Pac-12: Tyrone Willingham
Last week, new Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez talked about his disappointment with the conditioning of his players. He called them "weak, really weak." Who knew he was also referring to their heads?
AP Photo/ Arizona Daily Star/Benjie SandersRich Rodriguez already has had to deal with a lack of fitness as well as immaturity from his Arizona players. Both are scheduled to appear in Tucson City Court on March 15 -- also involved, safety Jared Tevis and guard Eric Bender-Ramsay were charged with trespassing -- but in the court of public opinion getting into a fight where there are allegations of women being punched tends to inspire a high degree of consternation. While the details of the original report from the Arizona Daily Wildcat are decidedly one-sided -- it's all from accounts from the folks hosting the party where the fights broke out -- this is the sort of thing that shortens a new coach's honeymoon.
And from his experience at Michigan, Rodriguez knows as well as anyone about short coaching honeymoons.
This incident could be forgotten by September, buried under confetti celebrating an early season upset. Or if things start slowly, it could become a centerpiece of an initial round of "We told you so" jabs air-mailed from Ann Arbor.
Here's a not completely fair point: It appears Rodriguez thus far has been unable to persuade his players to buy in 100 percent. He told the Wildcats to keep up their conditioning just after he was hired and they didn't. And he's told them to stay out of trouble, which they didn't. With this incident, even with thinking time -- "Hmm, is driving back to this party a good idea?" -- players opted to seek out a fight, not walk away. Toss in a first recruiting class that didn't make much of an impression, and you can feel a down-tick in the momentum of athletic director Greg Byrne's universally praised hire.
Of course, winning solves problems and makes this sort of stuff go away. The problem is, the Wildcats have plenty of personnel issues on both sides of the ball. Further, the schedule does not set up well for a fast start: a nonconference game with Oklahoma State and visits to Oregon and Stanford before mid-October. And Rodriguez's systems -- a no-huddle, spread-option offense and a 3-3-5 defense -- will require an adjustment period.
If you are looking for a negative comparison -- hey, just call us the party pooper -- consider Tyrone Willingham's ill-fated Washington tenure. Willingham got hired at Notre Dame (a Midwestern power) based on a solid job at Stanford (2000 Rose Bowl) but then was quickly -- and many thought unfairly -- fired after three seasons.
Immediately upon his hiring at Washington, Notre Dame fans, who felt wronged by depictions of Willingham's termination, bombarded Seattle-area media and Huskies message boards with "Just wait! You'll see!" missives.
And guess what? They were right. Willingham was a failure at Washington.
Willingham and Rodriguez are nothing alike, and these notable similarities of career path are purely coincidental. The Pac-12 blog is firmly on board with a high grade for the Rodriguez hire.
But the takeaway here is big-time college football's persistent, sobering reality.
After all the high-fives Rodriguez's hiring inspired, he's not a sure thing. No one is. And be advised, Wildcats fans, that there are likely going to be more stumbles ahead as Rodriguez tries to build the program he wants, with his players and his systems. Recent events are reminders that you might want to stock up on some patience before planning for a long-awaited trip to Pasadena.
At Friday’s Fiesta Bowl media day, David Shaw, the third African-American head football coach at Stanford, said he’s proud of the progress minority coaches have made across the college football landscape.
“I am. I really am. … No question,” Shaw said. “I give a lot of credit to Bill Walsh. He has always done a lot for minority coaches. And Stanford likes to be at the forefront of a lot of different things. And it is kind of the way we do business. I’m very proud of my school.”
Shaw said much of his upbringing and influence to become a football coach comes from his father, Willie, also a longtime coach in the NFL and college.
“It’s something I follow with my father being a coach,” he said. “I credit my father, Tyrone Willingham, Denny Green, a lot of those guys that, gosh, did a good job and showed that they could win games so that opportunities for the rest of us are more prevalent than they were before.
“I think the athletic directors, there has been, gosh, last seven or eight years, a hard push by athletic directors to make more guys like me available, get to know more guys like me and give them opportunities when they deserve them.”
SPLIT TITLE?
Asked what the ranking landscape of college football will look like should Alabama beat LSU in the national championship game, Shaw said he didn’t know, nor did he really care.
“That is a great question that I don’t have an answer for,” Shaw said. “For us, we just concentrate on this game. We don’t care where we are ranked after this game. We don’t care what happens where anybody else says that we are. It just means that we are Fiesta Bowl champs. That’s all we can care about. As far as the championship game, that’s great, people will watch that and enjoy that, but we are just concentrating on our game.”
WARY OF TURNOVERS
While Oklahoma State’s defense gets knocked for the yards it gives up, one stat that is indisputable is turnovers. With 23 interceptions on the year and 42 total turnovers, the Cowboys rank second nationally in turnover margin. That’s a scary thought, said Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck.
“Forty-two takeaways is a statistic that doesn’t lie,” Luck said. “When they have to make a play, they’ll make a play. They can swing momentum. We have to take care of the football or else you see a guy in the other jersey going the other way.”
CHALLENGE ACCEPTED
Oklahoma State wide receiver Tracy Moore didn’t know that Stanford’s secondary hadn’t allowed an opposing receiver to gain 100 yards this season. He does now. He also didn’t know that only eight wide receivers have reached the end zone against the Cardinal this season. He does now.
“That definitely sounds like a challenge to me,” Moore said. “I know plenty of guys on this team, Justin (Blackmon), Coop (Josh Cooper), knowing that, now we’re licking our chops.
“All of that happened before. They gotta play us now.”
Here's some skinny.
At UCLA, ESPN LA's Peter Yoon reported that interim head coach Mike Johnson would like to be considered for the job. Here's his update on other candidates:
UCLA has been turned down by Boise State coach Chris Petersen, according to a source with knowledge of the discussions, and eliminated Houston coach Kevin Sumlin as a candidate after meeting with him on Saturday, according to a source. Al Golden of Miami is considered the next top target, though Golden recently signed a four-year contract extension at Miami.
