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Eagles Host ‘Carbon Copy’ Saturday at Roos Field

Similar to a Weber State squad which knocked off EWU 35-34 on Oct. 23, No. 4 Montana State visits No. 5 EWU in a game with huge Big Sky Conference title chase ramifications

Eastern Washington University head coach Aaron Best calls Montana State a 'carbon copy' to the team which gave EWU its lone blemish thus far in the 2021 season.
 
Coming off a bye on the schedule, the Eagles host league unbeaten Montana State this Saturday (Nov. 6) to end a three-game homestand for the Eagles in a battle of nationally-ranked teams. The Bobcats enter ranked No. 4 in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in the Stats Perform and AFCA Coaches polls, while EWU is ranked fifth in both.
 
Kickoff is 1:05 p.m. Pacific time in a game broadcast regionally on SWX and available via ESPN+. The contest will also be broadcast on 700-AM ESPN and 105.3-FM in the Spokane/Cheney area. Larry Weir returns for his 31st season calling the play-by-play, with analysis handled by Paul Sorensen for the 19th season. Broadcasts begin one hour prior to kickoff and include an expanded post-game show.
 
Eastern saw its 20-game home winning streak fall by the wayside with a 35-34 loss to Weber State on Oct. 23 in which EWU was held nearly 20 points and almost 200 yards below its seasonal averages. The Wildcats also rushed for 213 yards and four touchdowns versus EWU, and was a perfect 4-of-4 on fourth down with three coming on fake punts. Still, Eastern rallied from a 14-point fourth quarter deficit and missed an extra point with 2:51 to play which could have knotted the game at 35.
 
The Bobcats are also coming off a bye, and come to Cheney with a perfect 5-0 league mark and 7-1 overall record. Eastern is 4-1 in the league and also 7-1 on the season, with MSU's lone loss a narrow 19-16 setback at Wyoming on Sept. 4. That same weekend, EWU knocked off UNLV 35-33 in two overtimes in its game versus a NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision opponent. Montana State knocked off Weber State 13-7 on Oct. 15.
 
The Bobcats enter the game with the second-best scoring defense (10.4 points per game) in FCS, and are No. 3 in passing defense (154.6 yards per game) and No. 9 in total defense (276.0). Weber State is now ninth nationally in passing defense (165.4), 14th in total defense (293.1) and 29th in scoring defense (21.0). Offensively, MSU is No. 11 in rushing offense (219.9) and WSU is 48th (155.1).
 
"Montana State will be hungry," said Eastern head coach Aaron Best, whose team went 22:03 without scoring in the second half against Weber State during a 22-0 scoring run for the Wildcats. "They are another great defensive team that likes to establish the run on offense. It may be a carbon copy of what we saw (against Weber State). We have to tighten some things up and play better ball."
 
While the Eagles are now 19-17 versus Weber State with a three-game losing streak, the series against MSU has been much more favorable. Eastern has won 32 of 42 games in the series, including 14 of the last 16. Eastern has won the last seven meetings, and haven't lost to the Bobcats in 10 years since MSU prevailed 36-21 at Roos Field in Cheney in 2011. Eastern is 14-4 all-time at home versus MSU.
 
This will be the seventh meeting all-time – but first since 2015 -- with both teams nationally ranked, and the third with both teams in the top 10. The collective ranking of nine for the two teams this season is actually the third-best behind the collective ranking of seven in 2013 (#3 EWU, #4 MSU) and eight in 2012 (#6 EWU, #2 MSU). Eastern prevailed in both meetings – 54-29 in Cheney in 2013 and 27-24 in Bozeman in 2012.
 
With all 22 starters returning and a whopping total of 67 returning letterwinners, Eastern is seeking its 11th Big Sky Conference title and 15th appearance in the FCS Playoffs. The Eagles won the 2010 NCAA Division I title and were runners-up in 2018, and advanced to the first round of the playoffs in the abbreviated 2020-21 campaign.
 
Eastern returns a total of 14 players who have previously earned All-Big Sky Conference honors, with 13 of them being honored during the 2020-21 campaign when eight of the league's 13 schools took part in the league schedule. Quarterback Eric Barriere was the runner-up for the 2020-21 Walter Payton Award, and joins offensive tackle Tristen Taylor, wide receiver Talolo Limu-Jones and kicker Seth Harrison as preseason All-Americans.
 
After the MSU game, Eastern has road games remaining at UC Davis (Nov. 13) and Portland State (Nov. 20).
 
 
 
Game Notes
 
Several Milestones Met or Ended Versus Weber State
 
There was some sweet to go along with the bitter of EWU's 35-34 loss to Weber State on Oct. 23 at Roos Field in Cheney, Wash.
 
After a record-breaking performance versus Idaho in a 71-21 romp on Oct. 16 at Roos Field, senior quarterback Eric Barriere set a Big Sky Conference career record versus the Wildcats. He finished the game with 330 yards of total offense (245 passing and 85 rushing) to give him 13,558 in his career and break the previous EWU and Big Sky records held by former Eagle Matt Nichols with 13,308 from 2006-09. With 12,051 passing yards, Barriere is now 565 from the school and league records held by Nichols of 12,616. With 105 career touchdown passes, he is five from the Eastern and BSC records of 110 held by former Eagle Vernon Adams Jr. (2012-14).
 
