Washington running back Dillon Johnson expected to play

Dillon Johnson, who had to be helped off the field on the final play against Texas, is expected to play against Michigan.

Washington running back Dillon Johnson, who suffered an uncomfortable injury on the final offensive play against Texas in the semifinals and needed to be helped off the field by trainers, is expected to play in Monday’s national championship game, head coach Kalen DeBoer announced on Saturday.

The Huskies running back has dealt with leg injuries for most of the season, either with his knee or foot. Johnson himself confirmed in a media availability that he won’t be 100% against Michigan, but he will be ready to play.

Johnson has been Washington’s best option on the ground by a wide margin this season. He’s rushed for 1,162 yards and 16 touchdowns on 222 carries this season, finishing in the top 25 in the country in rushing yards. He sent his biggest statement against USC with 256 yards and four touchdowns on the ground, gashing a leaky Trojans run defense.

No other Huskies running back surpassed 200 yards for the season, and the entire rest of the team managed just 583 yards on 150 carries.

The curious case of Michael Penix Jr’s draft stock

What can we make of an older, injury-embattled quarterback who has some of the best traits in the entire 2024 quarterback class?

If there’s one appeal for NFL fans to watch college sports, it’s watching the quarterbacks bloom and announce themselves as the future of the sport. The College Football Playoffs have been a proving ground for many top draft picks, from Clemson‘s Trevor Lawrence to Alabama‘s Tua Tagovailoa to LSU‘s Joe Burrow. This year, the story centers around Washington quarterback Michael Penix Jr., but his argument is a little different than the others mentioned above.

You can’t have a rational discussion on Penix’s prospects at the next level without mentioning his injury history. The 23-year-old suffered four consecutive season-ending injuries at Indiana, including two ACL tears and a joint dislocation in both shoulders. The Washington quarterback has not missed a game over the past two seasons, but the wear-and-tear will lower his ceiling as a first-round candidate.

We’ve also seen this film before, a senior quarterback with a late-career breakout once they’ve developed as a player. Kenny Pickett did this with Pittsburgh. Bo Nix did it at Oregon the past two seasons. In a sport where the entire foundation is that everyone is gaining experience rather than showcasing it, a seasoned player can do some true damage once it all slows down. That especially applies when said quarterback has a receiving room like Rome Odunze, Ja’Lynn Polk, and Jalen McMillan, all of whom have NFL futures.

Penix isn’t your average quarterback who is just better than everyone else because he’s 23. We’re learning more and more about what makes quarterbacks good prospects and good NFL quarterbacks, and the Washington quarterback checks some big boxes.

For one thing, Penix is a wizard within the pocket. No quarterback has exemplified this in the NFL more than Kansas City‘s Patrick Mahomes, but one of the most valuable skills a modern passer can have is avoiding sacks. No one can quite extend plays like the guy on the Chiefs, but avoiding negative plays and turning sacks into throwaways or even completions can save possessions. Penix’s 8.0% pressure-to-sack ratio is the fourth-best among any Power 5 quarterback, a talent on full display against Texas. He’s not particularly speedy or mobile, but he seems to have an almost supernatural sense of how to angle himself away from an oncoming pass rusher to buy an extra second to avoid a big loss.

Over Washington’s past two games, Penix has been pressured on 29 of his 80 dropbacks. He’s only been sacked twice. Longhorns pressured Penix 16 times in Monday’s semifinal and they never got him to the ground. He’s thrown for 1,014 and averaged 8.3 yards per attempt under pressure this season.

Penix is also one of the most precise downfield passers in the nation. PFF awarded him a passing grade above 90 on both intermediate and deep throws, and the site credited him with 40 big-time throws and seven turnover-worthy plays on passes 10 or more yards downfield. He ended the season with a 56.4% completion percentage, an average of 13.6 yards per attempt, 27 touchdowns, and nine interceptions on those passes. Even with the eye test, his downfield passes hum with an easy velocity and he finds tight windows routinely.

Penix’s injury history will likely prevent him from clambering into the upper tier of NFL Draft picks this upcoming season, but there’s a safe argument to make that he has the highest floor of any quarterback prospect in the class. Personally, I think he should be firmly in the mix to be the third or fourth quarterback selected in the draft with LSU’s Jayden Daniels.

It remains to be seen what NFL scouts make of that debate, but one more exceptional game against Michigan could vault him into conversations no one expected at the start of the season.

Michigan vs Washington will be a battle of good vs evil

When Michigan and Washington face off for the college football National Championship, it will be a battle of good versus evil in the minds of a lot of fans.

