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November 29, 2025 • 68 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's college football Saturday on your home for the Huskies,
Seattle's Sports Leader ninety three point three kjrfmcle n iHeartRadio Station.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
What is Husky Football?

Speaker 3 (00:12):
Football?

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Football?

Speaker 1 (00:14):
This is Husky Talk post Game howered by your Northwest
Chevy Dealers, by Cooor's Life, by UA Local thirty two,
Hider Construction, R and R Foundation Specialists, Bowen, Scar Forward,
Mitsubishi Electric, and by K two Vision. Husky Talk Post
Game is on the air with former Huskies Greg Lewis

(00:36):
and Mario Bailey, Ears, Dave Suckey, Muller, Hi Dog Fans.

Speaker 4 (00:40):
We're back inside Husky Stadium after a twenty six fourteen
loss for the Huskies of the Oregon Docks. Husky Tuck
post Game brought to you by Chevy Silverado. Bring on
the tough stuff, because with nine trims and four available engines,
Chevy Silverado.

Speaker 5 (00:53):
Was ready to accept all challenges.

Speaker 4 (00:56):
Well, there was one big challenge that was laid in
front of the Huskies today by the Oregon Ducks, and.

Speaker 5 (01:01):
They were not ready to accept it. Today.

Speaker 4 (01:03):
A twenty six to fourteen loss that was filled with
mistakes on offense, one big mistake at the end of
the game on defense, and the Oregon Ducks get the
win to go to twenty six. Excuse me eleven and
one after a twenty six to fourteen win today over
the Dogs. We can grab some of your phone calls
at two eight six, ninety five, ninety five or eight
hundred eight two nine or nine to five zero. And guys,

(01:24):
I was just looking at some numbers from the U
passing game versus the Oregon passing game. And I don't
know what your thoughts are, but I think the defense
played fairly well today. The defense gave you a shot,
turning touchdowns in the field goals, giving you some opportunities
there to get the ball and do something with it
in this contest today, and the offense just sputtered the
entire day. I thought they sputtered from a quarterback perspective,

(01:47):
they sputtered from a play calling perspective. It felt like
when there were times that UB guys was getting some
traction with the run game, they would go away from it.
And the difference, and Mario, you've been talking about this
now for a couple weeks with the Husky passing game,
the difference in the home run hitting ability of the
Oregon passing attack versus the udub passing attack was obvious.
I mean Demn Williams had throws of sixteen, thirteen, eleven, ten,

(02:09):
and twenty four and the twenty four yard or to
decor the graft came with a buck thirty three to
go with a fourth quarter when they were down twenty
six to fourteen. Dante Moore had throws of thirty five,
twenty two, thirty one, forty one, and sixty four and
the thirty five yard play came on the first drive
of the game for the Oregon Ducks. So they just
could never get the passing game going, never get any

(02:30):
rhythm at all with any consistency from a play calling perspective,
and again you're eight and four and not nine to
three because of it.

Speaker 6 (02:36):
Greg Lewis, Yeah, you know, the defense has to be
almost perfect for these guys. They can't give up anything
because when we play against top competition, you know, teams
who were in the upper echelon of college football, the
top half of our conference, you know, we don't seem
to be able to do anything on the offensive side
of the ball. I'm gonna tell you my statistic that

(02:57):
bothers me the most about today Okayam Mohammed at fourteen
carries one hundred and five yards. That statistic burns me up.
Adam Mohammett should have been twenty four carries, twenty five
carries for one hundred and sixty yards and two touchdowns.
There were so many times where we would go away
from what was working and doing well that it just

(03:17):
put our offense in a buying and that interception that
we threw Demon Williams made a horrible decision, but the
coaches put him in the position to make that horrible decision.
So I'm gonna you know that statistic of Adam Muhammad
having just fourteen carries to me when this game was
within reach. DC's played good enough to win was probably
the most telling statistic.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
And we've seen this all year long.

Speaker 7 (03:39):
We talked about it all pregame and I said, our
offense is not only going to have to play well
the entire time, They're gonna have to play well from
the beginning of the game.

Speaker 3 (03:48):
And they just couldn't do it.

Speaker 7 (03:50):
We talked about last week about Greg said we had
a good passing game. We do not have a good
passing game, great passing game. We have a below average
passing game. Once again, when we needed our offense to
come play for us, they could not do it. Demon
Williams struggled the entire time. That decision at the end
zone was the typical thing. They were gonna throw a

(04:11):
fade to Boston and everybody knows that when we get
down to the red zone, we're throwing the fade, and
they intercepted it. If the offense could have done anything
the entire game, our defense did just enough again to
help us win. The one thing I will say they
did to our defense that I hadn't seen anybody do
all season is they tried to test our corners. So

(04:32):
they did make a few big plays, But our plays
are just the normal plays that we try and run.
And Greg is absolutely right. Adam Muhammad had his best game.
He looked quick, he looked fast, he was cutting back,
he ran hard. I don't know why we were trying
to give Joon to the ball. I guess if this
his last game. But when you're playing Oregon in a
rival game, we have no time for helping somebody else

(04:56):
get the ball.

Speaker 2 (04:57):
Yeah, I don't.

Speaker 6 (04:57):
I wasn't even so much disappointed with the times we
gave it to Jonah Coleman. It was more that we
kept insisting on throwing the football when this game was
well within our reach as a offense that was running
the football extremely well. We were putting Oregon back on
their heels on en roller skates, and Adam Muhammad was

(05:17):
doing a great job. Jonah even had a couple of
decent carriers. I know he certainly wasn't the normal Jonah Coleman,
for sure, but I thought that if we had stuck
with running the football and you know, being you know,
close to the line of scrimmage, whether it's the screen
pass or slant routes, those kinds of things, I think
we had an opportunity to win this football game. I

(05:38):
think the two players are the two people who had
a bad day to day were Coach Fish and Jonah Coleman,
and you know, Emie demon Willis. I'm sorry, Mario, let
me clarify this and what I was trying to say.
All years, we have a good passing game against mediocre teams,
against teams that don't have great defense. I've been in
agreement with you all along that when we a tough

(06:00):
defense or a good defense, that we are challenged offensively
and I think at this point. One of the things
we said in the pregame Softy was this is Demand
Williams first start of a second season, So this is
right now who he is. So in order for this
team to take another step, in order to win these
types of games, he has to get better. But I

(06:22):
also think that the coaches have to do a solid
job behind him and giving him better decisions that you know,
and putting him in a position to make better decisions.
I think that that fade route or it actually it
was a double some kind of double move. It was
a hitch to the inside, and then he tried to
throw it fade to the outside. The safety never came
off the hash. He squatted on it, and then he
didn't bite on any kind of inside route and he

(06:44):
just went out there, and so you can't. I mean,
that's quarterback one on one, the quarterbacks sitting on the
half and the safety sitting on the hash, and he
doesn't bite, then you can't throw it. So that was
a bad decision. But I don't think we should have
ever been running that play in the first place.

Speaker 4 (06:58):
Well, let's talk about why they did what they did,
because all of us are watching the same game, and
we're all wondering what's going on with this run game.
I mean, first of all, I think we kind of
like you're looking for for two things. The answer is
to the what and the why, right, and the what
was Adam Mouhammad did not get the ball enough in
the game.

Speaker 5 (07:15):
I mean, clearly he was the better runner. He's a
healthier runner.

Speaker 4 (07:18):
You've been saying to Greg all week that with Jonah
Coleman's knee, he's just he's not Jonah Coleman, right, He's
somebody else with that knee injury. And that was painfully
obvious today. So I think we've known in the two
years now that Jeedfish has been here, he's gonna try
to take care of his guys. And maybe he was
a little bit too prideful, a little bit too stubborn
with Jonah and wanted to get him his numbers today,

(07:40):
whatever those were.

