WILLIAM INGE: First and foremost, it's an honor to be able to be here, and thank you all for being here right now.
First, starting to your right, we'd like to start with Cam Bright, linebacker, representing the defense, as well as Jeremiah Martin, one of our outside linebackers, which we call our edge position, and then we have Alex Cook, one of the safeties, who is just a father two weeks ago, so he's bringing it home right now.
Q. Alex, are you getting any sleep? Secondly, when you see Xavier Worthy on tape, what goes through your head?
ALEX COOK: I've just got the best sleep of my life the past two days since I've been in Texas. I hope that answers your question.
Yeah, Xavier Worthy is a super fast dude, someone who can take the top off the defense, definitely a guy we've been keying in on a lot game planning. We've been focusing a lot on what he does, where he's at on the field, if he's outside, if he's in the slot, if he's in the backfield. He's all over the place.
Yeah, definitely a guy who can take the top off the defense.
We're going to try to prevent him from taking deep shots and trying to take the top off the defense.
Q. Coach Morrell, with Texas's running back Bijan not playing in the game, how much has that altered your preparation for them, for Texas specifically?
WILLIAM INGE: They're not playing?
Q. Bijan and Roschan Johnson.
WILLIAM INGE: Oh, really, they're not playing? Oh, wow, that's great, guys. (Laughter.)
CHUCK MORRELL: I mean, obviously Texas does a great job with recruiting. They've got young talent on their squad, and we've had a chance to evaluate their younger running backs.
I think we don't see their identity trying to change. I mean, you get to a point where you're at, game 10, 11, 12, 13 on the season, and I don't think you're just going to magically change who you are. I think our plan is pretty straightforward. We've got to be able to do a great job in the box and stop the run and force them into the drop-back game.
Q. Jeremiah, I just was wondering, is this your first time back in Texas since you left A&M?
JEREMIAH MARTIN: I was here actually like two weeks ago. (Laughter.) I moved my fiance and my kids back down here. They're in Grand Prairie, Texas.
Q. Kind of déjà-vu coming back to where you've spent a lot of time?
JEREMIAH MARTIN: Yeah, for sure. I started my college career here, and I want to end it here, so it's pretty exciting.
Q. Jeremiah, having played in the SEC, having played at Washington, been there a couple years, just curious what you think this means for this program to have this kind of a game against a big name-brand opponent in Texas. What do you think a win would do for national perception of this program and everything that it can be?
JEREMIAH MARTIN: Yeah, for sure. I think the biggest thing for us, even like out-of-conference games for anybody, I think it's the biggest thing coming in as the underdog, as people say. I think taking this game and winning it, it means a lot to the program and it's going to mean a lot to the future people, too. At the end of the day, it's a bowl game, and whoever is the most conditioned and whoever comes out and plays the hardest, that's who's going to win the game in my opinion. I think that's going to be like the future brand -- like of the future.
Q. How have the players been practicing, and how have you been balancing kind of the business at hand mentality and the bowl festivities and making sure the players are in the right mindset?
WILLIAM INGE: Well, the practices have been very high-spirited and they've been pretty good. I think that's really a testament to these three defensive leaders that we have here, where as a player-led team, they set the identity for the team. They set the identity for the practices.
Most of the time as your leaders go, the rest will follow. So they've been able to set the identity and do the things that we need to be able to get done when it comes to practices, when it comes to offense, defense and special teams, when it comes to maintaining a healthy balance. You still have to know that it is a business trip but you also have to be able to have fun, and most of the time that takes a little bit of maturity, so you have to really understand that you have to know how to flip the switch on and off when it comes to play time and the time for you to be serious when it comes to you being purposeful in your preparation.
We feel as though the team has been really good thus far, and the area and everyone around us has been very hospitable. It's been a very good experience for us overall.
Q. AC, curious, you guys are the higher ranked team, you've won more games, you have more players playing in this game, and like Jeremiah mentioned, you're the underdog in Vegas. What is your thought on that given the circumstances that you guys are not favorite to win this game?
ALEX COOK: Yeah, I think it's just one of those Pac-12 deals where everybody looks down the Pac-12. It's one of those kind of situations. It's okay; we're okay with that. We've been underdogs this entire season. We've been not predicted to win in Vegas against multiple teams, more than three teams this year, and we're fine with that. It's no big deal. We're used to it. We've been through this. I've been through this six years being an underdog. I'm not fazed by this by any means.
I'm actually excited to be an underdog. That's what it's all about; underdogs come out on top.
