2010 Boise State Broncos football team

The 2010 Boise State Broncos football team represented Boise State University in the 2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Broncos were led by fifth-year head coach Chris Petersen and played their home games at Bronco Stadium. They entered the 2010 season with winning streaks of 14 games overall and 25 games in regular-season play. This was the Broncos' final season as a member of the Western Athletic Conference, as the school announced on June 11, 2010, that it would leave the WAC for the Mountain West Conference effective July 1, 2011.[1]

2010 Boise State Broncos football
WAC co-champion
Maaco Bowl Las Vegas champion
ConferenceWestern Athletic Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 7
APNo. 9
2010 record12–1 (7–1 WAC)
Head coachChris Petersen (5th season)
Offensive coordinatorBryan Harsin (5th season)
Offensive schemeMultiple
Defensive coordinatorPete Kwiatkowski (1st season)
Home stadiumBronco Stadium
(Capacity: 33,500)
2010 Western Athletic Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
Team W L    W L 
No. 11 Nevada +  7 1     13 1  
No. 9 Boise State +  7 1     12 1  
Hawaii +  7 1     10 4  
Fresno State  5 3     8 5  
Louisiana Tech  4 4     5 7  
Idaho  3 5     6 7  
Utah State  2 6     4 8  
New Mexico State  1 7     2 10  
San Jose State  0 8     1 12  
  • + Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

The Broncos finished the season 12–1, 7–1 in WAC play to claim a share of the WAC title with Nevada and Hawaii. The title was their third straight and eighth in the last nine years. They were invited to the Maaco Bowl Las Vegas where they defeated Utah 26–3.

Previous season

The Broncos finished the regular season undefeated, 13–0, for the second year in a row and fourth time in six years and won their seventh WAC title in eight years. They rose in the top 25 polls to as high as #4 in the Coaches and Harris polls before finishing the regular season at #6 in every major poll. Being ranked in the top 8, they were in position to receive an automatic bid to a BCS game, but another non-automatic qualifier, Mountain West champion TCU, was ranked #4 and received the automatic-bid. However, Boise State would become the first non-AQ team to receive an at-large bid to a BCS game as they were selected to play TCU in the Fiesta Bowl. This was the second consecutive time Boise State and TCU faced off in a bowl game, with the 2008 Poinsettia Bowl being the first (a TCU victory, which ruined Boise State's undefeated season) and the first time two teams from non-AQ conferences played each other in a BCS game. The Broncos would knock off the favored Horned Frogs 17–10 to finish the season 14–0 to become only the second team in Division I FBS history to finish a season 14–0 (2002 Ohio State, Alabama also would finish the season 14–0 three days after the Fiesta Bowl).

Recruiting

US college sports recruiting information for high school athletes
Name Hometown High school / college Height Weight 40 Commit date
Tyrone Crawford
DE
Bakersfield, California Bakersfield C.C. 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 258 lb (117 kg) Sep 8, 2009 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: NR
Bryan Douglas
DB
Harbor City, California Narbonne H.S. 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) 165 lb (75 kg) 4.6 Jul 12, 2009 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 73
Grant Hedrick
QB
Independence, Oregon Central H.S. 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) Jun 22, 2009 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 67
Tyler Horn
DE
Meridian, Idaho Mountain View H.S. 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 230 lb (100 kg) Jan 14, 2010 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 40
Holden Huff
TE
Rocklin, California Rocklin H.S. 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 205 lb (93 kg) Jan 29, 2010 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 40
Jeremy Ioane
DB
Honolulu, Hawaii Punahou School 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) 190 lb (86 kg) Feb 3, 2010 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 40
Darren Lee
LB
Susanville, California Lassen H.S. 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 203 lb (92 kg) Feb 3, 2010 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 40
Matt Miller
ATH
Helena, Montana Helena Capital H.S. 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 4.5 Dec 29, 2009 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 76
Kyle Sosnowski
DB
Boise, Idaho Capital H.S. 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 203 lb (92 kg) 4.8 Jul 30, 2009 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 40
Troy Ware
WR
Vista, California Vista H.S. 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 164 lb (74 kg) 4.6 Oct 12, 2009 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:   Rivals:   247Sports: N/A    ESPN grade: 76
Overall recruiting rankings: Scout: 97   Rivals: 82  ESPN:
  • Note: In many cases, Scout, Rivals, 247Sports, and ESPN may conflict in their listings of height and weight.
  • In these cases, the average was taken. ESPN grades are on a 100-point scale.

Sources:

  • "Boise State Football Commitments". Rivals.com. Retrieved September 27, 2010.
  • "2010 Boise State Football Commits". Scout.com. Retrieved September 27, 2010.
  • "ESPN". ESPN.com. Retrieved September 27, 2010.
  • "Scout.com Team Recruiting Rankings". Scout.com. Retrieved September 27, 2010.
  • "2010 Team Ranking". Rivals.com. Retrieved September 27, 2010.

    Pre-season

    Expectations for this season's team were arguably the highest in the program's history. The Broncos returned 23 of the 24 players who started in their 2010 Fiesta Bowl win over TCU. The only loss was cornerback Kyle Wilson, who was selected in the first round of the NFL Draft by the New York Jets.[2] Before the season, the Broncos were in the top 5 of most publications' early top 25 rankings, including #2 by Mark Schlabach of ESPN[3] and Lindy's.[4] In both polls they were only ranked behind defending BCS National Champions Alabama.

    Award Watch lists

    Jeremy Avery Sr. RB – Doak Walker Award.[5]

    Kyle Brotzman Sr. PK – Lou Groza Award.[6]

    Jeron Johnson Sr. DB – Lott Trophy,[7] Jim Thorpe Award.[8]

    Doug Martin Jr. RB – Paul Hornung Award.[9]

    Kellen Moore Jr. QB – Davey O'Brien Award,[10] Manning Award,[11] Walter Camp Award,[12] Maxwell Award.[13]

    Austin Pettis Sr. WR – Biletnikoff Award.[14]

    Nate Potter Jr. OL – Rotary Lombardi Award,[15] Outland Trophy.[16]

    Ryan Winterswyk Sr. DE – Rotary Lombardi Award,[15] Bronko Nagurski Award,[17] Chuck Bednarik Award.[13]

    Titus Young Sr. WR – Biletnikoff Award.[14]

    All–American lists

    Jeron Johnson Sr. DB – Sporting News 3rd team,[18] Nationalchamps.net 3rd team.[19]

    Kellen Moore Jr. QB – Sporting News 2nd team,[18] Nationalchamps.net 1st team.[19]

    Austin Pettis Sr. WR – Nationalchamps.net 3rd team.[19]

    Billy Winn Jr. DE – Nationalchamps.net honorable mention.[19]

    Ryan Winterswyk Sr. DE – Nationalchamps.net honorable mention.[19]

    Titus Young Sr. WR – Nationalchamps.net 3rd team as kick returner, honorable mention as wide receiver.[19]

    WAC media days

    During the WAC's football preview on July 26 in Salt Lake City, Utah,[20] the Broncos were selected by both the coaches and media as favorites to win the conference. They received 42 of a possible 43 first-place votes in the media poll, with Nevada coming in second and receiving the other first-place vote. They were effectively the unanimous choice in the coaches' poll, receiving all eight of the possible first-place votes; because conference rules prohibit coaches from voting for their own teams, Chris Petersen gave Nevada his first-place vote.

    Kellen Moore was selected as the preseason offensive player of the year.

    Media poll

    1. Boise State – 386 (42)
    2. Nevada – 333 (1)
    3. Fresno State – 300
    4. Idaho – 207
    5. Louisiana Tech – 200
    6. Utah State – 196
    7. Hawaii – 166
    8. New Mexico State – 81
    9. San Jose State – 66

    Coaches poll

    1. Boise State – 64 (8)
    2. Nevada – 55 (1)
    3. Fresno State – 50
    4. Utah State – 37
    5. Hawaii – 36
    6. Idaho – 33
    7. Louisiana Tech – 26
    8. New Mexico State – 14
    9. San Jose State – 9

    Pre-season Top 25 polls

    On August 6 Boise State received 1,215 points to rank 5th in the USA Today preseason poll, one spot ahead their season opening opponent, Virginia Tech.[21] The Broncos were the highest rated non BCS conference school.

    On August 21, Boise State received 1,336 points to rank 3rd in the Associated Press preseason.[22] They also received one first place vote from Joe Giglio of The Times & Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina. Just as they were in the Coaches poll, the Broncos were the highest rated non-BCS conference school and the ranking is the highest ranking in any poll in school history.