Speaker 5 (07:41):
I mean, guys, Jonah.

Speaker 4 (07:42):
Coleman in Big Ten play this year had ninety three
carries for three hundred and twenty six yards and five
touchdowns and nine Big Ten games. So he has been
not the same guy that he was a year ago
for a myriad of reason.

Speaker 5 (07:55):
So we know That's the what.

Speaker 4 (07:56):
The why is the question why in a game like
this when it's clear at day that Adam Muhammad was
the better answer at running back when it was working
with Adam Muhammad, would.

Speaker 5 (08:07):
They go away for him?

Speaker 4 (08:08):
For example, they had the ball to the forty one
yard line after the unsportsman like penalty on the Ducks.
This is mid first quarter, right Greg, four or five
to go, first quarter, you're down three to nothing.

Speaker 5 (08:18):
You got the ball to forty one.

Speaker 4 (08:19):
Adam Mohammad gets a nine yard run, a fourteen yard
run and then boom, they throw it into double coverage
and Demon Williams gets picked off. So why did they
go away from Adam Mohammad? Is it just a classic
case Mario? If a guy overthinking something, is he trying
to take care of a senior and Jonah Coleman? Is
he not believing Adam Mohammad. Does he think he's gonna
fumble the ball at some point? What is the logic

(08:40):
and going away from him when it was so painfully
obvious he was the best answer.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
I have no logic, That's what I just said.

Speaker 7 (08:46):
I don't know if you're just catering to the young
man because he's a senior and he's fighting through injury
and he's trying to play for you. But Adam Muhammad
wasn't the better running back the entire day. He wasn't
just a better running back. That's the best I've seen
him run entire season. He was quick, fast, hitting a hole, cutting,
showed a burst that I hadn't seen all year. There's
no reason to take him out at that time. Besides,

(09:09):
if you're just saying he's given the senior.

Speaker 6 (09:11):
I'm gonna tell you, if I, as a coach, have
something that's working right and that's working extremely well, I'm
gonna make you take it from me. I'm gonna make
you stop it before I go away from it. Now,
that doesn't mean I'm gonna head it off to him
every single play. No, I'm gonna mix his some short passing.
I'm throw it to him on a screen, a swing route.
But I am going to make you take away my

(09:32):
run game before I go away from it. And yes,
we ran the ball. You know with Ida Muhammad, you know,
maybe more than we have all year. But fourteen carries
for a guy who has one hundred and five yards
tells me that what he was doing work so why
not give him another ten and see what he, you know,
is able to accomplish with that. So I'm gonna make

(09:53):
you take away from me what's working. I'm not gonna
try to get too cute.

Speaker 5 (09:56):
It's just it just I.

Speaker 2 (09:58):
Keep saying this.

Speaker 6 (09:59):
It's not in fish to be patient with a run
game and to take what's being given by the defense,
especially if it's running and pounding the football. But it
was working so well today and it helps your defense out.
Our defense played well all day, and at some point
you knew if they had to stay out on the
field and were out there time and time again, there

(10:20):
was going to be a big play made eventually by Oregon.
And that's exactly what happened. Yeah, happen at the end
of the game. That really gave them the win.

Speaker 4 (10:26):
Yeah, I mean you're talking about you know, we had
a good, nice two or three minutes there right after
ten sales touchdown to kind of dream about maybe the
dog's getting a stop and maybe coming back and winning
this thing.

Speaker 5 (10:37):
Nineteen fourteen, rushing the field.

Speaker 4 (10:39):
Yeah, on the fourth and eight played at Denzel Boston.
I made it nineteen fourteen. We're just under nine minutes
to go and then fifty nine seconds of clock time
later on third and nine, which I don't know last
time I checked as a favorable position for the defense
to be in third nine, like you want to be
in those positions right, third and long, and Dante More
hit Malik Benson on what looked like a sea out

(11:00):
touchdown and catch and run for sixty four yards and
the game is over. So I mean, look, Greg, you
said in the in the open the defense had to
be almost perfect today, with the way the offense was performing,
with the way the passing game was performing, they had
to be almost perfect. They had a shot at a
pick on the first drive of the game, bounces right
off of Dylan Allen's chest.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
By the way, those okay.

Speaker 5 (11:22):
There you go.

Speaker 4 (11:23):
They could not they could not force those turnovers when
they had an opportunity. But I'm just I'm flummixed by
this by the play of the quarterback.

Speaker 5 (11:32):
Guys.

Speaker 4 (11:32):
Look, I know he's nineteen years old. I realize he's
playing his first game of his basically second year at Washington.
But if you would have told me after the Sun
Bowl performance against Louisville a year ago, when he was
dropping dimes all over the place, Okay, and I get
that Louisville was depleted defensively. I understand that, but the
accuracy that he showed in that game was very impressive.

(11:52):
If you would have told me a year later he's
going fifteen to thirty for a buck thirty two touchdowns
and two picks against the Oregon Duck, I would have
said that to disappointment. These Dirton balls right and left
to Amaro Evans. He's got wide open receivers and he can't.
He's short arming the ball the entire day. It's almost
like either a he's rattled, be he's hurt, or see
him and Jetfish Mario are just not on the same page.

Speaker 7 (12:15):
I'm not sure I can't call that, but he doesn't
seem like he can throw the ball any distance. I
know Greg talked about having complete His completion percentage was
at seventy, but when the chips are on the table
and you have to make plays, he's not making the play. Yes,
he's nineteen, but we've been saying he's nineteen years old
the entire season. He's gonna have to make a play,

(12:36):
but Coach Fish has to put him in situations where
he's throwing to some guys and getting some guys open.
Like I thought, the two touchdowns that Boston made were
plays that coach Fish hasn't called. The first one was
a slant, and normally we have Boston doing the fade.
So the first one was a slant. The other one
when he put him in the slot and did a
crossing route. Those were two great calls, but we have

(12:58):
to make those calls throughout the game.

Speaker 6 (13:00):
Ye had a crossing route was surprising only from this standpoint.
In order to run a crossing route at that depth
to get an end zone, you need time. And one
thing that I saw several times today was the offensive
line had some breakdowns.

Speaker 2 (13:15):
In Blitz pick up. There were a few free.

Speaker 6 (13:17):
Runners that happened during the game where Demon had a
guy coming free. The slant route was one of them.
Guy came free, hit him, a great pass, great catch.

Speaker 2 (13:26):
You know that work.

Speaker 6 (13:28):
So it was pretty gutsy to throw that crossing route
to me when your offensive line has had some issues.
So you know, good for them that they were to
make that play. I just still think that there's something
to be said about protecting your quarterback and putting him
in position to make not to have to make those
bad decisions, and I just don't think we are patient

(13:49):
enough with running the football and taking what's given to
us by the defense, you know, pounding it in the ground.
And I just think that, you know, and Demon Mario,
first of all, we've only been saying nineteen for a year.
It can only be nineteen for a year. But I
think he's got to get better. Demon Williams has got
to become a better football player. Where he's at right now,

(14:11):
I think his decision making and when we're in tough
games like this, when we're playing tough competition has been
you know, shaky at times, and his accuracy on the
road has not really been there. And against again, when
there's pressure, when there's you know, the the when there's
when he's been hit a few times, maybe that's it, Softy,

(14:31):
he's been hit a few times, guys have come free.
His accuracy is not there. So I think there's definitely
a lot of work that DeMont Williams is gonna have
to put in during the offseason. I just hope that
the coaching staff gives him an opportunity to do that
by protecting him a little bit with their play calling.

