AMEDA G y 2019 UTAH STATE FOOTBALL
CALEB REPP
RILEY BURT
GAME DAY
01 09.07.19
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STRIPE THE STADIUM
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UTAH STATE FOOTBALL 12 Conference Championships • 13 Bowl Games • 12 NFL Draft Picks Since 2011 • 72 All-Mountain West Selections (2013-18)
AGGIES HOST STONY BROOK IN HOME OPENER SATURDAY NIGHT
/// 2019 SCHEDULE / RESULTS /// DATE A 30 S 7 S 21 S 28 O 5 O 19 O 26 N 2 N 9 N 16 N 23 N 30 D 7
OPPONENT at Wake Forest STONY BROOK at San Diego State* COLORADO STATE* at LSU NEVADA* at Air Force* BYU at Fresno State* WYOMING* BOISE STATE* at New Mexico* MW Championship
TV TIME/RESULT ACC Network L 35-38 Facebook 5:30 pm CBSSN 8:30 pm CBSSN 5:30 pm TBA TBA ESPN Networks TBA ESPN Networks TBA ESPN Networks TBA CBSSN 5 pm ESPN Networks TBA CBSSN 8:30 pm Facebook 2 pm ESPN 2 pm
* Mountain West Game All times Mountain. Home games in BOLD CAPS.
TV: FACEBOOK (STADIUM) • Play-by-Play .................................................. Ari Wolfe • Analyst ....................................................... Eddie Royal • Reporter .............................................. Dani Klupenger • Web ................... Facebook.com/stadiumcollegefootball RADIO: AGGIE SPORTS NETWORK • Play-by-Play .......................................... Scott Garrard • Analyst ....................................................... Kevin White • Online ..................... 1280thezone.com / Tunein.com • National ..................................................... Internet 990 SOCIAL MEDIA: #AGGIESALLTHEWAY • Twitter/Instagram ............................. @USUFootball • Facebook ................................................. USUFootball • YouTube .......................................... UtahStateFootball • Live Stats ................. UtahState.Statbroadcast.com
/// AGGIE RADIO NETWORKS /// • Every Utah State football game can be heard live on the Aggie Radio Network. Scott Garrard serves as the play-by-play announcer, while former USU quarterback Kevin White (1988-89) will provide color analysis. Games can also be heard on the Internet (www.UtahStateAggies.com) by clicking on the ‘Listen Live’ link, as well as on the TuneIn App. • Salt Lake City .............. KZNS (1280 AM/97.5 FM) • Logan ......................................... KBLU-LP (92.3 FM) • Cache Valley ............ KACH (1340 AM/105.5 FM) • Price ................................................. KRPX (95.3 FM) • Green River ................................... KRPX (102.7 FM) • Moab .............................................. KRPX (100.3 FM) • Orangeville ...................................... KRPX (95.9 FM)
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Utah State had 11 players appear in their first-ever Aggie game last weekend at Wake Forest. Furthermore, nine players made their first-career start for USU. /// THE MATCHUP ///
STONY BROOK (1-0) vs. UTAH STATE (0-1)
Saturday, Sept. 7, 2019 • 5:30 p.m. (MT) • Logan, Utah • Maverik Stadium (25,100)
/// GAME 2 INFORMATION ///
@USUFOOTBALL
Game will be first of two Utah State contests aired exclusively on Facebook.
STONY BROOK SEAWOLVES 2019 Record: 1-0, 0-0 Colonial Athletic Association Last Game: Aug. 29, 2019 • W, 35-10 vs. Bryant
UTAH STATE AGGIES 2019 Record: 0-1, 0-0 Mountain West Last Game: Aug. 30, 2019 • L, 35-38 at Wake Forest
Head Coach: Chuck Priore • School Record: 85-66 (14th year) • Career Record: 123-75 (20th year) • Non-Conference Record: 68-46 (20th year) • vs. Utah State: 0-0
Head Coach: Gary Andersen • School Record: 26-25 (5th year) • Career Record: 52-53 (10th year) • Non-Conference Record: 20-20 (10th year) • vs. Stony Brook: 0-0
Statistical Leaders • Pass: Tyquell Fields (10-20, 194, 1 TD, 1 INT) • Rush: Isaiah White (13-54, 2 TD) • Rec.: Andrew Trent (3-79) • Def.: Augie Contressa (7 TKL, 0.5 TFL)
Statistical Leaders • Pass: Jordan Love (33-48, 416, 3 TD, 3 INT) • Rush: Jaylen Warren (19-141, 1 TD) • Rec.: Siaosi Mariner (8-118, 1 TD) • Def.: David Woodward (24 TKL, 3.5 TFL, 2 FF)
/// KICKOFF COVERAGE ///
• Utah State is looking to start its season with a 1-1 record for the seventh-straight year. The last time USU began a season with consecutive losses was during the 2009 campaign. • Utah State has won each of its last seven home games inside Maverik Stadium and is 35-9 in its last 44 home games. USU has also won six straight non-conference home games and is 18-3 in its last 21 non-conference home games. All-time, Utah State is 147-105 (.583) in Maverik Stadium. • Utah State was unstoppable at home in 2018 as it posted double-digit wins and scored at least 40 points in all six games, and won each game by an average margin of 38.2 points (59.5-21.3) as it out-scored its opponents 357-128. In fact, USU scored 50-plus points five times and 60-plus points four times at home last season. During its six home games in 2018, USU averaged 59.5 points and 608.0 yards of total offense (370.3 passing, 237.7 rushing), while allowing 21.3 points and 345.2 yards of total offense (201.3 passing, 143.8 rushing). • Utah State head coach Gary Andersen is 16-7 (.696) inside Maverik Stadium, including winning each of his last eight home games. In non-conference games, USU is 8-1 at home under Andersen. Overall, Utah State is 16-4 in Andersen’s last 20 games as head coach and those four losses are by a combined nine points. • Utah State has won 17 of its last 28 games played during the month of September, including 14 straight at home, and is 5-2 all-time in games played on Sept. 7. • Utah State is 4-1 in its last five games following a loss and 5-2 in its last seven games following a loss under Andersen. • Utah State has won each of its last 12 games against Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) schools dating back to the 2000 season. All-time, USU is 103-34-8 (.738) against FCS opponents. This is the first-ever meeting between the Aggies and Seawolves, and their first-ever game against a team from the Colonial Athletic Association.
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@USUFOOTBALL
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UTAHSTATEAGGIES.COM
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GAME NOTES
/// MOUNTAIN WEST STANDINGS /// MOUNTAIN Air Force Boise State New Mexico Wyoming Colorado State Utah State
MW Overall 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-1
WEST Hawai’i Nevada UNLV San Diego State San José State Fresno State
MW Overall 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-1
THIS WEEK’S GAMES (ALL TIMES MOUNTAIN) Friday, Sept. 6 • Marshall at Boise State (ESPN2) 7 pm Saturday, Sept. 7 • Western Illinois at Colorado St. (AT&T) • San Diego State at UCLA (Pac-12) • Wyoming at Texas State (ESPN+) • Stony Brook at Utah State (Facebook) • Nevada at Oregon (Pac-12) • Tulsa at San José State (ESPN3) • Arkanasas at UNLV (Facebook) • Minnesota at Fresno State (CBSSN) • Oregon State at Hawai’i (Facebook)
2 pm 2:15 pm 5 pm 5:30 pm 5:30 pm 7 pm 8 pm 8:30 pm 10 pm
/// MOUNTAIN WEST PRESEASON POLLS /// • Utah State was picked second in the Mountain Division of the 2019 Mountain West preseason polls.
MOUNTAIN DIVISION Team (First-Place Votes) Points 1. Boise State (15) 120 2. UTAH STATE (6) 108 3. Air Force 73 4. Wyoming 66 5. Colorado State 52 6. New Mexico 22
UTAH STATE TRAVELING WITHOUT THE ‘NIGHT RUNNER’ • Utah State’s sidelines will not be the same as Steve Wiley (1950-2018) passed away last December at the age of 67. Wiley drove USU’s football equipment for nearly 20 years, beginning with a trip to New Mexico State on Oct. 21, 1995. His last road trip was in 2013. Volunteering his own time and personal vehicles, Wiley drove approximately 150,000 miles on more than 100 road trips. After retiring as a machinist, Wiley spent the last six-plus years as USU Athletics’ assistant equipment manager. USU will honor Wiley prior to its home opener. ANDERSEN BEGINS SECOND TOUR-OF-DUTY WITH UTAH STATE • Utah State head coach Gary Andersen is beginning his second tour-of-duty with Utah State after previously serving as the head coach from 2009-12. Andersen is the first of 27 coaches in USU history to serve as head coach multiple times. • When initially hired by Utah State on Dec. 4, 2008, Andersen inherited a program that had suffered through 11 straight losing seasons and only had two winning campaigns in 28 years. Fast forward six years and Andersen inherited a program that has now appeared in seven bowl games in the past eight years after playing in just four bowl games prior to his arrival. • In just his third year at Utah State, Andersen’s 2011 club became the first Aggie team to win seven games since 1993 and the first to play in a bowl game in 14 years. The following season, Andersen led USU to its best season ever with a school-record 11 wins, going undefeated in the Western Athletic Conference and capturing its first outright league title since 1936. USU also won just its second-ever bowl game that season with a 41-15 victory against Toledo in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. USU finished the 2012 campaign with an 11-2 record and was one of just two teams in school history at the time, along with the 1961 club, to finish the season nationally ranked as it was 16th in the final Associated Press poll, 17th in the final Coaches poll and 23rd in the final BCS standings. • During his four years with the Aggies from 2009-12, Andersen posted a 26-24 record, including the school’s first back-to-back winning seasons (7-6 in 2011 and 11-2 in 2012) since 1979-80. He was also the first coach since Phil Krueger (1973-75) to notch an overall winning record. • During his final two seasons at Utah State, Andersen led the Aggies to an 18-8 record, including an 11-2 conference mark.
WOODWARD NAMED CHUCK BEDNARIK AWARD PLAYER OF THE WEEK • Junior LB David Woodward was named the Chuck Bednarik Award National Defensive Player of the Week following his performance in Utah State’s season opener at Wake Forest as he recorded a career-high 24 tackles, which included 1.0 sacks and a career-high-tying 3.5 tackles for loss, to go along with a career-high two forced fumbles. Nationally, those 24 tackles and two forced fumbles are the most in the nation this season, while his 3.5 tackles for loss are tied for the fourth-most in the country.
• For Woodward, it is his 10th-career double-digit tackle game, including his fourth in a row dating back to last season. It is also his second-career 20-tackle game as he had 20 stops at Colorado State last season.
• Junior QB Jordan Love was named the Mountain West Preseason Offensive Player of the Year, while senior DE Tipa Galeai, senior CB DJ Williams, junior KR Savon Scarver and junior LB David Woodward all joined Love on the preseason all-MW team. • Utah State’s five players named to the 25-member Mountain West preseason team are tied with Boise State for the most in the league and the most in its seven years in the conference.
UTAH STATE
STRIPE THE STADIUM • For the fourth time in as many years, Utah State will be ‘Striping the Stadium’ when it hosts Stony Brook in its 2019 home opener. All fans sitting in even sections of Maverik Stadium are encouraged to wear white, while fans sitting in odd sections should wear navy blue.
• Overall, those 24 tackles are tied for the second-most in both school and Mountain West history. Brian Longuevan holds the school record with 26 tackles against Weber State in 1974, while Johndale Carty also had 24 stops against Oklahoma State in 1996. Nevada’s Albert Rosette holds the MW record with 25 tackles against Air Force in 2012, while Nevada’s Asauni Rufus had 24 stops against Air Force in 2017.
WEST DIVISION Team (First-Place Votes) Points 1. Fresno State (17) 122 2. San Diego State (3) 106 3. Nevada 74 4. Hawai’i (1) 67 5. UNLV 51 6. San José State 21
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UTAH STATE HOSTS STONY BROOK IN HOME OPENER SATURDAY NIGHT • Utah State hosts Stony Brook on Saturday, Sept. 7, at 5:30 p.m., in its home opener. The game will be aired exclusively on Facebook, a platform that has more than 100 million video views daily, with Ari Wolfe (play-by-play), Eddie Royal (analyst) and Dani Klupenger (reporter) on the call. Live audio of the game is available on www.UtahStateAggies.com.
WARREN HAS BEST DEBUT BY AGGIE RUNNING BACK IN SCHOOL HISTORY • Junior RB Jaylen Warren had the best debut by an Aggie running back in school history last weekend as he carried the ball 19 times for 141 yards, which included runs of 59 and 43 yards, and one touchdown. In fact, Warren is the first running back in school history to rush for 100 yards in his first-ever game. MARINER THIRD-EVER AGGIE TO POST 100-YARD RECEIVING GAME IN DEBUT • Senior graduate transfer WR Siaosi Mariner became just the third player in school history to record 100 receiving yards in his Aggie debut, as he caught a career-high eight passes for a career-best 118 yards, including a 17-yard touchdown, against Wake Forest. In fact, it was Mariner’s first-ever 100-yard receiving game and his fifth-career touchdown reception. The only other Aggies to have 100 receiving yards in their first-ever USU game was Ken Thompson, who caught seven passes for 150 yards against San José State in 1979, and Kevin Curtis, who caught 11 passes for 171 yards against Utah in 2001. 2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM
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GAME NOTES SCOUTING STONY BROOK • Stony Brook, which is 1-0 on the season following its 35-10 home win against Bryant last weekend, returns 11 starters (O-3, D-8) and 54 letterwinners from last year’s team that went 5-3 in the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) to tie for third place. The Seawolves finished the season with a 7-5 record after losing to No. 20 Southeast Missouri in the opening round of the NCAA Division I Football Championship, 28-14. This season, Stony Brook is picked to finish in sixth place in the CAA, while senior DL Sam Kamara, senior RB Isaiah White and sophomore OL Kyle Nunez were all named to the CAA preseason all-conference team. Furthermore, graduate transfer WR Jean Constant was named a preseason first-team All-American by STATS FCS. Kamara and Nunez both earned second-team all-CAA honors last season, while senior CB Gavin Heslop and junior CB TJ Morrison were both named to the third team. In their win against Bryant last weekend, the Seawolves were led by junior QB Tyquell Fields, who was 10-of-20 passing for 194 yards with one touchdown and one interception. Senior RB Isaiah White carried the ball 13 times for 54 yards with two touchdowns and senior WR Andrew Trent caught three passes for 79 yards. Defensively, junior DB Augie Contressa had seven tackles, including 0.5 tackles for loss, while junior LB Keirston Johnson also had seven tackles, including 0.5 tackles for loss. As a team, Stony Brook had 443 yards of total offense (247-rushing, 196-passing) as compared to just 205 yards (38-rushing, 167-passing) for Bryant. Chuck Priore has an 85-66 record in 14 seasons as Stony Brook’s head coach and a 123-75 mark in 20 years as a collegiate head coach. AGGIES AND SEAWOLVES SERIES HISTORY • Utah State and Stony Brook will be meeting for the first-time ever this weekend.
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/// STONY BROOK at UTAH STATE ///
/// STATISTICAL COMPARISON /// 2019 UTAH STATE STATS (0-1/0-0 MW) TEAM STATISTICS USU OPP Points/Game .......................................... 35.0 ........... 38.0 First Downs ............................................ 23.0 ........... 30.0 Rushing/Game .................................... 180.0 ......... 178.0 Passing/Game .................................... 416.0 ........ 401.0 Total Offense/Game .......................... 596.0 ......... 579.0 Fumbles-Lost ........................................... 0-0 ............. 2-1 Pen.Yds/Game .................................. 8/84.0 ....... 1/15.0 Time of Possession ........................... 23:47 ........ 36:13
AGGIES VERSUS THE STATE OF NEW YORK • This will be Utah State’s second-ever game against a team from New York as it posted a 23-7 road win at Army in 1969.
STATISTICAL LEADERS Passing C-A-I Pct Yds TD YPG Love 33-48-3 68.8 416 3 416.0
AGGIES FROM NEW YORK • According to available records, Utah State has had 20 football players from the state of New York all-time in Eddie LaClair (1950), who was from Fort Edward, George Robertson (1951), who was from Irvington, Paul Dinan (1951), who was from Irvington, Russell McGraw (1951-52), who was from Elmsford, Donald Hoeft (1952), who was from New York City, Leo Terrio (1952), who was from Fort Edward, Joe Armenio (1952), who was from Brooklyn, Ed Massero (1955), who was from Elmsford, Pete Lenotti (1957-58), who was from Mamaroneck, Harvey Goossens (1967), who was from Livonia, Bernard Bradley (1969), who was from Brooklyn, Al Knapp (1973-74), who was from Sidney, John Segretti (1973), who was from Bayside, Mike Waufle (1977-78), who was from Hornell, Rodney Cooke (1984), who was from New York City, James Suitt (1983-84), who was from the Bronx, Steve Glynn (1987), who was from Lynbrook, Ed Prossner (1988), who was from Rome, Ryan Duve (1988-90), who was from Clarence Center, and Dajuan Vandroos (2012-13), who was from the Bronx.
Rushing Warren Bright
UTAH STATE AGAINST THE COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION • Utah State has never faced a team from the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA), nor has head coach Gary Andersen. HOMETOWN PLAYERS • Utah State has 38 players in its program from the Beehive State, while Stony Brook has 70 players on its roster from the Empire State. HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!! • Utah State freshman LS Jesse Vasquez will celebrate his 18th birthday on Saturday, Sept. 7. UTAH STATE HAS SIX BOWL TEAMS ON ITS 2019 SCHEDULE • Utah State’s 2019 schedule features six teams that played in bowl games a year ago as Wake Forest played in the Birmingham Bowl (W, 37-34 vs. Memphis); San Diego State played in the DXL Frisco Bowl (L, 27-0 vs. Ohio); LSU played in the Fiesta Bowl (W, 40-32 vs. UCF); Nevada played in the NOVA Home Loans Arizona Bowl (W, 16-13 OT vs. Arkansas State); BYU played in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl (W, 49-18 vs. Western Michigan); and Boise State played in the First Responders Bowl (Canceled vs. Boston College). Furthermore, Stony Brook played in the NCAA Division I Football Championship (L, 28-14 vs. Southeast Missouri).
/// ON THIS DATE IN AGGIE FOOTBALL HISTORY ///
• Utah State posted a 27-20 overtime home win against Utah on Sept. 7, 2012, snapping a 12-game losing streak to the Utes. USU scored the first 13 points of the game on a blocked punt and a 15-yard touchdown pass from Chuckie Keeton to Joe Hill. Keeton also had a 4-yard touchdown pass to Kellen Bartlett in the fourth quarter. Kerwynn Williams then scored the game-winning touchdown in overtime on a 1-yard run and CB Will Davis broke up a fourth-down pass to seal the win. Williams rushed for 95 yards on a 17 carries, while Keeton completed 22-of-32 passes for 216 yards. Bojay Filimoeatu had a career-high 12 tackles, which included 2.5 tackles for loss. In all, the Aggies outgained the Utes, 380-325.
Att Net Avg TD YPG 19 141 7.4 1 141.0 9 37 4.1 1 37.0
Receiving Mariner Nathan
Rec Yds Avg TD YPG 8 118 14.8 1 118.0 6 83 13.8 1 83.0
Defense U-A-T TFL Int FF-FR Woodward 18-6-24 3.5 0 2-0 Lefeged Jr. 5-5-10 0.0 0 0-0
/// STATISTICAL COMPARISON /// 2019 STONY BROOK STATS (1-0/0-0 CAA) TEAM STATISTICS SB OPP Points/Game .......................................... 35.0 ........... 10.0 First Downs ............................................ 19.0 ........... 11.0 Rushing/Game .................................... 247.0 ........... 38.0 Passing/Game .................................... 196.0 ......... 167.0 Total Offense/Game .......................... 443.0 ......... 205.0 Fumbles-Lost ........................................... 1-1 ............. 1-0 Pen.Yds/Game .................................. 5/42.0 ....... 5/36.0 Time of Possession ........................... 28:43 ......... 31:17 STATISTICAL LEADERS Passing C-A-I Pct Yds TD YPG Fields 10-20-1 50.0 194 1 194.0 Cassidy 1-2-0 50.0 2 0 2.0 Rushing White Fields
Att Net Avg TD YPG 13 54 4.2 2 54.0 8 52 6.5 1 52.0
Receiving Trent Anderson
Rec Yds Avg TD YPG 3 79 26.3 0 79.0 1 50 50.0 0 50.0
Defense U-A-T TFL Int FF-FR Contressa 4-3-7 0.5 0 0-0 Johnson 3-4-7 0.5 0 0-0
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
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SENIOR FEATURE SIAOSI MARINER
SENIOR FEATURE
WIDE RECEIVER LOOKING TO BETTER HIS CHANCES OF PLAYING AT THE NEXT LEVEL
by Wade Denniston, USU Athletic Media Relations With the graduation of wide receivers Ron’quavion Tarver, Jalen Greene and Aaren Vaughns from Utah State’s recording-setting team in 2018, the Aggies were in desperate need of bodies at that position heading into the new season. They got a shot in the arm in the form of graduate transfer Siasoi Mariner, who joined Utah State for the 2019 campaign after spending his first four seasons at Utah. “During my second recruiting process, I wanted to go for more of a familiar territory, with people and coaches I knew – where it would be an easier transition for me,” Mariner said. “It ended up coming down to BYU and Utah State. I ended up choosing Utah State and it was really easy.” Easy for one reason: Utah State head coach Gary Andersen. “Coach Andersen is an easy guy to love,” Mariner said. “It was really easy to follow him to Utah State, and it was a no-brainer for me.” Andersen, who coached the Aggies for four seasons from 2009-12, officially returned to Utah State on Dec. 9, 2018. He spent the 2018 season at Utah as an associate head coach/ defensive line coach. In joining the Aggies, Mariner followed in the footsteps of former Ute Caleb Repp, who also spent his first four seasons at Utah. “It was Caleb that first decided to come to Utah State,” Mariner said. “I know that BYU was after him, too. He told me that he was going to come to Utah State and I knew what position he was in, and it was a really good decision for him to make. Caleb pulled the trigger to come to Utah State first and I kind of waited a little bit.” Another former Ute, linebacker Nick Heninger, also joined the Aggies as a grad transfer. Unlike Mariner and Repp, though, he has two years of eligibility remaining. “I believe they all trusted me and it’s awesome to have them here,” Andersen said. “If they were to go anywhere, I would’ve wanted them to be here. They’re good players, great kids and they’ve adjusted so well to the system. And, our kids let them jump right in to be a part of this football team. I want them to be successful and I hope in January, they get all they want out of their senior years. They’re special kids and I’m happy we could give them an opportunity and I’m happy they decided to come with us.” Mariner earned his bachelor’s degree in sociology from Utah and is now pursuing a master’s in physical education. While with the Utes, he appeared in 36 games with 22 starts, recording 52 catches for 712 yards and four touchdowns. He had 11 career receptions of 20 yards or longer. “The biggest thing Siaosi brings to the table here is his maturity,” said Utah State passing game coordinator/wide receivers coach Jason Phillips. “He is a veteran guy that has been playing college football for the last four years. He has been a great leader in our room, a quiet leader, but his work speaks for itself. He is going to be a solid contributor for us. His role will be no different than any other receiver’s role in the room, and that is to go out and play hard every
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play, and make plays.” Phillips has been impressed with the way Mariner has taken some of the younger Aggie receivers under his wing. “He is encouraging and teaching those guys what it is like to play college football,” Phillips said. “It is way different than high school and he understands that. He is helping those guys tremendously. He is a solid and funny guy, a true warrior, and I am happy to have him here.” In his final season at Utah, Mariner recorded 17 catches for 209 yards and a 24-yard touchdown against Weber State. He helped lead the Utes to the Pac-12 Championship game against Washington and a berth in the Holiday Bowl against Northwestern. Now, Mariner, who is back to wearing No. 80 on his jersey after switching to No. 8 last season, just wants to lead the Aggies to their first-ever Mountain West title in football. “I wear No. 80 because of Jerry Rice,” Mariner said. “When I first got to college, I was promised a number in the recruiting process. I was No. 27 and when they put that on my name plate, I read it and didn’t like it, so I made a lastminute switch to No. 80. I saw all of the great receivers who wore No. 80 in the past and I fell in love with it. “Last year, I thought it would be cool to get back to my high school number, which was 8. I didn’t have my best season, so maybe God is telling me that 80 is meant for me.” Mariner made his Utah State debut last Friday night at Wake Forest. The 6-foot-2, 195-pound native of Tustin, Calif., led the Aggies with eight receptions for 118 yards and one touchdown, which gave USU a 21-17 lead at the break. Once his collegiate career is officially over at the end of this season, the son of Anna Mariner
will look to take his talents to the next level. “I have dreams of playing at the next level and I feel like I will play at the next level,” he said. “That’s one of the reasons why I made the move from Utah to Utah State, to better my chances of getting to the next level. I want to show more of what I have to offer.” So far, so good. “He is a heady kid and he understands defenses and offenses,” Phillips said. “He asks all of the right questions, so he is learning to be a better player along the way and help elevate his game moving forward. His biggest attribute is the way he thinks. He thinks the game, he understands the game and he plays the game the right way.” If Mariner wasn’t playing football, he would be taking his talents to the hardwood. “I am the best football player that plays basketball in the nation,” Mariner said. “Football is actually my second love; basketball is my first love. I chose football because I’m a little bit taller and I know my height right now is probably good for a point guard. I do love basketball and if anyone wants to take me up on that, we can have a one-on-one challenge.” Except during the current football seasons. “Coach Andersen said we couldn’t play, so I am going to follow the boss man’s rules,” Mariner said with a laugh. Mariner, who recently died his hair blond because “it was a saucy thing to do and I go by Sauce,” also enjoys watching boxing videos, hanging out with friends and touching base with his family. Some of his favorite boxers include Floyd Mayweather and Adrien Broner. “I like the way boxers prepare for a fight,” Mariner said.
