Friday, October 28, 2022

Lewiston Trib story and Spokane S-R stories about WSU loss in Pullman to Utah on Thur., 10/28/2022


 
 

WSU FOOTBALL

Washington State helmets feature ‘Wazzu’ nickname for first time

Oct. 27, 2022 Updated Thu., Oct. 27, 2022 at 8:46 p.m.

By Colton Clark  S-R

PULLMAN – Washington State’s football team is embracing a moniker that has long been used by fans as an unofficial school nickname.

 

The Cougs on Thursday debuted new helmet decals, featuring “Wazzu” in script lettering on the sides of the crimson lids. It’s believed to be the first time in program history that WSU’s uniforms will incorporate the term “Wazzu.”

 

Throughout the week, WSU’s media department had been teasing some sort of surprise regarding the Cougs’ uniforms for their Pac-12 matchup against Utah. On Thursday morning, WSU revealed its new-look helmets via social media. The reception from fans was overwhelmingly positive, though some traditionalists weren’t impressed.

 

WSU’s helmets are usually decorated with the growling Cougar logo, which is widely recognized as one of the most creative designs in college football. The team used a “Cougars” script logo on gray and crimson helmets in decades past.

 

Former school president V. Lane Rawlins called for WSU to ditch the “Wazzu” nickname in 2002 “on the grounds it is vaguely derogatory and plays to the perception that WSU is a place where booze trumps books,” according to an Associated Press article. But the Cougar faithful had already latched on to the moniker, which they have used for over half a century as a term of endearment.

 

Now, “Wazzu” is more of an official nickname than an informal one. First-year Cougs coach Jake Dickert leaned into it this offseason, coining a catch-all tagline for his rebuilt program: “New Wazzu.” The Cougs’ coaching staff broke out gray hoodies with the “Wazzu” logo across the chest.

 

The Utes’ helmets honored fallen teammates Ty Jordan and Aaron Lowe, featuring hand-painted portraits of the players. Jordan, a star running back, died in December 2020 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound that was ruled accidental. Lowe was killed on Sept. 26, 2021, in a shooting in Salt Lake City just hours after the Utes defeated Washington State.

 

:::::::::

Utah Rising to the occasion

No. 14 Utes defeat WSU without standout quarterback

 

·         Oct 28, 2022 by Stephan Wiebe, Lewiston Trib

 

PULLMAN — “Pac-12 after dark” often is full of surprises, but nobody expected the one the Utes unveiled Thursday at Gesa Field.

With star quarterback Cameron Rising on the sideline in a yellow pinny and headset, No. 14 Utah rode a backup quarterback and hard-nosed rushing attack to a 21-17 football victory against Washington State.

The Cougars (4-4, 1-4 Pac-12) couldn’t capitalize on the absence of Utah’s best player and dropped their third straight game. The Utes improved to 6-2 and 4-1.

“I’m proud of (our) effort, but really playing just good enough not to really, really find a win that one,” WSU coach Jake Dickert said.

A walk-on steps up for Utes

Sophomore quarterback Bryson Barnes had attempted just six passes on the season heading into the game.

But the backup, pardon the pun, “rose” to the occasion without starter Rising in the mix.

Barnes went 17-of-27 passing for 175 yards and one touchdown and rushed for another 51 yards.

In his biggest drive of the contest, Barnes scampered up the middle for 28 yards, hit receiver Jaylen Dixon for 27 yards on a huge third-and-16 and threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dalton Kincaid.

Those three big plays led to a 21-7 Utah lead late in the third quarter.

Barnes was helped by a steady rushing attack that piled up 169 yards, led by another backup, Jaylon Glover, with 76 yards and one touchdown.

Pivotal reviews go against WSU

“Boos” rained down on Gesa Field for much of the game, and no, not the Halloween kind.

On two occasions, pivotal reviews went against the Cougs to the dismay of the hometown fans.

On Utah’s go-ahead drive late in the second, the Utes were about to kick a field goal when officials called for a review of a huge tackle for loss by WSU edge Brennan Jackson on the previous play.

Jackson made contact with his helmet to the head of Utah running back Ja’Quinden Jackson, but no flag was thrown during the play.

After the review, Brennan Jackson was called for targeting and WSU’s best pass rusher was ejected from the game.

