GoHuskies Magazine: April 2018

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IN THIS ISSUE

APRIL 2018

From The Athletic Director’s Desk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Taran Alvelo leads UW softball towards the WCWS . . . 4 10 Questions With The “Perfect” Joe DeMers. . . . . . . . 13 The unique history of The Windermere Cup . . . . . . . . . 14 Join Husky baseball for a Mother’s Day brunch. . . . . . . 22 Hopkins, Thybulle earn Pac-12 honors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 The Shot ... Simply sublime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

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GOHUSKIES VOLUME 11 / ISSUE 6 / APRIL 2018

For Information on Advertising, Please Call Scott Boone at (206) 221-3071. GoHuskies Magazine is published seven times a year by Washington IMG Sports Marketing, in conjunction with the University of Washington Athletic Department.

GOHUSKIES MAGAZINE Washington IMG Sports Marketing 3910 Montlake Boulevard – Box 354070 Seattle, WA 98195

All material produced in this publication is the property of IMG College and shall not be reproduced in whole or in part without permission from IMG College and the University of Washington Athletic Department. Please send all address changes to the attention of Tyee Club at University of Washington; Box 354070; 202 Graves Building; Seattle, WA 98195-4070 or by email at huskies@uw.edu. EDITOR Brian Beaky WRITERS Mark Moschetti, Bob Sherwin PHOTOGRAPHERS Matthew Lipsen (cover), Don Jedlovec, Jonathan Moore, Red Box Photography, UW Athletics

FROM THE ATHLETIC DIRECTOR’S DESK

S

pring is often viewed as a time of renewal, the point in the year when the temperatures rise, flowers begin to bloom, and all turns green in our beautiful Emerald City. This year, however, I believe that our time of renewal began much earlier, with the exciting accomplishments of our men’s and women’s basketball programs under the guidance of new head coaches Michael Hopkins and Jody Wynn. The men's success is readily measured in wins — the most by any Husky team since 2012 — the restoration of excited fans and an energized Dawg Pack in Alaska Airlines Arena, and electrifying performances on the court. For our women, a team that lost major stars to graduation last year and endured multiple season-ending injuries to players this year, I was so impressed time and time again by their grit and determination. That team BATTLED. They competed and pushed themselves, and that perseverance was not only incredible to witness, it will undoubtedly pay off. Most important, we are proud of the young men and women in both programs for embracing adversity as opportunity, and for representing our University in a first-class fashion. In athletics, the change of meteorological seasons is punctuated by the change in sport seasons. So, as spring does make its entrance here on the shores of Montlake, we see the end of basketball, gymnastics and indoor track and field, and move into the spring sports of softball, baseball, rowing, outdoor track and field, golf, tennis and sand volleyball. Spring season is the busiest for

Jennifer Cohen

Husky Athletics from the perspective of the sheer volume of competitions, which means that YOU have many opportunities to get out and support our Husky student-athletes as they compete for championships! As always, your support and enthusiasm is a huge part of what makes the University of Washington such a special place for our student-athletes to learn, grow, and compete. Your energy and enthusiasm drive our success and I can’t wait to spend time with you this spring cheering on the Dawgs! GO HUSKIES!

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Football & Men’s Basketball Flagship Radio Station: KOMO Newsradio AM 1000 & FM 97.7

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JUNIOR

Taran Alvelo

HAS HUSKY SOFTBALL ROLLING ENTERING THE PAC-12 SEASON

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BY MARK MOSCHETTI FOR GOHUSKIES MAGAZINE

he didn’t always love softball. In fact, as Taran Alvelo explains, that might be putting it mildly. “When I was little, I didn’t want to get dirty and I didn’t want to play an outside sport,” the University of Washington pitching standout says. “I quit T-ball. I played one game and said, ‘I never want to play this stupid sport again.’” On the other hand, Alvelo has always loved purple and gold. It seems that no matter where she went, those were always the colors of choice. “My elementary school and my middle school were purple and gold. And when I transferred to a high school in Columbus (Ohio), it happened that my school colors were purple and gold again,” she says. “At the high school (Bloom Carroll), we were the Bulldogs. So I was still a ’Dog,” she adds with a laugh. But now, Alvelo is a Dawg, adorned in Washington’s version of her two favorite colors. More than that, she’s a Dawg who absolutely loves softball. And she’s one of the big reasons why the Huskies put 27 straight victories into the book to start the season, with no sign of slowing down. “I feel like we’re coming into the season where we left off last year,” Alvelo says. (The 2017 season ended with a split of four games in the Women's College World Series.) “Our goal is to execute what we need to execute. We’ve done such a good job of that so far this year.”

