Mike Leach takes over Washington State football

PULLMAN, Wash. (AP) — Washington State has made some big changes, hiring a new coach and dramatically upgrading the stadium.
The question now is whether the team it puts on the field will be any different from previous versions.
Former Texas Tech coach Mike Leach took over for the fired Paul Wulff and is expected to bring his high-flying offensive schemes to the Palouse. Ticket sales and interest in WSU football are way up since Leach was hired last November.
"We'll just do the best we can and try to win one game a week," Leach said.
Leach was 84-43 at Texas Tech and took the Red Raiders to 10 bowl games. He was fired in 2009 amid allegations he mistreated a player with a concussion.
Under Wulff, the Cougars were 9-40 the past four seasons, just 4-32 in the conference. The Cougars often got blown out at home and on the road.
Things did get slightly better last year, when WSU finished 4-8 while being competitive in more games. But it was too late for Wulff.
Leach accepted a contract worth more than $2 million a year, richest in program history, to try to return the Cougars to the prominence they enjoyed in the early 2000s, when they had three 10-win seasons in a row.
One of Leach's first decisions will be to pick between senior Jeff Tuel and sophomore Connor Halliday for the starting quarterback job.
Two weeks into training camp, Leach had still not revealed his choice, although most observers expect Tuel to remain the starter.
"I think they both are very much ahead of schedule, and both are better than expected," Leach said after the first scrimmage. "Both Jeff and Connor have good leadership skills, throw the ball well and are quick learners."
The often-injured Tuel became a starter as a freshman. As a sophomore, he threw for 2,780 yards, with 18 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. But he played in only a handful of games last season because of an injured shoulder.
Halliday threw for WSU freshman records of 494 yards and four touchdowns in a win over Arizona State last year, but suffered a lacerated liver against Utah and played in only four games.
Both figure to be more mobile than Marshall Lobbestael, who threw for 2,584 yards in his final season.
Whoever starts at quarterback, the top target figures to be Marquess Wilson, who caught 82 passes last year for 1,388 yards and 12 touchdowns. Bobby Ratliff, who caught 28 passes for 348 yards, is back. Also on hand are Bennett Bontemps, Gino Simone and a slew of younger players led by touted freshman Gabriel Marks
Contrary to popular opinion, running backs are not superfluous in Leach's Air Raid offense. Last year's leading rusher, Rickey Galvin, returns, although in fall camp he has spent time as a slot receiver. Galvin gained 602 yards and had a 5.3-yard average last year.
Also fighting for playing time will be senior Carl Winston, freshman Teondray Caldwell, sophomore Marcus Mason, redshirt junior Leon Brooks and junior college transfer Theron West. Winston carried the ball 142 times last year for 442 yards.
Much depends on an offensive line that must do a better job of protecting quarterbacks from injury.
The Cougars are thin on the defensive front seven, in part because of Leach's tough discipline style.
Three potential starters have been kicked off the team since Leach took over. Linebacker C.J. Mizell, perhaps the program's best athlete, was kicked off after an alleged altercation at a fraternity party earlier this year. Linebacker Sekope Kaufusi was kicked off after he was arrested in a marijuana possession case. Defensive tackle Anthony Laurenzi was kicked off after the alleged theft of a pair of headphones.
That left the team with more inexperience at linebacker than expected, and a thin depth chart on the defensive line.
Opponents who come to Pullman this season will see a dramatic change in Martin Stadium, where an $80 million expansion added a three-story structure that houses luxury suites and the press box. The luxury seats are expected to pump $3 million more into what has long been a cash-strapped program.
The new addition completely changes the profile of the 35,000-seat bowl.
Designed and built in just 18 months, the privately funded addition will be ready in time for the home opener Sept. 8 against Eastern Washington, associate athletic director John Johnson said. It is funded by a combination of ticket sales, donations and television revenue.
Washington State opens the season on Sept. 1 at Brigham Young, Leach's alma mater. Their Pac-12 home opener is Sept. 22 against Colorado. The Cougars play Oregon during their annual game in Seattle this season. But they do not have Pac-12 power Southern California on the schedule.
The annual rivalry game with Washington is Nov. 23 in Pullman.
The question now is whether the team it puts on the field will be any different from previous versions.
