Wednesday, August 31, 2022

A legacy of elite frontmen: New lead slingers take the reins at WSU, EWU and UW, schools where excellent QB play is the standard

 


A legacy of elite frontmen: New lead slingers take the reins at WSU, EWU and UW, schools where excellent QB play is the standard

By Dan Thompson The Spokesman-Review 31 Aug 2022

Matt Kegel’s first collegiate start came in one of the most hallowed venues in all of college sports: the Coliseum on the campus of the University of Southern California.

Leading up to that game on Nov. 11, 2000, neither the Cougars nor the Trojans were having a great season. Each was 1-5 in Pac-10 play. Just a few weeks later, USC would fire coach Paul Hackett and replace him with Pete Carroll, who had been fired by the New England Patriots the year before.

But this game, played in front of 40,000 fans on a cloudy Los Angeles afternoon, bore great significance to Kegel.

“All the years that led up to that, in the 19 years of development, commitment and study and knowledge, all came together,” Kegel said this week. “That was my first real opportunity on a national stage to lead a team and showcase my ability. The ball bounced my way, and we got some good results.”

Playing because usual starter Jason Gesser had broken his leg the week before against Oregon, Kegel completed just 12 of 32 passes, but they went for 242 yards, and he committed no turnovers. The Cougars took a two-score lead into halftime and won the game 33-27.

The next weekend, Washington dismantled WSU, 51-3, ending the Cougars’ season with a 4-7 overall record. But the next season, Gesser returned and started all 12 games, 10 of which the Cougars won. The year after that, in 2002, the Cougars won 10 games again.

Kegel didn’t play much those two years, during which he completed 47 of 83 attempts.

But he stuck around, and he knew what his role was.

“I was raised as a loyal person,” said Kegel, who was born in Havre, Montana, “and when I gave my commitment to play football at Washington State, that was a commitment to uphold and a dream to fulfill.”

It wasn’t always easy.

“It took loyalty and willpower to stay and compete every day knowing you’re a backup,” Kegel said. “I felt like I always competed and prepared to be one snap away and be the guy, and unfortunately for me it was a four-year wait.”

But that wait prepared him for other circumstances in life later, he said. And anyway, he was waiting for something special: the chance to be a starting quarterback at Washington State University.

This was the program that had by then attracted, developed and succeeded under the likes of Ryan Leaf, Drew Bledsoe, Mark Rypien and Jack Thompson, three of whom were top-three picks in the NFL Draft.

It is the program that has since seen eight more of its quarterbacks drafted or signed by NFL teams.

And in the state of Washington, it is not alone.

The Washington Huskies can also claim to be a quarterback powerhouse, with graduates such as Warren Moon, Hugh Millen, Chris Chandler, Billy Joe Hobert, Mark Brunell, Damon Huard, Brock Huard, Cody Pickett, Jake Locker and Jake Browning.

Then there is Eastern Washington University in Cheney, which in only the last 17 years has produced three quarterbacks who were named the national FCS offensive player of the year, and three more who were named All-America selections.

All three of those programs are beginning this football season with new quarterbacks who have yet to prove their pedigree at each institution. Cameron Ward will start at Washington State. Michael Penix Jr. will do so at Washington. Gunner Talkington is now the starter at Eastern Washington.

All follow in a line of great quarterbacks, many of whom went on to play and even star in the NFL.

All three are out to prove this fall that they are the next frontman to lead his team to great seasons. Because at these programs, through exhaustive recruiting and rigorous development and retention, excellent quarterback play has become the standard.

So, when Kegel became the full-time starting quarterback for Washington State in 2003, he felt he was ready.

“Most quarterbacks that get to that position in programs like Washington State or Washington have put in the work, and they know what it means to get your hands dirty, and to potentially reap the benefits of all your years of blood, sweat and tears, and dedication and study,” Kegel said. “Most of these things don’t happen overnight, and a lot of prep for many years goes into the development of a quarterback and any type of collegiate athlete.”

‘Is he going to be an All-American?’

Damon Huard was recruited by the University of Washington to play quarterback there in the early 1990s, and the pitch was pretty straightforward.