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Alvelo certainly has picked up where she left off in 2017, when she went 35-9 with a 2.07 earned-run average. Of those 27 straight wins – all of them before spring even officially arrived on the calendar – Alvelo logged 12 of them, with a miniscule 0.81 ERA. “I feel pretty confident in myself – and my team definitely has my back on the little hiccups I’ve had,” she says. “When I give up big hits or have a walk or hit batter, they’re right there to play defense or get a run across for us. “I feed off their energy and vice versa.”

Dream Almost Dashed Even before she got to high school, Alvelo knew she wanted to be a Husky. But, it wasn’t just the UW colors that caught her attention. She watched the team win the College World Series in 2009 and, though just a sixth-grader then, liked what she saw. “The energy Washington put out on the field the year they won – I was drawn to that,” she says. While she did make a few calls to other schools, there was no doubt in Alvelo’s mind that she eventually was going to come to Seattle. In fact, she started attending UW’s softball camps from the time she was an eighth-grader. “I got off the plane in eighth grade with my dad, and it was a small plane – we had to step out on the actual tarmac,” she recalled with a laugh. “We were just at the airport, and I was like, ‘I want to come here.’ And my dad said, ‘Well, let’s see the campus first.’” Alvelo feared her dream was going to end in a nightmare when she was cited for a shoplifting incident near the end of her senior year in high school. One of her first calls in the immediate aftermath was to UW coach Heather Tarr. “She helped me get past it. She saw something in me and she was able to pull me up when I needed it,” says Alvelo, who owned up to it, made restitution, and had her record expunged. “She was like, ‘All right, this is what we have to do now; this is how we have to approach things, and you will be better.’” Added Tarr, “She handled her business in the right way. It was the biggest learning thing in her own life, that she had to publicly overcome something that was very uncomfortable. What a great opportunity for us to be a part of her learning process.” Alvelo is very forthcoming in saying all her experiences — both positive and negative — have shaped her into who she has become, on and off the softball field.

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“I’m resilient. I definitely feel like that has been one of the aspects of myself that has really shown in the last few years,” she says. “I’m able to get up in the toughest of situations and stand tall and just keep moving. “Life was tough (at that time). But my teammates, coaches, family and friends — they’ve helped create who I am.” Sometimes, those tough situations happen in the pitcher’s circle. But, right from the start of her Husky career, Alvelo has stood tall through those, as well. She was the Pacific-12 Co-Freshman of the Year in 2016, a two-time All Pac-12 second-teamer, and was a National Fastpitch Coaches Association All-Region selection last spring.

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“She’s way more emotionally sound, and she knows what she can do,” Tarr says. “The first two years, she knew how to throw pitches, but didn’t have the command she needed at this level. Physically, she knows now what her body needs to do to produce a pitch. She’s at that place where she knows that about her body, and her mind is in the same place.” The 21-year-old Alvelo actually started out as catcher when she was eight years old. About a year later, while shagging balls in the outfield, she windmilled a couple of them back in, impressing her coach so much that he strongly encouraged her to start taking lessons. “From then on, it was my thing,” she says. “There was never a moment when I didn’t want to do this.” Now, there’s never one when she doesn’t want to keep getting even better – and helping the Huskies do likewise.

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“If I’m here and I’m in the moment, I’m not going to fail,” Alvelo says. “I’m going to succeed.” “How we practice and how we go about our days – it’s being where our feet are and being in the moment all the time,” Alvelo said. “Eventually, you create this way of life. “If I’m here and I’m in the moment, I’m not going to fail. I’m going to succeed.” And Taran Alvelo is going to do it in her two favorite colors.