    The Broncos' rankings were by far the highest preseason rankings ever for a non BCS conference school as the previous high to start a season was 14th in the AP poll, also achieved by Boise State in 2009.

    Schedule

    DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
    September 66:00 p.m.vs. No. 13 Virginia Tech*No. 3
    ESPN/ESPN 3DW 33–3086,587[23]
    September 186:00 p.m.at Wyoming*No. 3
    CBSCSW 51–629,014[24]
    September 256:00 p.m.No. 24 Oregon State*No. 3
    ABCW 37–2434,137[25]A
    October 26:00 p.m.at New Mexico StateNo. 3KTVBW 59–019,661[26]
    October 96:00 p.m.Toledo*No. 4
    • Bronco Stadium
    • Boise, ID
    KTVBW 57–1433,833[27]
    October 166:00 p.m.at San Jose StateNo. 3
    KTVBW 48–020,239[28]
    October 266:00 p.m.Louisiana TechNo. 2
    • Bronco Stadium
    • Boise, ID
    ESPN2W 49–2032,026[29]
    November 61:30 p.m.HawaiiNo. 2
    • Bronco Stadium
    • Boise, ID
    ESPNU/ESPN 3DW 42–734,060[30]
    November 127:00 p.m.at IdahoNo. 4
    ESPN2/ESPN 3DW 52–1416,453[31]
    November 197:30 p.m.Fresno StateNo. 3
    • Bronco Stadium
    • Boise, ID (Battle for the Milk Can)
    ESPN2W 51–033,454[32]
    November 268:15 p.m.at No. 19 NevadaNo. 3ESPNL 31–34 OT30,712[33]
    December 41:00 p.m.Utah StateNo. 9
    • Bronco Stadium
    • Boise, ID
    KTVBW 50–1432,101[34]
    December 226:00 p.m.vs. No. 20 Utah*No. 10ESPNW 26–341,923[35]
    • *Non-conference game
    • Homecoming
    • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
    • All times are in Mountain time
    • ^A Denotes the largest crowd in Bronco Stadium history to date. Previous high was 34,127 vs Oregon in 2009. The record was broken on October 22, 2011, vs Air Force with 34,196.

    Game results

    Virginia Tech

    1 2 3 4 Total
    #5 Broncos 17 3 6 7 33
    #6 Hokies 0 14 13 3 30

    First ever meeting.

    Boise State players during pregame.

    Boise State started fast, gave up the lead, and scored in the last two minutes of the game to pull off a win over #6 Virginia Tech in one of the premier matchups of college football's opening weekend. The Broncos recovered a fumble on Tech's second snap of the game which led to a 44-yard Kyle Brotzman FG. Austin Pettis blocked a punt on Tech's next possession then caught an 8-yard TD pass from Kellen Moore 2 plays later to put the Broncos up 10–0. The Broncos extended their lead to 17–0 on their next possession on a diving 2-yard TD catch by Tommy Gallarda. The Hokies countered with 2 TD's in the second quarter while Kyle Brotzman added a 47-yard FG to make the score 20–14 at halftime. Virginia Tech opened the scoring in the second half on Ryan Williams second 1-yard TD run to give the Hokies a 21–20 lead. The Broncos answered quickly on their next possession with a D.J. Harper 71-yard TD run. The PAT would be blocked for a 26–21 Broncos lead. On the ensuing possession, the Broncos forced the Hokies to attempt a 51-yard field goal, which they missed badly. However, the Broncos were called for running into the kicker, gave the Hokies a 4th and 5 situation where they went for it and scored on a 28-yard TD pass yet failed on the 2-point conversion. A 34-yard Hokie FG put them up by 4 late in the fourth. The Broncos got the ball back with 1:47 left and no timeouts, needing a TD to take the lead. The Broncos would march the field in only 38 seconds, with the help of a personal foul penalty, and finished the game-winning drive with a 13-yard TD pass from Moore to Pettis, their second connection of the game, to bring the final score to 33–30.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 23/38, 215 YDS, 3 TDS Doug Martin: 12 CAR, 83 YDS, LG of 23 Austin Pettis: 6 REC, 73 YDS, 2 TDS, LG of 16 BSU: 383
    D.J. Harper: 4 CAR, 80 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 71 Titus Young: 6 REC, 80 YDS, LG of 28 VT: 314
    Boise State on offense.

    1st Quarter

    • 12:44 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 44 YD FG 3–0
    • 09:48 BSU–Austin Pettis 8 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 10–0
    • 01:11 BSU–Tommy Gallarda 2 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 17–0

    2nd Quarter

    • 11:44 VT–Ryan Williams 1 YD Run (Chris Hazley Kick) 17–7
    • 10:23 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 47 YD FG 20–7
    • 00:57 VT–Ryan Williams 12 YD Pass from Tyrod Taylor (Chris Hazley Kick) 20–14
    Kellen Moore was named WAC Offensive Player of the Week and Davey O'Brien Award Quarterback of the Week.

    3rd Quarter

    • 06:34 VT–Ryan Williams 1 YD Run (Chris Hazley Kick) 20–21
    • 05:38 BSU–D.J. Harper 71 YD Run (PAT Blocked) 26–21
    • 02:40 VT–Jarrett Boykin 28 YD Pass from Tyrod Taylor (Two-Point Conversion Failed) 26–27

    4th Quarter

    • 07:38 VT–Chris Hazley 34 YD FG 26–30
    • 01:09 BSU–Austin Pettis 13 YD Pass from Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 33–30

    Boise State remained at #3 in the AP poll but did gain 7 more first place votes to now have 8. They moved up to #3 in the coaches poll. They were named the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl National Team of the Week[36] and quarterback Kellen Moore was named the Davey O'Brien Award Quarterback of the Week.[37] Moore and kicker Kyle Brotzman were named the WAC offensive and special teams players of the week, respectively.[38] During their bye week they lost 7 first place votes in the AP poll, but did remain at #3 in both polls.

    Wyoming

    1 2 3 4 Total
    #3 Broncos 17 17 10 7 51
    Cowboys 0 0 6 0 6

    5th meeting. 4–0 all time. Last meeting 2007, 24–14 Bronco win in Boise. With Boise State joining the Mountain West in 2011, the Cowboys' scheduled non conference game in Boise in 2011 will become a conference game.

    Boise State team about to take the field

    Boise State's last trip to Laramie in 2006 saw the Broncos walk away with a hard-fought 17–10 win. This game, however, would never be in doubt as the Broncos scored early and often on their way to a 51–6 win over their future Mountain West Conference counterparts. After an early Kyle Brotzman field goal, Shea McClellin fell on a bad Wyoming snap in the end zone for the Bronco defense's first touchdown of the season and a 10–0 lead. The Broncos next offensive possession only took 4 plays to go 93 yards and finished with a flea-flicker 58-yard touchdown pass from Kellen Moore to Austin Pettis. After Doug Martin's first rushing touchdown of the season, Kellen Moore would find Titus Young for a 49-yard touchdown reception. Another Brotzman field goal brought the score to 34–0 at halftime. The offense added another 17 points after halftime with Brotzman's third field goal, a 2-yard D.J. Harper touchdown run, and an 11-yard Jarvis Hodge touchdown run. Kellen Moore finished 20/30 for 370 yards, 2 TD's and 1 interception. Hunter White and Jeron Johnson recorded the Bronco's first interceptions of the season. The Broncos out gained Wyoming 648 to 135 total yards and held the Cowboy rushing game to −21 yards with the help of 4 sacks. Since the formation of the Mountain West Conference in 1999, Boise State has never lost a regular season game to a Mountain West team (their only loss to a Mountain West school was against TCU in the 2008 Poinsettia Bowl).

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 22/30, 370 YDS, 2 TDS, 1 INT Doug Martin: 17 CAR, 105 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 15 Titus Young: 4 REC, 94 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 49 BSU: 648
    D.J. Harper: 11 CAR, 59 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 11 Austin Pettis: 3 REC, 88 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 58 WYO: 135
    Despite throwing an interception, Kellen Moore had a good game throwing for 370 yards and 2 TDs
    The Broncos offense had 648 total yards

    1st Quarter

    • 09:54 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 24 YD FG 3–0
    • 08:30 BSU–Shea McClellin Recovered Fumble In End Zone (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 10–0
    • 05:42 BSU–Austin Pettis 58 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 17–0

    2nd Quarter

    • 13:28 BSU–Doug Martin 7 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 24–0
    • 11:41 BSU–Titus Young 49 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 31–0
    • 00:00 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 29 YD FG 34–0

    3rd Quarter

    • 09:00 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 38 YD FG 37–0
    • 06:21 WYO–Greg Saydjari 35 YD Pass From Austyn Carta-Samuels (Pat Failed) 37–6
    • 00:14 BSU–D.J. Harper 2 YD Run (Jimmy Pavel Kick) 44–6

    4th Quarter

    • 00:57 BSU–Jarvis Hodge 11 YD Run (Jimmy Pavel Kick) 51–6

    The convincing win helped the Broncos remain at #3 in both major polls and to keep their one first place vote in the AP Poll.

