Cougars are not perfect, but they’re definitely improving

  • By Jacob Thorpe The Spokesman-Review
  • Monday, October 12, 2015 9:34am
  • SportsSports

EUGENE — The truly “complete” game is an elusive, taunting leprechaun the Washington State football team will never catch yet will never stop chasing.

But though perfection is unattainable, Saturday’s 45-38 double-overtime win at Oregon saw the Cougars (3-2 overall, 1-1 in Pac-12) play together in a way that shows them getting closer to their target.

“I don’t think it was complete but I think we played extremely hard the whole time,” coach Mike Leach said. “I thought we were tough until the end, I think we could have made it easier than we did, but I thought all sides of the ball played hard. I thought we rose up, offense, defense and special teams.”

And, truly, every unit had some superlative performance that contributed to WSU’s first win in Autzen Stadium since 2003.

The Cougars offense scored 10 points in just over two minutes to tie the game, and scored touchdowns in each of the overtime periods to outlast the Ducks. The WSU defense overcame a special day for supremely talented UO back Royce Freeman to hold the Ducks to five conversions in 16 third-down attempts.

And though WSU had a field-goal attempt blocked, the special teams units suffered no other major blunders and held the Ducks without any significant kickoff or punt returns.

Leach acknowledged that Saturday’s win could be a turning-point game to the point, provided all three units continue to play hard and focused.

“We have to stack (good performances),” running back Jamal Morrow said.

The most glaring issue the Cougars must address is the offense’s recent penchant for giving up sacks. Whether because Luke Falk holds onto the ball too long or because the offensive line hasn’t held its blocks long enough, the Cougars have given up seven sacks in each of their Pac-12 games.

The accumulated hits are bound to take a toll on Falk as the season progresses and its tough to see how the team can get better if its quarterback isn’t at full strength.

Defensively, the Cougars must limit big plays and shore up the run defense, although its unlikely to face another running back as hard to stop as Royce Freeman this season, and few backups with the talent of UO freshman Taj Griffin.

The Cougars home crowd has seen two subpar efforts this season, a loss to Portland State and an uninspiring win over Wyoming.

WSU showed considerable improvement in its two Pac-12 road games, keeping it close on the road against a ranked California team and beating the Ducks in Eugene.

The Cougars will have a chance to show their home fans how much they have improved at 1 p.m. Saturday in their homecoming matchup against Oregon State.

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