Speaker 5 (14:47):
Well, and you know, the athleticism right of him.

Speaker 4 (14:50):
We really did not get to see a lot of that,
I thought at times this year, and certainly not see
a lot of it today.

Speaker 5 (14:55):
I mean, there's no doubt the longest run.

Speaker 4 (14:57):
The guy had was I think eighteen yards and that
was in the second half, you know, of this game
where they were kind of in desperation mode. So that,
Mario is the biggest disappointment for me that I thought
that with Deamond Williams where the year began, I really
believe that every game the Huskies would play, there's a
chance that Demond Williams was going to be the best
athlete on.

Speaker 5 (15:16):
The field that day. And that didn't happen very often,
if at all, this year.

Speaker 7 (15:20):
No, it only happened a few times. And I was
right with you, I called him must see TV. I'm expecting,
at least in this season a couple fifty sixty yards
runs and just being the best athlete on the field.
But when it happens, when the games like the Oregon,
the Michigan, the Ohio State and even in Wisconsin, we're
not even seeing any type of capability that he could

(15:41):
be the best athlete on the field. We're seeing the
Ohio State and Michigan has superior athletes and they're dominating
the young writer.

Speaker 6 (15:49):
I would tell you this, there was a couple of
hits today when DeMont Williams had to run the ball
where I was like, e yikes.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
I mean, so I'm gonna say this.

Speaker 6 (15:59):
I love to see Mon Williams run, but I don't
think we ever need to put him in a position
where he's running it more than four or five times
on design runs per game. Just and I know he
hasn't gotten injured, and he's tough and all of those things,
but some of the hits that I've seen him take
at his size does worry me a little bit. And
I'm sure as a coach you have to take that

(16:19):
into consideration when you're talking about playing him a whole
season long. Yes, today was the last game of the season.
I saw a couple you know, contacts on him that
he could have certainly you know, ended up with a
concussion or shoulder kind of deal. So I think I
understand why he's not running as many designed runs Mario
throughout the season, because he is a slighter guy.

Speaker 7 (16:41):
Well, if he's not gonna do the design runs, he
has proven that he's not a great passer. As much
as I thought coming into the season he was a
great passor. And you can look at his passing percentage
and say he's accurate, he's not. And we're not going
down the field, We're not going any type of distance.
So if you're not gonna run and you're not a
great passer, than what do we have.

Speaker 6 (17:02):
Yeah, I mean he's gonna run sometimes. I'm just saying,
if he's on the sideline not able to play what you.

Speaker 5 (17:07):
Have, well, I think there's ways to get around that.

Speaker 4 (17:09):
I mean, there was one hit that I think Greg
you talked about kind of right in the middle of
field where he ran into a wall. He just needs
to find a way to get down, get out of bounds.
A sideline is your friend to slide your buddy, right,
all that stuff, And I just feel like sometimes it
doesn't happen like that as much as it should.

Speaker 5 (17:23):
To me, it doesn't mean the guy can't run.

Speaker 4 (17:25):
It just means they have to try and protect them
and he's got to protect themselves. So again, whether it's
right or wrong, whether it's fair or unfair. Again, we
all have talked about the athleticism of demon Williams being
a weapon, a big weapon and maybe one of the biggest,
iff not the biggest weapons this offense has, and they
weren't able to tap it this year or whatever reason.

Speaker 6 (17:45):
Yeah, I want to see it. Don't get me wrong.
I'm just saying, you still gotta You know, when you're
playing dice right, you win a few times in a row.
Eventually you crap out if you keep going to it right.
So there, you just got to come up with the number.
And that's between scrambles and design runs and when you
run him, like you just said, I can't protect him.
If I'm running him on an off tackle power in

(18:07):
the middle of the field, I can't protect him. It
doesn't you can't get down and get out. When it's
that you're running up the middle, there's gonna be guys
that hit you. There's one particular play where and thankfully
the defensive back ended up getting the worst of it,
but that hit itself demand could have been you know, injured.

Speaker 2 (18:25):
So I'm just saying I want to see.

Speaker 6 (18:26):
Yes, there's five or six plays he's got to do
that design wise, and then you know, maybe another four
or five scrambles. But I'm just saying to expect him
to go out and play like, you know, the guy
in Baltimore. I just don't think that's it, because he's
gonna get hurt.

Speaker 7 (18:40):
That's what I wanted, the guy in Baltimore, the old
guy back in Atlanta, in Philadelphia.

Speaker 5 (18:45):
He's gonna get hurt him.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
He's gonna get hurt.

Speaker 7 (18:47):
It kept feeling like we were holding him back and Okay,
we'll do it next week.

Speaker 3 (18:51):
He's gonna get hurt. It never happened. So what are
we going to have then?

Speaker 2 (18:55):
A guy who can, from time to time make the
big play.

Speaker 6 (18:58):
Of course, I think Fish he's you know, he's in
love with the passing game, so he believes in demon.
But Deman's just got to get better, Mario, He's just
got to get better as a passer and use that
athleticism when it happens, you know, naturally. I'm just saying,
you're not gonna make him into a running quarterback because you.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
Know, he's just too small. He's just too small, man.

Speaker 1 (19:17):
I get that.

Speaker 5 (19:18):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (19:19):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
Sophy doesn't care about that young man.

Speaker 5 (19:23):
Very I very much care about.

Speaker 4 (19:25):
As a matter of fact, I was the guy that
was more nervous than anybody of getting a guy hurt.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
Right, Remember the.

Speaker 4 (19:29):
Wazoo game with a crack he took me to the sideline.
I was the one saying all year long, let's not
get this guy banged up. But that's different than don't
run the ball. It's be smart about it instead of
trying to make a nine yard run when you need
seven yards, get your seven yards and get the hell
out of bounds and get down.

Speaker 5 (19:44):
I think it's a.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
Can always do that.

Speaker 4 (19:46):
I think it's a total waste not using his legs.
I agree with Mario one thousand percent. I mean, may
not use it. I didn't say not use it. I
said you just got to be careful with your nerve. Well,
but okay, in order to be careful, you have to
try and attempt to run.

Speaker 7 (19:59):
The g It's not even a play action pass or
getting rolling out. So he has the option.

Speaker 6 (20:05):
Yeah, like he got smashed on the second player to
the second series of the game, I'm not and they
almost killed him.

Speaker 4 (20:11):
For an idea on the on the second player of
the game, the sack he took on the second play
of the game.

Speaker 6 (20:16):
He's staying, no, I'm talking about talking about when he
can be better.

Speaker 4 (20:23):
The guy is standing there like he's Peyton freaking Manning,
waiting for something to open up downfield. That's not happening,
and he ends up getting tripped up by a guy's thumb.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
But that god, that's because of his size. He's going down.
I remember, I remember playing Ohio State.

Speaker 6 (20:38):
I'm saying, guys are just barely touching him, and he's
going down because he's not that.

Speaker 5 (20:43):
He's staying there too long. I hear you, way too long.

Speaker 6 (20:47):
Man, he's got is you see how easy he goes
down when he does get hit. I mean, he's not
that big, strong guy. He's not going to hold up
if we're pounding him seven eight, nine times a game.

Speaker 7 (21:00):
Not gonna I'm not saying you gotta have design run
seventy I said today. I hope that that's what they do.
But what I'm saying is you have to. That's what
an offensive coordinator does. We go to his strength. If
his strength isn't throwing the ball down field, then we
have to roll out. We have to figure out ways
well he'll have the option to run as well, and
we have to we have to see.

Speaker 5 (21:26):
Let me just let me just wrap it up with this. Okay,
let me wrap it up with this.

