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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

UW coach Chris Petersen treated warmly by Boise State fans but Huskies lose 16-13

Christian Caple Tacoma News Tribune

BOISE – Their defense gave them a chance.

Their special teams gave them a spark.

Their offense, led by true freshman quarterback Jake Browning and an inexperienced offensive line, gave them nearly nothing Friday night.

And while the Washington Huskies made this season football opener at Boise State more interesting than it might have appeared at halftime, they still left Albertsons Stadium in the same fashion as most Broncos opponents.

They lost.

In coach Chris Petersen’s return to Boise, against the program he coached to 92 victories in eight seasons, the Huskies showed that Year 2 of their own Petersen era is unlikely to yield such greatness in a 16-13 loss before a crowd of 36,836.

The Huskies (0-1) did drive to Boise State’s 19-yard line in the final minute with a chance to tie the game, but Cameron Van Winkle missed a 46-yard field-goal try wide right with 21 seconds to play.

The Boise faithful cheered for their former coach, and why not? Petersen did for Boise State what no other coach ever had.

So the mood was not bitter when Petersen walked onto that blue turf an hour before kickoff. Instead, the fans welcomed him with a warm ovation, any wounds opened by Petersen’s departure apparently healed.

If they knew what his team would play like in the first half, they might have cheered even louder.

Boise State gashed the middle of the Huskies’ young defensive front with 32 rushes for 152 yards in the first two quarters, including a pair of touchdown runs by Jeremy McNichols that helped BSU to a 16-0 halftime lead.

Considering that at that point, the Broncos were outgaining UW 254-56 and the Huskies had achieved just four first downs – their offense again looked boring and stagnant and inert, all adjectives appropriately applied to last season’s outfit, too – UW was lucky to be within two scores.

Washington got on the board with a Van Winkle field goal in the third quarter. Then their special teams changed the complexion of the game.

After UW’s defense forced BSU to go three-and-out late in the third quarter – Boise State totaled just 83 yards in the second half and did not score – Huskies receiver Dante Pettis returned the ensuing punt 76 yards for a touchdown to cut the Broncos’ lead to 16-10.

And when Jaydon Mickens blocked a Boise State punt with a little less than 10 minutes remaining, the Huskies had the ball at BSU’s 27-yard line with a chance to score a touchdown and take the lead. But the drive stalled and they settled for a field goal.

The final drive of the game was the most frustrating for UW, capped by the Van Winkle miss on his attempt to tie the score.

Browning completed 20 of 35 passes for 150 yards with an interception.