Nov. 18
Washington 35 ... Washington State 32
In a game of several home runs, Washington got a 64-yard
touchdown catch from Cody Ellis, a 69-yard touchdown catch from Marcel Reese,
and a blocked punt for a score from Chris Reese, but didn't finally put the game
away for good until a 77-yard Louis Rankin touchdown run in the fourth quarter.
Washington State stayed around with a 43-yard interception return for a score
from Eric Frampton and two Alex Brink fourth quarter touchdown passes, but
wasn't able to go anywhere on a final drive with a Caesar Rayford sack ending
the Cougars' final shot. The two teams combined for 19 tackles for loss with
Wazzu's Mkristo Bruce coming up with four, but the Huskies outsacked the Cougars
five to two.
Player of the game ... Washington QB Carl Bonnell
completed 14 of 27 passes for 271 yards and two touchdowns with two
interceptions
Stat Leaders: Washington - Passing: Carl
Bonnell, 14-27, 271 yds, 2 TD, 2 INT
Rushing: Louis Rankin, 17-118, 2 TD. Receiving:
Marcel Reece, 3-107, 1 TD
Washington State - Passing: Alex Brink,
32-54, 328 yds, 2 TD
Rushing: Dwight Tardy, 19-105, 1 TD Receiving:
Brandon Gibson, 8-129, 1 TD
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
The Cougars
might be down after the loss to Washington and might be in danger of missing out
on a bowl, but they aren’t quite the same team without WR Jason Hill and with
Michael Bumpus not at his earlier season level. The big problems against UW were
in the secondary and on the offensive line. The line couldn’t pass protect, and
the defensive backs didn’t make nearly enough tackles to keep the receivers in
front of them. If there’s a 13th game, expect this to be a much
sharper team once it’s fully healthy.
|
2006
Schedule
CFN
Prediction:
6-6
2006 Record:
6-6
Preview
2006 predicted wins |
| 9/2 |
at Auburn L 40-14 |
| 9/9 |
Idaho
W 56-10 |
| 9/16 |
Baylor
W 17-15 |
|
9/23 |
at Stanford W 36-10 |
|
9/30 |
USC
L 28-22 |
| 10/7 |
at Oregon State W 13-6 |
| 10/14 |
California
L 21-3 |
| 10/21 |
Oregon W 34-23 |
| 10/28 |
at UCLA W 37-15 |
| 11/4 |
Arizona
L 27-17 |
| 11/11 |
at Arizona State L 47-14 |
| 11/18 |
Washington
L 35-32 |
|
|
2005
Schedule
CFN
Prediction:
6-5
2005 Record: 4-7
Preview
2005 predicted wins |
| 9/3 |
Idaho W
38-26 |
| 9/10 |
at Nevada
W 55-21 |
| 9/17 |
Grambling
W 48-7 |
|
10/1 |
at Oregon State L 44-33 |
| 10/8 |
Stanford
L 24-21 |
| 10/15 |
UCLA L 44-41 OT |
| 10/22 |
at California L 42-38 |
| 10/29 |
at USC L 55-13 |
| 11/5 |
Arizona State
L 27-24 |
| 11/12 |
Oregon
L 34-31 |
| 11/19 |
at Washington W 26-22 |
|
Nov. 11
Arizona State 47 ... Washington State 14
Arizona State exploded with 562 yards helped by the team's
best half of the year with a 30-7 halftime lead on two Rudy Carpenter touchdown
passes, a three-yard Ryan Torian scoring run and three Jesse Ainsworth field
goals. Washington State tied it early on a nine-yard Charles Dillon touchdown
catch, but a 23-point ASU run all but put it away. The Cougars opened the second
half with a six-yard Jed Collins touchdown, but the Sun Devils countered with 17
unanswered points highlighted by a 62-yard Brandon Smith touchdown catch.
