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Q&A With The Enemy: Talking Washington Huskies With UW Dawg Pound

For your Washington Huskies coverage this week, visit our SBNation sister site UW Dawg Pound.

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1) Washington had a ton of starters coming back on defense, but have really struggled in stopping the run the last couple games.  Would you chalk that up to going against two great running teams in Stanford and Southern Cal, or is the front seven a big point of concern?

We had a poor first quarter defending the USC running game but were able to shut it down to acceptable levels over the next three. I think a key component in that was USC taking themselves out of drives by turning the ball over. If USC plays a relatively clean game they end up beating Washington by 17 points even with the Huskies playing well. As for the returning starters you have to take into consideration that they comprised the second worst defense in the BCS in 2008. Conditioning, strength, speed, talent level, and coaching were all huge problems while Tyrone Willingham was at Washington. The coaching and conditioning have dramatically improved. The talent level and overall speed can only be fixed by future recruiting classes. We have made some strides in strength over the last eight months but it takes a full 18 months to rebuild a football player from a total strength perspective.

Stanford is a very physical team on both sides of the ball. Jim Harbaugh has had three full years to rebuild this team and it shows. We just couldn't stop them no matter what adjustment we made. Obviously when you give up 320 yards to the Cardinal it is a huge concern for your front seven. Our linebackers are actually pretty good but the front line was simply blocked all night by Stanford. Games are won on the line of scrimmage for the most part and we were hammered on both sides of the ball by Stanford.


2) If there is a weakness for this Irish team, it is the youth up front on defense (although statistically, it's the passing defense - there are a lot of issues on that side of the ball).  Is there a running back or running play we should be particularly concerned with containing?

Chris Polk is one of the better running backs in the Pac 10. He has the ability to break big one's but what is impressive is how he continues to get yards after contact. He just carries guys with him for 4-5 yards. We have a brute of a senior FB in Paul Homer. He won't carry the ball much but he is a battering ram from a blocking perspective. Johri Fogerson is Polk's backup and he has broken some big plays making catches out of the backfield this year. Both Polk, Fogerson, and Homer can catch the ball. Polk had no room to run last week but still picked up 70 or so tough yards carrying guys with him. He is a gamer. QB Jake Locker hasn't been unleashed yet this season as a running threat. He can hurt a team when he turns the corner because he has 4.35 speed and the size of a linebacker. Think Tim Tebow West. He picked up nearly 1000 yards on the ground his freshman season.


3) Reading about the Huskies, it seems like Jake Locker is pretty much the entire offense, considering Washington's ranks in rushing the ball (94th) versus passing (38th) and Number Ten's heavy contributions to both.  That plan was working rather well until Saturday night in Stanford, where Locker really struggled.  Was there anything the Cardinal did to force that performance, or was it just an off game for a great quarterback?  Notre Dame's defense has really struggled this year, but they've already seen some mobile guys with similar skillsets to Locker (Kaepernick, Forcier)

Jake Locker is the best QB in the Pac 10. He has a great arm and until last week thrived in Steve Sarkisian's pro-set offense. This season he is throwing first and running second, under Willingham he would run around 15 designed running plays per game. Under Sarkisian that number is closer to 2-3 and only if needed. They want to keep him healthy because if he goes down the season is over for the Huskies.

On Saturday night Jake simply had an off night and didn't respond well to the pressure even though he had plenty of it against LSU and USC. He had three drive killing turnovers which really threw him and the offense out of sync all night. I would like to credit Stanford but all three were obvious mental errors. When Jake is on his game he is pretty much unstoppable. I think you will see a different Jake Locker in South Bend. No offense to the Irish but from what I have seen of the ND defense it hasn't compared favorably to LSU, USC, and Stanford.

Even with all the running yards we gave up on Saturday our defense only gave up four touch downs. If our offense had performed minus the turnovers we could have won that game. We just aren't good enough to beat a good team with a minus turnover ration.

I wouldn't say Jake is the entire offense this year because we have actually gotten some pretty good production out of the running backs. The season is only four games old and we have had a brutal schedule. The balance will show in the stats as the season progresses.


4) Jon Tenuta loves blitzing, almost to a fault at this point in the season.  How capable is the Huskies offensive line at protecting Locker?