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
WEST STADIUM CENTER
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Completed in August, 2016, and located inside Maverik Stadium, Utah State’s $36 million, 85,000 square-foot West Stadium Center is a five-story premium seating and press box structure. It includes a state-of-the-art media and game operations area, 24 luxury suites, 20 loge boxes, over 700 covered club seats and a premium club area that is also used to host a student-athlete training table. In addition to the new structure, major concourse work included significantly increased restrooms, upgraded concessions and an enlarged concourse for better pedestrian traffic flow. Renovations also included new video boards on both the north and south ends of the stadium, along with a new public address system.
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
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AGGIE FIGHT SONGS
/// HAIL THE UTAH AGGIES ///
Hail the Utah Aggies, we’ll play the game with all our might See the colors flying, the Aggie blue and fighting white How they stir us onward; we’ll win the victory alright Hail the Utah Aggies; we’re out to win, so fight, fight, fight! Utah State, Hey! Aggies all the way! Go Aggies! Go Aggies! Hey! Hey! Hey!
/// THE SCOTSMAN ///
Show me the Scotsman who doesn’t love the thistle Show me the Englishman who doesn’t love the rose Show me the true-blooded Aggie from Utah Who doesn’t love the spot (stomp, stomp) where the sagebrush grows.
/// ALMA MATER HYMN ///
Across the Quad at eventide, as shadows softly fall, The tower of Old Main appears and peace rests over all. The lighted “A” upon the hill stands out against the blue; Oh, Alma Mater, Utah State, my heart sings out to you. And through the years as time rolls on, and student friendships grow, We’ll ne’er forget the joys we had, those days we used to know. Thy mem’ries ever will be new, thy friends be ever true; Oh, Alma Mater, Utah State, my heart sings out to you.
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UTAH STATE
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
UNIVERSITY QUICK FACTS
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/// UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY QUICK FACTS /// Founded: March 8, 1888 President (16th): Noelle E. Cockett (Jan. 1, 2017-present) Type: Land-grant, public research university Mission Statement: The mission of Utah State University is to be one of the nation’s premier student-centered land-grant and space-grant universities by fostering the principle that academics come first, by cultivating diversity of thought and culture and by serving the public through learning, discovery and engagement. Location/Profile: Logan, Utah Population: Logan - 48,565 Cache County - 114,181 Elevation: 4,778 feet (Logan Campus) Average summer highs: 85 degrees Average winter highs: 34 degrees Free public transportation for Logan campus, Logan City, Cache Valley 81 miles northeast of Salt Lake City 5 hours south of Yellowstone National Park 1-hour drive to four ski resorts 2-minute drive to Logan Canyon Number of steps to the top of Old Main Hill: 124
/// UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY QUICK FACTS /// Enrollment: Total Headcount Enrollment (Fall 2018): 27,932* *Includes USU Regional Campuses and Distance Education: 15,324 and USU Eastern: 1,895 Gender: Male: 12,774 Female: 15,158 Student Representation: All 29 counties in Utah All 50 states 78 countries
Campus Size: Main campus: 400 acres Statewide: 7,000 (does not include USU Eastern)
Ages: Average undergraduate age: 22.4 Average graduate age: 32.3
Regional Campuses, Distance Education and Extension: Regional Campuses: 4 (Brigham City, Moab, Tooele, Uintah Basin) Comprehensive Community College: 1 (USU Eastern with campuses in Price and Blanding) Extension Offices: In 28 of 29 Utah counties and at the Ogden Botanical Center, Thanksgiving Point, and Utah Botanical Center
Academics: Undergraduate degrees: 162 Undergraduate minors: 121 Graduate degrees: 153 Student/faculty ratio: 22.1 to 1 Average undergraduate class size: 20-29 students Study abroad opportunities: 150 in 40 countries Students who study abroad each year: 76%
Workforce: Faculty members: 800 Full-time support staff: 1,664
Colleges: College of Agriculture and Applied Sciences Caine College of the Arts Jon M. Huntsman School of Business Emma Eccles Jones College of Education and Human Services College of Engineering College of Humanities and Social Sciences S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources College of Science Most Popular Declared Majors: Economics; Psychology; Communicative Disorders and Deaf Education; Mechanical Engineering; Human Movement Science; Biology; Elementary Education; Computer Science
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
UTAH STATE
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HEAD COACH GARY ANDERSEN
GARY ANDERSEN • Utah, 1986 • 10th Season as Division I Head Coach (52-52 Record) • Fifth Season at Utah State (26-24 Record)
/// THE ANDERSEN FILE /// COACHING EXPERIENCE 2019 Utah State – Head Coach/DT 2018 Utah – Associate Head Coach/DL 2015-17 Oregon State – Head Coach 2013-14 Wisconsin – Head Coach 2009-12 Utah State – Head Coach 2005-08 Utah – Asst. HC/Def. Coordinator/DL 2004 Utah – Defensive Line 2003 Southern Utah – Head Coach 2002 Utah – Asst. HC/ST Coordinator/DL 2001 Utah – Assistant Head Coach/DT 1997-00 Utah – Defensive Tackles 1995-96 Northern Arizona – Asst. HC/DL/ST 1994 Park City (Utah) HS – Head Coach 1992-93 Idaho State – Defensive Line 1989-91 Ricks College – Offensive Line 1988 Southeastern Louisiana – Asst. HC/OC BOWL GAMES (12) Wisconsin (2) - 2014 Outback; 2013 Capital One Utah State (2) - 2012 & 2011 Famous Idaho Potato Utah (8) - 2018 Holiday; 2008 Sugar; 2007 Poinsettia; 2006 Armed Forces; 2005 Emerald; 2004 Fiesta; 2001 & 1999 Las Vegas CONFERENCE/DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIPS (2) Wisconsin (1) - Big Ten West, 2014 Utah State (1) - WAC, 2012 COACH OF THE YEAR HONORS Wisconsin - Maxwell Coach of the Year Semifinalist, 2013; George Munger Coach of the Year Semifinalist, 2013, 2014 Utah State - WAC Coach of the Year, 2012; Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Finalist, 2012 Utah - Frank Broyles Assistant Coach of the Year Finalist, 2008 PLAYING EXPERIENCE 1985-86 Utah – Offensive Center 1983-84 Ricks College - Offensive Center EDUCATION 1986 Utah – Political Science (B.S.) FAMILY Wife, Stacey; Sons, Keegan (Jen), Chasen (Marquelle), Hagen (Kaitlin); Grandchildren, Raylen, Baylor
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UTAH STATE
Gary Andersen (hired on Dec. 9, 2018) makes his return to Utah State after serving as USU’s head coach for four seasons (2009-12). Andersen will be the first of 27 coaches in USU history to serve as head coach multiple times. In all, Andersen is entering his 10th season as a Division I head coach, including his fifth at Utah State, and has 30 years of coaching experience. He has been involved in 12 bowl games, including four New Year’s Day bowls. As a head coach, he led Utah State to the 2012 Western Athletic Conference Championship and Wisconsin to the 2014 Big Ten Conference West Division title and has coached 16 NFL Draft picks, including six at USU. During his career, Andersen was a finalist for the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award at Utah State in 2012, along with being named the WAC Coach of the Year, and a semifinalist for the Maxwell Coach of the Year Award (2013) and George Munger Coach of the Year Award (2013, 2014) as the head coach at Wisconsin. He was also a finalist for the Frank Broyles Award at Utah in 2008, which is given to the top assistant in college football. Academically, three of Andersen’s teams finished in the top-10 nationally in Academic Progress Rate, in addition to 160 academic all-conference honorees. During his four-year tenure with the Aggies from 2009-12, Andersen posted a 26-24 overall record, including the school’s first back-to-back winning seasons (7-6 in 2011 and 11-2 in 2012) since 1979-80. He was also the first head coach since Phil Krueger (1973-75) to notch an overall winning record. When initially hired by Utah State on Dec. 4, 2008, Andersen inherited a football program that had suffered through 11 straight losing seasons and only had two winning campaigns in 28 years. Fast forward six years since his departure, and Andersen is inheriting a program that has now appeared in seven bowl games in the past eight years after playing in just four bowl games prior to his arrival. In just his third year at Utah State, Andersen’s 2011 club became the first Aggie team to win seven games since 1993 and the first USU team to play in a bowl game in 14 years. The following season, Andersen led USU to its best season ever with a school-record 11 wins, going undefeated in the WAC and capturing its first outright league title since 1936. USU also won just its second-ever bowl game that season with a 41-15 victory against Toledo in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. USU finished the 2012 campaign with an 11-2 record and was one of just two teams in school history at the time, along with the 1961 club, to finish the season nationally ranked as it was 16th in the final Associated Press poll, 17th in the final Coaches poll and 23rd in the final BCS standings. During his four years as Utah State’s head coach, Andersen built an Aggie football program that set numerous school records, including wins (11), points scored (454), total offense (6,108 yards) and yards per game (469.8) in 2012, and touchdowns (60), rushing yards (3,675) and rushing touchdowns (37) in 2011. The 282.7 rushing yards per game in 2011 ranked sixth in the nation that year and are the second-most in school history. Furthermore, the 34.9 points per game scored in 2012 were the second-most in school history at the time, while that team’s defense allowed just 322.1 yards and 15.4 points per game, its fewest at USU since the 1960s. Furthermore, those 15.4 points allowed per game in 2012 ranked seventh nationally. During his final two seasons at Utah State, Andersen led the Aggies to an 18-8 record, including an 11-2 conference mark. While at Utah State, Andersen coached six Aggies who went on to earn All-American honors (Will Davis, Kerwynn Williams, Tyler Larsen, Nevin Lawson, Zach Vigil and Kyler Fackrell) and 10 Aggies who played in the NFL, including current Seattle Seahawks linebacker Bobby Wagner, who was selected in the second round of the 2012 NFL Draft. Furthermore, Andersen coached 27 players that earned various all-conference honors during his time in Logan, including running back Robert Turbin, who was named the WAC’s Offensive Player of the Year in 2011 and has spent the past seven seasons in the NFL. Andersen comes back to Utah State after spending the 2018 season as the associate head coach and defensive line coach at the University of Utah, where the Utes posted a 9-4 record and advanced to the Pac-12 Championship game after winning the Pac-12 South. At Utah, Andersen helped coach 10 defensive starters to all-conference honors, including all three of his starters on the defensive line. In all, Andersen spent 12 years on staff at Utah during three different stints, including helping the Utes to undefeated seasons in 2004 and 2008 as they played in the Fiesta Bowl and Sugar Bowl, respectively. During his time at Utah, Andersen coached two All-Americans, two conference defensive Most Valuable Players, 22 first-team all-conference honorees and 16 NFL draft picks. Following his four years as Utah State’s head coach, Andersen spent two seasons as the head coach at Wisconsin (2013-14) and three years as the head coach at Oregon State (2015-17). At Wisconsin, he led the Badgers to a 19-7 record, a Big Ten divisional championship in 2014 and
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
HEAD COACH GARY ANDERSEN appearances in the Capital One Bowl and Outback Bowl. During his two years at Wisconsin, Andersen coached five All-Americans and had seven players selected in the NFL Draft. In 2013, Chris Borland was named a first-team All-American, and the Big Ten Conference Linebacker and Defensive Player of the Year. In 2014, Andersen coached Melvin Gordon, the nation’s leading rusher and scorer in 2014, to the Big Ten Conference Offensive Player of the Year Award and a runner-up finish for the Heisman Trophy. And at Oregon State, Andersen had three players drafted into the NFL in Isaac Seumalo, Sean Harlow and Treston Decoud, and coached two Freshman All-Americans in Xavier Crawford and Gus Lavaka and 12 all-league player. Andersen’s coaching career began in 1988 as the assistant head coach and offensive coordinator at Southeastern Louisiana, where he coached for one season before going to Ricks College from 1989-92 as the offensive line coach. His other coaching stints include Idaho State (1992-94, defensive line), Park City HS (1994-95, head coach) and Northern Arizona (1995-96, assistant head coach/defensive line/ special teams). Andersen also spent the 2003 season as the head coach at Southern Utah. A 1986 graduate of Utah, Andersen earned his bachelor’s degree in political science. He played center for Utah from 1985-86 after garnering first-team juco All-America honors in 1984 at Ricks College. Andersen is married to the former Stacey Lambert, and they have three grown children: Keegan (Jen), and twins Chasen (Marquelle) and Hagen (Kaitlin), one grandson (Raylen), and one granddaughter (Baylor).
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/// ANDERSEN-ERA STANDOUTS /// NFL DRAFT PICKS Utah State Yr. Rd. Pick Player 2011 3 90 Curtis Marsh, CB 2012 2 47 Bobby Wagner, LB 2012 4 111 Robert Turbin, RB 2012 7 212 Michael Smith, RB 2013 3 93 Will Davis, CB 2013 7 230 Kerwynn Williams, RB
Team Philadelphia Seattle Seattle Tampa Bay Miami Indianapolis
Wisconsin Yr. Rd. Pick Player Team 2014 3 68 Dezmen Southward, DB Atlanta 2014 3 77 Chris Borland, LB San Francisco 2014 4 130 James White, RB New England 2014 5 176 Jared Abbrederis, WR Green Bay 2014 7 224 Beau Allen, DT Philadelphia 2015 1 15 Melvin Gordon, RB San Diego 2015 2 57 Rob Havenstein, OT St. Louis Oregon State Yr. Rd. Pick Player Team 2016 3 79 Isaac Seumalo, OC Philadelphia 2017 4 136 Sean Harlow, OL Atlanta 2017 5 169 Treston Decoud, CB Houston ALL-AMERICANS Utah State 2012 Will Davis Cornerback 2012 Kerwynn Williams Running Back 2012 Kyler Fackrell (Freshman) Linebacker Wisconsin 2013 Chris Borland 2013 Ryan Groy 2014 Kyle Costigan 2014 Melvin Gordon 2014 Rob Havenstein
Linebacker Offensive Line Offensive Line Running Back Offensive Line
Robert Turbin earned Western Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year honors as a junior at Utah State in 2011 under Andersen. Turbin spent six years in the NFL.
Bobby Wagner earned first-team all-WAC honors three-straight years at Utah State under Andersen. Wagner is in his eighth season in the NFL and is a four-time first-team All-Pro.
Oregon State 2016 Xavier Crawford (Freshman) Cornerback 2016 Gus Lavaka (Freshman) Offensive Line
INDIVIDUAL AWARDS Utah State 2011 Robert Turbin Running Back WAC Offensive Player of the Year Wisconsin 2014 Melvin Gordon Running Back Heisman Trophy (runner-up) Doak Walker Award (winner) Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year Walter Camp (finalist) Maxwell Award (finalist)
Will Davis earned third-team All-American honors following his senior season at Utah State under Andersen. Davis spent six years in the NFL.
2013 Melvin Gordon Running Back Maxwell Award (semifinalist) Doak Walker Award (semifinalist) 2013
Chris Borland Linebacker Big Ten Defensive Player of the year Chuck Bednarik Award (semifinalist) Butkus Award (semifinalist) Lott IMPACT Trophy (finalist)
2013 Burlsworth Trophy Jared Abbrederis (winner) Wide Receiver
Kerwynn Williams earned honorable mention All-American honors following his senior season at Utah State under Andersen. Williams is in his seventh season in the NFL.
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
UTAH STATE
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ASSISTANT COACHES
FRANK MAILE
MIKE SANFORD
JUSTIN ENA
• Assistant Head Coach / Tight Ends • Utah State, 2007 • Ninth Season at USU • 11th Season Overall
• Offensive Coordinator / Quarterbacks • Boise State, 2005 • First Season at USU • 15th Season Overall
• Defensive Coordinator / Inside Linebackers • BYU, 2001 • First Season at USU • 11th Season Overall
• Frank Maile, a 2007 Utah State graduate, will continue to serve as the assistant head coach and will work with the tight ends this fall after spending the past three seasons as the Aggies’ co-defensive coordinator and defensive line coach. Overall, Maile has spent eight years on the Aggies’ staff, as he was a defensive graduate assistant from 2009-10 and the defensive line coach from 2011-13. • Maile (My-lay) helped Utah State to one of its most successful seasons in school history in 2018 as the Aggies went 11-2 and tied the school record for wins (11) and home wins (6), while being nationally ranked for six-straight weeks for the first time in school history. USU also set a school record by winning 10 straight games in 2018 and tied for first place in the Mountain Division of the Mountain West with a 7-1 mark. • With Maile serving as the interim head coach, Utah State won its fifth bowl game in school history, with a 52-13 victory against North Texas in the 2018 New Mexico Bowl. For USU, it was its seventh bowl game in the last eight seasons and 13th overall, including its fifth with Maile on staff. • During the 2018 season, Maile helped coach an Aggie defense that led the nation in turnovers forced (32), interceptions (22) and three-andouts forced per game (5.69), while ranking third nationally with six defensive touchdowns. USU also ranked 33rd nationally in scoring defense allowing 22.2 points per game. • In 2018, Maile mentored three Aggies who earned honorable mention all-Mountain West honors in senior DE Adewale Adeoye, junior DE Fua Leilua and junior NG Christopher ‘Unga.
• Mike Sanford brings 14 years of college coaching experience with him to Utah State, including two years as a head coach and three more seasons as an offensive coordinator. In all, Sanford has coached in five New Year’s bowl games and has been a part of three conference championships.
• Justin Ena, who has 10 years of collegiate coaching experience, including five seasons as defensive coordinator, is in his first season as Utah State’s defensive coordinator. Ena, who has coached in three bowl games, will also coach the inside linebackers at Utah State. • Previously, Ena (Eh-nuh) spent the past four seasons at Utah serving as the Utes’ co-special teams coordinator for three of those years, and working with the linebackers all four seasons. • During the 2018 season, Ena helped Utah’s defense rank among the top 20 in the nation in several categories, including fifth in rushing defense (101.8 yards allowed per game), ninth in tackles for loss (7.9 per game), 15th in total defense (315.1 yards allowed per game) and 16th in scoring defense (18.5 points per game allowed). Under Ena, the linebackers helped Utah rank in the top 30 in rushing defense in each of the last four seasons, including a No. 5 ranking in 2018 and a No. 6 ranking in 2015. Ena coached Utah linebacker Chase Hansen to three All-America honors this past season. • As co-special teams coordinator at Utah, Ena’s coverage units played a role in the Utes winning the NCAA net punting title in 2016, while the 2017 team finished fifth in the nation in net punting and the 2018 team ranked 15th. Furthermore, Utah has had three kickers earn All-America honors in Ena’s four years at Utah in punter Tom Hackett (2015), punter Mitch Wishnowsky (2016, 2017, 2018) and kicker Matt Gay (2017, 2018). • Prior to Utah, Ena was the defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at Weber State in 2014 and a six-year assistant at Southern Utah from 2008-13, including the last four as the defensive coordinator. He was also SUU’s special teams coordinator his first two seasons.
• Most recently, Sanford spent two seasons (2017-18) as the head coach at Western Kentucky, leading the Hilltoppers to a 9-16 overall mark and 6-10 conference record, highlighted by a berth in the 2017 AutoNation Cure Bowl in his first season. In all, Sanford was one of just five rookie head coaches to take his team to a bowl game. A pair of players were drafted from that squad as linebacker Joel Iyiegbuniwe went in the fourth round to the Chicago Bears and quarterback Mike White was taken in the fifth round by the Dallas Cowboys, while tight end Deon Yelder signed with the Kansas City Chiefs. • Western Kentucky had 28 Conference USA honorees during Sanford’s two years as head coach. Additionally, WKU increased their community service commitment by more than 500 percent, while 75 Hilltoppers saw their grade point average rise and 39 players posted a 3.0 GPA or higher. • Prior to his head coaching stint at Western Kentucky, Sanford spent the previous two seasons as the offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach at Notre Dame and was also the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Boise State in 2014.
/// THE SANFORD FILE ///
COACHING HISTORY 2019 Utah State – Assistant Head Coach/TE 2016-18 Utah State – Asst. HC/Co-Def. Coor./DL 2014-15 Vanderbilt – Defensive Line 2011-13 Utah State – Defensive Line 2009-10 Utah State – Defensive GA
COACHING HISTORY 2019 Utah State – Offensive Coordinator/QB 2017-18 Western Kentucky – Head Coach 2015-16 Notre Dame – Offensive Coordinator/QB 2014 Boise State – Offensive Coordinator/QB 2013 Stanford – Recruiting Coordinator/QB/WR 2012 Stanford – Recruiting Coordinator/RB 2011 Stanford – Running Backs 2010 Western Kentucky – Passing Coordinator/QB 2009 Yale – Recruiting Coordinator/TE/FB 2007-08 Stanford – Offensive Assistant/QB 2005-06 UNLV – Graduate Assistant/Specialists/QB
BOWL GAMES (5) Utah State (5) – New Mexico, 2018; NOVA Home Loans Arizona, 2017; Poinsettia Bowl, 2013; Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, 2012; Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, 2011.
BOWL GAMES (6) Western Kentucky (1) – AutoNation Cure, 2017. Notre Dame (1) – Fiesta, 2015. Boise State (1) – Fiesta, 2014. Stanford (3) – Rose, 2013; Rose, 2012; Fiesta, 2011.
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS (1) Utah State - WAC, 2012
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS (3) Boise State (1) – Mountain West, 2014. Stanford (2) – Pac-12, 2013, 2012.
