2011 Washington Huskies football team

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2011 Washington Huskies football
Alamo Bowl, L 56–67 vs. Baylor
ConferencePac-12 Conference
DivisionNorth Division
Record7–6 (5–4 Pac-12)
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorDoug Nussmeier (3rd season)
Offensive schemePro-style
Defensive coordinatorNick Holt (3rd season)
Base defense4–3
MVPCort Denninson
Greg Walker
Chris Polk
Captains
Home stadiumHusky Stadium
Seasons
← 2010
2012 →
2011 Pac-12 Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
North Division
No. 4 Oregon xy$   8 1     12 2  
No. 7 Stanford x%   8 1     11 2  
Washington   5 4     7 6  
California   4 5     7 6  
Oregon State   3 6     3 9  
Washington State   2 7     4 8  
South Division
No. 6 USC   7 2     10 2  
UCLA xy   5 4     6 8  
Utah   4 5     8 5  
Arizona State   4 5     6 7  
Arizona   2 7     4 8  
Colorado   2 7     3 10  
Championship: Oregon 49, UCLA 31
  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
  • % – BCS at-large representative
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
  • y – Championship game participant
  • † – USC ineligible for championship and post-season due to NCAA sanctions
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2011 Washington Huskies football team represented the

CenturyLink Field due to a planned renovation of Husky Stadium;[1] both stadiums are in Seattle. They are a member of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 7–6, 5–4 in Pac-12 play to finish in third place in the North division. They were invited to the Alamo Bowl where they were defeated by Baylor
67–56.

Schedule

DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
September 34:00 p.m.Eastern Washington*RTNWW 30–2758,088[2]
September 1012:30 p.m.Hawaiʻi*
  • Husky Stadium
  • Seattle, WA
RTNWW 40–3263,252[3]
September 1712:30 p.m.at No. 11
ABC/ESPN
L 38–5185,110[4]
September 2412:30 p.m.California
  • Husky Stadium
  • Seattle, WA
FSNW 31–2360,437[5]
October 14:00 p.m.at
Rice-Eccles Stadium
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • FSNW 31–1445,412[6]
    October 1512:30 p.m.Colorado
    • Husky Stadium
    • Seattle, WA
    RTNWW 52–2462,147[7]
    October 225:00 p.m.at No. 7 StanfordNo. 22ABCL 21–6550,360[8]
    October 297:30 p.m.Arizonadagger
    • Husky Stadium
    • Seattle, WA
    FSNW 42–3159,825[9]
    November 57:30 p.m.No. 6 Oregon
    FSNL 17–3469,407[10]
    November 1212:30 p.m.at No. 18 USCFXL 17–4064,756[11]
    November 1912:30 p.m.at Oregon StateRTNWL 21–3842,766[12]
    November 264:30 p.m.
    Versus
    W 38–2164,559[13]
    December 296:00 p.m.vs. No. 15 Baylor*ESPNL 56–6765,256
    • *Non-conference game
    • daggerHomecoming
    • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
    • All times are in Pacific time
    Source:[14]

