By Pat Graham | The Associated Press
The start-and-stop nature of the season has left Utah receiver Britain Covey and others with one prevalent feeling — burnout.
Never has just four games felt this long.
The Utes, who had their opening two games canceled because of COVID-19 issues, finish the regular season portion of their schedule by hosting Washington State on Saturday at Rice-Eccles Stadium.
“The honest truth is, and I don’t think that anyone can criticize teams for saying this, we’re all pretty burned out,” Covey said after Utah beat Colorado 38-21 last weekend. “We’re pretty burned out with the emotional drag of the season. At the same time, we’re ready to finish strong.”
The Utes (2-2) are still in contention for a bowl appearance (the conference requires a .500-or-better mark this season). If invited, Utah will have a player-driven discussion.
“That will be, in my opinion, up to the players,” said Kyle Whittingham, who is 133-66 as head coach of the Utes heading into his 200th game. “If they’re up for it and want to do it and we’ve got the record we need to have — obviously, we’ve got to win — then we’ll move forward. If they feel like enough is enough, we won’t.
“To me, they’ll handle that within themselves. I’ll back them whatever way they want to go.”
First things first, an eager Washington State squad that will be playing for the first time in 13 days. The Cougars’ game last week against California was canceled less than two hours before kickoff due to a COVID-19 case within the Golden Bears program.
Washington State players were on the field for pregame warmups when news trickled out the game was getting canceled.
It was the third cancellation of the season for the Cougars.
Washington State played USC on Dec. 6. Before that, the Cougars’ previous game was on Nov. 14 against Oregon.
“All they wanted to do was play a game. And I’m not taking shots at Cal, we’ve all been through it this year,” Washington State coach Nick Rolovich said. “It’s been hard on the players for all the teams.”
Borghi back?
One of the unknowns for Washington State is whether standout running back Max Borghi will play in his first game of the season Saturday. Borghi appeared set to make his season debut last week against Cal before the cancellation.
Borghi has been dealing with a back injury that caused him to miss Washington State’s three previous games. Borghi was an honorable mention all-Pac-12 selection a year ago after scoring 16 total touchdowns.
Wandering Cougs
Due to cancellations and schedule changes, the Cougars ended up with just one home game during the truncated season. Along with the canceled game against Cal, Washington State lost a home game against rival Washington due to virus issues with the Cougars.
Washington State’s lone home game was Nov. 14 against Oregon, and while there was hope of closing out the season at home, simply playing was the more important objective.
“Of course we’d like to play at home but that necessarily wasn’t a big point of emphasis in the discussion,” Rolovich said.