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Matt Entz leads NDSU out of the locker room
Carrie Snyder

Football

No. 1 Bison Welcome Missouri State Saturday for Trees Bowl, Code Green Game

THIS WEEK: No. 1-ranked North Dakota State (6-0, 2-0 MVFC) is the lone remaining unbeaten team among the FCS playoff conferences heading into this week's Trees Bowl game. NDSU will play Missouri State (1-4, 1-1 MVFC) at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 12, at Gate City Bank Field at the Fargodome (18,700). It is also the annual Code Green game and fans are asked to wear green in all sections of the Fargodome.
 
TICKETS ON SALE WEDNESDAY: Unclaimed student tickets will go on sale to the public at 7 p.m. Wednesday on GoBison.com/tickets. Reserved seats will be $41 plus fees in sections 13-15. The Bison Ticket Office will be open Thursday and Friday in the south lobby of the Sanford Health Athletic Complex from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday in the Fargodome east lobby at 9:30 a.m.
 
TELEVISION: KVLY and the NBC North Dakota network will carry the game with Brian Shawn joined by Lee Timmerman and sideline reporter Ryan Gellner. Pregame coverage hosted by Beth Hoole, Alex Egan and Kyle Emanuel begins at 1:30 p.m. The game will be available to ESPN+ subscribers on ESPN.com and the ESPN app.
 
RADIO: Coverage begins at 2 p.m. on the Peterson Farms Seed Bison Radio Network with fourth-year NDSU play-by-play voice Jeff Culhane joined by NDSU and Buffalo Bills hall of famer Phil Hansen and NDSU sideline reporter Jeremy Jorgenson. Extended coverage locally on 107.9 The Fox, Bison 1660 and 92.7 FM includes "Bison Tailgate" from 11:00-12:00 with Brad Jones and "Bison Game Day" from 12:00-2:00 with Keith Brake and Cole Jirik. Brake and Jirik return for "Bison Hotline" with Chris Hanson and Kyle Emanuel for two hours following the network broadcast.
 
ONLINE: NDSU All Access offers free audio streaming of all NDSU football games as well as live video of Bison home games to subscribers on GoBison.com/allaccess and the NDSU Athletics mobile app. Live stats for NDSU home games are available on BisonStats.com. Follow along with in-game updates on Twitter @NDSUfootball.
 
THE SERIES: This is the 12th meeting between North Dakota State and Missouri State since 2008. NDSU has won eight straight and leads the series 9-2 after last year's 48-7 victory in Springfield. Missouri State is 1-4 in Fargo with its only win coming in the 2009 Harvest Bowl game, 21-17.
 
LAST YEAR: NDSU's Easton Stick tied a school record with five touchdown passes—all in the first half—in last year's 48-7 win over Missouri State. Stick completed his first 11 passes and finished 15 of 24 passing for 238 yards. Tight end Ben Ellefson caught touchdowns from 29 and 5 yards, Dallas Freeman (29 yards) and Nate Jenson (43) caught their first touchdowns of the season, and Lance Dunn added a 27-yard TD as the Bison built a 34-0 halftime lead. Adam Cofield added touchdown runs from 14 and 5 yards in the third quarter for NDSU, which had nine players combine for 245 yards on the ground. Seth Wilson, playing his first game of the year, led all rushers with 95 yards on eight attempts. Jabril Cox made a game-high nine tackles with one of NDSU's four sacks.
 
TREES BOWL GAMES: This is the 29th Trees Bowl game sponsored by the North Dakota Forest Service. NDSU is 25-3 in the Trees Bowl and has won 10 straight including last year's 21-17 victory over South Dakota State. The event dates back to 1990 with one cancellation in 2001. Missouri State is making its first appearance as the Trees Bowl opponent.
 
CODE GREEN: Saturday is NDSU's annual "Code Green" game, and fans are asked to wear green to the game in all sections of the Fargodome. Code Green represents the Bison football defensive philosophy of play hard, play fast and play together. NDSU is currently ranked third in the FCS for total defense (275.0 yards/game), third in scoring defense (12.0 points/game), fourth in pass efficiency defense (103.60) and sixth in third down defense (.277). NDSU's seven touchdowns allowed are the fewest in the FCS through six games this season.
 
BISON ROUT NORTHERN IOWA: North Dakota State won the annual homecoming game 46-14 last week, handing Northern Iowa its worst regular-season loss since 2005. The Bison scored four unanswered touchdowns in the second half, the first coming on a 30-yard pass to tight end Noah Gindorff two plays after cornerback Josh Hayes ended UNI's second half opening drive with a forced fumble that NDSU's Marquise Bridges recovered. Hayes finished with six tackles and three pass breakups and linebacker James Kaczor made seven stops for the Bison. Adam Cofield had his first 100-yard game rushing 15 times for 104 yards and two touchdowns. Quarterback Trey Lance was 10 of 18 passing for 145 yards and three TDs.
 
