
Dawgs Set To Face Buckeyes In 105th Rose Bowl
December 22, 2018 | Football
THE GAME: The Pac-12 champion Washington football team (10-3 overall, 7-2 Pac-12) returns to the Rose Bowl game for the first time since 2001 as the Huskies will face Big Ten champion Ohio State (12-1, 8-1) in the 105th edition of "The Granddaddy of Them All." The game marks the first postseason matchup between the two old powers, though they have met 11 times in regular-season games. Kickoff in Pasadena is 2:00 p.m. on New Year's Day, and the game will air on ESPN.
HUSKIES' BOWL HISTORY: Washington will be making its 39th bowl game appearance in Pasadena. The Huskies enter the game with an 18-19-1 overall record in bowl games, dating back to the 1924 Rose Bowl, where the UW tied Navy, 14-14. This game vs. Ohio State marks the Huskies' 15th trip to the Rose Bowl and the UW's ninth straight season going to a different bowl game. Here's a rundown of the UW's all-time bowl results:
1924 • Rose • Navy • T, 14-14
1926 • Rose • Alabama • L, 19-20
1937 • Rose • Pittsburgh • L, 0-21
1938 • Pineapple • Hawaii • W, 53-13
1944 • Rose • USC • L, 0-29
1960 • Rose • Wisconsin • W, 44-8
1961 • Rose • Minnesota • W, 17-7
1964 • Rose • Illinois • L, 7-17
1978 • Rose • Michigan • W, 27-20
1979 • Sun • Texas • W, 14-7
1981 • Rose • Michigan • L, 6-23
1982 • Rose • Iowa • W, 28-0
1982 • Aloha • Maryland • W, 21-20
1983 • Aloha • Penn State • L, 10-13
1985 • Orange • Oklahoma • W, 28-17
1985 • Freedom • Colorado • W, 20-17
1986 • Sun • Alabama • L, 6-28
1987 • Independence • Tulane • W, 24-12
1989 • Freedom • Florida • W, 34-7
1991 • Rose • Iowa • W, 46-34
1992 • Rose • Michigan • W, 34-14
1993 • Rose • Michigan • L, 31-38
1995 • Sun • Iowa • L, 18-38
1996 • Holiday • Colorado • L, 21-33
1997 • Aloha • Michigan St. • W, 51-23
1998 • Oahu • Air Force • L, 25-45
1999 • Holiday • Kansas St. • L, 20-24
2001 • Rose • Purdue • W, 34-24
2001 • Holiday • Texas • L, 43-47
2002 • Sun • Purdue • L, 24-34
2010 • Holiday • Nebraska • W, 19-7
2011 • Alamo • Baylor • L, 56-67
2012 • Las Vegas • Boise State • L, 26-28
2013 • Fight Hunger • BYU • W, 31-16
2015 • Cactus • Oklahoma St. • L, 22-30
2016 • Heart of Dallas • Southern Miss • W, 44-31
2017 • Peach • Alabama • L, 7-24
2018 • Fiesta • Penn State • L, 28-35
TELEVISION: The Rose Bowl will air nationally on ESPN television, with Chris Fowler (play-by-play), Kirk Herbstreit (analyst), Maria Taylor and Tom Rinaldi (sidelines) providing the commentary.
RADIO: The Washington IMG College Network, with its flagship station KOMO AM-1000 and FM-97.7, will carry the live broadcast of every football game on 17 Northwest radio stations. First-year play-by-play man Tony Castricone and color analyst Damon Huard are joined by sideline reporter Elise Woodward. ESPN Radio (Dave Pasch, Greg McElroy, Tom Luginbill) will also air the game (Sirius/XM channel 80). The UW broadcast of the game will also air on Sirius/XM channel 81, and is available via TuneIn.com and the TuneIn app.