Player of the game ... Arizona State QB Rudy Carpenter
completed 16 of 24 passes for 334 yards and three touchdowns with an
interception
Stat Leaders: Arizona State - Passing:
Rudy Carpenter, 16-24, 339 yds, 3 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: Ryan Torian, 19-84, 1 TD. Receiving:
Zach Miller, 6-84
Washington State - Passing: Alex Brink,
14-30, 161 yds, 2 TD, 2 INT
Rushing: Dwight Tardy, 11-21. Receiving:
Brandon Gibson, 5-51
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
The Cougar defense that was such a rock throughout the year
completely imploded against Arizona State with no pass rush on Rudy Carpenter
and no big stops when the momentum had shifted early on. Worse yet, the offense
failed to correct the problems of last week against Arizona and failed to find a
running game or consistency from Alex Brink and the passing attack to keep up
the pace. The offense needs all the receiving weapons back and operational in a
big hurry.
Nov. 4
Arizona 27 ... Washington State 17
Arizona got a school-record 35 carries from Chris Henry along
with touchdown runs from three and six yards out as part of a 20-7 run over the
final three quarters. Anthony Johnson started out the scoring with a 78-yard
touchdown catch for the Wildcats on the third play of the game, but the Cougars
answered with a huge play of their own with Brandon Gibson taking a pass 91
yards for a score. The Wazzu offense struggled all day, but got a big break in
the third quarter losing a fumble on the Arizona five, but getting it right back
leading to a one-yard Jed Collins score. The Cougars were held to 45 rushing
yards.
Player of the game ... Arizona RB Chris Henry ran 35
times for 94 yards and two touchdowns
Stat Leaders: Arizona - Passing: Willie
Tuitama, 10-17, 159 yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: Chris Henry, 35-94, 2 TD. Receiving:
Syndric Steptoe, 6-52
Washington State - Passing: Alex Brink,
18-33, 265 yds, 1 TD
Rushing: Dwight Tardy, 11-44 Receiving:
Brandon Gibson, 5-120, 1 TD
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
The Cougar offense has to be more consistent and it needs
more of a running game. The inability to move the ball in the second half killed
any chance of beating Arizona converting just two of 13 third down chances. The
offensive line allowed QB Alex Brink to be hit way too much, and didn't get
nearly enough of a push for Dwight Tardy and the running game. With winnable
games against Arizona State and Washington to close, there's still time to claim
a high spot in the Pac 10 pecking order, but third might now be tough to get.
Oct. 28
Washington State 37 ... UCLA 15
UCLA's offense was shut down in the second half as Washington
State overcame a 15-14 halftime deficit to score 23 unanswered points with two DeMaundray Woolridge
touchdown runs and a 17-yard Alex Brink touchdown pass to Brandon Gibson. Brink
threw three touchdown passes with two to Gibson and one to Jason Hill, but it
was the defense that stole the show keeping the Bruins without a first down in
the third quarter and holding them to three Justin Medlock field goals in the
first half along with a 36-yard Junior Taylorl touchdown catch.
Player of the game ... Washington State QB Alex Brink
completed 28 of 38 passes for 405 yards and three touchdown and two
interceptions
Stat Leaders: UCLA - Passing: Patrick
Cowan, 17-37, 252 yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
Rushing: Chane Moline, 6-32. Receiving:
Chris Markey, 4-64
Washington State - Passing: Alex Brink,
28-38, 405 yds, 3 TD, 2 INT
Rushing: Dwight Tardy, 16-67. Receiving: Brandon
Gibson, 8-92, 2 TD
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ... Very,
very quietly, Washington State has become bowl eligible and has looked strong in
the process over the last few weeks with the running game controlling the Oregon
win last week and Alex Brink and the passing attack bombing away in the win over
UCLA despite being under consistent pressure. The number three spot in the Pac
10 bowl pecking order is there for the taking, and while that might not be the
Holiday Bowl, it would still mean a great bounce-back season and make the
program a player again after a few down years. A ten-win season, if there's a
bowl win, is within reach.
Oct. 21
Washington State 34 ... Oregon 23
Washington State forced four turnovers with Tyron Brackenridge
picking off a pass for a 24-yard score helping the defense keep the Oregon
offense out of the end zone until late in the fourth quarter. The Cougars got
two touchdown passes from Alex Brink in the first quarter and two Jed Collins
touchdowns to get out to a 27-3 lead after three quarters before the Ducks got a
touchdown on a Darius Sanders fumble return. Brady Leaf, who came in for an
ineffective Dennis Dixon, threw two late touchdown passes to Jordan Kent with
the final one from 36 yards out with :34 to play. J.D. Nelson, Blair Phillips
and Patrick Chung combined to make 37 tackles for the Ducks, while Wazzu's Eric
Frampton made 16 stops.
