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Washington State loses another player to transfer portal as Skyler Thomas reopens recruitment

Washington State Cougars safety Skyler Thomas (25) runs the ball on an interception against Washington during the first half of a college football game on Nov. 23, 2018, at Martin Stadium in Pullman.  (Theo Lawson / The Spokesman-Review)

On Monday, Washington State lost one of its top offensive players to the transfer portal.

On Tuesday, it was the Cougars’ defense that took a rather significant hit.

Skyler Thomas, a versatile defensive back who started 25 of 26 games the past two seasons at both safety positions and also nickel, announced on Twitter he was entering the transfer portal and plans to reopen his recruitment.

“Would like to thank Washington State for a great 4 years,” Thomas wrote. “I am forever thankful for Coug nation. I am also thankful for all the coaches who have helped me get this point. With that being said I have put my name in the transfer portal and would to reopen my recruitment.”

Thomas’ announcement comes approximately 24 hours after Tay Martin, arguably the team’s best returning wide receiver, confirmed to The Spokesman-Review he was entering the portal.

Neither player offered a reason behind their decision, but it’s possible both are looking for an opportunity to play this fall with the Pac-12 postponing its season early last week. The SEC, Big-12 and ACC are still moving ahead with a fall season, along with a few midmajor and FCS conferences.

Even during a tumultuous season for WSU’s defense, Thomas was one of the unit’s anchors, starting in all but one game last season and finishing second on the team with 72 tackles. Thomas also had two tackles for loss, led the Cougars with four interceptions and tacked on two fumble recoveries with three pass breakups.

Thomas’ ability to play multiple positions in the secondary was pivotal for a team that saw its defensive coordinator, Tracy Claeys, leave after five games and rearranged its defensive depth chart shortly thereafter. Thomas made 13 starts at free safety as a redshirt sophomore, but moved into the hybrid nickel role for the first give games of his redshirt junior year, then started seven more at strong safety.

The Riverside, California, native was third on the team with 76 tackles as a redshirt sophomore, breaking up two passes and intercepting two more.

Whenever the Cougars return to contact practice and games, the secondary projects to be one of the least-experienced position groups. The group also loses Marcus Strong, a regular starter at cornerback, and had to deal with the death of starting safety Bryce Beekman during the offseason.