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THIS WEEK: Top-seeded and No. 1-ranked North Dakota State (14-0) plays for its third straight NCAA Division I football championship against seventh-seeded and No. 4/5-ranked Towson (13-2) on Saturday, Jan. 4. Kickoff is scheduled for 1:05 p.m. at Toyota Stadium (20,500) in Frisco, Texas.
TELEVISION: Live coverage in high definition begins at 1 p.m. on ESPN2 with
Anish Shroff calling the play-by-play,
Kelly Stouffer analyst and
Cara Capuano sideline reporter. Video streaming will be on WatchESPN.com and the WatchESPN mobile app through participating TV providers.
RADIO: Live coverage begins at 12:30 p.m. on KFGO-AM 790 and KRWK-FM 101.9 of Fargo along with the North Dakota Corn Growers Bison Radio Network. KFGO's
Scott Miller will describe the play-by-play with NDSU and Buffalo Bills Hall of Famer
Phil Hansen as color analyst and NDSU's
Jeremy Jorgenson reporting from the sidelines. A live audio stream will be available on GoBison.com/allaccess.
THE SERIES: This will be the second meeting between North Dakota State and Towson. NDSU won 24-17 in the 1983 NCAA Division II quarterfinals at Dacotah Field in Fargo en route to the school's fourth national title and the first of four in the 1980s. NDSU opened a 14-0 lead in the first quarter and led 24-10 in the fourth before Towson scored with 1:10 to play. Bison quarterback Jeff Bentrim ran for 1-yard and 13-yard TDs and freshman running back Chad Stark carried 26 times for 164 yards.
CHASING HISTORY: With a victory, North Dakota State would be just the second team in FCS history to win three straight national championships joining the Appalachian State teams of 2005-07. ... NDSU's current 23-game winning streak is also one shy of the school and FCS records for consecutive victories. The Bison won 24 straight games from 1964-66 and Penn set the FCS record of 24 from 1992-95 which was tied by Montana from 2001-02. ... NDSU can set a school record for wins with a 15-0 mark and become the first undefeated national champion since Southern Conference champion Marshall went 15-0 to win the 1996 title. There have been 13 undefeated NDSU teams since 1894 with the last being the 1990 Division II title team.
THE GOLD STANDARD: It will be another "Gold Rush" for the Bison faithful expected to jam pack 10,000-seat Dr Pepper Ballpark for a Friday night pep fest and Toyota Stadium for Saturday's game. On the field, NDSU is the home team but will wear its green road pants with the alternate yellow jersey which was introduced in 2011. NDSU is 14-0 in the yellow jersey including a 5-0 mark this year and wins in each of the three playoff games.
POSTSEASON HISTORY: This is North Dakota State's fourth straight appearance in the FCS playoffs and its second as the top overall seed after claiming the No. 2 seed in 2011. NDSU is 13-1 in the FCS playoffs including two straight national titles and a quarterfinal appearance in 2010. This is North Dakota State's 27th postseason appearance overall. NDSU has a 48-14 record all-time in the postseason including three College Division national championships in 1965, 1968 and 1969 and five Division II titles in 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988 and 1990. NDSU is 43-13 in the NCAA playoff format since 1973.
OFFENSE SURGING: North Dakota State's offense has been surging through three playoff games. NDSU is averaging 46.0 points, up from its season average of 39.0, and the ground game is averaging 347.0 yards rushing up from its season average of 260.7. NDSU ran for 424 yards against Coastal Carolina in the quarterfinals and got a career-high 195 yards from
John Crockett in the semifinals against New Hampshire. Meanwhile, on defense, NDSU has about maintained its season averages allowing 11.7 points and 88.3 rushing yards per game.
PLAYOFF RECORDS: North Dakota State has already tied or broken several school playoff records.
Brock Jensen's 249 yards passing and 335 total offense yards against Furman were both records, and Jensen tied the mark of three touchdown passes against New Hampshire. Jensen has already broken playoff season records for passing yards (582), TDs (7) and total offense yards (773).
Zach Vraa has tied the season record with three TD catches,
Christian Dudzik has tied the record of 3 INTs.
