Best Of
Re: Hardcore Husky Podcast: When your head coach is the team's weakest link
This is a thoroughly depressing thread
DerekJohnson
Re: Hardcore Husky Podcast: When your head coach is the team's weakest link
I don't know how anyone can be excited moving forward without big changes to how the offense operates.
I thought Hugh Millen covered this nicely (and succinctly, which is odd for him) on with Softy yesterday (caught it by chance).
Fisch is enamored with the pass game and WANTS to win "that way".
We have a head coach more enamored with doing what he wants than with what works and/or best suits our personnel and the situations.
That's incredibly alarming to me and I don't know how you fix that. He's not some 36 year old upstart. I struggle to think that philosophy will change.
Even if Jedd doesn't change and gets personnel to do the pass heavy winning he wants, I still want a coach that can adjust to what the situation and opponent dictate will work the best.
Last Saturday, a good coach would have seen the run game working with #24 and leaned in heavy to all flavors of that, and passes off of that, and only gone with more downfield passing that complemented that plan (play action, etc) and mixed it up once they were loading up to stop the run more consistently.
We're in the Big Ten now. We honestly should be more run-centric than we are. Great defense and running games travel very well.
I'm just not convinced we have a great head coach.
BarbarasHedge
Re: Jiles? Good, Bad, Meh . . . . . . . .
He's interesting. One of our lowest-rated signees but goes to IMG Academy and reports something like 35 total offers and double digit offers from blue blood programs but haven't heard a damn thing about him since he committed.
bananasnblondes
Re: Just blatant racism from the rats
When the party has ZERO ideas for moving the country forward, they result to name calling- constantly.
Bill Maher said it best a couple of weeks ago when he called it the "Sugar Rush" of seeing who can hate Trump the most. It extends to anyone on the right, could be a black politician, a CEO of a health care company, or an activist who visits a college campus.
The name calling is to desensitize their base and become complacent with violence because it was done for the "Greater Good".
georgiaduck
Re: Chauvin needs a new trial
7 pages defending a junkie wife beater who overdosed while resisting arrest
On to narco traffickers and 2028 is ITB for the democrats
You have to be impressed with the improved messaging
All the cops are criminals and all the sinners saints
Pleased to meet you hope you guessed my name
RaceBannon
Re: Playoff chaos
Anything more than 4 teams is too many and I actually think 2 teams in a BCS Championship is the right answer.
Re: Lane Kiffin's disastrous exit from Ole Miss spells a much deeper problem in college football
I couldn't stand before a room of my players and coaches and say one thing, and then publicly tweet something else.
DerekJohnson
UW football flips 4-star WR Jordan Clay from Baylor ahead of signing day
Washington players high-five fans before the start of a game against Colorado State on Aug. 30, 2025, in Seattle. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
By Andy Yamashita Seattle Times staff reporter
Two Jedd Fisch recruiting cycles. Two last-minute wide receiver commitments for Washington.
A year ago, it was Marcus Harris, Mater Dei High’s four-star wide receiver according to the 247Sports composite rankings who chose UW instead of a long-standing commitment to Oklahoma.
Tuesday, it was Jordan Clay, a 6-foot-3, 200-pound wide receiver from Madison High of San Antonio, who announced he will flip his commitment from Baylor to Washington in a post on his social media accounts. Clay had been pledged to the Bears since July 11, and became the 23rd player to commit to UW’s 2026 recruiting class. The early signing period begins Wednesday.
“Big-bodied outside receiver whose size really stands out in live evaluations,” Gabe Brooks, 247Sports scouting analyst wrote in an evaluation June 17. “North of 6-2, 200 pounds with a strong, athletic base. Stood out physically in a loaded group of pass catchers at the 2025 Navy All-American Bowl. Plays even larger thanks to enormous hands and acrobatic midair ability. Excels along boundaries thanks to frame, body control, and spatial awareness.”
Clay is a composite four-star wide receiver who is considered the No. 23 player in Texas, the No. 28 wide receiver and the No. 179 player nationally. Along with offers from Washington and Baylor, he had opportunities at Arizona State, Colorado, Arkansas, Houston, Illinois, Kansas, Kansas State, Miami, Michigan State, Missouri, Nebraska, Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Purdue, SMU, Stanford, TCU, Tennessee, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, UCLA, and Utah, among others.
