4 unforced turnovers. Even the interception because McMillan doesn't fight for shit.
This is a pattern on him
He is quickly moving into massively overrated territory simply because he's soft. I can live with some of Odunze's mistakes but Bynum has performed better than these two. Hell, Polk just made a play better than what I've seen out of the fucking Bubble Screen Twins this year.
4 unforced turnovers. Even the interception because McMillan doesn't fight for shit.
This is a pattern on him
O’Brien could come in and throw 4 picks 6’s and I still wouldn’t be mad. Clean house, get Morris out. Bring in a dual threat to compete with Huard and go from there.
4 unforced turnovers. Even the interception because McMillan doesn't fight for shit.
This is a pattern on him
O’Brien could come in and throw 4 picks 6’s and I still wouldn’t be mad. Clean house, get Morris out. Bring in a dual threat to compete with Huard and go from there.
Bob Gregory on His Future: 'Going to Have to Work Until I'm like 90'
The UW interim coach likely won't return, but he's not done coaching.
Bob Gregory is like your favorite uncle. Self-deprecating and funny, he's the kind of guy who shows up at your Little League game when your dad can't make it. He's a ready and welcome stand-in.
For three weeks now, the defensive coordinator has been the face of Husky football after it went sideways, stepping in for the suspended and then fired Jimmy Lake.
Gregory, 57, has been that reassuring figure at the University of Washington who tells everyone, from the players to the media, that things will be all right even as he faces the prospect of putting his house up for sale and moving away.
He was the one on the coaching staff who athletic director Jen Cohen felt most comfortable with in putting behind the steering wheel of the school's biggest sporting enterprise, at least temporarily.
While the Huskies have lost both games where Gregory was in charge, he's left a positive impression in the way he's conducted himself in an otherwise impossible situation.
Now in his 35th year of coaching after graduating from Washington State, his Apple Cup opponent on Friday, Gregory has never been more than a defensive coordinator at Boise State, California and the UW among his various stops. Being a head coach never crossed his mind.
"To be honest, I never thought about it," Gregory said. "I always enjoyed the role with where I'm at."
Once a difficult season ends, the Spokane native and eight UW coaches won't go out recruiting, won't be thinking about the Huskies' future, won't necessarily have a happy holidays.
They'll be waiting to hear who the school hires as Lake's replacement and a few might be considered for the new staff to keep some continuity in place.
Gregory most likely is moving on. Most new coaches tend to bring in their own hand-picked coordinators.
The Husky interim coach, however, won't be retiring. He'll be coaching somewhere next season, explaining why as only he can explain it.
"I have a freshman in college and a junior in high school," Gregory said. "I'm going to have to work until I'm like 90 probably, so I have a ways to go."
Comments
Like always
If the Cuogs have McIntosh and Borghi 30 carries combined, we will get shredded.
They're a better team but this is setting up like 2015 where it might not matter.
Bob Gregory on His Future: 'Going to Have to Work Until I'm like 90'
The UW interim coach likely won't return, but he's not done coaching.
Bob Gregory is like your favorite uncle. Self-deprecating and funny, he's the kind of guy who shows up at your Little League game when your dad can't make it. He's a ready and welcome stand-in.
For three weeks now, the defensive coordinator has been the face of Husky football after it went sideways, stepping in for the suspended and then fired Jimmy Lake.
Gregory, 57, has been that reassuring figure at the University of Washington who tells everyone, from the players to the media, that things will be all right even as he faces the prospect of putting his house up for sale and moving away.
He was the one on the coaching staff who athletic director Jen Cohen felt most comfortable with in putting behind the steering wheel of the school's biggest sporting enterprise, at least temporarily.
While the Huskies have lost both games where Gregory was in charge, he's left a positive impression in the way he's conducted himself in an otherwise impossible situation.
Now in his 35th year of coaching after graduating from Washington State, his Apple Cup opponent on Friday, Gregory has never been more than a defensive coordinator at Boise State, California and the UW among his various stops. Being a head coach never crossed his mind.
"To be honest, I never thought about it," Gregory said. "I always enjoyed the role with where I'm at."
Once a difficult season ends, the Spokane native and eight UW coaches won't go out recruiting, won't be thinking about the Huskies' future, won't necessarily have a happy holidays.
They'll be waiting to hear who the school hires as Lake's replacement and a few might be considered for the new staff to keep some continuity in place.
Gregory most likely is moving on. Most new coaches tend to bring in their own hand-picked coordinators.
The Husky interim coach, however, won't be retiring. He'll be coaching somewhere next season, explaining why as only he can explain it.
"I have a freshman in college and a junior in high school," Gregory said. "I'm going to have to work until I'm like 90 probably, so I have a ways to go."