Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
These quarterbacks have started for the Washington Huskies. They are listed in order of the date of each man's first start at quarterback. They are listed in order of the date of each man's first start at quarterback.
The official NCAA record book does not include bowl games in statistical records until 2002, [1] with most colleges also structuring their record books this way. The Pac-12, in which Washington was a member from 1915 [a] until its effective demise after the 2023 season, held a championship game from 2011 through 2023. Washington appeared in the ...
The Washington Huskies football team competes in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, representing the University of Washington. Since 1959, the Huskies have competed as a charter member of the Pac-12 Conference , formerly known as the Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU ...
The Washington Huskies football team represents the University of Washington in college football. Washington competed in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) as a member of the Big Ten Conference , after having been a charter member of the Pac-12 Conference until the end of the 2023-2024 season.
Penix transferred to the University of Washington in December 2021. [14] He was the FBS leader in passing yards per game for the 2022 season (357) and led the Huskies to an 11–2 record. [15] He threw 4,641 passing yards, becoming the Washington Huskies all-time single-season passing leader during the Alamo Bowl. He was named AP Comeback ...
Moon attended two-year West Los Angeles College and was a record-setting quarterback as a freshman in 1974, but only a handful of four-year colleges showed interest in signing him. However, Offensive coordinator Dick Scesniak of the University of Washington in Seattle, was eager to sign the rifle-armed Moon. Adamant to play quarterback, Moon ...
The 1967 Washington Huskies football team was an American football team that represented the University of Washington during the 1967 NCAA University Division football season. In its eleventh season under head coach Jim Owens , the team compiled a 5–5 record, tied for fourth place in the Athletic Association of Western Universities (Pac-8 ...
The 2008 Washington Huskies football team represented the University of Washington in the 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Led by fourth-year head coach Tyrone Willingham, the team played its home games at Husky Stadium in Seattle. The Huskies were winless at 0–12, the worst record in the program's history.