Bobcats Face Cowboys
8/25/2003 12:00:00 AM | Football
THE STORYLINE
Montana State opens defense of its Big Sky Conference Championship the same way it closed out the 2002 football season -- by playing a road game against the Cowboys. Montana State opens the 2003 season against the Wyoming Cowboys, nine months after losing to McNeese State in the first round of the I-AA Playoffs. This year’s opener will be even more uphill -- literally and figuratively -- than last November’s trip to Cajun country. Division I-A Wyoming is coached by former University of Montana head coach Joe Glenn.
GAME FACTS
KICKOFF 2:00 pm MST
SITE Laramie, WY
STADIUM War Memorial
RADIO/TV State Farm Bobcat Network -- Kris Atteberry, Dan Davies
HIGHLIGHTS
l Montana State is opening the season on the road for only the second time in the last seven years
l MSU hasn’t beaten a Division I-A foe since 1984 (Fresno State)
l Travis Lulay has thrown only two interceptions in his last 136 attempts
STREAKS
l Montana State’s last win snapped a 16-game losing streak to Montana and an eight-game skein at Washington-Grizzly Stadium
l MSU has lost seven straight to Wyoming
l Brent Swaggert has started 35 straight games at left tackle
MILESTONES
l Travis Lulay enters his sophomore season with 2,064 passing years, 10th on MSU’s career list
l Adam Cordeiro and Jon Montoya each have 23 career sacks, tied for sixth in school history
SHINING
l WR SCOTT TURNQUIST had 605 receiving yards last year, including two 100-yard games in the last three contests
l WR/RS COREY SMITH was eighth in I-AA in punt returns last year
l LB Roger Cooper had six pass breakups and two interceptions in MSU’s last three games of ‘02
ABOUT THE ‘CATS...
MSU in ‘02 7-6
Conf./Record Big Sky/5-2, 1st
Home/Road 5-1/2-2
Grass/Turf 5-2/2-4
Day/Night 6-3/1-3
HEAD COACH Mike Kramer
Alma Mater Idaho/’76
Overall/Years 49-55/9th
At MSU/Years 12-23/3rd
vs UW 0-0
Home/Road 0-0/0-0
SERIES first meeting
At MSU 1-4
At McN 5-7
At Neutral 0-1 (at Billings)
Current Streak UW 7
ABOUT WYOMING ...
WYO in ‘02 2-10
Conf./Record Mountain West/1-6
Home/Road 2-3/0-6/0-1
Grass/Turf 2-8/0-2
Day/Night 2-6/0-4
HEAD COACH Joe Glenn
Alma Mater South Dakota/’71
Overall/Years 158-59-1/30th
At School/Years 0-0/1st
vs MSU 2-1
Home/Road 1-1/1-0
ABOUT WYO The Cowboys
Colors Brown, prairie gold
Location Laramie, WY
Enrollment 12,402
Stadium War Memorial
OPPONENT ‘03 SCHEDULE/RESULTS
A30 Montana State 2 pm
S6 at Oklahoma State 5 pm
S13 Kansas 2 pm
S20 at Air Force TBA
S27 at Boise State 6:05 pm
O11 at Utah State 6 pm
O18 BYU TBA
O25 at San Diego State TBA
N1 CSU TBA
N15 at Utah TBA
N22 New Mexico TBA
N29 UNLV TBA
NOTING THE ‘CATS
What to Watch
F A Grisled Vet at 19... Travis Lulay opens a season as Montana State’s starting quarterback for the first time. A 19-year old true sophomore, many fans consider Lulay a fixture in the Bobcat offense and next in line as a dominant Big Sky quarterback, but in fact he has started only eight games for the ‘Cats. The offense’s ability to click on all cylinders without last year’s Big Three of Junior Adams, Aaron Hill and Ryan Johnson will be important.
F Training Room Trauma... The Bobcats continue to battle the injury bug as the season dawns. After having lost starting center Nic Stevenson in the preseason, the status of linebacker Mac Mollohan and defensive tackle Beau Clark remain uncertain for the opener at Wyoming.
F Playing with the Big Boys... Montana State hasn’t beaten a Division I-A opponent since 1984, when Mike Kramer was a Bobcat assistant, but in the past couple of years the team has been competitive. The ‘Cats were beaten by Washington State in each of the last two seasons, but both games were competitive going into the second half.