Speaker 4 (21:29):
He's not a great passer and we can't run the
guy because he's too slight.

Speaker 5 (21:33):
So what's the point.

Speaker 2 (21:34):
Handed to Adam greg that's one game.

Speaker 5 (21:37):
We're talking about the entire.

Speaker 4 (21:39):
Season and that's what But I am to advantage of
his athleticism.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
All year long.

Speaker 4 (21:47):
They have sometimes and maybe they have to compliment him better.
Maybe that's the problem. Maybe they just don't have the
downfield passing game. Maybe they're looking for more of a
established receiving corps. I mean, the team's got, team's got
no tight end to speak of it all on this
foot team zero. They have no threat in their tight
end passing game at all? Don't They don't get consistent
with their running backs whatsoever? We know that, okay, And

(22:09):
let's face it, Denzel Boston did not have the year
we thought he was gonna have. Who knows what his
future looks like. He came out and walked today. He
might be out of here, by the way. Desmond, Roebuck,
Raid and Fine Bright guys like that seem to have
decent futures, but they're not ready yet to be impact
superstars at this level.

Speaker 5 (22:25):
So they're missing a lot, right, they're missing a lot.

Speaker 4 (22:28):
And I thought, naively so kind of like you did, Mario,
that maybe de mom would be, you know, the equalizer
in all of that. Did they be able to overcome
a lot of that because of number two is athleticism
and it just wasn't there.

Speaker 5 (22:39):
So here's what we'll do.

Speaker 4 (22:40):
We'll get a break, We'll get some of your phone
calls two age six, ninety five, ninety five, eight eight,
two nine or nine five. Oh, Husky Talk postgame is
on the AAR Dogs lose at twenty six to fourteen.
Right here on ninety three three KJRFM.

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Six to ten am on Sports Radio ninety three point
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Speaker 4 (29:53):
All right, Husky Talk post game brought to you by
Chevy Tracks bigger and balder, just like the Northwest and
Greg Lewis.

Speaker 5 (29:59):
Tracks is a.

Speaker 4 (30:00):
Small suv that gives you amazing style and all the
tech at an unbelievable price. The only thing more disappointing
than the Husky loss to the Oregon Ducks tonight is
Greg Lewis's lack of rhythm.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Damn on theta. He did not just call me I
have a lack of rhythm.

Speaker 4 (30:16):
You picked a phenomenal time to be looking towards the ground.
Mario Bailey, Oh yeah, I heard terrible. As mean as
they get, man, as mean as they get, the Grinch.

Speaker 5 (30:25):
The Grinch works period the world out there.

Speaker 2 (30:28):
I got rhythm, Okay, I'm a brother from the South.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
Well you're not.

Speaker 5 (30:31):
Showing it right now. I can tell you that. Here's
what we got.

Speaker 4 (30:34):
We got time for your phone calls at two eight six,
ninety five, ninety five, eight, two nine or nine five. Oh,
Huskies lose twenty six to fourteen. Uh, let's call the
phone line Steven's and Sultan Steven Nuran with Greg and Mario.

Speaker 5 (30:45):
Go ahead, man, how are you hey?

Speaker 22 (30:47):
Guys?

Speaker 23 (30:48):
How's it going.

Speaker 24 (30:48):
What a tough loss for us?

Speaker 3 (30:50):
Yep.

Speaker 24 (30:51):
I mean I was happy with Fish when we hired
him at first, but his mentality is we're packed twelve.
We need a coach come in here that has to
knows how to knock somebody in the mouth and take
it back. We need a Big ten coaches somebody's experience.

Speaker 23 (31:05):
Fish is a PAP twelve coach. He'd be great if
we're still in the Pac twelve. We need somebody to
toughen up these kids and push for it. Yeah, he said,
one recruit, Qush, But I'm not impressed with who's bringing in.
We need to bringing strong, physical players, not finesse players.

Speaker 5 (31:20):
Okay, he wants to.

Speaker 4 (31:21):
He wants a tougher, more physical head coach that can
play smash mouth football.

Speaker 5 (31:26):
And he said Jetfish, Ain't it.

Speaker 4 (31:28):
Have we seen enough after two years to know that
he is not the proper fit for this new world
order of the Big Ten?

Speaker 6 (31:34):
Greg Lewis, I'm not making assessments on all of that.
I am saying this. I think we should run the
football more. I think that it would bold better for
us in the Big ten if we had a offensive
system where we relied more on the run game, we
allow the you know, the field position to be a player,

(31:54):
and you know, run game travels, defense travels. I think
he's done a good job getting our defense better. I
think on the recruiting trill, he's recruiting some big, tough,
strong guys. I'm just hoping when he gets them here,
we don't still turn around and throw the ball seventy
five percent of the time, but that we utilize our
running game and we utilize the big, strong uglies upfront.

(32:17):
I do think over these last two years, for me,
I wish we would run the ball a little bit more,
and I think we had the personnel this year that
could have.

Speaker 4 (32:24):
Done that well. So this was in the Big Ten.
This is before today's game. I'm just looking at conference
games only. Okay, actually, no, this may have been. Yeah,
this is I believe updated. We went five to four
right in the Big Ten this year.

Speaker 5 (32:36):
Yes, nine games.

Speaker 4 (32:37):
Yeah, this is updated, so through nine games, and there's
some teams that are still playing.

Speaker 5 (32:42):
Maryland's among them.

Speaker 4 (32:43):
USC Michigan State YouTube as of right now is fifth
in the Big Ten in pass attempts. Okay, fifth and
the Big Ten. This is just Big Ten games and
pass attempts and they are number ten in RUSSI attempts,
so they are below average in rush attempts and they
are above average in it sounds like you want to
see that maybe move a little bit more with the

(33:03):
rush and maybe drop a bit with the pass. Part
of that, by the way, is winning games in the
fourth quarter. The more games are winning, the more you
can run the ball and protect the lead.

Speaker 2 (33:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (33:12):
But I think in a game like today, when the
run game was working and it was doing well for you,
you stick with that. You make the other team get
you out of what's working well. You make them bring
a safety down in the box. Now, when they do that,
guess what then works better? Mario, the pass game. It
gives you an opportunity to, you know, get to what
you want to do. But stick with that run game
until they do something different to take it away from you.

Speaker 7 (33:35):
Yeah, we've talked about it over and over, Like Coach
Fish just doesn't that's not his thing is to run
the ball. And then the Big ten that's what they're
doing out here, and we have to get better at it.
Like I said, we started off very strong in those
first three games and we were blowing them out. So
you could kind of run the clock out even then
even still trying to pass. But in the Big ten,
you have to run the ball, and we have to

(33:56):
want to run the ball. It's one of those things
that if you don't really want to do what you're
gonna do what you want to do, and he wants
to pass the ball, and that's what we do.

Speaker 4 (34:04):
James and Tacoma. You're on with Greg and Mario Husky. Hanks,
go ahead, James, Yeah.

Speaker 25 (34:09):
Does this lost put the rest the talk of Jetfish
be the favorite to go to Florida's Florida philling right now?

Speaker 2 (34:16):
If he watched the game today.

Speaker 5 (34:17):
Yes, No, they're not gonna hire a jetfish that.

Speaker 2 (34:23):
Thank you.

Speaker 4 (34:24):
Were you expecting some pushback? Yeah, James, I think I
think that's off the table for now. I mean, Summer
All the kid from Tulane seems to be the favorite
to land that job. There was a report that came
out about that earlier today, and I think that's just
kind of one thing that needs to be And I
don't know Greg, how you address this if you're Pat

(34:45):
Chun and the athletic department, but like what's.

Speaker 5 (34:49):
Going on here? You know what I mean?