BOWL GAME VARIETY: Washington has managed the very unusual feat of having earned berths in nine different bowl games over the last nine seasons, with no repeats during that span. Considering that the Pac-12 has arrangements with seven bowls (and that the UW has not been to one of those during that stretch), it's a rather extraordinary coincidence. The Huskies played in their third non-Pac-12 bowl game during that stretch last year at the Fiesta Bowl. They also played in non-affiliated bowls the previous two years, going to the Zaxby's Heart of Dallas Bowl in 2015 (UW got that berth due to more than seven Pac-12 teams qualifying) and the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl in 2016 (the Peach Bowl was a College Football Playoff semifinal). After a seven-year bowl drought (2003-09), Washington has also played in the 2010 Holiday Bowl, the 2011 Alamo Bowl, the 2012 Las Vegas Bowl, the 2013 Fight Hunger Bowl and the 2015 (2014 season) Cactus Bowl. Other than the Holiday and Rose Bowls, the UW has never otherwise appeared in any of those games, meaning that the Huskies played in a bowl for the first time for seven seasons in a row (2011 Alamo through 2017 Fiesta).
DECADE AFTER DECADE: Washington has won a conference title and a trip to the Rose Bowl in each of the last 10 decades, dating back to the 1920s when Washington won the berth in 1923 and 1925. In the 1930s, the Dawgs won the '36 title. In the '40s, Washington earned the trip in 1943 and then barely slipped in under the wire in the 1950s, winning the 1959 crown. The Huskies won two Rose Bowl berths in the 1960s -- 1960 and 1963 -- and one in the 1970s (1977). Titles in 1980 and 1982 did it for that decade and three straight trips to Pasadena to begin the 1990s covered that 10-year span. In the 2000s, UW was the first team to earn Rose Bowl berths in nine straight decades. USC joined the Dawgs in that distinction in 2004 after their New Year's Day appearance in Pasadena. The Trojans made it 10 straight decades in the 2017 Rose Bowl.
HUSKIES vs. BUCKEYES HISTORY: Ohio State boasts an 8-3 record in its 11 all-time meetings with Washington. All 11 OSU-UW games have been contested in the regular season (i.e., no bowl matchups). Six of the 11 have been played at Husky Stadium (UW is 2-4 in those games) while the other five have been at Ohio Stadium (UW is 1-4 in those). The series got started in 1957, when Washington hosted the Buckeyes, losing 35-7. OSU went on to win the national title. The following year, the Dawgs visited Columbus and fell to OSU, 12-7. The series picked back up again in the 1960s. In '65, OSU handed the UW a 23-21 loss in Seattle. The following year in Columbus, Washington picked up its first win, 38-22, as Husky halfback Don Moore rushed for 221 yards. The series went on hiatus until 1986, when a 10th-ranked Buckeye team visited Husky Stadium and fell to No. 17 Washington, 40-7. In that game, the UW piled up exactly 204 rushing yards and 204 passing yards and exploded for 24 points in the second quarter after a scoreless first. Chris Chandler threw for 204 yards and two TDs, both to Lonzell Hill. In 1993, 12th-ranked UW lost, 21-12, to a No. 16 OSU team in Columbus. The game was 14-12 in the fourth quarter before a 49-yard TD run from OSU's Butler By'not'e put the game away. In 1994, at Husky Stadium, unranked Washington upset No. 16 Ohio State with a 25-16 win. UW tailback Napoleon Kaufman rushed 32 times for 211 yards and totaled 278 all-purpose yards to break Hugh McElhenny's then-school record. UW led 19-0 after one quarter and 22-0 at half. In 1995 at Columbus, No. 10 OSU, after a 20-day layoff after its season-opener, took a 30-20 decision over the No. 18 Dawgs. Eventual Heisman Trophy winner Eddie George rushed for 212 yards and two scores while UW tailback Leon Neal ran for 135 yards and also caught seven passes. The Huskies opened the 2003 season at defending national champion Ohio State, falling, 28-9. The Buckeyes led 21-0 before the Huskies got a field goal in the third quarter. Craig Krenzel threw for 203 yards on 15-of-27 passing. The UW's Cody Pickett was 26-of-49 for 255, but the Huskies gained only seven yards on the ground. Most recently, on Sept. 15, 2007, the Buckeyes came to Seattle and beat the Huskies, 33-14. Chris Wells rushed for 135 yards while Jake Locker led the UW, rushing for 102 yards on 14 carries. Washington has already scheduled a home-and-home series with Ohio State, for the 2024 and 2025 seasons.
