APRIL 2020
IN THIS ISSUE
From the Athletic Director's Desk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 All-American Sis Bates keeps it all in the family . . . . . . . 4 10 Questions with tennis star Vanessa Wong. . . . . . . . . 13 Track's Elijah Mason has found a future in the discus. . . 14 Cy Young Award winner Blake Snell's recent visit to UW highlights Huskies competing in MLB . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Husky golf is holding its own, both on the PGA TOUR and right here at home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 The Shot: Huskies' big finish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
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GOHUSKIES VOLUME 13 / ISSUE 6 / APRIL 2020
For Information on Advertising, Please Call Brandon Forbis at (206) 695-2562. GoHuskies Magazine is published seven times a year by Huskies Sports Properties, in conjunction with the University of Washington Athletic Department.
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EDITOR Brian Beaky WRITERS Mason Kelley, Mark Moschetti
FROM THE ATHLETIC DIRECTOR’S DESK
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hat a memorable and remarkable time not just for college athletics, but for the entire world. It is likely that none of us will ever again experience a week quite like the one we had in March, when sporting events — including all NCAA Championships — were canceled or postponed nationwide, as citizens worldwide took drastic steps to prevent further spread of the COVID-19 virus. In our athletic department, we care deeply about the well-being of our entire Husky athletics family, including our student-athletes, coaches, staff and supporters. In every decision we make, we must always put first the safety of those who participate in and attend our events, which is why we had to make the painful decision to postpone all UW athletics activities until the time our state and local officials deem it safe for us to resume. Shortly thereafter, the NCAA canceled all winter and spring sports championships through the end of June. Speaking for myself only, this decision was not made lightly, as I recognize the tremendous impact on our student-athletes, who have worked so hard to achieve their goals. For many, their seasons are effectively over. My heart especially breaks for our seniors, who are denied the opportunity to finish their college athletics careers in the way that they deserve. We are strongly encouraging the NCAA to grant impacted student-athletes an additional year of eligibility.
Jennifer Cohen
And, of course, I also feel the sense of loss shared by our supporters, who turn to sports in general, and Husky athletics in particular, for comfort in difficult times. We are hopeful that these drastic measures will be effective in slowing or stopping the spread of COVID-19, and that we can once again share the joys of college athletics together again soon. I personally want to express my sincere compassion and well wishes for any of our supporters directly affected by the virus. You mean everything to us, and in these difficult times, we are thinking of nothing more than your health and well-being. We will all get through this. And, as always, we will do so together. GO DAWGS!
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FOR LOVE OF THE GAME
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Wherever she goes, Huskies’ superstar
SISis surrounded BATES — and inspired — by family
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BY MASON KELLEY
er name is Nicole. But, Washington softball fans are probably more familiar with her neighborhood nickname. Long before Sis Bates was a unanimous All-American, long before the shortstop was named the Female Sports Star of the Year at the 85th annual MTR Western Seattle Sports Star of the Year Awards, and long before she was the third player in history to win multiple Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year awards, she was just the lone girl in the neighborhood holding her own against all the boys. “There was me and my brother and I grew up with a bunch of boys in my neighborhood,” Bates says. “I consider them all like my brothers. I was the only little girl, so they all called me 'Sis,' like sister.” It stuck. Back then, the Ceres, Calif., native; her older brother, Jimmy; and the rest of the local kids used the neighborhood as their playground. They made two trees and an orange cone bases for wiffle ball. They used the garage as a dodgeball court. They played flag football and basketball in the driveway. “We were very adventurous,” she says. “We made up our own games, too. We were crazy kids.” From games in the front yard to the Women’s College World Series, Bates’ journey has been built around a selfless family always willing to put the needs of others before their own.