Versus Idaho, Barriere had school records of 600 yards passing (No. 8 in FCS history & No. 5 in BSC history), 577 yards of total offense, seven touchdown passes and eight TD's responsible for. That gave him a total of 123 TDs responsible for in his career, surpassing the record of 121 by Adams. As a team, EWU broke school records for total yards (837, 39 behind the Big Sky record of 876) and passing yards (624, 36 behind the Big Sky record of 660), while scoring its most points ever in 55 seasons at Roos Field (formerly Woodward Field).
 
The Weber State game was the 250th with Aaron Best as either a head coach or assistant coach at EWU (21 seasons), and the PSU game on Nov. 20 will mark his 300th as a coach or player (25 seasons).
 
After the Idaho victory and a thrilling win over Montana – the 28th time since 2010 the Eagles have rallied for a win when trailing or tied in the fourth quarter -- Eastern had extended its home winning streak to 20-straight games at "The Inferno" which at the time was the longest active home winning streak in the FCS. Returning All-America quarterback Eric Barriere was a perfect 16-0 as a starter at "The Inferno," and has quarterbacked EWU in five of the 28 rallies.
 
However, the Weber State loss ended both streaks. Eastern's last setback at "The Inferno" came in 2017 when EWU fell to Weber State 28-20. Eastern has now lost the last three meetings against Weber, and six of the last seven games in the series have been decided by eight points or less.
 
Speaking of close losses, Eastern's last victory in the series came on Halloween in 2015 when the Eagles squeaked out a 14-13 victory. Eastern scored the go-ahead touchdown in with 8:53 left in the third quarter on the second of two touchdown passes from Jordan West to Cooper Kupp and shutting out the Wildcats in the second half.
 
The Eagles fell 14-6 in 2018 in Ogden in the most recent meeting in a game in which Eric Barriere made just the third start of his career and was 19-of-42 for 185 yards and two interceptions as EWU failed to score a touchdown. Eastern's defense held the Wildcats to just 274 total yards and just one offensive touchdown, and held them scoreless for the final 51:25 of the game. That game represented the only time in EWU's last 163 games (entering the 2021 Weber State game) that the Eagles have not scored a touchdown, dating back to a 19-3 loss to Montana in 2008.
 
In the 2018 loss, the Eagles were ranked No. 4/3 in FCS and Weber State was 13th; in 2017 the Eagles were 11th and the Wildcats were No. 19/14 when EWU fell at home 28-20. The Wildcats took the lead for good in the third quarter of that game, and EWU could manage just two field goals in the second half.
 
Weber State went on to win the Big Sky title in both 2017 (tied with Southern Utah), 2018 (tied with EWU and UC Davis) and 2019 (tied with Sacramento State), as well as the abbreviated 2020-21 campaign when WSU was 5-0 and EWU 4-1 (the two teams did not meet). Eastern three-peated as league champs from 2012-14, but Montana is the only other school to have a streak of more than three (12-straight from 1998-2009).
 
The loss to Weber State also cost the Eagles their No. 2 ranking in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision – EWU's highest national ranking since ending the 2018 campaign second in both national polls. Eastern won its first seven games overall and its first four in the Big Sky, including a marquee victory over Montana on Oct. 2. That 34-28 win against the Grizzlies was a battle of what was then the No. 6 and No. 4 ranked teams in FCS, respectively.
 
Eastern's 7-0 start was the best under head coach Aaron Best, and exceeded the 5-0 start by the 1985 team under head coach Dick Zornes as EWU's best start as a member of FCS. The last time EWU was 7-0 in any season came 54 years ago in 1967 when Eastern won its first 11 games before losing in the NAIA Championship Game. Eastern was also 6-0 in 1965, 1948 and 1921, and 7-0 one other time (1965).
 
Until suffering its first setback, Eastern was one of six teams in the FCS that were undefeated (now there are just three). The last time Eastern was 4-0 in the league came in 2018, and EWU started the Big Sky schedule 4-0 in 2017 before losing. The Eagles were a perfect 8-0 in 2016, matching the 2013 Eastern squad for the school's best-ever Big Sky finish. Eastern saw its nine-game league winning streak come to an end, with EWU having a 12-game winning streak from 2016-17 and a 14-game streak from 2012-14.
 
After scoring 24 fourth-quarter points – including 21 consecutively in a span of just 5:09 -- in the win over Montana, Eastern jumped past the Grizzlies in the FCS rankings. On Oct. 9, both James Madison and South Dakota State lost, enabling the Eagles to jump up two more spots to No. 2 in both the AFCA Coaches Top 25 poll and the Stats Perform Top 25 polls. Eastern was ranked 14th and 11th, respectively, entering the season. Other preseason polls had EWU ranked eighth (College Football America), 10th (College Sports Madness), 16th (Hero Sports) and 19th (Athlon Sports).
 
 
Eagles Retain Lead in FCS in Scoring, Offense and Passing
 
The Eagles will enter this Saturday's game as the FCS leader in scoring (51.5 per game), total offense (603.9 yards per game) and passing (430.8). Eastern is second nationally in passing efficiency, with a mark of 179.46 which includes 31 touchdowns, a 66.8 percent completion mark (fifth) and just six interceptions.
 
Eric Barriere remains first in passing efficiency (181.26), passing touchdowns (30), total offense (432.0) and passing yards per game (414.0), and is second in points responsible for (204 with 30 TDs through the air, three on the ground and a trio of two-point conversions) and points responsible for per game (25.5).
 
