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Husky Classic Returns This Weekend
December 13, 2018 | Women's Basketball
OPENING TIP
• Washington hosts the return of the Husky Classic this weekend, welcoming in Boise State, Montana and St. Francis (Pa.) on Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 15-16 at Alaska Airlines Arena. The Huskies take on Montana on Saturday at 1:00 p.m. with Boise State facing St. Francis at 4:00 p.m. Sunday will feature the 3rd/4th place game at 1:00 p.m. with the Championship game at 4:00 p.m.
Fans can listen to the UW/IMG Network broadcast with Gary Hill Jr. and Elise Woodward on the call on KKNW 1150 AM, on the TuneIn App or online at GoHuskies.com. A live stream of the games will also be available on GoHuskies.com.
• The Husky Classic was a staple of the women's basketball schedule from 1986 through 2010 with the Huskies posting a 37-9 all-time record in classic games.
• Junior Amber Melgoza poured in 28 points to lead Washington to a 69-59 win over Ohio State last week, improving to 4-0 at home and to 6-3 on the season. She now is averaging 20.8 points per game on the year.
The Husky Classic
This year marks the 24th edition of the Husky Classic, which dates back to 1986. Throughout its history, Washington welcomed in some of the top teams in the country for the Classic. Despite playing a challenging schedule, the Huskies were 37-9 all-time in the classic including winning 14 of the 24 previous classics.
Of note, Washington's opponent in the very first Husky Classic was Montana. The Huskies won that game 68-56 on Dec. 30, 1986, then defeated Oklahoma 83-64 to win its first Husky Classic title.
Scouting the Grizzlies
Montana comes into the weekend with a 4-3 record, splitting a pair of games in Arizona last week. The Grizzlies beat Grand Canyon 69-47 on Dec. 7 after losing 100-51 at Arizona on Dec. 5. Montana is 3-1 at home, but has posted just a 1-2 record away from Missoula.
Redshirt junior guard McKenzie Johnston is leading the team with 11.6 points per game with 34 assists on the season.
Washington leads the all-time series against Montana 10-8, though this will be the first time the teams have met since the 1996-97 season. Overall, the Huskies are 6-1 against the Grizzlies in Seattle. Montana is 1-1 all-time in the Husky Classic.
Scouting the Broncos
Boise State earned its second trip to the NCAA Tournament in the last three years last season, posting a 25-8 overall record. The Broncos are off to a strong start this year as well, posting a 6-2 record thus far including a close home loss to No. 5 Louisville a few weeks ago. Their only other loss was a 95-71 defeat at Washington State on Dec. 1.
Boise State is incredibly balanced with six players averaging 7.7 ppg or better, led by Riley Lupfer at 11.7 ppg. The Broncos also have eight players averaging 3.0 rebounds a game or better.
Washington holds a 20-4 edge in the all-time series vs Boise State and is 12-1 against the Broncos in Seattle. The lone home loss in the series came back in 1978. Boise State beat the Huskies in Idaho last year 85-62 and has won two-straight at BSU. This will be Boise State's first appearance at the Husky Classic.
Scouting the Red Flash
Saint Francis comes into the weekend with a 2-6 record, dropping three of its last four including an 80-56 loss at Youngstown State on Saturday.
Senior guard Jess Kovatch has averaged over 20 points per game in each of her previous three seasons and is at 17.9 ppg this year. She is just 38 points shy of setting the program record for points, amassing 2,301 points thus far.
This would be the first meeting between the teams.
Up Next
UW returns to the court for one of its biggest games of the year, hosting No. 5 Mississippi State on Thursday, Dec. 20 at 7:00 p.m. It will be the first game of a tough series for Washington, which plays three of its next four games against teams ranked in the AP Top 10.
Last Time Out
Amber Melgoza scored a game-high 28 points on 8-of-16 shooting, adding seven rebounds to lead Washington to a big 69-59 non-conference win over Ohio State. The Huskies picked up their third-straight win to improve to 6-3 on the season, winning three-straight for the first time since the 2016-17 season. It was UW's first win over Ohio State in four tries all-time.
Magical Melgoza
Washington junior Amber Melgoza has picked up right where she left off last year, averaging 20.8 points through the first nine games of the season–fourth-best in the Pac-12 thus far. The junior has reached double-figures in each of her last 22 games dating back to last year and has scored 20+ points in five-straight games and 20 in her career.