HUSKIES vs. THE BIG TEN: Washington holds a 48-45-2 record all-time vs. current Big Ten opponents, a record that includes an 0-3 mark against Penn State (though the Nittany Lions were not members of the Big Ten at the time of two of those games against the UW) and 4-5-1 vs. Nebraska, also not a Big Ten member at the time of any of those games. Washington has played all 12 current Big Ten teams but have faced a Big Ten opponent only seven times since 2003 (the UW played Indiana in '03, Ohio State in '07, Illinois in 2013-14, Rutgers in 2016-17 and Penn State in the 2017 Fiesta Bowl). The Huskies have played Big Ten teams eight times in bowl games since 1990 (not counting Nebraska in the Holiday Bowl in 2010): Iowa in the 1990 Rose Bowl, Michigan in the 1992 and 1993 Rose Bowls, Iowa in the 1995 Sun Bowl, Michigan State in the 1997 Aloha Bowl, Purdue in the 2001 Rose Bowl, Purdue in the 2002 Sun Bowl and Penn State last year. The Huskies went 4-4 in those games. Here's the UW's all-time record vs. current Big Ten teams: 7-4 vs. Illinois; 1-2 vs. Indiana; 3-3 vs. Iowa; 1-0 vs. Maryland; 5-7 vs. Michigan; 2-1 vs. Michigan State; 7-10 vs. Minnesota; 4-5-1 vs. Nebraska; 3-0 vs. Northwestern; 3-8 vs. Ohio State; 0-3 vs. Penn State; 7-2-1 vs. Purdue; 2-0 vs. Rutgers; 4-0 vs. Wisconsin.
THE 100-YARD FACTOR: Since the 1947 season, Washington is 217-66-3 (.7643) when a Husky player rushes for 100 yards in a game. The Huskies were 8-0 in such games in 2016, were 5-1 in 2017 and are 5-0 this year.
HISTORY LESSON: Successfully rushing the football and winning go hand-in-hand for the Huskies. Since 1990, UW has rushed for 200 yards in a game 117 times. The Huskies' record stands at 100-16-1 (.859) in those contests. Since 1995, UW is 75-13-1 (.848) when rushing for 200 yards.
ROSE BOWL BULLET POINTS:
• Of the Huskies' seniors, only Greg Gaines has played in all 53 games. He will tie Keishawn Bierria (2014-17) for the UW record for most career games played (54).
• Quarterback Jake Browning has started and played in 52 out of a possible 53 games during his career. He is 39-13 (.750) in those 52 games. His win total is more than any other Pac-12 starting quarterback and 16 more than the next highest Huskies (Steve Pelluer and Brock Huard). His 52 starts are 12 more than the next closest Husky, Jake Locker, who started 40 games from 2007-10.
•Ben Burr-Kirven is currently ranked 25th in Pac-12 single-season history with 165 tackles. For perspective, no player has cracked the Conference's top-25 list in nearly 30 years. Washington's James Clifford was the last player to add his name to the top-25 tackling performances in a season, recording 168 stops in 1989.
•UW is 35-8 over its last 43 games.
• Washington hasn't allowed a team to score 40 points in its last 57 games and, during that same span, has allowed over 30 only four times. Over those 57 games, UW has outscored opponents, 1,916-995
• UW's defense has allowed just nine scrimmage plays of 30 or more yards (tied for fewest in the nation) and just one of 40 or more, fewest in the FBS.
• For the first time since 1995, the Huskies didn't have a true freshman play in their season opener. No true freshmen have played more than four games this season.
• In seniors Jake Browning and Myles Gaskin, the Huskies boast the most prolific, active quarterback-running back tandem in the nation, in terms of career statistics, both yardage and scoring. Gaskin ranks No. 3 in Pac-12 history in both rushing yards (5,202) and rushing TDs (55), while Browning is sixth in Pac-12 history in passing yards (11,983) and touchdown passes (94). Both of them are true seniors who have spent the last four seasons in the same backfield during one of the most successful runs in UW football history, as the Huskies have gone 39-14 over those four years. Browning, with 39 wins as a starting QB, has won more games than any starting quarterback in the history of the Pac-12. Meanwhile, Gaskin's stats are so prolific that several of his records seem unlikely to be approached for a very long time. He's the first Pac-12 player in history (and 10th in FBS history) to rush for 1,000 yards in four straight seasons. His 5,202 career rushing yards are more than 1,000 more than former UW record-holder Napoleon Kaufman, who sat atop the Husky rushing chart for 24 years. Gaskin's 60 career touchdowns (he has five receiving TDs to go with his 55 rushing scores) are 22 more than the next-closest Husky (Bishop Sankey, with 38).