Football Blue Blood vs the Upstart

Eighteen-time National Champion vs one-time split National Champion

David vs Goliath

Good vs Evil?

American sports fans love a good underdog story. Watching the New England Patriots win yet another Super Bowl is fun, but seeing them fall to the New York Giants was epic. Mike Tyson was everyone’s favorite boxer, but Buster Douglas became a legend after beating him in 1990. Underdog stories are the best kind of stories.

The Michigan Wolverines will meet the Washington Huskies in the college football National Championship game on Jan. 8. Both teams are 14-0 coming into the game, and both have had tremendous seasons. However, the game is a tale of big, bad Michigan taking on a Washington team that few expected to be in this position. So the underdog story is built in. However, it feels like even more than that this year.

By now, every college football fan is aware of the sign-stealing scandal involving the Michigan football team. Staff member Connor Stalions was accused of leading a sign-stealing operation that may go back quite a while. This effort included recording other teams’ sideline signals with cell phones, which is banned by the NCAA. There are also rules in place that forbid sending people to scout opponents in person ahead of games, which Michigan also allegedly did.

As the story broke, and then became mainstream, the Wolverines quickly became the villains in the college football universe. Despite their claims that other teams did it first. Eventually, head coach Jim Harbaugh accepted a three-game suspension over the incident. Michigan moved on with its season, which, of course, led to the Playoff and a trip to the National Championship game appearance, much to the chagrin of a large number of college football fans.

Many fans see Michigan as “cheaters” who don’t deserve a championship, and many are convinced that the NCAA will eventually wipe away their title if they win.

Washington, on the other hand, has loads of goodwill. They’re led by a very likable quarterback in Michael Penix, who leads one of the top ten offenses in the nation. The offense also features a terrific receiver unit, including Rome Odunze, who will likely be a top-15 draft pick soon. They’re a fun team to watch, while Michigan features an offense built around the running game with Blake Corum and defense.

Jan. 8 will be a contrast of styles, and, in the eyes of many, a battle of good vs evil. That is certainly an exaggeration of the highest magnitude, but realistically, it’s how many fans will view it. Michigan appears to be the favorite to win according to the betting lines. Washington, though, will be the favorite in the hearts of most. To those fans, the Huskies are the good guys after all.

Heading to the CFP National Championship is going to cost a pretty penny

Better tap into the savings if you want to go to the national championship.

The title game is set. The No. 1 Michigan Wolverines will take on the No. 2 Washington Huskies in Houston, Texas, for the national championship.

These two teams last met in 2021 in Ann Arbor, the Wolverines won 31-10. The last time they met in the postseason came in the 1993 Rose Bowl, Michigan also won that game. The year prior in the 1992 Rose Bowl Washington won 34-14.

This is the fifth postseason meeting between the two schools with each team winning twice. Overall, Michigan leads the all-time series 8-5 with back-to-back wins. Michigan and Washington become conference rivals next season with the Huskies leaving the dying Pac-12 for the Big Ten.

As of Tuesday, the cheapest ticket available on Vivid Seats is $1,078 and that puts you on the third level. The most expensive ticket would cost you $13,464 to sit on the front row at the midfield behind the Michigan bench. Sitting behind the Washington bench will cost you $11,016 per ticket.

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The best photos from Washington’s Sugar Bowl victory and Michael Penix’s statement performance

The game was closer in the final seconds than Washington expected, but the Huskies walked away with a ticket to the national championship game.

The Washington Huskies defeated Texas in the Allstate Sugar Bowl on Monday night to earn their place in the national championship game alongside Michigan.

Quarterback Michael Penix Jr., the Heisman Trophy runner-up and Maxwell Award winner, showed out the entire game. He completed 29 of 38 passes for 430 yards and a pair of touchdowns, and six different Huskies receivers had a catch of 10 yards or longer. The star quarterback completed his first 11 passes of the second half to help build a two-score lead that Washington eventually needed every inch of.

An onside kick recovery late in the game seemed to seal the final score at 37-31 in Washington’s favor, but an injury to running back Dillon Johnson stopped the clock on third down. After a penalty on the ensuing punt and a 41-yard pass from Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers to Jordan Whittington, the Longhorns were just 12 yards from a miraculous game-winning touchdown.

Instead, Washington defensive back Elijah Jackson swatted away the fourth-down pass in the defensive play of the game to ensure there would be no comeback, and the celebration was on.

Here are the best photos from Washington’s victory.

Penix throws Washington to a Sugar Bowl victory over Texas despite last-second nightmare

The Huskies quarterback threw for 341 yards on his first 22 attempts and completed his first 11 second-half attempts in the statement game.