The call also gave the Utes another chance for a touchdown at the 1-yard line, which they converted with just 20 seconds left in the half for a 14-7 halftime advantage.

Later on, a WSU fourth-down completion to Robert Ferrel was measured and ruled a first down by a couple inches. Then, the officials overturned the spot and gave the ball to Utah on a turnover on downs.

“I think in the ebbs and flows of every football game, there’s a lot of adversity you gotta deal with,” Dickert said. “I think it’s one of the biggest things we try to train our guys to overcome and attack it. … I thought our guys did a good job tonight of responding to some of that stuff — overturning calls and replays and all that — but you just gotta keep responding and keep working.”

Key players out, injured for both sides

WSU already was missing starting running back Nakia Watson and receiver Renard Bell going in.

Against the Utes, the Cougs lost safety Jordan Lee for the second time this season as well as new starting running back Jaylen Jenkins to injuries.

With running back Kannon Katzer leaving the program, that left playing time to former walk-on and fourth-stringer Dylan Paine for most of the game.

Paine, a redshirt freshman from Tumwater, Wash., was admirable in pass protection and finished with 10 rushing yards and three catches for 29 yards.

Utah was missing Rising and starting running back Tavion Thomas.

“At some point, everyone is banged up and you have to look at who’s going to win and they won the football game,” Dickert said.

Utah 0 14 7 0 — 21Washington St. 0 7 0 10 — 17

Second Quarter

WSU: Stribling 29 pass from C.Ward (Janikowski kick), 13:24.

UTAH: J.Jackson 6 run (Redding kick), 9:23.

UTAH: Glover 1 run (Redding kick), :49.

Third Quarter

UTAH: Kincaid 5 pass from Barnes (Redding kick), 1:07.

Fourth Quarter

WSU: C.Ward 7 run (Janikowski kick), 14:17.

WSU: FG Janikowski 42, 4:48.

A: 21,179.

UTAH WSU

First downs 19 14

Total Net Yards 344 274

Rushes-yards 42-169 19-52

Passing 175 222

Punt Returns 2-2 1-0

Kickoff Returns 0-0 3-79

Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0

Comp-Att-Int 17-27-0 27-31-0

Sacked-Yards Lost 1-6 4-21

Punts 4-35.75 4-48.25

Fumbles-Lost 1-1 2-1

Penalties-Yards 6-65 8-52

Time of Possession 35:14 24:24

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING: Utah, Glover 20-76, Barnes 8-51, Jackson 10-43, Bernard 3-1, (Team) 1-(minus 2). Washington St., C.Ward 12-38, Paine 2-10, Jenkins 4-7, Ferrel 1-(minus 3).

PASSING: Utah, Barnes 17-27-0-175. Washington St., C.Ward 27-31-0-222.

RECEIVING: Utah, Kincaid 7-56, Yassmin 3-16, M.Parks 2-43, Dixon 1-27, Enis 1-12, Vele 1-10, Glover 1-6, Kendall 1-5. Washington St., Ferrel 8-26, Smithson 5-23, Stribling 4-66, Paine 3-29, Nunnally 2-41, Riviere 2-15, Peters 1-15, Ollie 1-10, Jenkins 1-(minus 3).

MISSED FIELD GOALS: Utah, Redding 37.

:::::::::::::

Utah 21, WSU 17

Stars of the game

Playing in place of Rising, walk-on Barnes piloted the Utes to a win. He went 17-of-27 for 175 yards and one touchdown, rushed for another 51 yards and played better as the game went on.

For WSU, quarterback Cam Ward went 27-of-31 (87 percent) for 222 yards and one touchdown.

Key plays

WSU’s Cam Lampkin ran into punt returner Robert Ferrel, leading to the ball bouncing off Ferrel’s leg and Utah recovering at the 24.

Later in the drive, WSU edge Brennan Jackson made a big tackle for loss on third down only for a late review to change it to a targeting call.

Jackson was ejected from the game and Utah scored its go-ahead touchdown moments later on a 1-yard Jaylon Glover rush with just 20 seconds left in the first half.

The game remained close but Utah, which led 14-7 at the half, never trailed the rest of the way.

Up next

WSU (4-4, 1-4 Pac-12) heads to the road to face Stanford (3-4, 1-4) at 12:30 p.m., Nov. 5 (Pac-12 Network) at Stanford Stadium in Stanford, Calif.