LOPSIDED WINS IN VALLEY PLAY: North Dakota State has won its last four Missouri Valley Football Conference games by at least 32 points dating back to last year when the Bison closed out the regular season with victories over unranked Missouri State (48-7) and Southern Illinois (65-17). This year, the Bison have started league play beating No. 6 Illinois State (37-3) and No. 10 Northern Iowa (46-14). NDSU has never won back-to-back MVFC games by more than 30 points outside of this four-game stretch. Here are the five most lopsided conference wins by the Bison, who have won 16 games by at least 30 points since joining the MVFC in 2008:
        Largest Margin of NDSU Victory in MVFC Games
        55—NDSU 55, Missouri State 0 in 2015
        54—NDSU 54, South Dakota 0 in 2012
        52—NDSU 52, Indiana State 0 in 2017
        52—NDSU 59, Western Illinois 7 in 2015
        48—NDSU 65, Southern Illinois 17 in 2018
 
LEAGUE LEADERS: It's still too early for title talk just two games into the conference schedule, but eight-time reigning champion North Dakota State is in a familiar position atop the league standings. NDSU has played only eight conference games since the beginning of 2011 without holding at least a share of first place in the Missouri Valley Football Conference. The Bison fell out of first place for three weeks in 2012, three weeks in 2015 and two weeks in 2016.
 
BISON ON 27-GAME WINNING STREAK: North Dakota State's current 27-game winning streak is the second longest in FCS history behind the record 33-game Bison winning streak from 2012-14. Five Division I programs have multiple streaks of at least 27 wins including Yale and Penn with two each in the 1880s and 1890s, Oklahoma's three in the 1950s and 1970s, and Miami (Fla.) with two from 1990-93 and 2000-03. Oklahoma owns the FBS record with 47 consecutive wins from 1953-57.
        FCS Longest Winning Streaks
        33—North Dakota State, 2012-14
        27—North Dakota State, 2017-present
        26—James Madison, 2016-17

HOME STREAK AT 22 GAMES: North Dakota State's 22 straight home wins is the longest active home winning streak in FCS and second longest in Division I behind Alabama's 29 straight. It is the fourth longest in Missouri Valley Football Conference history, four shy of the conference record set by NDSU in 2015. The Bison record for consecutive home wins is 28 from 1964-69. NDSU had a 36-game home unbeaten streak 1964-71 including a 1970 season-opening tie with Eastern Michigan.
        NDSU Longest Home Winning Streaks
        28—Started 9/12/1964 vs. MSU Moorhead, ended 9/12/1970 by Eastern Michigan (T, 14-14)
        26—Started 10/27/2012 vs. Southern Illinois, ended 10/17/2015 by South Dakota (L, 24-21)
        23—Started 9/13/1980 vs. Northern Arizona, ended 9/15/1984 by MSU Mankato (L, 28-21)
        22—Started 9/2/2017 vs. Mississippi Valley State to present
        22—Started 10/24/1998 vs. South Dakota State, ended 9/28/2002 by Augustana (L, 23-6)

        MVFC Longest Home Winning Streaks
        26—North Dakota State, 2012-15
        25—Northern Iowa, 1989-92
        23—Northern Iowa, 1983-87
        22—North Dakota State, 2017-present
 
AGAINST THE TOP 25: NDSU's last four victories have all come against FCS Top 25 opponents, and the Bison have defeated 16 ranked teams on their current 27-game winning streak. That includes 12 teams ranked in the top 10 nationally, and NDSU has outscored those 12 by an average of 37-13.
 
TOP-FIVE OPPONENTS: With a 27-16 win over then No. 4-ranked UC Davis, North Dakota State improved to 16-1 since the beginning of the 2011 national championship season against opponents ranked in the top five of the Football Championship Subdivision. That includes an 9-1 record in the Fargodome, where the only loss in the past eight seasons to a top-five opponent came in the 2016 national semifinals to James Madison, 27-17.
 
COFIELD JOINS 100-YARD RUSHING CLUB: Junior running back Adam Cofield had his first career 100-yard rushing game against Northern Iowa finishing with 15 carries for 104 yards and two scores. He is the fourth NDSU player to crack the 100-yard mark this season joining quarterback Trey Lance (116 vs. Butler), and running backs Kobe Johnson (101 at Delaware) and Ty Brooks (104 vs. UC Davis and 106 at Illinois State). Brooks has topped the 100-yard mark six times in his career.
 