Former Texas Tech coach Mike Leach took over for the fired Paul Wulff and is expected to bring his high-flying offensive schemes to the Palouse. Ticket sales and interest in WSU football are way up since Leach was hired last November.
"We'll just do the best we can and try to win one game a week," Leach said.
Leach was 84-43 at Texas Tech and took the Red Raiders to 10 bowl games. He was fired in 2009 amid allegations he mistreated a player with a concussion.
Under Wulff, the Cougars were 9-40 the past four seasons, just 4-32 in the conference. The Cougars often got blown out at home and on the road.
Things did get slightly better last year, when WSU finished 4-8 while being competitive in more games. But it was too late for Wulff.
Leach accepted a contract worth more than $2 million a year, richest in program history, to try to return the Cougars to the prominence they enjoyed in the early 2000s, when they had three 10-win seasons in a row.
One of Leach's first decisions will be to pick between senior Jeff Tuel and sophomore Connor Halliday for the starting quarterback job.
Two weeks into training camp, Leach had still not revealed his choice, although most observers expect Tuel to remain the starter.
"I think they both are very much ahead of schedule, and both are better than expected," Leach said after the first scrimmage. "Both Jeff and Connor have good leadership skills, throw the ball well and are quick learners."
The often-injured Tuel became a starter as a freshman. As a sophomore, he threw for 2,780 yards, with 18 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. But he played in only a handful of games last season because of an injured shoulder.
Halliday threw for WSU freshman records of 494 yards and four touchdowns in a win over Arizona State last year, but suffered a lacerated liver against Utah and played in only four games.
Both figure to be more mobile than Marshall Lobbestael, who threw for 2,584 yards in his final season.
Whoever starts at quarterback, the top target figures to be Marquess Wilson, who caught 82 passes last year for 1,388 yards and 12 touchdowns. Bobby Ratliff, who caught 28 passes for 348 yards, is back. Also on hand are Bennett Bontemps, Gino Simone and a slew of younger players led by touted freshman Gabriel Marks
Contrary to popular opinion, running backs are not superfluous in Leach's Air Raid offense. Last year's leading rusher, Rickey Galvin, returns, although in fall camp he has spent time as a slot receiver. Galvin gained 602 yards and had a 5.3-yard average last year.
Also fighting for playing time will be senior Carl Winston, freshman Teondray Caldwell, sophomore Marcus Mason, redshirt junior Leon Brooks and junior college transfer Theron West. Winston carried the ball 142 times last year for 442 yards.
Much depends on an offensive line that must do a better job of protecting quarterbacks from injury.
The Cougars are thin on the defensive front seven, in part because of Leach's tough discipline style.
Three potential starters have been kicked off the team since Leach took over. Linebacker C.J. Mizell, perhaps the program's best athlete, was kicked off after an alleged altercation at a fraternity party earlier this year. Linebacker Sekope Kaufusi was kicked off after he was arrested in a marijuana possession case. Defensive tackle Anthony Laurenzi was kicked off after the alleged theft of a pair of headphones.
That left the team with more inexperience at linebacker than expected, and a thin depth chart on the defensive line.
Opponents who come to Pullman this season will see a dramatic change in Martin Stadium, where an $80 million expansion added a three-story structure that houses luxury suites and the press box. The luxury seats are expected to pump $3 million more into what has long been a cash-strapped program.
The new addition completely changes the profile of the 35,000-seat bowl.
Designed and built in just 18 months, the privately funded addition will be ready in time for the home opener Sept. 8 against Eastern Washington, associate athletic director John Johnson said. It is funded by a combination of ticket sales, donations and television revenue.
Washington State opens the season on Sept. 1 at Brigham Young, Leach's alma mater. Their Pac-12 home opener is Sept. 22 against Colorado. The Cougars play Oregon during their annual game in Seattle this season. But they do not have Pac-12 power Southern California on the schedule.
The annual rivalry game with Washington is Nov. 23 in Pullman.
MIke Leach is an incredible person and coach. I bought a tee shirt today and will wear it proud for both Kathi Goertzen and Coach Leach.
Im taking bets, Cougs will not win more than 5 games this season. If they win 5 i think Cougar fans should think of it as a success.Â
Sadly, I think we considered our 4-8 season last year to be a "success," all things considered.