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10 QUESTIONS WITH... BASEBALL’S JOE DEMERS

I

t started with a simple groundout to the first baseman, followed by two strikeouts. Through one inning of Washington's Feb. 24 matchup with UC Riverside, starting pitcher Joe DeMers had faced three batters, thrown just 10 pitches, and recorded three outs. DeMers put Riverside down 1-2-3 in the second inning as well ... and the third ... and the fourth ...By the time the Highlanders came to bat in the top of the fifth, just about everyone at Husky Ballpark was aware that something special was brewing. Finally, at 8:30 p.m., DeMers threw his 84th and final pitch — resulting in a harmless fly ball to right field for his 27th-straight out and the first perfect game in Husky baseball history, and just the fifth all-time in Pac-12 play. DeMers — who struck out nine UC Riverside batters and recorded just one three-ball count the entire game — said afterward that "Everything was working. It was awesome." Here's a little more about the Huskies' first perfect man.

If you were meeting someone for the first time, list five things about yourself that they wouldn't know about you.

What kind of lessons have you learned from playing baseball?

“I have three brothers. I played basketball in high school. I have played baseball in five different countries. I am French, Italian and Canadian. I will beat anyone in 2K.”

“Baseball has taught me to work hard for what I want in life.”

What is something you have learned away from competition? “You have to work hard on your own. Team practice is not enough.”

What's it like to compete at Husky Ballpark? “It is a great home field advantage because of the rain and cold.”

Why did you come to Washington?

What are some of your earliest memories playing baseball?

“The teammates that I knew I was going to be playing with, and the coaching staff.”

“Hitting a home run in tee-ball, rounding all the bases and then going to look for the ball I hit with the other team.”

What is your favorite thing about living in Seattle? “Sushi.”

What do you think it means to be a game-changer or have a game-changing moment? “Never giving in — competing!”

Who or what is your biggest inspiration and why? “My family, because they have given me everything I need to succeed in life.”

What is it like to compete in the Pac-12 conference? “There is no easy weekend. You have to bring your ‘A’ game every week.”

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A

CUP LIKE

Thirty-two years ago, a newspaper columnist, a local businessman and a legendary coach created rowing’s greatest spectacle

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NO OTHER BY BOB SHERWIN

M

ichael Callahan, now in his 11th season as the University of Washington men's rowing coach, knows firsthand the feeling of a shell flashing 46 feet below the distinctive bascule Montlake Bridge and down the narrow, amphitheater-like cut that spills west into Portage Bay. "It's a feeling of space closing in on you,'' says Callahan, who rowed for the Huskies from 1993-96. "You notice the speed. Your competitors are that much closer to you. You get that perspective. And the fans make it a lot of fun to row through, that spirit, the slogans that line the walls. And, it only increases as you go through. It's like rowing downhill, really motivating.'' The Montlake Cut, shoveled through to connect the lakes more than 100 years ago, became what Callahan calls "a stadium on water. It's like playing in a famed ballpark, like Fenway or Wrigley Field. It has its own personality. No one has that.'' As a venue for UW's remarkable, century-long rowing history, the Cut has developed the reputation as a rowing mecca. It's where UW and rowing rival Cal have had epic competitions. It's where the famed 1936 "Boys in the Boat'' Olympic champion varsity eight trained and raced. Nineteen national championships. Pocock shells. Hiram Conibear. Al Ulbrickson. Dick Erickson. Bob Ernst. And, since 1987, the site of the Windermere Cup crew regatta, the first Saturday in May.

