Winning The Key Plays

For the first time in a long time UW made the bulk of the key plays with a few that really stood out to me:
1) Oregon’s onside kick attempt
They tried the same thing against UCLA successfully and if you go look at the play from the end zone view UW was perhaps taken a bit by surprise … Oregon had UW outnumbered and a good kick probably gets recovered by Oregon. Fortunately Oregon hit it too hard and the a do or die recovery was made with no room for error
2) Alex Cook making the 3rd Down Tackle on Bo Nix
Oregon got a TD out of a very similar situation earlier in the game and EVERYTHING about this play signaled that it was coming again. Cook recognized the play, fired early, and beat Nix into the hole to win what effectively was a 1 v 1 play. Oregon converts that drive into a TD and the game was over … but they didn’t. The 10+ minute drive for Oregon was a double edged sword because it shortened the game … which played to UW’s advantage. Add to it that Nix hurt his ankle on the play …
3) Penix TD to Taj Davis
For YEARS we’ve talked about how important it is to have THAT QB who can make THAT throw when it matters … let’s be very clear that few QBs in college can even think of making that throw. Go watch the angle the Oregon S made on the play … he thought he was going to undercut that for an INT. Let’s also not gloss over that the play came on 3rd and long which makes the big balls on that throw even bigger.
4) Taking Advantage of a Backup QB
What made the ASU loss so demoralizing is that UW faced a backup QB for a large chunk of the game and made him look great. Everybody will point to the 4th down play, but I’ll look at the 3 plays leading into it. UW had just got mowed over by the Oregon running game … yet when it mattered (and helped by being able to disrespect the pass) put themselves into a position to get the ball back to the offense via a punt and a chance to win … of course Oregon decided to go for it and that blew up spectacularly
5) Peyton Henry’s Redemption
2018 Henry effectively had the same kick to win the game and missed it … it’s rare in sports (particularly in college) where you get to have that redemption moment in the same place against the same team with the same stakes in play. Henry hit that ball like a champ … couldn’t be happier for him
There’s always other plays that you can point to in a game … but for me it’s these 5 plays that really drove and dictated the UW victory. Historically, UW hasn’t made these plays when the bright lights are on. Saturday they did …
Comments
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The unsung hero of the game might be Alex Cook for knocking Nix out of the game
Cook it! -
That play was as 1 on 1 as it gets … really happy for him
That play will live in Husky legend for a long long time -
In the game thread I mentioned the D needing to play loose because the offense had their back. That's exactly what I was talking about.DerekJohnson said:The unsung hero of the game might be Alex Cook for knocking Nix out of the game
Cook it!
How many of our missed tackles were hesitant flat-footed lunges? Sometimes when you're getting carved up you need to be more aggressive, decisive, and just go.
There was no hesitation with Cook on that play, he just baited the lane for Nix pre-snap and went full speed into him. If Nix makes a juke stick move and scores, you live with it. Just an all-time step up play when he was on the receiving end of some highlight reel runs all night.
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A lot of the tackling issues are a combination of being out of position (including not making the correct run fits) and taking some really bad angles leading to lunging hopeful tackles
It’s nice to be able to call out all of the areas for improvement while winning at a high level -
Oregon’s OL gets some credit on the missed tackles. They held their blocks well and put a lot of UW defenders in one on one situations vice gang tackling.Tequilla said:A lot of the tackling issues are a combination of being out of position (including not making the correct run fits) and taking some really bad angles leading to lunging hopeful tackles
It’s nice to be able to call out all of the areas for improvement while winning at a high level -
I had completely forgot that Henry blew the 18 game. I just knew the Huskies blew it but forgot how
This was the Costanza Oregon Washington game
Everything was opposite -
The DAWGS are one blown field goal away from three straight at Autzen
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My favorite play was McMillan wrestling the ball away on a sure interception - he finally showed he can be tough
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Let Cook Cook!DerekJohnson said:The unsung hero of the game might be Alex Cook for knocking Nix out of the game
Cook it! -
It was as if Lanning/Dillingham was trying to make Nix the hero there instead of either one of the running backs. They put their QB in danger. If they just hand it off it may have been different. Bad decision in hindsight.
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Cohen draped in velvet on the bus ride home?RaceBannon said:I had completely forgot that Henry blew the 18 game. I just knew the Huskies blew it but forgot how
This was the Costanza Oregon Washington game
Everything was opposite -
Trice’s sack and the Nix knockout, leading to having to go to Thompson were huge
moments. I’d give Lanning the gameball for some amazingly bad calls in the game. -
He looked like Lambo out there GrozRTD said:Trice’s sack and the Nix knockout, leading to having to go to Thompson were huge
moments. I’d give Lanning the gameball for some amazingly bad calls in the game. -
RaceBannon said:
I had completely forgot that Henry blew the 18 game. I just knew the Huskies blew it but forgot how
This was the Costanza Oregon Washington game
Everything was opposite
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RaceBannon said:
I had completely forgot that Henry blew the 18 game. I just knew the Huskies blew it but forgot how
This was the Costanza Oregon Washington game
Everything was opposite
Redemption
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Almost like he’s never been a head coach beforeRTD said:Trice’s sack and the Nix knockout, leading to having to go to Thompson were huge
moments. I’d give Lanning the gameball for some amazingly bad calls in the game. -
One underrated play was on the first drive of the game, 3rd and 14, Penix scrambles and runs for 15 to keep the drive alive
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I'll point out Lambo was two plays away from two Rosebowls. Got that from a Sage former poster.RaceBannon said:The DAWGS are one blown field goal away from three straight at Autzen
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A grain of new found respect for Chris Petersen, his halftime troll job of going for it on 4th and 2, was elite trolling.