/// THE MAILE FILE ///
PLAYING EXPERIENCE 2004-07 Utah State – Defensive Lineman
PLAYING EXPERIENCE 2000-04 – Boise State – Quarterback
EDUCATION 2010 Utah State – Education (M.Ed.) 2007 Utah State – Interdisciplinary Studies
EDUCATION 2005 Boise State – Political Science
FAMILY Wife, Heather; Sons, Maximus, Samson, Titan; Daughter, Cecilia
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FAMILY Wife, Anne-Marie; Daughter, Peyton; Sons, Gunnar, Griffin
/// THE ENA FILE /// COACHING HISTORY 2019 Utah State – Defensive Coordinator/ILB 2016-18 Utah – Co-Special Teams Coordinator/LB 2015 Utah – Linebackers 2014 Weber State – Defensive Coordinator/LB 2010-13 Southern Utah – Defensive Coordinator/LB 2008-09 Southern Utah – Special Teams Coordinator BOWL GAMES (3) Utah (3) – Heart of Dallas, 2017; Foster Farms, 2016; Las Vegas, 2015. PLAYING EXPERIENCE 2005 Tennessee Titans – Linebacker 2002-04 Philadelphia Eagles – Linebacker 1998-01 BYU – Linebacker EDUCATION 2001 BYU – History FAMILY Wife, Dana; Son, Justice; Daughter, Olivia
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
ASSISTANT COACHES
STACY COLLINS
JASON PHILLIPS
• Special Teams Coord. / Running Backs • Western Oregon, 1998 • Fourth Season at USU • 22nd Season Overall
• Passing Game Coord. / Wide Receivers • Houston, 2001 • First Season at USU • 21st Season Overall
• Stacy Collins has 21 years of coaching experience, including 14 years as a coordinator and four years as a head coach at the collegiate level. Now in his fourth year at Utah State, Collins will serve as the special teams coordinator and running backs coach this season. Collins has spent the past three years with Utah State, serving as the inside linebackers coach (2017-18) and special teams coordinator (2016). • During the 2018 season, Collins helped coach an Aggie defense that led the nation in turnovers forced (32), interceptions (22) and three-andouts forced per game (5.69), while ranking third nationally with six defensive touchdowns. USU also ranked 33rd nationally in scoring defense allowing 22.2 points per game. • Prior to Utah State, Collins spent four seasons as the head coach and special teams coordinator at Division II South Dakota School of Mines, leading the Hardrockers to winning seasons in 2013 and 2015. /// THE COLLINS FILE /// COACHING HISTORY 2019 Utah State – Special Teams Coordinator/RB 2017-18 Utah State – Inside Linebackers 2016 Utah State – Special Teams Coordinator 2012-15 South Dakota School of Mines – Head Coach/Special Teams Coordinator 2011 Portland State – Assistant Head Coach/ Special Teams Coordinator 2008-10 Central Washington – Special Teams Coordinator/DL/LB 2007 Southern Oregon – Defensive Coordinator/ Recruiting Coordinator 2005-06 Idaho State – Linebackers 2004 Western Washington – Special Teams Coordinator/LB 2003 Western Washington – Linebackers 2002 South Dakota School of Mines – Defensive/Special Teams Coordinator 1999-01 Vienna (Austria) – Defensive Coordinator/ Interim Head Coach 1998-01 Western Oregon – Special Teams Coordinator/LB BOWL GAMES (2) Utah State (2) – New Mexico, 2018; NOVA Home Loans Arizona, 2017. CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS (4) C. Washington – Great Northwest: 2010, 2009, 2008 W. Washington – Great Northwest: 2003 PLAYING EXPERIENCE 1993-97 Western Oregon – Linebacker EDUCATION 2001 Western Oregon – Education (M.S.) 1998 Western Oregon – Physical Education (B.S.) FAMILY Wife, Mandi; Daughters, Kayla, Mackenzie, Kylee, Mackenna
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TJ WOODS • Assistant Coach / Offensive Line • Azusa Pacific, 2002 • Fifth Season at USU • 17th Season Overall
• Jason Phillips, who has 20 years of coaching experience, including five seasons as an offensive coordinator, is in his first season as Utah State’s passing game coordinator and wide receivers coach. Phillips, who played professionally for eight seasons, including six years in the NFL, has coached in six bowl games during his collegiate career. • Phillips comes to Utah State after spending the 2018 season as the wide receivers coach for the Salt Lake Stallions of the Alliance of American Football. Prior to that, he spent the 2017 season as the passing game coordinator and wide receivers coach at Oregon State and was the wide receivers coach at Kansas in 2016. Prior to his one-year stint at Kansas, Phillips spent three years on the coaching staff at SMU, where he served as co-offensive coordinator and wide receivers coach from 2012-14. • Under Phillips’ tutelage, SMU had multiple 1,000yard receivers for just the third time in school history and multiple 100-reception receivers for the first time in program history. In his first year at SMU in 2012, the Mustangs posted top-10 school efforts in scoring, scoring average, total offense, passing yards, passing touchdowns, completions, attempts, completion percentage and first downs.
• TJ Woods, who has 16 years of collegiate coaching experience, is in his first season as Utah State’s offensive line coach. This will be Woods’ second tenure with USU as he also coached the Aggies from 2009-12. In all, Woods has spent nine seasons under USU head coach Gary Andersen at three different schools. • Woods spent the 2018 season as the offensive line coach at Western Kentucky under current USU offensive coordinator Mike Sanford. From the 2017 to 2018 season, WKU’s rushing yards per game improved by 75.98, eighth-best nationally, and its yards per carry increased by 1.72, fifth-best nationally. Furthermore, WKU allowed 16 fewer sacks in 2018 as compared to 2017, the 10th-best improvement in the nation. • Prior to stints at Wisconsin and Oregon State, Woods spent four years at Utah State (2009-12), including the final two directing the offensive line. Woods coached five players to All-Western Athletic Conference honors, including Tyler Larsen and Philip Gapelu in 2011. Larsen, who earned second-team All-America honors as a senior in 2013, is now a five-year NFL veteran having spent the past three seasons with the Carolina Panthers.
/// THE PHILLIPS FILE ///
COACHING HISTORY 2019 Utah State – Offensive Line 2018 Western Kentucky – Offensive Line 2017 Oregon State – Run Game Coordinator/OL 2016 Oregon State – Co-Offensive Coordinator/ OL/TE 2015 Oregon State – Offensive Line 2013-14 Wisconsin – Offensive Line 2011-12 Utah State – Offensive Line 2009-10 Utah State – Tight Ends/Special Teams 2007-08 New Mexico – Graduate Assistant/OL 2006 Citrus JC – Run Game Coordinator/OL 2004-05 Azusa Pacific – Tight Ends 2003 Azusa Pacific – Graduate Assistant/OL
COACHING HISTORY 2019 Utah State – Passing Game Coordinator/WR 2018 Salt Lake Stallions – Wide Receivers 2017 Oregon State – Passing Game Coordinator/WR 2016 Kansas – Wide Receivers 2015 Denver Broncos – Training Camp Intern 2012-14 SMU – Co-Offensive Coordinator/WR 2010-11 Houston – Offensive Coordinator/ Recruiting Coordinator/WR 2008-09 Houston – Recruiting Coordinator/WR 2007 Baylor – Recruiting Coordinator/IWR 2003-06 Houston – Wide Receivers/Cornerbacks 2002 Texas State – Wide Receivers 2002 Atlanta Falcons – Training Camp Intern 2000-01 Houston – Offense 2001 Minnesota Vikings – Training Camp Intern BOWL GAMES (6) Houston (6) – Ticket City, 2011; Armed Forces, 2009; Armed Forces, 2008; Liberty, 2006; Fort Worth, 2005; Hawaii, 2003. PLAYING EXPERIENCE 1996-97 Hamilton Tiger-Cats – Wide Receiver 1995 Birmingham Barracudas – Wide Receiver 1991-94 Atlanta Falcons – Wide Receiver 1989-90 Detroit Lions – Wide Receiver 1987-88 Houston – Wide Receiver EDUCATION 2001 Houston – Kinesiology FAMILY Wife, Kimberly
/// THE WOODS FILE ///
BOWL GAMES (5) Wisconsin (2) – Outback, 2014, Capital One, 2013. Utah State (2) – Famous Idaho Potato, 2012; Famous Idaho Potato, 2011. New Mexico (1) – New Mexico, 2007 CONFERENCE/DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIPS (2) Wisconsin – Big Ten West Division, 2014 Utah State - WAC, 2012 PLAYING EXPERIENCE 2001-02 Azusa Pacific – Offensive Line 2000 Iowa State – Offensive Line 1999 Citrus JC – Offensive Line EDUCATION 2005 Azusa Pacific – Physical Education (M.S.) 2002 Azusa Pacific – Business FAMILY Wife – Kelly; Daughters, Madison, McKenzie
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
UTAH STATE
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ASSISTANT COACHES
BOJAY FILIMOEATU • Assistant Coach / Defensive Ends • Utah State, 2012 • First Season at USU • Third Season Overall • Bojay Filimoeatu, who is returning to his alma mater, is in his first season as Utah State’s outside linebackers coach. • Filimoeatu (Fee-lee-moe-ee-ah-tu) has spent the past two seasons as the linebackers coach at Mountain West-foe San José State and prior to that was a quality control defensive coach at Oregon State in 2016. At SJSU, Filimoeatu coached linebacker Ethan Aguayo to honorable mention all-Mountain West honors this past season as the junior led the Spartans in total tackles with 106 and ranked 29th nationally with an average of 9.6 tackles per game. • During the 2017 season, Filimoeatu coached junior linebacker Frank Ginda, who became just the second Spartan linebacker to earn firstteam all-Mountain West honors. As a junior, Ginda established a single-season conference record and the eighth-best total by a Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) player with 173 tackles. His 13.31 tackles per game average ranked 20th best among FBS players since the 2000 season when the NCAA standardized defensive statistics. • Filimoeatu was a two-year starting linebacker at Utah State (2011-12) for Gary Andersen, helping the Aggies to a pair of bowl games and the 2012 Western Athletic Conference title. While at USU, he made 112 tackles (48 solo), 8.0 sacks and one interception. He finished his college career at the 2012 Casino Del Sol College All-Star Game. • Prior to transferring to Utah State, Filimoeatu spent two years (2009-10) at Mt. San Antonio College in California, earning first-team All-America honors, as well as Defensive Player of the Year, for one publication. He was ranked as the No. 36 overall junior college prospect in the country after making 62 tackles, including 22.0 for loss, with 13.0 sacks, eight quarterback hurries, four pass breakups, three fumble recoveries and two forced fumbles during his career. He earned MVP honors of the state and national JC championship games. • Following college, Filimoeatu spent the 2014 season playing linebacker for the Oakland Raiders, appearing in eight games. /// THE FILIMOEATU FILE /// COACHING HISTORY 2019 Utah State – Linebackers 2017-18 San José State – Linebackers 2016 Oregon State – Quality Control/LB
• Following his collegiate career, Caputo received a training camp invitation from the New Orleans Saints and later signed a free agent contract with the Los Angeles Rams prior to the 2016 season. /// THE CAPUTO FILE ///
PLAYING EXPERIENCE 2016 Los Angeles Rams – Safety 2016 New Orleans Saints – Safety 2011-15 Wisconsin – Safety
EDUCATION 2012 Utah State – Interdisciplinary Studies
EDUCATION 2015 Wisconsin – Life Sciences Communication and Certificate in Entrepreneurship
FAMILY Wife, Hailey; Son, Johnny
UTAH STATE
• Assistant Coach / Safeties • Wisconsin, 2015 • First Season at USU • Third Season Overall • Mike Caputo, an All-American safety at Wisconsin, is in his first season as Utah State’s safeties coach. • Caputo (Ku-pooh-toe) comes to Utah State after spending the past two seasons as a defensive graduate assistant at LSU working with former USU defensive coordinator Dave Aranda. During his two years in Baton Rouge, Caputo helped the Tigers to a combined 18-7 record, including a 11-5 mark in the Southeastern Conference, and backto-back New Year’s Bowl games. • Caputo played safety at Wisconsin from 201215, including two seasons under Gary Andersen. In all, he played in 53 games, making 40 starts, and was part of a senior class that posted a 38-16 record over four years, including wins in the Outback (Jan. 1, 2015) and Holiday (Dec. 20, 2015) bowls, in addition to the 2012 Big Ten Championship and 2014 Big Ten West Division title. For his career, he recorded 244 total tackles, including 10.0 tackles for loss, while adding three interceptions, 20 passes defended, four forced fumbles and five fumbles recovered, while notching six career double-digit tackle games. • In all, Caputo started 39 out of a possible 40 games during his final three seasons at Wisconsin and earned second-team All-America honors from the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) following his junior campaign. As a junior, he led the Badgers with 106 tackles, which included 1.0 sacks and 6.0 tackles for loss, while adding four forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries, one interception and six passes defended. • Caputo, who was named a consensus secondteam all-Big Ten safety as both a junior and senior, posted 65 tackles, to go along with two interceptions, two fumble recoveries, one forced fumble and eight passes defended during his senior season. He then played in the 2016 EastWest Shrine Game and earned Defensive MVP honors after recording three tackles and two interceptions.
COACHING HISTORY 2019 Utah State – Safeties 2017-18 LSU – Defensive Graduate Assistant
PLAYING EXPERIENCE 2014 Oakland Raiders – Linebacker 2011-12 Utah State – Linebacker 2009-10 Mt. San Antonio College – Linebacker
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MIKE CAPUTO
MARK ORPHEY • Assistant Coach / Cornerbacks • Texas Southern, 2010 • First Season at USU • Ninth Season Overall • Mark Orphey, who has eight years of collegiate coaching experience, is in his first season as Utah State’s cornerbacks coach. • Orphey (Or-Fay) comes to Utah State after spending the past two seasons as the secondary coach at Montana State. During the 2018 season, Orphey helped the Bobcats to an 8-5 record, including a 5-3 mark in the Big Sky Conference, and an appearance in the NCAA FCS Playoffs for the first time since 2014, as they advanced to the second round of the playoffs for the first time since 2012. • In 2018, Bobcat defensive backs produced nine interceptions and six forced fumbles, and the Cats finished in the top half of the league in interceptions (12), passing yards allowed (213.5 yards per game) and passing efficiency defense (124.16). In his first year at Montana State in 2017, Orphey molded a youthful group of cornerbacks into a secondary that finished fifth in the Big Sky Conference in pass defense, allowing 239.5 yards per game. • During his two seasons at Montana State, Orphey coached four players to all-conference honors in safety Jahque Alleyn (2018), cornerback Greg Filer (2018), safety Brayden Konkol (2018) and safety Bryson McCabe (2017). • Prior to Montana State, Orphey spent four seasons at South Carolina, serving as a quality control assistant (2013) and defensive graduate assistant (2014-16). With the Gamecocks, Orphey helped the team to three bowl games (2013 Capital One Bowl, 2014 Independence Bowl, 2016 Birmingham Bowl) and the its third-straight 11-win season in 2013. South Carolina also earned two of its 12 all-time bowl wins during Orphey’s time there. During his four seasons at South Carolina, Orphey coached four players to all-conference honors • Orphey began his collegiate coaching career at his alma mater as the cornerbacks coach at Texas Southern. During his two seasons with the Tigers, he mentored Tray Walker to All-America honors in 2012. /// THE ORPHEY FILE /// COACHING HISTORY 2019 Utah State – Cornerbacks 2017-18 Montana State – Secondary 2014-16 South Carolina – Graduate Assistant 2013 South Carolina – Quality Control 2011-12 Texas Southern – Cornerbacks BOWL GAMES (3) South Carolina (3) – Birmingham, 2016; Independence, 2014; Capital One, 2013. PLAYING EXPERIENCE 2007-10 Texas Southern – Cornerback EDUCATION 2015 South Carolina – Health Information Technology (M.S.) 2010 Texas Southern – Business Administration
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
SUPPORT STAFF ®
WAQA DAMUNI
ZACH NYBORG
MIKE FAVERO
• Assistant AD / Academics & Student-Athlete Development • Utah State, 1998 • Seventh Season at USU
• Assistant AD / Director of Football Operations • BYU, 2011 • Fifth Season at USU
• Offensive Analyst • Utah State, 1992 • First Season at USU
KEEGAN ANDERSEN
TREVER McFALLS
TREVOR MANN
• Director of Player Personnel • Utah State, 2013 • First Season at USU
• Assistant Director of Player Personnel • Southern Utah, 2015 • First Season at USU
• Assistant Director of Recruiting • Utah State, 2016 • First Season at USU
JORDAN HICKS
JOE POWELL
DALTON ELLIOTT
• Director of Strength & Conditioning for Football • Georgetown (Ky.), 2005 • First Season at USU
• Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach • Central Michigan, 2014 • Second Season at USU
• Strength & Conditioning Graduate Assistant • Sioux Falls, 2018 • First Season at USU
CONNOR GORNY
JUNIOR SALT
JAMISON JONES
• Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach • Ball State, 2016 • First Season at USU
• Strength & Conditioning Graduate Assistant • Utah, 2015 • First Season at USU
• Offensive Graduate Assistant • Utah State, 2018 • First Season at USU
AUSTIN STEPHENS
AL LAPUAHO
HAYDEN MACE
• Offensive Graduate Assistant • Utah State, 2015 • First Season at USU
• Defensive Graduate Assistant • Utah State, 2012 • Second Season at USU
• Defensive Graduate Assistant • Linfield, 2012 • First Season at USU
ERIC RAISBECK
MIKE WILLIAMS
MIKE BAIR
• Special Teams Administrative Assistant • UW-La Crosse, 2008 • First Season at USU
• Associate AD/ Sports Medicine • Utah State, 1996 • 21st Season at USU
• Assistant AD/ Director of Equipment Operations • Utah State, 1995 • 23rd Season at USU
BILL GARREN
BRANDY SAUNDERS
• Assistant AD/ Director of Video Operations • Idaho State, 2002 • 14th Season at USU
• Administrative Assistant • Fifth Season at USU
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
UTAH STATE
17
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Name Scott Ackerman Lance Anderson Robin Andrea Dave Aranda Paul Arslanian Jerry Attaway Kent Baer Dave Baldwin Rudy Basovsky Pat Behrns Steve Bernstein Brian Billick Pat Blackburn Fred Bleil Jovon Bouknight Bo Bolinger Mark Brady Gregg Brandon Julius Brown Larry Bryan Dick Bumpas Bill Busch Ray Butcher Mike Canales Mike Caputo Ed Cavanaugh Charles Chandler Jeff Choate Kevin Clune Bob Cole Darryl Collier Stacy Collins Jesse Cone Jeff Copp Walt Corey Moe Cotter Mike Cox Nick Cuccia Dennis Darnell Craig Dickenson Darrell Dickey Dan Dodd Stan Eggen Mike Ellison Justin Ena Gene Epley Jim Erkenbeck Rich Ericson Steve Farmer Bojay Filimoeatu Doug Fiore Carl Franks Jeff Fries George Galli Alex Gerke Keith Gilbertson Rich Groth Darrel Guthrie Brent Guy Garth Hall Norvel Hansen Tom Harrell Wade Harman Donnie Henderson Josh Heupel Artie Holmes Jeff Hoover Cornell Jackson Mark Johnson Shaun Johnson Jeff Jorgensen Lannie Julias Nate Kaczor Chad Kauha’aha’a Eric Kiesau Tony Knap David Kotulski Phil Krueger Sid Lane Bill Laveroni R. Todd Littlejohn Joe Lorig Mike Lynch Frank Maile Ikaika Malloe
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ALL-TIME ASSISTANT COACHES
Alma Mater Years at USU Southern Utah, 1970 1973-74 Idaho State, 1996 2004 Washington, 1972 1983-84 California Lutheran, 1999 2012 Northern Arizona, 1976 1998-99 California State, 1971 1976-77 Utah State, 1973 1979-85 CS Northridge, 1978 2009-11 Adams State, 1961 1967 Dakota State, 1972 1986-91 Occidental, 1967 1970-72 Brigham Young, 1977 1986-88 Utah State, 1980 1983-84 Westmar, 1971 1986-91 Wyoming, 2006 2010-18 Oklahoma 1968 Brigham Young, 1982 1998-99 Northern Colorado, 1978 1991 Boise State, 2006 2016-18 Utah State, 1965 1975 Arkansas, 1972 1992-94 Neb.-Wesleyan, 1988 2009-12 Utah State, 1961 1974-75 Utah State, 1984 2016 Wisconsin, 2015 2019 Duke, 1951 1967 Central Washington, 1988 1995-97 Western Montana, 1993 2003-04 CS Fullerton, 2000 2009-13, 2015 Widener, 1982 2000-04 Florida A&M, 1979 1992 Western Oregon, 1998 2016-19 Stanford, 1951 1969-72 Boise State, 2001 2005-08 Miami 1967-69 Pittsburg State, 1962 1986-87 Idaho, 1989 1995-97 Utah State, 1967 1970 Missouri State, 1969 1991 Montana, 1995 2000 Kansas State, 1983 2007-08 Drake, 1978 1989-90 Moorehead State, 1976 1986-90 Utah State, 1971 1972 BYU, 2001 2019 Indiana (Pa.), 1965 1967-68 San Diego State, 1952 1967 Weber State, 1990 1998-99 Illinois State, 1999 2016-18 Utah State, 2012 2019 Miami, 1975 1985-88 Montana, 1994 2000-02 Arizona, 1965 1970 Southern California, 1957 1965-66 Utah, 1988 2009-10 C. Washington St., 1971 1977-81 Utah, 1966 1971-72 Utah State, 1951 1960 Oklahoma State, 1983 1992-94 Utah State, 1968 1969-72 Utah State, 1949 1963-65 Texas, 1947 1985 Drake, 1986 1989-91 Utah State, 1979 1986-88 Oklahoma, 2001 2015 Washington State, 1988 1995-97 UC Davis, 1991 2000-04 Sterling, 1986 1990-91 UC Davis, 1990 2005-08 Utah State, 1995 2006-08 Utah State, 1972 1974-79 San Jose State, 1964 1976-77 Utah State, 1991 1994-99 Utah, 1996 2009-10 Portland State, 1986 2000-02 Idaho, 1939 1959-62 New Mexico St., 1974 2003-04, ‘16 SE Missouri, 1951 1963 Utah State, 1968 1968-70 California, 1970 1979-82 Fresno State, 1989 1998-99 Western Oregon, 1997 2014-15 Montana, 1999 2002-04 Utah State, 2007 2011-13, 2016-19 Washington, 1996 2014-15
UTAH STATE
Name Alma Mater Years at USU Rod Marinelli Cal-Lutheran, 1972 1977-82 Greg Mark Miami, 1989 1995 John Math L.A. State, 1958 1964-66 Ralph Maughan Utah State, 1947 1951-66 Jim McAllister Whittier, 1961 1972-73 Max McCartney Whittier, 1958 1967-68 Kevin McGiven Utah Valley, 2001 2009, 2013-14 Gene McKeehan Utah State, 1968 1971-72, 83-94 Tom McMahon Carroll College, 1992 1998-2005 Henry Miller Northern Arizona, 1989 1998-99 Thurmond Moore San Jose State, 1978 1994 Steve Nejman Weber State, 1993 1998-99 Jack Nelson Gustavous Adolphus 1955-57 Don Norris Utah State, 1967 1967 Derrick Odum Utah, 1992 2000-02 Todd Orlando Wisconsin, 1994 2013-14 Mark Orphey Texas Southern, 2010 2019 Bob Owens LaVerne, 1970 1983-85 John Pappas Utah State, 1969 1985 Kraig Paulson Montana, 1987 2000-02 Gary Patterson Kansas State, 1982 1992-94 Keith Patterson E. Cen. Oklahoma, 1986 2018 Steve Peck UC-Riverside, 1969 1977-78 Chris Pella Utah State, 1966 1967-68, 72-82 Bob Petrino Carroll College, 1983 1995-97 Paul Petrino Carroll College, 1989 1995-97 Jason Phillips Houston, 2001 2019 George Porter San Jose State, 1952 1964-66 Al Prukop Southern California, 1961 1967-68 John Ramage Brigham Young, 1982 1985-91 Tom Ramage Utah State, 1957 1963-64 Pat Randolph West Virginia, 1988 1989 Corey Raymond LSU, 1992 2009-10 David Reeves Montana, 1989 2000-03 Roberto Rey Long Beach State, 1982 1985 Danilo Robinson Utah State, 1997 2005-08 Jack Robinson Illinois, 1949 1974-75, 83-85 Tommie Robinson Troy State, 1985 1992-93 Scott Runyan Wyoming, 1988 1992-94 John Rushing Washington State, 1995 2003-08 Dwone Sanders McNeese State, 1990 1994 Mike Sanford Southern California, 1978 2012 Mike Sanford Jr. Boise State, 2005 2019 Mike Santiago Southern Utah, 1977 2005-06 Al Saunders San Jose State, 1969 1973-75 Denny Schuler Oregon, 1969 1976-82 Kendrick Shaver Missouri State, 2002 2011-17 Terry Shea Oregon, 1969 1976-83 Chris Smeland Cal Poly, 1974 1995-97 DeAndre Smith SW Missouri State, 2002 2018 Doug Smith Pacific, 1952 1971-76 Tracy Smith LSU, 2003 2006-08 Bruce Snyder Oregon, 1963 1973 Evan Sorenson Utah State, 1947 1955-60 Greg Stevens Eastern Oregon, 1992 2005-08 Chris Tabor Benedictine, 1993 2002-05 Mark Tommerdahl Concordia, 1982 2017 Mike Trevathan Montana, 1999 2000-01 Iliasa Tuiaki Southern Utah, 2006 2009-11 Mike Tuiasosopo Pacific Lutheran, 1989 1996-99 Dave Tyler Utah State, 1978 1984 Randy Tyson Utah State, 1963 1966 Uani ‘Unga BYU, 2015 2018 Dave Ungerer Southern Conn. St., 1980 2013-15 Art Valero Boise State, 1981 1995-97 Vance Vice Oklahoma State, 1990 2005-08 Scott Wachenheim Air Force, 1984 1992-93 Dewey Wade Houston, 1959 1969-71 DeWayne Walker Minnesota, 1981 1993 Paul Wargo Arizona, 1968 1971-72 Mike Waufle Utah State, 1979 1982-84 Mark Weber Cal Lutheran, 1980 2013-15 Craig Wederquist Drake, 1983 1988-91 Luke Wells Oklahoma, 2001 2013-18 Matt Wells Utah State, 1996 2011-12 Frank Williams Utah State, 1948 1960-62 Joe Wood Oregon, 1973 1980-82 T.J. Woods Azuza Pacific, 2002 2009-12, 2019 Calvin Woodworth Oklahoma, 1956 1958-63 Cliff Yoshida Cal Poly Pomona, 1963 1970, 72 David Yost Kent State, 1992 2017-18 Jim Zorn Cal Poly Pomona, 1976 1992-94 Note: 1957-Present. Full-time coaches only. Bold = Current Assistant Coach
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
Rod Marinelli
Dallas Cowboys Defensive Coordinator/D-Line USU Assistant 1977-82
Tom McMahon
Denver Broncos Special Teams Coordinator USU Assistant 1998-2005
Nate Kaczor
Washington Redskins Special Teams Coordinator USU Assistant 1994-99
UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT
NOELLE E. COCKETT Montana State, 1980 January, 2017 - Present (Third Year)
Noelle E. Cockett was appointed as Utah State University’s 16th President in October 2016, beginning her official tenure in January 2017. She is USU’s first female president and the only female president with Utah’s higher education system. Since becoming president, Cockett has worked to improve the mission and vision of the university where the outstanding scholars, educators, and students, collectively embody a tradition of greatness. It is a great time to be an Aggie. In national rankings, the university continues to gain ground. Utah State University was ranked as the No. 5 public university in the nation in “National Universities Rankings 2018” by Washington Monthly and is the No. 2 highest-ranked public university in the nation with lowest tuition in “America’s Best Value Colleges” by Forbes. The university’s award-winning faculty continue to receive accolades. In March 2018, physics professor David Peak was named as a 2018 recipient of the National Council on Undergraduate Research-Goldwater Scholars Faculty Mentor Award. And the university’s facilities continue to astound thanks, in part, to many Utah State University alumni and friends who are so generous in their support of the institution. In May 2018, the university celebrated the opening for the Sorenson Legacy Foundation Center for Clinical Excellence on the north side of campus and the Life Sciences Building was dedicated in spring 2019. Prior to being named Utah State’s President, Cockett was serving as Executive Vice President and Provost at USU and has held that position since 2013. Prior to that, she served USU as Vice President for Extension from 2006 to 2013; Dean of the College of Agriculture and Applied Sciences from 2002 to 2013; and Director of the Utah Agriculture Experiment Station from 2009 to 2013. Cockett has built a distinguished career in sheep genomics research, maintaining an active research program even while serving in various leadership positions at Utah State University. Her research program has centered on the identification of genetic markers associated with economically important traits in sheep, as well as the development of resources that advance research on the sheep genome. Cockett and her colleagues published an article describing the sheep genome sequence in Science in 2014. Her current project focuses on the identification of genetic regions associated with entropion in newborn lambs. Cockett has served as the United States coordinator for sheep genome mapping since 1993 and is an active member of the International Sheep Genomics Consortium. As an active researcher, Cockett has received many awards and accolades throughout her career including a Young Scientist Award from the Western Section of the American Society of Animal Science (ASAS), the Utah Governor’s Medal for Science and Technology (2004 and 2015) and one of USU’s top honors, the D. Wynne Thorne Research Award. After receiving her master’s and doctorate in animal breeding and genetics from Oregon State University in 1983 and 1985, respectively, Cockett spent five years as a research geneticist at the United States Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service U.S. Meat Animal Research Center in Clay Center, Nebraska. She joined Utah
/// UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY BOARD OF TRUSTEES (2019-20 /// Mr. Jody K. Burnett, Chairman, North Salt Lake City Mr. Kent K. Alder, Vice Chairman, Logan Mr. Sami I. Ahmed, Member, Logan Mr. David G. Butterfield, Member, Logan Mr. John Y. Ferry, Member, Corinne Mrs. Gina Gagon, Member, Price Mr. Mark K. Holland, Member, North Salt Lake City Mr. David H. Huntsman, Member, Salt Lake City Mrs. Crystal C. Maggelet, Member, Salt Lake City Mr. J. Scott Nixon, Member, Kaysville
®
State University in 1990 as a researcher and assistant professor in the Department of Animal, Dairy and Veterinary Sciences in the College of Agriculture and Applied Sciences. Cockett, who earned her bachelor’s degree from Montana State in animal science in 1980, grew up on a beef cattle ranch in eastern Montana and is married to John Cockett, Director of Technology in USU’s Emma Eccles Jones College of Education and Human Services. Noelle and John have two children, Dylan and Chantelle.
/// UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE (2019-20 /// Noelle E. Cockett, President Francis D. Galey, Executive Vice President and Provost Neil N. Abercrombie, Vice President, Government Relations Douglas D. Anderson, Dean, Jon M. Huntsman School of Business Janet B. Anderson, Associate Vice President, Academic and Instructional Services, and Vice Provost Jodi Bailey, Chief Audit Executive Patrick Belmont, President, Faculty Senate Bradford R. Cole, Dean, Libraries David T. Crowley, Vice President for Business and Finance Beth E. Foley, Dean, Emma Eccles Jones College of Education & Human Services Maura E. Hagan, Dean, College of Science John H. Hartwell, Vice President and Director of Athletics Eric S. Hawley, Chief Information Officer H. Scott Hinton, President, USU Research Foundation Craig D. Jessop, Dean, Caine College of the Arts Jagath J. Kaluarachchi, Dean, College of Engineering Chris Luecke, Dean, S.J. & Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources Mica McKinney, Vice President, Legal Affairs James D. Morales, Vice President for Student Services Sydney M. Peterson, Chief of Staff, Secretary to the Board of Trustees William M. Plate, Vice President, Marketing and Communications Laurens H. Smith, Interim Vice President for Research Michael Torrens, Director of Analysis, Assessment & Accreditation Robert W. Wagner, Vice President for Academic & Instructional Services Joseph P. Ward, Dean, College of Humanities & Social Sciences Kenneth L. White, Vice President for Extension; Dean, College of Agriculture and Applied Sciences; Director, Agricultural Experiment Station Matthew T. White, Vice President for University Advancement David R. Woolstenhulme, Vice President for Regional Campuses
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
UTAH STATE
19
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UNIVERSITY VICE PRESIDENT / AD
JOHN HARTWELL The Citadel, 1987 June, 2015 - Present (Fifth Year)
Since being named Vice President and Director of Athletics at Utah State on June 2, 2015, John Hartwell has cast his vision for Aggie Athletics, which embodies maximum effort academically, athletically and socially to ensure success in both the classroom and on the fields of competition. Hartwell has also focused his time on maximizing and increasing the department’s revenue streams, along with planning for future facility renovations to both Maverik Stadium and the Dee Glen Smith Spectrum. In his time at Utah State, Hartwell has already rebranded the fundraising arm of the athletics department with the creation of Aggies Unlimited, which puts all giving under one umbrella. Utah State also entered into a new partnership with the Larry H. Miller Sports & Entertainment Group to be its flagship radio station for Aggie Athletics, which gives USU additional advertising opportunities throughout Cache Valley and the Wasatch Front, in addition to more control over each broadcast. Additionally, Hartwell has overseen the completion of the $36 million, 85,000-square foot West Stadium Center on the west side of Maverik Stadium, which includes 24 luxury suites, 20 loge boxes, over 700 covered club seats and a premium club area that is also used to host a studentathlete training table. Renovations also included new video boards on both the north and south ends of the stadium, along with a new public address system, while major concourse work significantly increased restrooms and upgraded concessions. Under Hartwell’s leadership, Utah State athletics has seen unparalleled success during the past four years, which includes arguably the best twoyear stretch ever. The just completed 2018-19 academic year saw both its football and men’s basketball teams nationally ranked as Utah State was one of just five institutions to have both programs ranked in the final Associated Press polls. Collectively, USU produced a combined 39-9 record between football (11-2) and men’s basketball (28-7) this past year, which is a single-season school record. That 39-9 mark was tied for the fourth-best winning percentage and seventh-most wins nationally. Furthermore, football tied the school record for wins with its 11-2 record, while men’s basketball went 28-7 to tie for the third-most victories in program history. In all, the 2018-19 academic year marked just the third time in school history that football and men’s basketball advanced to a bowl game and the NCAA Tournament, respectively. Furthermore, first-year head coach Craig Smith, who Hartwell hired, led Utah State’s men’s basketball program to its first-ever Mountain West regular season title and tournament championship after entering the season picked ninth in the preseason polls. Additionally, its football program was picked to finish fourth in the Mountain Division of the Mountain West, but posted a 7-1 league mark to tie for first in the division. At season’s end, both program’s head coaches were named Mountain West Coach of the Year. Not to be outdone, the 2017-18 academic year was arguably the best in school history under Hartwell as Aggie Athletics ranked 78th nationally in the Learfield Director’s Cup Standings, which is by far the best finish for USU in the Cup’s 25 years, while its 400-plus student-athletes achieved a school-record 3.25 grade-point average.
In 2017-18, Utah State’s men’s tennis program won its third-straight Mountain West regular season championship and advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the second time in as many years. In fact, men’s tennis won the school’s first Mountain West regular season (2016) and tournament championships (2017) since joining the Conference in 2013 and finished the 2017 campaign with a school-record 23 wins and a final national ranking of No. 45. Additionally, Utah State’s track & field/cross country teams had their best seasons in school history in 2017-18, highlighted by the men’s programs finishing the year ranked 10th nationally by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association. During the 2017-18 seasons, the Aggie men placed 27th in their first-ever appearance in the NCAA Cross Country Championships, followed by a 28th-place finish at the NCAA Indoor Championships and an 18th-place finish at the NCAA Outdoor Championships as its student-athletes combined to garner 12 All-America honors. On the women’s side, USU’s cross country program finished 14th in its first-ever appearance at the NCAA Championships, while its studentathletes combined to garner three All-America honors during the 2017-18 academic year Aggie football also excelled during the 2017-18 academic year, playing in its sixth bowl game in the past seven seasons. Aggie softball has also seen increased success in the recent past as they finished the 2017 campaign with a 33-18 record, including a 14-9 Mountain West mark, and advanced to the National Softball Invitational, marking the program’s first postseason appearance since 1993. In fact, those 33 overall wins and 14 league victories are its most since 1996, as USU finished the 2017 season tied for third place in the league. Even more impressive is Utah State’s continued successes by its studentathletes in the classroom as they have a 92 percent graduation success rate, which is the highest in the Mountain West, and a cumulative 3.24 grade-point average. During the 2018-19 academic year, USU had 170 student-athletes earn academic all-Mountain West honors, while 120 were named Mountain West Scholar-Athletes. Additionally, USU recognized 206 student-athletes at its annual Joe E. and Elma Whitesides Luncheon for earning a 3.2 or better GPA. Hartwell came to Utah State after spending three years as the Athletics Director at Troy and nine years as the Senior Executive Associate Athletics Director at the University of Mississippi, along with athletic administration stints at Georgia State and his alma mater, The Citadel. A 1987 graduate of The Citadel, the 54-year old Hartwell spent four-plus years as a certified public accountant with Ernst & Young before returning to his alma mater to serve as the Director of Internal Audit in 1991. From 1994 to 1997, he was in private business as the Chief Financial Officer for a $36 million beverage distributor on the South Carolina coast. Hartwell is married to Dr. Heather Seale Hartwell, and they have two daughters, Lauren (10) and Madison (7). Hartwell also has a 27-year old son, Hunter, a Vanderbilt graduate who lives in Atlanta.
/// UTAH STATE ATHLETIC DIRECTORS /// H.B. Hunsaker ............................................................................ 1955-63 Frank Williams ............................................................................ 1964-72 Ladell Andersen ........................................................................ 1973-82 Dave Kragthorpe ..................................................................... 1983-84 Rod Tueller ................................................................................. 1985-92 Chuck Bell ................................................................................. 1993-97 Bruce Van De Velde ..................................................................... 1998 Rance Pugmire ..................................................................... 1999-2003 Randy Spetman .................................................................... 2004-2007 Scott Barnes .......................................................................... 2008-2014 John Hartwell ................................................................... 2015-present
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UTAH STATE
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
AGGIES IN THE NFL...
MAURICE ALEXANDER
JALEN DAVIS
MARWIN EVANS
KYLER FACKRELL
JALEN GREENE
BUFFALO BILLS 2013 NFL Draft (4th Round - 110)
MIAMI DOLPHINS 2018 NFL Free Agent
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS 2016 NFL Free Agent
GREEN BAY PACKERS 2016 NFL Draft (3rd Round - 88)
LOS ANGELES RAMS 2019 NFL Free Agent
TYLER LARSEN
NEVIN LAWSON
DALLIN LEAVITT
DEVANTE MAYS
DONALD PENN
CAROLINA PANTHERS 2014 NFL Free Agent
OAKLAND RAIDERS 2014 NFL Draft (4th Round - 133)
OAKLAND RAIDERS 2018 NFL Free Agent
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS 2017 NFL Draft (7th Round - 238)
WASHINGTON REDSKINS 2006 NFL Free Agent
DAX RAYMOND
PATRICK SCALES
HUNTER SHARP
DARWIN THOMPSON
NICK VIGIL
CHICAGO BEARS 2019 NFL Free Agent
CHICAGO BEARS 2011 NFL Free Agent
CINCINNATI BENGALS 2016 NFL Free Agent
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 2019 NFL Draft (6th Round - 214)
CINCINNATI BENGALS 2016 NFL Draft (3rd Round - 87)
BOBBY WAGNER
KERWYNN WILLIAMS
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS 2012 NFL Draft (2nd Round - 47)
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS 2013 NFL Draft (7th Round - 230)
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POS NO X-WR 11 12 81 H-WR 16 17 13 LT 72 78 LG 75 64 C 58 74 RG 65 66 RT 77 73 Y-TE 87 -or- 88 89 Z-WR 80 83 19 RB 1 20 34
OFFENSE PLAYER HT Savon Scarver 5-11 Ajani Carter 6-0 Tim Patrick Jr. 6-0 Jordan Nathan 5-8 Taylor Compton 5-8 Deven Thompkins 5-7 Alfred Edwards 6-7 Jacob South 6-5 Ty Shaw 6-4 Heneli Avendano 6-3 Demytrick Ali’fua 6-3 Chandler Dolphin 6-3 Karter Shaw 6-4 Mohelika Uasike 6-1 Andy Koch 6-6 Kyler Hack 6-4 Caleb Repp 6-5 Carson Terrell 6-5 Travis Boman 6-4 Siaosi Mariner 6-2 Derek Wright 6-1 Sean Carter 6-2 Gerold Bright 5-10 Jaylen Warren 5-8 Riley Burt 6-1
WT 180 185 190 180 175 160 310 295 300 290 305 300 305 305 290 300 225 245 245 190 185 195 190 215 215
YR Jr. Fr. R-Fr. Jr. Jr. So. So. R-Fr. R-Jr. Fr. Jr. So. Fr. R-Jr. R-Fr. R-So. Gr. Jr. Jr. Gr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Gr.
QB
10 Jordan Love 3 Henry Colombi 6 Andrew Peasley
DE -or- DT -or- -or- DT DE -or- ILB ILB NKL CB S
51 93 97 91 92 90 94 44 96 10 24 42 9 41 33 38 21 25 7 23 4 8
6-4 6-2 6-2
DEFENSE Justus Te’i 6-3 Jacoby Wildman 6-2 Jake Pitcher 6-3 Devon Anderson 6-1 Hale Motu’apuaka 6-2 Ritisoni Fata 6-1 Caden Andersen 6-3 Fua Leilua 6-3 Christopher ‘Unga 6-0 Tipa Galeai 6-5 Dalton Baker 6-5 Nick Heninger 6-2 David Woodward 6-2 Elijah Shelton 6-1 Kevin Meitzenheimer 6-0 Eric Munoz 6-0 Andre Grayson 5-8 Jarrod Green 5-11 DJ Williams 5-9 Dominic Tatum 6-2 Shaq Bond 5-10 Braxton Gunther 5-10
225, Jr. 205 So. 200 R-Fr. 240 250 260 295 295 295 285 295 295 235 245 245 235 230 230 230 175 180 180 180 195 185
R-Jr. Gr. Jr. Sr. R-Fr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. R-Fr. Jr. R-Jr. So. So. Sr. Fr. Jr. Jr.
S CB
3 5 6 14
Troy Lefeged Jr. Cash Gilliam Cameron Haney Zahodri Jackson
5-11 5-11 5-10 5-10
P PK/K LS HLD PR KOR
89 98 62 59 57 50 89 26 16 13 11 13 21 1
SPECIALISTS Aaron Dalton 6-4 Christopher Bartolic 6-0 Dominik Eberle 6-2 Connor Coles 6-0 Brandon Pada 5-10 Jesse Vasquez 5-11 Aaron Dalton 6-4 Chase Nelson 5-10 Jordan Nathan 5-8 Deven Thompkins 5-7 Savon Scarver 5-11 Deven Thompkins 5-7 Andre Grayson 5-8 Gerold Bright 5-10
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190 200 185 185
Jr. Jr. Sr. So.
215 R-Sr. 195 Jr. 190 Sr. 190 R-So. 210 Jr. 225 Fr. 215 R-Sr. 200 Jr. 180 Jr. 160 So. 180 Jr. 160 So. 175 So. 190 Sr.
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nMotors.com HT WT YR 6-5 305 So. 6-5 335 So. 6-5 325 Sr. 6-6 335 Fr. 6-3 285 Sr. 6-1 300 Jr. 6-2 350 So. 6-1 300 Jr. 6-6 290 Jr. 6-5 290 Fr. 6-4 240 Sr. 6-3 210 Fr. 6-2 195 Jr. 6-1 205 Jr. 5-11 210 Sr. 5-10 215 Fr. 5-9 200 So. 6-1 195 Sr. 6-1 210 Jr. 6-1 195 Sr. 6-0 205 So. 5-9 180 Gr. 5-10 185 Fr.
DEFENSE POS NO PLAYER DE 2 Casey Williams 91 Makye Smith DT 5 Sam Kamara 96 Odean Gilzene NT 70 Brandon Lopez 92 Peterson Octavien Anchor 42 Keegan Henderson 17 Sean Hammond Jr. Mike 24 Keirston Johnson 47 Elijah Duff Buck 30 Reidgee Dimanche 54 Chris Higgins Rover 8 Augie Contressa 16 Oniel Stanbury BC 1 Gavin Heslop 20 Jabari Reddock FS 21 Synceir Malone 40 Randy Pringle Whip 14 EJ Fineran 48 Justin Burns FC 6 TJ Morrison 10 Kareem Gaulden 19 Gregory Young II
canon • 1
HT WT YR 6-2 250 So. 6-1 240 Fr. 6-2 275 Sr. 6-1 270 Sr. 6-1 280 Jr. 6-3 260 Jr. 6-2 250 Sr. 6-1 250 Gr. 6-0 225 Jr. 5-11 220 Jr. 6-0 200 So. 6-0 210 So. 6-0 200 Jr. 5-11 200 Fr. 6-1 200 Sr. 5-11 190 So. 6-1 200 Sr. 6-0 180 So. 6-4 210 Jr. 5-11 195 So. 5-10 185 Jr. 5-11 185 Jr. 5-10 180 Fr.
:
SPECIALISTS POS NO PLAYER HT WT YR K 50 Nick Courtney 5-9 160 Sr. 57 Kris McDonald 5-9 170 Fr. P 51 Mitchell Wright 6-1 205 Jr. DS 56 Billy Barber 6-3 225 Sr. HO 51 Mitchell Wright 6-1 205 Jr. KOR 5 Jean Constant 5-9 180 Gr. 7 Ty Son Lawton 5-10 200 Fr. PR 5 Jean Constant 5-9 180 Gr. 3 Seba Nekhet 5-9 175 So. 7 Ty Son Lawton 5-10 200 Fr.