    Conference opponents not played this season: Arizona State, UCLA

    Roster and coaching staff

    2011 Washington Huskies football team roster
    Players Coaches
    Offense
    Pos. # Name Class
    WR 9 Devin Aguilar Sr
    FB 48 Jonathan Amosa Jr
    OL 70 James Atoe RFr
    TE 81 Marlion Barnett So
    FB 36 Travon Brooks Fr
    QB 6 Derrick Brown Fr
    WR 7 Cody Bruns Sr
    TB 24 Jesse Callier So
    WR 19 DiAndre Campbell RFr
    WR 27 William Chandler So
    OL 76 Dexter Charles Fr
    TB 32 Deontae Cooper RFr
    OL 78 Mike Criste RFr
    OL 62 Ross Dolbec Fr
    OL 67 Skyler Fancher Sr
    TB 26 Johri Fogerson Sr
    WR 16 Marvin Hall Fr
    TE 84 Michael Hartvigson RFr
    OL 72 Micah Hatchee RFr
    TE 80 Evan Hudson RFr
    WR 3 James Johnson Jr
    WR 11 Jamaal Jones Fr
    WR 15 Jermaine Kearse Sr
    OL 56 Senio Kelemete Sr
    OL 75 Erik Kohler So
    WR 83 Luther Leonard Jr
    WR 89 Reade Lobdill Sr
    QB 5 Nick Montana RFr
    WR 12 Joshua Perkins Fr
    TB/FB 34 Dezden Petty Fr
    TB 1 Chris Polk Jr
    OL 79 Colin Porter So
    QB 17 Keith Price So
    OL 59 Ben Riva RFr
    TB 35 Cole Sager Jr
    TE 87 Cameron Salley So
    TB 25 Bishop Sankey Fr
    OL 73 Drew Schaefer Jr
    TE 88 Austin Seferian-Jenkins Fr
    WR 8 Kevin Smith So
    QB 13 Wil Smith Fr
    OL 64 Colin Tanigawa RFr
    OL 61 Ben Teichman Fr
    OL 65 Siosifa Tufunga Fr
    QB 14 Thomas Vincent Fr
    WR 2 Kasen Williams Fr
    QB 16 Erik Wilson So
    TB 29 Willis Wilson RFr
    OL 52 Nick Wood Sr
    Defense
    Pos. # Name Class
    S 36 Zach Beebe RFr
    DE 82 James Boker Fr
    DE 91 Connor Cree Fr
    DE 11 Talia Crichton Jr
    LB 31 Cort Dennison Sr
    CB 18 Greg Ducre So
    S 42 Ken Egu RFr
    S 41 Travis Feeney Fr
    S 29 Nate Fellner Jr
    DE 95 Jarett Finau Fr
    LB 37 Princeton Fuimaono So
    DE 85 Pete Galbraith Sr
    LB 53 Garret Gilliland So
    S 20 Justin Glenn Jr
    CB 26 Anthony Gobern Jr
    S 34 K.C. Herren RFr
    LB 50 Nick Holt Fr
    DE 93 Andrew Hudson RFr
    DE 52
    Hau'oli Jamora
    So
    LB 58 Jamaal Kearse RFr
    LB 56 Alec Kimble RFr
    DL 97 Lawrence Lagafuaina RFr
    LB 47 Scott Lawyer Fr
    DB 27 Adam Long Jr
    LB 40 Matthew Lyons Fr
    S 1 Sean Parker So
    LB 43 Cooper Pelluer So
    CB 38 Marquis Persley Sr
    CB 21 Marcus Peters Fr
    DL 55 Sione Potoa'e So
    CB 28 Quinton Richardson Sr
    S 5 James Sample Fr
    DL 77 Drew Schultz RFr
    S 13 Will Shamburger So
    DL 71 Danny Shelton Fr
    DE 22 Josh Shirley RFr
    DB 4 Antavius Sims Jr
    S 14 Taz Stevenson So
    DL 74 Alameda Ta'amu Sr
    DE 72 Everrette Thompson Sr
    LB 10 John Timu Fr
    DL 98 Semisi Tokolahi Jr
    CB 6 Desmond Trufant Jr
    LB 54 Tim Tucker So
    DL 90 Taniela Tupou Fr
    LB 3 Thomas Tutogi So
    S 39 Greg Walker Jr
    LB 51 Jordan Wallace Jr
    DE 45 Corey Waller Fr
    CB 32 Tre Watson Jr
    S 30 Evan Zeger Fr
    Special teams
    Pos. # Name Class
    PK 17 Erik Folk Sr
    PK 16 Eric Guttorp Sr
    LS 60 Brendon Lopez Sr
    P
    46 Will Mahan Sr
    P
    94 Kiel Rasp Sr
    Head coach
    Coordinators/assistant coaches

    [15]


    Legend
    • (C) Team captain
    • (S) Suspended
    • (I) Ineligible
    • Injured Injured
    • Redshirt Redshirt

    Roster
    Last update: August 17, 2011

    Game starters

    The follow players were the game starters.[16]