Melgoza's off-season goal was to become a more well-rounded player and it shows as she also leads the team in rebounds (5.9/game) and assists (3.5/game). She recorded her first career double-double against Northern Arizona on Nov. 11 with 20 points and 10 rebound, coming up two assists shy of a triple-double with a career-best eight helpers.
Melgoza is coming off an impressive sophomore campaign where she earned All-Pac-12 honors after finishing second in the conference in scoring at 19.0 points per game. But she did her real damage in Pac-12 play, leading the conference with 20.6 ppg in Pac-12 games. She finished the season with 570 points–11th most in program history and five points shy of the Top 10. In addition, Melgoza ended the season with 120 points over her final four games including pouring in 40 against Stanford–the most by a Pac-12 player on the season.
Melgoza on Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List
Amber Melgoza was one of 20 players from across the country to be named to the 2019 Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List as announced by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Women's Basketball Coaches Association on Oct. 23. The winner will be revealed on ESPN during the 2019 Women's Final Four in Tampa, Florida.
Productive Peterson
After an injury-plagued freshman campaign, Missy Peterson has been solid through the first nine games of her sophomore season, averaging 11.1 points and 3.9 rebounds per game. She averaged 14.6 ppg (73 total points) over a five game stretch beginning with a 17-point performance against Duke at the Gulf Coast Showcase. Two days later she set a career-high with 18 points vs. Michigan, then matched that with 18 a week later at Seattle U.
Peterson struggled with injuries her freshman year as a lingering foot injury kept her off the court until just before the start of the season. After playing sparingly through 18 games last year, Peterson suffering a season-ending knee injury at Washington State on Jan. 17.
After rehabbing this offseason, a healthy Peterson has returned with a vengeance. She has already scored more points this year (83) than all of last year (59) and is shooting 56.1% from the field (32-of-57) and 38.7% from three-point range (12-of-31).
Shooting Stars
The Huskies have been markedly better in shooting from the field this season, connecting on 43.4% through the first nine games. Last season, Washington shot just 38.3% at the end of the season. In fact, the Huskies rank 24th among 353 NCAA DI teams in 2PT FG% at 52.9% and are 69th overall in field goal percentage. Washington has already shot 45% of better in four games this season after do so in just five games all of last year.
The Charity Stripe
The Huskies matched a odd NCAA record earlier this year when they weren't awarded a free throw in the game against Fordham–a record shared with numerous teams. The Huskies now hold the NCAA records for fewest free throws in a game (0) and the most (69). On Nov. 30, 1991, UW attempted 69 free throws (making 51–also an NCAA record) in a 101-91 2 OT win vs. Northern Illinois.
This season, the Huskies are third in the Pac-12 and 30th in the NCAA in free throw shooting at 76.1% with Amber Melgoza ranking fourth in the Pac-12 and 42nd of over 3,000 players in the NCAA at 88.3% (53-of-60). Melgoza, who converted 11-of-11 from the charity stripe against Seattle and went 8-of-8 vs Ohio State, has made 24 of her last 25 free throws overall.
Home, Non-Conference Success
With its win over Ohio State last week, the Huskies improve to 18-1 in non-conference home games since the start of the 2016-17 season and have won eight-straight. Going back a bit further, the Huskies are 33-3 in such games since the start of the 2013-14 season.
That Halftime Lead...
The score at halftime has gone a long way to determine the score at the end of the game for the Huskies. Since Coach Wynn took over last season, Washington is 13-4 when leading at the half but is 0-22 when tied or trailing at halftime. This season, the Huskies are 6-0 when leading at halftime, but are 0-3 when trailing at the break.
RPI Check-In
Washington has continued to move up in the NCAA RPI rankings (through games Dec. 11), moving up to #58 out of 351 eligible teams–39 spots better than they were two weeks ago. That is eighth-best among Pac-12 schools, just behind Oregon State (#54) and UCLA (#45) and ahead of USC (#78), Arizona (#79), Utah (#98), and Washington State (#185). California is #2 in the RPI with Oregon at #10, Colorado at #20 and Stanford at #21. Two of UW's three losses have come against teams ranked in the Top 25 in Tulane (#29) and Michigan (#41).