STONY BROOK
OFFENSE POS NO PLAYER LT 71 James Tunstall 74 Cameron Lucas LG 62 Mason Zimmerman 69 Matt Mirabito C 72 Joe Detorie 60 Anthony Catapano RG 55 Kyle Nunez 60 Anthony Catapano RT 65 Ian McLean 76 Larry Ross Jr. Y 44 Zachary Lucas 83 Isaiah Givens QB 4 Tyquell Fields 9 Jack Cassidy TB 28 Isaiah White 7 Ty Son Lawton 3 Seba Nekhet WR 87 Nick Anderson 15 Brandon Benson WR 86 Andrew Trent 81 Delante Hellams Jr. WR 5 Jean Constant 27 JP Roane
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2019OMPAggies3in_10in.indd 1
7/7/19 12:08 PM
THE AGGIES 63
ASHTON ADAMS
Fr. | OL | 6-4 | 300 | HS Salem, Ore. (South Salem HS)
Sr. | DE | 6-5 | 260 | 3L Payson, Utah (Payson HS)
Jr. | OL | 6-3 | 315 | 2L Hayward, Calif. (San Leandro HS)
Fr. | OL | 6-5 | 300 | RS West Point, Utah (Syracuse HS)
JAYLIN BANNERMAN
Fr. | WR | 6-1 | 185 | HS Houston, Texas (North Shore HS)
CHRISTOPHER BARTOLIC
Jr. | P | 6-0 | 195 | JC Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar HS/ Orange Coast CC)
61
1
AARON BREDSGUARD
Fr. | DE | 6-3 | 225 | HS Bountiful, Utah. (Viewmont HS)
GEROLD BRIGHT
Sr. | RB | 5-10 | 190 | 3L Pensacola, Fla. (Escambia HS)
14
SEAN CARTER
Jr. | WR | 6-4 | 195 | JC Westlake Village, Calif. (Westlake HS/ Fullerton JC)
91
DEVON ANDERSON
Sr. | DT | 6-2 | 290 | 2L Baltimore, Md. (Overlea HS/ Dodge City CC)
98
Fr. | DE | 6-5 | 240 | JC Pickerington, Ohio (Pickerington Central HS/ Arizona Western JC)
12
AJANI CARTER
Jr. | OL | 6-3 | 285 | 1L Logan, Utah (Logan HS)
45
60
WYATT BOWLES
CADEN ANDERSEN
DEMYTRICK ALI’IFUA
24
DALTON BAKER
69
58
Jr. | TE | 6-4 | 245 | 1L Henderson, Nev. (Coronado HS)
R-So. | PK | 6-0 | 190 | SQ Bozeman, Mont. (Bozeman HS)
MICHAEL ANYANWU
Fr. | CB | 5-9 | 180 | RS Covina, Calif. (Charter Oak HS)
RILEY BURT
Gr. | RB | 6-1 | 210 | TR Mantua, Utah (Box Elder HS/ BYU)
SHAQ BOND
Jr. | S | 5-10 | 190 | 1L Decatur, Ill. (MacArthur HS/ Southwestern JC)
So. | QB | 6-2 | 200 | 1L Hollywood, Fla. (Chamindae Madonna College Prep)
HENELI AVENDANO
Fr. | OL | 6-3 | 300 | RS Sandy, Utah (Jordan HS)
99
JOSH BOWCUT
Fr. | DT | 6-5 | 280 | HS Sherwood, Ore. (Sherwood HS)
49
PIERCE CALLISTER
Fr. | P | 6-0 | 170 | HS Ogden, Utah (Weber HS)
3
HENRY COLOMBI
64
4
34
59
CONNOR COLES
22
89
TRAVIS BOMAN
®
7
JOSH CALVIN
Fr. | QB | 6-3 | 190 | HS Bellflower, Calif. (Mayfair HS)
17
TAYLOR COMPTON
Jr. | WR | 5-8 | 175 | 1L Logan, Utah (Logan HS)
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
89
AARON DALTON
R-Sr. | P | 6-4 | 210 | 3L Bountiful, Utah (Viewmont HS)
UTAH STATE
33
®
THE AGGIES
59
ARIC DAVISON
Fr. | OL | 6-3 | 295 | HS Richland, Wash. (Richland HS)
CHANDLER DOLPHIN So. | OL | 6-3 | 300 | SQ Sandy, Utah (Alta HS)
95
DIAMOND FAAMAFOE
Fr. | DT | 6-0 | 295 | HS Draper, Utah (Alta HS)
43
74
JACK DREWS
Fr. | TE | 6-3 | 230 | HS Ramona, Calif. (Ramona HS)
Fr. | WR | 6-4 | 180 | HS Vancouver, Wash. (Columbia River HS)
32
90
RITISONI FATA
KANEN EATON
SIONE FEHOKO
Jr. | DT | 6-1 | 295 | 2L Redlands, Calif. (East Valley HS)
So. | RB | 5-7 | 190 | SQ Salt Lake City, Utah (Cottonwood HS)
Sr. | DE | 6-5 | 230 | 1L Euless, Texas (Trinity HS/ TCU)
25
8
73
6
So. | CB | 5-11 | 180 | 1L Elk Grove, Calif. (Cosumnes Oaks HS)
BRAXTON GUNTHER Jr. | S | 5-10 | 185 | 1L Woods Cross, Utah (Woods Cross HS)
JARROD GREEN
42
NICK HENINGER
Jr. | DE | 6-2 | 245 | TR South Jordan, Utah (Bingham HS/ Utah)
34
KYLER HACK
So. | OL | 6-4 | 300 | RS Las Vegas, Nev. (Palo Verde HS/ Orange Coast CC)
Fr. | OL | 6-5 | 285 | HS Orem, Utah (Orem HS)
UTAH STATE
Sr. | CB | 5-10 | 185 | 3L Los Angeles, Calif. (Cathedral HS)
28
70
HUNTER HILL
CAMERON HANEY
OAKLEY HUSSEY
Fr. | S | 6-3 | 200 | HS Idaho Falls, Idaho (Hillcrest HS)
Sr. | PK | 6-2 | 195 | 2L Nuremberg, Germany (Redondo Union (CA) HS)
So. | CB | 5-10 | 185 | 1L Sarasota, Fla. (Riverview HS)
21
ANDRE GRAYSON
CASH GILLIAM
Jr. | S | 5-11 | 195 | JC Dayton, Ohio (Wayne HS/ Arizona Western JC )
So. | CB | 5-8 | 165 | 1L Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. (Etiwanda HS)
20
53
KEITH HARRIS
BRADEN HARRIS
Sr. | DE | 6-2 | 230 | SQ Gunnison, Utah (Gunnison Valley HS)
Fr. | S | 5-11 | 170 | HS Lawndale, Calif. (Leuzinger HS)
18
77
ANDY KOCH
Fr. | OL | 6-6 | 275 | RS Eastvale, Calif. (Eleanor Roosevelt HS)
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
So. | OL | 6-7 | 310 | 1L Redlands, Calif. (Redlands Senior HS)
5
14
ZAHODRI JACKSON
ALFRED EDWARDS
DOMINIK EBERLE
10
TIPA GALEAI
72
62
84
CAM LAMPKIN
Fr. | CB | 5-11 | 165 | HS Mesquite, Texas (Poteet HS)
THE AGGIES 34
DANIEL LANGI
So. | DE | 6-0 | 230 | SQ South Jordan, Utah (Bingham HS)
48
CONNOR LARSEN Fr. | DE | 6-5 | 240 | HS American Fork, Utah (American Fork HS)
Fr. | QB | 6-2 | 210 | HS Orem, Utah (Orem HS)
FUA LEILUA
Sr. | DT | 6-3 | 305 | 1L Anaheim, Calif. (Spanish Fork HS/ Oklahoma State)
29
PAILATE MAKAKONA So. | RB | 5-10 | 200 | TR West Valley City, Utah (Hunter HS/ Colorado Mesa)
82
SAWYER MERRILL
Fr. | WR | 6-1 | 170 | HS El Dorado Hills, Calif. (Oak Ridge HS)
Fr. | OL | 6-1 | 285 | HS Las Vegas, Nev. (Bishop Gorman HS)
44
5
COOPER LEGAS
SIONE LASIKE
Fr. | S | 6-0 | 195 | RS Spokane, Wash. (Gonzaga Prep)
Jr. | TE | 6-3 | 260 | JC West Bountiful, Utah (Bountiful HS/ Mt. San Antonio JC)
86
BRYCE MORTENSON
Fr. | TE | 6-6 | 245 | RS Smithfield, Utah (Sky View HS)
SIASOI MARINER
Gr. | WR | 6-2 | 190 | TR Tustin, Calif. (Tustin HS/Utah)
Fr. | DT | 6-2 | 295 | RS Honolulu, Hawaii (Punahou HS)
Jr. | TE | 6-4 | 250 | 2L Rexburg, Idaho (Madison HS)
Jr. | QB | 6-4 | 220 | 2L Bakersfield, Calif. (Liberty HS)
So. | S | 5-10 | 205 | TR Portland, Ore. (Westview HS/ Linfield College)
WADE MEACHAM
Fr. | LB | 6-1 | 225 | RS Bountiful, Utah (Viewmont HS)
Fr. | OL | 6-6 | 305 | RS Layton, Utah (Layton HS)
Jr. | LB | 6-0 | 230 | RS Belvidere, Ill. (Belvidere HS/ San Diego Mesa CC)
Jr. | S | 5-11 | 190 | JC Montgomery Village, Md. (Avalon HS/ Fullerton JC)
39
MAIKA MAGALEI
R-So. | LB | 6-1 | 230 | 1L Lakewood, Wash. (Lakes HS)
33
KEVIN MEITZENHEIMER Jr. | LB | 6-0 | 230 | 2L Moreno Valley, Calif. (Moreno Valley HS)
16
38
ERIC MUNOZ
TROY LEFEGED JR.
79
40
DUSTIN MATHEWS
3
30
PATRICK MADDOX
JORDAN LOVE
92
HALE MOTU’APUAKA
LOGAN LEE
10
80
85
MOSESE MANU
CHRISTIAN LAVALLE Fr. | DT | 5-11 | 225 | HS Mission Viejo, Calif. (Mission Viejo HS)
37
SAM LOCKETT
47
55
67
®
JORDAN NATHAN
Jr. | WR | 5-9 | 180 | 2L Monrovia, Calif. (Monrovia HS)
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
27
ENOCH NAWAHINE
Fr. | RB | 5-11 | 185 | HS Kahuku, Hawaii (Kahuku HS)
UTAH STATE
35
®
THE AGGIES
KALEO NEVES
CHASE NELSON
Jr. | RB | 5-10 | 200 | 1L Logan, Utah (Logan HS)
Fr. | DE | 6-2 | 215 | HS Provo, Utah (Timpview HS)
JARED REED
Jr. | DE | 6-3 | 260 | SQ Smithfield, Utah (Sky View HS)
So. | CB | 6-0 | 180 | TR Portland, Ore. (Central Catholic HS/ Portland State)
ELIJAH SHELTON
Jr. | OL | 6-4 | 300 | 1L South Jordan, Utah (Herriman HS)
Fr. | DE | 6-1 | 230 | RS Salt Lake City, Utah (Highland HS)
Jr. | TE | 6-5 | 245 | 2L Lehi, Utah (Lehi HS)
36
CALEB REPP
Gr. | TE | 6-5 | 230 | TR Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. (Los Osos HS/ Utah)
So. | WR | 5-7 | 160 | 1L Fort Myers, Fla. (Dunbar HS)
UTAH STATE
BRANDON PADA
Jr. | LS | 5-10 | 210 | 1L Glendale, Ariz. (Mountain Ridge HS)
DEAN RICE
Fr. | DT | 6-4 | 280 | HS Yuba City, Calif. (River Valley HS)
JACOB SOUTH
Fr. | OL | 6-6 | 295 | RS Anacortes, Wash. (Anacortes HS)
Fr. | S | 6-2 | 225 | HS Taylorsville, Utah (Taylorsville HS)
15
Fr. | LB | 6-3 | 210 | HS Salem, Ore. (West Salem HS)
TIM PATRICK JR.
Fr. | WR | 6-0 | 190 | RS San Diego, Calif. (Morse HS)
Fr. | DE | 6-3 | 215 | HS Salt Lake City, Utah (East HS)
Jr. | WR | 5-11 | 190 | 2L Las Vegas, Nev. (Centennial HS)
65
Fr. | OL | 6-4 | 300 | RS South Jordan, Utah (Herriman HS)
51
23
JUSTUS TE’I
DOMINIC TATUM
Fr. | CB | 6-2 | 180 | HS Culver City, Calif. (Culver City HS)
66
MOHELIKA UASIKE
R-Jr. | OL | 6-1 | 305 | 2L Euless, Texas (L.D. Bell HS)
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
Fr. | QB | 6-2 | 200 | RS La Grange, Ore. (La Grange HS)
KARTER SHAW
SAVON SCARVER
46
ADDISON TRUPP
ANDREW PEASLEY
11
32
MATTHEW STERZER
6
81
54
78
SIMON THOMPSON
DEVEN THOMPKINS
57
87
13
88
CARSON TERRELL
Fr. | OL | 6-5 | 290 | HS Sandy, Utah (East HS)
41
75
TY SHAW
JACKSON OWENS
36
97
JAKE PITCHER
76
47
26
R-Jr. | DE | 6-3 | 240 | 2L Oceanside, Calif. (Mission Hills HS)
96
CHRISTOPHER ‘UNGA
Sr. | DT | 6-0 | 300 | 3L Rochester, Calif. (Rancho Cucamonga HS)
THE AGGIES 19
KYLE VAN LEEUWEN
Fr. | WR | 5-9 | 175 | HS Provo, Utah (Timpview HS)
7
DJ WILLIAMS
Sr. | CB | 5-9 | 180 | 1L Smyrna, Tenn. (Smyrna HS/ Independence CC)
50
JESSE VASQUEZ
Fr. | LS | 6-1 | 225 | HS Thousand Oaks, Calif. (Oaks Christian School)
98
AJ VONGPHACHANH Fr. | DE | 6-3 | 230 | HS Pasco, Wash. (Chiawana HS)
52
JAYMASON WILLINGHAM
Fr. | LB | 6-3 | 215 | HS Steilacoom, Wash. (Steilacoom HS)
So. | LB | 6-2 | 190 | HS Arvada, Colo. (Ralston Valley HS)
LOGAN WOOD
Fr. | OL | 6-1 | 280 | HS Grand Junction, Colo. (Fruita Monument HS)
DAVID WOODWARD
Jr. | LB | 6-2 | 230 | 2L Olympia, Wash. (Olympia HS)
JACOBY WILDMAN
JAYLEN WARREN
Jr. | RB | 5-8 | 225 | JC Salt Lake City, Utah (East HS/ Snow College)
9
68
93
20
56
ETHAN VOWLES
®
Gr. | DE | 6-3 | 265 | 3L Logan, Utah (Logan HS)
54
83
DEREK WRIGHT
Jr. | WR | 6-1 | 195 | JC Sterling, Utah (Manti HS/ Snow College)
NOAH YOUNG
So. | LB | 6-3 | 225 | JC Gulf Breeze, Fla. (Gulf Breeze HS/ Southwestern JC)
® 2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
UTAH STATE
37
McNeil Engineering
Utah State Athletics Official Charter Coach Company
Holiday Motor Coach, LLC
Supports Utah State Aggie Football
Utah Office: 801.657.5533 Idaho Office: 208.529.3900 www.holidaymotorcoach.com
Surveying & Structural Engineering
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Cache Valley Concrete Cutting Curb Cutting, Asphalt, Green Concrete, Cured Concrete, Core Drilling, Wall Sawing
Licensed & Insured
IP & Corporate Attorneys Professional Land Surveyors
REGISTERED PATENT ATTORNEYS www.kba.law
Office: 801-444-9600 Fax: 801-444-9800
The Concrete Cutting Specialist Braden Atkinson 690 E 420 S Smithfield, UT 84335 435.881.1003 Fax 435.563.0295
FORESIGHT LAND SURVEYING Jeff Nielsen, P.L.S.
50 West Broadway, Suite 1000 Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 Tel: 801.994.4646 ● Fax: 801.531.1929 Logan Tel: 435.753.2488
2005 North 600 West, Logan, Utah 435-753-1910 jeff@foresightsurvey.com
www.CommercialTire.com
Paul Hansen
drywall • doors & hardware • insulation • interior finish
12552 So 125 W Ste. 100 • Draper, Utah 84020 T: 801.553.9111 • F: 801.553.2345 • www.dawcg.com
Manager CELL: 801-791-4714 PHONE: 801-728-6040 FAX: 801-728-6041 EMAIL: phansen@commercialtire.com
2011 West 2100 South West Haven, UT 84401
DAN J. SUNDSTROM
SALES & SERVICE
Master Electrician Cell: (435) 232-2300 email: dan@cse-wired.com
Phone & TV System • Speakers • Home Theatres • Custom Entertainment • Motorized Blinds Cameras • Gates • Whole House Sound • Satellite Set-Up & Install • Computer Networking Landscape Lighting • Lighting & Wiring Design • Consulting • Electrical & Sound Design Weddings • Utah Power Rebates • LED Change Outs • LUTRON Install & Programming
www.CSE-Wired.com
WINDOW COVERING SPECIALISTS
• Draperies • Blinds
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RANDY HADFIELD 357 South Main • Logan, Utah 84321 • (435) 752-7111 • (800) 467-8071 www.TrendInt.com email:trendinteriors@mac.com
Can You Dig It...We Can
Over 200 Years of Combined Excavation Experience. Call Today For a Free Estimate: 435.753.0967 •New Construction •Site Development •Sub Division Preparation •Basement & Backfills •Road Cuts
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For all your earth moving needs in Northern Utah & Southern Idaho you can trust Edge Excavation. As Northern Utah’s Premier Excavator, Edge has the experience and expertise to take your project to finish on time, every time.
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granite & quartz countertops 186 West 560 South • Smithfield UT 84335 o: 435.563.6443 c: 435.994.2099 e: info@evogranite.com evogranite.com
Overhead Door Company of Cache Valley 695 W. 1700 So., Bldg 28 STE 101 Logan, Utah 84321
Overhead Door Company of Bountiful
2481 South 1560 West Woods Cross, Utah 84087 James Christopherson Phone 801-295-7581 Manager james@odcbountiful.com
Fax 801-295-7584 Cell 801-201-3914 www.odcbountiful.com
Northern Acoustics & Drywall Inc. 202 West 300 South Logan, Utah 84321 (435) 760-0928 ENDRICKSEN AINTING INC. Mike Hendricksen 960 W. Jewell Ave., (1910 S.) Salt Lake City, UT 84104
Voice (801) 908-7607 Facsimile (801) 908-7616 hendricksenpaint@qwestoffice.net Cell Phone (801) 541-9719
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IN THE FAST-PACED ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING & TECHNOLOGY BUSINESS
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Dan Stott Drywall LLC. Drywall Contractor Steel Stud Framing • Grid Ceilings PO Box 723 Moab, UT 84532
435-260-1413 danstottdrywall@gmail.com
®
AGGIES UNLIMITED
SUPPORTING STUDENT-ATHLETES AT UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY
The Utah State Department of Athletics is proud to recognize the individuals and businesses on the following pages. These Aggie fans have made a financial investment to support USU Athletics and approximately 400 student-athletes. Aggies Unlimited revenues are primarily used to fund studentathlete scholarships, assist with operating expenses and provide academic support.
BLUE A SOCIETY Blue A Society members pledge at least $25,000 over a 5-year period or donate $25,000 or more annually to any USU Athletics philanthropic giving funds, including, but not limited to: Aggies Unlimited, Big Blue Scholarship Fund, Merlin Olsen Fund, Wayne Estes Fund, Capital Funds, etc. Kent & Donna Alder Boyd Baugh Brett & Jocelyn Bills Scott & Annie Bills Lane & Whitney Blake James & Heather Bohm Mark & Misty Bond Cache Valley Electric John & Noelle Cockett
Kevin & Melanie Cornett Tracy & Lorie Duckworth Al & Kathie Faccinto Ed & Lisa Fisher Bill & Kathy Fletcher Leland & Linda Foster Michael & Jo Frankland Larry & Jenny Gates Doug & Melece Griffin
Tom & Renee Grimmett John Gutke & Kelly Carmona Kirk & Sue Ann Hansen Katie & Destrie Hansen John & Heather Hartwell Fred & Sharon Hunsaker Chuck & Karen Hyer Burns & Brenda Israelsen L. Dwight & Jill Israelsen
Brady & Jenna Jardine Avery & Irasema Jeffers Randy & Marcia Jensen Ron & Janet Jibson Dan & Carol Johnson Dee Jones Nick & Stef Jones Marty & Betsy Judd Dave & Barbara Kragthorpe
Jim & Carol Laub Learfield Communications Mike & Melanie Lemon Jean & Joe Lopour Carl & Mary Sue Lundahl JayDee & Machelle Jeff & Jenae Miller Steve & Diane Mothersell Chris & Jen Newhouse
Nixon & Nixon Ray & Shelley Olsen Susan Olsen Jed & MerLynn Pitcher Ron & Mike Poindexter Kevin & Stacy Rice Scott & Jodi Richins Tyler Riggs Dick Sackett
Al & Michelene Salvo Chris & Doreen Seibert Dennis & Lynn Sessions Craig & Darcy Smith Randy & Julie Stockham Mark & LeAnn Stoddard Mike & Suzie Stones Lane & Annette Thomas Matt & Jen Wells
Kevin & Tessa White Tom & Patty Willis Matt & Nicole Wiser Bret & Chalisa Wursten Fred & Haleen Zweifel
For more information about Blue A Society, please contact an Aggies Unlimited staff member or call 435-797-2583.
5 Star
5 star members contribute at least $10,000 annually (July 1, 2018 – June 30, 2019) to any USU Athletics fund, including priority seating requirements. Spencer & Brittany Bailey Beazer Lock & Key Darren & Brigeta Benson David Bergener Lane & Whitney Blake Mark & Misty Bond Bill & Margaret Bullen Cache Valley Electric Center for Growth & Opportunity Colmena Capital Inc Communications Research Associates Inc Scott & Catherine Davis
Blake & Alison Dursteler DWA Construction Al & Kathie Faccinto Fidelity Charitable Fund Edwin & Lisa Fisher Doug Foxley Fisher Home Furnishings Bill & Kathy Fletcher Fletcher Consulting Services, Inc Leland & Linda Foster Carl & Holly Galbraith Larry & Jenny Gates LJ & Lisa Godfrey Goldenwest Credit Union
Gossner Foods Inc Tom & Renee Grimmett Kirk & Sue Ann Hansen Justin & Jocelyn Hamilton Matthew & Emily Huff Hullinger Family Foundation Fred & Sharon Hunsaker Chuck & Karen Hyer ICON Health & Fitness Wes & Jody Innes Inovar Inc Burns & Brenda Israelsen Dwight & Jill Israelsen Lynn & Irma Janes
JayDee Barr Construction Jed Merlynn Pitcher Foundation Jibson Family Foundation John & Renee Perko Family Foundation Dee Jones Nick & Stef Jones Marty & Elizabeth Judd David & Barbara Kragthorpe Mark & Melissa Larsen Jim & Carol Laub Jim & Carol Laub Family Foundation
Learfield Communications Michael Lemon Logo Shop Jean & Joe Lopour Carl & Mary Sue Lundahl LW Miller Companies Central Valley Machine Ron & Talee Meacham Metal Vision Inc David & Suzanne Pierce-Moore Steve & Diane Mothersell MountainStar Healthcare Dennis & Patricia Murray Keith & Joni Nelson
Chris & Jennifer Newhouse Nixon & Nixon Inc Susan Olsen Scott Parrish Michael & Rhonda Parson Michael & Camille Perkes Rob & Breanne Phelps Plastic Resources, Inc Poindexter Nut Company Ronald & Sherian Poindexter Power Cat, LLC Randy & Christine Reeve Regence Blue Cross Blue Shield
Richard W Sackett Living Trust Scott & Jodi Richins Tyler Riggs Rural Health Group, Inc S & S Worldwide, Inc Café Sabor Rich & Pam Saltmarsh Seibert LLC The Christopher I Seibert Dynasty Dennis & Lynn Sessions Mark & LeAnn Stoddard Swainston Mill & Cabinet Inc
Team Financial Services Lane & Annette Thomas Tann & Nancy Tueller Cody & Celeste Veibell The Villas Communities, LLC Vivint Western Mechanical Jon & Darlene White Clark & Jennifer Whitworth Woodbury Corporation Bret & Chalisa Wursten Zions Management Services Company
AGGIES UNLIMITED Aggies Unlimited members are listed alphabetically. Levels are determined by cash donations made between July 1, 2018 – June 30, 2019 to any Aggies Unlimited fund. To join Aggies Unlimited, call 435-797-2583 or go to aggiesunlimited.com. 1280 The Zone A & D Landscaping, Inc. A & J Enterprises LLC A. Lear Thorpe Trust Abbey Carpets Jacob Atkinson Craig & Alicia Adams David & Cherie Adams Dean & Joyce Adams Marilyn Adams Matthew Adams Richard Adams Todd & Melinda Adams Adobe Systems Inc. Aggie Sports Properties Inventory Jay & Sheryl Aguilar Stan & Joyce Albrecht Chad & Vanessa Alder Kent & Donna Alder Lance Alder Nate & Laurel Alder Tyler & Tiffany Alleman Blain & Carol Allen Craig Allen Dan & Natalie Allen David Allen David & Melanie Allen Jason & Lisa Allen Jeff Allen Jon B. Allen
40
Michael Allen Richard & Pamela Allen Rick Allen Stanley & Karen Allen Ty Aller Alan & Lora Lee Allred James Teichert Allred Alpha Sigma Phi Derek Alvey Analee Falk Family Foundation Roger Anaya Gary & Stacey Andersen Paul & Debbie Andersen Rallin & Jean Andersen Brendan Mark Anderson Bryan Anderson Gregory & Judilyn Anderson James Norman Anderson Janet Anderson Jeff & Lisa Anderson Kelly Anderson Kim & Sally Anderson Loren & Mary Anderson Mark & Kathie Anderson Matthew Anderson Richard & Moonyeen Anderson Scott & Kristen Anderson Terrell Anderson Val & Janice Andreasen Brian & Jill Andrus
UTAH STATE
Eric & Misty Andrus Angie’s Restaurant Inc. Larry Angle Quintin Apedaile Vickie Applegate Bob Arbon Joe & Kathleen Archer Arctic Circle Restaurants Inc Jory & Emberly Argyle Kim Arnell Kay & Tamra Asay Erik Ashcroft AT&T Foundation Atrium Investments, LLC Andy Averett Eric & Dixie Averett Marcus & Kimberly Averett Anthony & Carol Baer Linda Baer Jared Bagley USA Bags DeeVon & Marilyn Bailey Jodi Bailey Lon Marilyn Bailey Spencer & Brittany Bailey Michael & Michelle Bair Duane Maureen Baird Andrew Baker John Anthony Baldi Jarom Baldomero
Reed & Joan Baldwin Laurie Ballam Michael & Laurie Ballam Nicholas & Adele Ballam Debbie Ballard Jill Ballard Kelley & Vikki Ballard Seth & Patricia Balls Bank of Utah Philip & Robyn Bankhead Ryan & Kimberly Barfuss Coleman & Mary Beth Barnes Jason & Taryl Barnett Ted & Jennifer Barratt Barrett Labrum DO, LLC Kelly & Carolee Barrett Tyson & Carol Barrett Greg Barton Dale Bartos Janet Beth Bass Dave Bassler Alexander & Susan Baugh Boyd Baugh David & Linda Baugh Gifford Baugh Jordan & Caryn Baxter Jonathon Beadles Richard & Carillisa Bean Bear Lake Motor Co. Bear Lake Realty, Inc.
