Twitter
    Sportspress Northwest
    • Football
    • Baseball
    • NCAA
    • Hockey
    • Soccer
    • Basketball
    Twitter
    Sportspress Northwest
    Twitter
    Home » Thiel: Huskies’ Ross edging toward the frontier
    Football

    Thiel: Huskies’ Ross edging toward the frontier

    Art ThielBy Art ThielApril 23, 2016Updated:April 24, 2016No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Reddit LinkedIn Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Reddit LinkedIn Email
    With a 4.25-second 40-yard dash this spring,  John Ross appears to be back. / Drew McKenzie, Sportspress Northwest

    So’s you know, the fastest 40-yard dash time in the history of the NFL scouting combine was in 2008 when East Carolina RB Chris Johnson ran it in 4.24 seconds.

    Huskies WR John Ross this spring ran it in a hand-timed 4.25. As a junior. After ACL surgery on his right knee. When I asked him how rewarding it was to reach such a milestone, he smiled.

    “The milestone is four-flat,” he said. “That’s kinda impossible. But I always reach for the stars.”

    Oh my. He may not get to the stars, but the far frontier of human physical endeavor is visible from where he stands.

    University of Washington football fans knew something special was going on in 2014 when he scored seven touchdowns from distance. Precisely: 91, 20, 55, 75, 86, 100 and 96 yards. An average of 75 yards per touchdown play. Those are Roadrunner-cartoon plays, complete with the puff of dust and beep-beeps.

    But in spring ball a year ago, Ross hurt his knee. He sat out the 2015 season, rehabbing. Now, the blur is back.

    He caught a short touchdown pass in the Huskies “spring preview” scrimmage Saturday at Husky Stadium, the final of 15 practices that had the couple of thousand Huskies fans on hand intrigued by the 2016 prospects.

    Especially with Ross joining sophomore QB Jake Browning and sophomore RB Myles Gaskin to create the kind of explosive power not seen in years from a Huskies offense.

    The coaches held Gaskin out of even the pitty-pat tackles permitted Saturday, not wishing to risk a repeat of a year ago when Ross went down.

    “We don’t need to win spring ball,” Huskies coach Chris Petersen said. “We need to get guys assignment-sound and technique-perfect. Then in fall camp, they’ll take the shots they need to take to make sure we have ball security.”

    But after a year out of action, Ross needed the game-style exercise. He caught three balls for 39 yards, the longest just 16 yards. He needs work on technique and tactics to make him a greater threat than a returner who plays wideout.

    “He’s still learning the nuances of the wide receiver position — he’d be the first to tell you that,” Petersen said. “If John dials into all these nuances, he’s going to be a really hard guy to cover.

    “It’s nice to see him make catches in traffic. He shows a lot of courage over the middle. It’s one thing to run fast. It’s another to use technique to catch the ball and screen off defenders. He’s on the right track.”

    As Petersen said, Ross knows he has to break the single-dimension stereotype.

    “Break points, route-running, focus on catching the ball, understanding coverages – all of that kind of slowed me down as a freshman,” he said. “I thought being a fast guy would take me a long way. Sometimes it does, but I don’t want to be known as a fast guy. I wanted to get better.

    “Sometimes I feel like I’m no better than the rest of the guys out here. I got to get in the weight room more, strengthen my  knees. Not to say I’m not healthy. It won’t hurt me to be 110 percent.”

    If that 110 percent makes him any faster, he may have a superhero movie in his future. Of the soon-to-be legendary 40 clocking, Ross, 5-foot-11 and 196 pounds, said he wasn’t quite at full strength.

    “I always run against time, and I trained really hard for that,” he said. “I didn’t feel 100 percent going into that day. But I took a deep breath, ran the time, and was pretty happy. To be honest, I felt I could have run faster.

    “It was so early (in his return). I was still strengthening my knee.”

    Now he has all summer to heal, to lift and to get busy pursuing the milestone. Browning may have to work on his fastball.

     

    Share. Facebook Twitter Reddit LinkedIn Email

    Related Posts

    The day that college sports start to go pro

    July 1, 2021

    NCAA amateurism is dead. Mayhem will fill the void

    June 24, 2021

    Thiel: Gonzaga’s Few sounds the alarm on NIL

    June 14, 2021

    Comments are closed.

    • Follow @Art_Thiel on Twitter
    Use our affiliate link on Amazon

    Subscribe to Our Weekly Roundup

    Get the top stories sent to your inbox every Thursday.

    Art Thiel on KNKX 88.5FM

    Kirsten Kendrick's Q. & A. with Thiel can be heard every Friday during Morning Edition at 5:45am and 7:45am and again that same day on All Things Considered at 4:44pm. It also airs Saturday at 9:35am.

    Listen now!
    Latest Posts

    A few musings about sports journalism as the unwinding begins

    February 18, 2022

    Carroll’s staff makeover seeks to get Wilson back in the game

    February 16, 2022

    Arizona loss unmasks truths about Hopkins, UW hoops

    February 15, 2022

    Rams win a survivors contest called the Super Bowl

    February 14, 2022
    Twitter
    • Football
    • Baseball
    • NCAA
    • Hockey
    • Soccer
    • Basketball
    © 2025 Sportspress Northwest

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.