Strength of Schedule
Once again, the Huskies are not shying away from playing a difficult schedule in 2018-19. UW plays nearly half its schedule (13 games) against eight teams currently ranked in the AP Top 25 or receiving votes. In fact, the Huskies have the sixth-toughest schedule among the 353 NCAA DI programs when looking at the cumulative record of its opposition (189-61, .756). The Pac-12 conference boasts five teams in the AP Top 25 including four in the Top 15: #7 Oregon, #8 Oregon State, #11 Stanford, #13 California and #17 Arizona State with USC and Utah receiving votes. Outside Pac-12 play, the Huskies are slated to face #5 Mississippi State on Dec. 20. Three of UW's next four games are against teams in the AP Top 10 (Miss. St, at Ore., at Ore. St.).
Huskies in the Rankings
While still early in the season, UW ranks among the Pac-12 leaders in a number of categories. The Huskies are ranked third in the conference and 69th in the NCAA in steals with 87 (9.7/game). Washington is also third in the Pac-12 and 30th in the NCAA in free throw percentage at 76.1%. The Huskies lead the Pac-12 in three-pointers attempted (211) and are fourth in turnovers forced (18.56/game).
Individually, Amber Melgoza ranks second among Pac-12 qualifiers and eighth in the NCAA in free throws made (53), third in free throws attempted (60) and fourth in ppg (20.8) and total points (187).
Freshmen Making a Splash
Husky freshmen Haley Van Dyke, T.T. Watkins and Darcy Rees have seen quite a bit of action in Washington's first eight games of the season with the trio averaging 16.5 minutes per game through the early going.
Van Dyke is averaging 6.3 ppg and has scored in double figures in three games thus far including a career-high 13 points against George Mason on Sunday and is shooting 52.0% from the field overall.
Watkins scored 12 points on 4-of-5 shooting against Northern Arizona and is averaging 5.6 points per game through seven games this year. She had four points, three rebounds, two assists and a steal in 15 minutes vs George Mason after missing two games due to a concussion.
Rees scored in double-figures in two of UW's three games in Florida, recording 10 points against Duke and Fordham to open the tournament. She also became the first player in two years to record at least three blocks in a game when she did so against George Mason. Overall Rees is averaging 4.3 points and 3.0 rebounds per game and has started each of the last four games for the Huskies.
Radio Show
Washington Head Coach Jody Wynn joins Elise Woodward for the UW Coaches Show throughout the season at Chinook's at Fisherman's Terminal. The show is carried live on KOMO AM 1000 in Seattle at 6:00 p.m. on the following dates: Dec. 10, Dec. 17, Jan. 2, Jan. 8, Jan. 14, Jan. 21, Jan. 28, Feb. 4, Feb. 11, Feb. 18, Feb. 25, March 4 and March 11. The show can be heard online at gohuskies.com or by using the TuneIn Mobile App.
Wynn Adds Talented Trio on Signing Day
UW coach Jody Wynn announced the signing of a talented trio to National Letters of Intent during the November early signing period: JaQuaya Miller (Renton, WA/Kentridge HS), Ali Bamberger (Concord, CA/Carondelet HS), and Nia Lowery (Sacramento, CA/McClatchy HS).
Miller is a local product and one of the top post recruits in the country. The 6-3 post from Renton is a 4.5-star rated recruit by Prospects Nation, ranked No. 41 overall (sixth-best post in the country) and the top overall prospect out of Washington state.
Bamberger, a 6-3 post, is ranked as the No. 8 player out of California (No. 2 post player) and No. 81 overall in the Class of 2019 by Prospects Nation heading into her final season at Carondelet High School in Concord, Calif.
Lowery, a 5-11 wing from Sacramento, is rated as a four-star recruit by Prospects Nation from McClatchy High School. As a senior, she helped guide the Lions to a NorCal Division I Title, an appearance in the CIF Sac-Joaquin Section championship and a berth in the state tournament.
Home Bodies
After spending the majority of the 2017-18 pre-conference schedule on the road, the Huskies find themselves with the opposite this season: playing seven non-conference home games to just four on the road. The Huskies only non-conference road trip was a five-game, nine-day trip through New Orleans and Florida and back to Seattle U around Thanksgiving. Washington now plays six-straight at home over the month of December and doesn't play another road game until heading to Oregon to open its Pac-12 road slate on Jan. 4.