UP TO THE CHALLENGE: Running back Terrance West of Towson leads the FCS in rushing yards (2,420), rushing TDs (40), and rushing yards per game (161.3) but the Bison defense has a track record of limiting some of the nation's top runners:
|
NCAA Rank, Season Avg. |
vs. NDSU |
S28 - Zach Zenner, SDSU |
3rd, 143.9 ypg (23 TDs) |
4 yards, 0 TDs |
O5 - David Johnson, UNI |
10th, 116.9 ypg (10 TDs) |
142 yards, 1 TD |
O19 - Malcolm Agnew, S. Illinois |
58th, 80.7 ypg (6 TDs) |
24 yards, 0 TDs |
N9 - Marshaun Coprich, Ill. St. |
61st, 80.4 ypg (9 TDs) |
58 yards, 1 TD |
N16 - Martin Ruiz, Youngstown |
39th, 91.2 ypg (15 TDs) |
74 yards, 0 TDs |
D7 - Hank McCloud, Furman |
63rd, 78.0 ypg (5 TDs) |
7 yards, 0 TDs |
D14 - Lorenzo Taliaferro, C Car. |
12th, 115.3 ypg (27 TDs) |
53 yards, 1 TD |
J4 - Terrance West, Towson |
1st, 161.3 ypg (40 TDs) |
|
BISON BOUNCE BACK OVER UNH: NDSU bounced back from two turnovers on its first two possessions to score 52 straight points and beat New Hampshire 52-14 in the semifinals.
John Crockett rushed for a career-high 195 yards and
Brock Jensen tied a school playoff record with three touchdown passes. An NDSU playoff record crowd of 18,694 watched the final home game for 24 seniors and 11th-year head coach Craig Bohl. NDSU's 52 points were a school playoff record, passing the 51-11 win over Indiana University of Pennsylvania in the 1990 Division II title game when Chris Simdorn threw three TD passes for the Bison.
OFFENSIVE EXPLOSION VS. COASTAL: North Dakota State's offense had a banner day in the 48-14 national quarterfinal win over Coastal Carolina. NDSU's 623 yards of total offense was the most since 2007 against Illinois State, and the Bison had seven players combine for 424 rushing yards - the most in 17 years since a 1996 win over Minnesota State Mankato.
Sam Ojuri led the charge with 162 yards and two touchdowns on 20 carries. Quarterback
Brock Jensen accounted for four touchdowns including runs from the 10 and 1 and a pair of passing TDs to
Zach Vraa from 31 yards and
Kevin Vaadeland from the 2. Jensen finished 14 of 21 passing for 187 yards to seven different receivers led by Vraa's 78 yards on five catches.
BISON ROLL PAST FURMAN: North Dakota State scored three third quarter touchdowns and rolled to a 38-7 win over Furman in the second round. Quarterback
Brock Jensen went 15 of 25 passing for 249 yards and two touchdowns and had a game-high 86 yards rushing including a 53-yard score.
Ryan Smith had 141 all-purpose yards and
Zach Vraa had 112 yards receiving – his sixth 100-yard game of the year and the fifth in seven games.
BOHL TO COACH THROUGH PLAYOFFS: North Dakota State's
Craig Bohl will coach the Bison through the FCS playoffs despite accepting the head coaching job at Wyoming on Sunday, Dec. 8. Bohl, the all-time winningest coach at NDSU, won his 100th career game in the 42-0 victory over South Dakota. Bohl is 103-32 in his 11th season overall and is tied for sixth place in MVFC history with 32 league victories in six years.
KLIEMAN NEXT HEAD COACH: Chris Klieman, currently in his third year as defensive backs coach and second as NDSU's defensive coordinator, was named North Dakota State's next head coach Sunday. Klieman came to NDSU in 2011 after five years as the defensive backs coach, co-defensive coordinator and defensive coordinator at Northern Iowa from 2006-10. Klieman has been at four Missouri Valley Football Conference schools including assistant coaching stops at Western Illinois (1994-96) and Missouri State (1999). He also spent one year at Kansas (1997). NDSU will be Klieman's second head coaching job. He went 3-7 at Division III Loras College in an injury-plagued 2005 season.
SEEING DOUBLE: North Dakota State has two 1,000-yard rushers for the third straight season. Senior
Sam Ojuri (1,314) passed the mark for the third straight year and junior
John Crockett (1,191) has his second straight 1,000-yard season. The backs have split time all year with Ojuri averaging 6.6 yards on 199 carries and Crockett averaging 6.6 yards on 181 carries. Ojuri and Crockett both went over 100 yards in the same game against Southern Illinois, Youngstown State and South Dakota. Only one other FCS team has two 1,000-yard rushers this season: Monmouth's Kwabena Asante (1,080) and Julian Hayes (1,111).