ELLEFSON TIGHT END TOUCHDOWN LEADER: North Dakota State's Ben Ellefson caught his 14th career touchdown pass at Illinois State to tie Jerimiah Wurzbacher's NDSU career record for touchdowns receptions by a tight end. Ellefson and Wurzbacher are part of a three-way tie with wide receiver Warren Holloway for 10th place overall in NDSU career TD receptions.
 
LANCE LEADING PASSER IN FCS: Redshirt freshman quarterback Trey Lance is the FCS leader in passing efficiency with a 200.2 rating through six starts. Lance is 74 of 105 passing for 1,032 yards, 15 touchdowns, zero interceptions and ranks fourth in FCS with a 70.5 completion percentage. He is one of three FCS quarterbacks yet to throw an interception this year (minimum 15 attempts/game). Lance ranks fifth in yards per pass attempt (9.83) and seventh in points responsible for (21.0/game).
 
BISON WINNING ON THIRD DOWN: North Dakota State, James Madison and Princeton are the only three teams ranked among the FCS top 10 in both third down conversions and third down defense. NDSU is fifth on offensive third down conversions at 54.3 percent (38 of 70) and tied for sixth in third down defense with opponents converting only 27.7 percent (23 of 83). Quarterback Trey Lance is 17 of 32 passing on third down with 14 conversions and six TDs, and Lance leads the Bison with 10 first downs and three TDs on third-down rushing plays. Of NDSU's 57 third-down offensive plays, only half (36 of 70) have been third-and-5 or longer.
 
PLAYERS OF THE WEEK: North Dakota State has had five players combine for seven Player of the Week awards in the Missouri Valley Football Conference this season:
        — Trey Lance, Offensive (9/1) & Newcomer (9/1, 10/6)...301 yards and six touchdowns in the 57-10 win over Butler...Went 10 of 11 passing for 185 yards and four touchdowns with five carries for 116 yards and two scores...First NDSU freshman to start a season opener at quarterback...Accounted for 232 yards at Illinois State including 12 of 15 passing for 189 yards and three TDs.
        — Zack Johnson, Offensive Line (9/9)...12 knockdowns and zero pressures in 38-7 win over North Dakota...Graded 98% in his second career start at right guard after an All-America junior year at right tackle...Helped NDSU rush for 266 yards and 5.3 yards per carry, convert 9 of 14 third downs, and keep the ball for more than 35 minutes in the contest.
        — Griffin Crosa, Special Teams (9/15)...Made five PAT kicks and two field goals from 46 and 23 yards in the 47-22 victory at Delaware.
        — Garret Wegner, Special Teams (10/13)...Averaged 50.7 yards on three punts with two inside the 20 and a season-long of 60 yards in the win over Northern Iowa.
        — Karson Schoening, Offensive Line (10/14)...Graded 94 percent with zero missed assignments on 69 snaps in the win over Northern Iowa...Helped NDSU rush for 347 yards with zero sacks allowed against the Panthers, ranked sixth in sacks and allowing less than 100 rushing yards/game.
 
ELLEFSON NAMED TO GOOD WORKS TEAM: North Dakota State tight end Ben Ellefson was named to the Allstate AFCA Good Works Team, which recognizes 22 players in college football for outstanding leadership and commitment to giving back in their local communities. Fans are invited to visit ESPN.com/Allstate to vote for the Good Works Team captain once per day through Nov. 22. The team will be recognized at this year's Allstate Sugar Bowl. Ellefson is the eighth NDSU player to be named to the Good Works Team.
 
ELLEFSON SEMIFINALIST FOR CAMPBELL TROPHY: North Dakota State tight end Ben Ellefson is one of 185 semifinalists for the William V. Campbell Trophy presented by Mazda. The award recognizes the absolute best football scholar-athlete in the nation for his combined academic success, football performance and exemplary leadership. He is the 11th Bison player to be recognized as a semifinalist and follows 2018 finalist Easton Stick.
 
10th LARGEST CROWD FOR BISON FOOTBALL: The crowd of 34,544 for NDSU-Butler in the first Division I game at Target Field in Minneapolis was the 10th largest crowd in Bison history. Only eight other schools outside of the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, SEC and Pac-12 drew larger crowds on opening weekend: BYU, South Florida, Memphis, UCF, San Diego State, UAB, Cincinnati and UTEP.
 