Washington booked a ticket to play Michigan for the national championship with a 37-31 victory in the Allstate Sugar Bowl over Texas on Monday.

Both offenses came out blazing in the first half. Each team found the end zone once in the first quarter and twice in the second, with Huskies running back Dillon Johnson punching his way into the end zone twice and three different Texas running backs finding paydirt.

Despite the emphasis on each team’s running game near the goal line, the Huskies relied on quarterback Michael Penix Jr., and the Maxwell Award winner delivered. The senior quarterback threw lasers all over the field on Monday night. On the Huskies’ third play of the game, he wound up and dropped a perfect teardrop to Ja’Lynn Polk for a 77-yard gain.

He led another touchdown drive two possessions later with two 20-yard completions to retake the lead. Even when he didn’t throw a perfect pass, it seemed to work out. In the final two minutes of the first half, he fired an absolute missile toward Polk that a Texas defensive back deflected straight into the air. Instead of falling to the turf, however, the ball fluttered right back down into Polk’s hands for a 29-yard touchdown.

The Washington quarterback came out firing after halftime as well. With the score knotted at 21 after two quarters, he led the Huskies 70 yards in eight plays to start the third quarter with a touchdown. Penix completed all six of his passes for 61 yards, including a 19-yard dart to Jalen McMillan for his second touchdown pass of the game.

Penix ended the game with 29 completions on 38 attempts, throwing for 430 yards and two touchdowns. He racked up 341 yards on his first 22 attempts, averaging more than 15 yards per attempt well into the third quarter, and completed his first 11 passes of the second half.

On the other side, Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers was in full boom-or-bust mode. The Longhorns junior completed just 10 of his first 20 passes but still managed 102 yards on the work. He turned it on late, ending the game with 318 yards and a touchdown, but he missed too many early passes to keep pace with Penix’s masterclass.

The game got away from Texas on their first offensive play of the third quarter. Trailing 28-21, the Longhorns needed to answer Washington’s statement touchdown and instead fumbled on first down to surrender the ball right back to the Huskies. Penix and the offense could only generate a field goal, but it was still the game’s first two-score lead and put the game in their hands.

The Huskies played clock control once they took command, as Texas only held the ball for 2:21 of the third quarter and ran five offensive plays.

A Huskies field goal in the opening minute of the fourth made it a 34-21 game, and the Texas offense had last gasps to make it a game. The Longhorns survived a second fumble by stymying Penix into a punt, and Ewers threw a perfect back-shoulder fade to Adonai Mitchell in the end zone to cut the lead to six points with seven minutes to play.

Penix wasn’t going to let the game get away, however. He marched the Huskies down the field one final time, converting a huge third down before driving his team into the red zone with a perfect sideline pass to star wideout Rome Odunze for 32 yards for a final bow.

A chip-shot field goal later, and Washington held a two-score lead again. A late Texas field goal made the final margin slightly closer, but an onside kick recovery seemed to seal the Huskies’ victory.

However, a pair of unfathomable breaks ensued. Johnson, Washington’s starting running back, was injured and needed to be helped off the field on third down, stopping the clock and giving the ball back to Texas with 40 seconds left. Then, one of the Huskies gunners ran into the Longhorns’ return man for a penalty to improve their field position, and Ewers found Jordan Whittington for a 41-yard gain into Washington territory to give Texas life. A few plays later, a Huskies blitz seemed to end the game when Ewers needed to throw it away, but the officials put one last second on the clock. Texas’ last gasp came up empty after defensive back Elijah Jackson swatted away another fade intended for Mitchell, finally bringing the lengthy final minute to an end.

Washington will play the Wolverines for the national championship on January 8.

Transfer quarterback Will Rogers commits to Washington Huskies

The SEC’s No. 2 all-time leading passer threw for 12,315 yards over his four years at Mississippi State. He has one year of eligibility.

Former Mississippi State quarterback Will Rogers committed to transfer to the Washington Huskies, according to a Friday report from ESPN’s Pete Thamel.

Rogers finished his time in the SEC in second on the conference’s all-time passing leaderboard with 12,315 yards across his four seasons with the Bulldogs. The senior is one of the most experienced quarterbacks in the portal, with 43 games played and 1,876 career attempts.

Rogers’ most prolific season came as a sophomore in 2021 when he threw for 4,739 yards and 36 touchdowns during Mississippi State’s 7-6 season. He set a personal-best 73.9% completion percentage and threw for 400 yards four different times, including a standout game against Auburn when he completed 44 of 55 passes for 415 yards and six passing touchdowns. He led the Bulldogs past the Tigers (and quarterback Bo Nix) for a 43-34 victory.