Speaker 4 (34:50):
When I say that, like, what's what's happening at you,
dub Do we have a guy who has committed long
term to this program, or do we have a guy
that's looking to get out and use you dubbas stepping
stone to land a better gig somewhere else.

Speaker 5 (35:02):
Like what are we talking about here?

Speaker 4 (35:04):
If you have a guy, for example, who comes to
you and says, hey, if the Alabama job opens up
or the Michigan job opens up, yeah, I would walk
out of UDUB for that. Okay, fine, I understand where
UDUB is in the order of things in college football.
They're below Alabama, they're below Michigan. But if we're talking
about losing I got of UCLA, I don't want to
hear that talk. I don't want to I can't stomach

(35:25):
hearing about a guy going to UCLA from Washington. So
I think all of this talk somehow someway needs to
simmer down a little bit, and there's got to be
some continuity that starts to develop on this campus.

Speaker 2 (35:37):
Well, I mean, I'm gonna be honest.

Speaker 6 (35:39):
You know, I've only been a media person for twenty
years now, right, but I consider myself more of a
former player. I think a lot of this is more
conjectured than anything. Somebody thinks it's, you know, something interesting
to talk about and put out there. I have never
heard Jedfish say that, you know, I've been thinking about
other jobs or I'm looking at their jobs. And the

(36:00):
fact that we put his name in those things is
because folks in the media put his name in those things.
And you can say, well, those things come from somewhere
all you want. But I for one, never felt like
he was leaving to go to Florida or UCLA or any.

Speaker 2 (36:13):
Of that kind of stuff. And I've been vocal about that.

Speaker 4 (36:15):
So you think that Jed's committed long term to Washington,
I think he is okay, and until he isn't okay.

Speaker 6 (36:21):
But I'll tell you this kind of like a Kaylin
de Boor situation. Right if Jedfish takes us to the
playoffs and then he kind of pulls that into a
big job, Great we just made the playoff.

Speaker 2 (36:32):
Yeah, for sure, I'll take that.

Speaker 4 (36:33):
I think all of us have said from the start,
if you benefits from all this, then fabulous.

Speaker 5 (36:37):
Great.

Speaker 4 (36:38):
I mean, this isn't in some ways the new order
of things Mario in college football. But I do think
that we have reached a point with this current situation
where I would be not shocked, because I think to
use the word shock in college football is a little
bit naive. Now, nothing would surprise me in college football.
I'd be fairly surprised at this point if Jedfish wasn't

(36:58):
a Husky coach in a year from now, next season.
And that makes me feel good about next year. What's
going to happen in year four, in twenty twenty seven beyond.
I got no idea, but the idea of a lot
of guys coming back Mario from this football team. The
future looks to be trending up, at least for now
for this program.

Speaker 7 (37:16):
I don't know coach Fish, and I've never of course,
i've never heard him say that. I just keep hearing
the rumor and I get curious to why everybody has
that rumor.

Speaker 3 (37:25):
To why he would leave.

Speaker 7 (37:26):
But just looking at our season, I can't see why
he should leave or why anybody would say we're going
to take him. He's done such a wonderful job at
Washington and we're gonna give him a bunch of money.
So for me, he's done a great job recruiting, He's
done a great job as far as getting this program
when we lost everything and everybody two years ago.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
Right.

Speaker 7 (37:48):
So I'm hoping that he stays. If that's what he
wants to do, then good for him in the future.
But for right now, it feels like he's gonna stay here.

Speaker 2 (37:55):
No doubt if he stays, which I believe he will.

Speaker 5 (37:59):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (37:59):
He needs to get better, right, and Demand needs to
get better. Right. Those are two people.

Speaker 6 (38:03):
But I'll tell you you know, I said this off
the air we were talking about Demand, because you know,
maybe I sounded real critical in the first half of
the show. I'll tell you what I wasn't. I was
crap my sophomore year. I didn't do hardly anything out here.
My sophomore season wasn't that. I wasn't a bad player.
I just didn't put myself in a position to do
things well by making some bad decisions. Came back in

(38:24):
the off season after my sophomore year. I worked my
ass off, I was in the weight room, I was
watching film. I was getting stronger, I was getting faster,
and I came back my junior year and I was
a hell of a football player. And Demon Williams can
do just that. We see how talent he is, how
fast he is, and we've seen him be accurate, we've

(38:45):
seen his arm strength. Demon Williams can come back next
year and be all the things that we think he
can be. So it's about how much they dedicate themselves
to the off season, because right now we're not as
good a team as Michigan, Ohio State, Indiana and Oregon.
We can play with everybody else pretty much into Big ten.
You know, we're in that class with the Iowas if

(39:06):
we get them at home, you know, that kind of thing.
But we're still a little bit of getting well, i'm sorry,
getting better away from being one of those teams.

Speaker 4 (39:15):
We still got to get bad to be. Scott and
Shahlis you're on the air. Go ahead, Scottie, Hey.

Speaker 26 (39:21):
Guys, thanks for taking my call.

Speaker 22 (39:23):
You know, seven years ago Mario crystal Ball at Oregon said,
you know, we want.

Speaker 27 (39:27):
To be out.

Speaker 26 (39:28):
We want to out tough you and just beat you
up and win the fourth quarter. A couple of years ago, Landing.

Speaker 22 (39:32):
Said, you know, Oregon wants to be the sec of
the West, and people snickered and husky fans, you know, Dan.

Speaker 27 (39:37):
Lanning blah blah blah.

Speaker 26 (39:38):
Well, they've averaged eleven years, eleven wins a year in
the seven years. So that's, uh, you know, it's working,
and that's where we're chasing. Second point is, you know
Oregon does at this point what Ohio State does, and
they just bowla constrict you python, you and one through eleven,
one through twenty two, one through eighty five, enough plays

(40:00):
get rammed where their guys are going to win enough
of the plays individually that eventually they're going to make
one or two or three more plays than you.

Speaker 22 (40:07):
And that's what it was today. You know, going into
this year, my expectation and my hope was, you know,
have we closed the gap versus Michigan, Ohio State in Oregon?
And we have, that's for sure.

Speaker 26 (40:20):
But next year, I think Jeff Fish has somehow got
to win a.

Speaker 22 (40:24):
Football game against you know, Indiana or Penn State or
the Zeros to you know, to get over the hump.
You know, right now, he can beat the teams he's
supposed to, but you know, you've got to beat some
of you're not supposed to, and I think he can
do it. I think another year, you know, at the
moon and the way the recruiting's going, I believe that

(40:45):
he can do it.

Speaker 26 (40:46):
And that's all I got.

Speaker 5 (40:47):
So thank you guys for a great year's usual and
appreciate it.

Speaker 4 (40:51):
Scotty, Yeah, I mean have you made improvements over last year?

Speaker 2 (40:55):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (40:55):
I mean you've gone from six and seven to eight
and four. You've gone from four and five to five
and four conference, You've gone from getting destroyed by three
or four teams. To let's face it, maybe outside of
the Ohio State game, we can debate the context to
the final score. Really destroyed by nobody. I mean, they
were in the game of every game in the fourth
quarter for the most part, they played all season long,

(41:17):
and that was not the case last year.

Speaker 5 (41:19):
We know that, right.

Speaker 4 (41:20):
So they have made some strides, there's no doubt about that.
The question is what do they need to do to
take the next step?

Speaker 5 (41:26):
And then for.

Speaker 4 (41:27):
Today, boy, I would have loved to have known, guys,
what would have happened if the Huskies could have gotten
off the field on third and nine from the thirty
five yard line before that sixty five yard touchdown to Benson.
What happened on that play? Because the place was about
to erupt. It was going to erupt. Greg if you
dub could have gotten to stop there and gotten the
ball back.