There's some chatter out there about former Atlanta Falcons and Seattle Seahawks coach Jim Mora, Jr. My take: That would be a good hire. While things went badly for Mora in Seattle, let's recall that he was the first choice to replace Tyrone Willingham at Washington. He's a charismatic guy with an NFL sensibility that would translate well at UCLA. Recall that the last time a team in LA hired a charismatic guy with an NFL sensibility who had folks scratching their heads turned out OK.
Here's Jon Gold's take in the LA Daily News.
Sources have said that UCLA athletic director Dan Guerrero, who met with Sumlin in Houston on Saturday, is essentially rebooting the search and at this point, there are no clear-cut favorites. Miami head coach Al Golden, whom Guerrero interviewed for the job during the post-Karl Dorrell vacancy, is among the candidates, along with SMU head coach June Jones. Sources indicated on Saturday that there was minimal interest in former Oregon head coach Mike Bellotti.
UCLA has been the sort of job that more than a few folks thought might lure Bellotti back into coaching. But it doesn't seem, at least at this point, that he's high on the Bruins' list.
Meanwhile, at Arizona State, it appears that Sumlin might not be completely out of the picture, but that SMU coach June Jones' name is front-and-center at present. Still, there are plenty of other names in the rumor swirl. Writes Doug Haller:
Arizona State officials on Saturday met with SMU coach June Jones for more than three hours in Texas.
A report surfaced Sunday that ASU was in position to announce Jones' hire shortly after the university learned of its bowl destination. That wasn't true. According to a source, the Jones push slowed Sunday night. That doesn't mean it's over, but it could be an indication that ASU is having second thoughts.
Sources confirmed Sunday that Southern Miss coach Larry Fedora is still in the mix. Baylor coach Art Briles has emerged as a candidate.
I continue to hear ASU likes Oregon offensive coordinator Mark Helfrich.
Also, despite reports that ASU has backed off Sumlin, he still could be in play, especially if Texas A&M goes another direction in its quest to replace fired coach Mike Sherman.
In other words, neither coach search has moved -- at least according to reports -- decisively in one direction.
So stay tuned.
Price vs. Luck: Think back to your college football brain in August. Now look that bolded intro. Who would've thunk it, right? Well, turns out that Andrew Luck is a heck of a quarterback, but at present not only is Washington's Keith Price nipping at his heels in terms of passing efficiency, but he's also got more touchdown passes than the leading Heisman Trophy contender -- 21 vs. 18. Luck is almost certain to play well at home against a fair-to-middling Huskies defense. To lead the upset for Washington, Price will need to match -- if not exceed -- Luck's numbers.
Douglas C. Pizac/US PresswireWashington quarterback Keith Price enters Saturday's game with 21 TD passes, more than Stanford counterpart Andrew Luck.Who starts at QB, RB for Oregon? Not much to this one: Do Darron Thomas (knee) and LaMichael James (elbow) start for the Ducks at Colorado? Or do their backups: Bryan Bennett and Kenjon Barner? This pretty much is the only expected intrigue in Boulder on Saturday.
Hays or Maynard? While there's no single reason Utah and California are both 0-3 in Pac-12 play, the biggest is inconsistent play at QB. Utes QB Jon Hays replaced injured starter Jordan Wynn for the second half against Washington and has mostly improved in two starts. Cal's Zach Maynard started the season well but has struggled since the conference slate began, bottoming out last Thursday with three interceptions against USC. With two good defenses at AT&T Park, it's unlikely either offense will be able to run the ball 40 times and win. The team that is more efficient passing the ball likely ends up smiling.
Wildcats set free? There's a feeling that Arizona's players were playing tight -- more worried more about mistakes than focused on making plays -- in recent weeks as the losses piled up and coach Mike Stoops got more frenzied on the sidelines. We'll get a better feel for that Thursday night. The Wildcats have started slowly all season. If they get off to a quick, enthusiastic start against UCLA, you'd have to think a lot of players have loosened up since Stoops was fired. That shouldn't be over-construed as an indictment of Stoops, by the way. After all that losing and a coach firing, sometimes it becomes easier to play when you have nothing to lose.
Tuel time: Washington State QB Jeff Tuel didn't pick a great team for his first start since a fractured clavicle forced him to miss the Cougars' first five games: Stanford. While Tuel had his moments, he looked a little out of sorts against an A-list defense. But after getting his game legs back, Oregon State's defense offers a much softer landing. Tuel is the Cougars unquestioned leader. This is a must-win game for the Cougs' bowl hopes and for coach Paul Wulff — and in such games, unquestioned leaders step up, lead and make plays that turn must-wins into victories.
Hogs on the Farm: While the rise of Stanford football is not unreasonably connected to Luck, more than a few folks will tell you a culture shift was more important. A program that was seen as soft, one populated by smart young men with aspirations other than pro football -- because they wanted to make more money than the NFL could pay them -- transformed into an edgy, physical and, yes, maybe slightly dirty unit that played until the very echo of the whistle. Washington coach Steve Sarkisian has been talking about the Huskies playing physical football since he was hired to take over a team that went soft under Tyrone Willingham. The Huskies have taken some big steps forward -- see the dominant victory over Nebraska in the 2010 Holiday Bowl. But they aren't there yet on either line. Or are they? We'll see Saturday in the trenches.
Prince wears the crown: Kevin Prince is (again) UCLA's quarterback. While this has many Bruins fans slapping their foreheads, Prince was a capable passer in 2009 and ran the pistol offense well in 2010. He's just never been consistent and, most important, never stayed healthy. Well, Richard Brehaut is out for the year, so the QB job is (again) Prince's. At least as long as he can stay healthy, and barring any horrible play -- see Prince against Texas -- that forces embattled coach Rick Neuheisel to turn to true freshman Brett Hundley. Yet there is a potential positive spin here. What if Prince rises to the occasion? A UCLA win at Arizona would set the Bruins up nicely for a second-half run.