• Washington hosts the return of the Husky Classic this weekend, welcoming in Boise State, Montana and St. Francis (Pa.) on Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 15-16 at Alaska Airlines Arena. The Huskies take on Montana on Saturday at 1:00 p.m. with Boise State facing St. Francis at 4:00 p.m. Sunday will feature the 3rd/4th place game at 1:00 p.m. with the Championship game at 4:00 p.m.
Fans can listen to the UW/IMG Network broadcast with Gary Hill Jr. and Elise Woodward on the call on KKNW 1150 AM, on the TuneIn App or online at GoHuskies.com. A live stream of the games will also be available on GoHuskies.com.
• The Husky Classic was a staple of the women's basketball schedule from 1986 through 2010 with the Huskies posting a 37-9 all-time record in classic games.
• Junior Amber Melgoza poured in 28 points to lead Washington to a 69-59 win over Ohio State last week, improving to 4-0 at home and to 6-3 on the season. She now is averaging 20.8 points per game on the year.
The Husky Classic
This year marks the 24th edition of the Husky Classic, which dates back to 1986. Throughout its history, Washington welcomed in some of the top teams in the country for the Classic. Despite playing a challenging schedule, the Huskies were 37-9 all-time in the classic including winning 14 of the 24 previous classics.
Of note, Washington's opponent in the very first Husky Classic was Montana. The Huskies won that game 68-56 on Dec. 30, 1986, then defeated Oklahoma 83-64 to win its first Husky Classic title.
Scouting the Grizzlies
Montana comes into the weekend with a 4-3 record, splitting a pair of games in Arizona last week. The Grizzlies beat Grand Canyon 69-47 on Dec. 7 after losing 100-51 at Arizona on Dec. 5. Montana is 3-1 at home, but has posted just a 1-2 record away from Missoula.
Redshirt junior guard McKenzie Johnston is leading the team with 11.6 points per game with 34 assists on the season.
Washington leads the all-time series against Montana 10-8, though this will be the first time the teams have met since the 1996-97 season. Overall, the Huskies are 6-1 against the Grizzlies in Seattle. Montana is 1-1 all-time in the Husky Classic.
Scouting the Broncos
Boise State earned its second trip to the NCAA Tournament in the last three years last season, posting a 25-8 overall record. The Broncos are off to a strong start this year as well, posting a 6-2 record thus far including a close home loss to No. 5 Louisville a few weeks ago. Their only other loss was a 95-71 defeat at Washington State on Dec. 1.
Boise State is incredibly balanced with six players averaging 7.7 ppg or better, led by Riley Lupfer at 11.7 ppg. The Broncos also have eight players averaging 3.0 rebounds a game or better.
Washington holds a 20-4 edge in the all-time series vs Boise State and is 12-1 against the Broncos in Seattle. The lone home loss in the series came back in 1978. Boise State beat the Huskies in Idaho last year 85-62 and has won two-straight at BSU. This will be Boise State's first appearance at the Husky Classic.
Scouting the Red Flash
Saint Francis comes into the weekend with a 2-6 record, dropping three of its last four including an 80-56 loss at Youngstown State on Saturday.
Senior guard Jess Kovatch has averaged over 20 points per game in each of her previous three seasons and is at 17.9 ppg this year. She is just 38 points shy of setting the program record for points, amassing 2,301 points thus far.
This would be the first meeting between the teams.
Up Next
UW returns to the court for one of its biggest games of the year, hosting No. 5 Mississippi State on Thursday, Dec. 20 at 7:00 p.m. It will be the first game of a tough series for Washington, which plays three of its next four games against teams ranked in the AP Top 10.
Last Time Out
Amber Melgoza scored a game-high 28 points on 8-of-16 shooting, adding seven rebounds to lead Washington to a big 69-59 non-conference win over Ohio State. The Huskies picked up their third-straight win to improve to 6-3 on the season, winning three-straight for the first time since the 2016-17 season. It was UW's first win over Ohio State in four tries all-time.
Magical Melgoza
Washington junior Amber Melgoza has picked up right where she left off last year, averaging 20.8 points through the first nine games of the season–fourth-best in the Pac-12 thus far. The junior has reached double-figures in each of her last 22 games dating back to last year and has scored 20+ points in five-straight games and 20 in her career.