    Oregon State

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Beavers 7 3 14 0 24
    #3 Broncos 7 17 7 6 37

    7th meeting. 2–4 all time. Last meeting 2006, 42–14 Bronco win in Boise. The Broncos will return to Corvallis in 2016.

    Boise State fans and the GameDay set inside of Bronco Stadium

    ESPN's College GameDay broadcast from Bronco Stadium.[39] This was the first time that College Gameday broadcast from a Western Athletic Conference School. The game was broadcast nationwide on ABC, the first ever national network television broadcast of a regular season game in school history.

    13,205 fans showed up before sunrise to watch ESPN's College GameDay live from inside Bronco Stadium and 34,137 showed up 11 hours later to break a Bronco Stadium attendance record and see the Broncos extend their winning streak to 17 games with a 37–24 win over Oregon State of the Pac-10. The Broncos went to their bag of tricks for their first score as Austin Pettis took a reverse pitch from QB Kellen Moore and threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to TE Tommy Gallarda. Oregon State tied the game on a 54-yard punt return for a touchdown by James Rodgers. After a Kyle Brotzman field goal, Kellen Moore found Austin Pettis for a 17-yard touchdown to bring the score to 17–7. After an Oregon State field goal, Moore then found Titus Young on a 49-yard touchdown where Young was so wide open that he backed into the endzone for a 24–10 halftime lead. Two personal foul penalties on the Bronco defense helped lead to Oregon State's first touchdown of the second half, but the Broncos offense answered just 2:51 later on Moore's third touchdown pass of 21 yards to Tyler Shoemaker. Oregon State kept the Bronco lead to just 7 with another touchdown when they fumbled in their own endzone but recovered. Another Brotzman field goal pushed the lead back to 10. Boise State got the ball back with 9:31 left to play and ran running back Doug Martin on 8 of the first 9 plays during an 11-play, 67-yard drive that ate up 7:17 off the clock and led to another Bronco field goal. The Bronco defense had 4 sacks on the night, including 2 on back-to-back plays on the Beavers' opening possession. Titus Young now leads the nation in all-purpose yards per game with 208.0 and Kyle Brotzman leads the nation in field goals per game with 2.67 a game.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 19/27, 288 YDS, 3 TDS Doug Martin: 19 CAR, 138 YDS, LG of 55 Titus Young: 5 REC, 136 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 49 BSU: 469
    Austin Pettis: 1/1, 6 YDS, 1 TD D.J. Harper: 3 CAR, 21 YDS, LG of 9 Austin Pettis: 4 REC, 62 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 26 ORST: 237
    Kellen Moore was named WAC Offensive Player of the Week.
    Tommy Gallarda catching BSU's first TD.

    1st Quarter

    • 10:15 BSU–Tommy Gallarda 6 YD Pass From Austin Pettis (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–7
    • 04:12 ORST–James Rodgers 54 YD Punt Return (Justin Kahut Kick) 7–7

    2nd Quarter

    • 13:39 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 21 YD FG 7–10
    • 08:10 BSU–Austin Pettis 17 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–17
    • 06:08 ORST–Justin Kahut 41 YD FG 10–17
    • 03:30 BSU–Titus Young 49 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 10–24

    3rd Quarter

    • 05:28 ORST–Jacquizz Rodgers 4 YD Run (Justin Kahut Kick) 17–24
    • 02:37 BSU–Tyler Shoemaker 21 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 17–31
    • 00:42 ORST–Joe Halahuni 0 YD Pass From Ryan Katz (Justin Kahut Kick) 24–31

    4th Quarter

    • 12:27 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 33 YD FG 24–34
    • 02:14 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 30 YD FG 24–37

    Kellen Moore was named WAC Player of the Week[40] for the second time this season after going 19 of 27 for 288 yards and 3 touchdowns. The Broncos once again stayed at #3 in both major polls and still have 1 first place vote in the AP poll.

    RB D.J. Harper, who in the 3rd game of the year in 2009 tore his ACL and missed the rest of the season, again tore the same ACL and will miss the rest of the season.

    Panoramic view from the south endzone with a record attendance of 34,137.

    New Mexico State

    1 2 3 4 Total
    #3 Broncos 24 14 14 7 59
    Aggies 0 0 0 0 0

    11th meeting. 10–0 all time. Last meeting 2009, 42–7 Bronco win in Boise. With Boise State leaving the WAC, they are not currently scheduled to play each other again.

    Boise State stayed undefeated all time against the Aggies of New Mexico State with a dominating 59–0 win. The scores came early and often for the Broncos as they scored 24 first quarter points on a Kyle Brotzman field goal and 3 rushing touchdowns (backup QB Mike Coughlin-15 yards, RB Doug Martin 1 yard, RB Jeremy Avery 18 yards). Kellen Moore added 2 2nd-quarter touchdown passes to Kyle Efaw (41 yards) and Doug Martin (28 yards) for a 38–0 halftime lead. Moore connected with Efaw again early in the 3rd quarter for a 26-yard touchdown. Backup QB Joe Southwick would take over for Moore and throw a 78-yard touchdown to Chris Potter for Southwick and Potter's first career touchdown. Jarvis Hodge's 54-yard touchdown run late in the game was his second touchdown on the season. Boise State recovered 2 fumbles and Ryan Winterswyk had an interception. Since New Mexico State joined the WAC in 2005, the Broncos have outscored the Aggies 304–41 in 6 meetings and have shutout the Aggies 3 of the last 4 years.[41]

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 13/18, 196 YDS, 3 TDS Doug Martin: 10 CAR, 94 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 36 Kyle Efaw: 2 REC, 67 YDS, 2 TD, LG of 41 BSU: 608
    Joe Southwick: 4/5, 102 YDS, 1 TD Jeremy Avery: 8 CAR, 69 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 18 Titus Young: 5 REC, 69 YDS, LG of 17 NMSU: 208

    1st Quarter

    • 11:13 BSU–Mike Coughlin 15 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–0
    • 08:16 BSU–Doug Martin 1 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 14–0
    • 04:56 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 35 YD FG 17–0
    • 02:19 BSU–Jeremy Avery 18 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 24–0

    2nd Quarter

    • 14:52 BSU–Kyle Efaw 41 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 31–0
    • 04:22 BSU–Doug Martin 28 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 38–0

    3rd Quarter

    • 12:45 BSU–Kyle Efaw 26 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 45–0
    • 02:00 BSU–Chris Potter 78 YD Pass From Joe Southwick (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 52–0

    4th Quarter

    • 01:19 BSU–Jarvis Hodge 54 YD Run (Trevor Harman Kick) 59–0

    Despite the dominating win, Boise State was jumped in both polls by Oregon, falling to #4. They still have 1 first place vote in the AP poll.

    Toledo

    First ever meeting. The Broncos will go to Toledo in 2011.

    Boise State offense finished the game with 500 total yards.
    1 2 3 4 Total
    Rockets 7 0 0 7 14
    #4 Broncos 15 21 21 0 57

    The Broncos turned five Toledo turnovers into 28 points en route to a 57–14 blowout for their 58th straight regular-season home win. Jeremy Avery ran for 3 first half touchdowns (4, 12, 5) and Kellen Moore threw for two first-half touchdowns (2 yards to Kyle Efaw, 51 yards to Titus Young) for a 36–7 halftime lead. On Toledo's first possession of the second half, Shea McClellin took an interception back 36 yards for his second defensive touchdown of the season. Moore added his third touchdown of the game on a 33-yard pass to Tyler Shoemaker. Matt Kaiserman's 1-yard touchdown run ended the Bronco's scoring. Kellen Moore's 3 touchdown passes puts him at 14 for the season to only one interception and has 3 touchdown passes in 4 of 5 games this season. Boise State's defense racked up 4 sacks, 2 by Billy Winn, and gave up less than 100 yards rushing for the third time this season. Cornerback Brandyn Thompson recovered a fumble and had an interception, the 10th of his career. With Alabama's loss to South Carolina, Boise State now has the nation's longest winning streak at 19 games.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 16/27, 267 YDS, 3 TDS Doug Martin: 8 CAR, 56 YDS, LG of 29 Titus Young: 6 REC, 97 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 51 BSU: 500
    Jeremy Avery: 7 CAR, 42 YDS, 3 TDS, LG of 12 Austin Pettis: 4 REC, 81 YDS, LG of 28 TOL: 287
    Matt Kaiserman scoring the Broncos final touchdown.