Sarkisian, Huskies scaling Pac-12 mountain
So Washington coach Steve Sarkisian picked an apt analogy for his rebuilding program when he adopted mountain climbing. It's a step-by-step process with plenty of chances to go rear-end-over-tea-kettle. He called his Huskies "inexperienced mountain climbers."
Christian Petersen/Getty ImagesSteve Sarkisian's Huskies have won eight of their last nine games.So the focus is on Colorado, which visits on Saturday. Not a "look how far we've come!" retrospective on recovering from an 0-12 season in 2008. Not a glance ahead to games with Pac-12 North Division rivals Stanford and Oregon. The present is challenging enough.
Yet it is clear Sarkisian's program has taken steps up the mountain. Washington has won eight of its last nine games. The last time the Huskies had such a streak? 2000-01 when they won 15 of 16 under Rick Neuheisel.
Not unlike Mount Rainier's instant and iconic association with Seattle, so too is it difficult to look at Washington football in the big picture without mentioning the Don James Era. That is what Huskies fans want back -- a national championship, four Rose Bowl victories, pre-eminence as a West Coast football power.
Four coaches have tried to approach what James did in 18 seasons. Neuheisel in 2000 won the Huskies' one and only Rose Bowl since James stepped down in 1993.
Rose Bowls? Toilet bowls is more like it. The Holiday Bowl win over Nebraska last December was the Huskies' first bowl game since 2002 and first bowl victory since that Rose Bowl following the 2000 season.
But Sarkisian believes the Huskies, while "inexperienced mountain climbers," are on their way back to the glory days.
"I think we can get back to that level and I think we are on our way," he said. "How quickly we get there is, I guess, the mystery of it all. But I think we can get there."
And Sarkisian doesn't believe James' legacy is a burden. Rather it's a foundation for his faith.
"I firmly believe that anytime a football program has been to that place before it is a lot easier to find your way back and to find your way back on a consistent level," he said.
Of course, the Huskies aren't there yet, particularly on defense. It's hard to get to the Rose Bowl while giving up 427 yards per game.
But they've got a quarterback for the future (and present) in sophomore Keith Price and will only start seven seniors against the Buffaloes. By way of comparison, 10 freshmen or sophomores will start.
When Sarkisian discusses his rebuilding plan, he talks about hiring a good staff and recruiting, which makes perfect but unenlightening sense. But what he comes back to -- and in relation to hiring a staff and recruiting -- is team culture. Transforming a losing locker room into a winning one before much winning takes place is the chief task of a coach taking over a woebegone program. It's a matter of, Sarkisian said, "continually finding ways to get your current team to believe in what you are doing."
He said, "That can come on the practice field. It can come in team meetings. It can come in team exercises you are doing as a group from game-day opportunities. But to continually find ways to reinforce the beliefs that you want them to believe in so that the culture can start to change."
It would seem that Sarkisian is doing a good job of leading his team up that mountain, but the real tests will be Stanford and Oregon, the top-10 programs lording at present over the North Division and the entire conference. The Ducks' recent dominance over the Huskies, in particular, is a summit Washington fans are eager to climb over. (Just see below).
But those are strides for another day. If the Huskies stop watching where their present footing is, they might just topple over.
Let's not forget that the last time Washington started 4-1 -- in 2006 under Tyrone Willingham -- it ended up losing 27 of its next 32 games.
Price steps from the shadows to the spotlight
Steven Bisig/US PresswireWashington quarterback Keith Price has made many of his best plays throwing outside the pocket.Keith Price was the No. 120 athlete in the nation, in fact. Who knew there were that many athletes?
Ah, but Sarkisian had raised an old former quarterback's eyebrow at Price while scouting Barkley. When he was hired to replace Willingham, he made an inspired decision that went completely unheralded at the time.
"That was one of the key things we wanted to get done as soon as I took this job: Keep [Price] committed here," Sarkisian said.
Entering the season, Price, a 6-foot-1, 195-pound sophomore, was mostly viewed as the guy who would hand the ball to tailback Chris Polk. Be a game manager. Don't screw things up. Behave.
Instead, he presently ranks ninth in the nation in passing efficiency and is tied for the lead with 14 touchdown passes. He's completed 67 percent of his passes with just three interceptions, and the Huskies are 3-1 in large part because of his immediate success.
Barkley, while a likely NFL first-round draft pick this spring, ranks 34th in the nation in passing efficiency. Just saying.
Price's only previous significant action before this season was a start at Oregon last year when Jake Locker was hurt, and he turned in solid but unspectacular numbers: 14 of 28 for 127 yards with a TD and no interceptions in a blowout loss. Spring practice began with Price expected to be in a tight battle with Nick Montana -- yes, son of Joe -- to replace Locker. It ended with Price the clear starter.
Still, an impressive spring game and consistent playmaking in practice is one thing. What about when the lights go on and the action counts?
Question answered. Price, reputed to be cooler under pressure than a fall evening in Seattle, seems almost amused that folks are surprised.
"I knew how good I could play," Price said. "I knew my potential."
That's not just Price's personal confidence. That is a common theme among the Huskies players and coaches. While fans and media are agog with "Can you believe how good Keith Price is?" the Huskies coaches and players say they saw this coming.
"He's been doing this for us every day in practice," Sarkisian said. "Did I think he was going to be leading the country in touchdown passes after four games? Probably not. But I did think he'd play well."
Polk said this before the Huskies visited Nebraska on Sept. 17: "I'm not surprised at all. He's one hell of a player and he's not reached his full potential."
Price and Polk will face a big test at Utah on Saturday. The Utes are tough in Rice-Eccles Stadium, which old Pac-10 fans are about to learn is one of the loudest venues in the conference. They play sound, rugged defense. The Utes are fourth in the conference in rushing defense, No. 1 in pass efficiency defense and have forced 12 turnovers, four more than any other conference team.