Out of the Gates
Montana State’s 27-24 last-second home win against Saint Mary’s in last year’s opener snapped a two-game Bobcat losing streak in season openers. The Bobcats are 50-45-5 all-time in season openers, 0-10 when opening a season against a Division I-A opponent (since joining I-AA in 1979). The Bobcats have twice opened a season at Wyoming, losing 61-13 in 1950 and 6-0 in 1919.
Starting Strong
A good start has historically been important to long-term Bobcat fortunes. When opening a season with a win, MSU has an average record of 5-3. When opening with a loss, MSU’s average record is 3-5. When opening with a loss at a I-A opponent (since becoming a I-AA school in 1979), MSU’s average record is 3-8. In other years in that span, the ‘Cats average record is 5-6.
Opening on the Road
Saturday’s game will mark the second time in Mike Kramer’s four seasons that he has opened on the road -- the ‘Cats lost at UAB in 2001 -- and only the second time in the past seven seasons. The Bobcats are 12-26-2 all-time when opening the season on the road.
Against I-A
Montana State has opened the season against a Division I-A opponent 10 times since joining the ranks of Division I in 1979, and has lost all 10 times. In that span, the ‘Cats are 4-21 against Division I-A opponents, including 4-3 against Fresno State, 0-5 against Washington State, 0-2 against CSU, and single losses to Utah, Long Beach State, Florida, Central Michigan, Kansas, Tulsa, UNLV, Nevada, Wyoming, Idaho, and UAB. All those games, except for three of the wins against Fresno, were on the road.
Dusting off the
Scrapbooks
Montana State’s game against Wyoming marks the first of two September games the Bobcats will play against former Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference squads. The Bobcats belonged to that venerable league from the 1920s until the late ‘50s, while Wyoming was in that conference for the first five decades of the last century. MSU also faces Northern Colorado, formerly Colorado Teachers College, on September 27 in Bozeman.
Familiar Faces
Bobcat fans will see a set of familiar nemeses on the opposite sideline this weekend. Wyoming head coach Joe Glenn and his staff have traded Montana’s maroon and silver for the Brown and Prairie Gold sported by the Cowboys. Glenn was 2-1 in his three-year tenure as UM’s head coach in the ‘Cat-Griz rivalry.
Late Adds Bolster ‘O’
Montana State should benefit from some fall camp roster additions. Receiver Demetrius Williams joined the team at the beginning of camp, and was declared eligible by the NCAA late last week. Running backs David Mayfield and Bruce Molock were also granted their eligibility. Mayfield is MSU’s projected starter at running back, while Molock is his backup. Williams should see time at the X receiver spot behind Brandon Roosevelt.
D’ing Up
For the second straight season, Montana State finished 2003 as the Big Sky’s top defensive unit. The ‘Cats allowed just 313.6 yards per game. MSU also led the Big Sky in pass defense (200.7), and was third in rush defense (112.9) and third in scoring defense (21.8)
D’ing Up, Part II
Montana State became the first team in the last 137 games, dating back to a UM loss to Weber State in ‘92, to hold the Grizzlies to just seven points.
Hip! Hip! Lulay!!
Montana State quarterback Travis Lulay posted some impressive accomplishments in the course of his spectacular true freshman campaign a year ago, but none more than the season finale in Missoula. Lulay became the first true freshman since Dave Alt in 1956 to lead the Bobcats to victory over the Grizzlies. Playing in front of the biggest crowd in his career, Lulay was 14-for-25 passing, and made the day’s big play, a 53-yard TD pass to Junior Adams early in the second half that gave MSU its eventual winning cushion.
Road Tested
Montana State turned a weakness into a strength late last season by finding success away from home. MSU topped Sacramento State with an exhilerating walk-off win, then stunned Montana 10-7 in Washington-Grizzly Stadium.
Not So Fast, My Friend
A couple of obstacles remain, however. The Bobcats have lost 11 straight non-conference road games, dating back to a 13-10 win over Cal Poly in 1995, and have not beaten a I-A team on the road since 1984.
Rockin’ on the Road
MSU was only 2-4 on the road last year, but found statistical success. MSU averaged 358 yards and 17 first downs a game on the road, 330 yards and 15 first downs a game at home.
Comin’ Back
MSU came from behind to beat Eastern Washington and Portland State in the fourth quarter in games 10 and 11 last year, the Bobcats’ only fourth-quarter comebacks of the season.