Billy Joe Hobert – who quarterbacked the 1991 Huskies to a 12-0 record and a national championship – had been a teammate of Huard’s in high school. Huard’s brother Brock would later follow both down the road to the Seattle university.

“We were a feeder program for the University of Washington,” Damon Huard said. “No other program fed UW like Puyallup did in the 1990s.”

It wasn’t just Hobert who influenced Huard’s choice.

“Warren Moon, Kerry Collins,” Huard said, listing just two prior Huskies quarterbacks. “Every one of them played in the NFL. It seemed like the right thing to do.”

Huard admitted that he also liked the offense run by Mike Price at Washington State. But Huard ultimately canceled planned visits to Miami and Notre Dame, and from 1992 to 1995, he started 31 games for the Huskies. Later he won two Super Bowls as a backup quarterback with the New England Patriots.

Huard – whose son Sam is a quarterback at Washington – is now director of community and external relations for UW. He remembers when coach Chris Peterson was encouraging Jacob Eason – a Lake Stevens native who first played at Georgia before opting to transfer elsewhere – to come play quarterback for his hometown Huskies.

“Look, dude, it’s special to be a Husky QB,” Huard said, paraphrasing the pitch made to Eason, who accepted and started for Washington in 2019.

That’s a similar pitch to the one made by Aaron Best at Eastern Washington, a program that just fielded one of the most prolific college offenses in history under the leadership of quarterback Eric Barriere.

Barriere finished his career with 15 games in which he amassed at least 400 yards of offense, tying Steve McNair for the record in the Football Championship Subdivision. Barriere won the Walter Payton Award, given annually to the best offensive player in the FCS.

“That’s always going to be the expectation, is to find the next All-American,” Best said. “That’s where we start our conversations off. You’ve got a guy (at the high school level). My question back is: Is he going to be an All-American? That’s the standard we live by, is All-American quarterbacks.”

‘Our eyes sometimes lie to us’

Yet that’s not always such an easy thing to predict. Troy Taylor, who is now the head coach at Sacramento State of the Big Sky, was Eastern’s co-offensive coordinator in 2016, but before that he was the head coach at Folsom High School just outside Sacramento, California. Those experiences have given him a look at recruiting from both sides of the desk, as a high school coach and a college recruiter.

“The things that are the most important, you can’t measure objectively,” Taylor said. “A lot of it is subjective and projecting future success based on past performance can be hard.”

That’s because the level of talent surrounding a quarterback can be so different and can influence a quarterback’s play in so many different ways. A quarterback with a fantastic offensive line will have the time to make more throws, for example, than one who is running for his life every play.

College recruiting also has a certain momentum, Taylor said, where, as players are mentioned, they just climb and climb. He gave the example of two quarterbacks he had at Fulsom.

“One guy had a beard, 6-foot-3, 210 pounds and could throw the ball 70 yards,” he said. “You’d walk out onto the field and you’d be like, ‘Who’s that guy?’ ”

That player was going to be a junior. But there was a freshman competing for the starting job as well, and nobody really said much about him, Taylor said. The week of the team’s opening game, he decided they would play both, but that the freshman would start.

The junior quit. The freshman threw 11 touchdowns – in just his first game. That freshman’s name?

“He was Jake Browning,” Taylor said.

At Folsom Browning set California prep records for passing attempts (1,708), completions (1,191), yards (16,775) and touchdowns (229). At the University of Washington, he started 53 games and won 39 of them, more than any other quarterback in Pac-12 history.

“That’s just a little microcosm of how hard it is to evaluate. Our eyes sometimes lie to us. So it starts with evaluation and recruitment,” Taylor said. “And then it’s development.”

With playing time comes development

When Dan Hawkins talks about quarterbacks, he doesn’t like to use the word “coaching.”

“I always talk about handling the quarterback,” said Hawkins, who first became a head coach at Division III Willamette before coaching at Boise State, Colorado and, for the last five seasons, at UC Davis.

“(Former NFL coach) Bill Walsh used to say very few people know how to evaluate quarterbacks and even fewer know how to coach them,” Hawkins said. “I think that’s probably true.”

