Jedd Fisch has put a bow on his first full recruiting cycle as the head of the Huskies’ program. Led by quarterback Dash Beierly, the Huskies found high end talent at every position on the offensive side of the ball.
To complement Beierly the Huskies signed another signal caller from Hawaii, Treston Kini McMillan, who fits the mold of a true dual threat who can deflate a defense with his legs.
At the running back position the Huskies brought in two backs who complement each other with how they play the game. Julian McMahan out of Danville, California is a big back who runs downhill. He is also excellent out of the backfield. Quaid Carr on the other hand, is shifty behind the line with a devastating jump cut to go along with his blazing speed.
The Huskies brought in five new wideouts Fisch coined “The Fab 5” in his press conference headed up by longtime commit Chris Lawson from the Bay Area then added another high level prospect in Marcus Harris who decommitted from Oklahoma earlier in the week.
The Huskies looked to fill some much needed spots in the tight end room and got two players who play the position very differently. First, Barone Naone out of West Linn, Oregon comes in as a polished blocker who fills a much needed role for the Huskies. His counterpart, Austin Simmons out of Albany, Oregon looks like a copy of Jack Westover with his ability to make contested catches.
At the O-line Brennan Carroll found two distinct types of blockers. He found massive humans like Peter Langi who stands at 6-6 and weighs 330 pounds as well as linemen with quick feet like Kennedy Catholic’s Lowen Colman-Brusa.
This offensive class has a good combination of high end talent and players that have the chance to develop into key contributors as the Huskies look to make it back to the elites in college football.
Coach V, Jake Grant, and Trevor Mueller discuss each member of the 2025 offensive class.