:::::::::::::::

WSU FOOTBALL ‘We need to look in the mirror’: Washington State’s offense continues to struggle in 21-17 loss to No. 14 Utah

Oct. 27, 2022 Updated Fri., Oct. 28, 2022 at 12:32 a.m.

By Colton Clark The Spokesman-Review

PULLMAN – Missing its star quarterback and its leading rusher, Utah lacked its usual sizzle. But the Utes were still good enough to outpace Washington State and its slumping offense.

 

No. 14 Utah scored 21 consecutive points, taking a 14-point lead late in the third quarter. The Cougars, lackluster on the attack f0r much of the night, couldn’t keep up and dropped a 21-17 decision at Gesa Field in front of a sparsely populated Thursday night crowd.

 

It was another disappointing effort from a Cougar offense that has struggled mightily during the team’s three-game losing streak. WSU managed 17 or fewer points in losses to USC, Oregon State and Utah.

 

“Offensively, we’re just not doing anything well to lean our hat on right now,” WSU coach Jake Dickert said. “It’s not being able to run the ball. … Negative plays and not being able to take it down the field.

 

“We need to look in the mirror and figure out what we can do well and we gotta lean on that. Right now, it’s inefficient play and not being able to move the chains and get ahead of a really good team.”

 

All-Pac-12 Utah quarterback Cameron Rising was a surprise scratch, missing the game due to an undisclosed injury. Sophomore walk-on Bryson Barnes played a safe game in relief (17 of 27 for 175 yards, no turnovers).

 

Utah (6-2, 4-1 Pac-12), which was also without starting running back Tavion Thomas, took a by-committee approach on the ground and fed carries to a couple of power-running backup tailbacks. The Utes totaled 169 yards and two touchdowns on 42 rushing attempts.

 

“To have the next man up and have a backup quarterback, and to win on the road in a tough environment on a Thursday night – they’re the champions of the Pac-12 until someone beats them,” Dickert said.

 

The Utes, who won the conference title last season, came into the game averaging over 40 points and more than 450 yards per game. They totaled 344 yards Thursday.

 

WSU (4-4, 1-4) managed just 264. Cougar ball-carriers were stopped in the backfield on 10 plays. Tailbacks were stacked up at the line of scrimmage and passes were often thrown short and toward the sidelines.

 

“We gotta find ways to execute better and not get ourselves behind the chains,” Dickert said. “Negative plays are constantly (hampering our offense). We’re not good enough to overcome that right now.”

 

WSU quarterback Cameron Ward was efficient, completing 27 of 31 passes. But most of those throws were shallow and ineffective. He totaled 222 passing yards. The Cougars’ shorthanded ground game offered little help, adding 42 yards on 19 rushes. WSU lost running back Jaylen Jenkins to an undisclosed injury in the second quarter.

 

The Utes used a backbreaking third-down conversion to create an insurmountable lead late in the third quarter. Utah gained 27 yards on a third-and-16 passing play deep in Cougar territory to set up a 5-yard touchdown catch from standout tight end Dalton Kincaid, making the score 21-7.

 

At that point, it appeared as though WSU was buried.

 

But the Cougar offense answered with one of its rare signs of life when reserve receiver Tsion Nunnally laid out for a 39-yard reception. Ward darted in for a 7-yard TD run moments later. Midway through the final period, WSU forced a key turnover – nickel Tanner Moku jumped on a dropped handoff – but its offense couldn’t turn the takeaway into six points. The Cougars settled for a 42-yard field goal and trailed by just four points with five minutes to play.

 

“We didn’t execute at critical moments in the fourth quarter,” Ward said.

 

WSU’s offense never got another chance.

 

Utah moved slowly and methodically downfield, draining four minutes off the clock. Finally, WSU’s defense made a third-down stop, bringing up a Utah fourth-and-7 inside the Cougars’ 30-yard line. The Utes elected to pass, and WSU committed a game-clinching defensive hold in the secondary.

 

“It’s tough to swallow,” Dickert said of the finish.

 

Added Ward: “It sucks when you can’t be on the field to try to make a play for the team.”

 

The Utes captured the momentum heading into halftime after capitalizing on a WSU special-teams miscue and a red-zone targeting penalty called on the Cougs.

