Husky Roster Review: Grubb Offense Fits Westover Perfectly

The tight end trailed only the starting wide receivers in catches.
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Jack Westover originally was a walk-on player for the University of Washington football team. 

He's not always a starter at tight end, giving way to Devin Culp.

Yet this 6-foot-3, 247-pound senior from Bellevue, Washington, might just end up as one of those unsung yet overly resourceful Huskies who sneaks into the draft and spends much of a decade in the NFL.

Since he redshirted way back in 2018, Westover has been a steady contributor for UW teams coached by three different leaders. 

They've marveled at his versatility and athleticism, been forced to give him a scholarship and will call on him whenever they need a big play. Offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb described Westover as "wildly athletic" after first watching him on film.

"From a competitive mindset, I've always felt I could compete with anybody," the tight end said.

Going down the roster from No. 0 to 99, Westover, who wears No. 37 all to himself, is next up in a series of profiles about each of the Huskies' scholarship players and assorted walk-ons, summing up their spring football performances and surmising what might come next for them.

DOUBLE TROUBLE / Skylar Lin Visuals

Devin Culp (83) and Jack Westover (37) have given the Huskies' a strong 1-2 punch at tight end for the past couple of seasons.


MAN OF MANY TALENTS / Skylar Lin Visuals

Jack Westover not only has caught 41 career passes at the UW, he has 6 carries for 25 yards as a makeshift fullback. 


STARTING MATERIAL / Skylar Lin Visuals

Jack Westover has pulled eight starts as a Husky tight end, stepping in when needed. He often shares that role with Devin Culp (83).


TOP THIS / Skylar Lin Visuals

Jack Westover comes off a 2022 season in which he finished fourth on the team in receiving with 31 catches for 342 yards and a score.


ON THE DL / Skylar Lin Visuals

In injured Jack Westover (37) watches redshirt freshman Ryan Otton catch the ball and head upfield during spring practice. 


WILDLY ATHLETIC / Skylar Lin Visuals

Ryan Grubb described Jack Westover as "wildly athletic" early on, and the tight end showed off skills against Arizona.


GOOD HANDS / Skylar Lin Visuals

Jack Westover had five games in 2022 in which he came up with 3 receptions or more, including the Alamo Bowl, where he had 4 for 32 yards against Texas.


TOUGH TO TACKLE / Skylar Lin Visuals

Jack Westover, shown in the 2021 spring game, breaks a tackle as he heads up field in Husky Stadium.


Westover came to the Huskies after playing just two games of high school football, choosing to concentrate on basketball initially and then breaking his collarbone once he pulled on a helmet and pads for Mount Si High School in North Bend, Washington.

UW football followers first noticed him when Chris Petersen begin using the newcomer as a blocking fullback and then had Jacob Eason throw a 3-yard touchdown to him at Arizona in 2019. Westover was a redshirt freshman.

During the height of the pandemic, Westover started two of the four games and curiously ran the ball (5 carries for 22 yards) more than he caught it (one catch for 9 yards) for the Huskies in 2020.

Injuries helped destroy the 2021 UW team and Jimmy Lake's coaching career and Westover was not exempt from this, appearing in just seven of the 12 games. He started one game — at Michigan, where he caught 2 passes for 11 yards and ran once for 3 yards.

It took Grubb's multi-dimensional offensive set to properly use Westover and gain the full benefits from him. He played in 13 games last fall, started five and finished as the Huskies' fourth-leading receiver with 31 catches for 342 yards and a touchdown. He trailed only the UW's three starting wide receivers in catches.

"This offense gives the tight end a little more finesse, I'd say," Westover said. "It's been a really good fit for me."

Westover was productive from start to finish, catching a career-best 5 receptions for 49 yards in a 49-39 victory over Arizona. He entertained the Husky Stadium crowd that day by leaping over a defensive back after a catch.

He caught his second career TD pass against Oregon State, a wide-open 24-yarder to help rally the Huskies to a 24-21 victory.

Not bad for a walk-on with almost no high school football experience, but, yes, wildly athletic.


JACK WESTOVER FILE

Service: A sixth-year senior, Westover has played in 37 Husky games, starting 8. Only intermittent injuries have held him back.

Stats: Westover has career stats of 41 receptions for 416 yards and a pair of touchdowns, plus 6 carries for 25 yards. With the Grubb/DeBoer offense, his ball-carrying days likely are over. 

Role: He basically rotates with fellow sixth-year senior Devin Culp as the starter and that situation shouldn't change. Both are highly capable players. Both have a chance to be NFL players. 



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Dan Raley
DAN RALEY

Dan Raley has worked for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Atlanta Journal-Constitution and Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, as well as for MSN.com and Boeing, the latter as a global aerospace writer. His sportswriting career spans four decades and he's covered University of Washington football and basketball during much of that time. In a working capacity, he's been to the Super Bowl, the NBA Finals, the MLB playoffs, the Masters, the U.S. Open, the PGA Championship and countless Final Fours and bowl games.