But what Utah coach Kyle Whittingham, who also recruited Price, sees on film is a quarterback who can make a defense look bad even when it is sound.
"He makes so many non-rhythmic plays for them," Whittingham said. "When the play breaks down, when the pocket breaks down, he's able to escape and find a throwing window and makes something happen."
That has been Price's best skill thus far: His creativity. While he's a good athlete, he's more of a pure passer than a runner. He uses his athletic ability to extend plays, not to scramble for yards. He's hit a number of throws downfield when on the run outside the pocket.
Sarkisian calls this Price's "stinger." Sometimes coaches want to tamp it down because it's outside-the-playbook thinking. But not Sarkisian, even if it sometimes leads to an unhappy ending.
"Many of the good plays that he makes for us [involve] extending plays and buying time in the pocket," Sarkisian said. "He's going to make mistakes doing that stuff, but I just don't want to take that stinger from him. We're going to coach him. We're going to coach him on ball security -- the fumble there on the sack on the two-minute drill right before the end of the half [against California]. Those aren't great plays from him, but he'll learn. I definitely don't want to take that stinger from him because it's a unique asset to our offense right now."
That "stinger" has been around for a while. Price has played quarterback since he was eight years old. He never played any other position. While he doesn't have the polish or the "wow" arm strength Barkley has, it's already clear he has playmaking instincts and outstanding vision.
Further, he doesn't seem to cloud his thinking with the analysis of minutia. The best advice he's received about playing quarterback? "Just keep playing, no matter what the score is. Just keep playing and keep leading. That's the best advice. Forget about the score and just play."
It's also worth noting that Price has been putting up these numbers while not 100 percent physically. He engineered the win against Cal on two sprained knees.
"I still have a long way to go," he said. "Hopefully, my knees get better, back to 100 percent, so I can really showcase what I'm about."
So 14 touchdown passes in four games isn't even Price's best. Seems like a reason to stay tuned.
Neuheisel not uncomfortable on the hotseat
AP Photo/Damian DovarganesDon't underestimate Rick Neuheisel and the Bruins this season.Peter Yoon of ESPN Los Angeles takes an interesting look here at Neuheisel, under pressure in Year 4 coaching his alma mater.
"Fair isn't part of this," Neuheisel said. "I'm never worried about fair. As I like to tell football players, fair is where they give a blue ribbon to the pig. That's the fair. This is about doing what has to be done for the sake of UCLA football. That's why if the powers that be determine that there is a better coach for UCLA football, then that's their decision."
"There isn't," he continued. "I'm telling you right now, there isn't. But if that's the decision of the course they want to take, then they can do that."
And to have that looming over his head this season doesn't seem to bother Neuheisel as much as fans and the media might think. In fact, Neuheisel kind of likes being backed up against the wall. He draws upon his playing career at UCLA for inspiration.
My first West Coast job was covering Washington in 1999, the year it hired Neuheisel. My impression initially -- and it has been mostly cemented since then -- is Neuheisel is a much better coach when he's facing adversity than when things are swell.
His first Huskies team had an 0-2 start, but just as fans started grumbling, it won six of seven. But then Neuheisel seemed to get cocky during that surge and allowed his players to celebrate with roses after winning at Arizona, a seeming Rose Bowl berth just a win away. Problem was the Huskies needed to close the deal and they didn't, suffering a shocking loss to an injury-depleted UCLA team.
The 2000 Rose Bowl team started with a big victory over Miami, a game few thought the Huskies would win, but then the Huskies lost at Oregon to open the Pac-10 slate. The galvanizing moment of the season, however, was the paralyzing spinal cord injury safety Curtis Williams suffered at Stanford. Neuheisel was pitch-perfect in how he handled that situation, rallying his team around Williams while not overplaying the sentimental angle. Also, while some see Neuheisel as "Slick Rick," a coaching used car salesman, that horrible incident was revealing of his true character.
This is from an interview I did with Williams' brother, J.D., when he was hired to be an assistant for Tyrone Willingham in 2006 (And understand: Neuheisel's name was mud with Huskies fans at that time).
"I'd see him at the hospital with his cap down so people wouldn't know who he was," Williams said of Neuheisel.
"He wept there. He loved Curtis. He cared about that kid. There were times I'd show up early in the morning or late at night and no one else would be around, but he'd be there."
While there were rallies-and-regressions over the next couple of seasons, my take is that after winning the Rose Bowl, Neuheisel seemed to get too comfortable, too sure of himself. I'm not going to wade into the swamp of point-counterpoint of what led to Neuheisel's demise at Washington, but part of it was Neuheisel getting distracted by his own, larger-than-life image. Based on many conversations with him since then, I think he'd agree, at least to a certain extent.
So you have the Rubicon of this season at UCLA. We are still waiting on Neuheisel to fulfill the coaching promise so many see in him. Time is running out.
Yoon does a good job pointing out that Neuheisel wants to be successful not just for himself but also because he loves UCLA, where he went from a walk-on quarterback to Rose Bowl MVP.
Neuheisel saw every previous job as a stepping stone to something bigger. He bolted Colorado for Washington for a million dollar contract, and then spent his time in Seattle seeming to flirt with other jobs annually. That, justifiably, bugged Huskies fans.
But UCLA seems like a destination for Neuheisel. It's where he's always wanted to be.
Folks thought Neuheisel was done when he got fired at Washington. They thought he was doubly-done when he sued the school (and won big, by the way).
Now folks think he's done at UCLA. Most pundits don't see the Bruins doing much in 2011.
In my experience, the best time to buy Neuheisel stock is when it's down.
Understand: These are not predictions. They are extreme scenarios and pieces of fiction. You can read last year's versions here.
We're going in reverse order of my post-spring power rankings (which might not be identical to my preseason power rankings).
Up first: Washington State
Best case
Idaho State isn't good; no one would say the Bengals should have been competitive with Washington State. But there was something about the way the Cougars marched over the Bengals like an army of steamrollers in a 62-3 victory that raised a few eyebrows in Pac-12 towns.