Home Woes
The ‘Cats are 16-14 in Bobcat Stadium in its current configuration, 9-10 in Big Sky games, and 1-2 against Division II foes.
Personnel Ponderings
Entering 2003, MSU has...
...three new starters in the offensive line, but only one on the defensive front
...five starters back in the secondary
...33 players from Montana, and 30 players from California
...a returning starter at quarterback for the second straight year
...a running back who has started at least two games for the eighth straight year
...a new starter at defensive end (Clive Lowe) for the first time since Adam Cordeiro and Jon Montoya joined the starting group before the 2000 season
Current Montana State Two-Deep (with pro-nuns-ee-AY-shuns)
Offense
LEFT TACKLE 60 Brent Swaggert 6-4 293 Sr*
76 Dusty Daws 6-5 228 Jr*
LEFT GUARD 65 Mataio Toilolo(muh-TAY-oh Toe-ee-LOW-low) 6-1 290 Sr*
70 Chris Haynes 6-3 255 Jr+
CENTER 74 Lawrence Figueroa 6-1 285 Jr+
50 Zach Wolf 6-2 275 So
RIGHT GUARD 67 Joaquin Echauri (walk-EEN uh-CHAR-ee) 6-4 285 Jr+
70 Chris Haynes 6-3 255 Jr+
RIGHT TACKLE 73 Joe Hirst 6-6 271 Fr*
76 Dusty Daws 6-5 228 Jr*
QUARTERBACK 14 Travis Lulay (loo-LAY) 6-2 205 So
12 Brent Owens 5-10 183 Fr*
RUNNING BACK 35 David Mayfield 6-1 190 So
31 Bruce Molock
27 Jimmy Beal 5-7 162 Fr*
X RECEIVER 6 Brandon Roosevelt 5-11 175 Fr*
83 Demetrius Williams 6-2 185 Jr+
SLOT RECEIVER 86 Scott Turnquist 6-0 202 Sr*
82 Matt McCullough 5-11 161 Jr*
Z RECEIVER 84 Corey Smith 5-10 168 Sr*
5 Eddie Sullivan 6-0 200 Jr+
TIGHT END 85 Blake Wolf 6-2 240 Jr*
88 Jason Goodman 6-4 235 Fr
96 Sean Kelley 6-2 220 Fr
Defense
ANCHOR END 95 Jon Montoya 6-2 258 Sr*
90 Ryan Cogley 6-3 211 Fr*
NOSE 92 Adam Cordeiro (core-DARE-oh) 6-1 258 Sr*
71 DeShawn Gibbs 6-3 240 Jr+
TACKLE 58 Ray Sebestyen 6-2 253 Jr*
57 Brant Birkeland 6-1 265 Fr*
RUSH END 42 Clive Lowe 6-3 226 Fr*
99 Nick Barbero 6-2 217 Fr*
40 Chad Gluhm (gloom) 6-0 232 Jr*
SAM LINEBACKER 43 Nick Marudas (muh-ROOD-us) 6-1 222 So*
36 Clayton Curley 6-2 195 So+
MIKE LINEBACKER 91 Roger Cooper 6-3 224 So*
39 Brandon Eggart 6-0 213 Jr*
WILL LINEBACKER 47 Jonathan Molock 6-0 210 Sr+ 33 Mac Mollohan 6-0 205 So
23 Jason Gathing (like gather) 6-0 195 Jr+
LEFT CORNER 2 Joey Thomas 6-2 188 Sr 3 DeAngelo Wall 5-10 167 Fr*
FREE SAFETY 24 Kenneth Qualls 5-10 183 Sr+
20 Ryan Force 6-1 196 Fr*
STRONG SAFETY 10 Kane Ioane (eye-OWN) 5-11 203 Sr
26 Demond Goins (go-ins) 5-10 186 So*
RIGHT CORNER 7 Jay Hackett 6-0 178 Sr*
22 Kahiam Hunter (like I am) 5-10 170 Jr
KICKOFFS 11 EJ Cochrane
PLACEMENTS/PUNTS 19 Nate Cook
LONG SNAPS 96 Dusty Daws
RETURNS 84 Corey Smith, 3 DeAngelo Wall, 2 Joey Thomas
HOLDER 86 Scott Turnquist
*-indicates player has used redshirt year, +-indicates player is a transfer
Montana State opens defense of its Big Sky Conference Championship the same way it closed out the 2002 football season -- by playing a road game against the Cowboys. Montana State opens the 2003 season against the Wyoming Cowboys, nine months after losing to McNeese State in the first round of the I-AA Playoffs. This year’s opener will be even more uphill -- literally and figuratively -- than last November’s trip to Cajun country. Division I-A Wyoming is coached by former University of Montana head coach Joe Glenn.