BISON RETURN SEVEN FULL-TIME STARTERS: North Dakota State returns three offensive starters and four defensive starters from last year's 15-0 national championship team. Offensive linemen Dillon Radunz and Zack Johnson return with tight end Ben Ellefson on an offensive unit that will have a new quarterback and lost 65% of its rushing yards, 80% of its receptions and 84% of its receiving yards. NDSU still has depth at running back where Ty Brooks, Adam Cofield and Saybein Clark combined for 200 carries, 1,391 yards and 12 touchdowns last year. On defense, the Bison return their leading tackler in Buck Buchanan Award candidate Jabril Cox at linebacker, second-leading sack-getter in defensive end Derrek Tuszka, leading pass defender James Hendricks at safety, and cornerback Marquise Bridges.
 
COX ON BUCHANAN WATCH LIST: Junior linebacker Jabril Cox was on the 25-man preseason watch list for the STATS FCS Buck Buchanan Award presented annually to the top defensive player in the FCS. Cox finished fourth in the voting last year after being selected as the Defensive Player of the Year in the Missouri Valley Football Conference. He led the Bison defense and ranked 10th in the MVFC with 91 total tackles in 2018 and finished with 9.5 tackles for loss, 4.0 sacks, four interceptions including two for touchdowns, three pass breakups and seven quarterback hurries. He was the 2017 MVFC Newcomer of the Year and Freshman of the Year.
 
WEGNER ON WATCH LIST FOR FCS PUNTER OF THE YEAR: Junior punter Garret Wegner is on the preseason watch list for the inaugural FCS Punter of the Year award by the Augusta Sports Council, which has been home to the Ray Guy Award since 2000 honoring the nation's best punters as the FBS level. Wegner was All-MVFC first team in 2018 averaging 43.0 yards on 59 punts, which was 11th in the FCS. He had 14 punts of 50-plus yards, a league-best 27 punts inside the 20-yard line, and another 16 fair catches. NDSU opponents returned 20 punts for just 3.3 yards per return and the Bison ranked sixth nationally in net punting with a 39.15 average.
 
FIVE PRESEASON ALL-AMERICANS: North Dakota State has five preseason All-Americans including junior linebacker Jabril Cox and senior offensive lineman Zack Johnson, who were each named to first teams by HERO Sports, Athlon Sports and STATS FCS. Junior offensive lineman Dillon Radunz was second team by HERO Sports, senior defensive end Derrek Tuszka was named to the STATS FCS second team and HERO Sports third team, and junior punter Garret Wegner was third team by STATS FCS.
 
PRESEASON ALL-CONFERENCE: North Dakota State led the way with six players named to the Preseason All-Missouri Valley Football Conference team. Offensive linemen Zack Johnson and Dillon Radunz joined linebacker Jabril Cox, safety James Hendricks, defensive end Derrek Tuszka and punter Garret Wegner on the first team. NDSU had three honorable mentions in tight end Ben Ellefson, defensive tackle Cole Karcz and long snapper Ross Kennelly.
 
15-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS: North Dakota State won its 15th football national championship in 2018. NDSU claimed three College Division national championships in 1965, 1968 and 1969, five Division II titles in 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988 and 1990, and was the first team in college football history to win five straight national titles with FCS crowns in 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015 before winning again in 2017.
 
BISON WIN RECORD SEVENTH FCS TITLE: North Dakota State has won seven of the last eight FCS championships to surpass Georgia Southern's record of six FCS titles. The Bison are 7-0 in seven FCS title game appearances.
        Most FCS Championship Game Appearances
        8 - Georgia Southern (6-2)
        7 - North Dakota State (7-0)
        7 - Youngstown State (4-3)
        7 - Montana (2-5)
 
FIFTH UNDEFEATED, UNTIED FCS CHAMPION: Last year's 15-0 North Dakota State team was the fifth to go undefeated and untied in winning the FCS championship joining Eastern Kentucky in 1982 (13-0), Georgia Southern in 1989 (15-0), Marshall in 1996 (15-0) and NDSU in 2013 (15-0).
 
UNBEATEN SEASONS: Eleven teams have gone unbeaten in Missouri Valley Football Conference games since 1985, and only North Dakota State (2013 and 2018) and Southern Illinois (2009) have done it through an eight-game conference schedule. There have been 15 undefeated NDSU teams since 1894 including the 2018 national champions (15-0).
 