 

WSU’s defense forced a three-and-out and a Utah punt with about three minutes remaining in the second quarter. But a mental mistake by the WSU return team proved costly.

 

As Cougar return man Robert Ferrel waited for the punt to arrive, teammate Cam Lampkin – playing a protection role – traveled off course and collided with Ferrel, knocking him out of position. The ball bounced off the turf and made contact with Ferrel’s leg. The Utes were there to jump on the loose ball at the WSU 25-yard line.

 

“There are ebbs and flows in every football game,” Dickert said. “There is a lot of adversity you gotta deal with.”

 

Utah advanced to the Cougs’ 3-yard line before WSU edge rusher Brennan Jackson made a hard hit in the backfield on a third-and-1 rushing play. The Utes sent out their field-goal unit, but the referees stopped the game to review Jackson’s tackle for targeting. Officials determined that Jackson had lowered his head and collided with the helmet of Utes running back Ja’Quinden Jackson.

 

“It’s tough,” Dickert said of the play. “He’s making a big, physical tackle. … You gotta deal with those things. They happen both ways.”

 

Brennan Jackson, one of WSU’s best defensive players, was sent to the locker room early and Utah was given a fresh set of downs on the goal line. The Utes punched in a 1-yard rushing touchdown with 20 seconds on the clock and took confidence into the locker room, along with their first lead of the game, 14-7.

 

Neither team could capture momentum during a first quarter featuring plenty of stops at the line of scrimmage. The Cougs’ offense, sparked by an efficient start from Ward – who completed his first 12 passes – got rolling early in the second period.

 

Ward opened the scoring with a 29-yard touchdown strike to De’Zhaun Stribling early in the second quarter. Stribling motioned across the field to his right and cut upfield on the snap, running into open space and hauling in a precisely placed lob pass from Ward.

 

Utah’s offense found life on its fourth series of the game. Money Parks came down with a 31-yard catch on a third-and-4 near midfield to kick-start a scoring drive that ended with a 6-yard TD run from Ja’Quinden Jackson.

 

The Cougars responded with a promising drive, moving the ball to the Utes’ 33-yard line before pressure from Utah’s defensive front killed the series. WSU elected to go for it on fourth-and-11 from inside the Utah 35, but Ward was sacked – one of four sacks allowed by WSU’s patchwork offensive line – and fumbled the ball into the hands of Utah edge rusher Jonah Elliss, a graduate of nearby Moscow High.

 

Four plays later, the Utes used a WSU special-teams gaffe to build momentum.

:::::::::::::::::

Recap and highlights: No. 14 Utah holds off Washington State’s fourth-quarter comeback with Cameron Rising sidelined

Oct. 27, 2022 Updated Thu., Oct. 27, 2022 at 11:07 p.m. Spokesman-Review

Washington State Cougars quarterback Cameron Ward (1) loses control of the ball as he is brought down by Utah Utes defensive tackle Junior Tafuna (58) as a Utah shoe goes flying in the chaos during the first half of a college football game on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2022, at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Wash. (Tyler Tjomsland/The Spokesman-Review)

 

PULLMAN – Utah’s offense trotted onto the field with its first-team All-Pac 12 quarterback watching from the sideline, setting up a prime opportunity for an upset.

 

Washington State couldn’t rise to the occasion.

 

The No. 14 Utes leaned on their rushing attack and stifled the Cougars offense en route to a 21-17 win on Thursday night.

 

Utah (6-2, 4-1 Pac-12) entrusted sophomore walk-on Bryson Barnes with the quarterback duties as Cameron Rising was surprisingly scratched after pregame warm-ups.

 

Barnes completed 17 of 28 attempts for 175 yards and a touchdown. He was backed by a rushing attack that handled 41 carries for 171 yards and two scores.

 

Meanwhile, the Cougars (4-4, 1-4) continued an ineffective offensive spell that dated back to the second half against USC on Oct. 8. WSU had scored 17 points over its previous nine quarters leading into the fourth against Utah.

 

Cougars quarterback Cameron Ward got things going with a 7-yard touchdown run early in the fourth quarter.

 

The Cougars forced a fumble on Utah’s next drive, but the comeback was for naught, as WSU was unable to find the endzone on a drive starting at the Utah 35.