GAME FACTS
KICKOFF 2:00 pm MST
SITE Laramie, WY
STADIUM War Memorial
RADIO/TV State Farm Bobcat Network -- Kris Atteberry, Dan Davies
HIGHLIGHTS
l Montana State is opening the season on the road for only the second time in the last seven years
l MSU hasn’t beaten a Division I-A foe since 1984 (Fresno State)
l Travis Lulay has thrown only two interceptions in his last 136 attempts
STREAKS
l Montana State’s last win snapped a 16-game losing streak to Montana and an eight-game skein at Washington-Grizzly Stadium
l MSU has lost seven straight to Wyoming
l Brent Swaggert has started 35 straight games at left tackle
MILESTONES
l Travis Lulay enters his sophomore season with 2,064 passing years, 10th on MSU’s career list
l Adam Cordeiro and Jon Montoya each have 23 career sacks, tied for sixth in school history
SHINING
l WR SCOTT TURNQUIST had 605 receiving yards last year, including two 100-yard games in the last three contests
l WR/RS COREY SMITH was eighth in I-AA in punt returns last year
l LB Roger Cooper had six pass breakups and two interceptions in MSU’s last three games of ‘02
ABOUT THE ‘CATS...
MSU in ‘02 7-6
Conf./Record Big Sky/5-2, 1st
Home/Road 5-1/2-2
Grass/Turf 5-2/2-4
Day/Night 6-3/1-3
HEAD COACH Mike Kramer
Alma Mater Idaho/’76
Overall/Years 49-55/9th
At MSU/Years 12-23/3rd
vs UW 0-0
Home/Road 0-0/0-0
SERIES first meeting
At MSU 1-4
At McN 5-7
At Neutral 0-1 (at Billings)
Current Streak UW 7
ABOUT WYOMING ...
WYO in ‘02 2-10
Conf./Record Mountain West/1-6
Home/Road 2-3/0-6/0-1
Grass/Turf 2-8/0-2
Day/Night 2-6/0-4
HEAD COACH Joe Glenn
Alma Mater South Dakota/’71
Overall/Years 158-59-1/30th
At School/Years 0-0/1st
vs MSU 2-1
Home/Road 1-1/1-0
ABOUT WYO The Cowboys
Colors Brown, prairie gold
Location Laramie, WY
Enrollment 12,402
Stadium War Memorial
OPPONENT ‘03 SCHEDULE/RESULTS
A30 Montana State 2 pm
S6 at Oklahoma State 5 pm
S13 Kansas 2 pm
S20 at Air Force TBA
S27 at Boise State 6:05 pm
O11 at Utah State 6 pm
O18 BYU TBA
O25 at San Diego State TBA
N1 CSU TBA
N15 at Utah TBA
N22 New Mexico TBA
N29 UNLV TBA
NOTING THE ‘CATS
What to Watch
F A Grisled Vet at 19... Travis Lulay opens a season as Montana State’s starting quarterback for the first time. A 19-year old true sophomore, many fans consider Lulay a fixture in the Bobcat offense and next in line as a dominant Big Sky quarterback, but in fact he has started only eight games for the ‘Cats. The offense’s ability to click on all cylinders without last year’s Big Three of Junior Adams, Aaron Hill and Ryan Johnson will be important.
F Training Room Trauma... The Bobcats continue to battle the injury bug as the season dawns. After having lost starting center Nic Stevenson in the preseason, the status of linebacker Mac Mollohan and defensive tackle Beau Clark remain uncertain for the opener at Wyoming.
F Playing with the Big Boys... Montana State hasn’t beaten a Division I-A opponent since 1984, when Mike Kramer was a Bobcat assistant, but in the past couple of years the team has been competitive. The ‘Cats were beaten by Washington State in each of the last two seasons, but both games were competitive going into the second half.