A 42-10 manhandling the following weekend over UNLV raised a few more. But it was a 38-17 victory at San Diego State that confirmed it: The Cougs will not be patsies in 2011.
"Making a statement? I don't know about that," said Cougars quarterback Jeff Tuel after throwing three touchdown passes and outplaying touted Aztecs quarterback Ryan Lindley. "We're 3-0. That's good. We've got a bye coming up. That's good. Then we start the Pac-12 season at Colorado. That's probably where we try to make a meaningful statement."
For three quarters, the only statement from the Cougs is "almost." Colorado leads 24-10 with eight minutes left in the final frame and is driving. But on a third and 4 from the Cougs 18, Travis Long catches Buffaloes quarterback Tyler Hansen from behind and slaps the ball loose. Washington State recovers. Three completions from Tuel gets the Cougars to the Buffs 25. A draw play for Rickey Galvin gets the rest of it.
The defense stops the Buffs again, but the ensuing punt is downed on the Cougs 8-yard line with 2:15 left.
Tuel to Marquess Wilson converts a third and 8. Tuel to Kristoff Williams for 33 yards gets the Cougs into Colorado territory. A screen to Logwone Mitz reaches the 14. Tuel scrambles to the four, but takes a sack on second and goal. On fourth down, Tuel loops a throw to Wilson in the corner of the endzone with seven seconds left.
"I started thinking about our 2-point play when we got the ball on the eight," Washington State coach Paul Wulff said after his Cougars improved to 4-0 with a 25-24 win. "I thought, 'What kind of name is Gino Simone anyway?' Sounds like some sort of pretentious fashionista doesn't it? Like, 'The spring collection from Gino Simone features silk and ruffles and bright colors that will make you feel fabulous!' Thought the kid needed a football moment. And I thought he would be open. I was right, eh?"
The Cougs get votes in both the AP and Coaches polls.
But then the rebirth hits a wall. An overtime loss at UCLA, is followed by a blowout home defeat to Stanford. Oregon State gets revenge for a 2010 loss to the Cougs, and Oregon rolls at home. A four-game losing streak has fans once again questioning Wulff. Athletic director Bill Moos says he won't comment until after the season, which is read as a refusal to give a vote of confidence.
Washington State picks up win No. 5 at California, but falls back to .500 on a late field goal by No. 19 Arizona State. Utah comes to town with hopes of a South Division championships, but the Utes trudge out 27-24 losers. Tuel scrambles for the winning score with no time left, which rocks Martin Stadium like it's 2002, as though Drew Dunning is again sliding on his knees after USC is vanquished in overtime.
Washington State, after winning just five games the previous three years under Wulff, is bowl eligible.
"Bowl eligible? That's great," Wulff said. "But I hate purple and that's all I can see right now."
The Cougars rolls 35-24 over the faltering Huskies -- last place in the Pac-12 North -- at CenturyLink Field in Seattle. Headline in the Sunday Seattle Times, "Sarkisian on the hot seat?"
Washington State whips Army in the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl to finish 8-5, winning four of its final five games.
Wulff signs a contract extension exactly one month before signing a recruiting class ESPN.com's Tom Luginbill calls, "Shockingly good."
Worst case
It was a 2-0 start, but the 24-21 victory against Mountain West bottom-feeder UNLV didn't inspire many folks in Pullman.
The 35-30 loss at San Diego State felt revealing. Sure, quarterback Jeff Tuel can throw the football -- see three TD passes -- but giving up four sacks and rushing for just 96 yards isn't going to get it done. Nor is the defense yielding 487 yards.
The Cougars lose at Colorado but come back to surprise UCLA. That inspires hope: They are just three wins from bowl eligibility.
But no more wins come. Stanford, Oregon and Arizona State deliver beatdowns. Competitive games with Oregon State, California and Utah still include unhappy endings.
Wulff announces his resignation before the Apple Cup.
"While the program is better off today than when I took it over in 2008, my chief regret is that we just didn't get it done," he says. "I am and will forever be a Cougar. I only wish great things for this program in the future."
No. 15 Washington trounces Washington State 41-17. The Huskies head to the Alamo Bowl, where they bludgeon Texas A&M 35-10. ESPN.com shortly dubs them "darkhorse national title contenders in 2012."
The Cougars hire Tyrone Willingham to replace Wulff.
Embree and Shaw share some similarities. Both are first-time head coaches. Both played for the program they now coach. Both coached in the NFL. Both say they want to retire in their present job instead of climbing the coaching ladder. And, yes, both are black, the fourth and fifth black head football coaches in conference -- Pac-8 to Pac-10 to Pac-12 -- history.
Here's a quick look at the new guys.
Jon Embree, Colorado
Replaces? Dan Hawkins, who never posted a winning season in five years in Boulder.
Where was Embree last year? He was the tight ends coach for the Washington Redskins.
What's he bring to the table that's different? Embree is a hardnosed old school coach -- Hawkins was decidedly new school -- who is from the area and played for Colorado under the revered Bill McCartney. He's spent 10 of his 18 seasons in coaching at Colorado, working from 1993-2002 as a Buffs assistant under three different head coaches: Bill McCartney (1993-94), Rick Neuheisel (1995-98) and Gary Barnett (1999-2002). He has repeatedly said that Colorado is his dream job, not a stepping stone. His singular focus is restoring a program that was once a national power.
What else? Embree, 45, is the first black head football coach at Colorado and the fourth black head coach in Pac-12 history (Stanford's Dennis Green (1989-91), Stanford's Tyrone Willingham (1995-2001), UCLA's Karl Dorrell (2003-07) and Willingham at Washington (2004-08). Shaw became the fifth in January)... Embree earned a communications degree from Colorado in 1988... He was a member of McCartney's first recruiting class... In 1984, he earned first-team All-Big 8 honors and set school single-season records for receptions (51) and receiving yards (680)... He was a sixth-round selection by the Los Angeles Rams in 1987. He played two seasons with the Rams before suffering a career-ending elbow injury in 1989 while a member of the Seattle Seahawks... His original plan after the NFL was to get into TV news, but he took a job as a volunteer assistant with McCartney and was immediately bitten by the coaching bug... He is married to the former Natalyn Grubb and they have three children, a daughter and two sons. Eldest son Taylor, is a receiver at UCLA, while Connor is a receiver at UNLV.
