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Washington's Locker will start at UCLA
By TIM BOOTH
AP Sports Writer

SEATTLE(AP) -- Washington quarterback Jake Locker will start
Saturday when the Huskies try to break their 10-game road losing
streak at UCLA, despite a deep thigh bruise that limited him the
last two weeks.

After having his activity held back in practice early this week,
coach Steve Sarkisian took the reins off his quarterback
Thursday to test and see how his right thigh injury would
respond. Locker passed.

"I wanted to see him run full speed. I wanted to see him really
open up and go full speed, and he was able to do that,"
Sarkisian said.

Asked if the Huskies' playcalling would be handcuffed in any
way, Sarkisian said, "We won't hold back."

Locker was injured in the first quarter of Washington's 43-19
loss to Oregon on Oct. 24. On a third-and-2 run at the Oregon 12
midway through the first quarter, Locker kept for 3 yards before
taking a hard hit from the Ducks' Javes Lewis. From there,
Locker's leg became progressively stiffer and he was noticeably
limping in the final minutes of the blowout.

At first, Sarkisian said Locker was cramping, but a few days
later Sarkisian said he had a quadriceps injury.

The injury has lingered to the point where Locker was a
spectator during Washington's off week. The bleeding and
swelling in his right leg was still there earlier this week, but
Locker said on Monday the pain and stiffness has gotten better
each day.

Locker split reps with backup Ronnie Fouch this week, but was
given the majority of the work on Thursday.

"It's stability. It's great to have your starting quarterback,"
Sarkisian said. "Never mind an execution and all that
standpoint. Just from an execution standpoint, being in the
huddle, all the things that he brings. There are some obvious
leadership skills that he brings that I know the team feeds off
of."

Locker leads the Pac-10 in total offense at 271.9 yards per game
and is third in yards passing. Washington hasn't won a road game
since Nov. 3, 2007 at Stanford, but its last two road games at
Notre Dame and Arizona State were decided in overtime or the
final seconds.

"I think we're close," Sarkisian said. "We're understanding what
it takes."