By Tim Booth / Associated Press
SEATTLE — After just three plays, Hunter Bryant was celebrating in the end zone. Five plays later, it was Sean McGrew’s turn. And after another seven snaps, it was Puka Nacua catching his first collegiate pass for a touchdown.
It didn’t take long for No. 23 Washington to put last week’s surprising home loss in the past.
“It was just exciting knowing that doing our job we can do what we want to get done,” Bryant said. “We can put points on the board not doing anything special, not doing anything extra, but just doing our own job.”
Jacob Eason threw a 47-yard touchdown pass to Bryant on the third play of the game and added two more and Washington rebounded with a 52-20 romp over Hawaii on Saturday night.
Eason and the Huskies (2-1) overwhelmed the Rainbow Warriors, taking a 21-0 lead in less than 9 minutes. Eason was 18 of 25 for 262 yards, Richard Newton had three short TD runs, and Washington quickly bounced back from last week’s 20-19 home loss to California in its Pac-12 opener.
“It always feels good to be in the end zone quick,” Eason said. “Last week we struggled with some things and this week we got to jump on it early. That just shows how well we can bounce back and respond to adversity.”
While the final numbers look impressive, Washington did what was expected. Other than showing it could respond to last week’s setback, answers about how good the Huskies are will come the next three weeks with games at BYU, vs. USC and at Stanford.
Hawaii (2-1) was looking to beat three Pac-12 opponents in a season for the first time in school history. The Warriors opened with wins over Arizona and Oregon State at home, but the first trip away from the island was a quick slap of reality.
Hawaii coach Nick Rolovich jokingly tweeted out a picture of the Rose Bowl logo last week after beating the Beavers. He had to admit the Warriors aren’t ready for Pasadena.
“Coach Pete had his guys ready. We knew it was going to be a challenge. I would have liked to have seen us get to the fourth quarter and make it a game but it got out of hand pretty early,” Hawaii coach Nick Rolovich said. “I don’t think we’re ready for the Rose Bowl.”
Cole McDonald was 22 of 35 for 218 yards and a touchdown, but was also intercepted three times.
Bryant’s TD catch was the beginning of Washington’s early onslaught. Myles Bryant came up with Washington’s first forced turnovers on Hawaii’s second offensive play, stepping in front of McDonald’s pass for the first of his two interceptions in the first half. Washington made it 14-0 moments later on McGrew’s 22-yard TD run, and it was 21-0 when Nacua’s first career catch was a 28-yard TD on a perfectly placed throw from Eason.
Eason’s best TD throw was his last one, hitting Aaron Fuller on a 37-yard TD early in the second quarter, placing the deep post ball just out of the reach of the defensive back.
“It’s just really nice to be able to build a lead,” Washington coach Chris Petersen said. “I don’t think that happens most every game and I think that was really important for this game because Hawaii can score.”
The Warriors will lament their sluggish start on offense. Hawaii’s first six drives led to just 100 yards of offensive, zero points and two missed field goal attempts. The three drives that followed led to 20 points and 228 yards.
“This was a good barometer for us and we got some more work to do,” Rolovich said.
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