The term “handling” implies that there is a specialness to the position, that the play of that person is somehow more important than others’ play. And it is hard to say otherwise.

“You don’t have to have to be great at QB to win, but it will help you win,” said Timm Rosenbach, a WSU quarterback from 1986 to 1988 who is now the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana.

Montana won 10 games last year, starting with a 13-7 victory over Washington in which the Huskies gained just 232 yards on offense. The Grizzlies dealt with injuries at quarterback much of the season, and they finished seventh among the Big Sky’s 13 teams in passing offense.

“We won 10 games, but a lot of that was our defense,” Rosenbach said. “You can win a championship that way for sure, but if you have a great quarterback, you always have a chance.”

That formula worked for Washington State in 2003, when Rosenbach was in his first year as the Cougars’ quarterbacks coach after serving as the offensive coordinator at Eastern Washington the two years prior.

“A great defense can make an average offense or QB pretty good,” Kegel said. “I wouldn’t say that was the (case) in my time, but it certainly didn’t hurt to have a record-setting defense on my team.”

Kegel threw for the fifth-most passing yards (2,947) and had the fourth-best passer rating (128.1) in the Pac-10 that season, trailing the likes of Matt Leinart (USC), Aaron Rodgers (Cal) and Kellen Clemens (Oregon). All three of those players were later taken as first- or second-round picks in the NFL Draft.

But the Cougars fielded a top-three defense that season, and it culminated in a 28-20 victory over Texas in the Holiday Bowl. Kegel completed 18 of 32 passes for two touchdowns and two interceptions.

“That was one of many fond memories of that season,” Kegel said. “We walked the walk on that team, and to compete against a big-boy program like Texas and really for three quarters put it to them was a fun time in my life. That’s a lifelong memory.”

Importantly, Kegel wasn’t entirely inexperienced when he took over as starter that season. While he had only started the two games at the end of the 2000 season, he appeared in every game in 2001 by running the first series of the second quarter, which was by coach Mike Price’s design, Kegel said.

“That was a commitment that he had with me, and that kept me engaged and excited and a part of the team,” Kegel said. “I think it was as valuable for coach Price and the staff as it was for me to be ready.”

Rosenbach said Kegel’s play in 2003 was a testament to the quarterback’s ability to get the job done and to battle.

“He knew the situation. He knew that he may have to come in at any time (in earlier seasons) to pinch-hit for Jason (Gesser), and he was going to wait his turn, and he won 10 games,” Rosenbach said.

That season Kegel was the most veteran in a talented quarterback room, Rosenbach said. Josh Swogger was right behind him, Alex Brink was a freshman, and Mike Reilly, who redshirted that season, went on to be star quarterback at Division II Central Washington and eventually was named the Canadian Football League’s Most Outstanding Player in 2017.

“Wazzu’s the place where you’re sitting in the room as the quarterbacks coach with five guys,” Rosenbach said. “Three can play at the next level, and only one can get on the field at a time.”

The one-at-a-time truism is all the more apparent and relevant in an age when transferring between NCAA schools is easier than ever. It’s a reality coaches are continuing to grapple with.

But transfers – especially at the FCS level – are nothing particularly new. Swogger, for example, transferred from WSU to Montana and led the Grizzlies to the FCS semifinals and a 12-win season in 2006.

“You’re always developing,” said Cal Poly coach Beau Baldwin, who won a national title as Eastern’s head coach in 2010. “You want to try to recruit guys who have the ability to be starters someday, but it’s not easy in this world of revolving doors and transfers.

“Once you start going down the road of bringing in transfers, sometimes it’s hard to get back to just the development of the high school kid.”

While Baldwin was at Eastern, he tried to follow that philosophy, though he made a notable exception when he got Bo Levi Mitchell, the eventual MVP of that national title game, to transfer from SMU. But Baldwin already knew Mitchell; he had hosted him on a recruiting visit to Cheney two years earlier.