Dennis Merritt is first in the FCS in total touchdowns (16) and scoring (12.0 per game), and is also second in rushing touchdowns (13) and 37th in rushing yards per game (82.9 with a total of 663). Talolo Limu-Jones is sixth in receiving yards per game (101.3 with a total of 608 in six games) and 24th in receptions per game (6.6 with a total of 37).
 
Defensively, Jack Sendelbach is 21st in tackles (9.4 per game with a total of 66 in seven games) and fellow linebacker Ty Graham is 29th (9.3 with a total of 74 in eight games).
 
 
Eleven-Time BSC Player of the Week Eric Barriere Continues to Climb NCAA, Big Sky & EWU All-Time Leaders Lists
 
Senior quarterback Eric Barriere continues to garner yards and awards by the bushel, and is the cusp of several major all-time records in Big Sky Conference and EWU history. With 46 total games of experience, he is 27-10 in 37 career games as a starter (16-1 at home), with 12,051 passing yards, 1,507 rushing and 13,558 total yards of offense as an Eagle.
 
In the Weber State game on Oct. 23, Barriere passed the EWU and Big Sky records for total offense held by former Eagle Matt Nichols (2006-09). Barriere now has 13,558 in 46 career games to surpass the previous record of 13,308 set by Nichols in 47 games. Barriere's total ranks seventh in FCS history, 682 yards from moving into sixth.
 
With 12,051 career passing yards, Barriere is now 31 from moving into fourth in league history (Case Cookus, NAU, 12,082 yards from 2015-19), 156 from third (Jamie Martin, WSU, 12,207 yards from 1989-92), 223 from second (Cameron Higgins, WSU, 12,274 from 2007-10) and 565 from the school and league records held by Nichols of 12,616. Barriere is now in a tie for second in league history in touchdown passes with 105 (tied with Case Cookus, NAU, from 2015-19) and five from the Eastern and BSC records of 110 held by Vernon Adams (2012-14). He ranks 16th all-time in FCS history in both career passing yards and touchdown passes.
 
Barriere has had 27 performances of at least 300 yards of total offense and 19 with at least 300 yards passing in his 46 games as an Eagle. He has had 15 with at least 400 yards of total offense and nine with at least 400 passing, including school records of 600 yards passing (No. 8 in FCS history & No. 5 in BSC history), 577 yards of total offense, seven touchdown passes and eight TD's responsible for versus Idaho on Oct. 16, 2021.  He now owns four of the top five passing performances in school history, and four of the top six performances for total offense.
 
He broke FCS records for most passing yards (487) and total offense (497) in a single half versus Western Illinois on Sept. 18, 2021, as EWU took a 55-21 halftime lead in the 62-56 shootout victory. The old records of 480 and 491 were set in 2012 by Taylor Heinicke of Old Dominion versus New Hampshire. Barriere finished with a school-record 562 yards of total offense (542 passing yards were just seven from the school record).
 
In his career he has completed 61.8 percent of his passes (859-of-1390), good for 12,051 yards, 105 touchdowns and 27 interceptions, and has rushed 346 times for 1,507 yards and 21 more TDs (a school-record total of 126 touchdowns accounted for). He had a passing efficiency rating of 146.9 as a sophomore, 151.6 in 2019 and 181.3 thus far in 2021 for a 155.7 mark in his career to currently rank fourth in school history. His touchdown passes rank second all-time at EWU (second in Big Sky Conference history), his passing yardage is second (fifth in Big Sky Conference history) and his total of 13,558 yards of offense is both a school and Big Sky record.
 
Barriere owns the EWU career rushing record for a quarterback with 1,507 yards, breaking the previous record of 1,232 yards by Vernon Adams Jr. (2012-14). Eastern is 21-2 when Barriere has rushed for at least 21 yards, with the lone losses coming at Sacramento State (10/5/19) when he finished with 103 and at home versus Weber State (10/23/21) when he had 85.
 
Barriere is a preseason All-America selection and on watch lists for two end-of-season player of the year awards in FCS. Eleven times in his career he has won Big Sky Conference Player of the Week honors (five in 2021, three in 2020-21, twice in 2019, once in 2018). He has received accolades as National FCS Player of the Week for his performances in three different games, including a pair from Stats Perform.
 
In addition to his single game school records versus Idaho, he finished the game 26-of-35 passes (74 percent) for a passing efficiency rating of 284.32 that was close to the school record of 313.5. Barriere's performance earned him accolades as the FCS Stats Perform National Offensive Player of the Week for the second time this season, College Sports Madness FCS Offensive Player of the Week, as well as the College Football Performance Awards (CFPA) FCS Top Performer award. In addition, he earned ROOT Sports Big Sky Conference Player of the Week honors for the 11th time of his career and fifth this season.
 
One week prior to the Idaho game, he had a 32-of-41 performance for 347 yards and three touchdowns as EWU led 43-10 at halftime en route to a 63-17 romp at Northern Colorado on Oct. 9. In the first half alone, he was 23-of-29 (79 percent) for 231 yards as he earned ROOT Sports Big Sky Conference Offensive Player of the Week honors (his 10th).
 