Player of the game ... Washington State QB Alex Brink completed
20 of 23 passes for 179 yards and two touchdowns with an interception
Stat Leaders: Oregon - Passing: Brady
Leaf, 16-27, 262 yds, 2 TD
Rushing: Jeremiah Johnson, 12-63, Receiving:
Jaison Williams, 9-163
Washington State - Passing: Alex Brink,
20-23, 179 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: Dwight Tardy, 20-145, 1 TD Receiving:
Michael Bumpus, 8-74
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
Just when it seemed like Washington State would be mired in also-ran
status and might need to fight to get into a bowl game, it comes up with a great
defensive game against a sleepy Oregon team to get right back in the hunt for a
top Pac 10 bowl bid. The offense wasn't explosive, but Alex Brink was nearly
flawless and the running game pounded on the Ducks. Now the defense has to keep
up the intensity right off the bat and take advantage of a UCLA team that's sure
to be a bit mopey after the crushing loss to Notre Dame.
Oct. 14
California 21 ... Washington State 3
California got two touchdown runs
from Marshawn Lynch and a one-yard Nate Longshore sneak, and the defense and
special teams came through with big plays to get the win. A blocked punt led to
a two-yard Lynch run, while the D stuffed Washington State's Alex Brink on a
fourth down sneak on the one. The Cougars were only outgained 353 yards to 350,
but only managed a 25-yard Loren Langley field goal.
Player of the game ... California RB Marshawn Lynch ran
25 times for 152 yards and two touchdowns
Stat Leaders: California - Passing: Nate
Longshore, 17-31, 176 yds, 2 INT
Rushing: Marshawn Lynch, 25-152, 2 TD Receiving:
Robert Jordan, 6-56
Washington State - Passing: Alex Brink,
19-35, 227 yds, 1 INT
Rushing: Derrell Hutsona, 3-88 Receiving:
Brandon Gibson, 8-130
Whoopty doo. What does it all
mean Basil? ... The Cougars weren't able to strike with
any big scoring lays against Cal and wasn't able to take advantage of any
opportunity. Even though the defense kept the Bears from coming up with any
killer strikes, it didn't do enough to handle Marshawn Lynch and the running
game. That's a problem considering Jonathan Stewart and Oregon are up next.
Eventually, to handle one of the better teams, the Cougars need to show off a
little bit of firepower.
Oct. 7
Washington State 13 ... Oregon State 6
In an ugly game with six turnovers, 14 penalties, and a
combined nine of 30 third down conversions, Washington State got two Loren
Langley field goals in the first half and a 29-yard touchdown catch from Jason
Hill. Oregon State only managed 287 yards and two Alexis Serna field goals, but
still had a final shot to tie up the game late until its final drive stalled at
the Wazzu 23.
Player of the game ... Washington State WR Jason Hill
caught five passes or 121 yards and a touchdown
Stat Leaders: Washington State - Passing:
Alex Brink, 19-32, 270 yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: Derrell Hutsona, 6-68. Receiving:
Jason Hill, 5-121, 1 TD
Oregon State - Passing: Matt Moore,
18-34, 223 yds, 1 INT
Rushing: Yvenson Bernard, 17-91 Receiving: Sammie
Stroughter, 6-124
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
The Cougars might have played an ugly game, but it got the
desperately needed road win at Oregon State with Cal and Oregon up next. The
defense did a great job of keeping the Beaver ground game from getting going,
but Derrell Hutsona, Dwight Tardy and DeMaundray Woolridge couldn't get the
running game going. The question has to be whether or not the offense has the
firepower to hang with the big boys over the next few weeks considering the
running game has been average at best. If Alex Brink isn't bombing away
effectively, the Cougars can't win.