Yet no matter how well a coach knows a player or how they end up on campus, there is no substitute for game action, coaches said, which complicates the whole process of maintaining great quarterback play. Do you go with a two-quarterback system, like Taylor did last year at Sacramento State? Schedule three easy non-conference games so that the backup gets to mop up after halftime?

Like Price with Kegel, coaches will try to get game experience for their backup quarterbacks precisely because that time in games is so valuable and because someday, hopefully, that backup ascends, and coaches want to know how players will react.

“You can’t replicate what a game situation is like for a quarterback,” Taylor said. “You can’t prepare how you’re going to react to getting drilled by a 325-pound guy. … You have to live it and see how they react.”

Montana coach Bobby Hauck, who played three different quarterbacks last season because of injuries, described his own straightforward approach.

“I think you get better by playing in football, so developing quarterbacks, I think it’s a huge advantage if you can get your other quarterbacks other than your starter in the game and give them a chance to play,” Hauck said. “So, the more they get a chance to play, the more ready they’re going to be when they win the job.”

All of these approaches imply a desire to minimize variables along the stages of quarterback recruitment and development: the more talent in the room, the more likely it is that at least one will become great. And the more who become great, the better the program.

‘We have something different’

When Price was recruiting quarterbacks to come to Washington State during his time there from 1989 to 2002, he was aggressive in trying to get the best.

They would identify the top 10 quarterbacks nationally who fit their system, and then Price hopped on a plane to see them all.

“All the great QBs who were playing, I was looking at them,” Price said earlier this month.

But when he recruited those athletes, there was already momentum. They ran a system quarterbacks liked because they threw the ball a lot. And by the mid-’90s, the Cougars had produced a future Super Bowl MVP in Rypien and a first-overall draft pick in Bledsoe.

“They see Rypien, Bledsoe and Leaf, and they see themselves being able to play that position here at this school,” Price said.

Just like Huard said of Washington, the recruiting at Washington State benefits because programs with great anything – not just quarterbacks but especially them – self-germinate their own flowering.

It is the case, too, at Eastern Washington, where a school future record-setting quarterback Gage Gubrud hadn’t much heard of until Vernon Adams Jr. led the Eagles to a win over Oregon State in 2013.

Now, Gubrud is part of that fraternity of great quarterbacks.

“It’s a great thing to be able to say, even going to job interviews (for non-football positions),” Gubrud said. “You say, ‘I played quarterback at Eastern Washington,’ and everyone knows not just the program but the great tradition they’ve had at quarterback.”

Kegel said that Jack Thompson, the first of Washington State’s star quarterbacks, remains crucial to maintaining not just the legacy of Cougars quarterbacks but their connectedness as well.

Kegel has gotten to know not just the quarterbacks with whom he played at Washington State but also those who came before and after him.

“To have an opportunity after our playing days are done to come and develop a relationship with the person is almost as valuable as watching them and knowing them on the field,” Kegel said.

Thompson said he does what he can to foster those relationships because of his love for Washington State, as a program and as a university. And, he said, the quarterbacks genuinely like each other.

“We have something different, and I think that is very enticing to quarterbacks being recruited,” Thompson said. “They see the special bond up close and in person, and that’s a difference-maker.”

After his time at Washington State, Kegel signed with the Minnesota Vikings and spent about six months there before the team released him. After that, he moved back to his home state of Montana, and since 2006 he has worked for Medtronic, a medical device company. He and his family live in Great Falls, and he makes it back to Pullman for Cougars games and other events during the year.

By the time Kegel was the starting quarterback, he felt like he had confidence he could do what was asked. He felt he was ready to do what every quarterback wants: to face down a defense and make a play for his team.

“No matter what you’re doing in this life, if you walk in with confidence and the belief you’re going to be successful, you’re going to be successful,” Kegel said. “The younger players who get in the battle, they get that feeling, whether it’s the intensity of the game or the adrenaline rush they feel. But it is something we strive for from a young age, and especially a quarterback.

“We want that feeling,” Kegel said. “We want to be in that position.”