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s a sophomore in high school, Bates wanted a more competitive environment to fuel her passion for softball. “I was playing for a NorCal team and I didn’t feel like the competition in NorCal was what I needed to be ready when I got to school, so it was just so much more competitive,” Bates says. When her father, John, was presented with the idea of making the six-hour drive from Ceres to Huntington Beach every weekend so she could compete for an elite club program, Firecrackers-Rico, he didn’t hesitate to commit to at least 12 hours in the car every weekend. “It was mostly me and my dad who would make the drive every weekend,” Bates says. “He’s crazy and I love him so much. I think our relationship grew a lot in that time, because we were in the car for six hours and he would get off work, go to sleep and then wake up at 2 a.m. to be able to start driving so I could play on Saturday morning.” Bates will never forget those overnight drives and the black coffee that fueled her father during those trips. “I just have such a good relationship with my family,” Bates says. As close as Bates became with her father during those trips, she is just as close with her brother. “He’s my best friend on the planet,” Bates says. When they were little, they fought like most siblings, but only two years apart in age, they bonded in high school. “He’s ride or die, my best friend forever,” Bates says. “I’m so thankful he’s my brother.” Bates said her mother, Michelle, also shares a close bond with her own brother, Bates' uncle, Scott. Growing up around that relationship, Bates said it’s no surprise she is so close with Jimmy. It helps that Jimmy is as selfless as his father. “He puts everybody above himself,” Bates says. After graduating from UC Irvine, Jimmy spent last season working as a graduate assistant with the Huskies. “He lived with me, so that was great,” Bates says. “He’s just such a light in everyone’s life. He spread that throughout our program and he’s just such an amazing human. I try to be more like him every single day.
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“I’m literally obsessed with every part of Washington Softball”
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e’s so selfless and, as a graduate assistant, that was so nice, because it has to be hard to deal with 20 women all the time and he was always open to hit with us.” If Bates needed some extra work, she only needed to give her brother a few minutes' notice and he was right there waiting on the field with a fungo bat. “It’s kind of cool to have your brother hit you fungoes every day,” she says. From those six-hour drives twice a weekend with her dad to her brother jumping at every chance to help the Huskies improve last season, Bates said she admires “everything” about her family. “I aspire to be more like them every single day,” she says. “I hope some of their traits have rubbed off on me.” With a wide smile spread across her face each time she’s on the field, it’s clear the family traits have been passed down. In fact, next season, once her collegiate career is over, she plans to stick with the program for two more years as a graduate assistant. Like her brother last season, she wants to be able to give something to the program she loves. “I’m literally obsessed with every part of Washington softball,” Bates says with a laugh.
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alk to those who have been through the program and it is obvious that coach Heather Tarr has built a lasting winner that develops people as much as players. The Husky family is one Bates plans to be around as long as possible. “It obviously stems from the coaches,” she says. “I believe we have the best coaching staff in the world and the selfless thing, it comes from them. They put us above everything else and it’s not just about softball, it’s about us as humans. “It’s such a family. I know I could talk to coach Tarr about anything. They’re going to be honest with me and love me throughout it all. I literally love every part of it.” From the neighborhood family that helped the nickname "Sis" stick all those years ago in the front yard, to her actual family that taught her the value of being selfless, Bates embodies where she came from. And now, in her final season with Washington, she is helping to continue cultivating the strong culture embedded into the core of the Huskies’ softball program. There is no place she would rather be. “When you love everybody around you, and you want to play for them and you know they’re going to have your back,” Bates says, “what else could you ask for?”
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10 QUESTIONS WITH... JUNIOR VANESSA WONG
hile Husky fans' focus in the spring is usually on the red-hot Husky softball squad, baseball's attempt to get back to the College World Series, or the crews' annual bids for National Championships, it's hard to get much hotter than women's tennis player Vanessa Wong. The junior from Toronto, Ontario, started out her spring season with a perfect 10-0 record, and reached the round of 16 at the ITA Northwest Regional Championships. That follows on the heels of a 20-4 sophomore season and an 18-5 record as a freshman, seasons which saw Wong earn an All-Pac-12 Second Team award and reach the top-50 of the ITA National Rankings. We sat down with Wong earlier this spring to find out what motivates her to work so hard, and how far thinks her career can go.