 

Utah recovered an onside kick after a Dean Janikowski field goal and ran out the remaining 4 minutes of the game.

 

Ward completed 27 of 31 attempts for 222 yards and one touchdown. The problems mounted for WSU on third down, where they converted 3 of 10 attempts.

 

Ward was sacked four times, bringing the Cougars rushing total to a meager 42 yards on 19 attempts.

 

WSU hung with Utah for most of the first half, but muffed a punt late in the second quarter, setting up the Utes for a short scoring drive.

 

The Cougars nearly held the Utes to a field goal, until Brennan Jackson was charged with targeting on a would-be third-down stop.

 

Jackson was ejected and the Utes punched in a 1-yard touchdown run to take a 14-7 lead into halftime.

 

The Cougars have dropped four of their last five games, after starting the season 3-0. They travel to Stanford next week for a 12:30 p.m. kickoff against the Cardinal, with four games to earn two wins and secure bowl eligibility.

#


 

Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Football Cougs are making the grade at the halfway point


So far, so good for WSU: Cougs are making the grade at the halfway point

·         By Stephan Wiebe Lewiston Trib Oct 12, 2022

 

USC coach Lincoln Riley called Washington State “one of the 25 best teams in the country” — and for good reason.

Heading into Saturday’s 30-14 loss to the No. 7 Trojans, the Cougars sat one spot outside of the Associated Press Top 25 poll.

WSU is 4-2 overall and 1-2 in the Pac-12 Conference at the midpoint of the season with its only losses coming to No. 12 Oregon and USC.

Here’s how each position group has looked so far:

Quarterback: B+

Sometimes, sophomore quarterback Cam Ward looks like a literal superhero, wielding left-handed passes, escaping from near-impossible sack attempts and lobbing perfect touchdown tosses.

Other times, he throws bad interceptions in the end zone twice in the same game.

As WSU coach Dickert likes to say, “You take the bad with the good,” and Ward is a proven winner.

Receivers/tight ends: B

This is a group that makes up for a lack of a superstar with depth across the board.

Already, six players have double-digit catches and around 150-or-more receiving yards, and eight have caught touchdown passes.

The receivers took a hit against the Trojans when Renard Bell went down with an unspecified upper-body injury. The veteran is expected to miss extended time, so look for Robert Ferrel, Lincoln Victor and Orion Peters to step up in the slot in his absence.

Running backs: B-

Another position group that took a loss against USC. Starting running back Nakia Watson went down with a lower-body injury and also is out indefinitely.

Luckily for the Cougs, true freshman Jaylen Jenkins looked great in his place, compiling 184 yards of total offense — good enough to earn Pac-12 freshman of the week honors.

Jenkins is an explosive playmaker with a lot of upside. Mt. Spokane product Kannon Katzer will be his backup until Watson returns.

Offensive line: C

WSU’s offense often finds success because of Ward’s ability to extend passing plays with his legs rather than because of solid protection. The running game also has struggled to get going at times.

That said, compared to the eye test in fall camp, the Cougar offensive line has performed better than expected.

The group looked like it might be a team weakness in the preseason, but it has performed admirably against several stellar defensive fronts, so props to Grant Stephens, Konner Gomness and crew.

Defensive line: A

The stats speak for themselves.

The Cougars are sixth in the nation with 49 tackles for loss and tied for 15th in sacks with 19. Those numbers are tops and second in the Pac-12, respectively.

The best part for WSU is it does it with a two- or even three-deep rotation at each edge and defensive tackle position.

Edge Brennan Jackson has 7.5 tackles for loss, two sacks and three quarterback hurries as a leader of the group.

Linebackers: A

Senior linebacker Daiyan Henley dominates almost every defensive statistical category and is in the early running for Pac-12 defensive player of the year. His 10 tackles for loss are tied for fifth in the Football Bowl Subdivision.

Oh, and fellow linebacker Francisco Mauigoa also is a menace all around the field and has a 95-yard interception return touchdown to his name.

Defensive backs: C+

WSU is minus-4 in the turnover margin, which ranks 105th in the FBS.

The return of safety Jordan Lee from injury strengthens the Cougar secondary, but the defensive backs need to start getting more turnovers or they’ll have a tough time winning close games. No player has more than one interception and DBs are only responsible for three of the team’s five picks.