Speaker 6 (41:44):
Well, I'll tell you a couple of things. One you
asked about what can they do to take that next
step and get better? And this is what we saw
in that play. You didn't see anybody get to their
quarterback in his face. Maybe they are guys from the
aids kind of crept around. But we need a big
monster on the front of our defensive line. We need
a guy who can rehab it getting quarterbacks faces, make
him sell the ball, not have enough time to throw

(42:06):
that route. The receiver came from the outside to run
an inside scene. He got on the inside of the corner,
caught the ball in stride and from there it was
terrible tackling the guy who tried to I think it
was one of my favorite players, young guy Ray Shawn Clark,
who tried to make the tackle and he got hit
by Takario Davis who knocked him down and only got

(42:29):
a pitty pat on his shoulders and the guys off
to the race of a touchdown. But it starts with
we need somebody on the front of our defensive line
that can push the gap, get in a quarterback's face,
get pressure on him, hit the quarterback knock him down
so they don't have time to throw those kind of passes,
and then in the secondary make the tackle. That was
a huge backbreaking play. We had come all the way

(42:50):
back and for them to have that play, guy's mistackles.
But really it starts with the quarterback having a clean
pocket in front of him and able to throw that
pass with that timing.

Speaker 5 (42:59):
You see happened on that play. Mario.

Speaker 7 (43:01):
I thought it was what happened against Ohio State. I
thought he brought the blitz, and when he brought the blitz,
we didn't get anybody in his face and he got
the ball off. Once he got the ball off, it
was a race and Benson turned on some speed. He
took it to the house. But I thought it was
one of those times where coach called the blitz third
and eight, thought we could bring to bring some people

(43:21):
and it didn't work out. It didn't pan out for us.

Speaker 6 (43:23):
And when you have a monster up front, you don't
have to rely on the blitz, you know what I'm saying.
You can actually rush four, sometimes you can rush three,
and then your pressure, if it's always coming from the outside,
you leave clean pockets for the quarterback.

Speaker 2 (43:38):
To be able to see visually in front of him.

Speaker 6 (43:40):
If your pass rush can get pressure in the middle
and in front of him, now he can't see and
he's got to get over guy's hands or guy's helmets,
and then the ball can sell on you. So it's
just that clean pocket that you know they had because
we don't have those monsters.

Speaker 12 (43:54):
Now.

Speaker 2 (43:54):
I'll say this coach has done a great job.

Speaker 6 (43:56):
With the defensive schemes and keeping us in games, being
but don't breaking coming up with a stop keeping teams
out of the end zone. But eventually you're going to
give up something when you're out on the field all
the time.

Speaker 4 (44:08):
How about we get Nate and Seattle and then we'll
get to a break after that. Nate, you're next up
on Husky Talk post game.

Speaker 26 (44:14):
Go ahead.

Speaker 28 (44:15):
Man, Hey, guys, thanks for thinking my call. You know,
it's frustrating. You know, we have four losses, right and
four and we have this offensive guru offensive as a coach,
and I think our defense gave up twenty five or
more points twice this year. And you know there was
just a couple of games there that you know, we

(44:35):
just choked. I don't know what happened, but I truly
in my heart think that we are in this game
today and we could have won it. But you know,
when you call plays the way that he does and
just stick to the pass like he does, two things
are going to happen. You're eventually going to be a
one dimensional offense and have to go away from the run.
And two, your defense is going to get tired, and

(44:56):
because there's going to be three and outs. And Adam
Muhammad was on pace for two hundred yards after the
first quarter and then the guy doesn't get a carry
in the second quarter. So yeah, I don't understand it.
You have a you know, a guy in Jonah Coleman
who's probably at sixty seventy percent, like just riding hamet
to the whole game.

Speaker 4 (45:16):
Yeah, he just didn't have it today, Jonah Coleman. And
I don't blame the guy. Last time we saw him,
he had a knee breeze that was you know, nine
feet long, for crying out loud, So he's not going
to be the same player.

Speaker 5 (45:25):
And it's it's perplexing. I mean, they just.

Speaker 4 (45:27):
Were not able to get any kind of a rhythm
at all. And Native's exactly right. They had two games
this year imagine this day and age in college football,
and maybe this is just life in the Big ten, right, right,
two games where they allowed twenty five points for more. Actually,
they only allowed more than twenty five one time, and
that was the SA against the Oregon Ducks. The other
game was Illinois where they allowed twenty five, but they

(45:48):
won forty two to twenty five in that game. So
I don't really have a lot of complaints about the defense. Yeah,
there were some clutch plays that went for the opponent
like to day, for example, like the touchdown to in
the end zone here on the Blitz obviously earlier in
the year. But outside of a couple of plays here
and there, or maybe the defense got caught with their

(46:08):
pants down, I thought the defense kept you in every
game you played this year.

Speaker 6 (46:12):
In today's college football, hold the team under thirty points
is pretty good defense, right. There's so many ways teams
and score. There's so many great athletes. They've created a
situation where you can barely touch wide receivers. Teams have
figured out how to get the ball the great running
backs and slot guys in space. So there's a lot
of points being scored in college football.

Speaker 2 (46:31):
So for your.

Speaker 6 (46:31):
Defense to have one game where they gave up twenty
six all year, it means that you had a chance
to win every football game.

Speaker 2 (46:37):
You were in every game. So kudos to to coach Walters.

Speaker 6 (46:41):
You know, he changed the trajectory of our defense because
last year that was in the case. We gave up
plenty of points, especially in the second half. He did
a good job. Now we have to figure out again.
Demon's got to get better, and I think again the
play calling has got to get better.

Speaker 3 (46:56):
That's the bottom line.

Speaker 7 (46:57):
Coach has to get better calling the players, getting the
ball to the playmakers. Demon has to get better, especially
in these big games. If you look at his stats
in the four games that we lost, they're horrendous. We
can't seen the score, touchdowns, we can't see the defense
had us in this game until the middle of the
fourth quarter when we had that one pass that they

(47:18):
flopped on.

Speaker 4 (47:18):
Yeah, well we'll do this, We're gonna break. We'll come
back and wrap it up. Grab more of your phone calls.
Twenty six to fourteen lots today for you dub against
the Ducks. We're getting caught up in all the scores,
including the Iron Bowl. Alabama Auburn next on ninety three
to three KJRFM.

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Speaker 4 (54:03):
All Right, we're back here inside Husky Stadium twenty six
to fourteen loss for you to have today, uh bittersweet
moment for the radio audience. Final segment of the year,
the Husky Talk postgame Show, brought to you by your
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the Huskies.

Speaker 2 (54:43):
Pick somebody, Dillon Allen.

Speaker 6 (54:45):
Dillard Allen had a really good game for a defensive beck,
especially tackling and coming up making plays in the backfield.

Speaker 2 (54:51):
Sol Dillard.

Speaker 4 (54:52):
Allen's my player, all right, Eleven tackles overall, a couple TFLs.

Speaker 5 (54:56):
Mario, come on, just do it. You know you want
to do it.

Speaker 2 (54:59):
Just do it.

Speaker 7 (55:00):
We can go with the safety, the Husky safety Denner
and Allen.

Speaker 5 (55:07):
Did they not give up a sixty five yard touchdown?

Speaker 6 (55:09):
And old faith old Faithful got beat up.

Speaker 2 (55:16):
I think he might have had a stinger.

Speaker 4 (55:17):
Well, Old Faithful at nine tackles and a half a
tea fl in the game.

Speaker 2 (55:21):
Then I to him for doing that with a bad shoulder,
because it looks like he.

