American college football season
The 2013 Washington Huskies football team represented the University of Washington in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season . The team, coached by fifth-year head coach Steve Sarkisian , was a member of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference . Sarkisian left the team to become the head coach at USC following the Apple Cup.[1] The team was led by quarterbacks coach Marques Tuiasosopo following Sarkisian's departure. The Huskies played their home games at their on-campus home of Husky Stadium .
Offseason [ edit ] Former Husky Marques Tuiasosopo was hired in January as the new quarterbacks coach. The offseason saw some attrition with the losses of fullback Cooper Pelluer, safety Evan Zeger, receivers James Johnson and Jamaal Jones, running back Erich Wilson II, and defensive back Darien Washington for various reasons. Running backs coach Joel Thomas left to coach the same position at Arkansas. The offseason also included legal troubles for tight end Austin Seferian-Jenkins and receiver Kasen Williams. Seferian-Jenkins was charged with DUI and served one day in jail as part of his sentencing agreement.[2] Williams was also charged with DUI in a separate incident for which he paid a fine.[3] Construction on Husky Stadium entered the final stages and the team was able to break it in with the start of fall camp in August.[4]
Weekly starters [ edit ] The following players were the weekly offensive and defensive game starters.
Opponent WR LT LG C RG RT QB TB TE WR WR #19 Boise State Williams Hatchie Charles Criste Tanigawa Riva Price Sankey Hartvigson Mickens Smith Illinois Williams Hatchie Charles Criste Tanigawa Riva Price Sankey Seferian-Jenkins Mickens Smith Idaho State Williams Hatchie Charles Criste Tanigawa Riva Price Sankey Seferian-Jenkins Mickens Smith Arizona Stanford Oregon Arizona State California Colorado UCLA Oregon State Washington State Opponent DE NT DT RE LB LB LB S S CB CB #19 Boise State Kikaha Shelton Hudson Littleton Feeney Timu Thompson Shamburger Parker Peters Ducre Illinois Kikaha Shelton Hudson Littleton Fuimaono Timu Thompson Shamburger Parker Peters Ducre Idaho State Kikaha Shelton Hudson Littleton Fuimaono Tutogi Thompson Shamburger Parker Peters Ducre Arizona Stanford Oregon Arizona State California Colorado UCLA Oregon State Washington State
Roster and coaching staff [ edit ] 2013 Washington Huskies football team roster Players Coaches Offense Defense Special teams Pos. # Name Class LS 49 Weston Blackburn So P/PK 46 Travis Coons Sr P 45 Korey Durkee So P 40 Zach Grossnickle Sr LS 51 Luke Hutchinson Fr LS 77 Ryan Masel So PK 48 Cameron Van Winkle Fr
Head coach Coordinators/assistant coaches Legend (C) Team captain (S) Suspended (I) Ineligible Injured Redshirt Roster Last update: October 1, 2013
Schedule [ edit ] Date Time Opponent Rank Site TV Result Attendance August 31 7:00 p.m. No. 19 Boise State * FS1 W 38–671,963 September 14 6:00p.m. vs. Illinois * No. 19 BTN W 34–2447,312 September 21 12:00 p.m. Idaho State * No. 17 P12N W 56–067,093 September 28 4:00 p.m. Arizona No. 16 FOX W 31–1365,815 October 5 7:30 p.m. at No. 5 Stanford No. 15 ESPN L 28–3150,424 October 12 1:00 p.m. No. 2 Oregon No. 16 FS1 L 24–4571,833 October 19 3:00 p.m. at Arizona State No. 20 P12N L 24–5360,057 October 26 8:00 p.m. California FS1 W 41–1766,328 November 9 5:00 p.m. Colorado P12N W 59–766,599 November 15 6:00 p.m. at No. 13 UCLA ESPN2 L 31–4168,106 November 23 7:30 p.m. at Oregon State ESPN2 W 69–2743,779 November 29 12:30 p.m. Washington State FOX W 27–1771,753 December 27 6:30 p.m. vs. BYU * No. 25 ESPN W 31–1634,136 *Non-conference game HomecomingRankings from AP Poll released prior to the game All times are in Pacific time
Game summaries [ edit ] Boise State [ edit ] 1 2 3 4 Total #19 Broncos 0 3 3 0 6 Huskies 7 3 14 14 38
Illinois [ edit ] 1 2 3 4 Total #19 Huskies 0 10 21 3 34 Illini 0 3 14 7 24
Idaho State [ edit ] 1 2 3 4 Total Bengals 0 0 0 0 0 #17 Huskies 21 21 7 7 56
Arizona [ edit ] 1 2 3 4 Total Wildcats 0 6 7 0 13 #16 Huskies 8 3 14 6 31
Stanford [ edit ] 1 2 3 4 Total #15 Huskies 0 7 14 7 28 #5 Cardinal 7 10 14 0 31
1 2 3 4 Total #2 Ducks 7 14 10 14 45 #16 Huskies 7 0 17 0 24
Arizona State [ edit ] 1 2 3 4 Total #20 Huskies 7 0 10 7 24 Sun Devils 3 26 10 14 53
1 2 3 4 Total Golden Bears 0 7 0 10 17 Huskies 17 7 14 3 41
Colorado [ edit ] 1 2 3 4 Total Buffaloes 7 0 0 0 7 Huskies 10 21 21 7 59
1 2 3 4 Total Huskies 7 10 7 7 31 #13 Bruins 20 7 7 7 41
The Bruins lead the series, 38–30–2. Last time the teams met, during the 2010 season, Washington won 24–7 in Seattle. UCLA was the winner in the Rose Bowl, a 24–23 decision in 2009. The Bruins have won the last seven straight games played in the Rose Bowl against the Huskies.