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his year — the 32nd renewal of the Windermere Cup on May 5 — the Huskies men's eight will take on OxfordBrookes, the 2017 British National Champion and Henley Champion, as well as the University of British Columbia crew. The women's eight will compete against an Olympic-quality Dutch National team. The first official Windermere Cup regatta was inspired not by a rower, but by a newspaper article penned by then-Seattle Times columnist Blaine Newnham. He had covered a 1986 regatta in which the Husky eight completely swamped Oregon State, and argued that middling competition was a disservice to the proud Husky rowing tradition. The Cut, he

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argued, was "truly a Carnegie Hall of Rowing'' and that UW's well-earned tradition demanded a higher level of competition. "Instead of being critical, I wanted to come up with a solution,'' Newnham says. "What could happen (if they tried). There were so few big races, other than championship races. Here was the opportunity to have one.'' John Jacobi, founder of Windermere Real Estate, read that column the next morning and was inspired. He had no previous association with rowing but was a dedicated Husky booster. Newnham's argument made sense to him, so he set up a meeting with legendary UW men's coach Dick Erickson, and thenwomen's coach Bob Ernst.

"One of the things he always said was, 'I have to make a difference in my community,''' says Jill Jacobi Wood, daughter of John Jacobi, who has retired from the business and mostly stepped away from his involvement in the Cup. "He always gave back to the community and this was a great opportunity for him to do that,'' Jacobi Wood adds. "My father is a great idea guy. He always had a vision. He knew how to make things happen.'' Why not enhance the competition? Why not make it world-class? Why not invite the best in the world to this unique rowing venue? Jacobi offered those questions and his fi-

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LIKE NO OTHER nancial resources while Erickson provided the answer — the Russians were coming. The Soviet Union's national team was arguably the best in the world at the time — tested, experienced, celebrated. Yet, could they, or would they come? It was a different time for the two superpowers, the waning days of the Cold War, just three years away from the Berlin Wall breakdown and the Soviet Union breakup. The Soviets were still a world menace and a thorn to U.S. efforts to sow peace. "It was the darkest time,'' Newnham says. The two countries had boycotted each other's Summer Olympic Games, with the U.S. declining to attend the 1980 Moscow Games and the Soviets no-showing at the 1984 Los Angeles Games. The sports community had grown tired being a pawn in this superpower gamesmanship. It would take some adroit political maneuvering to get the Soviets to Seattle, and into this restive climate stepped in cable TV mogul Ted Turner and Seattle-based PR maven Bob Walsh. Turner bankrolled the 1986 Goodwill Games in Moscow and, four years later, was behind the 1990 Goodwill Games in Seattle. Turner's go-to guy was Walsh. He organized the Goodwill Games and helped UW officials lure the Soviets for the initial Windermere Cup. "The Windermere folks stepped up, so money was not a problem,'' Newnham says. "Walsh had good Russian contacts. They got the Soviets to show up, but not make it a competitive race.'' T he Soviets gave the event instant gravitas. The powerful Soviet eight dominated the Huskies that day. Still, as Newnham said, "the atmosphere was electric. People could actually see the race. For so many regattas at lakes and reservoirs, it may be good water, but terrible for spectators.'' After the race, the Soviet rowers showed their version of detente. Not only did the rowers do the traditional shirt exchange, but on the victory lap east through the Cut, they split the shells, four Soviets and four Huskies in each. The event also provided two valuable lessons for the future Windermeres. The Soviets' superiority had raised the competitive bar that the Huskies needed to match, while the planners changed their focus towards collegiate-level national teams and elite university programs, for more competitive races. Over the 31 past Windermeres, national teams from England, Germany, Australia, China, New Zealand and the Russians — here again just two years ago — have competed. Top programs such as Cal, Notre Dame and Wisconsin also have had Cut experience. "We'd love to get the East Coast old schools (Ivy League) here, but they usually have finals that time of year,'' Jacobi Wood says. "It just has not worked out very often.''

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LIKE NO OTHER Those top traditional East Coast rowing programs can't completely avoid the Huskies. Inevitably and historically, they face the Huskies and/or the Cal Bears at the IRA National Championship Regatta. The Huskies have won 19 national championships, including a record five in a row (2011-2015) under Callahan. UW provides 14-and-a-half scholarships for the men's program, plus a multitude of endowments to maintain the elite level. The women's program, started in 1975 by Erickson, has had enormous success as well. Callahan says the rowers — including a high number of walkons — are attracted to UW by the chance "to find the best version of themselves. They are attracted by a challenge.'' He said they also understand, appreciate and want to be part of the UW rowing legacy — the rivalry with Cal, the national championships, the Montlake Cut and Windermere Cup. "They are tied to the history, but they are here to make their own legacy,'' Callahan says. "They draw on the power of past successes, but they're trying to write their own chapter.''

