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Will Washington football rebuild or reload after memorable run?








New Washington football coach Jedd Fisch laughs during an introductory news conference on Jan. 16 in Seattle. Fisch takes over for Kalen DeBoer this season.




It’s the quietest part of the year for college football. Vacation season for coaches and players. So while they — and some of you — might be at the beach, we’ve crafted Big Ten-themed topics to explore. No firm answers, just fun — and pertinent — questions.

Did Kalen DeBoer leave anything in the cupboard at Washington for Jedd Fisch?

Few coaches in college football history had a better two-season run than DeBoer did in Seattle. He won 25 games, two bowls, a Pac-12 title and his team advanced to the national title game. And he did it, many believed, with a roster that wasn’t stacked the way Michigan, Georgia or Alabama might have been. DeBoer’s predecessor, Jimmy Lake, was criticized for, among other things, not being able to beat Oregon in recruiting.

When DeBoer got the job, he beat Oregon three times in two years. Coaching! (And quarterback Michael Penix, who followed DeBoer to UW.)

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Perhaps the Huskies had some pretty darn good recruits, too.

Ten of them were selected in the 2024 NFL Draft, and only one of those, Penix, was DeBoer’s guy. Several committed during the Chris Petersen era. Others to Lake, head coach for just two years. DeBoer may well have coached up a few of them but, the point is, the team had dudes for him to coach.

Will Jedd Fisch have those dudes? Apparently, according to any pundit or analytic, he won’t in his first year. ESPN’s Football Power Index projects UW as the Big Ten’s sixth-strongest team. Throw in a comically hard schedule, with road trips to Iowa, Penn State and Oregon, and the impression is the Huskies will be lucky to win seven games.

The rocky transition between Lake and DeBoer left the 2022 class in shambles, with just 10 high school signees. DeBoer did better in 2023 — the 27th-ranked class, according to On3 — but his departure after his second season left the class in 49th. It’s a curious ranking since DeBoer didn’t leave for Alabama until January, and couldn’t have known in December that Nick Saban was kicking around the decision to retire. It speaks to DeBoer’s own uncertainty at UW.

DeBoer and/or Fisch brought in 25 transfers to address the roster issues. One, Mississippi State quarterback Will Rogers, should start. But UW’s secret sauce last season was an incredible receiving corps, three of whom, led by Rome Odunze, were selected in the NFL Draft in April. Those guys helped make Penix look good. Rogers won’t have them.

It seems like DeBoer got out of Seattle while the getting was good and Fisch may have a rebuilding year on his hands.

Washington experiences unique highs and lows. In this century, UW has had four elite teams, 2000, 2016, 2022 and 2023, and teams in 2004, 2008 and 2021 that were so godawful their coaches got fired. The Huskies have a great stadium, city and helmet. But they have their hands full in this league.





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