Sept. 30
USC 28 ... Washington State 22
USC survived as Washington State got two Alex Brink touchdown
passes and had a shot at the win with a last-second Hail Mary that was picked
off by Taylor Mays. The Trojan offense struggled with its consistency without WR
Dwayne Jarrett, but Steve Smith stepped up with 186 yards and second half
touchdown grabs from seven and 11 yards out. Wazzu got up 3-0, but never led the
rest of the way after Chris McFoy, who later left the game with a shoulder
injury, caught a seven-yard scoring pass. Chauncey Washington ran for a
three-yard score to put the Trojans up 14-6, but the Cougars came back with a
four-yard scoring pass to Jason Hill in the final minute of the first half to
pull within two after missing on the conversion. USC had a nightmare of a time
putting the game away despite holding on to the ball for 11:35 in the fourth
quarter and getting a nine-play, 99-yard scoring drive in the third.
Player of the game ... USC WR Steve Smith caught 11
passes for 186 yards and two touchdowns
Stat Leaders: Washington State - Passing:
Alex Brink, 26-46, 287 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: Dwight Tardy, 11-62. Receiving:
Michael Bumpus, 11-112
USC - Passing: John David Booty, 23-32,
269 yds, 3 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: Chauncey Washington, 18-71, 1 TD Receiving:
Steve Smith, 11-186, 2 TD
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
The Cougars did what they needed to do to hang around with USC and
get the ball in their hands at the end with a chance to win, but they also
missed on several opportunities along the way that would've kept them from
needing a last second Hail Mary. With the Trojans focused on Jason Hill, Michael
Bumpus, as he has been doing all year, turned into a top target making big play
after big play. Alex Brink had a nice game keeping the chains moving, but too
many drives finished with field goals instead of touchdowns. This game proved
Wazzu can play, and now it has to prove it can win all the games it should, like
it should at next week's date at Oregon State.
Sept. 23
Washington State 36 ... Stanford 10
Washington State dominated on both sides of the ball as
Mkristo Bruce came up with a school-record five sacks and Mike Graise returned
an interception 33 yards for a touchdown for the defense, Jason Hill blocked a
punt on special teams, and caught a seven-yard scoring pass. Alex Brink threw
two touchdown passes and ran for another. The Stanford points were helped by
turnovers with Aaron Zagory hitting a 34-yard field goal and Kelton Lynn
catching a 25-yard touchdown pass.
Player of the game ... Washington State DE Mkristo
Bruce made seven tackles and five sacks
Stat Leaders: Washington State - Passing:
Alex Brink, 21-33, 228 yds, 2 TD
Rushing:
Dwight Tardy, 17-97, 1 TD
Receiving:
Cody Boyd, 5-72
Stanford - Passing: Trent Edwards,
14-23, 159 yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: Anthony Kible, 11-40 Receiving:
Kelton Lynn, 5-65, 1 TD
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
It's all about defensive pressure, and if Mkristo Bruce
and the Cougar front line can get into the backfield half as effectively as they
did against Stanford, they have an honest shot to stay with USC next week. Alex
Brink is playing extremely well, while the running game is getting contributions
from several different areas. This is a strong offensive attack with several
weapons to work with, and now there has to be more explosion. Brink has to start
connecting on bigger pass plays for the Cougars to challenge in the tough Pac 10
games ahead.
Sept. 16
Washington State 17 ... Baylor 15
Washington State got stuffed at the goal line, but won the
game with a 17-yard Loren Langley field goal with nine seconds to play to cap
off a sloppy game with eight total turnovers and -10 rushing yards from Baylor.
The Bears made enough plays to stay alive getting a 40-yard fumble recovery for
a score from Anthony Arline with just over five minutes to play, but the Cougars
answered with Alex Brink, who caught a four-yard touchdown pass in the third
quarter, taking the team on its best drive of the day for the final points.
Jason Hill caught a 13-yard touchdown pass from Gary Rogers in the second
quarter for the Cougars. Baylor got out to a 9-0 lead on a safety and a 12-yard
touchdown catch from Justin Fenty.