OJURI CRACKS 3,000 YARD MARK: Senior running back
Sam Ojuri has become the sixth running back in NDSU history to eclipse the 3,000 career yards mark. Ojuri has 3,610 yards in 50 career games and trails only Lamar Gordon, Kyle Steffes and Jake Morris on the school's all-time rushing list. NDSU's last 3,000-yard rusher was Steffes, who finished second in school history with 3,952 yards from 2003-06.
NDSU All-Time Leading Rushers
4,696 - Lamar Gordon, RB (1998-01)
3,952 - Kyle Steffes, RB (2003-06)
3,688 - Jake Morris, RB (1994-97)
3,610 -
Sam Ojuri, RB (2009,11-13)
3,313 - Chris Simdorn, QB (1987-90)
JENSEN JOINS ELITE GROUP: Senior quarterback
Brock Jensen surpassed the 1,000-yard career rushing mark at Youngstown State and is one of eight active quarterbacks in the Football Championship Subdivision with 5,000 passing and 1,000 rushing yards in a career.
FCS Active Players, Total Offense—5,000 passing and 1,000 rushing yards
1. Denarius McGhee, Montana State (11,203 passing; 1,149 rushing; 12,352 total)
2. Brian Bell, Sam Houston State (8,447 passing; 1,517 rushing; 9,964 total)
3.
Brock Jensen, North Dakota State (8,463 passing; 1,220 rushing; 9,683 total)
Others: Gavin McCarney, Colgate; Benjamin Anderson, Arkansas-Pine Bluff; Garrett Safron, Sacramento State; Greg McGhee, Howard; Matt Lancaster, Butler.
MOST WINS AS QUARTERBACK: North Dakota State quarterback
Brock Jensen has won more games at quarterback than any player in FCS history. Jensen is 46-5 as NDSU's starting quarterback and with 47 total victories (including 2010 off the bench against Morgan State) he has surpassed Armanti Edwards, who won 43 games at Appalachian State from 2006-09. Jensen is NDSU's career leader in pass attempts (1106), pass completions (690), passing touchdowns (69), passing yards (8,463) and total offense (9,683). Jensen also ranks second among all active FCS players in total TDs responsible for (105).
Most Wins by FCS Quarterbacks
47,
Brock Jensen, North Dakota State (2010-present)
43, Armanti Edwards, Appalachian State (2006-09)
42, J.R. Revere, Georgia Southern (1998-01)
41, Eric Ward, Richmond (2006-09)
VRAA's RECORD YEAR: Junior wide receiver
Zach Vraa has a school-record 14 touchdown receptions this year, passing T.R. McDonald's mark of 11 touchdown catches in 1993. Vraa has caught a TD pass in 11 of 14 games this season. He leads the Missouri Valley Football Conference with 17.8 yards per catch, 81.4 yards per game, and is second in NDSU single-season history with 1,140 receiving yards.
NDSU Single-Season Receiving Yards
1,181 - T.R. McDonald, 1993
1,140 -
Zach Vraa, 2013
1,003 - Warren Holloway, 2011
828 - Tim Strehlow, 1999
WEARING THEM OUT: North Dakota State ranks first nationally in time of possession and third down conversions, and the advantage is most notable in the fourth quarter. NDSU is averaging 9:43 in the fourth quarter this year including seven games over 10 minutes and a season-high 11:31 at Youngstown State. The Bison have converted 35 of 53 third downs in the final quarter for 66 percent.
FOURTH QUARTER SUCCESS: North Dakota State has held 12 of 14 opponents scoreless in the fourth quarter with Missouri State and New Hampshire combining for 13 points on two touchdowns. Those touchdowns and a Sam Houston State field goal in last year's national title game are the only fourth-quarter points NDSU has allowed in the last 19 games since holding Illinois State scoreless in the final game of the 2012 regular season.
LITTLEJOHN STEPS IN: North Dakota State linebacker
Carlton Littlejohn was named Missouri Valley Football Conference Defensive Player of the Week after making a game- and career-high 16 tackles with seven solo stops and 1.5 tackles for loss in North Dakota State's 28-10 home victory over Illinois State. Littlejohn made 10 of his 16 tackles in the second half after moving from the outside to middle linebacker in place of injured starter
Grant Olson.
