Arizona State at Washington

The Sports Xchange

September 19, 2018 at 5:43 pm.

GAME SNAPSHOT
KICKOFF: Saturday, 10:30 p.m. ET
SITE: Husky Stadium, Seattle
TV: ESPN
SERIES: Arizona State leads 20-15
RANKINGS: Washington No. 10

PLAYERS TO WATCH
Sun Devils

–QB Manny Wilkins notched his 52nd career touchdown accounted for (39 passing and 13 rushing) in the San Diego State game. Wilkins’ 13 rushing touchdowns move him into a tie among ASU quarterbacks for third in school history with Taylor Kelly. Mark Malone has the record with 32 and Danny White is next at 14.

–WR N’Keal Harry, a junior, finished with nine receptions against San Diego State, moving into fifth place in school history in career receptions (161). He also has 17 career touchdown receptions, moving him to 10th on ASU’s career list.

–WR Frank Darby caught four passes for 111 yards in the first half against the Aztecs, tying his previous career-high for yardage in the process. He finished with career high for receptions (five) and receiving yards (127). Darby’s 51-yard reception in the second quarter was the longest passing play for the Sun Devils this season.

–S Jalen Harvey, a redshirt senior who hadn’t played a down of defense for the Sun Devils until this season, logged a career-best 13 tackles against San Diego State, 12 of which came solo. He played wide receiver previously in his career.

Huskies

–RB Myles Gaskin paces the Washington rushing attack against an Arizona State defense that led the nation against the run through two games. However, San Diego State’s Juwan Washington and Chase Jasmin both eclipsed 100 yards against the Sun Devils. Gaskin will set the pace from a similar two-man approach with Salvon Ahmed, an explosive change-of-pace sidelined for much of Week 3.

–CB Byron Murphy has been excellent in coverage for the Huskies, producing a team-best seven pass break-ups through three games. One of the best receivers Murphy and the Washington secondary will face in 2018 is Arizona State’s N’Keal Harry, whose nine catches against the Huskies a season ago tied his second-highest output of the campaign.

–DT Greg Gaines is an imposing presence on the interior, forcing offensive lines to adjust their blocking to containing him. His role up front gives Washington its best opportunity to emulate the run defense San Diego State employed in Week 3 to set the tone against Arizona State’s rushing offense. The Sun Devils were held to just 1.5 yards per carry, the result of plugged lanes up front.

KEYS
TO THE GAME

Arizona State knocked Washington out of contention for the College Football Playoff last season, winning 13-7 in mid-October.

The teams meet again Saturday, this time in Seattle rather than Tempe, Ariz., with the Huskies having no margin of error in the national race.

No. 10 Washington (2-1, 1-0 Pac-12) lost its opener in Atlanta against Auburn but bounced back to rout North Dakota and post a stifling defensive effort in a 21-7 victory at Utah last week.

Arizona State (2-1) followed up a rousing home win over No. 23 Michigan State with a 28-21 loss at San Diego State, allowing 311 rushing yards last Saturday night.

“You’ve got to stop the run,” Arizona State coach Herm Edwards said.

“It’s a hard pill to swallow when people are running the ball on you because there’s hardly anything you can do. Unless you can cause a fumble, it becomes a short game and a long afternoon for you defensively while your offense sits over there and watches the clock being bled down.”

Arizona State, thanks to its work against UTSA and Michigan State, had led the nation in rushing defense through two games.

Washington coach Chris Petersen had a potentially potent ground attack, led by senior running back Myles Gaskin and sophomore Salvon Ahmed, an explosive change-of-pace runner sidelined for much of last week’s game. Petersen said Monday there are “no concerns” about his health this week.

Gaskin delivered his first breakout performance of the season at Utah, gaining 143 yards on 30 carries and scoring on a 38-yard rush.

“If we’re going to give him the ball enough and our offensive line keeps guys relatively covered, he’s going to make his plays,” Petersen said.

“He’s slippery, he’s strong, he’s fast; he’s all those things. We’ve just got to give him a chance to get things started and he’s going to find creases.”

Washington senior quarterback Jake Browning threw an interception for a third consecutive game at Utah, and his up-and-down play in 2018 has contributed to Washington’s low red-zone conversion rate (73.3 percent, No. 111 in the nation).

The aim for Washington’s offense against Arizona State coordinator Danny Gonzales’ 3-3-5 odd-stack defense is to build on the positives from the Utah win. The Huskies managed 5.0 yards per play and rushed for 172 yards against a stout Utes’ defense.

Arizona State, meanwhile, will be looking for its running game. The Sun Devils, after rolling off 266 yards rushing in the season opener, totaled 44 and 36 yards on the ground in the following two games.

The ineffective run game has made the Sun Devils somewhat one-dimensional, evident in quarterback Manny Wilkins attempting 48 and 46 passes.

Wilkins will be testing a Washington secondary that might be the best in the country and is led by safety Taylor Rapp and cornerback Byron Murphy, who has produced a team-best seven pass break-ups through three games.

“Their defense, it’s outstanding, one of the better defenses in college football in my opinion,” Edwards said. “What they do schematically, how they built it, they do a nice job with their secondary. They’re very talented.”

ASU counters with, among others, junior N’Keal Harry, one of the top receivers in the country. He finished with nine receptions against San Diego State, moving into fifth place in school history in career catches (161).

“Big and strong and tough and I think he has really deceptive speed too,” Petersen said. “He’s such a big guy you don’t think he’s going to run like that but then he’ll break the tackle and outrun everybody.”

Arizona State has won 11 of the past 12 meetings against Washington, with the Huskies winning 44-18 in Seattle in 2016.

Washington, trying to at least stay on the fringes of playoff possibility, can’t afford another loss to ASU, like the one suffered last season. Petersen said that game or any revenge angle won’t play a part Saturday.

“I think it’s completely different. That’s the mindset every week,” he said. “It’s not about referencing a game … it’s just like, you’ve got to play. You’ve got to play your best or you’re going to get beat. I just really believe that.”