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I absolutely love the way he looks up at Cook after with the smug smile like he doesn't know how to react when getting manhandled like that
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I'm actually shocked the horrific Pac 12 refs didn't call targeting there.Canadawg said:I absolutely love the way he looks up at Cook after with the smug smile like he doesn't know how to react when getting manhandled like that
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We were terrifiedPurpleThrobber said:
I'm actually shocked the horrific Pac 12 refs didn't call targeting there.Canadawg said:I absolutely love the way he looks up at Cook after with the smug smile like he doesn't know how to react when getting manhandled like that
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Cook's facemask essentially scraped the turf. It was clear ankle biting. If he's like 4" higher they probably call it.
The real no call heart attack was the potential late hit out of bounds on Oregon's final drive. They throw that they are in fg range 1st and 10 with at least two plays left in the bag. -
When you say 'ankle biting', is that a euphemism for some type of dirty play or something? Or do you mean literal biting? It's not a rhetorical question (like 99% of the questions I ask here).Doogles said:Cook's facemask essentially scraped the turf. It was clear ankle biting. If he's like 4" higher they probably call it.
The real no call heart attack was the potential late hit out of bounds on Oregon's final drive. They throw that they are in fg range 1st and 10 with at least two plays left in the bag. -
When it happened I thought Nix was probably telling him that was a dirty hit. It wasn't. Nix got extremely low. Cook had to get lower.Canadawg said:I absolutely love the way he looks up at Cook after with the smug smile like he doesn't know how to react when getting manhandled like that
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It's not dirty, spearing the knees is dirty.creepycoug said:
When you say 'ankle biting', is that a euphemism for some type of dirty play or something? Or do you mean literal biting? It's not a rhetorical question (like 99% of the questions I ask here).Doogles said:Cook's facemask essentially scraped the turf. It was clear ankle biting. If he's like 4" higher they probably call it.
The real no call heart attack was the potential late hit out of bounds on Oregon's final drive. They throw that they are in fg range 1st and 10 with at least two plays left in the bag.
It's when a smaller guy takes the lowest possible shot at a bigger guy to trip him up. Nix could have very well trucked Cook or broken a higher wrap-up attempt.
Cook made the right play. Look at 90% of Buddas highlights at UW, they are the exact same, he gets their fast and hits them below their base and takes them out before they can make a move.
Budda would have had 20+ tackles last night. -
"Don't hit me low I can't break the tackle that way"
-Nix -
So if he's 4 inches higher they call what?Doogles said:
It's not dirty, spearing the knees is dirty.creepycoug said:
When you say 'ankle biting', is that a euphemism for some type of dirty play or something? Or do you mean literal biting? It's not a rhetorical question (like 99% of the questions I ask here).Doogles said:Cook's facemask essentially scraped the turf. It was clear ankle biting. If he's like 4" higher they probably call it.
The real no call heart attack was the potential late hit out of bounds on Oregon's final drive. They throw that they are in fg range 1st and 10 with at least two plays left in the bag.
It's when a smaller guy takes the lowest possible shot at a bigger guy to trip him up. Nix could have very well trucked Cook or broken a higher wrap-up attempt.
Cook made the right play. Look at 90% of Buddas highlights at UW, they are the exact same, he gets their fast and hits them below their base and takes them out before they can make a move.
Budda would have had 20+ tackles last night. -
Doogles said:
Cook's facemask essentially scraped the turf. It was clear ankle biting. If he's like 4" higher they probably call it.
The real no call heart attack was the potential late hit out of bounds on Oregon's final drive. They throw that they are in fg range 1st and 10 with at least two plays left in the bag.
ZTF always hits people late and it almost cost that game -
Targeting. Because they are P12 refs, which was the original comment I was responding to.creepycoug said:
So if he's 4 inches higher they call what?Doogles said:
It's not dirty, spearing the knees is dirty.creepycoug said:
When you say 'ankle biting', is that a euphemism for some type of dirty play or something? Or do you mean literal biting? It's not a rhetorical question (like 99% of the questions I ask here).Doogles said:Cook's facemask essentially scraped the turf. It was clear ankle biting. If he's like 4" higher they probably call it.
The real no call heart attack was the potential late hit out of bounds on Oregon's final drive. They throw that they are in fg range 1st and 10 with at least two plays left in the bag.
It's when a smaller guy takes the lowest possible shot at a bigger guy to trip him up. Nix could have very well trucked Cook or broken a higher wrap-up attempt.
Cook made the right play. Look at 90% of Buddas highlights at UW, they are the exact same, he gets their fast and hits them below their base and takes them out before they can make a move.
Budda would have had 20+ tackles last night.