Beazer Lock & Key Landon & Toni Beck Mike & Elizabeth Beck Scott & Kay Beck Robert & Susie Beers Scott & Tamra Behunin Daniel & Marily Bell Dutch & Karen Belnap Tim & Kollette Belnap Benevity Community Impact Fund Eric Bennett Trevor & Lynnette Bennett Benson Plumbing, LLC. Craig & Michelle Benson Darren & Brigeta Benson Jaron Bentrude David Bergener Joseph & Patricia Bergeson Thomas & Audrie Bernhardt Grant Bess David & Sheryl Bessinger Best Card of Utah Trevor & Audrey Betenson Elliot & Lindi Billings Scott & Amy Billings Brett & Jocelyn Bills Scott & Annie Bills David & Sarah Bindrup Ralph & Jane Binns Birch Creek Golf Course
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
Stephen Bird Daryl & Sherylee Black The Black Family Foundation Lane & Whitney Blake Joseph & Vicki Blanch Jacob & Crystal Blasi James & Jill Blotter Miller Auto Body Devin Boehme Ryan & JennaLyn Bohm Ted & Marilyn Boman Mark & Misty Bond Kirk & Madonna Bortle David Bosen Davis & Bott Lorenzo & Myrna Bott Randall & Nadine Cooper Boudrero Richard & Terri Boudrero Jerry & Julie Bovee Jay & Ethel Bowcutt Cory & Bobbie Bowen Warren & DeAnna Earsley Bowers Jacob Alan Boxx Shane & Lisa Boyce Craig & Aubrey Bracken Larry & Amber Bradley Bandon LLC. Post Consumer Brands The Brass Tag Bob Bredsguard
Gregory & Natasha Brenchley Jon & Tonya Brenchley Brent Allen’s Automotive Inc. Craig & Joan Brewerton Dennis & Margie Bright William A. Brindley Boyd & Kerry Bringhurst Curtis & Marilyn Broadbent Jordan & Makena Rae’ Brown Ken Brown Roger Brown Bryan Porter DDS LLC Ronald & Dixie Bryant Brandon & Megan Buck Marv & Diann Buck Terrall Budge Ed & Diane Buist Bill & Margaret Bullen Jonathan & Julie Bullen Scott Bunnell Scott & Janalee Burbank Lee & Diann Burke Katharine Burn Jody & Dione Burnett Matt Burnham Brad & LaNette Burr Brent & Lorrie Burr Jared & Nikki Burr Ann Burt Austin Burtenshaw
AGGIES UNLIMITED Kevin Cecy Burtenshaw Jordan Butler Buttars Tractor-Tremonton Inc. David & Trisha Butterfield Christopher & Leslie Buxton C M M Enterprises, LLC Cache Honda Yamaha Cache Valley Builders, Inc. Cache Valley Electric Company Cache Valley Extermination Inc. Cafe Sabor Peter & Claire Caldwell Frank & Jaime Caliendo Vosco Call Camp Chef Eileen P. Campbell Randell & Kassi Capener Reed & Caitlyn Capener Quin Card Neal & Jana Carling Shawn Carlsen Lee & Flo Carlston Charles & Amy Carpenter Hayes & Terrie Carr Kenneth & Steffanie Carrillo Raymond & Ruth Cartee Johndale Carty N Bar L Cattle Center for Growth and Opportunity Central Milling Company Central Valley Machine James Chadburn Brian & Jacqueline Chambers David & Melanie Chambers Eldon & Jane Chambers Gary & Ruth Ann Chambers Jim & Carol Chambers Jason & Anne Chapman Jillian Chappel Scott Chappell John Chatburn Richard Checketts Chi Kappa Alpha Jay & Laura Lee Child Michael & Cherie Child Amber Rae Childers Barbara Christensen Benji & Krista Christensen Bruce & Theresa Christensen Charles & Diane Christensen David Christensen Erik & Aneka Christensen Joseph Val Christensen Kasey & Stephanie Christensen Kerry Val Christensen Kevin Christensen Kyle Christensen Michael & Kelli Christensen Val Dee & Lannis Christensen Clair & Rosemary Christiansen Kelly & Ronda Christoffersen Christine Downs Cisneros Carla Clark Thomas & Tammie Clark Charles Claybaugh Kendall Clyde McKell Clyde Kent & Ladawn Coburn John & Noelle Cockett Codale Electric Supply, Inc. Cold Stone Creamery of Logan David Cole Ryan Colich Richard & Jeri Garner Collings Richard & Vonda Collins Columbus Travel Colmena Capital, Inc. Max Cologna Communications Research Associates Inc. Compost West, Inc. Donald Conner Michael & Denise Conover Cook Martin Poulson, P.C. Joseph & Nancy Cook
Les Cook Matthew & Kristin Cook Noel & Molley Cooley James & Leona Cooper Phil & Suzanne Cooper David & Kathy Coppin Frank & Karla Coppin Jennie Corbett Annette Viola Cottle Adam C. Couch David & Holly Cowley Douglas & Karla Cranney Michael & Kathy Cranney Trevor & Analise Cranney Glen Crawford Steve & Jeanine Bennett Creamer David & Doris Crockett Thom & Sandra Crockett Crossroads Traffic Management, LLC Edward Crowell Thomas Cruickshank Bill Crunk Jerren & Sharel Cundick Craig & Earlyn Curtis Curt & Kristie Curtis Melvin & Carrie Curtis Steven Curtis Larry Dahle Jess & Desirae Daines Paul & Jerusha Daines Dale Barton Agency Anthony Damato Geneal Dart Nancy Davidson Andrew Davis Dorothy Davis Dwight Davis Jason & April Davis Kenny & Gracie Davis Scott & Catherine Davis TJ & Erin Davis Natalie R. Day Wayne & Nancy Day Paul Daybell Bryon T. Dehek Jared & Emily DeLisle The Delta Air Lines Foundation Richard & Linda DeMoss Scott & Cora Denning Brendan Dennis Wade Denniston Ryan & Karen Dent Jay Despain Steven & Rochelle DeSpain Andrew & Jessica Dickinson Doug & Kathy Dickson Carl & Cynthia Dixon Blair Doane Wayne & Shelley Dodd John & Laurie Dodge Domino’s Pizza Scott & Mandy Donavan doTERRA International, LLC Ed Douglas Jason & Dawn Douglas Danny Douglass Jean Douglass William Doutre Todd & Kara Downs Sandra Drake Arden & Joan Draney Benjamin Draper Tyson & Rory Drysdale Grayson & Lenonnie DuBose Leo & Karen Ducharme Willie & Vicki Duersch Leah Dunagan Kent & Teri Dunkley Mike & Kitty Dunn Blake & Alison Dursteler Kevin & Danene Dustin DWA Construction The Christopher I. Seibert Dynasty James & Barbara Earl Nile & Anne Easton Randy & Jaime Eck
Terryl & Kathy Eck DJ Eckman Edge Excavation David & Rexann Edwards Edwards Furniture Inc. Joe Eliason Matt & Michelle Elison Robert Elkington Mike & Jody Ellison Christopher & Patrice Erickson Jake S. Erramouspe Gary & Susan Etherington Brian Evans Clyde & Lorraine Evans Cole & Kristine Evans Darin Evans Dee & Patricia Evans Gordon Evans Jon & Denna Evans Mathew Evans Tiffany Evans Mark &Stephanie Ewing David & Susan Ezola Al & Kathie Faccinto Factory Homes Outlet Mark & Beverly Faldmo Eric & Stacie Falk Clinton & Jan Farmer Scott Farner William Fausel Mike & Heidi Favero Mary Felando Tarvish & Jana Doggett Felton Nancy Ferderber Dennis & Charlotte Ferguson Ferguson Enterprises Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Ryan & Karen Filimoehala Royce Caden Fillmore James & Jodi Finlayson Firehouse Pizzeria First & Third Event Market Curtis & Camille Black Fisher Ed & Lisa Fisher Fisher Home Furnishings Stephen & Shauna Flammer Fletcher Consulting Services, Inc. Bill & Kathy Fletcher Janet Flinders Thomas Flowers Jerry & Vicky Fonnesbeck Forgotten Trails Land & Livestock Mike Fosmark Jera Foster Leland & Linda Foster Keith Foulger Donald & Peggy Francis Steven & Angela Francis McKay Francom Michael & Jo Frankland Eric & Jenny Franson Benjamin Froehle Doug & Melody Fryer Joe Fuhriman Craig Woods Fuller Mark Gabrylczyk Carl & Holly Galbraith Jake Gallegos Kirt Gardiner Craig & Michelle Gardner Jacob & Jenny Garlock Steven Gasik James & Terri Lee Gass Larry & Jenny Gates Chuck & Louise Gay Adrian & Neva Geddes Don & Norma Gerbozy John & Patsy Giboney Jason & Michelle Gibson Eric Gierloff Andre Giles Noel & Elizabeth Gill Ronald & Sandra Gillam Joel & Julie Gillespie Tyson & Sara Glover Marlowe & Michele Goble
Bruce Godfrey Clint & Adrianne Godfrey David & Marci Godfrey L. J. & Lisa Godfrey Todd & Shauna Godfrey Judd A. Goff Goldenwest Credit Union Reid & Sherry Goldsberry Bryce C. Goodin Richard & Colleen Gordin Todd Gordon Gossner Foods, Inc. John & Taunya Gossner Great Harvest Bread Company Great Western Recreation Loyal Green Mary Green Michael Green William & Sharie Green Joshua Greene Louis & Nancy Griffin Kyle & Tamra Griffiths HuHot Mongolian Grill Market Street Grill Tom & Renee Grimmett Weston Groll Robert Craig Gross Allen & Marilyn Grunig Ryan & Lara Lee Grunig Bruce & Casey Gunnell Gaye Gunnell Paul & Melinda Gustafson Gary Mont Gustin John Gutke Robert & Marilyn Gutke Wayne & Kristen Guymon Nnamdi Ifekandu Gwacham Eric Gwilliam Susan Lee Haddock Haddy Financial, LLC. Steven & Amy Hadfield Brandon Elizabeth Halaufia Casey Halaufia Willie & Patty Halaufia Gary & Lorene Hale Evan & Diane Hall Jan & Alyson Hall Kimber & Minnie Hall Michael & Jennifer Hall Richard & Melinda Hall Colene Hamblin Stephanie Hamblin Karen Hamilton Mike Hamilton Richard Hampton Richard & Marjorie Handel Curtis & Nancy Hanks Brad Hannig Austin Hansen Corey & Trisa Hansen Destrie & Katie Hansen Hansen Oil Company John & Patricia Hansen Keith & Dane Hansen Kellen Hansen Kirk Hansen Ned & Cathryn Hansen Ted & Lenis Hansen Mike & Hayley Hanson Ben J. Hardcastle Jared & Carilynn Hardy Richard Harper Lee Owen & Kaye Harris Ronney & LuAnn Harris Dave & Jan Hart John & Heather Hartwell Justin Hatch Dave & Michelle Haws Marc & Laurie Haws Arthur & Mary Heers Lane Hemming Lyle & Carol Henderson Kendall & Kim Hendricks Robert William Hendricks RoLynne Hendricks Robert& Mary Ann Henke
Herm’s Inn, LLC Abel Herrera Nathan Hess Ryan Hess Kyle & Klydi Heywood Edgar R. Hibbard Jim S. Hickman Katie Hickman Eugene & Maureen Higham Brad & Kathy Higley Chris & Gwen Hilbus Daniel & Alexis Lopez Hilker Joe Hill Randall & Katie Sue Hill Travis & Lydia Hillen Cody F. Hillyard Lyle & Alice Hillyard Steven Himebaugh Todd & Linette Hlavaty Randall & Sherrie King Hobbs Bruce & Carol Hodges Jeffery & Denise Hodges Doug & Shellee Hoffman Thomas & Karen Hoffman Zach & Anna Hoffman Joe Hoggan Brody & Keesha Holbrook Holiday Motor Coach Jared Martell Holland Leon & Marilynn Holland Thomas Holland Tyler Holland David Holman Tyler & Marie Holst Curt & Lois Hoskins Blain & Angela Housley Christopher & Tara Howell Herond & Gaylen Hoyt Don & Arlene Huber Russel & Karen Hudson Matthew & Emily Huff Jana Huffman Christine Hughes Brett & Julie Hugie Christie Hulet Eric Hull Hullinger Family Foundation Thomas & Shauna Humpherys Willard Humpherys Rick & Cindy Humphreys Dean & Shelli Hunger Brian & Cherie Hunsaker Fred & Sharon Hunsaker Jeff & Angela Hunsaker Robert & Donna Hurst Hutchinson Family Trust Chuck & Karen Hyer Gordon & LeAnn Hyer Scott & Janie Hymas ICON Health & Fitness, Inc. Matt & Abbey Ingebritsen Weston & Jody Innes Inovar Inc. Casey & Jennifer Isom Clay Isom Burns & Brenda Israelsen Dwight & JillAnn Israelsen Marianna Israelsen Rachel Israelsen Nicolas Zeb Izatt J K Business Machines Brett & Cindy Jackman Jack’s Tire & Oil Inc. Leon & Nicole Jackson William Jackson Darin Jacobs David & Alisa Jacobs Alan & Bonnie James Alan & Linda James Scott James Shelly James Lynn & Irma Janes Verl & D’On Janes Brady & Jenna Jardine Jardine Financial Services, Inc. Cathi Jarvis
JayDee Barr Construction, Inc Jed & MerLynn Pitcher Foundation Irasema Jeffers Matthew Jenkins Morty & Pat Jenkins Troy & Jennifer Jenkins Van & Marsha Jenkins Jay & Lori Jenks Dale & Stacy Jennings Branden Jensen Brandon Jensen Garrett & Alyssa Jensen George Jensen Greg & Jamie Jensen Kenneth & Teresa Jensen Kent & Bonnie Jensen Kirk & Heather Jensen LaVal & SueAnn Jensen Miles & Janet Jensen Randy & Marcia Jensen Rodney Jensen Scott Jensen Shawn & Jennifer Jensen Steven Jensen Todd Jensen Wayne & Laurel Jensen Jensen’s Custom Cabinets & Millwork Richard & Carol Jenson Steven & Jana Jenson Curtis & Valerie Jeppesen Larry Jeppesen David Jett Doug Jewell Garth & Carol Jewkes Jibson Family Foundation Ron & Janet Jibson Jim & Carol Laub Family Foundation JMN Enterprises, Inc. Joseph S. Bergeson Trust John & Renee Perko Family Foundation John Nels Anderson, M.D. Cory & Marisa Johnson Daniel & Carol Johnson Eric Johnson Jeff & Jenny Johnson Jordan Lavar Johnson Joseph Kirkland Johnson Kim & Cynthia Johnson Kory Johnson Larry & Kaylene Johnson Merrill Johnson Michael & Laurie Johnson Noelle Johnson Steven Johnson Whitnee Johnson Arthur & Calleen Jones Dee Jones Dylan Jones Harold & Anne Jones Jones Simkins, LLC. Kenneth & Dawn Jones Nick & Stef Jones Ricky Jones Roger & Susan Jones Travis & Kelli Jones Jeff & Betsy Jorgensen Jeff & Julie Jorgensen JRC Inc. Barry & DeeAnn Judd Casey & Haley Judd Marty & Elizabeth Judd Wesley & Allie Jurkatis Justin D. Thornton, DDS P.C. Brady & Mindy Kaae Kabuki Japanese Steak House and Sushi Bar Nancy Van-Kampen John & Tracey Kartsone Derrick Keddington Dax & Tami Keller Scott Kelson Todd Kelson Ken & Nancy Kennedy Living Trust Frank & Jean Kenyon
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
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John & Barbara Kerr Rolfe & Janeil Kerr Kevin & Robyn Kesler Curt Kidd Michael & Elaine Kidman Kilgore Companies Scott Killebrew Kimander Properties Bryan & Catherine King Kelly & Sydney King Ted & Cindy King Kingsburg Towing Blake & Dove Kirby Garrett & Elizabeth Kite Sheila & Karl Klages Gerald & Trudy Knight Curtis & Susan Knudsen Phil & Maureen Koeven Mike & Juanita Kohler Wallace & Pat Kohler Christopher Koopman David & Joleene Kooyman Jeffrey Kooyman Gary & Nancy Korth David & Barbara B. Kragthorpe Von & Sara Krebs David & Tamara Kuge Sharon Kunzler KYS Inc. Renee LaBeau Hal & Helen LaBelle Thomas Lachmar Steve & Penny Lackey Real Salt Lake Lakeside Consulting, LLC Wayne & Kathryn Lamb Ray Lancaster Sarah Landes Sidney Lane David & Patricia Langrock Thomas Lanvers Curtis & Sonia Larsen Keith & Angi Larsen Mark & Melissa Larsen Travis & Emily Larsen Tyler James Larsen Vicky Larsen Wade & Meridee Larsen Anthony & Barbara Larson Cory & Kimberly Larson Don G-K Larson Douglas & Elizabeth Larson Greg & Julianne Larson Steve & Kimberly Larson Eric Laub Jim & Carol Laub Mark Laub Learfield Communications, Inc. Jared & Chelsea Leatham Ronald & Mary Leavitt Victoria Lefler Cody & Chelsea Lehman Clare & Cathy Leishman Dana & Ann Leishman Ryan Leishman Steven & Lorene Leishman Leland J. Winger, Jr. Howard Lemcke Michael & Melanie Lemon LeNonne Restaurant Alma Leonhardt Ivan & Vona Vee Leonhardt Claudia Lewis Daniel Lien Ed & Deborah Lindbloom Gary Lindley Keisa & Blaine Lindley Scott Lindsay Travis & Katie Lish Bruce Lithgow Kay Don & Kaye Littledike Nate & Dani Lloyd Locker 42 Logan Optical, Co. Logan South Taco Time Logo Shop
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Mark & Stacie London Greg S. Long Brian & Leann Longuevan Lyndon Loosle Joseph & Jean Lopour Dean Losee Mark & Colleen Low Shane & Jennifer Lowe Carl & Mary Sue Lundahl Kent & Adrian Lundgren Rick & Adrienne Lungman Darren & Cheree Lutz Ray & Sue Lutz LW Miller Companies Newell & Janet Lyman Kenneth & Verene Lyon Jennifer MacAdam Scott & Carrie Mackowiak Richard & Teresa Champ-Major Samuel Kacie Malouf David Manning Marc & Deborah Bingham Fund Victoria Marrott Grant & Sharon Martinsen Andrew Masson Peter & Kristen Mathesius Blake & Patrice Mathews Cody & Colette Mathews Lynn & Tama Mathews Rhett & Angela Mathews Jarvis Maughan Ronald & Jeanette Maughan Kevin Maw Wayne & Diane May MayMoes, LLC. Brandon McBride Jeff & Barbara McBride Troy & Dianne McBride Samuel McConkie Richard McElrath Sean & Maggie McInerney Michael & Maxine McKee Ryan & Laura McLane Mark & Julie McLellan Jeffrey & Julie McMurdie Joseph & Annette McMurdie Eliot & Tracy McNeil Jacob McNeil Mont McNeil Brett Meacham Ron & Talee Meacham Allen & Sandy Mecham Gilbert Melendez The Melting Pot John & Jennifer Merrill Reed Merrill Stanton & Michelle Merrill Eldon Messersmith Metal Vision Inc Todd & Lisa Meyers Stan & Judith Meyrick Deborah Meza Steve & MichelleThurber Marty & Dianne Mickelson Midgley-Huber Inc. Corey & Erin Mikkelsen Michael & Janice Mikkelsen Steve & Mariette Milbrandt Corey & Michelle Miles Kent Miles Thomas Miles Millcreek Construction Inc. Kristen Millecam David Miller Dyar & Bertha Jo Miller Miller Companies LC Ruth Miller Scott & Cherilyn Miller Todd & Kayla Miller Carrie Milligan David Milligan Erin & Eileen Milligan Earl Mills Michael & Jenalyn Mills Robert Mills Carma Mirabal
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AGGIES UNLIMITED Steven & Terri Misener Ken & Becky Mitchell Scott & Lisa Mitchell The Mobile Source, LLC Jack Molgard Molgard Law Offices, P.C. Scott & Lindasue Monson Larry Montgomery Steven Moon David & Suzanne Pierce-Moore John & Paula Moran Chris & Melissa Morgan Stew & Vicki Morrill Michael & Holley Morrison Budd Mortensen Gene Mortensen John & Jolene Mortensen Delon Mortimer Allen-Hall Mortuary Steve & Diane Mothersell Dale & MyrLynn Moulton Evva Moulton Mountain View Dairy Farms MountainStar Healthcare Mr Mac of Logan Scott & Peggy Muir Paul & Jane Munns Nicholas & Amy Dawn Murphy Dennis & Patricia Murray Paul & Bev Murray Wayne & Tina Murray Jason Napier Nathan & Associates Stephen & Christine Neeleman James & Betty Neeley John & Hayley Neil Larry & Rebekah Campbell Neilson Leila Neilson Brok Nelson Curtis & Suzanne Nelson Jason & Janae Nelson Keevin & Pamela Nelson Keith & Joni Nelson Lyle & Judy Nelson Nelson Communications Associates Otis Nelson Steven Nelson Vern & Patricia Nelson Jacob & Kara Nesbit Vincent Neumiller Jeff Newell Chris & Jennifer Newhouse Robert & Alana Niedergerke Eric & Marva Nielsen Ramsey Nielsen Richard & Louise Nielsen Terry & Kim Nielsen Dylan Nielson Layne Nielson Jack Nixon Jr Nixon and Nixon, Inc. Scott Nixon Noble House Interiors Stephen & Wendy Noel Paul & Pamela Norman Michael Norton Paul & Sharon Norton Stanley & Joan Norton Chad & Katrina Nye NyeCo Lonnie Nyman Okland Construction Lex & Mardi Obray JR & Jill Ochsenbein Michael Off Daniel Ogden Doug Ohlson Michael Okonkwo Randy Oldroyd Cameron & Katie Oliver David & Michelle Oliver Conley Olsen Darren & DeAnn Olsen Dylan & Katie Olsen Herm & Norma Olsen
UTAH STATE
Hy & Ellen Olsen Jackson & Celeste Olsen Justin Olsen Larry & Vicki Olsen Phillip & Connie Olsen Raymond & Shelley Olsen Reid & Stacey Olsen Richard & Julie Olsen Ryan & Angie Olsen Susan Olsen David & Merilee Olson Robert Allen Olson Scott & Elaine Olson Paul Oppenheimer Brady Orchard Adrian Brad Van Orden Jerry Orsund Robert Ortiz Bryan Ostermiller Andrew & Megan Ostler Kyler Ovard Phillip & Jill Ann Pack Brad & Laurie Packer Jed & Andrea Palmer Jeff & Taubi Palmer Taylor & Lacee Palmer Boyd & Arline Parker Cathy Parker Grant & Gloria Parker Patrick & Jennefer Parker Randy Parker Richard Parker Blair & Cynthia Parrish Scott Parrish Mike & Rhonda Parson Darin Partridge Michael & Connie Paskett Pat Patterson Arnie & Jolene Peasley Ty Pebley Richard Perea Michael & Camille Perkes David Perry Bruce P. Petersen Craig & Susan Petersen Gary & Anne Petersen Kent & Rachel Petersen Kurt & Patti Petersen Austin Tyler Peterson Craig & Laura Peterson Dillon Peterson Jacob & Kristina Peterson Larry & Peggy Peterson Travis & Amy Peterson William & Angela Peterson Rob & Breanne Phelps Joseph & Karen Phillips Sara Phillips Craig & Carol Pickett David & Cindy Pierce Michael Pierce Plastic Resources, Inc. Richard Plogger Doug & Heather Plowman Burke & Lori Plummer Poindexter Nut Company Ronald & Sherian Poindexter Rodger & Geniel Pond Margaret Poppleton Abel & Martha Porter Bryan Porter Paul & Jami Porter Val & Nancy Potter LaMont Poulsen Lynn & Ardith Poulsen Gary & Andrea Powell Power Cat, LLC Rodney & Karen Price PricewaterhouseCoopers Foundation Primrose Hospice, Inc. Greyson Prinzing Dennis & Donna Pruss Janet Pulsipher Dean & LuAnn Quayle Rage Salons
