Party Of Nine: Marquess Wilson Leads The Way
Marquess Wilson led the way against SDSU. We take a more in depth look at how the wide receivers performed.
| Final - 9.17.2011 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Washington St. Cougars | 10 | 7 | 7 | 0 | 24 |
| San Diego St. Aztecs | 14 | 0 | 7 | 21 | 42 |
Marquess Wilson led the way against SDSU. We take a more in depth look at how the wide receivers performed.
One statistic has the Cougs on the bowl bubble. What do you think?
Rickey Galvin only carried the ball 11 times against SDSU, but he got nicked up to the point that WSU felt the need to hold him out last week. Durability continues to be a concern.
The WSU offensive line performed about as well as could be expected against SDSU, given the heavy blitzing it faced. Promising start to the year.
The linebackers generally did a good job of tackling Ronnie Hillman, but there were some weak spots.
WSU's final numbers against the run weren't very good, but there were some positives to take away from the game against SDSU -- namely, Toni Pole. Now, about whoever's playing next to him ...
Remember Marshall Lobbestael's fumble against SDSU? Here's why it happened.
If you aren't one of the nearly 500 subscribers to Cougar Sports Weekly, here's a snippet of what you missed this morning.
A look at Marquess Wilson's second half touchdown, which came on an outside screen.
A couple of days ago, we showed you how the Cougars scored on the first play against San Diego State using the greatest play in football, four verticals. Not too long after that, WSU used the success of that first play to its advantage.
I'm going to be going back and re-watching the loss to San Diego State at some point this week; what do you want me to pay specific attention to?
We take a look at the greatest play in football: four verticals.