1st quarter scoring: UCLA – Myles Jack 8-yard run (Ka'imi Fairbairn kick); UCLA – Cassius Marsh 2-yard pass from Brett Hundley (Fairbairn kick); WASH – Bishop Sankey 2-yard run (Travis Coons kick); UCLA – Jack 1-yard run (failed kick)
2nd quarter scoring: UCLA – Jack 1-yard run (Fairbairn kick); WASH – Jaydon Mickens 2-yard pass from Keith Price (Coons kick); WASH – Coons 34-yard field goal
3rd quarter scoring: WASH – Austin Seferian-Jenkins 1-yard pass from Cyler Miles (Coons kick); UCLA – Jack 2-yard run (Fairbairn kick)
4th quarter scoring: UCLA – Devin Lucien 40-yard pass from Hundley (Fairbairn kick); WASH – Damore'ea Stringfellow 14-yard pass from Miles (Coons kick)
Oregon State [ edit ] 1 2 3 4 Total Huskies 17 10 21 21 69 Beavers 0 0 0 27 27
Washington State [ edit ] 1 2 3 4 Total Cougars 0 10 0 7 17 Huskies 3 0 17 7 27
1st quarter scoring: UW – Travis Coons 48-yard field goal
2nd quarter scoring: WSU – Andrew Furney 49-yard field goal; WSU – Rickey Galvin 14-yard pass from C. Halliday (Furney kick)
3rd quarter scoring: UW – Seferian Jenkins 18-yard pass from Keith Price (Coons kick); UW – Bishop Sankey 7-yard run (Coons kick); UW – Coons 39-yard field goal
4th quarter scoring: WSU – Dom. Williams 5-yard pass from Halliday (Furney kick); UW – Price 2-yard run (Coons kick)
1 2 3 4 Total Cougars 0 16 0 0 16 Huskies 7 14 7 3 31
1st quarter scoring: WASH – Bishop Sankey 11-yard run (Travis Coons kick)
2nd quarter scoring: BYU – Taysom Hill 1-yard run (Justin Sorensen kick); WASH – John Ross III 100-yard kick return (Coons kick); BYU – Sorensen 45-yard field goal; BYU – Sorensen 31-yard field goal; WASH – Sankey 11-yard run (Coons kick); BYU – Sorensen 32-yard field goal
3rd quarter scoring: WASH – Austin Seferian-Jenkins 16-yard reception from Keith Price (Coons kick)
4th quarter scoring: WASH – Coons 45-yard field goal
Rankings [ edit ] Ranking movementsLegend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking — = Not ranked RV = Received votes Week Poll Pre 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Final AP RV 20 19 17 16 15 16 20 RV RV RV RV — — — RV 25 Coaches RV 23 23 20 20 18 19 25 RV — — RV — — — RV RV Harris Not released 25 RV RV — RV — RV RV RV Not released BCS Not released — — — — — — — — Not released
December 2, 2013 – Head coach Steve Sarkisian left the team to take the job at USC December 6, 2013 – Chris Petersen from Boise State was hired as the next head coach at Washington References [ edit ] ^ Just, Adam (December 2, 2013). "UW's Steve Sarkisian Leaving for USC Head-Coaching Job" . The Seattle Times . Retrieved December 9, 2013 . ^ Jude, Adam (July 15, 2013). "UW's Austin Seferian-Jenkins Pleads Guilty to DUI" . The Seattle Times . Retrieved December 9, 2013 . ^ Jude, Adam (July 9, 2013). "UW Receiver Kasen Williams Pays $695 Fine for Chelan County Citation" . The Seattle Times . Retrieved December 9, 2013 . ^ Jude, Adam (August 5, 2013). "UW Happy to Be 'Home' During First Practice Inside New Husky Stadium" . The Seattle Times . Retrieved December 9, 2013 .
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