Gallery: (10/5/2019) PHOTO GALLERY - Sacramento State vs. EWU
The consistency bugaboo caught up with the Eagles once again.
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The No. 22/21 Eastern Washington University football team made plenty of plays and had plenty of stops, but it wasn't enough as the Eagles lost 48-27 to Sacramento State Saturday (Oct. 5) in a Big Sky Conference game at Hornet Stadium.
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The Hornets scored 21 unanswered points in the first half to help them open up a 20-point lead in the third quarter and won for the first time in Sacramento against the Eagles in 13 tries. Eastern scored a pair of touchdowns in the last 18:30 of the game, but Sac State held on to beat EWU for just the fifth time in 24 meetings thanks to returns of both an interception and fumble for touchdowns.
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Eastern punted six times – five on three-and-outs – and missed on its first three attempts to convert fourth downs. The Eagles also had 11 penalties for 97 yards, compared to five for 62 yards for Sac State.
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"We were in the game," said Eastern head coach
Aaron Best. "When they had their sack-fumble returned for a touchdown, we were within two scores and had the ball. So we were in the game, No. 1. That's who we are and who we are going to be."
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Quarterback
Eric Barriere led the Eagles with 412 yards of total offense, including 309 through the air and 102 on the ground with one touchdown rushing and two passing.
Antoine Custer Jr. added 55 yards and a touchdown on the ground, and
Jayson Williams led EWU receivers with seven catches for 120 yards.
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The Eagle defense kept EWU in the game by forcing six Hornet punts and allowing Sac State to convert just two of its first 10 third downs.
Dehonta Hayes had 17 tackles for the Eagles, matching the 17 he had versus Idaho two games ago.
Calin Criner had 12, and
Tre Weed had six plus his first career interception.
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Eastern jumped out to an early 7-0 lead on a 75-yard drive to start the game, but Sac State scored the next 21 points to open a 21-7 advantage. Included was a 27-yard interception return for a TD by the Hornets.
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Barriere scored on a 92-yard run on the next possession – the fourth-longest in school history – but he would leave the game shortly after that and not return until the third quarter.
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In the meantime, Sac State was able to score once at the end of the second quarter and once in the third to take a 34-14 lead with 5:15 to play. With Barriere back in the game, Eastern rallied to score on drives of 71 yards and 59 yards to cut the lead to a single score. The second touchdown came with 13:11 left to play on a 27-yard TD pass from Barriere to
Jayson Williams.
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However, Sac State converted two third downs on its next possession, and took a 41-27 lead with a 75-yard drive. The 13 plays and time elapsed of 6:55 were season highs for the Hornets. Sac State provided the dagger with 2:18 to play on a 73-yard fumble return for a touchdown with 2:18 to play.
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Records & Rankings . . .
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* Eastern is 2-4 overall and 1-1 Â Big Sky Conference play, with a 35-20 victory over North Dakota on Sept. 28 counting in the league standings for EWU. Prior to that, the Eagles had lost their previous two games to FCS competition by a total of 12 points.
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* Now 3-2 overall and 0-0 in the Big Sky, Sac State is coached by Troy Taylor, who spent the 2016 season as offensive coordinator at Eastern before moving on to the same position for two seasons at Utah. This is his first season at the helm, and the Hornets lost a pair of close games to FBS foes – 19-7 at Arizona State on Sept. 6 and 34-20 at Fresno State on Sept. 21. While he was at Eastern alongside former head coach Beau Baldwin and Best as running game coordinator, the Eagles led the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in passing offense (401.0 per game) and were second in total offense (529.6) and third in scoring (42.4).
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What's Next . . .
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* The No. 22/21 Eastern Washington University Eagles will put a pair of 11-game winning streaks on the line in EWU's 93rd Homecoming Game when Northern Colorado comes to Roos Field on Oct. 12 in what promises to be yet another wild and wooly league game. Kickoff is 1:10 p.m. Pacific time at "The Inferno" in a game broadcast regionally by ROOT Sports and nationally via the DirecTV Audience Network. Eastern will try to establish a new school record for consecutive home victories at the current site of Roos Field (formerly Woodward Field), plus extend a long winning streak over UNC. Both streaks are at 11, as EWU hasn't lost a home on the red turf since Nov. 4, 2017. The Eagles fell at Northern Colorado in 1981, but haven't lost since in the 13-game history of the series. Eastern's 11-game winning streak includes the last 10 with the Bears as a member of the Big Sky Conference. Eastern is 55-34-3 in its previous 92 Homecoming contests, and last year beat Idaho 38-14. The year prior, EWU fell to Weber State 28-20 after beating Northern Colorado 49-31 in 2016.
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Key Stats . . .