He had a 30-of-43 passing performance in a 50-21 Big Sky Conference win at Southern Utah, throwing for 518 of EWU's school-record 554 passing yards (the other 36 came on a fake punt). He had four touchdown passes against the Thunderbirds. Barriere had no interceptions for the third-straight game, and entered the Montana game with 125 attempts without a pick after throwing two in EWU's season-opening 35-33 win at UNLV. His streak was snapped at 154 attempts versus the Grizzlies.
 
Following the Southern Utah game on Sept. 25, he received his second-straight FCS National Offensive Player of the Week accolades from College Sports Madness. He also received honorable mention as FCS Offensive Player of the Week from Stats Perform and honorable mention as the FCS Performer of the week from College Football Performance Awards. In addition, his second-straight 500-yard passing performance on the road helped him win him his ninth-career ROOT Sports Big Sky Offensive Player of the Week award, and he earned the same honor from CSN.
 
He had the most yards in back-to-back games in school history in both passing and total offense with 542 passing at Western Illinois on Sept. 18, 2021 (a school-record 562 yards of total offense) and 518 pass a week later at Southern Utah (546 total). He is the first FCS player with consecutive 500-yard passing performances since Cornell's Jeff Mathews in 2011 (521 versus Cornell and 548 at Penn).
 
The performance at Western Illinois earned Barriere his eighth-career ROOT Sports Big Sky Offensive Player of the Week award and he was also recognized nationally as he was named the Stats Perform FCS National Offensive Player of the Week, the College Football Performance Association FCS National Performer of the Week and the College Sports Madness National Offensive and Big Sky Player of the Week.
 
He was selected as Big Sky Conference Offensive Player of the Year and was the runner-up for the Walter Payton Award in the 2020-21 season. He was selected to six different FCS All-America squads during the season impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic. A unanimous first team All-Big Sky choice in the 2020-21 season, he earned third team All-Big Sky Conference honors as both a sophomore (2018) and junior (2019).
 
He entered the 2020/21 season with a streak of 239 passes without an interception, with his last interception coming on his 14th attempt at Sacramento State (10/5/19). His streak ended at 250 in the opener at Idaho on Feb. 27, 2021, when he had a pass go through an EWU receiver's hands and was picked off by the Vandals. He had another streak of 154 without an interception in 2021.
 
He finished the 2020-21 season ranked in the top 10 in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in total offense (sixth, 369.0 per game), passing offense (seventh, 348.4), passing touchdowns (second, 19) and points responsible for (ninth, 17.4 per game).
 
In 2019, Barriere finished fifth in the voting for the prestigious Walter Payton Award presented by STATS, and earned third team FCS All-America honors from Hero Sports. That season he finished second in FCS in total offense with an average of 355.8 yards per game and was third in passing (309.3), ninth with 31 touchdown passes and fourth in points responsible for (20.2 per game with 31 TDs passing, eight rushing and a two-point conversion).
 
 
Eastern is 32-19 Since 2010 Versus Ranked­ Opponents
 
Following EWU's game on Oct. 2 versus fourth-ranked Montana, Eastern has now won 63 percent of its games (32-19) versus ranked teams since 2010. Eastern is 61-73 (.455) in 134 games overall against ranked teams since becoming a member of that classification in 1983 (then known as I-AA). Since 1983, Eastern is 1-7 versus ranked FBS foes, and a loss to Washington (ranked 13th by the media and 12th by the coaches) in 2019 was the eighth such foe EWU has faced.
 
Eastern's 2021 game versus Montana was the 65th time and the most recent occasion Eastern has faced a team ranked in the top 10 in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (STATS), and Eastern will repeat that when they host Montana State on Nov. 6. Eastern is 11-10 versus top 10 foes since 2010, including a 6-4 mark in the regular season and 5-6 in the playoffs Eastern is 20-45 in the 65 games all-time versus top 10 opponents. The Eagles are 10-35 all-time versus top 5 opponents (5-7 since 2010), including 2-8 versus No. 1 (0-2 since 2010).
 
Overall, EWU has faced the No. 1 team in FCS 10 times, winning twice -- 35-31 in 2004 over Southern Illinois in the FCS Playoffs and 30-21 in 2002 over Montana at Albi Stadium in Spokane, Wash. One of the losses was in 2016 in Fargo, N.D., when North Dakota State beat No. 8 Eastern 50-44 in overtime. The following season, EWU was ranked seventh and lost 40-13 to second-ranked NDSU in Cheney. Eastern lost a third time to the top-ranked Bison by a 38-24 score on Jan. 5, 2019, in the NCAA Division I Championship Game.
 
 
Eagles Now 63-11 on the Red Turf
 
A school-record stretch of 20-straight wins at Roos Field came to an end on Oct. 23, 2021, when the Eagles lost 35-34 to Weber State. At the time, the streak was the top active mark in FCS and came just one victory shy of the overall school record of 21 set from 1935-40. Eastern won all five of its regular season home games in 2019, all eight in 2018, three at home in the 2020-21 season and was 3-0 in 2021 before the loss to the Wildcats, who had handed EWU its last home loss in 2017.
 
The Eagles entered the 2021 season as one of three teams with the longest active home winning streaks in FBS with 17 consecutive victories, and EWU improved that to 18 with a resounding 63-14 win over Central Washington on Sept. 11. The other schools who entered the season with 17-game home winning streaks included James Madison, which extended its streak to 19 with a 55-7 win over Maine on Sept. 11. North Dakota also had a 18-game streak after winning its home opener Sept. 18 versus Drake, but fell at home on Oct. 2 against North Dakota State. James Madison lost at home 28-27 on Oct. 9 versus Villanova, thus giving EWU sole possession of the top active mark.
 