He’s the third wide receiver to join Washington’s 2026 recruiting class. UW also holds a commitment from composite four-star wide receiver Mason James out of Norman, Okla., and composite three-star receiver Blaise LaVista from Lincoln-Way East High in Frankfort, Ill. Clay was first offered by Washington Nov. 16.
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“Catch-point bully who’s quite strong with the ball, even amid multiple defenders,” Brooks wrote. “Unafraid to work the intermediate and deep middles with willingness to put (his) body in harm’s way.”
Clay, a Navy All-American Bowl and Polynesian Bowl selection, totaled 108 catches for 2,323 yards and 24 touchdowns during his first three seasons of high school football at Madison, according to 247Sports. He was also a standout hurdler, running a personal-best 14.25-second time in the 110-meter hurdles as a junior.
Clay’s commitment also means Fisch and the Huskies have landed recruits from Texas in consecutive years. Washington signed composite three-star cornerback Ramonz Adams Jr. from Bastrop, Texas, during the 2025 cycle.
At Washington, Clay will join a young receiver group crowded with former blue-chip talent. UW signed five wide receivers in 2025, with Dezmen Roebuck and Raiden Vines-Bright starting a majority of its games this season. Former composite four-star Chris Lawson also played considerable snaps while Harris’ season was derailed by injury. Freshman wideout Deji Ajose did not appear in a game this season.
The Huskies also have a pair of former four-star receivers — sophomore Rashid Williams and redshirt freshman Justice Williams — who will likely be ready for the 2026 season.
Rashid Williams won a starting spot before the season before suffering a collarbone injury against FCS UC Davis Sept. 6. He was expected to return after the bye week, but sustained a hand injury during practice that Fisch said he didn’t have enough time to return from and was ruled out for the year. Justice Williams, who missed his entire true freshman season with an injury, suffered a toe injury before the Purdue game Nov. 15 and similarly did not have enough time to return this season.
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But UW will lose several contributors after 2025. Junior Denzel Boston is a candidate to depart early for the NFL after two productive seasons under Fisch, and senior Omari Evans is out of eligibility. Sophomore Audric Harris will reportedly enter the transfer portal when it opens Jan. 2.
Clay may be the ideal replacement for the 6-4 Boston. Only Justice Williams is listed taller than Clay among the wide receivers on UW’s roster in 2025, and both may be in contention for the X-receiver spot Boston has occupied for the past two seasons in 2026.
“More of a dirty work run-after-catch weapon who plays angry and relies on strength in those opportunities,” Brooks wrote. “Wins with physical traits at this stage; can enhance separation consistency and big-play potential with improved quick-twitch athleticism.”
UW’s 2026 recruiting class
Name | Position | Composite rating | Signed? | Height / Weight | School | Hometown |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kodi Greene | OT | ★★★★★ | 6-6 / 320 | Mater Dei | Renton, Wash. | |
Brian Bonner Jr. | RB | ★★★★ | 6-0.5 / 185 | Valencia | Valencia, Calif. | |
*Derek Colman-Brusa | EDGE | ★★★★ | 6-5 / 267 | Kennedy Catholic | Burien, Wash. | |
Rahsjon Duncan | CB | ★★★★ | 6-1 / 186 | McClymonds | Oakland, Calif. | |
Jordan Clay | WR | ★★★★ | 6-3 / 200 | Madison | San Antonio, Texas | |
JD Hill | DT | ★★★★ | 6-2 / 275 | Mission Viejo | Mission Viejo, Calif. | |
Gavin Day | S | ★★★★ | 6-3 / 190 | Faith Lutheran | Las Vegas, Nev. | |
Mason James | WR | ★★★★ | 5-10.5 / 175 | Norman North | Norman, Okla. | |
Dre Pollard | ATH | ★★★★ | 6-0 / 175 | Ed W. Clark | Las Vegas, Nev. | |
Derek Zammit | QB | ★★★★ | 6-1 / 195 | DePaul Catholic | Wayne, N.J. |
*local recruit
Andy Yamashita: ayamashita@seattletimes .com. Andy Yamashita is a sports reporter at The Seattle Times, primarily covering Washington Huskies football.
DerekJohnson
Re: Stein to Kentucky
probably the same members of your fan base who would’ve been happy with Wilcox as HC
Re: The Fisching Report Recruiting Thread Sponsored by The Fisch Bowl
If we’re stuck with Fishsticks’ offense it’s gonna require some high end WRs


