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Pac 10 Fans Home
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Washington Huskies vs Syracuse Orange Football Preview
The University of Washington football team thought it had turned the corner as a program. It was wrong. Now the Huskies will try to take out their frustrations on Syracuse. It’s a simple fact: Washington didn’t score a single point in the second half during their season-opening loss at BYU this past weekend. The Huskies moved the ball between the 30s but couldn’t finish drives. BYU’s defensive line got hands into passing lanes, and a number of quarterback Jake Locker’s second-half passes were thrown without conviction or zip. Locker – being the physical specimen he is – needed to shake things up with a bold scramble or two, but because he got rid of the ball so quickly on so many occasions, he robbed himself of that dimension and thereby limited his offensive production.
Here’s what’s even more discouraging for Washington coming out of the BYU game, which it fully expected to win: A defense that figured to be the Huskies’ true Achilles heel was actually not that bad. Allowing 21 points from BYU’s offense (plus a safety) represents a decent effort by UW’s defense. Locker – being projected by many as the No. 1 pick in the 2011 NFL Draft – should have been expected to manufacture a total in the mid-20s, given the Huskies’ skill-position talent. He couldn’t. Switching to the Big East side of this intersectional divide, the good news for Syracuse coming out of its opener was that its quarterback can hit big plays down the field. Ryan Nassib threw two touchdown passes and racked up 229 yards on 17-for-27 passing in last Saturday’s 29-3 win for Syracuse at Akron. Nassib connected with Aaron Weaver for a 23-yard score on the game's first series and found teammate Van Chew for a 26-yard touchdown five seconds before halftime for a 17-3 lead.
The bad news for Syracuse is that it committed three turnovers against Akron and scored only 23 points – six of the Orange’s other points came on a blocked field goal return. Syracuse does not possess a lot of power or dynamic athleticism, so Coach Doug Marrone needs his team to weed out mistakes and give away no cheap points whatsoever. That’s a starting point for a competitive game in one of college football’s tougher road environments. The bottom line on this game is as follows: Locker was okay against BYU, which is another way of saying that he played far below his advance billing for this, his much-hyped senior season. Locker was supposed to have a breakout year, but he was kept in a box by BYU’s defense. Locker needs to be a flat-out stud for Washington in 2010. Starting with this Syracuse game, it’s time for this gifted athlete to answer the bell and become the player coach Steve Sarkisian wants him to be. Period.
By Matt Zemek
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