USA TODAY US Edition

Wash. State’s Leach will tackle any topic

- Carter Karels @CarterKare­ls USA TODAY Sports

Without even realizing it, Mike Leach might have settled the hot dog-sandwich debate once and for all.

“I don’t like hot dogs. I’ve never liked hot dogs, even when I was a kid,” the Washington State coach said Thursday at Pac-12 media days. “I think some of that started when I was a really young kid.

“You know, I’ve had bologna sandwich after bologna sandwich, so anything that even remotely resembled bologna, I hated.

“And you know, everyone always says, ‘Go to the ballgame,’ or, ‘Eat a hot dog.’ Not me. And no, it’s not a sandwich. I’m not into hot dogs.”

Such an eccentric question, though rare for most coaches, is standard for Leach. The unpredicta­bility of his uncanny solilo- quies invites questions about anything, even if it has nothing to do with college football.

“There are just too many Cubs fans. … Every yuppie with a BMW, some special attachment to his computer or some designer set of jeans or something like that is a Cubs fan — and refers to it as ‘ my Cubbies,’ ” Leach said when Chicago faced the Cleveland Indians in the 2016 World Series.

If the Cougars, by chance, become the topic of conversati­on, that won’t prevent Leach from similar offthe-cuff remarks.

He ripped his team’s mentality after a 0-2 start to last season.

But Thursday, despite the attack on hot dogs, Leach mostly played it straight.

Leach knows he will coach against star quarterbac­ks Sam Darnold of Southern California and Jake Browning of Washington. Leach’s QB Luke Falk — who threw for more yards than Darnold and Browning last season — doesn’t get as much national hype. But, Leach said, the senior quarterbac­k can improve at the tail end of his recordbrea­king career.

“Doing the same thing he has been doing, that is one of his strongest qualities,” Leach said.

Along with Falk, Washington State returns three productive running backs and nine defensive starters. But winning the Pac-12 or sneaking into the College Football Playoff remains a tall order.

Leach, though, has an idea that would increase the Cougars’ chances.

“States have 16-team playoffs or more, NFL does it, lower-division colleges do it; we are the only ones that don’t,” Leach said. (The four-team College Football Playoff deal runs through 2025, but expanding to eight teams or more comes up regularly.) “You can draw up a softball bracket. … It is pretty easy to sort out. You can get the whole thing done in 16 games.

“Have some well-placed breaks in between. Half the country is off; half the country is playing next week. … It’d be incredible fun, and it’s indisputab­le it’d make more money.”

“It is pretty easy to sort out. … It’d be incredible fun, and it’s indisputab­le it’d make more money.” Washington State coach Mike Leach, making the case for a 16-team playoff

 ?? KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Mike Leach discussed hot dogs, the Cubs and, yes, football Thursday at Pac-12 media days.
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS Mike Leach discussed hot dogs, the Cubs and, yes, football Thursday at Pac-12 media days.

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