Q. Alex, you played wide receiver against Coach K's defense. I think you were over on defense when he was there for a year, weren't you?
ALEX COOK: Correct, yeah.
Q. Have you had a chance to take a look at that defense and have any input on if it's anything different or is it pretty much the same?
ALEX COOK: Yeah, I played against the defense and I played with Coach K as a safety, so I was kind of in between those two different time zones.
But I remember all the calls. I remember every single call like the back of my hand. I don't forget that stuff. So I think it will be a big advantage for me. If he doesn't switch up the signals, hey, I might be making a lot more plays than anticipated.
Q. Chuck, I'm curious, you hear so much about what this extra month means from a coaching standpoint, development standpoint. When it is your first year here in this defense, just how productive has that been just having the extra time to continue to build your culture, continue to install, continue just to build familiarity with what you guys are doing?
CHUCK MORRELL: Yeah, I think it's been outstanding. The bonus practice structure has really helped us with a lot of the younger players in the program.
Again, I think it's really a testament to these guys that are sitting down the line here that do a great job of leading us every day and holding the standard up there and being involved in helping the young guys develop.
I think that's part of their legacy. The word "legacy" came up, and these guys have left just this unbelievable legacy this season in flipping things around, but they're also leaving a legacy for the younger players how to operate going into a bowl game and how to be a pro.
So that bonus time has been fantastic for us. Made a lot of progress.
Q. Alex, this crew, I think I counted it up, maybe 60 percent of the guys on the roster have never been to a bowl game and it's been three years since Washington has been to one. Has this almost been like Christmas to them, something new, something unusual?
ALEX COOK: Yeah, it's definitely something we've emphasized. Obviously most of the team hasn't been to a bowl game, and this is their first time really, for a lot of guys, getting outside of the state since the beginning of the season.
It's kind of a time for the leaders to step up and set the standard and make sure these guys are doing the right things on and off the field, but also making sure we obviously spend time with those guys off the field and making sure we spend our last times together and making the most of that.
I think it's just trying to find a balance and find a focus, just like Coach Inge said, time to flip the switch. But yeah, the young guys, they're having a good time. They're practicing hard, and there's nothing much we can ask from them.
Q. Coach Inge, I'm curious how you would describe the health of this linebacker corps where you've got a guy like Cam who's leaving after this game and some other contributors and you're bringing in a bunch of guys including a transfer next season. When you look at the numbers there, the experience, young, old, do you like where you're at right now? How would you assess the state of that room?
WILLIAM INGE: Yeah, in a sense we really love where we're at and where we're going, and that's what development and progression is all about, and that's the message that we tell our prospects and recruits when you come in, that the expectation is you're going to be competing for a championship, and that is exactly what we're thinking. That's the mindset that you have to have 24/7, and that's how as coaches, that's how we're built.
From a recruiting standpoint that's what we're all about. We're going to get to the hearts of the players and let them know how much we're going to love for them and care for them, and for me, I want to be their leader. The one thing we all know as coaches is these young men make us look better than we really are.
Q. Coach Inge, it was introduced that you were in the inaugural Alamo Bowl here, so I'm curious what you remember from '93 and '96, and how does it feel to be back?
WILLIAM INGE: Okay, I remember 1993 it was the Builder's Square Alamo Bowl. It was awesome. Our head coach Hayden Fry at the time told us we were going to be playing against a very good Cal team, where initially they were a top-5 team in the nation and had a couple guys get hurt in the middle of the season. So when we came into this game, it was one of those scenarios, like hey, we're from the Big Ten, we're going to be all right, and we got humbled.
It was something as a young player, as a true freshman, it was something that was great to be able to experience as a freshman because I knew if we ever got in a scenario like that again, that was not going to happen. That's exactly what occurred as we got on through the years in our collegiate experience.
When we came down here in 1996, our head coach was playing one of his very dear friends in Spike Dykes, and if I'm not mistaken, I think it might have been Coach Dykes' last game if I'm not mistaken.
But we had to deal with a travesty, today, on the 27th of December where Martin Mitchell, one of our players' families was on the way to the game and there's an automobile accident, and he lost his parents. That will really make you appreciate what you have as friends.
When we came out, there was nothing that was going to stand in our way as the team on a mission, and the one thing that we just really remembered is just all the fun that we had around walking on the River Walk and being able to play in the game and compete.
We knew that as you go through all the years, this has always been a very, very, very competitive game that everyone was going to be able to look at and see outside of your Rose Bowl or your College Football Playoff games.
FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports