Special teams failures and a dubious replay call on the Huskies’ final play led to a 31-28 defeat Saturday night against Stanford, thwarting a splendid game from QB Keith Price.
Author: Art Thiel
Bruce Irvin is back from a four-game suspension a fortunate dude — during his absence, the Seahawks were 4-0. Now he has to prove he’s needed against Andrew Luck Sunday.
The Huskies coach tried Monday to head off the distraction of the USC vacancy. So far, he seems to be avoiding the mistakes of Rick (“I never interviewed for that job”) Neuheisel.
On day when so little worked as it had, Seahawks’ two outsized leaders, Wilson and Sherman, come up with ways to pull off a ridiculous win, on the road, shorthanded.
In pineapple-express conditions, the Huskies leaned on Bishop Sankey’s low-gear, high productivity rushing — including a school-record 40 carries — to prevail over Arizona.
Zduriencik blew his cred when he said Alston and Lasorda worked on one-year deals. The Dodgers were one of the strongest franchises is sports. Wedge worked for the Mariners.
Rather than wait for team management to tell him to go away, manager Eric Wedge beat the Mariners to it Friday afternoon, telling the club that after the season ends Sunday, he was done with a franchise that has locked up its eighth losing season in the past 10, three under Wedge.
Michael Bennett’s noteworthy game against Sunday — he played all five D-line positions — spotlighted the depth of talent, once assembled, the Seahawks have to fix a weakness.
Mariners signed vets to win games, brought up youngsters to help the future, and ended up doing little of either. And they’re as far away from playoffs as they’ve been in a decade.
To hear Washington QB Keith Price tell it, last year’s Arizona game in Tucson, a 52-17 win by the Wildcats, was a nightmare, complete with ghosts.