Eastern is now 63-11 (85.1 percent) overall at "The Inferno" since 2010. The stadium has been known as Roos Field since 2010 when a new red synthetic Sprinturf surface made its debut. Eastern's last home loss came on Nov. 4, 2017, versus Weber State.
 
At its current site, the previous school record was 11 consecutive home wins set between 9/16/78 and 9/27/80 (between losses was from 11/19/77 to 11/1/80). Eastern had a nine-game winning streak snapped in a 36-21 loss to Montana State on Sept. 24, 2011. The Eagles also had a nine-game winning streak at that venue snapped against Sacramento State on Oct. 21, 2000, when the Hornets made a 23-yard field goal with no time remaining.
 
Eastern has lost just seven regular season games at "The Inferno" – 50-7 (87.7 percent), plus are 13-4 (76.5 percent) in playoff games. The only regular season losses at home for EWU since 2010 are to conference foes Montana State (2011), Portland State (2011 and 2015), Northern Arizona (2015) and Weber State (2017 and 2021), as well as North Dakota State (2017).
 
Eastern finished a perfect 8-0 in its debut season at "The Inferno," including three playoff victories. Eastern has won 85.1 percent of its games since the red turf was installed in 2010 – including a 6-0 record versus rival Montana. The original red turf at Roos Field was replaced in summer of 2020 by a new AstroTurf surface.
 
The North Dakota State game on Sept. 9, 2017, was the 50th at Roos Field since the red turf surface was installed in 2010. In 2016, Eastern finished 7-1 in the 50th season of football at EWU's current stadium location, which opened in 1967. Eastern has a 176-66 record (72.7 percent) in 242 games at Roos Field (formerly Woodward Field) since 1967, with the Eagles utilizing Joe Albi Stadium in Spokane as the school's main home field from 1983-89.
 
 
New Iconic Red Turf at "The Inferno" Made its Debut on March 6, 2021
 
The red glow that was missing in Cheney, Wash., in May and June finally returned in July of 2020 with the replacement of EWU's original iconic red turf. And it finally got to be used on March 6, 2021.
 
Workers began in July of 2020 the three-week process of installing the second generation of red turf at Eastern Washington University's Roos Field. The original red turf at "The Inferno" was installed in 2010, and taken out in May of 2020 in preparation for its replacement.
 
The basic design of the new turf is the same as before with "Eastern" in one end zone. But "Eagles" replaced "Washington" in the other.
 
The project was completed in August, just as preseason practices were expected to move from the grass EWU practice fields to the stadium in preparation for the 2020 season. But the Covid-19 pandemic delayed the start of the season, so instead of making its debut versus Western Illinois on Sept. 12, 2020, the turf finally made its debut versus Northern Arizona on March 6, 2021.
 
 AstroTurf received the bid to replace the iconic red field. The nearly $1 million project was part of a $5 million pledge provided by local businessman Jack Gillingham toward the Roos Field Renovation Project.
 
 
Eagles Have Won 80 Percent of Their Last 115 Big Sky Conference Games
 
Assured of yet another winning season with seven victories, Eastern has had 24 winning seasons in the last 26 years (1996-2021), including a current school record string of 15-straight (2007-21) and another stretch of seven straight (1999-2005). The last time Eastern had that many winning seasons in a row came 75 years earlier in the Red Reese era when Eastern had a string of 11-straight winning seasons from 1931-1941.
 
A major reason for Eastern's stretch of winning seasons is success in the Big Sky Conference. In finishing 5-1 in the league in the 2020-21 season, Eastern has now won at least five conference games in the last 14 seasons, with a 6-2 or better finish (75 percent) in 11 of those 14. Since EWU's last losing league season in 2006 (3-5), the Eagles are 92-23 for a .800 winning percentage in 15 seasons (including 2021). Starting with three wins at the end of the 2009 season, Eastern has had a 78-16 record (.830) in league games since then.
 
After five games of the 2021 season (4-1 record), the Eagles have won 68 of their last 80 Big Sky Conference games (85.0 percent) since a 0-2 start in 2011. Included are stretches of 58 victories in the last 69 games (including two at the end of the 2012 season) and 36 of the last 43 (since 2016). Those are percentages of .841 and .837, respectively.
 
At one point the Eagles had won 44 of 50 league games, and the only Big Sky school which has come close to that in the 58-year history of the league was Montana, which won 50 of 55 games from 1995-2002 and 46 of 51 from 2003-2009.
 
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 74-14 (.841) against conference foes since the 0-2 start in 2011 and 64-12 (.842) since winning the last three games at the end of the 2012 campaign (one a non-conference win over Cal Poly).
 
What is perhaps most impressive is Eastern's ability to consistently win on the road versus conference foes, with records of 30-8 (79 percent) on the road, 34-4 at home (89 percent) and 64-12 overall (84 percent) in the last eight-plus seasons since ending 2012 with three wins versus fellow BSC foes. From 2012-2019, Eastern defeated every Big Sky team on the road at least once, including former Big Sky member North Dakota and a 2012 non-league road victory at Idaho, which re-joined the league in 2018. Until losing at Southern Utah in October of 2017, the Eagles had won their previous road game versus all 13 other league members.
 