Special teams: B

This is a hard bunch to grade because WSU hasn’t needed to turn to special teams much in key situations. It’s a phase of the game that hasn’t been spectacular but also hasn’t made many mistakes.

Punter Nick Haberer has pinned seven punts inside the 20-yard line and averages 41.1 yards per boot. Kicker Dean Janikowski is 5-of-7 on field goals.

WSU Cougs Football: Jordan Lee will return to starting lineup


WSU Coug Football: Jordan Lee will return to starting lineup

By Jamey Vinnick, Cougfan, 10/12/2022

PULLMAN – Srong safety Jordan Lee will return to the WSU starting lineup when the Cougars take on Oregon State 6 o’clock in the evening on  Saturday in Corvallis.

That’s according to Jake Dickert, Washington State U head football coach.

 Lee missed three games with injury, before returning to play against USC in a limited role. As a result, Jaden Hicks will move back to a rotational role, playing both free and strong safety.

 "I think we got J Lee to about 25 snaps last week," Dickert said. "We'll probably get him to about 50 snaps this week. And then have Hicks bounce back and forth. And that's a lot of pressure on a freshman to do both jobs. But I think he's been really good throughout the week and he's ready to go there."

Lee returned in the 30-14 loss to USC with 6 tackles and 1.5 tackles for loss in limited reps. The 5-11, 202-pound graduate transfer from Los Angeles was a welcome sight back in the lineup and Dickert characterized what he brings to the team.

"He's an elite box defender," Dickert said of Lee. "There were a couple times in last week's game, they had an extra hat for him. He beats the block and goes and makes a big play. He just has that feel in the box and that aggressiveness, which in this game, will be everything. Hicks will be there, but that's four years down the road."

DICKERT SPOKE MORE about the right guard situation on Wednesday. He had said on Monday that with Grant Stephens suspended for the first half of Saturday's game, the Cougars would shift the offensive line around, with Fa'alili Fa'amoe likely entering the lineup.

"We have a bunch of different guys rotating in right now," Dickert said. "I think the maturation of Fa'alili has been really impressive. He's just been a little bit banged up throughout the last few weeks but now he's ready to go. To get those reps, we moved him to tackle ... we've got Quinn (McCarthy) and Brock (Dieu) at guard and Ma'ake (Fifita). We're gonna find the best and I don't know if we know at this point exactly who it will be."

One potential move would be to slide Fifita to right guard where he played last season, and let Fa'amoe operate at right tackle, until Stephens returns for the second half at guard and Fifita would move back to tackle.

In this matchup against Oregon State last year, WSU emerged victorious 31-24. But the Beavers gashed WSU for 309 yards on the ground, with two backs going over 100 yards. The Cougar run defense has taken major strides this year however and Dickert spoke about what he has seen that has resulted in such progress.

"This will be a check mark of where our interior defensive line is at," Dickert said. "I do think this is the most physical offensive line we have played ... we're going to see the improvement we've made ... I think it goes back to our interior defensive line playing at a higher level. And that doesn't necessarily always mean making plays. But doing your job and eating up blocks."

WSU-OREGON STATE GAME DETAILS:

·         WHERE: Reser Stadium

·         KICKOFF: Saturday, 6 p.m. Pacific

·         TV: Pac-12 Networks (Roxy Bernstein, Lincoln Kennedy)

·         RADIO: Washington State IMG Radio Network

·         SATURDAY WEATHER: 77 degrees at kickoff, light winds, clear skies

·         RECORDS: Both teams are 4-2/1-2

·         THE SERIES: WSU leads 56-46-3

·         LAST TIME: WSU won 31-24 in Pullman in 2021

·         ESPN matchup predictor: 62.3 percent chance OSU wins

·         RANKINGS: WSU is receiving votes in both polls

·         THE LINE: OSU by 3

#

WSU men’s hoops recruiting verbal: Center Oscar Cluff from Australia to Cougs

 


WSU men’s hoops recruiting verbal: Aussie center Oscar Cluff to Cougs

Cougfan 10/12/2022

PULLMAN -- On Monday, the WSU men's basketball program secured a “verbal” for the class of 2023 from Cochise College center Oscar Cluff. The 6-foot-10 big man from Bokarina, Australia, took an official visit to WSU in late September and gave the coaches his verbal on Monday over an offer from Cal.