THE GAME: The Washington football team (3-4 overall, 2-2 Pac-12) returns to the road for the second week in a row as the Huskies travel to face Stanford (3-4, 2-3) Saturday night in Palo Alto. Kickoff is 7:30 p.m., and the game will air on FS1 television. The Huskies picked up a come-from-behind road win last week at Arizona, overcoming a 13-0, halftime deficit to win, 21-16. The Cardinal were idle last week, following a win over Oregon and losses at Arizona State and Washington State.
Georgia sophomore Lebbeus Overton named 2020-21 MaxPreps Male High School Athlete of the Year maxpreps.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from maxpreps.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Building a Fence: Keeping Washington Blue Chips Home
Everyone around UWDawgpound is feeling a bit down about some of the recruiting misses lately on homegrown blue chip players and wondering why players seem to be deserting the hometown squad to play elsewhere. Emeka Egbuka is heading to Ohio State, and it seems like JT Tuimolau is likely headed elsewhere as well. Some are staying home, like Sam Huard, but it feels like more misses than hits. This begs the question:
Are the Huskies doing a good job keeping their home state talent at home?
The short answer is:
yes.
They re not getting 100% of the top players in the state. They never have and they never will, nor will any school keep all the best homegrown players for themselves. Players are people, and they pick schools for all kinds of reasons. Geographic proximity to their high school is a big one, but far from the only one. Top players in every state cross state lines all the time, and not just from the high-density talent