Eastern secured its 10th Big Sky title in 2018 and in the 2020-21 season EWU earned its 14th berth in the FCS Playoffs in what is now 37 years as a member of the FCS (formerly I-AA) and 34 seasons in the Big Sky. Since 2010 when EWU won the NCAA Division I title, the Eagles have won league titles six times (2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018) and advanced to the playoffs all six of those seasons.
 
 
Eagles Continue Big Sky Success With Impressive Consistency
 
Consistency has been a cornerstone of EWU Football, and the Eagles have cemented a 16-year run of winning the league title and/or advancing to the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs at least every other year. Since 2004, Eastern has advanced to the playoffs and/or won the league title at least every other year, and hasn't had back-back-empty seasons since 2002 and 2003.
 
Since 2010 when EWU won the NCAA Division I title, the Eagles have won league titles six times (2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018) and advanced to the playoffs all six of those seasons. From 2004 to 2009 Eastern advanced to the playoffs four times (2004, 2005, 2007, 2009), and won the league title twice (2004, 2005). Eastern has three other playoff berths in school history (1985, 1992, 1997) and two other titles (1992, 1997), and has only had two multi-year stretches in which they accomplished neither. Those were both six-year stretches from between 1986-1991 and 1998-2003.
 
 
Thanks to First Half Outputs, Eagles are One From Record of 50-Point Games
 
Eastern now has had at least 50 points in five games this season, which is the second most in a single season. The
school record is six (2018, 2014).
 
In EWU's last 12 games – all in the 2021 calendar year – Eastern has recorded its top five first-half scoring outputs in the school's 38-year history in FCS. Most recently, the Eagles scored 43 points versus Idaho in a 71-21 romp, and 43 one week earlier at Northern Colorado in a 63-17 victory. Earlier this season EWU recorded the top two performances with 55 against Western Illinois and 46 versus Central Washington. Those games broke the previous record of 45 set versus Cal Poly on March 27, 2021, during EWU's abbreviated 2020-21 winter/spring schedule.
 
Eastern's 29 points in the first quarter versus Idaho are the most points in a first quarter (fifth overall for any quarter), eclipsing the 28 Eastern scored earlier this season against Western Illinois and Central Washington and on five other occasions.
 
Four times this season -- plus the Cal Poly game on 3/27/21 -- Eastern has topped the 62-point mark, including a Roos Field record of 71 against Idaho, 63 versus both UNC and CWU, and 62 at WIU. Those represent five of the top 19 performances in school history (12 as a member of FCS). Of EWU's games of 62 points or more, head coach Aaron Best has had eight of those as head coach – and has been a part of all 12 as a member of FCS. Of the 71 games in school history with over 50 points (record of 68-3), Aaron Best has been the head coach in 16 of those.
 
Eastern's defense has contributed mightily toward a scoring advantage of 187 points this season for the Eagles (average of 28.1 per game with an average score of 52-28). In 32 total quarters thus far, EWU has recorded nine shutout quarters, including the first quarter against Weber State on Oct. 23 and the third quarter versus Idaho on Oct. 16. Only five times has the defense surrendered more than a single touchdown in a quarter, and three of those came against Western Illinois in EWU's high-scoring 62-56 victory (UNLV and Weber State were the other times that occurred).
 
 
Eagles Have Been Impressive in November, But October Has Been Good Too
 
Since 2010, Eastern is 26-4 in regular season games in November, but October hasn't been too shabby either. The Eagles are 35-8 in October and won three of their four outings in 2021.
 
Eastern continued their November success in 2019 with a 4-0 record. Since 2004, EWU has lost just seven regular season games in November (Weber State in 2017; NAU, Portland State and Montana in 2015; Sac State and Weber State in 2006; and Cal Poly in 2005), with an overall record of 39-7 and a current nine-game winning streak in the month. Until losing to Northern Arizona on Nov. 7, 2015, Eastern had won its last 19 regular season games in November, dating back to a 15-13 loss to Sacramento State on Nov. 1, 2008.
 
In November through January since 2004, the Eagles are now 55-16, including a 39-7 regular season mark and 16-9 record in the FCS Playoffs. Since 2010, Eastern is 40-9 overall in November and beyond (26-4 regular season and 14-5 in the playoffs), with the lone setbacks coming in 2019 to North Dakota State in the NCAA Division I Championship game; 2017 to Weber State; 2016 to Youngstown State in the semifinals of the FCS Playoffs; 2015 to Portland State, Montana and Northern Arizona; 2014 to Illinois State in the playoff quarterfinals; 2013 to Towson in the playoff semifinals; and 2012 to Sam Houston State in the playoff semifinals.
 
 
Eastern Washington Football Picked to Finish Third by both the Coaches and Media
 
The Eagles have been picked to finish third in the Big Sky Conference by both the coaches and media in polls released July 26 at the Big Sky Conference Football Kickoff in Spokane.
 
Only four-time defending Big Sky Champions Weber State plus Montana were selected ahead of the Eagles in both polls, with EWU finishing ahead of Montana State and Sacramento State.
 
After that, spots six through 11 were identical in both the coaches and media polls with UC Davis picked sixth followed by Northern Arizona, Idaho, Idaho State, Portland State, and Southern Utah. In the coaches poll, Cal Poly was selected 12th followed by Northern Colorado. The media selected Northern Colorado 13th and Cal Poly 12th.
 