    1st Quarter

    • 12:47 BSU–Jeremy Avery 4 YD Run (Austin Pettis Run For Two-point conversion) 0–8
    • 07:42 BSU–Kyle Efaw 2 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–15
    • 04:41 TOL–Austin Dantin 4 YD Run (Bill Claus Kick) 7–15

    2nd Quarter

    • 14:29 BSU–Jeremy Avery 12 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–22
    • 03:38 BSU–Titus Young 51 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–29
    • 00:30 BSU–Jeremy Avery 5 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–36

    3rd Quarter

    • 12:51 BSU–Shea McClellin 36 YD Interception Return (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–43
    • 07:21 BSU–Tyler Shoemaker 33 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–50
    • 02:03 BSU–Matt Kaiserman 1 YD run (Kyle Brotzman kick) 7–57

    4th Quarter

    • 10:55 TOL–Danny Noble 7 YD pass from Terrance Owens (Bill Claus Kick) 14–57

    The Broncos moved back to #3 in both polls with 8 first-place votes in the AP and 1 first place vote in the Coaches poll. They also debuted at #3 in the first Harris poll of the season and received 10 first-place votes.

    San Jose State

    1 2 3 4 Total
    #3 Broncos 21 20 7 0 48
    Spartans 0 0 0 0 0

    11th meeting. 10–0 all time. Last meeting 2009, 45–7 Bronco win in Boise. With Boise State leaving the WAC, they are not currently scheduled to play each other again.

    Boise State only played their starters for the first half, but that was enough to dominate the depleted Spartans 48–0 to extend the nations longest winning streak to 20 games. Kellen Moore threw 2 touchdown passes of 17 and 43 yards while going 14 of 16 for 231 and now has 16 touchdowns to just 1 interception on the year. Titus Young added 2 touchdowns, one each receiving and rushing. Doug Martin ran for 2 touchdowns on only 8 carries. Aaron Tevis made a one handed interception in the second quarter and returned it 43 yards for a touchdown, the defenses 3rd TD of the season. The Broncos offensive reserves lost 2 fumbles in the second half. Punt returner Chris Potter returned 4 punts for 76 yards with a long of 33 in rout to being named WAC Special Teams Player of the Week.[42] The Broncos held their second opponent this season to negative yards rushing (Wyoming being the other) and recorded 4 more sacks to now have 20 on the season. The Broncos outgained the Spartans, who started 7 freshman, 535 to 80.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 14/16, 231 YDS, 2 TDS Doug Martin: 8 CAR, 68 YDS, 2 TDS, LG of 14 Titus Young: 7 REC, 105 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 43 BSU: 535
    Joe Southwick: 8/13, 83 YDS Matt Kaiserman: 15 CAR, 49 YDS, LG of 11 Austin Pettis: 3 REC, 53 YDS, LG of 24 SJSU: 80

    1st Quarter

    • 12:19 BSU–Doug Martin 6 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–0
    • 06:48 BSU–Tommy Gallarda 17 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 14–0
    • 01:19 BSU–Titus Young 17 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 21–0

    2nd Quarter

    • 05:16 BSU–Titus Young 43 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Pat Failed) 27–0
    • 04:14 BSU–Aaron Tevis 43 YD Interception Return (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 34–0
    • 00:42 BSU–Jeremy Avery 2 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 41–0

    3rd Quarter

    • 10:53 BSU–Doug Martin 4 YD Run (Trevor Harman Kick) 48–0

    After #1 Ohio State's loss to #16 Wisconsin, Boise State rose to #2 in the three human polls and received 15 first place votes in the AP, 11 in the Coaches, and 29 in the Harris poll. The #2 ranking is the highest ranking in school history in any poll. The Broncos also debuted at #3 in the initial BCS poll of the season, their highest ranking ever in the BCS poll.

    Following a bye week, the Broncos stayed at #2 in the human polls, but got fewer first place votes in all three (11 in the AP, 5 in the Coaches, 14 in the Harris). They did remain at #3 in the BCS poll.

    Louisiana Tech

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Bulldogs 7 0 6 7 20
    #2 Broncos 14 14 14 7 49

    13th meeting. 8–4 all time. Last meeting 2009, 45–35 Bronco win in Ruston. With Boise State leaving the WAC, they are not currently scheduled to play each other again.

    Boise State defense during a 4th quarter goal line stand.

    Despite giving up 394 total yards, the most they have given up this season thus far, the Broncos rolled to their 21st stright win and 9th straight over Louisiana Tech 49–20. Kellen Moore, who threw only his second interception of the season, threw 2 touchdowns to tie him with Ryan Dinwiddie (2001–2003) for the most career touchdown passes in school history with 82.[43] Moore also caught a touchdown from wide receiver Austin Pettis, Pettis' second touchdown pass of the year. Doug Martin had his best game of the season 150 yards and 2 touchdowns. He would have had a third touchdown, but he fumbled on the goal line, which was recovered by tight end Kyle Efaw for a Bronco Touchdown. Louisiana Tech consistently drove the ball down the field but turned the ball over on downs 4 times, including 3 times inside the Broncos 10-yard line and twice inside the 5.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 20/28, 298 YDS, 2 TDS, 1 INT Doug Martin: 21 CAR, 150 YDS, 2 TDS, LG of 38 Tyler Shoemaker: 6 REC, 124 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 34 BSU: 468
    Austin Pettis: 1/1, 7 YDS, 1 TD Jeremy Avery: 7 CAR, 29 YDS, LG of 26 Austin Pettis: 5 REC, 55 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 20 LT: 394
    Bronco offense celebrating Kyle Efaw's fumble recovery for a touchdown.

    1st Quarter

    • 07:08–Doug Martin 2 YD Run (Jimmy Pavel Kick) 0–7
    • 03:29–Lennon Creer 1 YD Run (Matt Nelson Kick) 7–7
    • 01:33–Austin Pettis 6 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Jimmy Pavel Kick) 7–14

    2nd Quarter

    • 07:56–Tyler Shoemaker 32 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Jimmy Pavel Kick) 7–21
    • 00:56–Kyle Efaw Recovered Fumble In End Zone (Jimmy Pavel Kick) 7–28

    3rd Quarter

    • 09:37–Phillip Livas 23 YD Pass From Ross Jenkins (Pat Failed) 13–28
    • 03:40–Jeremy Avery 26 YD Run (Jimmy Pavel Kick) 13–35
    • 00:40–Kellen Moore 7 YD Pass From Austin Pettis (Jimmy Pavel Kick) 13–42

    4th Quarter

    • 07:18–Doug Martin 20 YD Run (Jimmy Pavel Kick) 13–49
    • 00:44–Lennon Creer 25 YD Run (Matt Nelson Kick) 20–49

    The Broncos remained at #2 in the AP poll but lost 4 first place votes to now have 7. They fell one spot in every other poll to #3 in the Coaches with 3 first place votes, #3 in the Harris with 12 first place votes, and #4 in the BCS. TCU, who Boise State has played in bowl games the last two seasons, jumped over Boise State to #3 in the BCS to put them in position to gain an automatic bid to the BCS over Boise State.

    Hawaii

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Warriors 0 0 0 7 7
    #3 Broncos 6 15 14 7 42

    12th meeting. 8–3 all time. Last meeting 2009, 54–9 Bronco win in Honolulu. With Boise State leaving the WAC, they will not play in 2011 but Hawaii will join the Mountain West as a football only member in 2012 and the series will continue as a conference game.

    Jeremy Avery (27) scoring a 2nd-quarter TD.

