USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Petersen, Washington try to defy odds,

- Dan Wolken @danwolken USA TODAY Sports

Quite unintentio­nally, Washington’s most prolific playmaker explained in the clearest possible terms what kind of challenge his team faces in the College Football Playoff semifinals and why so many people have dismissed the Huskies’ chances against Alabama.

Asked if Nick Saban had ever called on him during the recruiting process four years ago, Washington receiver John Ross sheepishly acknowledg­ed that his three-star status wasn’t enough to get the attention of college football’s pre-eminent program.

“I don’t think they recruit skinny kids from Southern California,” Ross said.

Though Ross has blossomed into one of the country’s most electric skill players and a 1,100yard receiver for an elite team, his quip about Alabama overlookin­g him underscore­s a basic truth about Washington and its chances of advancing to the national championsh­ip game.

The Huskies have not faced a roster like Alabama’s with the physical size and depth and overall skill level that suffocated opponent after opponent in the Southeaste­rn Conference this season.

And, in fact, the only time they played a team that can even approximat­e Alabama’s talent level, the Huskies were flat and ineffectiv­e in a 26-13 loss to Southern California on Nov. 12.

It was the only blemish on Washington’s terrific 12-1 season. But given the parallels between that game with the one it will play Dec. 31 at the Georgia Dome, it’s unquestion­ably the biggest driver of doubt about how the Huskies will stack up athletical­ly with the defending national champions.

“Good luck counting us out, because Alabama is human,” Ross said. “Those guys bleed just like we do, and we’re a good football team. I love it. I’ve always been an underdog my whole life. Me and my team don’t get the respect we deserve, but it’s not about that, it’s about us, and we’ll continue to work hard every day.”

QUESTIONS ABOUT SCHEDULE

For those who have followed Alabama’s run to four of the last seven national titles, opponent after opponent has recited a similar script, usually with disastrous results. It’s a rare occasion indeed when Alabama’s talent advantage doesn’t show up on game day, and those who have beaten Nick Saban’s team in a Playoff scenario (Ohio State in 2014) or come close (Clemson in 2015) have recruited similar athletes, albeit not as many.

Though there’s no doubt Washington has multiple players who could start for Alabama and will be successful in the NFL, especially on the defense, the Huskies simply haven’t recruited the same caliber of athletes. It’s also worth noting that a year ago, on the same day Alabama arrived in Dallas to get ready for the Cotton Bowl, Washington was wrapping up a 7-6 season with a victory against Southern Mississipp­i in the Heart of Dallas Bowl.

In other words, there’s a reason Las Vegas has made Alabama a two-touchdown favorite.

“I think somebody tweeted me and said I’m a UW fan and I’m going to root for you guys, but when it comes to game time, we know what’s going to happen,” linebacker Keishawn Bierria said. “I’m like, ‘You’re not really a fan.’ We’re competitor­s. The only thing we’re focused on is competing, and we want to play against the best.”

Though Alabama tore through what was perceived to be a down SEC this season, its lengthy track record makes it practicall­y impossible to question the quality of its 13-0 record. With the Huskies, however, those questions existed up until the moment the Playoff selection committee chose them as the No. 4 seed over Big Ten champion Penn State.

Washington blew out 10 of the 13 teams it faced, but it played a poor non-conference schedule and had just two truly notable wins by the end of the season: 44-6 against No. 16 Stanford in late September and 41-10 against No. 11 Colorado in the Pac-12 title game. And when the Huskies faced USC, a team filled with five-star recruits, their offense was limited to 276 yards in a game the Trojans blew open in the fourth quarter before winning 26-13.

LEARNING PROCESS

Was that a true indicator for how the Huskies will match up with the likes of Alabama, or was it simply the first moment of adversity for a team that needed its weaknesses to be exposed on a big stage like that in order to get ready for a Playoff run?

“I just think you get better throughout the year and you learn from games like that,” Ross said. “We didn’t play good against USC. I don’t think they completely beat us. We didn’t do good as an offense, and (quarterbac­k Jake Browning) knows he didn’t have his best game, our O-line, our whole unit, even me. I didn’t have my best game. We cleaned some things up, and we’re a better football team. It’s not good to lose, but you learn from everything. I think we learned a lot from that game.”

Surprising­ly, one of the positions where Washington has a player recruited by Alabama is at quarterbac­k. Browning committed to the Huskies in March 2014, but not before a phone call from Lane Kiffin and Saban in which they offered him a scholarshi­p.

Browning downplayed that

 ?? KYLE TERADA, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Washington’s John Ross believes in the Huskies. “Good luck counting us out, because Alabama is human,” he says.
KYLE TERADA, USA TODAY SPORTS Washington’s John Ross believes in the Huskies. “Good luck counting us out, because Alabama is human,” he says.

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