Why did you come to Washington? “I chose to come to Washington because I believe that it is a school that supports their student-athletes and provides us with incredible opportunities. I also chose UW because of the coaches, the support staff, and the girls that were on the team.” What is your earliest tennis memory? “I remember hitting tennis balls around a court when I was four years old and running around with a tiny racquet. I was stealing five minutes from each of my sister's tennis lessons when I was four and she was nine.”
What sport would you play if you didn’t play tennis? “If I didn't play tennis I would want to play softball.” What is your favorite quote? “'To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that is all,' by Oscar Wilde.” What are your goals for this season? “My goals are team goals; to win our conference and host Super Regionals.” What would be your dream place to play a tennis match? “My dream place to play a tennis match would be on the underwater tennis court in Dubai.” Who is your favorite tennis player and why? “My favorite tennis player is Roger Federer because of his game style and his poise on court. Watching him play is so peaceful and so entertaining. He is incredibly smart and creative, and he also stays incredibly calm when he competes.” What is your go-to song on karaoke night? “A Thousand Miles, by Vanessa Carlton.” What is the best advice you’ve received? “To make the most out of every moment and every opportunity.” What is your favorite show to binge watch? “Grey's Anatomy.”
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FLIRTING WITH
Death Sophomore
Elijah Mason is flying high and living on the edge in his pursuit of an NCAA Championship BY MARK MOSCHETTI FOR GOHUSKIES MAGAZINE
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e doesn’t jump motorcycles over a string of vehicles. Wouldn’t dream of trying to walk on a high wire between two tall buildings Elijah Mason is no daredevil. Not a trace of Evel Knievel or the Flying Wallendas in his DNA. Yet, as the University of Washington sophomore tells it in his own articulate manner, every time he heads to the track and picks up a discus, he's flirting with death. “It’s a term my coach and I are using now,” he says of one of the connections between himself and UW throwing coach Andrew Ninow. “That’s kind of the way I refined my technique. “I’m always trying to find a way to flirt with death and becoming more comfortable with flirting with death.” Ninow couldn’t help but laugh when told that one of his prize pupils totally embraces that concept “When you’re trying to throw the discus really far, you have to get on the very edge of your balance and get as much forward momentum as possible before you push,” Ninow explains. “Imagine falling over the edge of a cliff and pushing off your left leg as far as you can to keep from falling. Pushing literally keeps you from falling. When you’re throwing really well, you’re flirting with that edge of just about to fall, then you sweep yourself to get across the ring. “We’re really trying to maximize the extremes of everything you do.”
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ow, into just the second year of his college career, Mason certainly is maximizing his results: An All-American, seventhplace finish at NCAAs in 2019. A spot in Washington’s all-time top 10 for the discus, at an even 199 feet. And, a final-throw, come-from-behind victory at the Pacific-12 Conference championships, when his mark of 189 feet, 7 inches was enough to beat out good buddy Dotun Ogundeji of UCLA by 10 inches. “I was super nervous. I had just gotten passed by Dotun,” he recalls of Ogundeji’s toss of 188-9 to move ahead of Mason’s 187-9 mark from a few minutes earlier. “I was pretty sure it was over. … That throw (by Ogundeji) kind of woke me up. It was like, ‘All right, stop trying to focus on throwing far and just throw it.’” Mason threw it – and right away, he knew it: He was about to become the first Husky to win a conference men’s discus crown since Borys Chambul took the 1976 title at 196-4. “It felt great,” Mason recalls. “It wasn’t an amazing throw. But, on that day in that time, compared to every other throw, that’s the one. I was thinking, ‘There’s no way that’s not further.’”