Melgoza's off-season goal was to become a more well-rounded player and it shows as she also leads the team in rebounds (5.9/game) and assists (3.5/game). She recorded her first career double-double against Northern Arizona on Nov. 11 with 20 points and 10 rebound, coming up two assists shy of a triple-double with a career-best eight helpers.
Melgoza is coming off an impressive sophomore campaign where she earned All-Pac-12 honors after finishing second in the conference in scoring at 19.0 points per game. But she did her real damage in Pac-12 play, leading the conference with 20.6 ppg in Pac-12 games. She finished the season with 570 points–11th most in program history and five points shy of the Top 10. In addition, Melgoza ended the season with 120 points over her final four games including pouring in 40 against Stanford–the most by a Pac-12 player on the season.
Melgoza on Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List
Amber Melgoza was one of 20 players from across the country to be named to the 2019 Ann Meyers Drysdale Watch List as announced by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Women's Basketball Coaches Association on Oct. 23. The winner will be revealed on ESPN during the 2019 Women's Final Four in Tampa, Florida.
Productive Peterson
After an injury-plagued freshman campaign, Missy Peterson has been solid through the first nine games of her sophomore season, averaging 11.1 points and 3.9 rebounds per game. She averaged 14.6 ppg (73 total points) over a five game stretch beginning with a 17-point performance against Duke at the Gulf Coast Showcase. Two days later she set a career-high with 18 points vs. Michigan, then matched that with 18 a week later at Seattle U.
Peterson struggled with injuries her freshman year as a lingering foot injury kept her off the court until just before the start of the season. After playing sparingly through 18 games last year, Peterson suffering a season-ending knee injury at Washington State on Jan. 17.
After rehabbing this offseason, a healthy Peterson has returned with a vengeance. She has already scored more points this year (83) than all of last year (59) and is shooting 56.1% from the field (32-of-57) and 38.7% from three-point range (12-of-31).
Shooting Stars
The Huskies have been markedly better in shooting from the field this season, connecting on 43.4% through the first nine games. Last season, Washington shot just 38.3% at the end of the season. In fact, the Huskies rank 24th among 353 NCAA DI teams in 2PT FG% at 52.9% and are 69th overall in field goal percentage. Washington has already shot 45% of better in four games this season after do so in just five games all of last year.
The Charity Stripe
The Huskies matched a odd NCAA record earlier this year when they weren't awarded a free throw in the game against Fordham–a record shared with numerous teams. The Huskies now hold the NCAA records for fewest free throws in a game (0) and the most (69). On Nov. 30, 1991, UW attempted 69 free throws (making 51–also an NCAA record) in a 101-91 2 OT win vs. Northern Illinois.
This season, the Huskies are third in the Pac-12 and 30th in the NCAA in free throw shooting at 76.1% with Amber Melgoza ranking fourth in the Pac-12 and 42nd of over 3,000 players in the NCAA at 88.3% (53-of-60). Melgoza, who converted 11-of-11 from the charity stripe against Seattle and went 8-of-8 vs Ohio State, has made 24 of her last 25 free throws overall.
Home, Non-Conference Success
With its win over Ohio State last week, the Huskies improve to 18-1 in non-conference home games since the start of the 2016-17 season and have won eight-straight. Going back a bit further, the Huskies are 33-3 in such games since the start of the 2013-14 season.
That Halftime Lead...
The score at halftime has gone a long way to determine the score at the end of the game for the Huskies. Since Coach Wynn took over last season, Washington is 13-4 when leading at the half but is 0-22 when tied or trailing at halftime. This season, the Huskies are 6-0 when leading at halftime, but are 0-3 when trailing at the break.
RPI Check-In
Washington has continued to move up in the NCAA RPI rankings (through games Dec. 11), moving up to #58 out of 351 eligible teams–39 spots better than they were two weeks ago. That is eighth-best among Pac-12 schools, just behind Oregon State (#54) and UCLA (#45) and ahead of USC (#78), Arizona (#79), Utah (#98), and Washington State (#185). California is #2 in the RPI with Oregon at #10, Colorado at #20 and Stanford at #21. Two of UW's three losses have come against teams ranked in the Top 25 in Tulane (#29) and Michigan (#41).