Eastern received three first-place votes in the media poll and two in the coaches. Weber State had 14 votes in the media and seven in the coaches, while Montana had four first-place votes in the media poll to go with two in the coaches. Montana State (three in media, one in coaches) and Sacramento State (one in coaches) rounded out the first place votes.
 
Prior to the 2020 season, Eastern was picked No. 4 in both polls. In 2018 and 2019, they were selected No. 1 by both the coaches and media, which marked the third time since 2014 the Eagles have been picked No. 1 in both polls. In 2015 EWU was selected first by the media. In 2016 the Eagles were fourth by the coaches and third by the media, and in 2017 Eastern was second in both. In 2013, EWU was second in both as well.
 
Since winning the league and NCAA Division I titles in 2010, Eastern has won Big Sky championships in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016 and 2018, giving the Eagles a total of 10 league titles.
 
Eastern Washington plays three of the top-five teams in the Big Sky preseason polls at home this season in No. 1 Weber State, No. 2 Montana and No. 4 Montana State. They are also slated to play No. 8 Idaho at Roos Field, and will go on the road to play No. 11 Southern Utah, No. 12/13 Northern Colorado, No. 6 UC Davis and No. 10 Portland State.

 
Streak of At Least One Road Win Extended to 53 Seasons; Two Road Wins Now at 28 Seasons
 
Eastern improved its streak of regular season road wins to six games with a 63-17 win at Northern Colorado on Oct. 9. Eastern is now 4-0 thus far on the road and won the last two regular season road games in the 2020-21 winter/spring season. The streak dates back to a 28-21 loss at Idaho on Feb. 27, and the lone blemish away from home since then was a 42-20 setback at North Dakota State in the first round of the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs.
 
Against UNLV, extended EWU's current streak seasons with at least one road win to 53. That streak now includes all 38 seasons Eastern has been a member of the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (formerly I-AA). The last time Eastern was winless on the road was 1969 when the then-Savages were 0-4 away from home and finished 4-5 on the season.
 
Two weeks later at Western Illinois, Eastern extended its streak of seasons with at least two road wins to 28. Eastern has had at least two road wins in all but six seasons (1974, 1975, 1976, 1988, 1989, 1994) since 1969, including a current streak of 28-straight seasons with at least a pair.
 
 
With Addition of Mason, Eight Players Have Made Starting Debuts in 2021
 
Central Washington transfer Robert Mason III made the first start as an Eagle on Oct. 16 versus Idaho and finished with four catches for 39 yards and his first career touchdown catch for EWU. Mason is junior and graduated from Graham-Kapowsin High School in Washington State in 2018.
 
One game earlier, redshirt freshman Nolan Ulm made his first career start in his 12th career game on Oct. 9, 2021, at Northern Colorado. The 2020 graduate of Kelowna (B.C.) Secondary in Canada finished the game with career highs of six receptions for 38 yards, including a career-long reception of 13 yards.
 
Two redshirt freshmen made their starting debuts in Eastern's showdown with Montana on Oct. 2, both on offense. Luke Dahlgren started at left offensive guard, as usual starting guard Wyatt Hansen moved to right tackle to fill that position held previously by Matthew Hewa Baddege. In addition, EWU started four wide receivers and no running back versus the Griz, and Jakobie James received his first career start. Dahlgren is a 2019 graduate of Forks (Wash.) High School, and James graduated the same year from Redlands (Calif.) HS.
 
Freshman Cage Schenck, a 2020 graduate of Woodinville (Wash.) High School had his first career start at Southern Utah as a nickel back, and finished with a career-high three tackles with a pass broken up for the second-straight game.
 
A pair of tackles – one on each side of the ball – and a linebacker also made their first career starts earlier this season. Redshirt freshman Matthew Hewa Baddege started at offensive tackle at UNLV on Sept. 2. Versus Central Washington on Sept. 11, freshman Matthew Brown started at defensive tackle for his first start as an Eagle and freshman Ahmani Williams made his first career start at linebacker
 
Hewa Baddege is from Port Coquitlam, B.C., and Brown is out of Hoquiam (Wash.) High School. Williams is a 2020 graduate from Skyline High School in Vancouver, Wash., and is the son of former Eagle All-America safety Julian Williams.
 
The Eagles entered the season with 18 players on each side of the ball with starting experience, including 182 total starts by offensive players and 136 by the defense for a total of 318. There were no new starters when EWU played at Western Illinois on Sept. 18.
 
In the abbreviated 2020-21 season, 20 players made the initial starts of their careers – 12 on defense and eight on offense. Eastern entered that year with a total of 20 players returning with 191 games of starting experience, including 10 players on defense with 86 starts and 10 on offense with 105 starts.
 
Here are the current starts by EWU players:
 
Current Starts on Defense (224 starts by 21 players): Calin Criner 27, Tre Weed 26, Jack Sendelbach 25, Mitchell Johnson 25, Darrien Sampson 18, Joshua Jerome 15, Ty Graham 14, Debore'ae McClain 9, Ely Doyle 9, Jacob Newsom 7, Darreon Moore 7, Marlon Jones Jr. 7, Matthew Brown 7, Brock Harrison 6, Anthany Smith 6, Cale Lindsay 5, Keshaun King 4, Caleb Davis 3, Jusstis Warren 2, Cage Schenck 1, Ahmani Williams 1.
 