All About Football – Until It Wasn’t Although born in Puyallup, about 35 miles southeast of Seattle, Mason spent his formative years in Arizona. While doing so, he thought he had his athletic future all pegged. “My life was football. Everything I knew growing up was football – and basketball. I did track because of football. We were doing track events in P.E., and I thought, ‘I’m going to go to school for football, so there’s no point in taking this seriously.’” Of course, plans change. When Mason got to Desert Vista High School in Casa Grande, the coaches got him to take track more seriously. “I was like, ‘You know what? I don’t want to do badly for them. I want to give this all I have because they’re giving all of what they have for me,'" he says. "So, I kept on going with it.”
Imagine falling over the edge of a cliff and pushing off your left leg as far as you can to keep from falling.
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Mason won three consecutive Arizona Division-1 state discus titles, throwing the lighter, high-school implement 172-2 as a sophomore, 182-1 as a junior, and 203-9 as a senior. He also won the state shot put title as a senior with a heave of 61-2. Mason finished his senior season ranked fourth in the country in the discus after a toss of 212-1 at the Arcadia Invitational. Oh, by the way … he also lettered two years in football. And, part of him still dreamed of playing in college. “But, track was slapping me in my face,” he says. “If I was going to play football, I wanted to do two sports. But, at the schools I wanted to go to for academic reasons (he’s a community environmental planning major), I was not going to play two sports.”
Adjusting To A New Voice
“I wanted a place where they would help me grow, not because I’m good, but because they care for me as a person. Washington was the best place for that.”
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Mason wasn’t as highly recruited as some other throwers. And, he acknowledged that the Huskies weren’t his initial choice. But, they were his final choice. “Everything I know is family-based,” he says. “I didn’t want to be a part of someplace where you only got to be considered family because you were good. I wanted a place where they would help me grow, not because I’m good, but because they care for me as a person. Washington was the best place for that.”
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ealing with assorted injuries — one of which still keeps him out of the shot put most of the time — Mason redshirted as a true freshman in 2018. Shortly after that season, Maurica and Andy Powell took Washington's reins – Maurica as program director, Andy as head coach. Gradually, new assistants came aboard, including Andrew Ninow as the throws coach. “He’s a nerd; he’s a straight-up wizard,” Mason says with a grin and a laugh. “He knows what he’s talking about. He’ll tell you to your face a hundred times something is going to happen, and you look at him and say, ‘Please, stop – it’s not true. It’s not going to happen.’ And then three weeks go by, and it happens.” Mason is a guy Ninow is thrilled to work with on a daily basis. “Anything he can find to get better, he’s going to do every day,” says Ninow, whose athletes over the years have earned 14 NCAA podium places. “He was here all summer working out – never missed a day, never complained. It’s really persistence and focus that makes great athletes great.” Mason entered 2020 eyeing another Pac-12 crown, and looking to take a few steps up from last year’s seventh-place NCAA finish. Beyond that? He’s keeping his cards close to the vest – at least for now. “I think through just about everything a thousand times over, and after that, I think about it again,” he says. “I’m picky with what I say. "But, I’m definitely looking to go further.”
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“He knows what he’s talking about. He’ll tell you to your face a hundred times something is going to happen, and you look at him and say, ‘Please, stop – it’s not true. It’s not going to happen.’ And then three weeks go by, and it happens.”
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THERE’S
No Place Like Home Shoreline native and one-time Husky commit
Blake Snell
returned to Husky Ballpark this spring to inspire the next generation of UW ballplayers looking to make it to The Show
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BY BRIAN TOM AND BRIAN BEAKY
l ake Snell has pitched in some of the biggest ballparks in the world. But, there's only one that he calls home. "To be a Husky, for me it was everything. There was nothing like it," Snell says. "It was down the road for me. My mom worked here. I watched them with my dad my whole life." A Shoreline native who now resides in Lynnwood during the offseason, Snell originally signed with the Huskies out of Shorewood High School but opted to play professionally after being drafted in the first round of the 2011 MLB Draft by the Tampa Bay Rays. After working his way up through the minor leagues, Snell broke out in 2018 with one of the greatest pitching seasons of this century, going 21-5 with 221 strikeouts and a 1.89 earned-run average, the lowest by an American League starter since Pedro Martinez in 2000. Snell won the AL Cy Young Award, made the All-Star team, and placed ninth in MVP balloting. After missing much of the 2019 season with an injury, Snell is eager to bounce back in 2020 — before departing for spring training, though, Snell made a visit to Husky Ballpark to work out and visit with coach Lindsay Meggs' 2020 Husky squad.