Out of the Gates
Montana State’s 27-24 last-second home win against Saint Mary’s in last year’s opener snapped a two-game Bobcat losing streak in season openers. The Bobcats are 50-45-5 all-time in season openers, 0-10 when opening a season against a Division I-A opponent (since joining I-AA in 1979). The Bobcats have twice opened a season at Wyoming, losing 61-13 in 1950 and 6-0 in 1919.
Starting Strong
A good start has historically been important to long-term Bobcat fortunes. When opening a season with a win, MSU has an average record of 5-3. When opening with a loss, MSU’s average record is 3-5. When opening with a loss at a I-A opponent (since becoming a I-AA school in 1979), MSU’s average record is 3-8. In other years in that span, the ‘Cats average record is 5-6.
Opening on the Road
Saturday’s game will mark the second time in Mike Kramer’s four seasons that he has opened on the road -- the ‘Cats lost at UAB in 2001 -- and only the second time in the past seven seasons. The Bobcats are 12-26-2 all-time when opening the season on the road.
Against I-A
Montana State has opened the season against a Division I-A opponent 10 times since joining the ranks of Division I in 1979, and has lost all 10 times. In that span, the ‘Cats are 4-21 against Division I-A opponents, including 4-3 against Fresno State, 0-5 against Washington State, 0-2 against CSU, and single losses to Utah, Long Beach State, Florida, Central Michigan, Kansas, Tulsa, UNLV, Nevada, Wyoming, Idaho, and UAB. All those games, except for three of the wins against Fresno, were on the road.
Dusting off the
Scrapbooks
Montana State’s game against Wyoming marks the first of two September games the Bobcats will play against former Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference squads. The Bobcats belonged to that venerable league from the 1920s until the late ‘50s, while Wyoming was in that conference for the first five decades of the last century. MSU also faces Northern Colorado, formerly Colorado Teachers College, on September 27 in Bozeman.
Familiar Faces
Bobcat fans will see a set of familiar nemeses on the opposite sideline this weekend. Wyoming head coach Joe Glenn and his staff have traded Montana’s maroon and silver for the Brown and Prairie Gold sported by the Cowboys. Glenn was 2-1 in his three-year tenure as UM’s head coach in the ‘Cat-Griz rivalry.
Late Adds Bolster ‘O’
Montana State should benefit from some fall camp roster additions. Receiver Demetrius Williams joined the team at the beginning of camp, and was declared eligible by the NCAA late last week. Running backs David Mayfield and Bruce Molock were also granted their eligibility. Mayfield is MSU’s projected starter at running back, while Molock is his backup. Williams should see time at the X receiver spot behind Brandon Roosevelt.
D’ing Up
For the second straight season, Montana State finished 2003 as the Big Sky’s top defensive unit. The ‘Cats allowed just 313.6 yards per game. MSU also led the Big Sky in pass defense (200.7), and was third in rush defense (112.9) and third in scoring defense (21.8)
D’ing Up, Part II
Montana State became the first team in the last 137 games, dating back to a UM loss to Weber State in ‘92, to hold the Grizzlies to just seven points.
Hip! Hip! Lulay!!
Montana State quarterback Travis Lulay posted some impressive accomplishments in the course of his spectacular true freshman campaign a year ago, but none more than the season finale in Missoula. Lulay became the first true freshman since Dave Alt in 1956 to lead the Bobcats to victory over the Grizzlies. Playing in front of the biggest crowd in his career, Lulay was 14-for-25 passing, and made the day’s big play, a 53-yard TD pass to Junior Adams early in the second half that gave MSU its eventual winning cushion.
Road Tested
Montana State turned a weakness into a strength late last season by finding success away from home. MSU topped Sacramento State with an exhilerating walk-off win, then stunned Montana 10-7 in Washington-Grizzly Stadium.
Not So Fast, My Friend
A couple of obstacles remain, however. The Bobcats have lost 11 straight non-conference road games, dating back to a 13-10 win over Cal Poly in 1995, and have not beaten a I-A team on the road since 1984.
Rockin’ on the Road
MSU was only 2-4 on the road last year, but found statistical success. MSU averaged 358 yards and 17 first downs a game on the road, 330 yards and 15 first downs a game at home.
Comin’ Back
MSU came from behind to beat Eastern Washington and Portland State in the fourth quarter in games 10 and 11 last year, the Bobcats’ only fourth-quarter comebacks of the season.