Speaker 4 (55:25):
All right, let's go to the phone line, Sam and Spokane. Sam,
you're on the air. How about it?

Speaker 5 (55:29):
Man?

Speaker 3 (55:31):
Hey, hey, thanks for taking my call.

Speaker 2 (55:32):
Guys, as someone who has not played football, when I
watch it, when we blitz like on third and nine,
third and ten, and then we.

Speaker 27 (55:42):
Play soft coverage.

Speaker 23 (55:43):
Does that like contradict the blitz, Like shouldn't that speed
up the quarterback?

Speaker 27 (55:47):
And then we should play man?

Speaker 26 (55:49):
So there is they aren't just so.

Speaker 25 (55:51):
Wide open like when our quarterbacks play shell.

Speaker 27 (55:55):
That's my question. Love you guys go dogs.

Speaker 2 (55:57):
Yeah, there's different types of blitzes.

Speaker 6 (55:59):
You know, there's zone blitzes, there's zero blitzes, there's blitz
with zone coverage behind it. So I think Ryan Walters
is the type of guy who when he takes a
chance blitzing, he still likes to play zone behind it sometimes.
So you do that by you know, having your linebackers
maybe drop out at the last minute and have some
second night dairy guys coming. I think on those particular

(56:20):
plays though, the linebackers, the linebacker came and the secondary
is playing outside in and so they gave him a
release inside hoping that the safeties will come up. But
you get enough pressure on the quarterback to make it
a bad throw. Unfortunately, when you don't get there, there's
a guy who's going to be open, and now you
got to come up and try to make the tackle.
And when you don't make the tackle. You exacerbate the problem.

(56:42):
Now it's the touch.

Speaker 4 (56:42):
Yeah, how good did you think Oregon was? Watching them
play in person for the first time this year.

Speaker 7 (56:47):
I thought they were average And honestly, the way our
defense played, I really thought they were average. Our defense
did a great job and our offense. After watching us offense,
I thought we had a chance today. So Oregon, we
we could have win that game. Like I said, we
were in until the end of the fourth quarter or
the middle of the fourth quarter.

Speaker 2 (57:08):
Yeah, they're definitely not gonna win. No, it's no championship.

Speaker 6 (57:11):
So whatever whatever field NICs pay for, this team is
still gonna come up at short.

Speaker 5 (57:16):
Well, here's the thing.

Speaker 4 (57:18):
I was talking to John Canzano about this after the
game was over, and I told him the same thing
that you guys just said.

Speaker 5 (57:22):
It was like, man, I was, I didn't think they
were that. I mean all that, you know.

Speaker 4 (57:26):
I mean, they're good team, give them credit for what
they've done, came here and won, blah blah blah. But
I don't see any kind of elite team out there.
And he said, well, who is elite in college football?
He's right, this thing's wide open. I mean, so Because
of that, I do think that depending on the matchup
that Oregon gets and how healthy they are, they gonna
get those receivers back obviously first and foremost. If that

(57:46):
happens and they get the right matchup, I can see
them making a run. I mean, I think Ohio State
is the best team in college football. I happened to
like Georgia a lot myself.

Speaker 6 (57:54):
Personally, I like Indiana a lot too. Yeah, I think
has already beat organ Sure, but is there one.

Speaker 4 (57:59):
Team that is obviously absolutely head and shoulders better than
everybody exponentially?

Speaker 5 (58:04):
I don't see that in college football?

Speaker 6 (58:06):
Teassa. Here's here's why where I disagree with you, guys.
I think Ohio State has not played their best football game.
I think Ohio State is playing possible to a degree.
They play great defense, Championship caliber defense every week, right,
But most of the time they're just content with running
the football and giving Bo Jackson and those guys the
second half of games and not being real creative and

(58:28):
not throwing down the field a lot. I believe when
they get into the playoffs, they have they have two
guys on the outside that are better than everybody else.
And I think when they get into those types of games, Mario,
they're going to show that those guys are better than
everybody else. So I think Ohio State is much better
football team than everybody else.

Speaker 5 (58:45):
All right, Ron in Oregon, you're on the air. Run
go ahead, man, what's happening?

Speaker 27 (58:49):
Face off one? How you doing?

Speaker 25 (58:51):
What a game?

Speaker 26 (58:51):
Huh?

Speaker 5 (58:52):
Yeah? Great game. Never forget a defense.

Speaker 25 (58:56):
The defensive line stopped the run, and the offensive line
for the Dogs was able to run. They couldn't give
demand any time. So part of that's Demon's fault that
part of the line couldn't block well enough. He ran
around back there, and I think that was Oregon's game plan,
maybe give up a little bit of the run. But
Muhammad was having a great day, and I agree with

(59:17):
your partners there. God eat him. He was getting eight
nine yards of crack and then they started throwing the ball.
I don't know, I don't understand right.

Speaker 2 (59:25):
Well, it was close.

Speaker 4 (59:26):
Yeah, and Ryan, here's the thing, man, I appreciate the
call we talked about earlier.

Speaker 5 (59:30):
He did have fourteen carries.

Speaker 4 (59:31):
He had five carries in the first half and he
had nine carries in the second half. And somebody can say, well,
fourteen carries sixteen seventeen if one or two extra carries
come before that interception in the corner to Denzel Boston
and they get to the five six yard line without
a Mohammed and they open up something else and they
keep it maybe a little bit safer there and they're
not putting the ball up in the air and not

(59:53):
taking chances like that in a game like this one
are two extra carries could have made a gigantic difference
for this game.

Speaker 6 (59:59):
Yes, so seven more carries would make the even bigger
difference in this game.

Speaker 2 (01:00:03):
So I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:00:04):
I just think that, you know, if you have a
running back who's playing well, there's no reason he should
have less than twenty three, twenty four carries. And to me,
that's another nine or ten sol you know, four more
in the first half and another you know, seven or
eight in the second half. So I just think that
it was a missed opportunity for us today that could
have put us in a much better position now.

Speaker 4 (01:00:25):
But the other point too, and you've talked about this,
and we've talked about this, that that's really not.

Speaker 2 (01:00:30):
What Jed fishes na.

Speaker 4 (01:00:31):
He hasn't done that since he's been here, right, I mean,
if there's anybody in this football team who went healthy
deserves to have a gigantic day running the ball, it's
Joanah Coleman.

Speaker 2 (01:00:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:00:40):
And he hasn't done it.

Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
Do it, won't do it, hasn't done it, And I
can't tell you why.

Speaker 4 (01:00:44):
So why should we expect at fifty years old whatever
he is going into year three now at Washington, sixty
year as a head coach.

Speaker 5 (01:00:52):
I believe seventh year overall, whatever it'll be.

Speaker 2 (01:00:54):
Is he gonna change?

Speaker 5 (01:00:56):
Is he gonna wake up tomorrow and say I hit
the error of my it's who he is.

Speaker 7 (01:01:02):
It's a little late, but I will say, Coach Don James,
we were we were running the ball.

Speaker 2 (01:01:09):
That's what we did.

Speaker 7 (01:01:10):
We ran the ball, and we got Greg Sophomore year
we went six and five and didn't make a ball
game for the first time in ten years. He went out,
got Keith Gilberson here and he changed.

Speaker 2 (01:01:25):
To a different running the ball touch no.

Speaker 3 (01:01:27):
No, no, no.

Speaker 7 (01:01:28):
We passed the ball, he ran the ball, but he changed.
All I'm saying is the change. When I got here,
we had to wear socks up to our knees.

Speaker 5 (01:01:36):
You should be.

Speaker 6 (01:01:36):
Thanking me for that because I wouldn't to there, and
as uniform know me and the other captains, we changed,
We asked.