    Three school records were set and Kellen Moore picked apart the Hawaii defense in rout to a 42–7 in front of the third largest overall and largest crowd ever to see a conference game at Bronco Stadium. Kellen Moore threw for a career-high 507 yards going 30 of 37 with three touchdowns and 2 INTs. His three touchdown passes gives him the school record for touchdown passes in a career, now with 85.[44] Moore also completed the longest pass of his career with a third quarter 83-yard TD pass to Titus Young. Austin Pettis caught 8 passes, including one touchdown of 43 yards, and now holds the record for career receptions in school history, currently with 196, breaking Don Hutt's record set 37 years ago. Jeremy Avery had 3 touchdown runs and now has 9 TDs on the season and has scored a TD in 5 straight games. The Bronco offense racked up a total of 737 total yards for the most total yards in school history. The Bronco defense held the nations leading passing attack to only 151 yards and recorded 7 sacks, the most in a game this season. Shea McClellin's two sacks gives him a team high 6.5 on the season.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 30/37, 507 YDS, 3 TDS, 2 INTS Jeremy Avery: 10 CAR, 92 YDS, 3 TDS, LG of 35 Austin Pettis: 8 REC, 122 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 43 BSU: 737
    Doug Martin: 17 CAR, 55 YDS, LG of 11 Tyler Shoemaker: 5 REC, 117 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 35 HAW: 196
    Kellen Moore threw for 507 yards and the offense had a school record 737 yards.

    1st Quarter

    • 05:31 BSU–Jeremy Avery 14 YD Run (Two-Point Conversion Failed) 0–6

    2nd Quarter

    • 14:23 BSU–Tyler Shoemaker 12 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–13
    • 09:26 BSU–Jeremy Avery 4 YD Run (Austin Pettis Run For Two-Point Conversion) 0–21

    3rd Quarter

    • 12:14 BSU–Austin Pettis 43 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–28
    • 08:47 BSU–Titus Young 83 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–35

    4th Quarter

    • 14:52 BSU–Jeremy Avery 19 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–42
    • 13:16 HAW–Alex Green 54 YD Run (Scott Enos Kick) 7–42

    For his record-breaking performance Kellen Moore was named the WAC offensive player of the week for the third time this season.[45] Despite the dominating win, the Broncos would fall in the polls again and are now ranked #4 in every major poll. They are still receiving first place votes in all 3 human polls with 7 in the AP, 3 in the Coaches, and 9 in the Harris poll.

    Idaho

    1 2 3 4 Total
    #4 Broncos 28 10 14 0 52
    Vandals 0 0 7 7 14

    40th meeting. 21–17–1 all time. Last meeting 2009, 63–25 Broncos win in Boise. Despite a 40-year rivalry, there are currently no future plans to meet again.

    Boise State players celebrate with the Governor's Trophy

    Boise State set a school record for consecutive wins (23) with their 12th straight win over their in-state rival in potentially their final meeting after games for 40 straight years. Boise State got on the board within the first minute of the game on a 76-yard punt return for a touchdown by Chris Potter. The Broncos added three more first-quarter touchdowns, including a 58-yard TD pass from Kellen Moore to Titus Young. A Kyle Brotzman field goal and Moore's second TD pass (17 yards to Jeremy Avery) brought the score to 38–0 at halftime. As they did in the first quarter, the Broncos again scored in the first minute of the third quarter when Doug Martin broke away for a 39-yard TD run. Later in the third Kellen Moore found Gabe Linehan from 21 yards out for his third TD pass of the game. Kicker Kyle Brotzman scored 10 points and set the WAC record for points in a career, now with 403, passing Jason Elam (395 at Hawaii from 1989 to 1992).[46] The Broncos defense recorded three interceptions, two by Brandyn Thompson to give him 12 for his career. Jeron Johnson blocked a Vandal punt, the first block of his career and second on the season for the Broncos. Boise State has not trailed since their final drive against Virginia Tech in the season opener, a streak of 481:09.

    Passing leaders Rushing leaders Receiving leaders Total yards
    Kellen Moore: 19/26, 216 YDS, 3 TDS Doug Martin: 16 CAR, 117 YDS, 2 TDS, LG of 39 Titus Young: 5 REC, 75 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 58 BSU: 424
    Joe Southwick: 3/4, 9 YDS Jarvis Hodge: 8 CAR, 52 YDS, LG of 22 Jeremy Avery: 3 REC, 34 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 17 IDA: 316
    Boise State offense scored six touchdowns.

    1st Quarter

    • 14:19 BSU–Chris Potter 76 YD Punt Return (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–0
    • 08:58 BSU–Doug Martin 8 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 14–0
    • 04:01 BSU–Jeremy Avery 1 Yd Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 21–0
    • 00:56 BSU–Titus Young 58 YD pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 28–0

    2nd Quarter

    • 08:57 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 41 YD FG 31–0
    • 00:12 BSU–Jeremy Avery 17 YD pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman kick) 38–0

    3rd Quarter

    • 14:05 BSU–Doug Martin 39 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 45–0
    • 10:30 IDA–Eric Greenwood 17 YD Pass From Nathan Enderle (Trey Farquhar kick) 45–7
    • 07:11 BSU–Gabe Linehan 21 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 52–7

    4th Quarter

    • 09:26 IDA–Aaron Lavarias 0 YD Fumble Return (Trey Farquhar Kick) 52–14

    Punt returner Chris Potter was named the WAC special teams player of the week for the second time this season.[47] The Broncos climbed back up to #3 in the AP, Coaches, and Harris polls and remained at #4 in the BCS. They did receive more first-place votes in all three polls (9 AP, 5 Coaches, 11 Harris).

    Fresno State

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Bulldogs 0 0 0 0 0
    #3 Broncos 3 17 17 14 51

    13th meeting. 8–4 all time. Last meeting 2009, 51–34 Bronco win in Fresno. The Broncos will play a non-conference game in Fresno in 2011 before the rivalry becomes a conference game again in 2012 in the Mountain West.

    The BSU offense generated 516 total yards.

    Boise State once again rewrote the record book in a dominating performance against their rival Fresno State to once again win the Milk Can. Despite a slow start that included an interception and a fumble on their first two possessions, Kellen Moore rallied to have a spectacular game, going 27 of 38 for 333 yards and four touchdowns and passed Ryan Dinwiddie for the most passing yards in school history, currently at 9,943. Moore connected with Titus Young eight times for two touchdowns and 164 yards, a career-high, to help Young break a school record for career receiving yards, currently with 2,836. Austin Pettis also caught two touchdowns to increase his school record for career receiving touchdowns to 37. One week after breaking the WAC scoring record, kicker Kyle Brotzman broke Brock Forsey's school record for career points, currently with 418. The Bronco defense recorded 4 sacks and 2 interceptions to shut out the Bulldogs, the first time Fresno State has been shut out since 1998. Boise State wore all-orange uniforms for the first time.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 27/38, 333 YDS, 4 TDS, 1 INT Doug Martin: 24 CAR, 72 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 8 Titus Young: 8 REC, 164 YDS, 2 TDS, LG of 45 BSU: 516
    Austin Pettis: 1/1, 50 YDS Jeremy Avery: 8 CAR, 27 YDS, LG of 8 Austin Pettis: 10 REC, 93 yds, 2 TDs, LG of 18 FRES: 125
    Boise State about to score in the second quarter

    1st Quarter

    • 00:53 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 20 YD FG 0–3

    2nd Quarter

    • 08:34 BSU–Doug Martin 1 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–10
    • 06:15 BSU–Titus Young 42 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–17
    • 00:00 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 20 YD FG 0–20

    3rd Quarter

    • 07:21 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 50 YD FG 0–23
    • 03:46 BSU–Austin Pettis 15 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–30
    • 00:02 BSU–Austin Pettis 6 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–37

    4th Quarter

    • 12:29 BSU–Titus Young 28 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–44
    • 04:59 BSU–Jarvis Hodge 4 Yd Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–51

    Kyle Brotzman, who connected on a pair of 20-yard field goals and one from 50, was named the WAC special teams player of the week for the second time this season.[48] The Broncos remained the same in every major poll, but did receive one more first-place vote in the AP and three more first-place votes in the Harris. They also closed the gap in the BCS poll with #3 TCU from 0.033 to 0.014.

    Nevada

    1 2 3 4OT Total
    #3 Broncos 3 21 0 70 31
    #19 Wolf Pack 0 7 7 173 34

    37th meeting. 24–12 all time. Last meeting 2009, 44–33 Bronco win in Boise. The Broncos will play a non-conference game against the Wolf Pack in Boise in 2011 before the rivalry becomes a conference game in 2012 in the Mountain West.

