Sunday, December 2, 2007

Hawaii 35, Washington 28

I haven't read a ton of military history, but I've read enough to know that the most grievous mistakes by battle commanders aren't those that lead to defeat, but those that are made in the wake of victory.

The biggest mistakes are by commanders who, having driven their opposition into full retreat, fail to press the advantage, chase the retreaters down, and destroy them.

To cite just one example, had Confederate General P.G.T Beauregard ordered his troops to chase panicked Union forces back to Washington after the Battle of Bull Run , we might all be tawkin' lahk thee-is.

Here's the part where I reluctantly but inevitably make a parallel between military history and football.

The Husky defense did exactly what I'd hoped they'd do, in the first quarter against Hawaii. They blitzed, they disguised coverages, they played aggressive.

This led to three Hawaii turnovers and a 21-0 Washington lead. Hawaii fans were booing their undefeated team. The Warriors' body language was that of a defeated team.

Had the Huskies (led by defensive coordinator Kent Baer) pressed their advantage, continued to blitz, continued to play aggressive, they might have broken the game open.

Instead, they went conservative. They played conventional. And Colt Brennan was able to finish the half with 12 straight completions and three touchdowns, bringing confidence and momentum back to the Hawaii sideline.

Sure, the Husky offense went scoreless in the second half, and surely the enduring image of this game will be Marcel Reece letting the tying touchdown pass bounce off his pads and into the arms of a Hawaii DB.

Sure, the Husky defense allowed only 14 points in the second half, after they went back to blitzing and disguising coverages.

But had Kent Baer pressed the advantage when he had it, the game could have turned into a rout.

In the great Willingham-Mora debate, I'm decidedly in the keep Willingham camp. With this year's schedule, I'd keep Willingham had the Huskies finished 0-11.

Still, I hope he'll take a good look at the people he's hired. From the looks he was shooting at coaches after Hawaii score their third touchdown of the second quarter, I expect he will.

In the grand scheme of things, the Dawgs went toe-to-toe with the #12 team in the country, at their place. A good sign. The Huskies' next game is September 6th, 2008, at Husky Stadium, vs. BYU.

Here's the full 2008 schedule.

3 comments:

Travis said...

Tyrone is staying

For 2008 at least.

He must go 7-5 or he will be gone

He must beat the Cougars or he will be gone

If we go 7-5, he probably needs to win the bowl, or he will be gone

The schedule next year will not be an easy one

Good luck, Ty. And GO DAWGS

Justin said...

The program is trying to reschedule the game at Oregon to the week before BYU. A season-opener in Eugene would be interesting.

Sept. 6 BYU (Yikes. Sophomore QB tossed 24 TDs / Freshman running back rushed for 1200+. LOSS 0-1)
Sept. 13 at Oregon (They'll have QB issues, but if Stewart stays they'll be tough to beat at home. LOSS 0-2, 0-1)
Sept. 20 Oklahoma (LOSS 0-3, 0-1)
Sept. 27 Stanford (Better WIN 1-3, 1-1)
Oct. 4 at Arizona (Skill guys are back from a talented offense. LOSS 1-4, 1-2)
Oct. 11 at California (Who knows? What the heck, they could win at Cal or at Zona. WIN 2-4, 2-2)
Oct. 18 Oregon State (Better start Fouch until he gets knocked out for the season. WIN 3-4, 3-2)
Oct. 25 Notre Dame (This will be a fun game. WIN 4-4, 3-2)
Nov. 1 at USC (Um, yeah. LOSS 4-5, 3-3)
Nov. 8 Arizona State (Sun Devils will have some talented senior weapons. LOSS 4-6, 3-4)
Nov. 15 UCLA (as before, I think they could beat ASU or UCLA at home. WIN 5-6, 4-4)
Nov. 22 at Washington State (I never pick the Huskies to lose to the Cougs. WIN 6-6, 5-4)

The Huskies lose a rare rematch against BYU in the Las Vegas Bowl. I lose $200 in blackjack and get 86'd from O'Sheas casino on the strip for fighting with a random Wazzu fan who makes fun of my hat.

red said...

thank you



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