Speaker 3 (01:01:43):
Chas I'm saying Coach James changed at a late age.

Speaker 2 (01:01:47):
Win.

Speaker 3 (01:01:48):
It was all about winning, right, he made the change.

Speaker 4 (01:01:50):
Okay, well, maybe we should go to jet and say,
hey man, these guys need different socks. Right and the
story period, alright's got one more Pete in the parking lot.
I'm assuming Pete is no longer in the parking lot,
but Pete in the parking lot, you're on the air.

Speaker 27 (01:02:03):
I am still in the parking lot.

Speaker 3 (01:02:05):
Oh boy, and I love this.

Speaker 27 (01:02:07):
Hey, what have we known each other twenty years?

Speaker 7 (01:02:09):
Softy?

Speaker 27 (01:02:11):
Here's what I love the fact that there is so
much passion about this program. Again, we could have been
done when we lost the championship game and everybody left.
We could have been done. This program is back on
the com The people out here in the parking lot

(01:02:31):
know it. Yes, it's not easy, and we've changed divisions.
We can do this. This is a program on the come.
Let's win.

Speaker 4 (01:02:43):
Hey man, It's gonna take some work, there's no question
about it. I just think that for today, we're kind
of frustrated about what happened this afternoon right Greg at
Husky Stadium, because it felt like there were opportunities if
you would have fired maybe a few more missiles that
you had at your disposal that maybe, just maybe you
could have found a way to either a pull this
off or be at the minim I'm giving yourself a

(01:03:03):
real shot to do it.

Speaker 5 (01:03:04):
Lant in the game.

Speaker 6 (01:03:04):
Yeah, I think always when you look at things post mortem,
you think about what could we have done better, what
opportunities that we have, and not just today. You know,
this is a big, you know, loss of opportunity because
we thought that there were some things we could have done.
But also when you look at the Wisconsin game, this
could have been a type of season where we had
ten wins, and so post mortem you look at it

(01:03:27):
and you break that down. But I think what the
caller is saying, though we saw progress, We saw this
team getting better. We see the recruiting things that coach
Fish is doing, and there's brighter days ahead if we
can stay the course and we can make some slight
adjustments and guys and get a little bit better. So
I think, you know, as we go out, I'm going
to focus on the positives and hope that next year,

(01:03:48):
you know, I'm positive.

Speaker 2 (01:03:53):
Something we just got to come up with a different day.

Speaker 5 (01:03:55):
You were the one that brought up person that's Mario.

Speaker 2 (01:03:58):
Okay, Mario geinst the persty day.

Speaker 5 (01:04:01):
I was.

Speaker 6 (01:04:03):
I gotta be Peter or something like that. But no,
I'm gonna focus on that. You know, there was progress made.
We're getting better. There's some good recruits coming, and I'm
gonna pray like crazy or wish on the star or
find a clover or something that coach Pete next year
runs the ball ten times more per game.

Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
Yeah, coach me, coach.

Speaker 5 (01:04:21):
I'm sorry, man, you're talking. That's three coaches ago.

Speaker 4 (01:04:28):
Yeah, that's what happens, folks when you get old. You know,
I really hope that coach Lambe cauld run. All right, Well, Mario,
final thoughts. I mean Greg just kind of gave a
little post mortem there, just kind of went right into it.

Speaker 5 (01:04:42):
I appreciate that, by the way.

Speaker 7 (01:04:43):
How about you, Uh, you know, it's a little disappointing
to go eight and four, is that we went after
I was hoping nine and two.

Speaker 3 (01:04:51):
But I'm gonna do what Greg said.

Speaker 7 (01:04:53):
I'm gonna go in the positive thing and think if
we have demand back and coach fish back Adam Hammet Boston.
We got we got some weapons, we got some things
we could do in the defense. Coach did a wonderful
job on the defense. They surprised me all seasons. So
next season, I'm looking forward.

Speaker 5 (01:05:10):
To how you could have hey to the defense a
year ago.

Speaker 3 (01:05:13):
Now you love the defense, man, I'm just I'm amazed.

Speaker 7 (01:05:16):
Actually, like the first few games, I even thought, oh,
here we go with same old defense. But as the
season progressed, they just got better and better.

Speaker 6 (01:05:23):
So you were hoping, will he played eleven games because
you said nine and two?

Speaker 7 (01:05:26):
Excuse me, nine and two, sorry, nine and three, nine wins.

Speaker 2 (01:05:33):
I'm just curious. I mean he said ninety two. I
wanted to know what he meant, I would played eleven games?

Speaker 5 (01:05:38):
What he mean?

Speaker 2 (01:05:39):
I was thinking, he's getting old too. No, we we
are getting old.

Speaker 5 (01:05:46):
I believe you are.

Speaker 7 (01:05:46):
The oldest person in nineteen ninety we went nine and two.
I was thinking, you're you there, you go, there, you go?

Speaker 4 (01:05:52):
All right, Well, I think the future is bleak and
everything's missable.

Speaker 5 (01:05:54):
So what is this time with that? How's that sound?
We're going nowhere? All right? This is as good as
it gets people.

Speaker 2 (01:06:00):
No.

Speaker 4 (01:06:00):
I mean, look, guys, in the end, Udub's gotta find
a way to do a lot of things better. And
I think, like I just said on X and I'll
say it again that I think one of the real
frustrations for me for this year. If I would have
told you at the start of the year in late
August that Jonah Coleman, Demon Williams, and Denzel Boston would
have the kind of years they're about to have, I
think you would have thought that was a disappointment, right.

(01:06:22):
I mean, for Jonah Coleman to end up with not
even four hundred yards rushing total in nine are you nuts?
In nine Big Ten games to not even break the
four hundred yard mark is absurd. That's absurd for a
guy to have those numbers. Okay, well yeah, but he
hasn't hurt the entire year. He's been nicked up for
a couple of weeks now for certain, no question about that.

(01:06:43):
But the first five or six games in the Big
Ten he was not banged up. And to get those
types of numbers out of Jonah Coleman. And there's context
to it, play calling, offensive line turnovers, the defenses, you're
playing things like that. I'm just saying this for whatever
reason why it happened. You can side for yourself. But
if I would have told you back in August that
those would be the numbers, those would be the seasons

(01:07:05):
that Demon Williams, Denzel Boston, and Jonah Coleman would put up,
nobody would have accepted that. Nobody would have thought that
would be an acceptable year for your three star players
on offense. They were the biggest names you had over
the offseason going into the offseason. It was Demon Williams,
Jonah Coleman, and Denzel Boston. So the inability for Jedfish

(01:07:26):
and company this year to unlock those three guys is
a huge downer for me, and it's a big reason
why you're eating for absolutely.

Speaker 6 (01:07:33):
I think we would all agree that the offense as
a whole was disappointing this year, especially in Big Ten play, right,
And if we're going to take that next step, you know,
right now between us and the conference title, there's like
sixteen seven teams, and if we're going to take that
next step, that's where it's got to be on the
offensive side of.

Speaker 5 (01:07:50):
No doubt, all right, that's it for us. Andrews back
in the studio.

Speaker 4 (01:07:53):
Thank you, Mario, Greg Lewis, thank you everybody tuning in
this year. We appreciate it. That's it for us, another edition.
Thanks than we made it. The twenty twenty five Husky
Hanks Show Postgame edition is over.

Speaker 5 (01:08:06):
We'll do one more.

Speaker 4 (01:08:06):
Wrap it up on Tuesday at four o'clock and say
goodbye for the regular season, and then wait on the
bowl game. Huskies lose right here on a Saturday night.
We'll talk to you Monday at three on ninety three
three KJRFF Gold Dogs.
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