Player of the game ... Washington State QB Alex Brink
completed 21 of 32 passes for 251 yards with an interception and caught a
four-yard touchdown pass
Stat Leaders: Washington State - Passing:
Alex Brink, 21-32, 251 yds, 1 INT
Rushing:
DeMaundray Woolridge, 18-54
Receiving:
Michael Bumpus, 7-64
Baylor - Passing: Shawn Bell, 31-48, 256
yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
Rushing: Brandon Whitaker, 6-20 Receiving:
Brandon Whitaker, 9-57
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
Alex Brink might not be the most
popular quarterback around Pullman, but he was able to get the offense going
when it absolutely had to and has to get at least a little of the credit for the
win over Baylor. The defensive line did a fantastic job of stuffing the running
and generating pressure all game long. Expect more of the same against an anemic
Stanford team next week. If the Cougars can consistently get into the backfield,
it'll have no problems against the Cardinal and should push USC in two weeks.
Sept. 9
Washington State 56 ... Idaho 10
Washington State cranked out 637 yards of total offense and
won in a walk jumping out to a 35-3 halftime lead and coasted from there. Alex
Brink threw three first half touchdown passes and ran for a one-yard score, and
Chris Jordan scored three times on catches from 22-21 and ten yards out. Two
long fourth quarter scoring runs put a capper on the Cougar blowout with an
80-yard touchdown from Christopher Ivory and a 53-yard touchdown from Kevin
McCall. Idaho didn't get in the end zone until the fourth quarter on a two-yard
Jayson Bird run.
Player of the game ... Washington State QB Alex Brink
completed 12 of 15 passes for 231 yards and three touchdowns and ran five times
for 46 yards and a score.
Stat Leaders: Washington State - Passing:
Alex Brink, 12-15, 231 yds, 3 TD
Rushing:
Dwight Tardy, 15-92, 1 TD Receiving:
Michael Bumpus, 6-55, 1 TD
Idaho - Passing: Steve Wichman, 11-31,
170 yds, 1 INT
Rushing: Jayson Bird, 15-34, 1 TD Receiving:
Marlon Haynes, 4-64
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
You want offensive balance? How
about 344 rushing yards and 293 through the air against Idaho? Washington
State's offense was firing on all cylinders, while the defense played its best
game since a blowout over Grambling last September. With defenses
focused on stopping Jason Hill, Michael Bumpus and Chris Jordan are cleaning up.
QB Alex Brink was rock solid, while Gary Rogers proved he could move the team
when he saw meaningful time in the second quarter. There's no reason this
shouldn't be the start of a big run with Baylor and at Stanford ahead.
Sept. 2
Auburn 40 ... Washington State 14
Auburn struggled early to convert drives into touchdowns with
four John Vaughn field goals, the longest from 52 yards, keeping Washington
State in the game, and then Brandon Cox connected with Brad Lester for a 34-yard
score to give the Tigers the lead for good. Kenny Irons finished the job with a
58-yard scoring dash on Auburn's first play of the second half for a 26-7 lead.
Wazzu got a 50-yard touchdown catch from Cody Boyd to make things interesting,
and then, thanks to a fake punt that prevented a three-and-out, the Auburn
offense took over with Brad Lester and Carl Stewart each running for scores.
Player of the game ... Auburn RB Kenny Irons ran 20
times for 183 yards and one touchdown. He also caught three passes for 40 yards.
Stat Leaders: Washington State - Passing:
Gary Rogers, 6-9, 83 yds, 1 TD
Rushing:
DeMaundray Woolridge, 9-86 Receiving:
Michael Bumpus, 6-37
Auburn - Passing: Brandon Cox, 11-18, 191
yds, 1 TD
Rushing: Kenny Irons, 20-183, 1 TD Receiving:
Courtney Taylor, 3-51
Whoopty doo. What does it all mean Basil? ...
Auburn is a national title-caliber team, so there's n
need to be too concerned about the blowout loss. What is a potential problem is
the deep thigh bruise to RB DeMaundray Woolridge and the general ineffectiveness
of QB Alex Brink. If the Cougars should be able to do anything, it's score, and
it needs all the pieces in place to improve and get better over an easy stretch
of games against Idaho, Baylor and Stanford. Auburn averaged 10.1 yards per pass
attempt and 17.4 yards per completion. Wazzu averaged 4.5 yards per attempt and
8.8 yards per completion. Those numbers need to be reversed against everyone
else.
2006 Washington State Preview
Offense |
Defense |
Depth Chart |
Further Analysis
Instead, Washington State had one of the goofiest seasons in
recent college football history losing a ridiculous five games by
four points or fewer. Obviously the team is going to believe that
just a few breaks here and there and things could change this
season, but it's going to have to make more of its own good fortune.