Rogers’ 94 career passing touchdowns are the second-most of any quarterback set to return in 2024, trailing only new Oregon quarterback Dillon Gabriel’s 125.

Rogers would only need 2,293 passing yards and 27 passing touchdowns next season to break into the top ten in the history of the FBS in each respective statistic,

Washington is no stranger to a high-flying passing offense, leading the FBS this season with 343.8 passing yards per game this season behind Heisman Trophy finalist Michael Penix Jr. While Penix and his top weapons like Rome Odunze leave for the NFL this offseason and the Huskies’ schedule will surely get harder in their first season as members of the Big Ten, Rogers still expressed excitement about the Washington offense in Thamel’s report.

Rogers will only have one season of eligibility remaining.

Washington picks up crystal ball prediction for Will Rogers

This would be a major addition for Washington.

The Washington Huskies could be one step closer to addressing their quarterback position for the 2024 season. This time they will look to the SEC and the transfer portal to address the future need for a signal-caller.

According to 247Sports insider Chris Hummer, Rogers is likely to land with the Washington Huskies for the 2024 season. The former Mississippi State Bulldogs quarterback is the No. 2 all-time leading passer in SEC history with 12,315 yards and No. 4 in touchdown passes with 94.

He will now likely head to Seattle, where he will replace a former Indiana transfer, Michael Penix Jr who is out of college eligibility after the season. The Huskies are preparing to take on the Texas Longhorns in the CFP Semifinal game in the Sugar Bowl.

Rogers is among the active leaders in career passing yards, trailing only Sam Hartman (Notre Dame), Bo Nix (Oregon), Dillon Gabriel (Oklahoma), Penix Jr. (Washington), and Jayden Daniels (LSU). Following the season, he will only trail Gabriel, who also entered the transfer portal.

The addition of Rogers is quite an addition for a Washington team led by head coach Kalen DeBoer, who has been one of the hottest head coaches in college football since he arrived in the Pacific Northwest.

Committee selects Michigan, Washington, Texas, and Alabama for the College Football Playoff

The committee chose the SEC and Big 12 champions for their resumes over the undefeated but injured Florida State Seminoles.

The last year of the four-team College Football Playoff structure resulted in the most complex debate in the format’s history.

The committee announced the four playoff teams would be the Michigan Wolverines, Washington Huskies, Texas Longhorns, and Alabama Crimson Tide.

Florida State, who finished 13-0, finished fifth in the rankings. The Georgia Bulldogs, who were No. 1 in the rankings before the conference championship games, fell all the way to sixth.

The argument for the final two spots surely consumed most of the night for the College Football Playoff committee. Michigan and Washington, both dominant and undefeated, were automatic selections, but any combination of the final two spots would break a previous precedent established in other years.

Florida State won the ACC Championship, now the first undefeated Power 5 team ever left out of the playoff. They lost starting quarterback Jordan Travis for the season to a broken leg in their final home game, however, creating a popular argument that they are no longer one of the four best teams.

Alabama defeated Georgia to win the SEC, and no SEC champion has ever missed the playoff, but they were competing for one of the final spots with Texas, who defeated them by two scores in their home stadium earlier in the season.

At the end of the day, the committee’s decision shows the criteria truly does come down to the “best four teams,” not the “four most deserving,” as the committee has said over and over throughout the year. The wrinkle that injuries and strength of schedule can outweigh an undefeated record is sure to shake up scheduling and conference alignment in the future, especially with the best programs in college football already starting to consolidate in the same two or three conferences.

Washington secures perfect season and Pac-12 title with a win over Oregon

The Huskies moved to 13-0 and effectively clinched a spot in the College Football Playoff with their Friday victory over Oregon.

Washington came into the Pac-12 title game as underdogs despite a perfect 12-0 season. They left Las Vegas as the last champion in the conference’s illustrious history.

Washington jumped out to a 20-3 lead with a dominant first half. The Huskies held the ball for 10 of the first 11 minutes, and quarterback Michael Penix Jr. offered up a sterling first half with 196 passing yards.

The Ducks roared back with 21 unanswered points to take the lead again, but Penix orchestrated two more touchdown drives in the fourth quarter to put Washington ahead for good. He salted the game away with a clutch third-down conversion on the final drive to keep Oregon’s offense off the field.

The Huskies, who entered the game No. 3 in the College Football Playoff rankings, all but assured themselves a spot in the four-team playoff at the end of the year.

Here are the best images from the last Pac-12 conference championship.