Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Thiel: Raw talent gives Pac-12-champion Huskies chance to go long way

Washington’s Myles Gaskin (9) burned Colorado for 162 yards. (Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press)
By Art Thiel sportspressnw.com

SANTA CLARA, CA – The play that sealed the Pac-12 Championship Friday night had nothing to do with good coaching or clever scheming or luck. It was pure athletic improvisation, which makes the Washington Huskies slightly scarier for the opponent they draw in the College Football Playoffs.

Ahead 24-7 in the third quarter, QB Jake Browning, amid a mediocre game for him, dropped back from the Colorado 19-yard line and had nothing. The Buffaloes’ premium linebacker, Jimmie Gilbert, broke free of his blocker and laid hands on Browning. Beginning an awkward throw from below his right knee before he fell over, Browning flung a duck toward the sideline seeking an incompletion.

Instead, the incomparable WR John Ross, from a standing jump, speared the ball one-handed, clasped with two, and needed only half of his warp speed to tiptoe down the sidelines for the touchdown.

It should have been a sack. Or at least an incompletion. Instead, it began a giggle-fest among the 47,118 at Levi’s Stadium, an acknowledgment that they got their money’s worth. At least, if they weren’t fans of the semi-helpless Buffs.

The Huskies? They received a trophy that rewarded a splendid 12-1 season with their first Pac-12 title since 2000 with a 41-10 thrashing of eighth-ranked Colorado.

The Huskies did everything required to make irrelevant the “very small” margin a CFP spokesman said Tuesday existed between No. 4 Washington and No. 5 Michigan. A no-doubt rout that was executed despite an 8-for-21 passing day for Browning.

Somewhere in Ann Arbor, Michigan, a clipboard undoubtedly died a horrible death. Police are looking for a khaki-clad suspect with a red face.

The pull-away triumph left CFP committee with no wiggle room to deny Washington a berth in the playoffs. At the moment, Washington would play No. 1 Alabama in a semifinal Atlanta’s Peach Bowl Dec. 31. But the Crimson Tide has to play Florida Saturday for the SEC championship, and No. 3 Clemson has an ACC title game too.

All will be sorted on at 9 a.m. Sunday when the committee announces the field. As far as RB Myles Gaskin is concerned, he could do without that nonsense.

“It’s up to a whole bunch of people I don’t know,” he said. “I don’t care for it personally.”

That bureaucracy held no sway after the game amid the confetti and fireworks that celebrated a return to dominance that seemed far away until Chris Petersen arrived.

As much as the Buffaloes rightfully should be celebrated for their one-year turnaround from 1-8 to 8-1 – the biggest flip in conference history – Petersen is king of the West Coast because it took him just three years after his hugely successful run at Boise State to resurrect the Huskies in his careful yet clever image.

“I have so much respect for this conference, and what types of coaches and players that we have,” he said. “ I don’t take for granted at all sitting up here” with the trophy.

Amid all the NFL-caliber talent on the Washington team, a freshman led them.

Safety Taylor Rapp, the precocious kid from Bellingham’s Sehome High School, held the Most Valuable Player trophy above his head on the postgame presentation platform as securely as he clutched two interceptions, one returned for a touchdown that broke open the game.

“Honestly, I didn’t see any of this coming,” Rapp said. “It’s so crazy and surreal. It felt l like a dream out there.”

He was part of a defense that suffocated the mistake-prone Buffs, held to 163 yards of offense, a season low as well as a Pac-12 championship-game low. The only other team the Huskies held so tightly was Portland State.

UW also temporarily knocked out of the game QB Sefo Liufau, the Buffs’ primary weapon, during a first-quarter sack by LB Psalm Wooching.

Liufau, from Tacoma’s Bellarmine Prep, had his sore leg wrapped at halftime and returned. But his first pass of the second half was tipped, then grabbed by Rapp, who scooted 35 yards with the pick-six to break open the game.

Asked if he knew that Liufau was limited, Rapp said, “The quarterback was out there. Doesn’t matter to me. Play ball.”

The Huskies’ offense plodded through a first half leading 14-7 so awkwardly that a national reporter in the press box inquired of a Seattle reporter whether Browning was hurt.

No. He was waiting. While he waited, he handed the ball off to Gaskin (162 yards) and Lavon Coleman (107 yards). They were the first pair of backs to each top 100 yards in the championship game’s brief six-year history.

The rest of the night was up to the defense. They picked Liufau twice more to set up short fields so the Huskies didn’t have to rely on the passing game Petersen called “awkward.”

But if the Huskies had little going in the air, consider the Buffs: Besides the three picks, they completed 7 of 22 passes for for 76 yards.

Following a wild kickoff return in the third quarter that included a fumble recovery by RB Phillip Lindsay that reached the Washington 2-yard line. As they have done several times season, the Huskies mustered a goal-line stand that forced Colorado to accept a field goal and to kill any momentum.

“The only thing to keep them in the game was to return the kickoff,” Petersen said. “When (opponents) get down there to the 5, I always think, ‘I don’t know if they’re going to score.’ A lot of times, they don’t. That was the case again.”

Even when the Huskies are awkward, they have the defense and the raw talents like Browning and Ross. They can take a team a long ways past awkward, maybe all the way to Atlanta.