 

2022 football preview: New frontman QB Cameron Ward brings an up-tempo rhythm in Jake Dickert’s first full season at Washington State

 


2022 football preview: New frontman QB Cameron Ward brings an up-tempo rhythm in Coach Jake Dickert’s first full season at Washington State

Wed., Aug. 31, 2022 By Colton Clark, Spokane S-R

WSU football schedule 2022

9/3: Idaho, 6:30 p.m.

9/10: at Wisconsin, 12:30 p.m.

9/17: Colorado St., 2 p.m.

9/24: Oregon, TBD

10/1: Cal, TBD

10/8: at USC, TBD

10/15: at Oregon St., TBD

10/27: Utah, 7 p.m.

11/5: at Stanford, TBD

11/12: Arizona St., TBD

11/19: at Arizona, TBD

11/26: Washington, TBD

And so begins the Jake Dickert era at Washington State.

For real, this time.

The Cougs played well under Dickert for the final six games of the 2021 season, after coach Nick Rolovich was dismissed for failing to comply with a state COVID-19 vaccine mandate.

Yet Dickert’s seventh game at the helm – 6:30 p.m. Saturday versus Idaho – will signal the proper start to his head-coaching career at WSU.

He’ll be joined on the sidelines by the staff he assembled this offseason – eight new assistants, including two coordinators. WSU will debut its revamped version of the Air Raid offense. Several prized additions from Dickert’s first recruiting class will play starring roles.

It will be the team Dickert shaped, not the team he inherited.

Of course, many familiar faces are back from WSU’s 2021 roster, a group of players that handled last season’s turmoil with grace and came up one game shy of a Pac-12 championship berth. The Cougs had to replace 11 starters, but they return a strong core of leadership – especially on defense – and a handful of potential standouts who played behind established veterans last year.

WSU won a few important recruiting battles for coveted transfers this offseason. No Cougar player has attracted more public interest than the headliner of the 2022 class, quarterback Cameron Ward.

Side A (offense): The Cougs are counting on Ward to operate the Air Raid efficiently and live up to his ever-building expectations of stardom. He was a highly touted signal-caller coming out of FCS Incarnate Word – where he dazzled over the past two seasons under coach Eric Morris, who is now coordinating WSU’s offense.

This preseason, Ward looked the part, exhibiting the uncommon skill set that had made him one of the top-rated transfer players of this recruiting cycle. He has “elite pocket presence,” Dickert noted, plus mobility and the arm strength and precision to make any throw – even when he’s firing from off-balance footing.

“I was really amazed with his arm and I think everyone talks about his arm, but I don’t think people talk enough about his leadership,” slot receiver Lincoln Victor said.

Ward will be surrounded by a deep and talented group of pass-catchers, captained by Victor and seventh-year senior slotback Renard Bell, and including returning starters on the outsides in De’Zhaun Stribling and Donovan Ollie.

“It’s the best receiving corps I’ve been with,” Bell said.

WSU reloaded fast after losing its two leading receivers from last season in Calvin Jackson Jr. and Travell Harris.

Nakia Watson will shoulder running back duties after sitting last year behind the senior duo of Max Borghi and Deon McIntosh. But the Cougars will take a “by-committee” approach on the ground and play three or more tailbacks. Watson, a 500-yard rusher at Wisconsin between 2019-20, is the only Coug RB with game reps.

The key for WSU’s offense will be keeping Ward clean. The Cougs’ offensive line is unproven after being remade this offseason following several departures.

The Air Raid has returned to Pullman, but it will only partially resemble the system former coach Mike Leach employed from 2012-19. Although WSU’s new offense will lean on the passing game, it boasts the ability to ground and pound. Expect the Cougars to operate at a quick pace and send out a variety of formations – from five-wide sets to “bunch” formations with two tight ends.

“It’s a diverse offense,” linebacker Travion Brown said. “They’ve got a lot of stuff going on. It’s really good for the defense because it gives us a lot of looks.”

Side B (defense): The Cougs are staying mostly consistent with their defensive approach and building upon the foundation Dickert set as defensive coordinator over the past two years.

WSU’s new DC, Brian Ward, shares coaching philosophies and strategy with Dickert.