David Ragland Ralph W Binns, DDS Argyle Ranch Eric & Amy Rasmussen Paul & Peggy Rasmussen Philip & Linda Rasmussen Kevin & Bonnie Rawlings Byron & Colleen Rawlins Jim & Dana Ray Raymond Construction Thomas & Patricia Reading Brent Redd Edward & Susan Redd Mark & Sunny Reeder Robert Reeder Lynn & Barbara Rees Lance & Nancy Reese Edward M. Reeve Nate Reeve Randy & Christine Reeve Riley & Kelly Reynolds Jerry & Lorraine Rhodes Captain Cleve A. Rice Kevin & Stacy Rice Michael & Anna Rice Jeffrey Miriam Rich Richard W Sackett Living Trust Timothy & Jana Richards Paul Richins Ronald & Jan Richins Scott & Jodi Richins Edward & Kathy Rigby Jay & Helen Rigby Jeannie Rigby Tyler Riggs Craig R. Rigsbee Alan & Tammy Rindlisbacher Brent & Janis Ritchie Adam Ritter Matthew & Natalie Robbins Robert & Nancy Funk Curtis & Lori Roberts Gary Roberts Richard Roberts Randy & Florence Robins Kent & Joan Robson Ross & DaNece Robson Matt Rogers Ryan Jerry Rogers Ashlee Roper Sheldon Roper Michael Roskelley Richard Rouse Steve Rowland Brent L. Rowser Royal Wholesale Electric Gary & Rachell Rudd Rural Health Group, Inc, Bernard Russ Danny & Sally Russell Ivy Russell Grant Rust Ruth’s Chris Steak House S & S Worldwide Inc. S. E. Needham Jewelers, Inc. Dick Sackett Syd & Laura Sadler Rich & Pam Saltmarsh Al & Michelene Salvo Salvo Properties, LLC. Gary & Elizabeth Sampson Alan & Cindy Saunders Brandy Saunders Kyle & Audrey Saunders Victor & Kelley Saunders Todd & Renee Savage Mark Schaefer Logan Schenk Glen & Julene Schmidt William & Jennie Schow Alexandrea Schulte Joe & Anita Schulte Schwab Charitable Fund Scott Hlavaty, DMD, MS Robert Sears Jeff & Teresa Seeholzer
Seibert, LLC Dennis & Lynn Sessions Kalem & Syndie Sessions Donnie Shafer Steven Shafer Shaffer’s Bakery Lawrence Shane Edward & Mary Jane Shaw Kevin & Randi Shaw Phillip Shaw Marlin Shields Roy & Carol Shivers Patrick Shuldberg Tami Lynne Shulsen Spencer & Amy Shumway La Wanna M. Shurtliff Evelyn Sibbernsen Sidstan, LLC Lisa Simmons Randy & Janet Simmons James Skabelund Brett & Jodi Skinner Erik & Deana Skinner Stephen & Marlene Skinner Chad Skola Henry Skola Robert Slack Ron & Heather Smellie Carlos & Annette Smith Connie Smith Dustin Smith Geoffrey & Peggy Smith Shawn & Teresa Smith Sian N’Lice Smith Timothy Asa Smith Tracy & Penny Smith Donald & Shannon Smurthwaite KC & Emily Smurthwaite Lynda Snell Joseph & Joni Solosabal Butch Songer Chuck Sorensen Kenneth & Geraldine Sorensen Lois Sorenson Jeremy & Marie Spackman Michael & Anne Spackman Don Sparks Pete Sparreboom Jr Spartan Companies Brian Phillip Speckhard Shawn & Carrie Spencer Gerald & Sheryl Spriet SPRYOS, Inc Roland & Jeanie Squire Richard & Kathy Stachon Dave & Kris Stanger Staples Inc. Starbucks Coffee State Farm Companies Foundation Mike & Sherri Steele Greg & Janalyn Stephens John Stephens Kyle & Joanne Stephens George & Louise Stettler Michael & Angela Stevens Gary & Lesa Stevenson Gary & Denise Stewardson Thomas & Kathy Stewart Robert & Moneice Stocker Randall & Julie Stockham Mark & LeAnn Stoddard Tom Stoddard Betty Stokes Mark Stokes Michael & Cindy Stokes Ryan & Jennifer Stolworthy Michael & Suzanne Stones Maverik Country Stores Bob Stott Ryan & Carrie Stott John & Joanna Strang Elizabeth Strasser SB Strategies Austin & Caitlin Strobel Andrew & Emilee Stromness Randy & Holly Stuart
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
Ron Stucki Kevin & Tracy Suminguit Kent & Kay Summers Dan & Julie Sundstrom Survivor’s Trust Under the 1983 Swainston Mill & Cabinet Inc. Wade Swan Matthew & Lisa Syme T & O, LLC Taco Time of Logan Clenn Talbot JoAnne H. Tanaka Jonathan Glen Tanner Brooks & Sally Tarbet Steve & Savanna Tate Aaron & Lisa Taylor Todd Taylor Team Financial Services Jeff & Valerie Tebbs Tec Electric Co Don Telford Jay & Beth Thatcher Thermo Fisher Scientific Scott & Teresa Theurer Theurer’s Quality Meats Inc. James Thomas Lane & Annette Thomas Maurice & Susan Thomas Myles & Chelsea Thomas Ralph Thomas Jeffrey Scott Thompson Jon Thompson Joshua & Alysha Thompson Ray Thompson David & Stephanie Thornley Derle & Margene Thorpe Raymond & Beverlee Thorson Samuel Tingey Paul & Michelle Tippets Scott & Kathy Tolman Thomas & Janna Tolman Kay & Judy Toolson Joe Tovar Triangle S Companies Troy-Bilt Construction Inc. Clark Tucker Tann & Nancy Tueller Michael Twohig Scott & Sue Ulbrich USU Charter Credit Union - Logan Utah Jazz Dirk & Allison Willoughby Vanderwall Chadd & Lori VanZanten Cody & Celeste Veibell Abraham Verdoes George Veugeler Bryce & Alicia Vicars Village Inn The Villas Communities, LLC Vivint W. Garnett & Associates, Inc. Trevor Duncan Wachsman David Wadley Kip & Ann Wadsworth Troy Wadsworth Robert & Tracy Wagner James & Angela Walker Hal Wamsley Scott & RaNae Wamsley Miles & Kay Wandersee Dustin & Michelle Ward Robert Ward Wade & Christine Ward Robert & Christine Wardle Craig & Barbara Warnes Brian & Tami Warnick Dahl Warren Ian Washburn Watkins Printing, LLC Joel Alan Watson David & Tracy Watterson Scott & Michele Watterson Craig & Dorothy Watts Randy & Kathie Watts Winston & Ruth Ann Watts
WCF Insurance Clair Webb Eric Webb Dale Webber Darren & Brooke Webber Tony & Kathie Wegener Baer Welding Luke Wells Matt & Jennifer Wells Suzanne Wells Wells Fargo Educational Matching Gift Program Debra Wertz Adcentives West Richard & Julie Westerberg Terry Westerberg Western Mechanical, Inc WestHost Burdette & Holly Weston Michael & Zoe Weston Randall & Debi Weston Weston Rentals LLC Neil & Jill Whitaker Jon & Darlene White Kenneth & Cynthia White Kevin White Matthew & Christina White McRae & Kristin Whitlock Clark & Jennifer Whitworth Mark Whitworth Craig Whyte Nathan & Heather Wickizer Scott & Cathy Wilcock Dennis & Lynette Wildman Stuart Wilkinson Casey Williams Christine Williams Keren Williams Michael & Susan Williams Michael Williams Daniel Willie Dale Lester Willis McKay & Ruby Willis Tom & Patty Willis Willis Family Trust Ben Wilson Dennis & Lisa Wilson Drew & Michelle Wilson Wilson Motor Company Wilson Wholesale LLC Joel & Andrea Winkler Jeremy & Laura Winn John & Suzann Winn Justin & Cathryn Wise Byron Wood Gordon & Karen Wood Woodbury Corporation Dave & Karen Woolstenhulme John & Wendy Worley III Jack Worthington Jason Wright Jon & Marilyn Wright Larry Wright Paula & Karl Wright Bret & Chalisa Wursten Jaden & Tayler Wursten Jerry & Audre Wursten Josh & Kellie Yonk Jonathan & Jessica Young Robert Young Kurt & Wendy Zalar Zions Management Services Company Lorin & Jerri Zollinger Paula Zsiray Frederick Zweifel
CAR COACHES BEAR LAKE MOTORS 867 Washington Street Montpelier, ID 83254 208.847.0421
LARRY H. MILLER CHEVROLET MURRAY 5500 South State Street Murray, UT 84107 801.590.0435
CACHE HONDA YAMAHA 3765 US 91 Hyde Park, UT 84318 435.563.6291
MURDOCK HYUNDAI 3131 North Main North Logan, UT 84341 435.787.0040
D. DAHLE MAZDA 4595 South State Street Murray, UT 84107 801.266.0033
MURDOCK VOLKSWAGEN 3181 North Main North Logan, UT 84341 435.799.3500
HERITAGE CHRYSLER DODGE 2900 North Main Logan, UT 84341 435.752.0050
NAPA AUTO PARTS Preston, Smithfield, Logan and Providence 435.752.2755 RICH’S CARS ‘N CREDIT 2570 North Main North Logan, UT 84341 435.752.7424
HERITAGE CHRYSLER DODGE 647 South Main Street Brigham City, UT 84302 435.723.3456
VALLEY MOTORS 2490 North Main North Logan, UT 84341 435.753.6161
KEN GARFF HYUNDAI 717 West Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84101 801.257.3200
Automobile dealerships continue to play an important part in the success of Aggie Athletics. These dealers provide the use of automobiles to the department throughout the year. Their assistance permits Utah State University to more effectively utilize its funds, and offers Aggie Athletics a crucial recruiting tool. Aggie Athletics is deeply grateful for their continued support and encourages Aggie fans to consider visiting one of these dealers when looking for a new vehicle.
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WILSON MOTOR COMPANY 328 North Main Logan, UT 84321 435.752.7355
LARRY H. MILLER BOUNTIFUL CHRYSLER JEEP 755 North 500 West West Bountiful, UT 84010 801.693.2200
YOUNG HONDA 1855 Main Street Logan, UT 84341 435.255.6767
MURDOCK CHEVROLET, BUICK, GMC, CADILLAC 1955 North Main North Logan, UT 84341 435.752.6801
YOUNG TOYOTA 1945 Main Street Logan, UT 84341 435.241.6227
MILLS PUBLISHING, INC. Dan Miller, President; Paula Bell, Regional Advertising Director; Cynthia Bell Snow, Office Administrator; Jackie Medina, Design; Paula Bell, Dan Miller, Paul Nicholas, Chad Saunders Advertising Representatives
facebook.com/MillsPublishing Art Director;
Ken Magleby, Katie Steckler, Patrick Witmer, Graphic
Published by MILLS PUBLISHING INC. 772 East 3300 South, Suite #200 Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 Editorial matter property of the Utah State Athletic Department. All rights reserved. Copyright applied. Nothing appearing in the Utah State University Football Programs may be reprinted, wholly or in part, without permission of the publisher. The publisher is not responsible for the return of unsolicited material. Advertising rates and information may be obtained by calling 801-467-9419. NOTICE: Utah State Law prohibits the consumption of alcoholic beverages on state property. Mountain West Conference Code requires each member institution to be responsible for the crowd control at its home games. (Please do not verbally or physically abuse officials, visiting teams or other fans, and refrain from throwing objects onto the field. Copyright 2019.
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
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No. Name Pos. 1 Gerold Bright RB 3 Henry Colombi QB 3 Troy Lefeged Jr. S 4 Shaq Bond S 5 Cash Gilliam S 5 Cooper Legas QB 6 Cameron Haney CB 6 Andrew Peasley QB 7 Josh Calvin QB 7 DJ Williams CB 8 Braxton Gunther S 9 David Woodward LB 10 Tipa Galeai DE 10 Jordan Love QB 11 Savon Scarver WR 12 Ajani Carter WR 13 Deven Thompkins WR 14 Sean Carter WR 14 Zahodri Jackson CB 15 Simon Thompson LB 16 Jordan Nathan WR 17 Taylor Compton WR 18 Cam Lampkin CB 19 Kyle Van Leeuwen WR 20 Keith Harris S 20 Jaylen Warren RB 21 Andre Grayson CB 22 Michael Anyanwu CB 23 Dominic Tatum CB 24 Dalton Baker DE 25 Jarrod Green CB 26 Chase Nelson RB 27 Enoch Nawahine RB 28 Oakley Hussey S 29 Pailate Makakona RB 30 Patrick Maddox S 32 Sione Fehoko RB 32 Matthew Sterzer S 33 Kevin Meitzenheimer LB 34 Riley Burt RB 34 Daniel Langi DE 36 Jared Reed CB 37 Sam Lockett S 38 Eric Munoz LB 39 Maika Magalei LB 40 Dustin Mathews LB 41 Elijah Shelton DE 42 Nick Heninger DE 43 Jack Drews TE 44 Fua Leilua DT 45 Jaylin Bannerman DE 46 Addison Trupp DE 47 Logan Lee TE 47 Kaleo Neves DE
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UTAH STATE NUMERICAL ROSTER Ht. 5-10 6-2 5-11 5-10 5-11 6-2 5-10 6-2 6-3 5-9 5-10 6-2 6-5 6-4 5-11 6-1 5-7 6-4 5-10 6-3 5-9 5-8 5-11 5-9 5-11 5-8 5-8 5-9 6-2 6-5 5-11 5-10 5-11 6-3 5-10 5-10 5-7 6-2 6-0 6-1 6-0 6-0 6-0 6-0 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-3 6-3 6-5 6-3 6-4 6-2
Wt. 190 200 190 190 195 210 185 200 190 180 185 230 230 220 190 185 160 195 185 210 180 175 165 175 170 225 165 180 180 260 180 200 185 200 200 205 190 225 230 210 230 180 195 230 230 225 230 245 230 305 240 215 250 215
Cl. Exp. Hometown (High School/Last School) Sr. 3L Pensacola, Fla. (Escambia HS) So. 1L Hollywood, Fla. (Chaminade Madonna College Prep) Jr. JC Montgomery Village, Md. (Avalon HS/Fullerton JC) Jr. 1L Decatur, Ill. (MacArthur HS/Southwestern JC) Jr. JC Dayton, Ohio (Wayne HS/Arizona Western JC) Fr. HS Orem, Utah (Orem HS) Sr. 3L Los Angeles, Calif. (Cathedral HS) Fr. RS La Grande, Ore. (La Grande HS) Fr. HS Bellflower, Calif. (Mayfair HS) Sr. 1L Smyrna, Tenn. (Smyrna HS/Independence CC) Jr. 1L Woods Cross, Utah (Woods Cross HS) Jr. 2L Olympia, Wash. (Olympia HS) Sr. 1L Euless, Texas (Trinity HS/TCU) Jr. 2L Bakersfield, Calif. (Liberty HS) Jr. 2L Las Vegas, Nev. (Centennial HS) Fr. HS Houston, Texas (North Shore HS) So. 1L Fort Myers, Fla. (Dunbar HS) Jr. JC Westlake Village, Calif. (Westlake HS/Fullerton JC) So. 1L Sarasota, Fla. (Riverview HS) Fr. HS Salem, Ore. (West Salem HS) Jr. 2L Monrovia, Calif. (Monrovia HS) Jr. 1L Logan, Utah (Logan HS) Fr. HS Mesquite, Texas (Poteet HS) Fr. HS Provo, Utah (Timpview HS) Fr. HS Lawndale, Calif. (Leuzinger HS) Jr. JC Salt Lake City, Utah (East HS/Snow College) So. 1L Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. (Etiwanda HS) Fr. RS Covina, Calif. (Charter Oak HS) Fr. HS Culver City, Calif. (Culver City HS) Sr. 3L Payson, Utah (Payson HS) So. 1L Elk Grove, Calif. (Cosumnes Oaks HS) Jr. 1L Logan, Utah (Logan HS) Fr. HS Kahuku, Hawaii (Kahuku HS) Fr. HS Idaho Falls, Idaho (Hillcrest HS) So. TR West Valley City, Utah (Hunter HS/Colorado Mesa) So. TR Portland, Ore. (Westview HS/Linfield College) So. SQ Salt Lake City, Utah (Cottonwood HS) Fr. RS Taylorsville, Utah (Taylorsville HS) Jr. 2L Moreno Valley, Calif. (Moreno Valley HS) Gr. TR Mantua, Utah (Box Elder HS/BYU) So. SQ South Jordan, Utah (Bingham HS) So. TR Portland, Ore. (Central Catholic HS/Portland State) Fr. RS Spokane, Wash. (Gonzaga Prep) Jr. RS Belvidere, Ill. (Belvidere HS/San Diego Mesa CC) R-So. 1L Lakewood, Wash. (Lakes HS) Fr. RS Bountiful, Utah (Viewmont HS) Fr. RS Salt Lake City, Utah (Highland HS) Jr. TR South Jordan, Utah (Bingham HS/Utah) Fr. HS Ramona, Calif. (Ramona HS) Sr. 1L Anaheim, Calif. (Spanish Fork HS/Oklahoma State) Jr. JC Pickerington, Ohio (Pickerington Central HS/Arizona Western JC) Fr. HS Salt Lake City, Utah (East HS) Jr. 2L Rexburg, Idaho (Madison HS) Fr. HS Provo, Utah (Timpview HS)
UTAH STATE
No. Name Pos. 48 Connor Larsen DE 49 Pierce Callister P 50 Jesse Vasquez LS 51 Justus Te’i DE 52 Jaymason Willingham LB 53 Braden Harris DE 54 Dean Rice DT 54 Noah Young LB 55 Christian LaValle DT 56 Ethan Vowles LB 57 Brandon Pada LS 58 Demytrick Ali’ifua OL 59 Connor Coles PK 59 Aric Davison OL 60 Wyatt Bowles OL 61 Aaron Bredsguard DE 62 Dominik Eberle PK 63 Ashton Adams OL 64 Heneli Avendano OL 65 Karter Shaw OL 66 Mohelika Uasike OL 67 Sione Lasike OL 68 Logan Wood OL 69 Caden Andersen OL 70 Hunter Hill OL 72 Alfred Edwards OL 73 Kyler Hack OL 74 Chandler Dolphin OL 75 Ty Shaw OL 76 Jackson Owens OL 77 Andy Koch OL 78 Jacob South OL 79 Wade Meacham OL 80 Siaosi Mariner WR 81 Tim Patrick Jr. WR 82 Sawyer Merrill WR 83 Derek Wright WR 84 Kanen Eaton WR 85 Mosese Manu TE 86 Bryce Mortenson TE 87 Caleb Repp TE 88 Carson Terrell TE 89 Travis Boman TE 89 Aaron Dalton P 90 Ritisoni Fata DT 91 Devon Anderson DT 92 Hale Motu’apuaka DT 93 Jacoby Wildman DE 95 Diamond Faamafoe DT 96 Christopher ‘Unga DT 97 Jake Pitcher DE 98 Christopher Bartolic P 98 AJ Vongphachanh DE 99 Josh Bowcut DT
Ht. 6-3 6-0 6-1 6-3 6-3 6-2 6-4 6-3 5-11 6-2 5-10 6-3 6-0 6-3 6-5 6-3 6-2 6-4 6-3 6-4 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-3 6-5 6-7 6-4 6-3 6-4 6-5 6-6 6-6 6-6 6-2 6-0 6-1 6-1 6-4 6-3 6-6 6-5 6-5 6-4 6-4 6-1 6-2 6-2 6-3 6-0 6-0 6-3 6-0 6-3 6-5
Wt. 260 170 225 240 215 230 280 225 225 190 210 315 190 295 300 225 195 300 300 300 305 285 280 285 285 310 300 300 300 290 275 295 305 190 190 170 195 180 260 245 230 245 245 210 295 290 295 265 295 300 260 195 230 280
Cl. Exp. Hometown (High School/Last School) Fr. HS American Fork, Utah (American Fork HS) Fr. HS Ogden, Utah (Weber HS) Fr. HS Thousand Oaks, Calif. (Oaks Christian School) R-Jr. 2L Oceanside, Calif. (Mission Hills HS) Fr. HS Steilacoom, Wash. (Steilacoom HS) Sr. SQ Gunnison, Utah (Gunnison Valley HS) Fr. HS Yuba City, Calif. (Rivery Valley HS) So. JC Gulf Breeze, Fla. (Gulf Breeze HS/Southwestern JC) Fr. HS Mission Viejo, Calif. (Mission Viejo HS) So. HS Arvada, Colo. (Ralston Valley HS) Jr. 1L Glendale, Ariz. (Mountain Ridge HS) Jr. 2L Hayward, Calif. (San Leandro HS) R-So. SQ Bozeman, Mont. (Bozeman HS) Fr. HS Richland, Wash. (Richland HS) Fr. RS West Point, Utah (Syracuse HS) Fr. HS Bountiful, Utah (Viewmont HS) Sr. 2L Nuremberg, Germany (Redondo Union (CA) HS) Fr. HS Salem, Ore. (South Salem HS) Fr. RS Sandy, Utah (Jordan HS) Fr. RS South Jordan, Utah (Herriman HS) R-Jr. 2L Euless, Texas (L.D. Bell HS) Fr. HS Las Vegas, Nev. (Bishop Gorman HS) Fr. HS Grand Junction, Colo. (Fruita Monument HS) Jr. 1L Logan, Utah (Logan HS) Fr. HS Orem, Utah (Orem HS) So. 1L Redlands, Calif. (Redlands Senior HS) So. RS Las Vegas, Nev. (Palo Verde HS/Orange Coast CC) So. SQ Sandy, Utah (Alta HS) Jr. 1L South Jordan, Utah (Herriman HS) Fr. HS Sandy, Utah (East HS) Fr. RS Eastvale, Calif. (Eleanor Roosevelt HS) Fr. RS Anacortes, Wash. (Anacortes HS) Fr RS Layton, Utah (Layton HS) Gr. TR Tustin, Calif. (Tustin HS/Utah) Fr. RS San Diego, Calif. (Morse HS) Fr. HS El Dorado Hills, Calif. (Oak Ridge HS) Jr. JC Sterling, Utah (Manti HS/Snow College) Fr. HS Vancouver, Wash. (Columbia River HS) Jr. JC West Bountiful, Utah (Bountiful HS/Mt. San Antonio JC) Fr. RS Smithfield, Utah (Sky View HS) Gr. TR Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. (Los Osos HS/Utah) Jr. 2L Lehi, Utah (Lehi HS) Jr. 1L Henderson, Nev. (Coronado HS) R-Sr. 3L Bountiful, Utah (Viewmont HS) Jr. 2L Redlands, Calif. (East Valley HS) Sr. 2L Baltimore, Md. (Overlea HS/Dodge City CC) Fr. RS Honolulu, Hawaii (Punahou HS) Gr. 3L Logan, Utah (Logan HS) Fr. HS Draper, Utah (Alta HS) Sr. 3L Rochester, Calif. (Rancho Cucamonga HS) Jr. SQ Smithfield, Utah (Sky View HS) Jr. JC Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar HS/Orange Coast CC) Fr. HS Pasco, Wash. (Chiawana HS) Fr. HS Sherwood, Ore. (Sherwood HS)
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
STONY BROOK NUMERICAL ROSTER No. Name Pos. Cl. Exp. 1 Gavin Heslop* DB Sr.-R 3L 2 Casey Williams DL So.-R 1L 3 Seba Nekhet RB So.-R 1L 4 Tyquell Fields QB Jr.-R 2L 4 Jack Pruban K So.-R 1L 5 Sam Kamara* DL Sr. 3L 5 Jean Constant WR Gr. TR 5 Jadon Turner RB Fr. HS 6 TJ Morrison DB Jr.-R 2L 7 Ty Son Lawton RB Fr.-R RS 8 Augie Contressa DB Jr.-R 2L 9 Jack Cassidy QB Jr.-R 2L 10 Kareem Gaulden DB Jr.-R 1L 11 Shawn Harris Jr. WR Fr. HS 12 Joshua Zamot QB Fr.-R RS 13 Danny Sanchez QB Fr.-R RS 13 Sean Cassidy DB Sr.-R TR 14 EJ Fineran DB Jr.-R 2L 14 Trey Berry QB Fr. HS 15 Brandon Benson WR Jr.-R TR 16 Oniel Stanbury DB Fr.-R RS 17 Sean Hammonds Jr. DL Gr. TR 17 Griffin Wiegel QB Fr. HS 18 Jahquel Webb WR So.-R 1L 19 Gregory Young II DB Fr.-R RS 20 Jabari Reddock DB So.-R 1L 21 Synceir Malone DB Sr.-R 3L 21 Jordan Jackson DB Fr. HS 22 Calique Cato-Jacobs DB Fr.-R RS 23 Ryan Vadis WR Fr.-R RS 24 Keirston Johnson LB Jr. TR 25 Ronnie Beard DB So.-R 1L 26 Quenton Porter DB Fr.-R RS 27 JP Roane WR Fr.-R RS 28 Isaiah White* RB Sr.-R 3L 29 Justin Reese DB Fr. HS 30 Reidgee Dimanche LB So.-R 1L 32 Tahshawn Brinson RB Fr. HS 33 Will Corchado DB So.-R 1L 34 Luke Anderson DB Fr.-R RS 35 Alex Indelicato RB Fr.-R RS 36 John Corpac WR So.-R 1L 36 Gavin Carlson DB Fr. HS 37 Kendall Nero-Clark DB Fr.-R RS 38 Aidan Kaler LB Fr. HS 39 Jaylyn Stover LB Fr.-R RS 41 Randall Hepburn Jr. DB Fr.-R RS 42 Keegan Henderson DL Sr.-R 3L 42 RJ Lamarre WR Fr. HS 43 Chris Campbell LB Fr.-R RS 44 Zachary Lucas TE Sr.-R 2L 44 Clarens Legagnuer LB Fr. HS 45 Lukas Merluzzi WR Fr.-R RS 47 Elijah Duff LB Jr.-R 2L
Ht. 6-1 6-2 5-9 6-2 5-10 6-2 5-9 5-10 5-10 5-10 6-0 6-1 5-11 5-10 6-0 6-2 6-1 6-4 6-1 6-1 5-11 6-1 6-3 5-9 5-10 5-11 6-1 5-10 5-10 5-10 6-0 6-0 5-11 5-10 5-11 5-11 6-0 5-8 6-0 6-0 5-9 5-10 5-11 6-2 6-2 6-1 6-2 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-4 6-1 6-1 5-11