Home Woes
The ‘Cats are 16-14 in Bobcat Stadium in its current configuration, 9-10 in Big Sky games, and 1-2 against Division II foes.
Personnel Ponderings
Entering 2003, MSU has...
...three new starters in the offensive line, but only one on the defensive front
...five starters back in the secondary
...33 players from Montana, and 30 players from California
...a returning starter at quarterback for the second straight year
...a running back who has started at least two games for the eighth straight year
...a new starter at defensive end (Clive Lowe) for the first time since Adam Cordeiro and Jon Montoya joined the starting group before the 2000 season
Current Montana State Two-Deep (with pro-nuns-ee-AY-shuns)
Offense
LEFT TACKLE 60 Brent Swaggert 6-4 293 Sr*
76 Dusty Daws 6-5 228 Jr*
LEFT GUARD 65 Mataio Toilolo(muh-TAY-oh Toe-ee-LOW-low) 6-1 290 Sr*
70 Chris Haynes 6-3 255 Jr+
CENTER 74 Lawrence Figueroa 6-1 285 Jr+
50 Zach Wolf 6-2 275 So
RIGHT GUARD 67 Joaquin Echauri (walk-EEN uh-CHAR-ee) 6-4 285 Jr+
70 Chris Haynes 6-3 255 Jr+
RIGHT TACKLE 73 Joe Hirst 6-6 271 Fr*
76 Dusty Daws 6-5 228 Jr*
QUARTERBACK 14 Travis Lulay (loo-LAY) 6-2 205 So
12 Brent Owens 5-10 183 Fr*
RUNNING BACK 35 David Mayfield 6-1 190 So
31 Bruce Molock
27 Jimmy Beal 5-7 162 Fr*
X RECEIVER 6 Brandon Roosevelt 5-11 175 Fr*
83 Demetrius Williams 6-2 185 Jr+
SLOT RECEIVER 86 Scott Turnquist 6-0 202 Sr*
82 Matt McCullough 5-11 161 Jr*
Z RECEIVER 84 Corey Smith 5-10 168 Sr*
5 Eddie Sullivan 6-0 200 Jr+
TIGHT END 85 Blake Wolf 6-2 240 Jr*
88 Jason Goodman 6-4 235 Fr
96 Sean Kelley 6-2 220 Fr
Defense
ANCHOR END 95 Jon Montoya 6-2 258 Sr*
90 Ryan Cogley 6-3 211 Fr*
NOSE 92 Adam Cordeiro (core-DARE-oh) 6-1 258 Sr*
71 DeShawn Gibbs 6-3 240 Jr+
TACKLE 58 Ray Sebestyen 6-2 253 Jr*
57 Brant Birkeland 6-1 265 Fr*
RUSH END 42 Clive Lowe 6-3 226 Fr*
99 Nick Barbero 6-2 217 Fr*
40 Chad Gluhm (gloom) 6-0 232 Jr*
SAM LINEBACKER 43 Nick Marudas (muh-ROOD-us) 6-1 222 So*
36 Clayton Curley 6-2 195 So+
MIKE LINEBACKER 91 Roger Cooper 6-3 224 So*
39 Brandon Eggart 6-0 213 Jr*
WILL LINEBACKER 47 Jonathan Molock 6-0 210 Sr+ 33 Mac Mollohan 6-0 205 So
23 Jason Gathing (like gather) 6-0 195 Jr+
LEFT CORNER 2 Joey Thomas 6-2 188 Sr 3 DeAngelo Wall 5-10 167 Fr*
FREE SAFETY 24 Kenneth Qualls 5-10 183 Sr+
20 Ryan Force 6-1 196 Fr*
STRONG SAFETY 10 Kane Ioane (eye-OWN) 5-11 203 Sr
26 Demond Goins (go-ins) 5-10 186 So*
RIGHT CORNER 7 Jay Hackett 6-0 178 Sr*
22 Kahiam Hunter (like I am) 5-10 170 Jr
KICKOFFS 11 EJ Cochrane
PLACEMENTS/PUNTS 19 Nate Cook
LONG SNAPS 96 Dusty Daws
RETURNS 84 Corey Smith, 3 DeAngelo Wall, 2 Joey Thomas
HOLDER 86 Scott Turnquist
*-indicates player has used redshirt year, +-indicates player is a transfer
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