“Brian Ward has a very similar scheme – same philosophy,” edge-rusher Brennan Jackson said. “There’s still a big emphasis on turning the ball over, being ballhawks and just sprinting to the ball – 100% effort, every play.”

The Cougars played a resilient, swarming style of defense in 2021 and finished the season fifth nationally in takeaways (29).

WSU’s defense is paced by the edge-rushers, a deep and disruptive group that brings back all-conference stalwarts/team captains in Jackson and Ron Stone Jr. WSU is fortified up front with an ultra-experienced rotation of tackles.

“You can’t take off days when you play against this type of defense,” Cameron Ward said.

The Cougs landed a professional-caliber recruit this offseason in senior Nevada transfer Daiyan Henley, an outside linebacker who quickly distinguished himself as one of the team’s top pound-for-pound players. He’ll pair with co-starters Brown and Francisco Mauigoa to form an athletic linebacking corps that shouldn’t take a step back despite graduating longtime starters Jahad Woods and Justus Rogers.

Nickel Armani Marsh, a Spokane native, reprises his role as captain of the WSU secondary, which lost both of its starting safeties and its lockdown corner – Jaylen Watson, now with the Kansas City Chiefs. The Cougs gained an impact transfer to take the job at strong safety in senior Jordan Lee. Otherwise, WSU isn’t blessed with experience at the safety spots.

The cornerbacks might lack star power, but the group is fairly tested and has four reliable pieces. The primary question for WSU’s CBs: Can senior Derrick Langford Jr. replace Watson effectively and blanket the Pac-12’s best receivers?

Extras (special teams): The Cougs have few concerns – if any – regarding their kicking and punting units.

Dean Janikowski emerged last season as the Pac-12’s most accurate placekicker and claimed first-team all-conference honors. Australian punter Nick Haberer impressed in his first season playing American football and took home freshman All-America honors.

WSU should be effective in the return game with two of its most electric offensive playmakers – Victor and Bell – catching kicks and punts.

Surprise hits: Two dynamic young skill players had breakout performances this preseason and both are expected to contribute significantly off the bench in 2022.

True freshman tailback Jaylen Jenkins wowed onlookers throughout fall camp with his elusive running style and exceptional top-end speed. He offers a change of pace for a running back group that will be spearheaded by a power-centric ball-carrier in Nakia Watson.

Receiver Orion Peters, a second-year freshman, established himself as WSU’s No. 3 option at slotback early this preseason. Peters made sharp cuts to shake off defensive backs and came up with plenty of highlight-reel sideline receptions this preseason to secure a key rotational role in WSU’s pass-heavy offense.

Producer: A first-time head coach, Dickert earned his title through both chance and merit.

He led a defensive resurgence as a WSU coordinator in 2021. When a uniquely odd situation left the Cougars coachless at midseason, Dickert seemed like the best choice to steer the ship on an acting basis.

Dickert proved himself as a unifying presence, pulling the fractured team together and guiding it to a winning season and a rare Apple Cup triumph. His interim tag was removed in late November. It wasn’t how he imagined, but Dickert had become a head coach after 15 years climbing the occupational ladder.

After an encouraging offseason of program-building, Dickert is all set to debut his remade team, the “New Wazzu,” he calls it.

Album review: The Cougars have the makeup of a winning team, so we’re comfortable predicting an above-.500 finish and a bowl berth. We’re going to stay conservative with our estimate, considering the uncertainties that come with a first-year staff, a freshly installed offensive system and several new faces occupying key roles on the field. WSU certainly has the potential to outperform our record prediction. But let’s not get too carried away before we see the “New Wazzu” in action.

Prediction: 7-5

2022 football preview: Game-by-game predictions for the Washington State University Cougars


2022 football preview: Game-by-game predictions for the Washington State University Cougars

Aug. 31, 2022 by Colton Clark S-R of Spokane

 

Pac-12 picks

Colton Clark's predicted order of finish:

1. Utah

2. Oregon

3. USC

4. Washington State

5. Oregon State

6. UCLA

7. Washington

8. Arizona State

9. Stanford

10. Cal

11. Arizona

12. Colorado

Washington State’s nonconference football slate features two favorable matchups against lower-level opponents and one major test on the road against a notable Power Five foe. The Cougars open Pac-12 play with a grueling month-long stretch, during which they will face four of the conference’s best projected teams – including defending champion Utah. WSU’s schedule for November is much less daunting. The Cougars close their season with four very winnable games, all against opponents they beat in 2021.