PUNT COVERAGE: North Dakota State's
Ben LeCompte has punted 48 times for a 43.1 average this year including 10 touchbacks and 23 inside the 20-yard line. Only 7 of 48 punts have been returned and NDSU tacklers have limited those returns to nine total yards. NDSU is allowing just 1.29 yards per punt return, which is second in the FCS.
SMITH AMONG PUNT RETURN LEADERS: North Dakota State wide receiver
Ryan Smith is the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision active career leader in punt returns (81) and punt return yards (935), and is tied for first in punt return touchdowns (3). Junior free safety
Christian Dudzik handled the first 13 punt returns this year before Smith took his first return a career-long 85 yards for a TD in the first quarter against Missouri State. Smith also had a 100-yard kickoff return for touchdown at Indiana State which tied a 1923 school record.
SMITH FOURTH IN RECEPTIONS: Senior wide receiver
Ryan Smith ranks fourth in NDSU history with 144 career receptions for 1,750 yards. Smith had a career-high eight catches at Kansas State and hauled in a career-high 111 receiving yards on four catches against South Dakota, including career-long 64-yarder for a TD.
NDSU Top Five Career Pass Receptions
1. Kole Heckendorf, 178 (2005-08)
2. Travis White, 163 (2002-06)
3. Warren Holloway, 161 (2008-11)
4.
Ryan Smith, 144 (2010-present)
5. T.R. McDonald, 134 (1990-93)
FLIPPING THE FIELD: North Dakota State ranks eighth nationally and leads the Missouri Valley Football Conference in net punting thanks to sophomore All-MVFC punter
Ben LeCompte, who has been flipping the field with an impressive 43.1 yards per punt average. LeCompte had seven punts and four inside the 20 – both career highs – in the Northern Iowa game. He had a career-long punt of 75 yards and another for 74 yards at South Dakota State, and a 65-yarder against UNI. LeCompte's career average of 43.1 would rank second in school history behind Mike Dragosavich's 44.46 from 2004-07.
BISON LAST FCS UNBEATEN: North Dakota State is the last unbeaten team in the Football Championship Subdivision and one of two in all of Division I. Florida State is 13-0 in the Football Bowl Subdivision.
STREAKING: NDSU's 23-game winning streak is a Missouri Valley Football Conference record, the longest active streak in Division I, and one games shy of the school-record 24-game winning streak set from 1964 to 1966 and FCS record of 24 games by Penn (1992-95) and Montana (2001-02). The Bison have won 14 straight at home (second best in the FCS) and 44 of the last 45 non-conference home games including 34 straight since a 2003 loss to UC Davis.
Division I Overall Winning Streaks
1. North Dakota State (MVFC) 23
2. Florida State (ACC) 15
3. Eastern Washington (Big Sky) 10
Division I Home Winning Streaks
1. Sam Houston State (Southland) 22
2. South Carolina (SEC) 18
3. Stanford (Pac-12) 16
4. Ohio State (Big Ten) 15
5. North Dakota State (MVFC) 14
ON THE ROAD: North Dakota State has won 14 straight true road games and 17 including two national championship games in Frisco, Texas, and one neutral site win against South Dakota in Sioux Falls, S.D. The Bison have won 22 of their last 26 road games and are 42-20 on the road since head coach
Craig Bohl took over in 2003. NDSU is 17-7 in MVFC road games. The Bison have not lost away from Fargo since the 38-31 overtime loss to eventual national champion Eastern Washington in the 2010 NCAA quarterfinals.
Division I Road Winning Streaks
1. Northern Illinois (MAC) 15
2. North Dakota State (MVFC) 14
3. Towson (Colonial) 11
SCHOOL-RECORD ATTENDANCE: North Dakota State set a school record for average home attendance for the third straight year drawing 18,622 over nine games, which ranked sixth in the FCS. NDSU drew a record crowd of 19,108 for the homecoming game against Missouri State was the fifth straight regular season sellout and the 17th sellout overall since 2006. NDSU finished second in total home attendance (167,600) behind Montana.