David Shaw, Stanford
Replaces: Jim Harbaugh, who rebuilt the program into a national power before being hired away by the San Francisco 49ers.
Where was Shaw last year: He was Stanford's offensive coordinator.
What's he bring to the table that's different: Where Harbaugh was boisterous, often eccentric and sometimes prickly, Shaw is mellow, polished and accommodating. That said, he's repeatedly insisted that doesn't mean the competitive fire doesn't burn just as hot. He certainly knows Stanford. His father coached there and he's a 1984 graduate. He returned to Stanford in 2007 when Harbaugh arrived -- they were together at San Diego -- so he's seen the Cardinal renaissance firsthand. And, just like Embree, he says that Stanford is his destination job and that he's not looking to move on or up in the coaching profession.
What else? Shaw is the fifth Stanford alum to become head football coach, joining Charles Fickert (1901), Carl Clemans (1902), Chuck Taylor (1951-57) and Paul Wiggin (1980-83)... He was a member of Stanford's 1991 Aloha Bowl team coached by Dennis Green that finished 8-4. He was also on the Cardinal's 1992 Blockbuster Bowl-winning squad coached by Bill Walsh that went 10-3. He finished his Stanford career with 57 receptions for 664 yards and five touchdowns... He started his coaching career in 1995 at Western Washington. He's also coached for the Philadelphia Eagles, Oakland Raiders and Baltimore Ravens... He's coached quarterbacks, receivers and running backs in his career... Shaw's offense ranked ninth in the nation in scoring last fall (40.3 ppg) and it amassed a school-record 6,142 yards, averaging a notably balanced 213.8 on the ground and 258.7 yards through the air... His father, Willie, had two separate coaching stints at Stanford (1974-76; 1989-91) during his 33-year coaching career, which was mostly spent in the NFL... His bachelor's degree from Stanford is in sociology... He was born in San Diego. He and his wife Kori have three children, Keegan, Carter and Gavin.
Pac-12 links: De Carolis diagnosed with Parkinson's
- Former Arizona RB Nic Grigsby is headed to Miami.
- Is Arizona State the sleeper in the South? The Sun Devils pick up a commitment.
- A couple of former California players agreed to NFL free-agent deals.
- Colorado coach Jon Embree is ready to face low expectations.
- Don't expect Oregon coach Chip Kelly to open up about Willie Lyles at media day. Even then, there's plenty for Kelly to talk about.
- Our best wishes go out to Oregon State AD Bob De Carolis, who has been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease.
- A look at Stanford decision making on fourth down.
- More on a recent UCLA commitment.
- Tennessee to NCAA: Don't look at us! It was all Lane Kiffin's fault.
- A Utah preview and ranking. The Utes will talk today, but bigger tests are ahead.
- There's a new book about Tyrone Willingham's tenure at Washington that figures to be controversial.
- Washington State's setup at media day.
- Lots of change for the conference as it heads into media day. An update on the Pac-12 Network. And there's good and bad news for the conference.
Well, for you I have an answer.
Willingham has been elected to the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl Board of Directors.
“Tyrone Willingham is one of the most respected names in college football,” said Gary Cavalli, the bowl's executive director and co-founder. "He epitomizes class, character, and the highest level of coaching achievement. Tyrone’s involvement with the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl will strengthen our conference and team relationships and help us continue to grow the game.”
Cavalli might have trouble selling that to Notre Dame or Washington fans, but Willingham is a nice get for the bowl game that features the Pac-12's No. 6 team.
Willingham, the news release said, "retired from the coaching profession after the 2008 season, relocating back to the Bay Area in the process."
Hmm. That's not exactly how I remember it but far be it from me to quibble.
Harbaugh bolts: What's next for Stanford?
Harbaugh has agreed to a five-year, $25 million contract to become the San Francisco 49ers' head coach, according to reports.
It appears Stanford fought to retain Harbaugh. According to ESPN NFL analyst Chris Mortensen, Harbaugh met with top Stanford officials Thursday, and the school increased its contract offer from December.
The late gambit wasn't enough. He will replace fired coach Mike Singletary.
Jason O. Watson/US PRESSWIREJim Harbaugh was 29-21 in four seasons at Stanford, including a 12-1 record this past season.When Bob Bowlsby hired Harbaugh after the Cardinal went 1-11 in 2006, most folks went "What?" Oh, people knew who Harbaugh was -- a longtime NFL quarterback -- and it was interesting to learn how successful he was at San Diego, but few thought much of the choice. And when Harbaugh barked, "I vow I will attack this endeavor with enthusiasm unknown to mankind," he sort of seemed, well, slightly manic.
And Stanford is not a manic sort of place.
Harbaugh was manic. And he also turned out to be a hell of a coach and a hell of a motivator. Sure, he struck gold when he signed quarterback Andrew Luck, but Harbaugh deserves all the credit for hiring an outstanding staff, recruiting well and rebuilding a program into a surprising national power.
His first season, his outmanned Cardinal beat No. 2 USC 24-23, despite being a 41-point underdog. That -- the 4-8 finish wasn't particularly inspiring-- was only a first hint of what was to come.
He went 5-7 his second year, 8-5 his third and 12-1 this season. Along the way, he sold his players on a blue collar work ethic, announced, "We bow to no program at Stanford," and made good on that by running up the score on USC in 2009 and taunting Trojans coach Pete "What's your deal?" Carroll afterwards.
What's Harbaugh's deal? It doesn't feel hyperbolic to say his marriage with Stanford -- albeit brief -- was lightning in a bottle. Coaching magic.
