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Washington St coach given assurance he'll be back

SEATTLE -- Washington State coach Paul Wulff said Monday he has the support of the administration and will be back in 2010 despite just three victories in his first two seasons.

In a conference call with reporters ahead of Saturday's Apple Cup against Washington, Wulff said athletic director Jim Sterk has talked to his staff and been "very reassuring about what we've been doing."

"(Sterk's) very excited about how much work we've done and moving forward. It's been outstanding," Wulff said. "As we move into next year you're going to see a hugely improved team, one of the most improved teams around. We've got all the ingredients to take a giant step as a team."

Wulff, a former offensive lineman for the Cougars, was hired from Football Championship Subdivision Eastern Washington to take over for Bill Doba after the 2007 season.

Dealing with reduced scholarships because of academic penalties and installing a new philosophy that not everyone bought into, while trying to reshape a program that grew complacent after a trio of 10-win seasons earlier this decade, Wulff and the Cougars struggled to a 2-11 mark in his first season. The losses during that first campaign were eye-popping, including going 10 straight quarters in the middle of last season getting outscore 172-0. They lost to California 66-3, Oregon 63-14, Oregon State 66-13, USC 69-0 and Stanford 58-0.

The only redeeming win in Wulff's first season was a stunning 16-13 double overtime upset of Washington that was part of the Huskies' winless season.

This year hasn't been any better for Wulff, leading fans to question whether the former center was the right person to try and revitalize football on the Palouse. Plagued by injuries and a lack of depth that's required a number of true freshman to play this season, the Cougars are 1-10 entering Saturday's game, where they are 24½-point underdogs to the Huskies.

The Cougars' only victory is over SMU and their offense hasn't scored more than 17 points since late September. Defensively, Washington State has allowed at least 40 points in six of its last seven games and it ranks 118th out of 120 schools in the Football Bowl Subdivision in scoring defense.

"We just know this program is going to jump by leaps and bounds," Wulff said. "You're right, that helps us keep our sanity because there are so many parts that are missing right now that are going to be in the fold next year and we know we're going to take a big, big step as a program."