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People loyal to WSU are expecting a big turnaround this season, and while I share their enthusiasm under a high-profile head coach, Leach is still the head coach of many a poor recruiting class brought to us by Wulff.
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I don't expect to be "contending" for any PAC-12 titles or bowl games until next season, after a full recruiting season under Leach's tutelage.Â
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All projections aside, Go Cougs.
I will forever be pissed at Texas Tech for firing him, but I'm glad he landed in this part of the world. I don't expect he'll turn WSU into a Tech caliber team in the near future, mostly due to recruiting, but they'll be a hell of a lot more fun to watch.  Good luck to the Pirate! Our loss is your gain.
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Rant time: Stupid Tommy Tubberville is a worthless coach. First losing season in almost 20 years, dating back to when I was at texas tech. a-hole. I'd kill to get Leach back.
Cougs Rock!!
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 @Big Don you seem to have all of the answers, but one problem - YOU ARE FULL OF IT! I encourage you take some time looking closely at the academic entrance requirements and student eligibility requirements of Washington State University. If you can actually read data and numbers, and aren't clouded by stupidity, then you will find that your perceptions are simply false.
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I will grant you the fact that UW has more stringent requirements. Maybe that is the way of preserving the International Student ratio at UW. Have you had a high school senior in the state of Washington attempt to attend UW in the last 5 years? Check out that stat. They aren't flattering numbers. What happened to being a state university?
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I am offended that you refer to WSU Alumni as idiots. I am proud to be a Coug, and an Alumni. I am far from an idiot. Idiots are those that try time and time again to have state residents pay for a stupid Husky Stadium remodel because some whiny purple fans think they deserve it. Well I have news for you . . . we don't care about your dumb remodel. Perhaps you are jealous that we have an alumni base, and proper financial planning with a Pac 12 contract, Â who will pay for our stadium remodel without asking for a free donation from taxpayers.
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 @COUGMAN ...the usual academic reqmts are totally waived for good football players, as long as they meet NCAA minimums SAT 700, GPA 2.0 or something like that....
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Here would be a fun thing to do.  Like politicians giving up their tax returns, make all full-ride scholarship players reveal their high school transcripts and SAT's, and publish on the school web.  Consider how many of your own kids could ever get in with similar background (NOT)....
@Big Don @COUGMAN Just FYI, when Leach was at Texas Tech he had one of highest graduating rates of any football program. I'm not saying he is drafting high IQ players, but he's getting them through college with a degree. What more do you expect from an athletic program?Â
It's called "Higher Education."
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Universities are supposed to be for intellectual development.  But, they scrape IQ-75 tattooed goons, with SAT of 701, off the streets of Oakland and Compton, have the gall to call them "students," give them all-expense free ride, and pay a coach (this case) $2M, more than any other faculty/staff/official at the university, because they can play a brutal game that causes a lot of injuries, but  gets idiot alumni to ddonate money when the team wins;
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Tear down the stadium, build a Casino & Cat House complex and make some Real Honest Money.  It's all happening anyway and the state isn't getting it's deserved cut.  Then the University could get back to its true purpose of Education....
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 @Big Don Apparently you don't do much research before spouting off.
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The only reason they can afford to pay Leach a $2 million per year salary is because they get a ton of money from their new television contract. And the money for the stadium upgrade is completely privately-funded. That money would not be there were it not for the football team. The football team funds itself.
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The higher education is rolling along regardless of the athletic department. Think of athletics as entertainment. They do not drain the budget for the funding of actual entertainment.
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And if you think of college as preparing you for your career, well, many of these athletes are preparing themselves for a specific career. I guess it's kind of like a trade school, eh?
 @keeper ...most college players, at age 40, are bums with no career, living in the glories of the past...
 @Big Don Most?  Come on dude, I'm a Dawg and all for ribbing the kitties on the other side of the mountains but you don't know what you are talking about.  I know a fair amount of ex-players, Dawgs, Cougs, Vandals, Broncos, Lutes, whatever and they are far from bums.
Go Cougs
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 @Hachee_Bungwhy really go bark somewhere else
Good luck to ya. Don't Coug it.
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Go Dawgs!