Washington State head coach Nick Rolovich walks the sideline against Southern California in Los Angeles on Dec. 6. (Alex Gallardo/Associated Press)

Washington State head coach Nick Rolovich walks the sideline against Southern California in Los Angeles on Dec. 6. (Alex Gallardo/Associated Press)

Rolovich: No bowl game for Cougars

Season will end Saturday against Utah

By Theo Lawson | McClatchy News Service

PULLMAN — There’s a good chance a handful of Washington State football players will escape the cold of Pullman for warm-weather locales like California, Arizona or Texas next week.

For the first time since 2014, however, a bowl game won’t be the destination.

The Cougars were already facing long odds when it came to the convoluted 2020 bowl season, needing to beat Utah on the road Saturday to merely qualify for the college football postseason with the Pac-12-mandated .500 record. With only four bowls in play for the conference, WSU would also need luck. Some combination of USC, Washington, Oregon, Stanford and Colorado would probably have to opt out for the 2-2 Cougars to nab a backdoor invite.

It won’t come down to that for the Cougars. Even if everything aligned for WSU, first-year coach Nick Rolovich confirmed the next time his team would be playing competitive football after Saturday’s game at Rice Eccles-Stadium in Salt Lake City (10:30 a.m., FS1) will be on Sept. 4, 2021, in Pullman against Utah State.

“I think this will be it,” Rolovich said Tuesday on a Zoom call with reporters. “I think it’s been incredibly hard on these guys. The uncertainty of what’s going to hit next, what’s going to hit what team. I think they all deserve a ton of credit — I’m talking about the players — for getting to this point. You guys have no idea what they go through, and it’s not any of your fault, but this is completely abnormal for them and they continue to battle through, to represent Cougs the best they can, and I appreciate that for them.”

The Cougars benefited from the exposure of bowl games each of the past five years, qualifying twice for the San Diego Holiday Bowl (2016, 2017), the El Paso Sun Bowl (2015), the San Antonio Alamo Bowl (2018) and the Phoenix Cheez-It Bowl (2019).

“Bowl games aren’t bowl games (in 2020), they’re really just another away game it looks like,” Rolovich said. “All I can say is I appreciate the guys who’ve made it through and I think they’ll be better leaders because of this year. It was incredibly hard, but I think they’ll be better future leaders of this world and their families because of the adversity they faced this year. That’s how I want to look at it.”

In this instance, players seem to be in lockstep with their coach, weighing the perks of bowl season against the opportunity to return home and see family members and friends for the first time since the summer.

“It’s been a long season, we’ve been here since June just working,” senior cornerback George Hicks III said. “We’ve been away from our families and we’ve only played four games. We’ve had a lot of games canceled, a lot of things have hit us, so I think the biggest thing with coach Rolo and a lot of the guys in the building is what if we continued on practicing, continued on and then say it gets canceled because of COVID from one of the two teams. So, that’s something we’re all disappointed in.

“We’ll be back here next year. We’ll be in a bowl game, different situation, different scenarios.”

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