The Los Angeles Rams continue to shore up their defensive line as the offseason wears on. Per Camber Michelle of Huskies Wire, L.A. is inking former Washington Huskies defensive tackle Tuli Letuligasenoa to a training camp contract as an undrafted free agent.
HOUSTON — When the Washington Huskies take on Michigan in the CFP national championship game on Monday night, they will emphasize stopping the Wolverines' fearsome run game.
Preparing for the ruggedness of the Big Ten in 2024, the University of Washington made replenishing the defensive trenches a transfer portal priority. After all, as much as he tried, Tuli Letuligasenoa was not going to be around forever.
LAS VEGAS — Tuli Letuligasenoa will get in a stance as a University of Washington defensive tackle with a lot of wear and tear on him for who knows for how many plays in Friday's Pac-12 championship game against Oregon.
Defensive tackle Tuli Letuligasenoa and strong safety Dominique Hampton sat next to each other on the field at Reser Stadium, slightly hunched over, both shaken
Tuli Letuligasenoa is like an old pick-up truck. Sometimes his engine doesn't turn over and he sits parked off to the side, but eventually he sputters to life and goes chugging down the road.
Tuli Letuligasenoa was in uniform for the Stanford game, yet he walked onto the field on Saturday afternoon with his white University of Washington jersey untucked and hanging well below his waist.
Kalen DeBoer's coaching staff fixed a lot of stuff for the University of Washington football team during its turnaround 2022 season. Team morale. A flagging offense.
Veteran defensive tackle Tuli Letuligasenoa was the lone University of Washington casualty at Arizona on Saturday night after he was helped off the field with a lower-body injury in the opening half of the 31-24 victory and unable to return.
Recently Pac-12 Network analyst Yogi Roth posed a question that directly impacts Washington. Who is the best non-quarterback in the conference? The answer
When University of Washington spring football drills began, Tuli Letuligasenoa stood off to the side at times, idle while his defensive-line teammates went at it.
While it wasn't discussed in the same light as quarterback Michael Penix's return to Montlake, Washington's defensive line got a huge boost when defensive tackle Tuli Letuligasenoa opted to return for his sixth and final year.
No position area for the University of Washington football team with multiple starters returning is more fortified, experienced and, for that matter, battered than the defensive tackles.
For all the good things that have happened around University of Washington football this season, Kuao Peihopa's suspension and subsequent exit through the transfer portal wasn't one of them.
A light mist was falling on Husky Stadium as University of Washington football players made their way from a Saturday practice in Dempsey Indoor to their locker room.
Tuli Letuligasenoa can be powerful, volcanic, absolutely profane in the heat of the battle for the University of Washington football team. Yet question the junior defensive tackle about his singled-out game performance at UCLA, and the 6-foot-1, 307-pound junior from Concord, California, turns meek, barely audible, excruciatingly humble.
People usually have no trouble hearing Tuli Letuligasenoa whatsoever on the practice field. Do some high-stepping or finger-pointing at the expense of his University of Washington defense — Jay'Veon Sunday, remember?
Tuli Letuligasenoa and Inoke Breckterfield have two of the longest names and shortest amounts of patience on the University of Washington football team. They seemingly were made for each other — the easily agitated player and the demanding and grumpy coach.
Tuli Letuligasenoa was the hero of the Arizona victory, the first guy rushed to the interview room to explain everything, the player who came up with the game-changing interception.
After pulling reserve duty against Arkansas State, defensive tackle Tuli Letuligasenoa and inside linebacker Edefuan Ulofoshio have returned to the University of Washington starting lineup for Saturday night's game against California, according to the team depth chart.
Tuli Letuligasenoa plops down in a seat to address a room full of media members. With his dark scraggly beard and the glint in his eye, the University of Washington defensive tackle looks fairly intimidating.
Tuli Letuligasenoa possesses the longest surname — all 13 letters and six syllables of it — of anyone on the University of Washington football team. Also,
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!