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The Husky offensive line is shuffled all game in the loss at Indiana

The Husky offensive line is shuffled all game in the loss at Indiana

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – When the season began, this University of Washington football team's dirty little secret was that it was going to have major problems on offense as all of the new players took on roles at the top while also dealing with physical and had to deal with the merciless Big Ten conference.

If you didn't know that on Saturday, you know it now.

The Huskies were pushed around starting on the first play of their 31-17 loss to undefeated and 13th-ranked Indiana, when the Hoosiers sent a bull rush up the middle and sacked quarterback Will Rogers for an eight-yard loss . The home team effectively sent a message with a certain amount of aggression.

Things became more and more confusing as the game progressed. Jedd Fisch and his team opened the game with redshirt freshman Soane Faasolo and junior Gaard Memmelaar at left tackle and left guard, respectively.

For the second series, UW swapped Faasolo for redshirt freshman Kahlee Tafai and substituted Memmelaar for sophomore Landen Hatchett. And so it went for the rest of the game, with the Huskies trying different combinations throughout the game as they tried to open more holes for leading rusher Jonah Coleman, who ran 19 times for 104 yards, and pass protection for the beleaguered Rogers to accomplish.

“We were looking for something that would work,” Fisch said frankly.

Early in the fourth quarter, the 6-foot-1, 300-pound Hatchett found himself at right guard in a still-close game, 24-14, taking the spot normally given to senior Enokk Vimahi, the Ohio State transfer , who had not previously disclosed his position to anyone.

With the Huskies falling to 4-4 overall and 2-3 in Big Ten play, looking ahead, the younger players like Hatchett, Tafai and Faasolo, all in their second years of college football, always could be used more frequently as the schedule progresses.

“These guys need opportunities, these guys need representation,” Fisch said. “These guys need to see how good they can become.”

As the game ended, sophomore right tackle Drew Azzopardi and Memmelaar sat on the bench staring into space while true freshman offensive lineman Paki Finau sat in a chair next to them.

Faasolo and redshirt freshman offensive guard Zach Henning stood side by side and also looked disappointed.

When the game ended, D'Angalo Titialii, the Huskies' and Portland State's first senior center, was the first to leave the field and head straight to the locker room, waiting for everyone's handshake after the game Team waived.

“We struggled early with some line plays, so we tried to combine everything,” Fisch said. “I thought we were better defensively in the second half.”

The patchwork across the entire offensive line continues in the ninth game next week against USC.

For the latest UW football and basketball news, visit si.com/college/washington

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