The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Browning’s confidence is emerging

Quarterbac­k’s quick evolution helps put Huskies in final 4.

- By Tim Booth

SEATTLE — It was so out of character it became the defining moment of his time at Washington. Maybe that’s because the most exuberance Jake Browning had ever shown before was a fist pump and a smile. Then came “The Point.” As the sophomore quarterbac­k glided into the end zone for a touchdown early in Washington’s blowout of Oregon, Browning quickly pointed in the direction of an opponent. It was a different side of Browning, one filled with self-confidence and a little cockiness.

Underneath an exterior that seems to be a plug-in of how Washington coach Chris Petersen is wired, Browning has a feisty competitiv­eness that emerges only on occasion.

“You see him in the hall, you go like this,” Washington offensive lineman Trey Adams said, mimicking Browning’s point. “Coach Pete hates that. That was awesome. I love that play.”

Thanks to Browning’s evolution, Washington exceeded the preseason expectatio­ns of being a program on the rise and reached the College Football Playoff, where it will face top-ranked Alabama in the Peach Bowl on New Year’s Eve. Browning has developed into one of the top quarterbac­ks in the country as just a sophomore and every so often — like the play against Oregon — his self-assurednes­s has emerged.

“I probably appreciate him more because he has a calmer demeanor than I do,” Petersen said. “I think it’s easier when you’re a player. You can just let it go out there. When you’re on the sideline it just gets bottled up and you just try and bite your tongue as best as you can. I think the thing is we’re both really competitiv­e and sometimes, he’s awesome, but I try and do the best I can and not be too competitiv­e overcoachi­ng him because he gets it.”

Browning was named the Pac-12 offensive player of the year in a vote of coaches after throwing for 3,280 yards and 42 touchdowns. He led Washington to its first conference championsh­ip since 2000 and barely missed out on a trip to New York for the Heisman Trophy ceremony. Browning’s sixth-place finish in the Heisman voting was still the second-best in Washington history behind only defensive lineman Steve Emtman, who finished fourth in 1991.

Browning is still an unassuming figure on a national stage. He was an unplanned player of the year because of an unexpected jump from the end of his freshman season to now, and he’s on the verge of setting Pac-12 records for the most touchdown passes in a season. Browning’s potential sophomore slump instead became a sophomore showcase.

It was improvemen­t his coaches hoped to see after throwing him into starting as a true freshman. But this? “His accuracy in the red zone has been at a high level throughout the year. He’s really improved there. His decision-making when he has extended the play has improved, not forcing a couple of balls where he did his freshman year,” Washington offensive coordinato­r Jonathan Smith said. “We’re putting a lot on his plate in recognitio­n in coverage and changing plays.”

It’s the combo of Smith and Petersen that have come to understand Browning’s personalit­y. They had a good feel of how Browning would respond to the college game through years of recruiting Browning, first at Boise State and then Washington.

“You don’t really know what you’re going to get, but I think with him with as long as we recruited him and as much as he was around us we had a pretty good idea that he was going to be like he is,” Petersen said. “And then you just wait to see how winning and losing affects guys. Do they change?”

Browning’s numbers this season are also the result of those around him. The return of John Ross can’t be overstated, giving Washington an athletic speedster they desperatel­y lacked a season ago. That was never more evident than the Pac-12 title game victory over Colorado when a pass Browning intended to throw away instead became a spectacula­r TD catch for Ross.

Myles Gaskin and Lavon Coleman have been productive on the ground; Dante Pettis and Chico McClatcher have made significan­t jumps as receivers; and Washington’s coaches no longer have limitation­s on the playbook.

Browning sums up his season like this: Getting rid of negative plays. Plays that might have been intercepti­ons as a freshman have been incompleti­ons or sacks. Browning knows those negative plays can’t return against Alabama.

“I don’t think we’re a team that’s going to come out and throw the ball every play, or come out and run the ball every play. We stay balanced and do our thing,” he said. “They’re good, but you can’t let a good team get you away from what got you there.”

 ?? ROBERT REINERS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Quarterbac­k Jake Browning (right) made an unexpected jump during his sophomore season — and so did Washington, which won the Pac-12 championsh­ip and qualified for the playoff semifinals.
ROBERT REINERS / GETTY IMAGES Quarterbac­k Jake Browning (right) made an unexpected jump during his sophomore season — and so did Washington, which won the Pac-12 championsh­ip and qualified for the playoff semifinals.

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