Strength of Schedule
Once again, the Huskies are not shying away from playing a difficult schedule in 2018-19. UW plays nearly half its schedule (13 games) against eight teams currently ranked in the AP Top 25 or receiving votes. In fact, the Huskies have the sixth-toughest schedule among the 353 NCAA DI programs when looking at the cumulative record of its opposition (189-61, .756). The Pac-12 conference boasts five teams in the AP Top 25 including four in the Top 15: #7 Oregon, #8 Oregon State, #11 Stanford, #13 California and #17 Arizona State with USC and Utah receiving votes. Outside Pac-12 play, the Huskies are slated to face #5 Mississippi State on Dec. 20. Three of UW's next four games are against teams in the AP Top 10 (Miss. St, at Ore., at Ore. St.).
Huskies in the Rankings
While still early in the season, UW ranks among the Pac-12 leaders in a number of categories. The Huskies are ranked third in the conference and 69th in the NCAA in steals with 87 (9.7/game). Washington is also third in the Pac-12 and 30th in the NCAA in free throw percentage at 76.1%. The Huskies lead the Pac-12 in three-pointers attempted (211) and are fourth in turnovers forced (18.56/game).
Individually, Amber Melgoza ranks second among Pac-12 qualifiers and eighth in the NCAA in free throws made (53), third in free throws attempted (60) and fourth in ppg (20.8) and total points (187).
Freshmen Making a Splash
Husky freshmen Haley Van Dyke, T.T. Watkins and Darcy Rees have seen quite a bit of action in Washington's first eight games of the season with the trio averaging 16.5 minutes per game through the early going.
Van Dyke is averaging 6.3 ppg and has scored in double figures in three games thus far including a career-high 13 points against George Mason on Sunday and is shooting 52.0% from the field overall.
Watkins scored 12 points on 4-of-5 shooting against Northern Arizona and is averaging 5.6 points per game through seven games this year. She had four points, three rebounds, two assists and a steal in 15 minutes vs George Mason after missing two games due to a concussion.
Rees scored in double-figures in two of UW's three games in Florida, recording 10 points against Duke and Fordham to open the tournament. She also became the first player in two years to record at least three blocks in a game when she did so against George Mason. Overall Rees is averaging 4.3 points and 3.0 rebounds per game and has started each of the last four games for the Huskies.
Radio Show
Washington Head Coach Jody Wynn joins Elise Woodward for the UW Coaches Show throughout the season at Chinook's at Fisherman's Terminal. The show is carried live on KOMO AM 1000 in Seattle at 6:00 p.m. on the following dates: Dec. 10, Dec. 17, Jan. 2, Jan. 8, Jan. 14, Jan. 21, Jan. 28, Feb. 4, Feb. 11, Feb. 18, Feb. 25, March 4 and March 11. The show can be heard online at gohuskies.com or by using the TuneIn Mobile App.
Wynn Adds Talented Trio on Signing Day
UW coach Jody Wynn announced the signing of a talented trio to National Letters of Intent during the November early signing period: JaQuaya Miller (Renton, WA/Kentridge HS), Ali Bamberger (Concord, CA/Carondelet HS), and Nia Lowery (Sacramento, CA/McClatchy HS).
Miller is a local product and one of the top post recruits in the country. The 6-3 post from Renton is a 4.5-star rated recruit by Prospects Nation, ranked No. 41 overall (sixth-best post in the country) and the top overall prospect out of Washington state.
Bamberger, a 6-3 post, is ranked as the No. 8 player out of California (No. 2 post player) and No. 81 overall in the Class of 2019 by Prospects Nation heading into her final season at Carondelet High School in Concord, Calif.
Lowery, a 5-11 wing from Sacramento, is rated as a four-star recruit by Prospects Nation from McClatchy High School. As a senior, she helped guide the Lions to a NorCal Division I Title, an appearance in the CIF Sac-Joaquin Section championship and a berth in the state tournament.
Home Bodies
After spending the majority of the 2017-18 pre-conference schedule on the road, the Huskies find themselves with the opposite this season: playing seven non-conference home games to just four on the road. The Huskies only non-conference road trip was a five-game, nine-day trip through New Orleans and Florida and back to Seattle U around Thanksgiving. Washington now plays six-straight at home over the month of December and doesn't play another road game until heading to Oregon to open its Pac-12 road slate on Jan. 4.
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