Jack Westover, as the Washington State Cougars no doubt have discovered entering Saturday night's Apple Cup in Pullman, is a hard player to scout.

Foremost, he's a University of Washington tight end, supposedly the back-up to fellow junior Devin Culp, yet Westover has caught 25 passes for 296 yards and a touchdown — which is two receptions and 71 yards more than Culp, while each has scored once this season.

Westover likewise has a history of running the football, rushing five times for 22 yards in 2020.

This season, the 6-foot-3, 245-pounder has returned a pair of kickoffs for 15 yards.

Oh yeah, Westover also has  collected two special-teams tackles, one each coming against Oregon State and Colorado.

And who was it exactly who said new Husky coach Kalen DeBoer and Company wouldn't use the tight end that much at all?

It certainly wasn't Westover, who's been more than satisfied with how everything has turned out with the Huskies winning nine of 11 games so far, and utilizing the tight end in a significant way to make that happen. 

Coming out in different UW game-opening sets, he's started three times this season, while Culp has 10 starting assignments and even No. 3 tight end Quentin Moore has opened once. 

New offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb didn't hesitate to describe both Westover and Culp as "wildly athletic" when the UW went to work installing the new offense and nothing has happened to change that assessment.

"It's been exciting coming in to this offseason with a lot of uncertainty, really not knowing what was going to happen and sticking around, staying the course and just getting back to the work part of it," Westover said. "It's been really fun and a cool experience."

The DeBoer coaching staff took over and installed a wide-open offense that, sure, it can split four or five wide receivers out wide. Still, the new leaders also have gone with three tight ends at a time, all of which works well for Westover.

"I think it really fits my skill set as a player," he said. "I'm not like a ground-and-pound tight end; I'm not 6-6, 260. That's not my kind of play style. This offense gives the tight end a little more finesse, I'd say. It's been a really good fit for me."

While the UW has been a steady source of NFL tight ends over the past decade, someone remarked the other day that Westover is so skilled yet unassuming he might be that guy who quietly enjoys a 10-year pro football career. 

"That's cool to hear that," Westover said. "The NFL is the top one percent of the one percent. It would be a blessing to do that. Yeah, it's cool to hear that. Me and Devin have been having a lot of fun this year."

Together, they form one highly productive UW tight end as they either share plays or alternate them, collectively piling up 48 catches for 531 yards and those 2 scores.

In his fifth season, which includes a redshirt year, Westover arrived without a scholarship from Mount Si High School in Snoqualmie, Washington, and immediately went to work in showing Chris Petersen's coaching staff he could play right away.

"From a competitive mindset, I've always felt like I could compete with anybody," Westover said. "It doesn't matter if they're four or five years older than me or what. That was kind of my mindset I had coming in — is my time would come."

It has, multiple times over for the versatile tight end, enough so that the Cougars should be wary of how the Huskies might use him once the Apple Cup kicks off.

Go to si.com/college/washington to read the latest Inside the Huskies stories — as soon as they’re published.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Watch: Reds' Elly De La Cruz scores from second base on pickoff attempt
Dodgers' Dave Roberts confirms Yoshinobu Yamamoto is going on 15-day IL
Watch: Fighter jet flyover briefly interrupts Orioles at-bat
Rangers designate right-hander for assignment
Watch: Denmark's Christian Eriksen nets goal at Euro 2024 three years after suffering cardiac arrest
Giants place left-hander on 15-day IL with ankle sprain
Oilers crush Panthers in Game 4, stay alive in Stanley Cup Final
Dodgers ace leaves game against Royals due to triceps tightness
Sam Mayer uses overtime restart to win Xfinity Series' return to Iowa
Liberty forward pushes herself into MVP conversation with big game vs. Aces
Tiger Woods makes big admission about his U.S. Open future
Cubs P 'Mike' Imanaga continues hot start vs. Cardinals
Celtics' All-Defensive guard reportedly could replace Kawhi Leonard on Team USA
Tee Higgins' contract decision adds pressure on Bengals in 2024
One-time Defensive Player of the Year open to reunion with former team
College baseball has become too regional for its own good
Three Padres prospects who should be untouchable in trade talks
Connor McDavid's history-making night helps Oilers stave off elimination
Astros scratch Justin Verlander as nightmare season continues
Watch: Oilers chase goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky from Game 4