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Washington fires embattled Willingham

Coach, who refused to resign, will stay on through end of season

Image: Willingham
Elaine Thompson / AP
“We didn’t win enough football games. That’s it,” Tyrone Willingham said Monday. “Hopefully, we’ve done all the other things right, (and) it’s a good strong program for someone to jump into and do things.”
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updated 8:05 p.m. ET Oct. 27, 2008

Tyrone Willingham’s ouster Monday as Washington’s football coach surprised only his players.

Two days after the Huskies fell to 0-7, athletic director Scott Woodward sat next to Willingham at the coach’s weekly news conference and announced Willingham will be replaced after the season.

A move that seemed seasons in the making was actually days in the making. University president Dr. Mark Emmert said Willingham was told a change would be made after the Huskies lost 34-13 to Oregon State on Oct. 18.

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“Scott and Tyrone were talking about the best ways to handle it, what the timing could be or should be and just working on details of the transition,” Emmert said. “There wasn’t anything particularly strategic about it.”

Word of his firing, however, was slow to leak to the team, which plays at No. 7 USC on Saturday.

Quarterback Ronnie Fouch said Willingham pulled him aside just minutes before the announcement.

“It’s tough. He’s the reason I came here,” Fouch said. “It’s going to be tough to see him gone after this year.”

When asked if it was his decision to leave, Willingham said flatly, “no” and added he never considered resigning.

Willingham was under fire for failing to restore Washington to national prominence. He’s 11-32 overall in his four seasons, and the Huskies just lost their ninth consecutive game — an embarrassing 33-7 loss to Notre Dame on national television.

“We didn’t win enough football games. That’s it,” Willingham said. “Hopefully, we’ve done all the other things right, (and) it’s a good strong program for someone to jump into and do things.”

With a year left on his contract, Willingham will receive a $1 million buyout.

Now, he has five games to try to salvage this lost season for the Huskies, winless through seven games for only the second time in school history.

Two of Washington’s final five games will be at home, where many fans have gotten in the habit of leaving at halftime and where Willingham has faced boos recently when his image is shown on the stadium’s video screen.

It’s unclear how Washington’s players, almost entirely recruited by Willingham and his staff, will react to the challenge.

“Change can be a good thing. Change can be a bad thing,” said quarterback Jake Locker, out since Sept. 27 with a broken thumb. “It depends on how we approach it.”

Willingham was hired in 2004 just weeks after he was fired at Notre Dame, where he went 21-15 but only 11-12 in his final two seasons.

When he arrived at Washington, Willingham was charged with restoring the integrity of the program that spiraled out of control during former coach Rick Neuheisel’s tenure, whose UCLA team will visit the Huskies on Nov. 15.

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Willingham brought stability and order to the program but that didn’t add up to wins on the field, where the Huskies were plagued by second-half collapses, critical injuries and some uninspired performances in Willingham’s tenure.

“It became quite obvious with the performance on the football field it wasn’t up to what we talked about at the beginning of the season and previous to the season,” Woodward said. “It became more obvious as time went on this season.”

With a team full of freshmen and sophomores, this season is on pace to be one of the worst in school history. Washington went 1-10 in 2004 and 1-9 in 1969. The only hope for a victory this season would seem to be the Nov. 21 Apple Cup at rival Washington State.

And Willingham will be on the sideline — a position he’s not eager to give up, not even next season.

“I will not rule out anything,” he said when asked about his future.

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