Braden Bishop
Blake Snell Snell threw in the Huskies' bullpen for several minutes and jogged along the warning track before most of the current Dawgs took the field. After his workout, the 27-year-old, who remains close with most of the Huskies' 2011 signing class, chatted with the current team. Snell shared a message that with a combination of hard work, talent and determination, anyone can make the big leagues. It was a simple message that was sprinkled with stories that could resonate with the Huskies, most of whom have dreams of one day playing Major League Baseball. Snell also shared that pro ball is, at times, not all it is cracked up to be. The minor leagues are a grind, he said, and — despite all the fame and fortune he has earned — Snell emphasized how jealous he is of the experience that all the Huskies are gaining by playing college ball. "My best friend, Trevor Mitsui, came here to play," he told the team, in reference to his highschool teammate and a 2014 UW alum, who played three years of minor-league ball before retiring in 2016. "I was so jealous of him the whole time he was here. I would literally tell him every day, 'You get to go to UW. You're with your family. You've got
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this cool little brotherhood that you got to create and make all these memories.' And I'm in Princeton, West Virginia, bored out of my mind at a Motel 6 – it's terrible. This is something I will always be jealous of. "You guys have it so good here," he continued to tell the intently listening Huskies. "They take care of you. There's not a better university, I promise you that." Snell's affinity for the Huskies extends beyond the baseball field. He remains an avid Husky football fan and is not shy about sharing his love of UW on social media. Snell is also an ardent believer of using his influence for the greater good. Following the lead of former Husky and current Arizona Diamondbacks' star, Jake Lamb, Snell is helping under-privileged kids attend UW baseball games this season. In one corner of the stadium is Jake's Corner, while the opposite end sports Blake's Corner. The two stars have pledged to buy tickets that will be given away to young kids that otherwise would be unable to attend games at Husky ballpark.
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You guys have it so good here,” Snell continued to tell the intently listening Huskies. “They take care of you. There’s not a better university, I
Jake Lamb
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Andrew Kittredge
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f course, Snell and Lamb — who hit at least 29 home runs for Arizona in each of his last two full seasons — are just two of many former Huskies (or, in Snell's case, Husky signees) in Major League camps this spring. Shoot, Snell isn't even the only Husky on the Rays' pitching staff. Spokane native Andrew Kittredge struck out 157 batters in two seasons at UW before turning pro in 2011 — the same year Snell entered the professional ranks straight out of high school. Unlike Snell, though, who rose quickly through the minors, Kittredge was 27 years old by the time he reached the majors in 2017. He's found solid footing over the last year, though, appearing in 37 games (with seven starts) for the Rays last season, with a 4.17 ERA. In fact, Kittredge and Snell have combined to start more than 30 games for the Rays in each of the last two seasons. Center fielder Braden Bishop (UW, '15), meanwhile, is hoping to break camp with the Mariners after appearing in 27 games as a rookie in 2019, while pitcher Jeff Brigham (UW, '14) is hoping to do the same in Miami, following a 2019 season in which he posted a 4.46 ERA in 32 relief appearances for the Marlins. Pitcher Austin Voth traded one Washington for another, as he now represents the World Series champion Washington Nationals. Voth will be looking to repeat in 2020 after going 2-1 with a 3.30 ERA in eight starts (nine total appearances) for the Nationals last year; Voth appeared on Washington's postseason roster for the first two rounds of the 2019 playoffs, but did not appear in any playoff games. Finally, there's submariner Adam Cimber, who played three seasons at Washington before finishing his career at the University of San Francisco, and has since become a reliable reliever for the Cleveland Indians, logging a 3.89 ERA in 138 appearances over the last two seasons. All in all, that's six Huskies on Major League rosters this spring, with numerous others making their way up through the minor leagues, hoping to join the likes of Snell, two-time Cy Young Award winner Tim Lincecum and the dozens of others who have made it all the way from Husky Ballpark to the big leagues. If you want to catch the next generation of Husky greats in action this spring, visit GoHuskies.com or call 206-543-2200 to reserve your seat at the ballpark. You never know — the next Cy Young Award winner may be taking the mound that day. Or, in Snell's case, perhaps sitting right next to you, cheering their lungs out in the place they call home.