HUSKIES' BOWL HISTORY: Washington will be making its 39th bowl game appearance in Pasadena. The Huskies enter the game with an 18-19-1 overall record in bowl games, dating back to the 1924 Rose Bowl, where the UW tied Navy, 14-14. This game vs. Ohio State marks the Huskies' 15th trip to the Rose Bowl and the UW's ninth straight season going to a different bowl game. Here's a rundown of the UW's all-time bowl results:
1924 • Rose • Navy • T, 14-14
1926 • Rose • Alabama • L, 19-20
1937 • Rose • Pittsburgh • L, 0-21
1938 • Pineapple • Hawaii • W, 53-13
1944 • Rose • USC • L, 0-29
1960 • Rose • Wisconsin • W, 44-8
1961 • Rose • Minnesota • W, 17-7
1964 • Rose • Illinois • L, 7-17
1978 • Rose • Michigan • W, 27-20
1979 • Sun • Texas • W, 14-7
1981 • Rose • Michigan • L, 6-23
1982 • Rose • Iowa • W, 28-0
1982 • Aloha • Maryland • W, 21-20
1983 • Aloha • Penn State • L, 10-13
1985 • Orange • Oklahoma • W, 28-17
1985 • Freedom • Colorado • W, 20-17
1986 • Sun • Alabama • L, 6-28
1987 • Independence • Tulane • W, 24-12
1989 • Freedom • Florida • W, 34-7
1991 • Rose • Iowa • W, 46-34
1992 • Rose • Michigan • W, 34-14
1993 • Rose • Michigan • L, 31-38
1995 • Sun • Iowa • L, 18-38
1996 • Holiday • Colorado • L, 21-33
1997 • Aloha • Michigan St. • W, 51-23
1998 • Oahu • Air Force • L, 25-45
1999 • Holiday • Kansas St. • L, 20-24
2001 • Rose • Purdue • W, 34-24
2001 • Holiday • Texas • L, 43-47
2002 • Sun • Purdue • L, 24-34
2010 • Holiday • Nebraska • W, 19-7
2011 • Alamo • Baylor • L, 56-67
2012 • Las Vegas • Boise State • L, 26-28
2013 • Fight Hunger • BYU • W, 31-16
2015 • Cactus • Oklahoma St. • L, 22-30
2016 • Heart of Dallas • Southern Miss • W, 44-31
2017 • Peach • Alabama • L, 7-24
2018 • Fiesta • Penn State • L, 28-35
TELEVISION: The Rose Bowl will air nationally on ESPN television, with Chris Fowler (play-by-play), Kirk Herbstreit (analyst), Maria Taylor and Tom Rinaldi (sidelines) providing the commentary.
RADIO: The Washington IMG College Network, with its flagship station KOMO AM-1000 and FM-97.7, will carry the live broadcast of every football game on 17 Northwest radio stations. First-year play-by-play man Tony Castricone and color analyst Damon Huard are joined by sideline reporter Elise Woodward. ESPN Radio (Dave Pasch, Greg McElroy, Tom Luginbill) will also air the game (Sirius/XM channel 80). The UW broadcast of the game will also air on Sirius/XM channel 81, and is available via TuneIn.com and the TuneIn app.
BOWL GAME VARIETY: Washington has managed the very unusual feat of having earned berths in nine different bowl games over the last nine seasons, with no repeats during that span. Considering that the Pac-12 has arrangements with seven bowls (and that the UW has not been to one of those during that stretch), it's a rather extraordinary coincidence. The Huskies played in their third non-Pac-12 bowl game during that stretch last year at the Fiesta Bowl. They also played in non-affiliated bowls the previous two years, going to the Zaxby's Heart of Dallas Bowl in 2015 (UW got that berth due to more than seven Pac-12 teams qualifying) and the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl in 2016 (the Peach Bowl was a College Football Playoff semifinal). After a seven-year bowl drought (2003-09), Washington has also played in the 2010 Holiday Bowl, the 2011 Alamo Bowl, the 2012 Las Vegas Bowl, the 2013 Fight Hunger Bowl and the 2015 (2014 season) Cactus Bowl. Other than the Holiday and Rose Bowls, the UW has never otherwise appeared in any of those games, meaning that the Huskies played in a bowl for the first time for seven seasons in a row (2011 Alamo through 2017 Fiesta).