    The Broncos were shocked by their rival Nevada, ending the Broncos' 24-game winning streak, 35 straight regular season wins, 10 straight wins over the Wolf Pack, and dashed their dreams of going to another BCS game. The Broncos went up big early, scoring on a field goal, a 28-yard touchdown pass from Kellen Moore to Titus Young, and two Doug Martin rushing touchdowns from 4 and 51 yards to put the Broncos up 24–7 at halftime. The Bronco offense went away in the second half and Nevada's pistol attack ran all over the Boise State defense scoring 17 straight points to tie the game at 24 with about 5 minutes to play. On their possession after Nevada tied it up, Boise State answered on their first play with a 79-yard screen pass to Doug Martin to put the Broncos up 31–24. However, the Broncos scored too fast as Nevada would methodically march the ball down the field eating up 4:40 off the clock and tied the game at 31 with 13 seconds to play. After the kickoff, the Broncos had 9 seconds. Kellen Moore went deep and connected on a 53-yard pass to Titus Young to put the Broncos on Nevada's 9 yard line with 2 seconds to play. Kicker Kyle Brotzman had a 26-yard field goal attempt for the win. He missed. The Broncos got the ball first in overtime and were held to a field goal attempt, this time from 29 yards. Brotzman missed again. Nevada Kicker Anthony Martinez connected on a 33-yard field goal on the Wolf Pack possession to give Nevada their first win in the series since 1998.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 20/31, 348 YDS, 2 TDS Doug Martin: 24 CAR, 152 YDS, 2 TDS, LG of 51 Titus Young: 6 REC, 129 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 53 BSU: 493
    Colin Kaepernick: 19/35, 259 YDS, 1 TD Vai Taua: 32 CAR, 131 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 26 Rishard Matthews: 10 REC, 172 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 47 NEV: 528

    1st Quarter

    • 06:28 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 33 YD FG 3–0

    2nd Quarter

    • 12:38 BSU–Doug Martin 4 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 10–0
    • 05:47 BSU–Titus Young 26 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 17–0
    • 04:20 NEV–Vai Taua 5 YD Run (Anthony Martinez Kick) 17–7
    • 02:59 BSU–Doug Martin 51 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 24–7

    3rd Quarter

    4th Quarter

    • 13:01 NEV–Rishard Matthews 44 YD Run (Anthony Martinez Kick) 24–21
    • 05:14 NEV–Anthony Martinez 23 YD FG 24–24
    • 04:53 BSU–Doug Martin 79 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 31–24
    • 00:13 NEV–Rishard Matthews 7 YD Pass From Colin Kaepernick (Anthony Martinez Kick) 31–31

    Overtime

    • NEV–Anthony Martinez 34 YD FG 31–34

    After the loss, Boise State fell in every major poll to #9 in the AP, #10 in the Coaches and Harris, and #11 in the BCS.

    Utah State

    1 2 3 4 Total
    Aggies 7 0 0 7 14
    #10 Broncos 15 14 14 7 50

    17th meeting. 12–4 all time. Last meeting 2009, 52–21 Bronco win in Logan. With Boise State leaving the WAC, they are not currently scheduled to play each other again.

    BSU players with the schools 8th WAC championship trophy.

    In Boise State's last conference game as a member of the WAC, they secured a share of their 8th conference title in 10 years and finished 75–5 all time in WAC games, including going 40–0 at home. The Broncos got on the board very early when Sr. linebacker Derrell Acrey picked off the Aggies first play of the game and took it back 31 yards for the score just 14 seconds into the game. Kellen Moore supplied the rest of the first half offense with three touchdown passes (12, 2, 4) with a pair to tight end Kyle Efaw for a halftime score of 29–7. The ground game took over in the second half with Jeremy Avery, Kellen Moore, and Michael Coughlin all with rushing touchdowns. The Bronco defense kept Utah State to only 41 yards passing and forced 2 interceptions and 4 sacks.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 24/34, 237 YDS, 3 TDS Jeremy Avery: 10 CAR, 71 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 20 Kyle Efaw: 5 REC, 76 YDS, 2 TDS, LG of 30 BSU: 453
    Mike Coughlin 1/2, 14 YDS Jarvis Hodge: 8 CAR, 48 YDS, LG of 11 Austin Pettis: 4 REC, 51 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 21 USU: 291
    Kellen Moore scoring a rushing TD in the 3rd quarter.

    1st Quarter

    • 14:46 BSU–Derrell Acrey 31 YD Interception Return (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 0–7
    • 08:21 BSU–Kyle Efaw 12 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Austin Pettis Run For Two-Point Conversion) 0–15
    • 01:00 USU–Kerwynn Williams 40 YD Run (Peter Caldwell Kick) 7–15

    2nd Quarter

    • 13:07 BSU–Kyle Efaw 2 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–22
    • 01:13 BSU–Austin Pettis 4 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–29

    3rd Quarter

    • 06:55 BSU–Jeremy Avery 13 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–36
    • 00:17 BSU–Kellen Moore 1 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 7–43

    4th Quarter

    • 11:03 USU–Diondre Borel 1 YD Run (Peter Caldwell Kick) 14–43
    • 06:21 BSU–Mike Coughlin 1 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 14–50

    The Broncos would fall in one poll and gain in another to finish the regular season #10 in every major poll. With the Pac-10 not having enough bowl eligible teams, Boise State was selected to take the Pac-10's spot in the Maaco Bowl Las Vegas to play #19 Utah.

    Utah–Maaco Bowl Las Vegas

    1 2 3 4 Total
    #19 Utes 3 0 0 0 3
    #10 Broncos 0 16 7 3 26

    7th meeting. 4–2 all time. Last meeting 2006, 36–3 Bronco win in Salt Lake City. The Broncos and Utes were scheduled to play in 2011, 2012, and 2013, but Utah bought their way out of the series in order to continue playing their rival BYU since both teams are leaving the Mountain West next season.

    In a Matchup of the first two BCS busters, Boise State dominated after a slow start to win their first non BCS bowl game since 2003. The Broncos fumbled on their first possession of the game to give Utah a short field but held the Utes to a field goal attempt which they missed. After a Boise State punt, the Broncos recovered a Utah fumble, but failed to convert on a fake punt on their following possession. The Broncos' next possession also ended with no success when Kellen Moore threw his 6th interception of the season, which led to a Utah field goal, their only score of the game. The Broncos where held scoreless in the first quarter for the first time in 21 games. They turned the ball over again early in the second quarter when Kyle Efaw fumbled while trying to convert on fourth down. All of the Broncos early mistakes seemed to disappear when Doug Martin took the first play of their next possession 84 yards for the Broncos first score. The run was the longest play in the 19-year history of the Maaco/Las Vegas Bowl and the second longest run play in Boise State history. The Broncos scored again on their next two possessions with a 29-yard Kyle Brotzman field goal and 25 yard touchdown pass from Moore to Tyler Shoemaker to lead 16–3 at halftime. The Broncos opened the second half by recovering a fumble on Utah's first possession. The Broncos looked to be about to score a touchdown after Moore found Austin Pettis for 46 yards, but Pettis was stripped near the goal line and the ball went out of the endzone for a touchback. However, Moore and Pettis would connect on an 18-yard touchdown on the Broncos next possession. Another Ute fumble set up a 27-yard Brotzman field goal which was blocked. The Broncos added a 4th quarter 21 yard Brotzman field goal to bring the final score to 26–3. Despite turning the ball over 4 times, the Broncos gained 543 total yards. The Bronco defense gave up only 200 total yards and forced 3 turnovers and 4 sacks. Kyle Brotzman's 8 points helped set an NCAA record for most points in a career for a kicker with 439.

    Passing Leaders Rushing Leaders Receiving Leaders Total Yards
    Kellen Moore: 28/38, 339 YDS, 2 TDS, 1 INT Doug Martin: 17 CAR, 147 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 84 Austin Pettis: 12 REC, 147 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 46 BSU: 543
    Austin Pettis 1/1, 2 YDS Jeremy Avery: 12 CAR, 55 YDS, LG of 14 Tyler Shoemaker: 5 REC, 89 YDS, 1 TD, LG of 25 UTAH: 200

    1st Quarter

    • 00:56 UTAH–Joe Phillips 44 YD FG 3–0

    2nd Quarter

    • 08:39 BSU–Doug Martin 84 YD Run (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 3–7
    • 02:27 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 29 YD FG 3–10
    • 00:18 BSU–Tyler Shoemaker 25 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Two-Point Conversion Failed) 3–16

    3rd Quarter

    • 08:18 BSU–Austin Pettis 18 YD Pass From Kellen Moore (Kyle Brotzman Kick) 3–23

    4th Quarter

    • 08:49 BSU–Kyle Brotzman 21 YD FG 3–26

    Following all the bowl games, the Broncos would finish the season ranked #7 in the Coaches poll and #9 in the AP poll.