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Husky golfers are tearing up America’s courses — both in the collegiate ranks, and on the PGA TOUR
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ou can forgive the golf media for largely ignoring Nick Taylor heading into the final round of February's PGA TOUR AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. The 2010 UW grad — who was ranked as the world's No. 1 amateur player during his senior year — had only made the cut in two-thirds of his tournaments so far in the 2020 season, with just one top-20 finish, and hadn't won a PGA TOUR event since 2014, in just his fourth-career Tour start. Plus, he was playing in the final group with Phil Mickelson, he of five major championships and 51 career wins. If you were going to pick either Mickelson or Taylor to be holding the trophy at the end of the day on Sunday, it wasn't a difficult call. But, it was the Husky who, in fact, held on, firing a 2-under-par 70 in difficult conditions for his second-career win. The win was the first wire-to-wire victory for a Canadian in the PGA TOUR's modern era, and earned Taylor a two-year exemption on Tour — and a cool $1.4 million. In fact, it's been a banner year for Husky men's golfers on the PGA TOUR. In addition to Taylor's win at Pebble Beach, 2015 UW grad Cheng-Tsung Pan (who goes by C.T. Pan on Tour) won the RBC Heritage Tournament last April, and finished the 2019 PGA TOUR season ranked 37th in the FedEx Cup standings, with $2.6 million in PAGE 22
Noah Woolsey
BY BRIAN BEAKY EDITOR • GOHUSKIES MAGAZINE earnings. Pan's year was so strong, in fact, that he competed for the International team at December's prestigious Presidents Cup in Australia, winning two of three matches in which he played. In April, Pan will represent UW — with purple shafts on his clubs and purple highlights on his bag — at The Masters in Augusta, Ga. Joel Dahmen, who played one season at UW, also brought more than $1 million in PGA TOUR winnings home last season, while Brock Mackenzie ('04), Alex Prugh ('07) and Richard Lee ('10) all
Nick Taylor
competed in the Tour's lower levels, including the Korn Ferry Tour (formerly the Web.com Tour) and the Mackenzie Tour (formerly PGA TOUR Canada). Who will be the next Husky to make the jump from the Husky Golf Center to the PGA TOUR? Head coach Alan Murray's 2019-20 squad has already notched four tournament victories this year, climbing as high as 17th in Golfstat's national men's college rankings. In addition, three different Huskies have combined for six individual medalist honors already this season, with juniors Noah Woolsey and Jan Schneider sharing the title at the season-opening Husky Invitational, Woolsey winning again the following week in North Carolina, Woolsey and senior Henry Lee sharing medalist honors at Georgetown in October, and Lee winning January's Arizona Intercollegiate. At February's Seminole Invitational, Washington notched its fourth win of the year, with two freshmen — Peter Hruby and Bo Peng — joining Woolsey in the top-10 overall. "To have two freshman finish in the top-10 in a tough field is great for the future of our program, and Noah just continues to be solid for us which is great to see," said assistant coach Thomas Sutton. "We're excited to get this win and continue to get better." GoHUSKIES
Photographs by RED BOX PICTURES
Senior Celebration
UW guard Amber Melgoza celebrates in front of the home crowd after the Huskies upset No. 8 UCLA on Senior Night at Alaska Airlines Arena.
To purchase Husky Athletics photography, visit www.HUSKIESPHOTOSTORE.com
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