Wt. 200 250 190 195 200 275 180 175 185 215 210 205 185 170 190 285 190 210 170 210 200 250 210 180 180 190 200 180 185 180 225 170 205 185 210 165 210 205 195 190 170 180 170 195 215 230 200 240 180 210 240 185 200 230
Hometown (High School/Last School) Yonkers, N.Y. / Archbishop Stepinac Philadelphia, Pa. / South Philadelphia / Temple Brooklyn, N.Y. / Fort Hamilton Yonkers, N.Y. / Archbishop Stepinac Arlington Heights, Ill. / Prospect Carteret, N.J. / Carteret Delray Beach, Fla. / Village Acad. / Bryant Rochester, N.Y. / Irondequoit Yonkers, N.Y. / Archbishop Stepinac Staten Island, N.Y. / Curtis Commack, N.Y. / Commack Bohemia, N.Y. / Connetquot Jersey City, N.J. / Lincoln/Temple Mt. Vernon, N.Y. / Archbishop Stepinac Millville, N.J. / Holy Spirit Bronx, N.Y. / Lehman Bohemia, N.Y. / Connetquot / Stonehill College Bethlehem, Pa. / Bethlehem Catholic East Setauket, N.Y. / Ward Melville Waco, Texas / La Vega / SMU Brooklyn, N.Y. / Erasmus Hall Louisville, Ky. / Ballard / Ball State Rochester, N.Y. / McQuaid Jesuit Brooklyn, N.Y. / Erasmus Hall Clinton, Md. / Suitland Upper Marlboro, Md. / Largo Bronx, N.Y. / Iona Prep Freeport, N.Y. / Freeport Brooklyn, N.Y. / Erasmus Hall Closter, N.J. / Northern Valley Regional Jacksonville, Fla. / Robert E. Lee / USF Commack, N.Y. / Commack Hedgesville, W.V. / Hedgesville Sicklerville, N.J./Timber Creek Regional Gordon Heights, N.Y. / Longwood Rock Hill, S.C. / South Pointe Hamilton, N.J. / Hamilton West Bronx, N.Y. / Paramus Catholic Elmont, N.Y. / Holy Trinity / Sacred Heart Dix Hills, N.Y. / Half Hollow Hills West Salisbury, Conn. / Salisbury School East Setauket, N.Y. / Ward Melville Fairport, N.Y. / Fairport Dix Hills, N.Y. / Half Hollow Hills East Sayville, N.Y. / Sayville Washington, D.C. / McKinley Tech Orlando, Fla. / Lake Nona Merritt Island, Fla. / Merritt Island West Nyack, N.Y. / Clarkstown South Staten Island, N.Y. / Tottenville Northvale, N.J. / Old Tappan Brooklyn, N.Y. / Lincoln Cicero, N.Y. / Cicero-North Syracuse Wyandanch, N.Y. / Amityville
No. Name Pos. Cl. Exp. 47 Kordell Jackson DB Fr. HS 48 Justin Burns LB So.-R 1L 49 Anthony Del Negro TE So.-R 1L 50 Nick Courtney K Sr.-R 3L 51 Mitchell Wright P Jr.-R 1L 52 Angelo Guglielmello K Fr. HS 54 Justin Morgan OL So.-R TR 54 Chris Higgins LB So.-R 1L 55 Kyle Nunez OL So.-R 1L 56 Billy Barber LS Sr.-R 3L 56 Mike Boyle K Fr. HS 57 Kris McDonald K Fr.-R RS 58 Carson Tebbetts LS So.-R 1L 60 Anthony Catapano OL Jr.-R 2L 61 Cole Gambino OL Fr. HS 62 Mason Zimmerman OL Sr.-R 3L 62 Mike Karachannas OL Fr. HS 63 Brandon Ciullo P So.-R 1L 63 Regan Craig OL So.-R 1L 65 Ian McLean OL Jr.-R 1L 66 Mike Puetzer OL So.-R 1L 67 Brennan Souhrada OL So.-R 1L 68 Jaelen Vazquez OL Jr.-R 2L 69 Matt Mirabito OL Fr.-R RS 70 Brandon Lopez DL Jr.-R 2L 71 James Tunstall OL So.-R TR 71 Eric DiCrescenzo LS So.-R 1L 72 Joe Detorie OL Sr.-R 3L 72 Enzo Millione OL Fr. HS 73 Niko Papic DL Fr. HS 74 Cameron Lucas OL So.-R 1L 76 Larry Ross Jr. OL Fr.-R RS 78 Chris Chernak Jr. OL Fr.-R RS 80 Dean Koukounas TE Fr.-R RS 81 Delante Hellams Jr. WR So.-R 1L 82 Anthony Millan WR Jr.-R 2L 83 Isaiah Givens TE Fr.-R RS 84 Carter McCarthy TE Jr.-R TR 85 Mike Saleme WR So.-R 1L 86 Andrew Trent WR Sr.-R 3L 86 Marcus Velez TE Fr. HS 87 Nick Anderson WR Sr.-R 3L 87 Aidan Adomaites TE Fr. HS 88 Cal Redman TE Fr. HS 88 Thomas Dutton TE Fr.-R TR 89 Deion Davis WR Fr.-R RS 90 Petey Wilks, Jr. DL So.-R 1L 91 Makye Smith DL Fr.-R RS 92 Peterson Octavien DL Jr.-R 2L 93 Dakar Edwards DL So.-R TR 94 Souleymane Camara LB Fr.-R RS 95 Lorenzo Worrell DL Jr.-R 2L 96 Odean Gilzene DL Sr.-R 3L 96 Jovani Duran DL Fr. HS
Ht. 5-10 5-11 6-2 5-9 6-1 5-8 6-6 6-0 6-2 6-3 5-10 5-9 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-5 6-5 5-7 6-5 6-6 6-6 6-6 6-3 6-6 6-1 6-5 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-4 6-5 6-5 6-6 6-5 6-0 6-2 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-1 6-5 6-1 6-4 6-5 6-6 6-1 6-0 6-1 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-4 6-2 6-2
Wt. Hometown (High School/Last School) 180 Victor, N.Y. / Victor 185 Bowie, Md. / Bishop McNamara 220 Bohemia, N.Y. / Connetquot 165 East Meadow, N.Y./WT Clark 225 Sydney, Australia / Barker / Macquarie University 150 Nutley, N.J. / St. Joseph Regional 335 Bronx, N.Y. / Poly Prep Country Day / Independence CC 210 East Islip, N.Y. / East Islip 340 East Islip, N.Y. / East Islip 240 Sound Beach, N.Y. / Rocky Point 175 Central Valley, N. Y. / Monroe-Woodbury 170 Islip, N.Y. / Islip 210 North Haven, Conn. / North Haven 300 Franklin Square, N.Y. / H Frank Carey 280 Hamburg, N.Y. / St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute 325 Whitehouse, Ohio / Anthony Wayne / Maryland 275 Islip, N.Y. / Islip 180 East Setauket, N.Y. / Ward Melville 280 Rochester, N.Y. / Irondequoit 290 St. Augustine, Fla. / Pedro Menendez 280 Glen Cove, N.Y. / Glen Cove 325 Bay Shore, N.Y. / Bay Shore 330 Bronx, N.Y. / Cardinal Hayes 335 Bay Shore, N.Y. / Bay Shore 280 Jamaica, N.Y. / The Kent School 305 Indian Head, Md. / Lackey / UConn 220 Westmont, N.J. / Haddon Township 285 Fallston, Md. / Fallston 280 Franklin Square, N.Y. / Carey 270 Bayside, N.Y. / Bayside 335 Lorton, Va. / South County 290 Staten Island. N.Y. / Peddie School 315 Brooklyn, N.Y. / Lincoln 245 Riverhead, N.Y. / Riverhead 205 Washington, D.C. / Dematha Catholic 215 Garden City South, N.Y. / Frank Carey 210 Teaneck, N.J. / Bergen Catholic 225 Scottsdale, Ariz. / Horizon / UTSA 190 New Hyde Park, N.Y. / Herricks 195 Bellport, N.Y. / Bellport 225 East Setauket, N.Y. / Ward Melville 195 Lakewood, Calif. / Lakewood 240 Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. / Cold Spring Harbor 240 Hebron, Conn. / RHAM 245 Columbia, Mo. / Hickman / Air Force 180 Ardmore, Pa. / Lower Merion 275 Brooklyn, N.Y. / Erasmus Hall 240 Upper Marlboro, Md. / Frederick Douglas 260 Naples, Fla. / Golden Gate 260 Staten Island, N.Y. / Curtis / AIC 210 Bronx, N.Y. / Cardinal Hayes 275 Rosedale, N.Y. / Christ the King 270 Bronx, N.Y./Mount St. Michael Acad. 260 Malverne, N.Y. / Malverne
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
UTAH STATE
45
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SENIOR FEATURE RILEY BURT
SENIOR FEATURE
GRAD TRANSFER RUNNING BACK EXCITED TO FINISH COLLEGIATE CAREER CLOSER TO HOME
by Wade Denniston, USU Athletic Media Relations Riley Burt is finishing his collegiate career closer to home. The former Box Elder High School star and native of Mantua, Utah, is one of five graduate transfers on Utah State’s 2019 roster. The running back joined the Aggies from BYU, where as a junior in 2018 he rushed for 323 yards and two touchdowns on 59 carries. “After that season, I wanted to transfer,” Burt said. “Coach (Gary) Andersen called and told me to come play for him. It sounded good to me, so I said, ‘Alright.’ I committed pretty fast and came up on a visit.” The Aggies are glad to have him in what is now a pretty loaded backfield with the likes of senior Gerold Bright and junior Jaylen Warren, a transfer from Snow College in Ephraim, Utah. “He has played in a lot of football games, being a graduate transfer,” said Utah State special teams coordinator/running backs coach Stacy Collins. “He finished last season in the bowl game and did a nice job. He’s done a great job coming in here and fitting in right away, competing in a lot of different areas as a running back. He’s done a great job for us on special teams, he’s a mature young man and we’re excited to have Riley here.” Andersen agreed. “When we found out Riley was looking to make a decision to play somewhere else, I talked to (BYU head coach) Kalani Sitake and tried to get information and see what the scenario was,” Andersen said. “We thought it would be a good, natural fit for us. We knew at that point we were looking for a couple more
46
UTAH STATE
backs. We now have two senior running backs and Riley was a natural fit for us. He’s had some good games, and he’s been in a lot of college football games.” Burt capped his BYU career by rushing for 110 yards and one touchdown on 13 carries against Western Michigan in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. “He has big-play abilities,” Collins noted. “He can flat out run and even though he is a very big back with great size, he has great speed. He had some legit track times in high school, and you can see it out here on the field. He can do some stuff that is really impressive.” The son of Nate and Lisa Burt graduated from BYU with a degree in exercise and wellness. He is currently working on his master’s degree in physical education. “He’s faced adversity, but is a better person and player because of that,” Andersen said. “He’s been a great kid since he’s been here and he’s kind of coming home to play, too, which is important to him. He gets to be closer to home, and closer to his parents and family, and gets to play at Utah State for his senior year. He’s excited and we’re excited to have him.” Burt was a three-star recruit by 247Sports. com and ESPN.com coming out of Box Elder HS, where he rushed for 1,109 yards and 11 touchdowns as a senior. He selected BYU over offers from Utah State, Utah, UNLV, Boise State and San Diego State at the time. “Utah State looked at me back then, but I committed to BYU and wanted to be there,” Burt said.
He’s glad to be in Logan, playing for the Aggies now. “I really want to have a good year, make some plays for the team and have the best season of my career,” Burt said. “I’m going to do whatever I can to help the team and hopefully win a Mountain West championship.” Burt played in eight games as a freshman in 2015 for BYU. He carried the ball 14 times on the season for 86 yards. After missing the entire 2016 campaign due to injury, Burt appeared in eight games as a redshirt sophomore in 2017, recording 104 yards rushing and one touchdown on 23 carries. In the Aggies’ season opener at Wake Forest last Friday night, Burt made his debut with Utah State, playing on special teams. Once his collegiate career is over, Burt, who went all four years of playing at BYU with dreadlocks and didn’t have to cut his hair – “I grew my hair out and I hid it,” – the 6-foot-1, 215-pounder wants to remain in athletics as a strength and conditioning coach. “Hopefully, I get an internship somewhere, possibly at Utah State, which would be great,” said Burt, who grew up a big fan of Walter Payton and wears No. 34 to honor him.
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
SENIOR FEATURE CALEB REPP
SENIOR FEATURE
®
TIGHT END PLAYING OFFENSE AGAIN AND ENJOYING EVERY MINUTE OF IT WITH UTAH STATE
by Wade Denniston, USU Athletic Media Relations As soon as Gary Andersen was hired to lead Utah State’s football program – again – Caleb Repp knew that’s where he wanted to be, too. “When I found out coach Andersen was coming to Utah State, I knew this was going to be the place for me,” Repp said. “I saw how he was at Utah with the defensive linemen and he has a great coaching style, which I like and was attracted to. Once he said he was coming here, I knew I wanted to follow him.” Andersen, who coached the Aggies for four seasons from 2009-12, officially returned to Utah State on Dec. 9, 2018. He spent the 2018 season at Utah as an associate head coach/ defensive line coach. Repp, who graduated from Utah in the spring of 2019 with a degree in sociology, played in 37 games and made six starts during his four seasons – he redshirted in 2016 – with the Utes. The son of Gary and Sharon Repp went back and forth between offense and defense with Utah, sometimes switching positions in the middle of a season. “Caleb is a tremendous athlete,” Andersen said. “He’s a good football player, whether he was a defensive end, tight end or wide receiver. He’s been a really good player. We expect big things out of him and he’s a natural. He can go out and play in any spot when you need him to, whether it’s blocking or it’s running a pass route. He might even pop in there on some third downs and rush the passer, who knows?” Repp finished his career at Utah with 21 tackles, including 2.0 sacks, and two forced fumbles. On the offensive side of the ball,
he caught two passes for 25 yards and two touchdowns. “I started half the games my freshman year, then I redshirted my sophomore year,” Repp said. “They moved me all around and played me everywhere: safety, linebacker, defensive end, outside receiver and tight end. I got comfortable at defensive end, but I couldn’t gain the weight they wanted me at. I probably was five pounds shy of where they wanted me at and that was the bare minimum. I went back to tight end halfway through last season and then I knew I wanted to transfer.” Repp won’t have to worry about switching positions as an Aggie. The 6-foot-5, 225-pound native of Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., is playing
tight end at Utah State, and that suits him just fine. “I’m pretty excited,” he said. “I haven’t really played offensive football in three years. I really needed a fresh start. The guys here are great. I love the tight end group and they are cool guys. Everybody works to help get each other better. It’s a good group of guys to be around.” Repp made his Utah State debut last Friday night at Wake Forest as he started the game and finished with five receptions for 59 yards, including a long of 23. “He is a very dynamic player,” said Utah State assistant head coach/tight ends coach Frank Maile. “He is going to be very explosive during the year and you’re going to love watching him play. He has been a positive addition for us. He is a great kid off the field, too, along with his abilities on the field.” Coming out of Los Osos High School in Rancho Cucamonga, Repp, a three-star recruit by Rivals.com and Scout.com, had scholarship offers from Montana State, Nevada and Utah. Repp chose to go the Pac-12 route. “It was a pretty easy choice,” said Repp, who also played basketball and ran track in high school. “Everything worked out, even with me switching to defense and then coach Andersen coming to Utah. Now, both of us showing up at Utah State is all in the Lord’s plan. Everything happens for a reason.” Outside of football and school, Repp enjoys hanging out with friends and teammates. His parents, who adopted both Caleb and his older brother, now live in Huntington Beach, Calif., and he also enjoys spending time with them when he goes home. “I am adopted and am really grateful for my parents that adopted me,” Repp said. “I could’ve been in a way worse situation and I know I wouldn’t be here if I had not been adopted. My parents were really good raising me and I had a good life. We kept our faith strong in our family and it carried over to me, where I try to keep my faith strong, because I had good examples of that growing up. “My birth mom is still in my life and I talk to her every now and then. She’ll try to come to a couple of games, and that will be cool to see her.” One player Repp has tried to model his game after is former Detroit Lions wide receiver Calvin Johnson, who played all nine of his seasons in the NFL with the same time and was a six-time Pro Bowl selection. “He was a beast,” Repp said of Johnson. “He’s a pretty humble guy and he really doesn’t talk too much. He doesn’t say he’s humble, but he is. You don’t have to say your humble, because your actions show it. He’s more of an action kind of person. I like to have my actions speak louder.” Repp would love to continue his career by making an NFL roster. However, if that doesn’t work out, he’s got a back-up plan. “Just go travel the world,” he said.
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
UTAH STATE
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2019 UTAH STATE FALL SCHEDULES MEN’S GOLF
DATE EVENT Sept. 6-8 Air Force Invite Sept. 16-17 Colorado State Invite Oct. 7-8 Colorado Invite Oct. 14-15 CSUN Invite
Chase Lansford Ashley Cardozo
LOCATION USAFA, Colo. Fort Collins, Colo. Erie, Colo. Simi Valley, Calif.
MEN’S TENNIS
DATE EVENT Sept. 20-23 Boise State Invite Oct. 16-20 ITA Regionals Nov. 8-10 LMU Invite
LOCATION Boise, Idaho Denver, Colo. Los Angeles, Calif.
WOMEN’S TENNIS
DATE EVENT Sept. 13-15 Boise State Invite Sept. 20-22 Idaho State Invite Oct. 4-6 Washington State Invite Oct. 23-27 ITA Regionals Nov. 8-10 CSUN Invite
LOCATION Boise, Idaho Pocatello, Idaho Pullman, Wash. Las Vegas, Nev. Northridge, Calif.
CROSS COUNTRY
DATE EVENT Aug. 31 Sagebrush Invite Sept. 21 Montana State Invite Oct. 5 Paul Short Run Oct. 11 Steve T. Reeder Memorial Oct. 18 Wisconsin Invite Oct. 25 Utah Open Nov. 1 MW Championships Nov. 15 NCAA Mountain Regionals Nov. 23 NCAA Championships
LOCATION Logan, Utah Bozeman, Mont. Bethlehem, Pa. Logan, Utah Madison, Wis. Salt Lake City, Utah Logan, Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Terre Haute, Ind.
SOCCER
Bailey Downing
Sergiu Bucur
Luke Beattie
Josie Givens
DATE OPPONENT Aug. 23 South Dakota State Aug. 25 South Dakota Aug. 30 Utah Sept. 4 Weber State Sept. 8 Marquette Sept. 13 Illinois State Sept. 15 Illinois-Chicago Sept. 22 Idaho State Sept. 27 UNLV Sept. 29 Nevada Oct. 3 Fresno State Oct. 6 San José State Oct. 11 New Mexico Oct. 13 San Diego State Oct. 18 Colorado State Oct. 20 Wyoming Oct. 25 Air Force Oct. 27 Colorado College Nov. 1 Boise State
LOCATION Brookings, S.D. Vermilion, S.D. Salt Lake City, Utah Logan, Utah Milwaukee, Wis. Normal, Ill. Chicago, Ill. Logan, Utah Las Vegas, Nev. Reno, Nev. Fresno, Calif. San Jose, Calif. Logan, Utah Logan, Utah Fort Collins, Colo. Laramie, Wyo. Logan, Utah Logan, Utah Logan, Utah
VOLLEYBALL
Hannah Jones
48
UTAH STATE
DATE OPPONENT Aug. 30 Eastern Michigan Aug. 30 Xavier Aug. 31 Southern Utah Sept. 3 Utah Sept. 6 Washington State Sept. 6 Idaho Sept. 7 Portland Sept. 13 San Francisco Sept. 14 Cornell Sept. 14 Saint Mary’s Sept. 18 Utah Valley Sept. 21 Weber State Sept. 24 Boise State Sept. 26 Air Force Oct. 3 San José State Oct. 5 Nevada Oct. 10 UNLV Oct. 12 New Mexico Oct. 17 Wyoming Oct. 19 Colorado State Oct. 24 Fresno State Oct. 26 San Diego State Oct. 31 Nevada Nov. 2 San José State Nov. 7 New Mexico Nov. 9 UNLV Nov. 14 Colorado State Nov. 16 Wyoming Nov. 21 San Diego State Nov. 23 Fresno State
2019 FOOTBALL GAME PROGRAM ®
TIME All Day All Day All Day All Day
TIME All Day All Day All Day
TIME All Day All Day All Day All Day
TIME 9:30 a.m. TBD 7 a.m. 3 p.m. 9 a.m. All Day TBD TBD TBD
TIME 5 p.m. 11 a.m. 7 p.m. 4 p.m. Noon 6 p.m. Noon 1 p.m. 8 p.m. 2 p.m. 8 p.m. Noon 4 p.m. 1 p.m. 3 p.m. 1 p.m. 3 p.m. 1 p.m. 3 p.m.
LOCATION TIME Logan, Utah Noon Logan, Utah 7 p.m. Logan, Utah 2 p.m. Logan, Utah 6 p.m. Portland, Ore. 10:30 a.m. Portland, Ore. 5 p.m. Portland, Ore. 2 p.m. San Francisco, Calif. 7 p.m. Moraga, Calif. Noon Moraga, Calif. 8 p.m. Logan, Utah 7 p.m. Ogden, Utah 6 p.m. Logan, Utah 7 p.m. USAFA, Colo. 6:30 p.m. Logan, Utah 7 p.m. Logan, Utah Noon Las Vegas, Nev. 7:30 p.m. Albuquerque, N.M. 1 p.m. Logan, Utah 7 p.m. Logan, Utah TBA Fresno, Calif. 7 p.m. San Diego, Calif. 3 p.m. Reno, Nev. 7 p.m. San Jose, Calif. 3 p.m. Logan, Utah 7 p.m. Las Vegas, Nev. 1 p.m. Fort Collins, Colo. 7 p.m. Laramie, Wyo. 1 p.m. Logan, Utah 7 p.m. Logan, Utah 1 p.m.
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