Sept. 3 vs. Idaho

After a five-year hiatus, the Battle of the Palouse is back. The border neighbors are both led by first-year coaches in Dickert and Jason Eck, who were coworkers at a couple of past coaching stops. That adds intrigue to a farmland feud that has been largely uninteresting over the past two decades – the Cougs have outscored the Vandals 396-99 over nine straight wins. WSU will be a heavy favorite over Idaho, which dropped back down to the Football Championship Subdivision in 2018. WSU, 45-10.

Sept. 10 at Wisconsin

Dickert returns to his home state for one of WSU’s most anticipated nonconference games in some time. The Badgers eventually wear WSU out with their powerful running game, combined with a tenacious defensive front and a booming home-field advantage of more than 80,000 fans. Wisconsin, 30-24.

Sept. 17 vs. Colorado State

WSU gets back on track against a Mountain West Conference bottomfeeder and cruises to a well-rounded victory. WSU, 37-13.

Sept. 24 vs. Oregon

The Cougs go toe-to-toe with a ranked Ducks team before a rowdy crowd at Gesa Field, but the Air Raid can’t find enough cracks in an Oregon defense led by first-year coach Dan Lanning, who guided the Georgia Bulldogs’ superpowered defensive unit over the past three seasons. UO, 33-26.

Oct. 1 vs. California

WSU comes out firing on homecoming and maintains its big early lead over a middling Cal team. WSU, 40-24.

Oct. 8 at USC

Southern Cal is off to the Big Ten Conference in two years. So, the Trojans have a target on their back and will probably get everyone’s best shot this season. But USC also has a talent advantage over perhaps all of its Pac-12 peers. The Trojans, who rejuvenated their program this offseason with the addition of a vaunted head coach (Lincoln Riley) and a host of standout transfers, present matchup issues for WSU’s secondary. USC, 41-28.

Oct. 15 at Oregon State

This one is a toss-up, but history points to WSU as the favorite. The Beavers’ stout rushing attack and play-action game gives WSU’s defense a considerable challenge, but the Cougars’ aerial attack proves too explosive for Oregon State’s defensive backs to contain. The Cougars extend their winning streak over OSU to nine games. WSU, 34-26.

Oct. 27 vs. Utah

Utah, visiting Pullman for the first time in four years, grinds out its fourth consecutive win over the Cougars. The Utes, the favorites to win the Pac-12 this season, churn out a few long possessions behind veteran QB Cam Rising, and their loaded defensive front rattles WSU’s unproven offensive line on a bitter Thursday night. Utah, 27-16.

Nov. 5 at Stanford

Cameron Ward outduels touted Cardinal QB Tanner McKee, and the Cougars’ veteran-laden defensive line clamps down on Stanford’s persistent ground game as WSU extends its winning streak in the series to six games. WSU, 30-17.

Nov. 12 vs. Arizona State

The hosts shouldn’t drop this one against a rebuilt ASU team and its embattled coach, but we’re going to stick an oddball upset loss here – just because there always seems to be a wacky home game on WSU’s schedule each year. The Cougs and Devils trade blows in a shootout for much of the night during a wild edition of “Pac-12 After Dark.” Ward leads an up-tempo possession in crunch time but a potential walk-off field goal misses the mark in wintry conditions. ASU, 31-29.

Nov. 19 at Arizona

The Cougs take out their frustrations on a struggling Wildcats team led by former WSU QB Jayden de Laura, who sees steady pressure in his pocket throughout the night. WSU, 40-14.

Nov. 26 vs. Washington

The Cougars retain the Apple Cup trophy. Dickert improves to 2-0 in the rivalry series. Why not? UW is also playing under a first-year coach. The Huskies won’t be the same four-win team that we saw last year, but how much better can they be? WSU, 38-27.