    Opponent WR LT LG C RG RT TE QB TB FB WR
    EASTERN WASH. Je. Kearse Kelemete Tanigawa Schaefer Porter Kohler Seferian-Jenkins Price Polk Hartvigson% Aguilar
    HAWAI’I Amosa Hartvigson%
    at Nebraska Williams+ Johnson+ Aguilar
    CALIFORNIA Seferian-Jenkins Amosa -

    Hartvigson%

    at Utah Hartvigson Johnson
    COLORADO Seferian-Jenkins Johnson+ Aguilar
    at Stanford Hartvigson%
    ARIZONA Johnson+
    OREGON Hartvigson% E. Hudson%
    at USC Williams+ Smith+ Aguilar
    at Oregon State Seferian-Jenkins Montana Williams+
    WASHINGTON STATE Wood Price Tucker Smith
    vs. Baylor Williams+ Aguilar

    % – started as second/third tight end + – started as third/fourth wide receiver

    Opponent DE DT DT DE OLB ILB OLB S S CB CB
    EASTERN WASH. Crichton Thompson Ta’amu Jamora Fuimaono Dennison Timu Fellner Parker Ducre Trufant
    HAWAI’I Ducre^ Richardson
    at Nebraska Timu Glenn
    CALIFORNIA Thompson Potoa’e Gilliland
    at Utah Tokolahi Shirley Fuimaono Ja. Kearse Ducre
    COLORADO
    at Stanford
    ARIZONA Timu Shamburger
    OREGON Richardson
    at USC A. Hudson
    at Oregon State
    WASHINGTON STATE Shirley Fellner
    vs. Baylor Shelton Ja. Kearse

    ^ – started as fifth defensive back

    Game summaries

    Eastern Washington

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Eagles 10 3 7 7 27
    Huskies 7 13 7 3 30

    Washington Husky cornerback Desmond Trufant intercepted a pass by Eastern Washington Eagles' quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell in the end zone with 29 seconds left to preserve a 30–27 win on September 3. Trufant wrestled the pass away from 6-foot-5 Eagles receiver Brandon Kaufman. Mitchell passed for 473 yards on the night, completed 39 of 69 passes, and had 3 touchdowns against 2 interceptions. For Washington, quarterback Keith Price threw three touchdown passes and completed 17 of 25 passes for 102 yards, and running back Chris Polk ran for 125 yards on 23 carries. Washington gained fewer total yards than Eastern Washington – 250 yards compared to 504 for the Eagles – but had zero turnovers while the Eagles gave up the ball four times. Trufant had forced another one of those turnovers during the first quarter; he stripped Matt Johnson on a punt return and created a short field for the Huskies that led to a 7-yard touchdown pass from Price to Jonathan Amosa.[17]

    After the game, the Pac-12 Conference named Trufant Pac-12 defensive player of week. Washington placekicker Erik Folk was named Pac-12 special teams player of the week. Polk was a perfect 3-for-3 on field goals during the game and all three of his field goals came from outside of 40 yards.[18]

    Hawaii

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Warriors 0 14 6 12 32
    Huskies 21 7 3 9 40

    Nebraska

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Huskies 7 10 0 21 38
    #11 Cornhuskers 10 10 17 14 51

    California

    1 234Total
    California 7 1330 23
    Washington 14 737 31
    • Date: September 24
    • Location:
      PDT

    Utah

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Huskies 7 3 14 7 31
    Utes 7 0 0 7 14

    Colorado

    1 234Total
    Colorado 7 377 24
    Washington 21 1777 52
    • Date: October 15
    • Location:
      PDT

    Stanford

    1 2 3 4 Total
    #22 Huskies 7 7 0 7 21
    #7 Cardinal 10 28 10 17 65

    Arizona

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Wildcats 10 3 15 3 31
    Huskies 0 14 14 14 42

    Oregon

    1 2 3 4 Total
    #6 Ducks 10 7 17 0 34
    Huskies 3 7 7 0 17

    USC

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Huskies 0 3 7 7 17
    #18 Trojans 7 16 14 3 40

    Oregon State

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Huskies 7 7 0 7 21
    Beavers 14 3 0 21 38

    Washington State

    Washington State at Washington
    1 234Total
    Washington State 0 1470 21
    Washington 14 7710 38
    • Date: November 26
    • Location:
      Versus

    Keith Price threw three touchdown passes to become Washington's all-time single-season leader in that category, the final one a 22-yard toss to Chris Polk, and Washington held off rival Washington State 38–21 on Saturday night to win the 104th Apple Cup. Price threw his 29th touchdown pass of the season midway through the third quarter, finding Polk on a wheel-route out of the backfield to give the Huskies a 28–14 lead.