DECADE AFTER DECADE: Washington has won a conference title and a trip to the Rose Bowl in each of the last 10 decades, dating back to the 1920s when Washington won the berth in 1923 and 1925. In the 1930s, the Dawgs won the '36 title. In the '40s, Washington earned the trip in 1943 and then barely slipped in under the wire in the 1950s, winning the 1959 crown. The Huskies won two Rose Bowl berths in the 1960s -- 1960 and 1963 -- and one in the 1970s (1977). Titles in 1980 and 1982 did it for that decade and three straight trips to Pasadena to begin the 1990s covered that 10-year span. In the 2000s, UW was the first team to earn Rose Bowl berths in nine straight decades. USC joined the Dawgs in that distinction in 2004 after their New Year's Day appearance in Pasadena. The Trojans made it 10 straight decades in the 2017 Rose Bowl.
HUSKIES vs. BUCKEYES HISTORY: Ohio State boasts an 8-3 record in its 11 all-time meetings with Washington. All 11 OSU-UW games have been contested in the regular season (i.e., no bowl matchups). Six of the 11 have been played at Husky Stadium (UW is 2-4 in those games) while the other five have been at Ohio Stadium (UW is 1-4 in those). The series got started in 1957, when Washington hosted the Buckeyes, losing 35-7. OSU went on to win the national title. The following year, the Dawgs visited Columbus and fell to OSU, 12-7. The series picked back up again in the 1960s. In '65, OSU handed the UW a 23-21 loss in Seattle. The following year in Columbus, Washington picked up its first win, 38-22, as Husky halfback Don Moore rushed for 221 yards. The series went on hiatus until 1986, when a 10th-ranked Buckeye team visited Husky Stadium and fell to No. 17 Washington, 40-7. In that game, the UW piled up exactly 204 rushing yards and 204 passing yards and exploded for 24 points in the second quarter after a scoreless first. Chris Chandler threw for 204 yards and two TDs, both to Lonzell Hill. In 1993, 12th-ranked UW lost, 21-12, to a No. 16 OSU team in Columbus. The game was 14-12 in the fourth quarter before a 49-yard TD run from OSU's Butler By'not'e put the game away. In 1994, at Husky Stadium, unranked Washington upset No. 16 Ohio State with a 25-16 win. UW tailback Napoleon Kaufman rushed 32 times for 211 yards and totaled 278 all-purpose yards to break Hugh McElhenny's then-school record. UW led 19-0 after one quarter and 22-0 at half. In 1995 at Columbus, No. 10 OSU, after a 20-day layoff after its season-opener, took a 30-20 decision over the No. 18 Dawgs. Eventual Heisman Trophy winner Eddie George rushed for 212 yards and two scores while UW tailback Leon Neal ran for 135 yards and also caught seven passes. The Huskies opened the 2003 season at defending national champion Ohio State, falling, 28-9. The Buckeyes led 21-0 before the Huskies got a field goal in the third quarter. Craig Krenzel threw for 203 yards on 15-of-27 passing. The UW's Cody Pickett was 26-of-49 for 255, but the Huskies gained only seven yards on the ground. Most recently, on Sept. 15, 2007, the Buckeyes came to Seattle and beat the Huskies, 33-14. Chris Wells rushed for 135 yards while Jake Locker led the UW, rushing for 102 yards on 14 carries. Washington has already scheduled a home-and-home series with Ohio State, for the 2024 and 2025 seasons.