    Post-season awards

    Jr. QB Kellen Moore was a finalist for four national awards.

    Moore was also honored by the Touchdown Club of Columbus as the nations top quarterback.[49]

    Head coach Chris Petersen was named the winner of the Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award.

    WAC first team

    WAC Co-Offensive Player of the Year

    Kellen Moore (2009 WAC Offensive Player of the Year)

    Offense

    Austin Pettis Sr. WR (2009 1st team, 2008 2nd team)

    Titus Young Sr. WR (2009 1st team)

    Thomas Byrd Jr. OL

    Nate Potter Jr. OL (2009 1st team)

    Kellen Moore Jr. QB (2009 1st team, 2008 2nd team)

    Doug Martin Jr. RB

    Defense

    Shea McClellin Jr. DL

    Ryan Winterswyk Sr. DL (2009 & 2008 1st team)

    Winston Venable Sr. LB (2009 2nd team)

    George Iloka Jr. DB

    Jeron Johnson Sr. DB (2009 & 2008 2nd team)

    [50]

    WAC second team

    Defense

    Billy Wynn Jr. DL (2009 2nd team)

    Byron Hout Jr. LB

    Brandyn Thompson Sr. DB

    All-American lists

    Kellen Moore Jr. QB–Football Writers Association of America All-American,[51] AP 3rd team.[52]

    Nate Potter Jr. OL–AP 3rd team.

    Titus Young Sr. WR–AP 3rd team.

    Billy Wynn Jr. DL–AP 3rd team.

    Rankings

    Ranking Movement
    Legend: ██ Increase in ranking. ██ Decrease in ranking. ( )= First place votes.
    PollPreWk 1Wk 2Wk 3Wk 4Wk 5Wk 6Wk 7Wk 8Wk 9Wk 10Wk 11Wk 12Wk 13Wk 14Final
    AP 3 (1) 3 (8) 3 (1) 3 (1) 3 (1) 4 (1) 3 (8) 2 (15) 2 (11) 2 (7) 4 (7) 3 (9) 3 (10) 9 10 9
    Coaches 5 3 3 3 3 4 3 (1) 2 (11) 2 (5) 3 (3) 4 (3) 3 (5) 3 (5) 10 10 7
    Harris Not released 3 (10) 2 (29) 2 (14) 3 (12) 4 (9) 3 (11) 3 (14) 10 10
    BCS Not released 3 3 4 4 4 4 11 10

    NFL Draft

    2nd Round, 44th Overall Pick by the Detroit Lions—Sr. WR Titus Young

    3rd Round, 78th Overall Pick by the St. Louis Rams—Sr. WR Austin Pettis

    7th Round, 213th Overall Pick by the Washington Redskins—Sr. CB Brandyn Thompson

    Statistics

    Team

    BSUOpp
    Scoring586166
      Points per Game45.112.8
    First Downs326192
      Rushing2,6031,349
      Passing4,1741,962
    Total Offense6,7773,311
      Avg per Game521.3254.7
    Penalties-Yards74–71171–609
    Fumbles-Lost23–1329–13
    BSUOppNeutral
    Punts-Yards32–1,37284–3,396
      Avg per Punt42.940.4
    Time of Possession/Game30:3830:31
    3rd Down Conversions76/155-49%54/189-29%
    4th Down Conversions6/16-38%9/24-38%
    Touchdowns Scored7722
    Field Goals-Attempts16–245–12
    PAT-Attempts70/72-97%19/21-90%
    Attendance199,135116,079128,510
      Games/Avg per Game6–33,2725–23,2162–64,255

    Scores by quarter

    1 2 3 4OT Total
    Boise State 170 199 145 720 586
    Opponents 31 24 53 553 166

    Offense

    Rushing

    NameGPAttYardsAvgTDLongAvg/G
    Doug Martin132011,2606.3128496.9
    Jeremy Avery13954955.2113538.1
    Jarvis Hodge13463056.635423.5
    D.J. Harper3181608.927153.3
    Matt Kaiserman13391403.611710.8
    Mike Coughlin814987.021712.2
    Titus Young1314946.71387.2
    Drew Wright1112383.20173.5
    Chris Potter126335.50122.8
    Joe Southwick89313.40203.9
    Brenel Myers12050.0050.4
    Dan Paul12111.0010.1
    Kyle Efaw13000.0100.0
    Tyler Shoemaker131−1−1.000−0.1
    Kellen Moore1319−32−1.7112−2.5
    TEAM911−24−2.200−2.7
    Broncos Total134862,6035.43484200.2
    Opponents134611,3492.91254103.8

    Passing

    NameGPCmp–AttPctYdsTDINTLngAvg/GRAT
    Kellen Moore13273–38371.33,84535683295.8182.6
    Joe Southwick817–2470.8202107825.2155.3
    Mike Coughlin84–944.43600144.578.0
    Austin Pettis134–4100.06520485.0401.5
    Chris Potter121–250.02600262.2159.2
    Broncos Total13299–42470.54,17438683321.1180.0
    Opponents13190–37151.21,96281447150.995.2

    Receiving

    NameGPRecYdsAvgTDLongAvg/G
    Titus Young13711,21517.198393.5
    Austin Pettis137195113.4105873.2
    Tyler Shoemaker133258218.254844.8
    Doug Martin132833812.127926.0
    Kyle Efaw132429912.554123.0
    Jeremy Avery131415411.012611.8
    Geraldo Hiwat131116014.504812.3
    Chris Potter12812515.617810.4
    Tommy Gallarda77639.03179.0
    Dan Paul127304.30132.5
    Gabe Linehan136599.81177.4
    Mitch Burroughs86599.80177.4
    Aaron Burks106589.70165.8
    D.J. Harper34369.001812.0
    Chandler Koch11242.0040.4
    Matt Kaiserman1311111.00110.8
    Kellen Moore13177.0170.5
    Broncos Total132994,17414.03883321.1
    Opponents131901,96210.3847150.9

    Defense

    Team GP Tackles Sacks Pass Defense Interceptions Fumbles Blkd
    Kick
    SoloAstTotalTFL-YdsNo-YdsBrUpQBHNo.-YdsAvgTDLongRcv-Yds-TDFFSFT
    Total

    Special teams

    Field GoalsMade-AttPct01-1920–2930–3940–4950–60LNGBLKDPAT
             
    Team Punting Kickoffs
    No.YdsAvgLongTBFCI20Blkd No.YdsAvgTBOB
    Total
    Team Punt Returns Kick Returns
    No.YdsAvgTDLongNo.YdsAvgTDLong
    Total

    Scoring

    NameTDFGPAT2PT PATSAFETYTOT PTS
    Kyle Brotzman 16–2359–61  107
    Doug Martin14    84
    Jeremy Avery12    72
    Austin Pettis10  3 66
    Titus Young10    60
    Kyle Efaw6    36
    Tyler Shoemaker5    30
    Jarvis Hodge3    18
    Tommy Gallarda3    18
    Kellen Moore2    12
    Mike Coughlin2    12
    Chris Potter2    12
    D.J. Harper2    12
    Shea McClellin2    12
    Jimmy Pavel 0–19–9  9
    Matt Kaiserman1    6
    Aaron Tevis1    6
    Derrell Acrey1    6
    Gabe Linehan1    6
    Trevor Harman  2–2  2
    Broncos Total7716–2470–723 586
    Opponents225–1219–21  166