FCS average home attendance
1. Montana - 24,380
2. James Madison - 21,011
3. Southern - 20,107
4. Yale - 19,809
5. Montana State - 19,704
6. North Dakota State - 18,622
NDSU, MVFC TOP GRIDIRON POWER INDEX: North Dakota State has the top spot in the Gridiron Power Index (GPI), the index ranking for the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision and a top indicator of at-large playoff selection. The Missouri Valley Football Conference has seven teams in the top 30 and is tops among all 14 conferences ahead of the Colonial Athletic Association and Southland Conference.
Gridiron Power Index - Nov. 25
1. North Dakota State 1.14
2. Eastern Illinois 1.86
3. Eastern Washington 3.86
4. SE Louisiana 4.14
5. Towson 6.00
Conference GPI - Nov. 25
1. Missouri Valley 27.11
2. Colonial 34.23
3. Southland 35.46
4. Ohio Valley 37.94
5. Big Sky 43.65
WILLIAMS AND INTERCEPTIONS: North Dakota State's
Marcus Williams has 21 career interceptions, which is second in MVFC history. He is the FCS active leader in career interceptions (21) and interception return yards (503).
His seventh career INT return for touchdown against Furman broke the FCS record of six set by Murray State's William Hampton (1993-96).
MVFC Career Leaders - Interceptions
24, Adrion Smith, Missouri St., 1990-93
21,
Marcus Williams, North Dakota St., 2010-present
21, Jeff Smith, Illinois St., 1985-88
18, Ty Talton, Northern Iowa, 1995-98
18, Dre Dokes, Northern Iowa, 2003-06
THREE SHUTOUTS: North Dakota State's shutout victories over Delaware State and South Dakota State were the first back-to-back shutouts for NDSU since 1987 when the Bison won 34-0 at Augustana (S.D.) and 33-0 at home over Morningside. NDSU's 42-0 win over South Dakota gave the Bison three shutouts for the first time since the 1997 team had four.
NEGATIVE YARDS: SDSU's minus-32 yards rushing was the lowest total allowed by North Dakota State in Division I football. The NDSU record is minus-85 yards against Morningside in 1974. SDSU's Zach Zenner, the leading rusher in the Football Championship Subdivision, had four yards on eight carries.
NATIONAL TEAM OF THE WEEK: North Dakota State was named the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl National Team of the Week by the Football Writers Association of America on Sept. 3 following its 24-21 win at Kansas State. NDSU is just the second Football Championship Subdivision team to be recognized. The other was Appalachian State in 2007 following its opening game win at No. 5-ranked Michigan.
THE DRIVE: North Dakota State came back from a 21-7 deficit to win 24-21 at Kansas State in the season opener. The Bison marched 80 yards in 18 plays over a span of 8:30 to score the winning touchdown on
Brock Jensen's 1-yard run with 28 seconds left. Jensen completed 14 of 15 passes in the second half including 7 of 7 on the final drive as the Bison converted four third down opportunities.
ACADEMIC HONORS: North Dakota State's
Andrew Grothmann,
Ryan Drevlow,
Kyle Emanuel and
Esley Thorton were named to the Capital One Academic All-District 6 team by a vote of the College Sports Information Directors of America. Grothmann has a 3.58 GPA in agricultural economics, Drevlow has a 3.69 GPA in electrical engineering, Emanuel has a 3.59 in construction management, and Thorton has a 3.89 in exercise science. All four were voted to the Missouri Valley Football Conference all-academic team along with teammates
Danny Luecke and
Ryan Smith. Luecke has a 3.84 in math education and Smith a 3.57 in business administration.
TURNER OFFENSIVE LINEMAN OF THE YEAR: North Dakota State left tackle
Billy Turner was named Offensive Lineman of the Year on the FCS Athletics Directors Association All-America team announced Tuesday. Turner graded out at 90 percent during the regular season and has not allowed a sack in 14 games. He starred in the win at Kansas State grading out at 96 percent with 10 knockdowns. Turner is a two-time All-Missouri Valley Football Conference first-teamer and was a consensus All-American in 2012.
FIRST REPEAT WINNER OF EDDIE ROBINSON AWARD: North Dakota State head coach
Craig Bohl was named the first back-to-back winner of the Eddie Robinson Award as the FCS Coach of the Year by The Sports Network. Bohl has guided NDSU to 23 straight victories and its third straight appearance in the NCAA championship game. He was named Region 4 FCS Coach of the Year by the American Football Coaches Association and is a candidate for AFCA National FCS Coach of the Year honors, which he won in 2012.
