Taylor Mays, a former O'Dea High School star, is reportedly returning to Seattle to become Washington's new safeties coach.
Safety Peyton Waters, UW’s most recent portal entrant, burned his redshirt in 2024 after playing in all 13 games, primarily on special teams. UW added two players at his position from the portal – FIU transfer CJ Christian and Northern Arizona transfer Alex McLaughlin – making it unlikely Waters was going to see the field much next season.
It's assuring for UW fans to have Coach Fisch's assessment so closely confirms what we all saw on the field on New Year's Eve. Of course, there's another part to this whole new world of college sports.
Cook left the Longhorns program in the middle of the 2024 season, a move that head coach Steve Sarkisian said was "mutual." Cook then joined the Washington Huskies in the December transfer portal window,
The Purdue Boilermakers are on a hot streak, and the Washington Huskies are struggling. Keep track of the action here.
Once was described as the perfect football player, Taylor Mays became this Seattle kid who passed on the University of Washington football team nearly two full
A one-time five-star recruit in the 2006 class out of O'Dea, a private Seattle-area high school that has produced many UW players, highlighted by record-setting running back Myles Gaskin, Mays is a unique choice for Fisch since the two never crossed paths during their time in the NFL.
North Carolina football grabbed a new portal talent Saturday for Bill Belichick, who previously played for his son at Washington.
Only six Washington athletes have had their number retired in that building: Thomas, fellow men’s basketball players Brandon Roy and Bob Houbregs, volleyball players Courtney Thompson and Krista Vansant, and now Kelsey. It’s about as exclusive a club as they come. But Plum isn’t just in the club — she has full-fledged VIP status.
At halftime of its game against Purdue on Saturday, Washington sent its first women’s jersey to the rafters, retiring the No. 10 that Plum wore for four years as she rewrote the school — and NCAA — record books.
Byron Leftwich, a former NFL quarterback, two-time Super Bowl winner and recently Tom Brady’s offensive coordinator with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, interviewed for the same job w