    Roster

    No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Cls. Hometown (H.S./Prev. Exp.)
    1Titus YoungWR5–10170Sr.Los Angeles, CA (University HS)
    2Austin PettisWR6–3201Sr.Anaheim, CA (Lutheran HS)
    3Chris PotterWR5–9161So.Westlake Village, CA (Oaks Christian High School)
    4Jerrell GavinsCB5–9171Jr.Miami, FL (El Camino JC) (South Miami Senior HS)
    5Jason RobinsonS5–11194Sr.Los Angeles, CA (University HS)
    6D.J. HarperRB5–9198Jr.Cypress, TX (Cypress Creek HS)
    7Mike CoughlinQB6–5212Sr.San Diego, CA (Mira Mesa HS)
    8George IlokaS6–3207Jr.Houston, TX (Kempner HS)
    9Mike TamburoQB5–11183Fr.Suwanee, GA (North Gwinnett HS)
    11Kellen MooreQB6–0187Jr.Prosser, WA (Prosser HS)
    13Brandyn ThompsonCB5–10180Sr.Elk Grove, CA (Franklin HS)
    14Trevor HarmanP6-2188Fr.Beaverton, OR (Southridge HS)
    15Quaylon EwingCB6–0175Fr.Houston, TX (Kempner HS)
    15Joe SouthwickQB6–1182Fr.Danville, CA (San Ramon Valley HS)
    16Cedric FebisDB6–3197Jr.Amsterdam, Netherlands (Bishop Kelly HS in Boise, ID)
    17Winston VenableS5–11223Sr.San Rafael, CA (Glendale Community College) (St. Thomas More Prep (Oakdale, CT))
    18Aaron BurksWR6–2186Fr.Grand Prairie, TX (Mansfield Timberview HS)
    19Josh BorgmanCB5–7169So.Boise, ID (Centennial HS)
    20Mitch BurroughsWR5–9188So.Meridian, ID (Meridian HS)
    21Carlo AudagnottiRB5–7176So.Johannesburg, South Africa (Santa Margarita HS)
    21Jamar TaylorDB5–11193So.San Diego, California (Helix HS)
    22Doug MartinRB5–9201Jr.Stockton, CA (Saint Mary's HS)
    23Jeron JohnsonS5–11194Sr.Compton, CA (Dominguez HS)
    24Malcolm JohnsonRB5–10181Fr.Gresham, OR (Barlow HS)
    25Hunter WhiteLB5–11224Jr.Huntington Beach, CA (Edison HS)
    26Matt KaisermanRB6–0188So.Nampa, ID (Skyview HS)
    27Jeremy AveryRB5–9179Sr.Bellflower, CA (Bellflower HS)
    28Jarvis HodgeRB5–9203Sr.Phoenix, AZ (Mountain Point HS)
    28Dane TurnerS5–10170Fr.Sutter, CA (Sutter Union HS)
    29Tyler JacksonS6–0203So.Castle Rock, Colorado (Douglas County High School)
    30Travis StanawayS5–11188Jr.Clyde Hill, WA (Bellevue HS)
    31Antwon MurrayCB5–11177Jr.Lakeland, FL (Kathleen HS)
    32Jonathan BrownS5–10204Fr.Alameda, CA (Encinal HS)
    32Dave WilsonLB6–1222Jr.Powell, WY (Powell HS)
    33Tommy SmithLB6–1218So.Atlanta, GA (North Atlanta High School)
    34Kirby MooreWR6–2196So.Prosser, WA (Prosser HS)
    35Kyle BrotzmanK/P5-10201Sr.Meridian, ID (Meridian HS)
    36Aaron TevisLB6–3228Jr.Tucson, AZ (Canyon Del Oro HS)
    37Ebenezer MakindeCB5–11164Fr.Phoenix, AZ (Paradise Valley HS)
    38Raphiel LambertCB5–11200So.Portland, Oregon (Jesuit High School)
    39Drew WrightFB5–9188So.Nampa, ID (Vallivue HS)
    41Kharyee MarshallDE6–1207Fr.Phoenix, AZ (Washington HS)
    41Dan GoodaleK/P5-9182Fr.Boise, ID (Timberline HS)
    42Matt WilsonLB6–1212Jr.Powell, WY (Powell HS)
    43Ricky Tjong-A-TjoeDT6–3282Fr.Netherlands, Amsterdam (Boise HS, in Boise, ID)
    44Allen MooneyS5–10211Fr.Maple Valley, WA (O'Dea HS)
    45Daron MackeyLB5–11233Sr.Bakersfield, CA (Bakersfield College) (West HS)
    47Dan PaulLB/FB6–0241Jr.Boring, OR (Sam Barlow HS)
    48J.C. PercyLB6–0214So.Blackfoot, ID (Blackfoot HS)
    49Brad ElkinP6-2201Sr.Tacoma, WA (Bellarmine Prep HS)
    50J.P. NisbyDT6–1305Jr.Stockton, CA (Saint Mary's HS)
    51James CrawfordLS6–1207So.Westlake Village, CA (Oaks Christian HS)
    52Derrell AcreyLB6–1235Sr.East Highland, CA (Redlands East Valley HS)
    54Michael AmesOL6–4281So.Boise, ID (Centennial HS)
    55Chuck HayesDT6–2290Jr.Auroro, CO (Eaglecrest HS)
    56John Michael DavisLB6–0210Fr.Santa Margarita, CA (Las Flores HS)
    57Garrett PendergastOL6–4271Jr.Whittier, CA (Servite HS)
    59Will LawrenceOL6–2293Sr.Upper Marlboro, MD (CH Flowers HS)
    61Joe KelloggOL6–2305So.Scottsdale, AZ (Saguaro HS)
    62Kevin SapienOL6–4286Sr.Torrance, CA (West Torrance HS)
    64Brenel MyersOL6–2267So.Houston, TX (Westfield HS)
    65Matt ParadisDT6–1275Fr.Council, ID (Council HS)
    66Thomas ByrdC5–11284Jr.San Pablo, CA (McClymond HS)
    68David CushingLB6–1277Fr.Caldwell, ID (Vallivue HS)
    70Zach WallerOL6–5289Jr.Elk Grove, CA (Franklin HS)
    71Cory YriarteOL6–1281Jr.Palmdale, CA (Oaks Christian HS)
    72Matt SlaterOT6–4290Sr.St. Paul, MN (Cretin Derham Hall HS)
    73Nate PotterOL6–6293Jr.Boise, ID (Timberline HS)
    75Faraji WrightOT6–3284So.Vallejo, CA (Berkeley HS)
    76Jake BroylesOL6–4257Fr.Henderson, NV (Foothill HS)
    77Spencer GerkeOL6–3290Fr.Boise, ID (Bishop Kelly)
    78Charles LenoOT6–3249Fr.Oakland, CA (San Leandro HS)
    79Bronson DurrantOL6–3266So.Eugene, OR (Marist)
    80Kyle EfawTE6–4229Jr.Boise, ID (Capital HS)
    81Nick AlexanderDE6–4237Fr.Los Angeles, CA (Crenshaw HS)
    82Geraldo HiwatWR6–4189Fr.Netherlands, Amsterdam (Capital HS in Boise, ID)
    83Sean KingTE6–3240Sr.Boise, ID (College of the Redwoods) (Timberline HS)
    84Jimmy PavelK5–9212So.Molalla, OR (Central Catholic HS)
    85Tommy GallardaTE6–5249Sr.Brea, CA (Brea Olinda HS)
    87Gabe LinehanTE6–3213Fr.Banks, OR (Banks, OR)
    88Chandler KochTE6–2244So.Flower Mound, TX (Flower Mound HS)
    89Tyler ShoemakerWR6–1207Jr.Meridian, ID (Mountain View HS)
    90Billy WinnDT6–4288Jr.Las Vegas, NV (Las Vegas HS)
    91Greg GrimesDT6–0271So.Sacramento, CA (Inderkum HS)
    92Shea McClellinDE6–3262Jr.Caldwell, ID (Marsing HS)
    93Justin JungblutDT6–4241Fr.Scottsdale, AZ (Saguaro HS)
    94Byron HoutDE6–0241Jr.Coeur d' Alene, ID (Lake City HS)
    95Darren KoontzDE6–3254So.Los Alamitos, CA (Los Alamitos High School)
    96Jarrell RootDE6–3259Jr.Boise, ID (Capital HS)
    97Chase BakerDT6–1296Jr.Rocklin, CA (Rocklin HS)
    98Ryan WinterswykDE6–4263Sr.La Habra, CA (La Habra HS)
    99Michael AtkinsonDT6–0332So.Windsor, Ontario, Canada (Catholic Central High School)

    [53]

    Coaching staff

    NamePositionAlma MaterYears
    at BSU
    Chris PetersenHead CoachUC Davis ('88)8 (5 as Head Coach)
    Brent PeaseAssistant head coach
    Wide Receivers
    Montana ('90)5
    Bryan HarsinOffensive coordinator
    Quarterbacks
    Boise State ('00)10 (5 as OC)
    Pete KwiatkowskiDefensive coordinatorBoise State ('90)13 (first as DC)
    Bob GregoryAssistant coachWashington State ('87)2 (first since 2001)
    Scott HuffOffensive LinesBoise State ('02)5
    Marcel YatesSecondaryBoise State ('00)8
    Chris StrausserTight Ends
    Run Game Coordinator
    Chico State ('89)9
    Jeff ChoateSpecial teams
    Linebackers
    Montana-Western ('93)5
    Keith BhonaphaRunning BacksHawaii ('03)2

    [54]

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