THIS WEEK: After a 57-10 rout of Butler at Target Field in Minneapolis, No. 1-ranked North Dakota State (1-0) makes its home debut this week against Division I FCS independent North Dakota (1-0). Game time is 2:30 p.m. at Gate City Bank Field at the Fargodome (18,700). UND, formerly in the Big Sky Conference, will join the Missouri Valley Football Conference in 2020. The Fighting Hawks beat Drake 47-7 last Saturday.
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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 p.m. The game will be available to
ESPN+ subscribers on the ESPN app.
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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
Nate Tanguay 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.
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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.
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TICKETS: Single-game tickets for all six NDSU home games went on sale Aug. 1 and sold out for the eighth straight year. A limited number of additional single-game tickets become available each game week and will go on sale Fridays at 7 a.m. online only at
GoBison.com/tickets.
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THE SERIES: This is the 112th meeting between North Dakota State and North Dakota, the 10th most played series among current FCS programs. UND has a 62-46-3 lead all-time dating back to 1894, when NDSU won the first two meetings 24-6 in Grand Forks and 20-4 in Fargo. NDSU won the only Division I meeting between the two schools 34-9 in 2015 at the Fargodome, where UND has a 4-2 record.
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LANCE PLAYER OF THE WEEK: North Dakota State's
Trey Lance is the Missouri Valley Football Conference Offensive Player and Newcomer of the Week after accounting for 301 yards and six touchdowns in the 57-10 win over Butler. Lance was 10 of 11 passing for 185 yards and four touchdowns with five carries for 116 yards and two scores. He was the first freshman to start a season-opener at quarterback for NDSU.
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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 and most in the FCS this season. Only eight other schools outside of the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, SEC and Pac-12 drew larger crowds on opening weekend:
       Utah at BYU - 61,626
       Wisconsin at South Florida - 46,704
       Ole Miss at Memphis - 44,107
       Florida A&M at UCF - 44,073
       Weber State at San Diego State - 40,222
       Alabama State at UAB - 39,165
       UCLA at Cincinnati - 38,032
       Houston Baptist at UTEP - 34,646
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SIX TRUE FRESHMEN PLAY: Six true freshmen made their collegiate debut for North Dakota State in the season-opener against Butler: wide receiver
Jake Lippe, safety
Julian Wlodarczyk, running back
Kobe Johnson, kicker
Griffin Crosa, tight end
Travis Yohnke and defensive tackle
Javier Derritt. Crosa converted all seven PAT kicks, Johnson rushed six times for 63 yards (10.5 ypc) and Derritt assisted on one tackle.
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SEASON OPENER NOTES: North Dakota State improved to 84-33-6 all-time in season-opening games with its 57-10 win over Butler. NDSU has won 14 of 16 openers as a Division I program. NDSU's
Matt Entz won his head coaching debut against Butler, becoming the fourth straight Bison head coach to start with a victory.
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NEUTRAL SITE GAMES: North Dakota State improved to 22-6-1 in neutral-site games with the win over Butler. The victory at Target Field was the 14th straight neutral-site win for the Bison since 1985, but just the second time the Bison have played their season-opener at a neutral site. NDSU won the 1967 opener against Montana State in Great Falls.
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HOME OPENERS: North Dakota State has won 20 straight home-opening games since 1999, which is the second longest active streak among FCS programs. North Dakota won its 33rd straight home opener last weekend against Drake. Central Arkansas (19) hosts Abilene Christian on Sept. 14, Wofford (18) hosts Samford on Sept. 14, and Harvard (18) hosts Brown on Sept. 27.
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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.
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12-GAME SCHEDULE: While 12-game regular season schedules are the norm for the Football Bowl Subdivision, this year's 12-game schedule in the Football Championship Subdivision is a rare departure from the usual 11-game slate based on the 2019 calendar. Teams are not required to play 12 games. NDSU opponents North Dakota and Missouri State each have 11-game schedules with two bye weeks. The last time NDSU played a 12-game regular season was 2014 when the Bison beat Iowa State 34-14 in the opener and went on to win their fourth FCS national championship. The next 12-game schedule opportunity is in 2024.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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CAPTAINS: North Dakota State's six captains in 2019 selected by a vote of team members are safety
James Hendricks, cornerback
Marquise Bridges, running back
Ty Brooks, tight end
Ben Ellefson, offensive lineman
Zack Johnson and defensive end
Derrek Tuszka.
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MERCADEL GETS SIXTH YEAR: After missing the 2018 season with a knee injury, North Dakota State linebacker
Aaron Mercadel has received a sixth year of eligibility in 2020. That news brings NDSU's current senior class to just 14 after the Bison boasted their largest outgoing class ever with 24 seniors on the 2018 team.
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BISON ON 22-GAME WINNING STREAK: North Dakota State owns the longest active winning streak in the FCS at 22 games, which is second longest in Missouri Valley Football Conference history and tied for fifth longest in FCS history behind the record 33-game Bison winning streak from 2012 to 2014.
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FCS Longest Winning Streaks
       33 - North Dakota State, 2012-14
       26 - James Madison, 2016-17
       24 - Montana, 2001-02
       24 - Penn, 1992-95
       22 - Harvard, 2013-15
       22 - North Dakota State, 2017-present
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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.
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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.
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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)
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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).
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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).
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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).
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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)
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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).
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BISON AT HOME: NDSU is 74-6 at home since 2010 including a 24-1 mark in the FCS playoffs. The Bison have won 64 of the last 66 home games over non-conference opponents with its last home loss coming in the 2016 semifinals to James Madison. NDSU is 24-4 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.
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DECADE LEADER:Â North Dakota State's 122 wins this decade are more than any other program in college football. NDSU is 113-8 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.
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FCS Winningest Teams, 2010s (by wins)
       122 - North Dakota State (121-13)
       92 - Sam Houston State (92-33)
       90 - Eastern Washington (90-31)
       85 - Jacksonville State (85-29)
       82 - James Madison (82-34)
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FCS Winningest Teams, 2010s (by pct.)
       .904 - North Dakota State (122-13)
       .778 - Harvard (70-20)
       .746 - Jacksonville State (85-29)
       .744 - Eastern Washington (90-31)
       .736 - Sam Houston State (92-33)
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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).
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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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