Mike Leach wanted one more play before the Cougars attempted the game-winning field goal. / Washington State Athletic Communications file

PULLMAN — Certain phrases do not roll off the tongue with ease. Scenic Newark. Honest politician. Classy porn star. First-place Washington State.

Huh? What? How did that last one slip in there?

Oh, how ye Crimson faithful would have loved to crow about being sole occupants of first place in the Pac-12 Conference’s North Division after beating California. The fact that the Huskies currently reside in last place would have made victory that much sweeter.

When WSU led California 10-0 and 24-10 and 45-34 and 52-41 Saturday night, the long-suffering Cougars seemed destined to reign over the North, however briefly. No sane individual expects Wazzu to wind up on top at season’s end, but you take what you can get at a school that lays claim to only four conference football titles after almost a century of competition.

Leave it to the Cougars to lose a remarkable game – and their shot at first place — in remarkable fashion. On a night when Connor Halliday passed for a national-record 734 yards; Vince Mayle caught 11 passes for a school-record 263 yards; and WSU amassed a school-record 812 total yards; the Cougars lost 60-59.

Yes, 60-59. Walk-on kicker Quentin Breshears missed a 19-yard field goal with 15 seconds left to play. Honest.

“Offense, defense, special teams together lost it,” WSU coach Mike Leach said in his most diplomatic manner.

Yeah, but …

“Coach Leach preaches, ‘Make routine plays. Make routine plays.’ We didn’t make a routine play,” wide receiver River Cracraft said.

Breshears’ kick, which barely missed wide right, came on third down after Halliday used WSU’s final time-out. The Cougars had the ball 1½ yards from the goal line and could have run another play before using the time-out to set up a field-goal try.

“We probably should have done that,” Leach said.

Leach said he wishes Halliday had thrown one last pass on third down. The quarterback made it clear that he didn’t think it was necessary, given the circumstances.

“I mean, it’s an 18-yard field goal,” Halliday said.

Technically, Halliday was a yard off. Let’s not get technical after a memorable contest in which two young teams with paper-maché defenses combined for more than 1,400 yards.

Leach tried to take the onus off Halliday by claiming he called the time-out, but Halliday would have none of that.

“That was my move,” Halliday said in his typically blunt, honest manner.

The time-out call might have been Halliday’s only questionable decision all night. He completed 49 of 70 passes, had no interceptions and threw six touchdown passes to tie a school record he already shared. The 734 passing yards topped the major-college record of 716 set by Houston’s David Klingler in 1990.

“It’ll be fun to look back on when I’m 30 years old and talking to friends and family,” Halliday said.

“Connor played well today,” Cracraft said in a shameful attempt to clinch understatement-of-the-year honors.

Halliday’s memorable performance was spoiled when WSU’s shaky defense coughed up season highs for passing yards (527), total yards (589) and points. Barely one minute after RB Gerard Wicks gave WSU a 59-54 lead, California wide receiver Trevor Davis – who scored on back-to-back touchdown returns of 100 and 98 yards in the third quarter – streaked past cornerback Daquawn Brown down the left sideline to grab a 51-yard touchdown pass from Jared Goff with barely three minutes remaining.

“I’d probably say it’s the funnest football game I’ve ever played in in my life,” Goff said.

That’s easy for Goff to say, since he set a career high for passing yards against WSU for the second consecutive year. The talented sophomore completed 37 of 53 passes for 527 yards and five touchdowns.

Halliday and Goff were at their best in the third quarter, when each team scored four touchdowns. The only time Davis was touched on his kickoff returns came when teammates joined him in the end zone.

“We’ve done some good things on kickoffs up to this point,” Leach said. “I don’t know what the lapse was.”

Leach spared the media too many details regarding lapses in Washington State’s defense. That was a good thing, considering that WSU’s press conference wound up around midnight after a game that required more than four hours. No doubt some of the 30,000-plus homecoming fans climbed into their jammies at halftime.

It is painfully clear that WSU’s promising young secondary is not ready for prime time. California also has an inexperienced secondary prone to disaster – the Bears have yielded 49 or more points in three consecutive games – but the Bears would be 5-0 if not for Arizona’s Hail Mary pass on the last play of the game a couple weeks back. The Cougars are 2-4 – the opposite of a year ago – and must win four of their remaining six games to be considered for a second bowl game in a row.

The task won’t get easier Friday when the Cougars visit 14th-ranked Stanford (6 p.m., ESPN). The Cardinal has won the past six meetings with WSU, and most of the scores have not been pretty. Halliday says nothing would be uglier than a 2-5 record after Palo Alto.

“We’re really in a must-win situation,” Halliday said.

Get used to it, kid. That’s what happens to teams that have a knack for turning must-win games into can’t-win games.

Make no mistake, however: Halliday’s right arm, and his mastery of Mike Leach’s Air Raid offense, are magical. It does not hurt that WSU has one of the most talented and deep receiver corps in the country, though a rash of drops Saturday included two in the end zone.

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7 Comments

  1. Connor from hero to semi-goat (time out call). Quentin a goat for missing a short FG (didn’t see the play i.e. how was the snap/hold?) The team is a herd of goats.

    Stat sheets are for losers, the scoreboard is for winners.

    Recruit, recruit, recruit, and coach them up. Keep calm and cougar on; we could have been a contender. If only……..

    • That’s what really elevates it to the upper echelon of Cougin’ it.

      The reason you kick on 3rd down is if there is a bad snap you can down it and kick on 4th down. The Cougs get a bad snap and rather than down it the holder rushes and they miss the kick.

      Gotta mostly blame the coaches, they should have reminded him right as he ran out that it was 3rd down so if there was any issue at all down it and try on 4th.

      • They didn’t have any timeouts left. The clock would have ran out if they tried to kick it on fourth down.

        • yeah, so you stand up and thrown an incomplete pass to stop the clock, they had plenty of time.
          If your not doing that why bother kicking on 3rd down. Well coached teams practice those scenarios so their ready. Leach is like Andy Reid, great offensive coaching mind, but his teams are sloppy and ill prepared and make mistakes down the stretch that cost them games over and over.

  2. I can’t imagine how that poor field goal kicker feels. Hopefully the coaches can buck him up. Also I don’t agree with Leaches comment: “Offense, defense, special teams together lost it.” Defense and special teams, OK. But the offense put up 59 points. Not too shabby.