    Washington State pulled within 28–21, but Erik Folk's 46-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter pushed the lead to 10 and Polk sealed the Huskies third straight Apple Cup title on his 1-yard TD run with 5:23 left.

    Price, who sat out last week's loss at Oregon State due to a multitude of injuries, finished 21 of 29 for 291 yards. Washington also got a blocked punt that Jesse Callier returned 2 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter.[19]

    The Cougars fired head coach Paul Wulff the following week.

    Baylor (Alamo Bowl)

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Huskies 7 28 14 7 56
    #15 Bears 21 3 29 14 67

    Entering their first game in the Alamo Bowl, the Huskies has a 16–14–1 overall bowl game record, going back to their first game in the 1924 Rose Bowl. The Huskies set new school record during the season in passing touchdowns (32) and in fewest fumbles (11).

    Rankings

    Ranking movements
    Legend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking
    — = Not ranked RV = Received votes
    Week
    PollPre1234567891011121314Final
    AP
    RVRVRVRVRV22RVRVRVRV
    CoachesRVRVRVRVRVRVRV24RVRVRV
    HarrisNot releasedRV25RVRVRVNot released
    BCSNot released25Not released

    References

    1. ^ "UW regents okay Husky Stadium remodel". KING. Seattle. Associated Press. November 19, 2010. Archived from the original on November 22, 2010. Retrieved January 9, 2011.
    2. ^ "Eastern Washington Eagles vs. Washington Huskies Box Score". ESPN. September 3, 2011. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
    3. ^ "Hawaii Warriors vs. Washington Huskies Box Score". ESPN. September 10, 2011. Retrieved September 10, 2011.
    4. ^ "Washington Huskies vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers Box Score". ESPN. September 17, 2011. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
    5. ^ "California Golden Bears vs. Washington Huskies Box Score". ESPN. September 24, 2011. Retrieved September 25, 2011.
    6. ^ "Washington Huskies vs. Utah Utes Box Score". ESPN. October 1, 2011. Retrieved October 1, 2011.
    7. ^ "Washington Huskies vs. Colorado Buffaloes Box Score". ESPN. October 15, 2011. Retrieved October 15, 2011.
    8. ^ "Washington Huskies vs. Stanford Cardinal Box Score". ESPN. October 22, 2011. Retrieved October 22, 2011.
    9. ^ "Arizona Wildcats vs. Washington Huskies Box Score". ESPN. October 29, 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2011.
    10. ^ "Oregon Ducks vs. Washington Huskies Box Score". ESPN. November 5, 2011. Retrieved November 5, 2011.
    11. ^ "Washington Huskies vs. USC Trojans Box Score". ESPN. November 12, 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2011.
    12. ^ "Washington Huskies vs. Oregon State Beavers Box Score". ESPN. November 19, 2011. Retrieved November 19, 2011.
    13. ^ "Washington State Cougars vs. Washington Huskies Box Score". ESPN. November 26, 2011. Retrieved November 26, 2011.
    14. ^ "Washington Football Future Schedules". University of Washington Department of Athletics. Archived from the original on December 9, 2010. Retrieved January 9, 2011.
    15. ^ "Washington Football Roster". GoHuskies. Archived from the original on September 25, 2011. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
    16. ^ "2012 Washington Football Information Guide & Record Book" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2018.
    17. ^ "Desmond Trufant's interception preserves Washington's win". ESPN. September 3, 2011. Retrieved September 9, 2011.
    18. ^ "First Pac-12 Player of the Week Winners". Pac-12 Conference. Retrieved September 6, 2011.
    19. ^ "Keith Price-Led Washington Tops Wazzou in Apple Cup". ESPN. November 26, 2011. Retrieved December 29, 2014.