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* Eastern finished with 497 yards of total offense, while Sac State had 471. Eastern entered the Sacramento State game ranked 14th in the FCS in total offense (469.8), 21st in passing (297.0), 52nd in rushing (172.8) and 20th in scoring (36.0). Sac State team entered 16th in FCS in passing offense (301.0), 17th in total offense (462.3) and 11th in scoring (38.5).
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EWU Highlights . . .
* A 92-yard touchdown run by
Eric Barriere after he was flushed out of the pocket by Sacramento State equaled the longest run in school history. It only ranks behind runs of 96 by Taiwan Jones (2009 versus Idaho State), 95 by John Ditz (1954 versus Lewis & Clark) and 94 by
Sam McPherson (2018 versus Northern Arizona). It was the longest run by a quarterback, with the previous long set by Barriere versus Southern Utah in 2018 when he had an 85-yard TD run (he also had a 66-yard scoring run at Portland State in 2018). The Eagles had four runs of at least 81 yards in 2018.
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* Senior defensive end
Darnell Hogan made the first start of his career, giving EWU a total of 14 players who have made their starting debuts in 2019. Hogan is from Seattle and graduated in 2015 from Cleveland High School, and the Sac State game was his 31st as an Eagle.
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Notables . . .
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* Despite the loss, the Eagles have won 54 of their last 64 Big Sky games since a 0-2 start in 2011. Included are current stretches of 44 victories in the last 52 games (including two at the end of the 2012 season) and 22 of the last 26 (since 2016). Including three wins at the end of the 2009 season, Eastern has a 64-13 record in league games since then. Including four non-conference victories (two versus MSU, and one each against Cal Poly and Northern Arizona), two playoff wins (Montana and UC Davis) and one loss (Idaho), the Eagles are 60-11 since the 0-2 start in 2011 and 50-9 since the end of the 2012 campaign. What is perhaps most impressive is Eastern's ability to consistently win on the road versus conference foes, with records of 23-6 on the road, 26-3 at home and 49-9 overall in the last seven-plus seasons since 2012.
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* The Eagles are now 0-4 on the road thus far, compared to a 2-0 mark at home where EWU has equaled a school record with 11-straight wins at the current site of Roos Field/Woodward Field.
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* Until Saturday, Hornet Stadium was definitely a home-away-from-home for the Eastern football team, but, actually, home-field advantage hasn't meant much for either team in the past 16 meetings in the series. Thanks to a second-half rally in the most recent meeting in 2015 in Sacramento, the Eagles defeated Sacramento State 28-20 and kept EWU perfect in 12 tries versus the Hornets in Sacramento. Despite the 2019 loss, the Eagles still lead the all-time series 19-5 (7-4 in Cheney, 12-1 in Sacramento), with the first four losses coming in Cheney. But even stranger than winning 12-straight in Sacramento is the fact that in the last 16 meetings between EWU and Sac State, the home team has won only five times (EWU 45-10 in 2004, 28-24 in 2010, 31-28 in 2012 and 52-31 in 2017; Sacramento State in 2019). Eastern is 7-1 in Sacramento and 4-4 in Cheney in those past 16 meetings. Prior to a 2000 home loss, EWU had won the first eight meetings from 1980-1999.
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* Until Saturday, it had been 14 years since Eastern has lost to a current NCAA Football Championship Subdivision opponent in California – an 8-0 record starting back in 2008. Eastern was 2-0 versus Sacramento State, 3-0 against Cal Poly and 2-0 at UC Davis since then, with the last road loss to those three teams a 40-35 setback at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo on Nov. 5, 2005. The Eagles did lose to California of the Pac-12 Conference 59-7 on Sept. 12, 2009, in Berkeley, Calif. Eastern, in fact, hadn't lost to a California FCS team in its previous 17 match-ups, dating back to a 15-13 home loss to Sacramento State on Nov. 1, 2008. Since then, EWU was 5-0 versus Sac State and 6-0 against both Cal Poly and UC Davis.
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Head Coach Aaron Best Comments . . .
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On Loss: "We're depleted, but so what – that's not an excuse. We're not good enough in some areas, we aren't disciplined enough in areas, we don't make enough plays in areas and we hold too much on offense."
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On Eric Barriere: "He's a warrior – a flat-out warrior. Gunner came in and tried to operate as well as he could, and we didn't protect him as well as we would like. There are enough warriors in that locker room – and Eric is certainly one of them."
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On Getting Behind: "When you are three scores behind, it takes some things away. You have to be patient, but you can't be too patient – you can't run the ball between the tackles too often. They got us in a (come-from-behind) situation when they returned the interception for a touchdown on a screen pass."
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On Sac State: "Kudos to them – they made a ton of plays and Troy Taylor had his team ready. They were coming off a bye week fresher than us. We didn't make enough plays and gave up too many points – 14 of those came from an offensive standpoint, really. So we allowed 34 points, which is too many. We didn't score enough points and we have to get more dynamic on offense. Scoring 27 points isn't going to win ballgames too often and too consistently in the Big Sky."
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