EIGHT STRAIGHT CONFERENCE TITLES: NDSU won its eighth consecutive Missouri Valley Football Conference championship in 2018, topping the league record seven straight by Northern Iowa in the early 1990s. NDSU won outright MVFC titles in 2012, 2013, 2017 and 2018. North Dakota State has won 35 football conference championships including 26 in the North Central Conference (last in 1994) and one in the Great West Football Conference (2006).
        Most Consecutive Conference Titles in Division I Football
        14 - Oklahoma (Big 8, 1946-59)
        12 - Montana (Big Sky, 1998-09)
        10 - BYU (WAC, 1976-85)
        9 - Florida State (ACC, 1992-00)
        8 - Nebraska (Big 8, 1910-17)
        8 - North Dakota State (MVFC, 2011-18)
 
BISON PICKED TO WIN VALLEY FOOTBALL CROWN: North Dakota State topped the Missouri Valley Football Conference preseason poll with 392 points and 32 of the 40 first-place votes from the league's coaches, media and sports information directors. South Dakota State earned the second spot in the poll, finishing with 348 total points and four first-place votes. Illinois State (289 points), Indiana State (279) and Northern Iowa (266) were tightly bunched for third, fourth and fifth place, while Illinois State (3) and Indiana State (1) also received first-place mentions. South Dakota came in sixth followed by Youngstown State, Western Illinois, Southern Illinois and Missouri State (80).
 
BISON AT HOME: NDSU is 77-6 at home since 2010 including a 24-1 mark in the FCS playoffs. The Bison have the longest active home winning streak in the FCS at 22 games and NDSU has won 66 of the last 68 home games over non-conference opponents with its last home loss coming in the 2016 semifinals to James Madison. NDSU is 26-4 at home all-time against FCS Top 10 teams. North Dakota State ranked fifth in the FCS last year with an average home attendance of 18,106.
 
DECADE LEADER:  North Dakota State's 127 wins this decade are more than any other program in college football. NDSU is 118-8 since the beginning of 2011, the first of five consecutive national championship seasons. North Dakota State holds the distinction of being the winningest Division II program of the 1980s, going 103-20-2 from 1980-89 with four national titles in that span.
 
SUCCESS VS. THE FBS: NDSU has a 9-3 record against Football Bowl Subdivision opponents and has won six in a row against FBS foes since 2010 with wins at Kansas (6-3), Minnesota (37-24), Colorado State (22-7), Kansas State (24-21), Iowa State (34-14) and 11th-ranked Iowa (23-21). NDSU has three future FBS games against Oregon in 2020, Arizona in 2022 and Colorado in 2024. NDSU's first three FBS wins were against Ball State (2006), Central Michigan (2007) and Minnesota (2007).
 
ANNIVERSARY SEASONS: Three milestones are being celebrated this year with the 150th anniversary of college football, the 125th anniversary of NDSU football, and the 35th anniversary of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. NDSU has commissioned artist Terrence Fogarty for a limited-edition commemorative painting on sale at GoBison.com/painting. It features iconic images from the program's humble beginnings in 1894 through NDSU's modern-day FCS dynasty.
 
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Players Mentioned

Lance Dunn

#10 Lance Dunn

RB
5' 9"
Senior
Dallas Freeman

#83 Dallas Freeman

WR
6' 1"
Senior
Nate Jenson

#85 Nate Jenson

TE
6' 6"
Senior
Easton Stick

#12 Easton Stick

QB
6' 2"
Senior
Marquise Bridges

#9 Marquise Bridges

CB
5' 11"
Senior
Ty Brooks

#28 Ty Brooks

RB
5' 9"
Senior
Saybein Clark

#30 Saybein Clark

RB
6' 1"
Redshirt Freshman
Adam Cofield

#18 Adam Cofield

RB
5' 11"
Junior
Jabril Cox

#42 Jabril Cox

LB
6' 3"
Junior
Ben Ellefson

#82 Ben Ellefson

TE
6' 3"
Senior

Players Mentioned

Lance Dunn

#10 Lance Dunn

5' 9"
Senior
RB
Dallas Freeman

#83 Dallas Freeman

6' 1"
Senior
WR
Nate Jenson

#85 Nate Jenson

6' 6"
Senior
TE
Easton Stick

#12 Easton Stick

6' 2"
Senior
QB
Marquise Bridges

#9 Marquise Bridges

5' 11"
Senior
CB
Ty Brooks

#28 Ty Brooks

5' 9"
Senior
RB
Saybein Clark

#30 Saybein Clark

6' 1"
Redshirt Freshman
RB
Adam Cofield

#18 Adam Cofield

5' 11"
Junior
RB
Jabril Cox

#42 Jabril Cox

6' 3"
Junior
LB
Ben Ellefson

#82 Ben Ellefson

6' 3"
Senior
TE