It's also understandable why he left. His stock will never be higher. Harbaugh is as competitive a guy as you'll ever meet. He wants to test himself all the time and on the highest level. If you coach football, that's the NFL.
And know what? If he washes out -- if the 49ers locker room knows only enthusiasm known to jaded rich guys -- then no matter. Harbaugh's track record in college is so good he'd again be a hot coaching prospect should he want to return in the future.
As for Stanford going forward, there is one hire that would immediately quash the despondency among fans who just days ago were flying high: Boise State's Chris Petersen. There are more than a few folks who believe this is the sort of job that could lure Petersen away from the Broncos. And the cerebral Petersen would be a good fit.
The top internal candidate would be offensive coordinator David Shaw. Shaw would bring continuity for quarterback Andrew Luck -- no, Luck won't reconsider his decision to return because of Harbaugh's move -- and likely would try to maintain the Harbaughian culture. He's a Stanford graduate and has significant NFL coaching experience. His father, Willie, was an assistant coach at Stanford from 1974-76 and again from 1989-91.
While hiring Shaw might not have much pizazz with fans and media, it would resonate positively in the locker room. It also would continue a Stanford tradition of giving black coaches an opportunity. At present, there are no black head coaches in the Pac-10(Colorado joins next year in the Pac-12 with Jon Embree). And, yes, that is still something worth raising an eyebrow over.
Also off the current staff: Greg Roman. The associate head coach was responsible for much of the Cardinal's offensive creativity. [Edit note: We inadvertently left Roman out of our first draft, which was an oversight].
There is a third option: Bowlsby again going off the grid. Let's face it: He's had plenty of time to contemplate who will replace Harbaugh. The general feeling all season was Harbaugh was going to bolt, either to Michigan or the NFL. So Bowlsby surely isn't flat-footed on the news today. Here's a guess he's already sent out some feelers.
Pause for a moment, though, Stanford fans. What a week, eh? Your Cardinal posts a dominant performance in a victory over Virginia Tech in the Discover Orange Bowl -- yeah! -- Luck announces his return -- yeah! -- scuttlebutt starts to surface that Harbaugh is seriously considering returning to the Farm -- yeah! -- and then (boom) it's announced that Harbaugh is headed across the peninsula to the 49ers.
Boo!
But don't get too morose. There is no reason to believe that Stanford is headed back to 1-11, to Buddy Teevens and Walt Harris. A winning culture has been established, much more so than when Tyrone Willingham left for Notre Dame in 2001, knowing full well his recruiting had been sub-par. The right coach has a good shot to maintain that culture.
Stanford is never going to be a team that regularly goes 12-1. It wasn't headed that way even with Harbaugh. But the Cardinal can and should remain competitive at a high level on a regular basis.
It just needs to attack this endeavor with enthusiasm unknown to mankind.

Academics: Stanford
This one's easy. Stanford is the most academically prestigious institution in FBS.
Athletic director: Bob Bowlsby, Stanford
He hired Jim Harbaugh. Things are working out there. And the Cardinal still dominates the Director's Cup standings.
City: Seattle
This is a tough one because the Pac-10 is a conference of great destinations. Seattle nips San Francisco because neither California nor Stanford are actually located in San Francisco.
Coach: Chip Kelly
In his first year, he led Oregon to the Pac-10 championship. In his second, the Ducks are national title contenders. Not bad. And his offense is innovative and entertaining.
Facilities: Oregon
Oregon's facilities are as good as any program in the nation.
Fans: Washington
The Huskies averaged 63,640 fans during an 0-12 season under a coach, Tyrone Willingham, who had no support. Huskies fans bleed purple.
Game day atmosphere: Oregon
Autzen Stadium is loud as any stadium in the country. At night, it's a complete frenzy. And, by the way, it's also an immaculate, well-designed venue.
Mascot: Traveler
USC's white horse with its Trojan warrior rider is one of college football's most identifiable symbols.
Stadium: Rose Bowl
UCLA's home stadium is a college football church. Best sunset in all of sports.
Strength program: Arizona
Mike Stoops brought Corey Edmond along with him when Stoops was hired away from Oklahoma. It was a smart move.
One game doesn't define Cal, Washington
Both surrendered more than 50 points. Both were sliced and diced for more than 300 rushing yards. Neither showed much backbone.
Their circumstances after three games are the same. And different.
AP Photo/Elaine ThompsonWashington's Jake Locker only completed 4 of 20 passes against Nebraska's defense.The Huskies are now 1-2 after being completely outclassed at home in a 56-21 loss to Nebraska. Locker turned in the worst performance of his career and may have severely damaged his once-soaring draft stock.
"I know we are better than the way we performed," Sarkisian said Monday. "I thought in the second half there were moments there where we lacked the competitive nature that this program prides itself on. I was disappointed in that. That will never happen again."
Meanwhile, California didn't enter the season with high expectations, see a predicted seventh-place finish in the preseason media poll (one spot below Washington). But the Bears were so impressive in a dominant win over Colorado -- albeit a weak Buffaloes team -- that they earned a national ranking before heading to Nevada. So high expectations developed.
Of course, high expectations are Cal's bugaboo.
Now what? Are these two teams going to wilt from disappointment and play indifferently and inconsistently for the rest of the season?
Here are a handful of relevant but predictable statements from Mr. Obvious: One game does not a season make (either way). There are nine games ahead in which to erase the bad feelings from Sept. 18. Both teams are 0-0 in the Pac-10 and therefore are in the thick of the Rose Bowl race just like everyone else.
So buck up. Shows some pride. Neither of you feels as bad as the 2009 Pac-10 champions did after its opening game last year.
As for us observers from the outside, this is going to be interesting. How players -- individuals and an entire team -- and coaches respond to adversity is often telling.
Just about everything went as well as could be expected in Sarkisian's first year. Now, at 1-2, there's an inkling that the honeymoon is over. Fans and media fell prey to Sarkisian's extreme optimism entering the season. He sold his team hard, and lots of folks (including me) were buying.
