Top Washington recruit repping Husky gear when LSU came to visit

Purdue v Washington
Purdue v Washington | Blake Dahlin/ISI Photos/GettyImages

Washington pulled in one of the top recruiting classes in this last recruiting cycle, and they are looking to repeat that again next year. The Huskies and Jedd Fisch have been making inroads across the country, finding top talent wherever they go. One of the top wide receiver targets on their list is Tre Moore from Pflugerville, Texas.

He has offers from 40+ programs and from all over the place, with the top programs wanting his ball-catching services. One of those schools, LSU, sent Charles Weis Jr., the brand new offensive coordinator who came from Ole Miss with Lane Kiffin, who was at Moore's high school. Weis paid a recruiting visit, rocking his LSU gear, only to find that Moore had shown up to school, wearing Husky gear instead. Nice.

You can see the picture below:

Washington WR coach Kevin Cummings would love to haul in 4-star WR Tre Moore

Related: Demond Williams Jr.'s early Heisman odds might turn UW fans' heads

Moore is 6'3 and 200 pounds. He had a breakout sophomore year, catching 38 receptions for 562 yards and six touchdowns. That's impressive for a player who probably couldn't even drive himself to practice yet. As a junior (this season), it was even more impressive with 85 receptions for 1,443 and 19 touchdowns. Which is why everybody and their brother are showing up to give him offers.

Moore is still actively fielding offers and hasn't even narrowed his recruitment, but Washington is firmly in the mix as wide receiver coach Kevin Cummings has him as a top priority. If you've learned anything over the years, a high school player wearing the gear from a particular college could mean something, but it often means nothing.

In this case, it's more hilarious that Weis came to find one of LSU's top targets, rocking another competing school's sweatshirt. That's good stuff in the humor category, even if it means little in the recruiting category.

Loading recommendations... Please wait while we load personalized content recommendations