Originally published Saturday, November 15, 2008 at 10:30 PM
Neuheisel has successful return as UCLA wins
Rick Neuheisel came back to Husky Stadium for the first time in five years and reminded downtrodden Washington what he did during most of his tenure with the Huskies: win.
AP Sports Writer
Rick Neuheisel came back to Husky Stadium for the first time in five years and reminded downtrodden Washington what he did during most of his tenure with the Huskies: win.
Led by Khalil Bell's 97 yards rushing and two touchdowns, Neuheisel made a successful return to his former school as UCLA easily outclassed Washington 27-7 on Saturday night.
The Bruins (4-6, 3-4 Pac-10) scored on the first drive of the game and never trailed as Washington fans who showed up on a cool November night to voice their anger and animosity about Neuheisel's messy divorce from the school in 2003 were left to boo their own lame-duck coach Tyrone Willingham in his final home game at Washington.
The Huskies lost their school-record 12th straight and are 0-10 (0-7 Pac-10) for the first time in school history. They remain the only winless team in the country.
Neuheisel did his best all week to soothe the return. The first-year UCLA coach even apologized to angry Washington fans who blame him for the school's 18-50 mark since his firing in 2003.
But with the two schools occupying the bottom of the Pac-10 standings, the focus was bound to be on the sidelines.
Many fans made certain Neuheisel knew of their displeasure. A large contingent showed up with signs, ranging from "Neu-weasel!" to one asking for betting advice - "Hey Slick, should I take UW and the points?" - in reference to Neuheisel's involvement in an NCAA tournament pool that was part of his dismissal at Washington.
But some chose to remember Neuheisel's accomplishments in Seattle with signs acknowledging the 2001 Rose Bowl title, a 33-16 overall record and bowl games in all four seasons.
He first stepped on the field about two hours before kickoff, his first time in the stadium since June 2003, and lingered near midfield taking in his old surroundings. The one time Neuheisel's name was mentioned through the stadium's speakers, he was mildly booed.
His security detail was more cursory than a show of force with one lone state trooper jogging across the field with Neuheisel when the Bruins emerged from the locker room before kickoff.
Meanwhile, Willingham walked the Washington sideline for the last time in Husky Stadium, his future already determined to be unemployment following the Huskies season finale Dec. 6 at California.
The only question that remains for Willingham is if he can avoid being the only coach to have a winless season at Washington.
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The only hope for Washington seems to be next week's Apple Cup against equally woeful Washington State.
A familiar name to Neuheisel tried to give Washington momentum early. Trenton Tuiasosopo, cousin of Marques who led Washington to the 2001 Rose Bowl, intercepted Kevin Craft to set up Washington's first touchdown and deflected another pass that became Craft's second interception of the first half.
Craft threw his third interception early in the second half and faced an upset Neuheisel when he returned to the sideline.
But UCLA's defense stopped Washington in place and Craft responded by engineering a 15-play, 92-yard drive, hitting on all three of his throws. Bell then flew over the pile from the 1 on the first play of the fourth quarter to put the Bruins up 24-7. Neuheisel gave an emphatic fist pump on the sideline and had a high-five waiting for Craft as he came off the field, while the remnants of a half-filled Husky Stadium - the announced crowd of 59,738 was tickets sold - started heading for the exits.
Washington's only score - a 7-yard TD run by Brandon Johnson - came on a drive in the first quarter that started at the UCLA 11. The Huskies finished with only 135 total yards.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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