How well the Huskies bounce back will be revealing. After a bye, they figure to be underdogs in five of their next six games. They need five wins to earn bowl eligibility and to avoid their seventh consecutive losing season. That won't be easy in the Pac-10 this year.
AP Photo/Cathleen AllisonThe Cal defense struggled with Nevada's pistol offense, allowing 497 yards.Then there's Cal. I'll pause for a moment and allow the Bears fans to mumble imprecations to themselves.
That newly aggressive defense under new coordinator Clancy Pendergast looked abysmal and poorly coached against Nevada's pistol offense. Say what you want about how funky the scheme is, but the Bears were getting gashed by simple option plays.
And then there's Kevin Riley. Not to spoil the Pac-10 blog's objective distance, but I've interviewed him a lot through the years: I like the guy. I don't root for teams but I will admit that I think it would be cool if he walked away from Cal after a senior year that made him proud.
But he's got to show some senior savvy. He's got to be more accurate. He's got to stop throwing interceptions at horrible times, such as hurling a pick-6 when the offense is driving for a go-ahead score.
Further, more than a few fans are frustrated with Jeff Tedford. He's averaged more than eight wins a year in eight seasons as the head coach, but even he admitted during the preseason that Bears fans are not wrong to want the program to take another step forward.
Unlike Washington's plight vs. Nebraska, Cal has better players than Nevada. It should have handled its business. Period. So how the Bears handle this bit of adversity also will be a measure of Tedford.
Moreover, Riley and Locker are the conference's only two senior QBs. They need to start playing like it.
There is a tendency to want to write a team's ultimate story after every meaningful game, no matter that this weekend's thrilling win can be reduced to rubble by what happens the following Saturday. And vice versa. If Cal wins at Arizona on Saturday, things will feel much better in Berkeley -- Nevada loss? A fluke!
And Wildcats fans will be slapping their foreheads.
If the Huskies win at USC in two weeks and Locker throws for four TDs, then Mel Kiper, Todd McShay and the Pac-10 blog will go (shrilly), "See! Told you so!"
As Mr. Obvious said, "One game does not a season make." Sure, it can become the first part of a pattern. But it also can become a touchstone for a reversal.
Washington's defense needs to step up
It's about something that has been doing a perhaps surprisingly good job making Locker's life difficult the past few weeks: The Washington defense.
Tom Hauck/Getty ImagesMason Foster thinks the defense will be just as good as the team's highly-touted offense.I know. No way. The Huskies lost their two best defensive players -- linebacker Donald Butler and end Daniel Te'o-Nesheim -- to the NFL from a unit that ranked eighth in the Pac-10 in total defense (389.5 yards per game) and ninth in scoring defense (26.7 ppg).
But the Huskies defense has consistently hinted during fall camp that it's not going to be the weakling counterpart to what should be an explosive offense.
"They've caused us some problems on offense," said coach Steve Sarkisian, who calls the offensive plays. "They've caused turnovers. They've gotten after the quarterback."
Foster, a senior and all-conference candidate, said the young guys who were forced into action last year are in far better physical condition. Along those lines, Sarkisian noted that junior noseguard Alameda Ta'amu is no longer just a massive mound of inert space filler -- who at his best is merely hard to move. After dropping 30 pounds to 330, he's a guy who can get into the backfield and make plays.
The secondary also appears significantly improved with corners Desmond Trufant and Quinton Richardson and safeties Nate Fellner, Nate Williams and Will Shamburger. The apparent successful return of end Everrette Thompson from a torn Achilles should bolster the pass rush.
But it's not just about maturing physically, getting healthy and conditioning better. A year ago, coordinator Nick Holt was only that slightly menacing guy who was always barking at them about not understanding what it takes to play great defense. Now the defensive guys and Holt are playing the same tune, one that probably sounds a bit like Rage Against the Machine.
"They've got a real mentality right now," Sarkisian said. "What I like most about it is they've really adopted Nick's personality. They are aggressive. They are tough. They are smart."
Of course, this also merely could be preseason optimism (or maybe the Huskies offense won't be all that potent). The unit certainly will be tested at BYU on Saturday. Sure, the Cougars only have 11 starters back and are replacing quarterback Max Hall. But they have won 43 games over the past four seasons: They are fairly close to the proverbial "reload not rebuild" category.
While there may be some sentiment about the trip for Sarkisian -- he was BYU's quarterback in 1995-96 -- the Huskies players probably don't look too fondly at the Cougars. In their 2008 game in Seattle, Locker scored what appeared to be a game-tying touchdown in the waning moments -- pending the PAT -- but he was flagged for a celebration penalty after flicking the ball into the air.
Just about everyone thought the penalty ridiculous, at least outside of Provo. Of course, barely anyone would remember the call if the Huskies hadn't blown the extra point and subsequently lost 28-27.
That was about as close to respectability as the Huskies would come during an 0-12 season that ended the Tyrone Willingham Era and brought in Sarkisian.
Moreover, one of BYU's quarterbacks -- it appears two will play versus the Huskies -- is true freshman Jake Heaps, a product of Washington State powerhouse Skyline High School. He picked BYU over Washington last winter, and there are just a few whispers that some of the Huskies might be eager to make him feel like he made a mistake.
"I didn't even really know he was from around here until a couple weeks ago," Foster said. "That's going to make it a little more exciting -- a big-time recruit from the state of Washington that went to another school and will play as a true freshman. It's going to be fun to get a couple of hits on him."
The Huskies -- suddenly -- have high expectations. Only two years removed from an 0-12 season, they are thinking about more than just earning their first bowl berth since 2002.
"It's a total turnaround," Foster said. "No more losing every game. The mindset is different. We're really looking forward to coming out in competing at the top of the conference this year."
A total turnaround likely would make Locker a leading Heisman Trophy candidate.
But that's not going to happen if the defense can't make stops.

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