BOHL, JENSEN CAPTURE MVFC HONORS: North Dakota State's
Craig Bohl was named Bruce Craddock Coach of the Year for the third straight season and quarterback
Brock Jensen was named Offensive Player of the Year by a vote of the Missouri Valley Football Conference head coaches, sports information directors and media. The Bison had 14 players earn spots on the all-conference team including eight on the first team highlighted by three-time All-MVFC first team cornerback
Marcus Williams.
CONFERENCE PLAYERS OF THE WEEK: The following players were recognized as Player of the Week by the Missouri Valley Football Conference this season for their performances:
-
Colten Heagle, Defense (team-high seven tackles and two stops for loss at Kansas State in his first game back from knee injury Sept. 2012)
-
Billy Turner, Offensive Line (96% with 10 knockdowns at Kansas State)
-
Ben LeCompte, Special Teams (seven punts averaging 44.3 yards, three inside the 20 and two touchbacks at South Dakota State with a career-long 75 and a 74-yarder)
-
Ryan Smith, Special Teams (took his first punt return of the season 85 yards for a touchdown against Missouri State)
-
Joe Haeg, Offensive Line (98% with eight knockdowns vs. Missouri State)
-
Billy Turner, Offensive Line (92% with 10 knockdowns in NDSU's season-high 331-yard rushing game at Southern Illinois)
-
Zack Johnson, Offensive Line (13 knockdowns as NDSU averaged 6.7 yards per carry and had backs run for 146 and 120 yards at Youngstown State)
-
Christian Dudzik, Special Teams (scored his first two career TDs on punt returns of 43 and 68 yards at Indiana State)
-
Carlton Littlejohn, Defense (10 of his career-high 16 tackles in the second half against Illinois State after moving to middle linebacker in place of
Grant Olson)
-
Brock Jensen, Offense (17-for-22 passing for 200 yards, career-high four TDs and a fifth TD by rush at Youngstown State, where he tied the FCS wins record and broke NDSU's career and single-season records for TD passes)
NATIONAL HONORS: The following players earned national recognition this season for their performances:
-
Ben LeCompte, Sports Network co-Special Teams Player of the Week (seven punts averaging 44.3 yards, three inside the 20 and two touchbacks at South Dakota State with a career-long 75 and a 74-yarder)
-
Grant Olson, College Sporting News All-Star (eight tackles and a career-high two sacks totaling 14 yards at South Dakota State where the Bison held SDSU to minus-32 yards rushing)
-
Zach Vraa, CFPA Wide Receiver of the Week (five catches for career-high 179 yards against Missouri State, TD catches of 36 and 23 yards, two other catches for 56 and 52 yards)
-
Ryan Smith, CFPA Punt Returner of the Week (took his first punt return of the season 85 yards for a touchdown and a 7-0 lead against Missouri State)
-
Christian Dudzik, Sports Network co-Special Teams Player of the Week and CFPA Punt Returner of the Week (scored his first two career TDs on punt returns of 43 and 68 yards at Indiana State)
-
Ryan Smith, CFPA Kickoff Returner of the Week (100-yard kickoff return to answer an Indiana State kickoff return touchdown on the previous play, tying the 1923 NDSU record for longest kickoff return)
-
Brock Jensen, College Sporting News All-Star (17-for-22 passing for 200 yards, career-high four TDs and a fifth TD by rush at Youngstown State, where he tied the FCS wins record and broke NDSU's career and single-season records for TD passes)
ALL-AMERICANS: North Dakota State had seven players recognized as All-Americans on Wednesday, including five players who earned their first career honors.
-
Marcus Williams, consensus first team All-America cornerback for the third straight season by the Sports Network, Walter Camp and Associated Press.
-
Billy Turner, consensus first team All-America offensive lineman for the second straight season by the Sports Network, Walter Camp and Associated Press.
-
Andrew Grothmann, first team fullback by The Sports Network, his first All-America honor.
-
Colten Heagle, third team safety by The Sports Network, his first All-America honor.
-
Ryan Drevlow, second team defensive line by the Associated Press, his first All-America honor.
-
Brock Jensen, third team quarterback by the Associated Press, his first All-America honor.
-
Grant Olson, third team linebacker by the Associated Press, his first All-America honor following an honorable mention by College Sports Journal last year.