HUSKIES vs. THE BIG TEN: Washington holds a 48-45-2 record all-time vs. current Big Ten opponents, a record that includes an 0-3 mark against Penn State (though the Nittany Lions were not members of the Big Ten at the time of two of those games against the UW) and 4-5-1 vs. Nebraska, also not a Big Ten member at the time of any of those games. Washington has played all 12 current Big Ten teams but have faced a Big Ten opponent only seven times since 2003 (the UW played Indiana in '03, Ohio State in '07, Illinois in 2013-14, Rutgers in 2016-17 and Penn State in the 2017 Fiesta Bowl). The Huskies have played Big Ten teams eight times in bowl games since 1990 (not counting Nebraska in the Holiday Bowl in 2010): Iowa in the 1990 Rose Bowl, Michigan in the 1992 and 1993 Rose Bowls, Iowa in the 1995 Sun Bowl, Michigan State in the 1997 Aloha Bowl, Purdue in the 2001 Rose Bowl, Purdue in the 2002 Sun Bowl and Penn State last year. The Huskies went 4-4 in those games. Here's the UW's all-time record vs. current Big Ten teams: 7-4 vs. Illinois; 1-2 vs. Indiana; 3-3 vs. Iowa; 1-0 vs. Maryland; 5-7 vs. Michigan; 2-1 vs. Michigan State; 7-10 vs. Minnesota; 4-5-1 vs. Nebraska; 3-0 vs. Northwestern; 3-8 vs. Ohio State; 0-3 vs. Penn State; 7-2-1 vs. Purdue; 2-0 vs. Rutgers; 4-0 vs. Wisconsin.
THE 100-YARD FACTOR: Since the 1947 season, Washington is 217-66-3 (.7643) when a Husky player rushes for 100 yards in a game. The Huskies were 8-0 in such games in 2016, were 5-1 in 2017 and are 5-0 this year.
HISTORY LESSON: Successfully rushing the football and winning go hand-in-hand for the Huskies. Since 1990, UW has rushed for 200 yards in a game 117 times. The Huskies' record stands at 100-16-1 (.859) in those contests. Since 1995, UW is 75-13-1 (.848) when rushing for 200 yards.
ROSE BOWL BULLET POINTS:
• Of the Huskies' seniors, only Greg Gaines has played in all 53 games. He will tie Keishawn Bierria (2014-17) for the UW record for most career games played (54).
• Quarterback Jake Browning has started and played in 52 out of a possible 53 games during his career. He is 39-13 (.750) in those 52 games. His win total is more than any other Pac-12 starting quarterback and 16 more than the next highest Huskies (Steve Pelluer and Brock Huard). His 52 starts are 12 more than the next closest Husky, Jake Locker, who started 40 games from 2007-10.
•Ben Burr-Kirven is currently ranked 25th in Pac-12 single-season history with 165 tackles. For perspective, no player has cracked the Conference's top-25 list in nearly 30 years. Washington's James Clifford was the last player to add his name to the top-25 tackling performances in a season, recording 168 stops in 1989.
•UW is 35-8 over its last 43 games.
• Washington hasn't allowed a team to score 40 points in its last 57 games and, during that same span, has allowed over 30 only four times. Over those 57 games, UW has outscored opponents, 1,916-995
• UW's defense has allowed just nine scrimmage plays of 30 or more yards (tied for fewest in the nation) and just one of 40 or more, fewest in the FBS.
• For the first time since 1995, the Huskies didn't have a true freshman play in their season opener. No true freshmen have played more than four games this season.
• In seniors Jake Browning and Myles Gaskin, the Huskies boast the most prolific, active quarterback-running back tandem in the nation, in terms of career statistics, both yardage and scoring. Gaskin ranks No. 3 in Pac-12 history in both rushing yards (5,202) and rushing TDs (55), while Browning is sixth in Pac-12 history in passing yards (11,983) and touchdown passes (94). Both of them are true seniors who have spent the last four seasons in the same backfield during one of the most successful runs in UW football history, as the Huskies have gone 39-14 over those four years. Browning, with 39 wins as a starting QB, has won more games than any starting quarterback in the history of the Pac-12. Meanwhile, Gaskin's stats are so prolific that several of his records seem unlikely to be approached for a very long time. He's the first Pac-12 player in history (and 10th in FBS history) to rush for 1,000 yards in four straight seasons. His 5,202 career rushing yards are more than 1,000 more than former UW record-holder Napoleon Kaufman, who sat atop the Husky rushing chart for 24 years. Gaskin's 60 career touchdowns (he has five receiving TDs to go with his 55 rushing scores) are 22 more than the next-closest Husky (Bishop Sankey, with 38).
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