During the 2022 Apple Cup, edge rushers Bralen Trice and Jeremiah Martin both had career days while getting after Washington State quarterback Cam Ward, combining for 25 pressures in Pullman. While Martin has since graduated, Washington's defensive line will need another strong performance against Ward to secure the school's first 12-0 season.
Changes are coming to the Washington Huskies pass rush in 2023, and the transfer portal is a big reason. Our series on the comings and goings within the Washington Huskies football program continues with part four, the edge rushers.
Since all of Washington's draft-eligible players decided to return to school for the 2023 season, the team's annual pro day was completely made up of graduating seniors.
Jeremiah Martin recently tweeted out a fancy graphic of himself in three different University of Washington football poses, ending this post with the announcement he would be entering his name in the NFL draft.
Jeremiah Martin began his college football career in Texas and he'll finish up there. Heading into the Alamo Bowl against the Texas Longhorns on Dec. 29 in San Antonio, the University of Washington edge rusher will return to the Lone Star state where he spent three seasons at Texas A&M before joining the Huskies for the past two.
Earlier victories over Michigan State and Oregon were each worth three Pac-12 player of the week honors for the University of Washington football team.
Two years ago, his then-University of Washington position coach boldly proclaimed that Bralen Trice would someday be a better edge rusher than Joe Tryon-Shoyinka, who went from the Huskies to the NFL as a No.
If people haven't noticed, Jeremiah Martin recently hit several milestones — new father, star player, versatile player. Against Arizona last weekend, two
Football insiders like to say the difference between the powerful SEC and the rest of college football is the monsters up front on the defensive line. They disrupt things like no one else does.
The short yardage struggles are opponent agnostic, Penix looks just fine, and a big day from Jeremiah Martin 1. Running Into A Wall Coming into this game it looked like Washington would have a chance to cure what ailed them in the rushing department.
Tackler. Sacker. Blocker. Father. The world for Jeremiah Martin got a little crazy over a 72-hour period. If anything, his football resume and family tree looks good.
The University of Washington edge rushers, the new coaching staff concluded in spring football, had the potential to be really special, disruptive, game-changing.
When the University of Washington defensive unit came out for Saturday's first play against Portland State, Bralen Trice and Jeremiah Martin lined up as the starting edge rushers, looking every bit intimidating to the other side.
A lot of people it seems are trying to set deep roots in the SEC these days — top-rated recruits, Oklahoma, Texas, ESPN execs — where college football is king and national championships are won.
Obscured by typical Apple Cup excitement and a University of Washington football program in total disarray, outside linebacker Jeremiah Martin made his first college football start.
Jeremiah Martin knows his way around the transfer portal, but he won't be navigating it this year. On New Year's Day, while others are fleeing college football programs everywhere, including his in Seattle, the 6-foot-3, 270-pound University of Washington senior outside linebacker took a moment to let people know where he stands.
Jeremiah Martin was in the right place, at the right time, with the wrong hands. Against Montana, the University of Washington outside linebacker and Texas A&M transfer alertly backed into the opposing end zone and momentarily had possession of a Grizzlies pass before the ball fell harmlessly to the ground incomplete.
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!