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he Husky rowing program, which began in 1899, arguably realized its full potential 88 years later with the Windermere Cup. The reputation of the event, the program and the venue spread through the rowing world. It is one of the great rowing spectacles, world-wide as well as locally. "Whenever I'm out shopping and I'm wearing my Windermere Cup gear, people are always stopping me, saying things like, 'I rowed

in that' or 'I love going to it,''' Jacobi Wood says. For the UW rowing program, they can be grateful that more than three decades ago, John Jacobi read his morning paper. That prompted him to give a check and a name to a world-class Seattle event. And, fortunately, it's a name that blends itself well for sport and enterprise. Imagine, had other Seattle business icons stepped up instead, we might have the Dick's Drive-In Regatta, Ride The Ducks Row or Sub Pop Showdown? "It really is kind of a perfect fit,'' Jacobi Wood adds. "We lucked out on that.''

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4MOM Join the Huskies this Mother's Day and help raise money to cure Alzheimer's disease

once and for all BY BRIAN BEAKY EDITOR, GOHUSKIES MAGAZINE

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hree years ago, when Huskies outfielder Braden Bishop started his 4MOM foundation to raise money for Alzheimer's research, his mother, Suzy, was in the early stages of the diagnosis. A former UCLA track star and vice president of production at NBC, she still ran and biked in the hills behind the family's home, and said of her son's initiative, "[It] brings a tear to my eye. I'm really proud of Braden for initiating this. He never ceases to amaze me." These days, Suzy rarely speaks at all. If she recognizes Braden, that's a good day. But Braden, now a Seattle Mariners prospect, isn't giving up — and his former Husky teammates still have his back. On Sunday, May 13, the Husky baseball team will host a Mother's Day Brunch prior to its game against Suzy's alma mater, UCLA. Tickets to the brunch, being held in the Conibear Shellhouse, are $40, and include brunch, bottomless mimosas, and a game ticket. Most importantly, a portion of the proceeds from the event will go to the 4MOM Foundation (www.4momalz.com) to fund research with the goal of preventing future families from having to endure the pain of Alzheimer’s disease. Tickets can be purchased online at GoHuskies.com, or by calling the Husky ticket office at 206-543-2200. In the years since Bishop started his foundation, his cause — and that of any family working with a family member diagnosed with Alzheimer’s — has been taken up by not only his Husky teammates, but other college players and teams, and even many of his Seattle Mariners teammates. That first year, the Huskies hosted a 4MOM game

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4MOM in which all of the players on both the UW and Arizona teams inscribed the phrase "4MOM" on their arms, as Bishop had been doing in tribute to Suzy. Word trickled up social media to the Seattle Mariners locker room, where several Mariners players jumped on board in support. A weightlifting competition that year brought in the first few thousand, while during spring training in 2018, Mariners players like Mitch Haniger and Andrew Moore jumped on board, contributing set amounts to the foundation for every hit, strikeout, walk or other specific in-game events. Soon, word spread throughout the Cactus League, with players and coaches on multiple teams chipping in to raise money for Alzheimer's awareness. In all, Bishop has raised more than $40,000 already through fundraisers such as this, as well as direct donations to the foundation website, www.4MOMalz.com, which includes information about Alzheimer's; videos of Suzy, Braden and the Bishop family; special 4MOM gear and apparel; and more. In an interview with the Seattle Times

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earlier this spring, Mariners manager Scott Servais said, “It says a lot about the person, no doubt. You see the whole thing he’s gone through with his mom and the maturity level to step up and try to make a difference. I think it’s awesome. And I think it’s awesome that people are following.” There is no cure for Alzheimer's — in reality, there isn't even any treatment. That's why the work of individuals like Bishop and Bill Gates (who donated $50 million to the Dementia Discovery Fund in November) is so important — for every minute that passes without a cure, another U.S. family finds themselves trapped in the painful spiral that Bishop's has had to endure. This Mother's Day, be a part of the team working to end Alzheimer's disease by joining the Huskies for their Mother's Day Brunch. Don't do it for yourself, or even for Braden Bishop — do it, as Braden would, 4MOM. Tickets to the Mother’s Day Brunch on Sunday, May 13, are available by calling 206-5432200 or online at www.GoHuskies.com.

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U

EARN PAC-12’S TOP HONORS AFTER MORE THAN DOUBLING THEIR WIN TOTAL OF A YEAR AGO, THE HUSKIES PUT THREE PLAYERS ON THE ALL-PAC-12 TEAM FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 2011-12.

niversity of Washington head coach Mike Hopkins was named the Pac-12 Coach of the Year in March, while junior Matisse Thybulle became the first player in UW history to be named the Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year. Coach Hopkins, in his first year with the UW program, is the fourth UW coach to earn a Coach of the Year honor and first since 2012. He joins Lorenzo Romar (2012, 2009, 2005), Bob Bender (1996) and Marv Harshman (1982, 1984) in being awarded the honor, but is the first to take home the award in his first season as the head coach. Hopkins is also just the sixth Pac-12 Coach to earn the honor in their first year at their university, joining Stanford's Dick DiBiaso (1976), UCLA's Gary Cunningham (1978), Oregon State's Jim Anderson (1990), California's Ben Braun (1997) and Washington State's Tony Bennett (2007). Hopkins led the Huskies to a 20-11 regular season record, UW's 29th 20-win season in program history. Additionally, UW made a huge jump in wins after finishing 9-22 a year ago, its largest move between seasons since 1936-37 and 1938, when UW went from 15-11 to 29-7 the following year. Washington also went from 2-16 to 10-8 in Pac-12 play, which is its biggest jump (eight wins more) in conference play in UW history. Washington also had the first forward since 2010-11 to earn Pac-12 First Team All-Conference team honors, the first Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year honor in Thybulle and put three on the all-conference teams for the first PAGE 26

time since the 2011-12 season. Thybulle, the owner of the 2018 Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year award, has been a force this season under Hopkins' 2-3 zone, as he has set the UW career record in steals with 196 and also moved into the UW career top-10 in blocks with 98. He is the only UW player in program history to be in the top-10 in both categories. He is also sixth in Pac-12 history in single-season steals with his 92 this year, which is 18 off the conference's single-season record and is the UW single-season record as well. In the last 25 years, Thybulle is one of just three Pac-12 players to post over 190 steals and 90 blocks in their career, while he is also just the fourth player in UW history to earn All-Defensive Team honors, joining Aziz N'Diaye (2011), Justin Holiday (2010) and Venoy Overton (2010). He's started in every single game of his career, which now spans to 96, and has a streak of 43-straight games with at least one steal posted. Washington also had a trio of players earn All-Conference honors, as Noah Dickerson was a first-team selection, Jaylen Nowell picked up honorable mention Pac-12 honors and All-Freshman Team recognition, and Thybulle made the All-Defensive Team. Congratulations to coach Hopkins and the entire Husky men's basketball squad on a great season! Season-ticket renewals start soon, so be sure to contact the Husky Ticket Office at 206-543-2200 to lock in your seats for what will no doubt be an exciting 2018-19 season! GoHUSKIES


TWO GREAT SCHOOLS ONE GREAT TRADITION The Apple Cup is a Washington tradition and one of the great rivalries in all of college sports. Whether you’re cheering for the Dawgs or screaming for the Cougs, Boeing is proud to be the title sponsor of this annual matchup between two great competitors.


Photographs by RED BOX PICTURES

MR. PERFECT

Teammates celebrate with Joe Demers (Junior, Martinez, Calif.) following his perfect game against UC Riverside on Feb. 24. Demers’ perfect game was the first-ever in Husky baseball history, and lifted the Dawgs to an 8-0 victory. To purchase Husky Athletics photography, visit www.HUSKIESPHOTOSTORE.com

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