Our offensive line had exceeded expectations until last Saturday against Stanford. Obviously we are used to handling speed after playing LSU close and beating USC. Our offensive line even though it has exceeded expectations is simply adequate at this point and won't get better until we bring in some better talent. What is helping the line right now is that they are playing in front of an extremely mobile QB. When your QB runs a sub 4.4 it masks a lot of problems. Our running backs are excellent blockers and that helps too. If I was Tenuta I would play UW straight up. When you blitz you are leaving your vulnerable secondary even more vulnerable. Jake has no problem getting around the end for a big gainer if you over run him. He actually has a better arm than Clausen and some very good receivers so if you can't catch him you can get burned by blitzing. UW uses a zone blocking scheme that features the infamous chop block this season. Notre Dame is going to have to adapt to that early.


5) If the Irish decide they want to air it out, how is the Washington secondary?  Stanford only threw 14 times against them, and Aaron Corp was totally shut down in his start.  I'm curious to know what to expect if Jimmy decides to chuck it deep.

We haven't really been tested by a QB of Jimmy's caliber yet except in practice. Aaron Corp really didn't have a chance and I wouldn't call him an elite QB anyway. LSU's Jordan Jefferson had two big plays for TD's when Washington had coverage errors while blitzing which left a young safety playing his first game on an island. They weren't long throws but LSU's Tolliver is just huge and super fast. So when the UW defender stop he was off to the races. Idaho was probably our best test so far against a QB who will play in the NFL some day. Nathan Enderle carved our secondary up with a lot of mid range stuff. They didn't break anything long but they picked up a lot of yards in front and just right over our LB's.

We know we are improved back there. We know we have made adjustments in personnel and schemes in the secondary that make us a better team. The long ball doesn't worry me. What does worry me is being picked apart on the mid range stuff. If Weis wants to stretch the field long all day I think he is missing out on what has proven to work best against our secondary. Obviously we need to get pressure on Clausen. He doesn't do well against pressure. I think the toe injury might be enough to slow him down considerably.

 6) Finally, beyond the obvious advantages of ditching Ty Willingham for a coach with a heartbeat and getting Jake Locker back, what are the differences between this Huskies team and the one that got flattened by the Irish in Seattle this year?

There is a new attitude in Seattle. Coach Sarkisian and his staff our tireless workers and recruiters. They are going to turn this thing around a lot quicker than most people think. This team doesn't quit and the team you faced last year had quit on themselves. Even the coaching staff quit after the fourth game so it was a real mess to clean up. We may not win on Saturday but your team is going to know that they were in a serious football game. The goal Washington has besides winning this year is gaining the respect of each opponent. I think we have done that so far and it will continue till the end of the season.

Washington is missing some pieces here and there but they are a sound fundamental football team in 2009. That was never the case under Coach Willingham. This team gets better every week and learns from its mistakes. They don't like losing and there is no apathy on the sidelines. Our team is playing with a lot of spirit. These kids are fired up when they hit the field. The difference between Washington 2008 and 2009 is night and day. Most importantly these guys believe right down to the very depth of their very soul that they are going to beat Notre Dame on Saturday. It worked against USC, came close to working against LSU, so why not Notre Dame?

If Notre Dame is going to win on Saturday they are going to have to kick Washington's butt in the trenches. If they don't do that and try to finesse their way through it they will come up on the short end of the stick.

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I appreciate the responses, but it seems like the UW guy answered every question the same way. Jake Locker is awesome and so is Steve Sarkisian. I guess I learned that Chris Polk is their RB. His “hype” is not really supported by his stats, but I guess like CW said, that could easily be explained by the quality of defense played thus far.

by djta on Sep 30, 2009 1:30 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Jake Locker, Jake Locker, Jake Locker

That it is pretty much it. You stop Jake Locker and you will stop Washington.

by John Berkowitz on Sep 30, 2009 2:17 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

I think this is going to be another close game. Locker is going to be a real tough task for Tanuta. I really hope that Tanuta stays with the same game plan he had against Purdue because that was the best I have seen the defense play against a quality opponent (Nevada doesn’t count). If the D can play like that, it should be a good game for the Irish. I believe that our O-Line is better than there D-Line, but with our D-Line being young, I’m not sure what to think about that matchup. If the D can get to Locker, without the blitzes, I can see us winning by a touchdown, if not its a toss up to me.

by phillyphan9208 on Sep 30, 2009 4:13 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

i'd like to first see

how healthy Clausen and Allen are before predicting what’s going to happen.

by SBakerTheTouchdownMaker on Sep 30, 2009 7:27 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

If Notre Dame is going to win on Saturday they are going to have to kick Washington's butt in the trenches.

Isn’t that true of any game? Way to stick your neck out.

I always turn to the sports section first. The sports page records people's accomplishments; the front page has nothing but man's failures.
~Earl Warren

by lookingdeadred on Oct 2, 2009 8:44 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

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