The Cougars weren't merely unlucky, there were also unclutch. With a
good amount of returning experience and several All-Pac 10
candidates to lead the way when things get tight. While it's not a
good strategy to get into too many firefights in the Pac 10, that's
exactly what this Cougar team is going to have to do. Fortunately,
it's equipped to keep up the pace.
While it
didn't make a lot of national headlines, the decision of receiver Jason
Hill to come back for his senior year might have changed the Pac 10
season. He's a top gamebreaker with All-America ability, and combined
with Michael Bumpus and Chris Jordan, should make quarterback Alex Brink
look very, very good.
Replacing an All-America running back like Harrison isn't going to be
easy, but there's help from the JUCO ranks with Derrell Hutsona and J.T.
Diedrichs to keep the nation's 15th best running game from slipping off
the map.
The defense should be better with a good set of linebackers and end
Mkristo Bruce to be one of the nation's best pass rushers.
Unfortunately, the new corners probably aren't going to help a horrible
pass defense from stopping any of the high-octane Pac 10 attacks cold,
but if they can just make a few more plays on third down, there might be
a slight improvement.
The Pac 10 has improved too much from top to bottom for a team with as
many holes as Washington State has to win the title, but that doesn't
mean it can't be a major factor in the race. With an offense as
explosive as this one will be, there will be a few upsets and more than
a few heart-stoppers. This could be the comeback team of the 2006
season.
The Schedule:
Playing Idaho and Baylor in the non-conference schedule should mean
a 2-1 start after a likely opening day loss at Auburn. Most of the
Pac 10 big boys have to come to Pullman with USC, Cal, and Oregon have
making the trip. If Wazzu can win two out of those three, it'll be
in the hunt for the title. Road games at Oregon State, UCLA and
Arizona State should be shootouts of the highest order.
Best
Offensive Player:
Senior WR Jason Hill. He likely would've been a late second, early
third round draft pick had he left at the end of last year. Now the
senior returns with a great résumé to scare the rest of the Pac 10.
107 career catches, 2,104 yards, 25 touchdowns, and a 19.7
yard-per-catch average should put him on a few preseason All-America
teams.
Best
Defensive Player: Senior DE Mkristo Bruce. Bruce is known for
making the big sack, but he's also an active tackler finishing among
the team leaders in each of the last two seasons. He's a blur off
the edge and great at chasing down ball-carriers.
Key
player to a successful season: Senior CBs Tyron Brackenridge and
Don Turner. The Cougar secondary allowed 289 passing yards per game
last season and seemingly never, ever, made a key third down stop.
Brackenridge and Turner take over the starting roles and while they
have size and speed, they have to prove they can produce.
The
season will be a success if ... The Cougars win eight games and
come up with a few big home upsets. The team is now two seasons
removed from a run of three straight ten-win seasons and needs to
get back on the winning track or there might be coaching changes
next year at this time. There's too much talent to have another
non-bowl campaign.
Key
game: Oct. 7 at Oregon State. The trip to play the Beavers comes
after the home game against USC and before battles against Cal,
Oregon, and at UCLA. A third straight loss to Oregon State could
mean an ugly, season-sapping five game losing streak before things
start to ease up.
2005
Fun Stats:
- Washington State third quarter scoring: 111 - Washington State
fourth quarter scoring: 68
- Punt return average: Washington State 11.6 yards per return -
Opponents 5.3 yards per return
- Passing yards per game: Opponents 289.1 - Washington State 277.3
The Last Time Washington State…
…played in a bowl
game…2003 (Holiday Bowl vs. Texas)
…missed a bowl game…2005
…pitched a shutout…2003 (Idaho)
…was shutout…1984 (Ohio State)
…scored 50 points…2005 (Nevada)
…went undefeated…1917
…won a conference title…2002 (share, Pac-10)
…had a 3,000-yard passer…2002 (Jason Gesser)
…had a 1,000-yard rusher…2005 (Jerome Harrison)
…had a 1,000-yard receiver…2005 (Jason Hill)
…had a first-round draft choice…2003 (DB Marcus TrufanBBBB
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