Current Starts on Offense (270 starts by 23 players): Tristen Taylor 55, Eric Barriere 37, Andrew Boston 32, Conner Crist 16, Talolo Limu-Jones 15, Wyatt Musser 15, Freddie Roberson 14, Wyatt Hansen 13,  Johnny Edwards IV 12, Dylan Ingram 12, Matt Shook 10, Dennis Merritt 9, Tamarick Pierce 6, Efton Chism III 6, Anthony Stell Jr. 4, Matthew Hewa Baddege 4, Brad Godwin 2, Luke Dahlgren 2, Jakobie James 2, Robert Mason III 1, Nolan Ulm 1, Blake Gobel 1, Gunner Talkington 1.
 
 
Eagle Football Tidbits
 
* Eastern picked up its third win of the season – and second on the road – after surviving for a 62-56 win on Sept. 18 at Western Illinois of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. The Eagles led 55-21 at halftime as Eric Barriere set FCS records with 487 passing yards and 497 total yards of offense in the first half alone. He finished with a school-record 562 yards of offense (542 through the air), breaking the record with a win-clinching 10-yard first down run in the final minute.
 
* Prior to that, the Eagles opened their home schedule with a 63-14 win versus NCAA Division II Central Washington and a 35-33 victory in two overtimes over UNLV in EWU's season opener on Sept. 2 in Las Vegas. The Rebels are a member of the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) and the Mountain West Conference. Eastern has now won four of its last 11 games versus FBS members.
 
* Eastern finished 5-2 overall in the unique 2020-21 spring season and advanced to the first round of the NCAA Division I playoffs where it lost to North Dakota State. The Eagles ended the season ranked No. 10 in the Stats Perform Top 25 poll, marking the 16th time Eastern has finished the season nationally ranked, including 12 times since 2004. The other seasons were in 1985, 1992, 1993, 1997, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017 and 2018. Seven times the Eagles have finished in the top four – fourth in 1997, 2012, 2014 and 2016; third in 2013; second in 2018; and first in 2010 after winning the NCAA Division I title.
 
* Eastern closed the 2020 regular season with the best offense in FCS, and finished the season third at 524.9 yards per game. The Eagles were also fourth nationally in passing (367.3) and eighth in scoring offense (37.7). Eastern's passing average was the third-best in school history and the average of 524.9 yards per game of total offense was fourth, just ahead of the 2019 average of 524.8 which led FCS.
 
* In EWU's last 17 seasons (2004-2020/21), EWU has ranked in the top 10 in FCS in passing 14 times, total offense on 13 occasions and scoring eight times. In school history, EWU has won a trio of FCS titles for total offense (2019, 2001, 1997), as well as three passing offense titles (2016, 2015, 2011) and two for scoring offense (2014, 2001).
 
* Eastern entered the fall season with a total of 36 players returning with 318 games of starting experience, including 18 players on defense with 136 starts and 18 on offense with 182 starts.
 
* Headlining Eastern's cast of returning players are a trio of All-Americans – Barriere, offensive tackle Tristen Taylor and wide receiver Talolo Limu-Jones. They helped Eastern lead FCS in total offense during the regular season, and Barriere went on to finish as the runner-up for the Walter Payton Award given to the top offensive player in FCS. He won first team recognition on six FCS All-America teams, including the FCS Athletic Director's Association which picked him as its top offensive player nationally.
 
* Of the total of 67 returning letterwinners, fifth-year head coach Aaron Best had them evenly split with 31 back on both offense and defense, plus five specialists. The adjusted, abbreviated schedule in 2020-21 did not count against the eligibility for all student-athletes.
 
* Three of the returning players are back for their seventh seasons as Eagles. Following the conclusion of the 2019 season, offensive tackle Tristen Taylor, linebacker Jack Sendelbach and running back Dennis Merritt were granted a sixth year by the NCAA to complete four years of eligibility because of seasons lost because of injuries. Also receiving a sixth year was University of Washington transfer Jusstis Warren, who played in just one game for EWU in 2019 and only one in 2020-21.
 
 
 
 
EWU Preseason Notes & Honors
 
 
Eagles Check in at No. 11 on Stats Perform Preseason Top 25
 
The Big Sky Conference had five teams recognized in the Stats Perform preseason top 25 poll, including two in the top nine. Weber State came in at No. 6 followed by Montana at the No. 9 spot. After EWU came Montana State (No. 12) and UC Davis (No. 23) while Sacramento State received votes.
 
The Eagles will face off against Weber State, Montana and Montana State at home at Roos Field in 2021 and take on UC Davis on the road, but won't play the Hornets.
 
FCS National Champion Sam Houston claimed the No. 1 spot, while James Madison, South Dakota State, North Dakota State and Delaware rounded out the top five. The Missouri Valley Football Conference had the most selections with six, followed by the Big Sky Conference with five.
 
Eastern was ranked 14th by the American Football Coaches Association in the other major weekly poll. In other preseason polls, the Eagles ranked as high as eighth by College Football America and 10th by College Sports Madness. The Eagles landed 16th on the Hero Sports preseason squad, and were ranked 19th by Athlon Sports. They were picked to finish third by both the coaches and the media in the Big Sky Conference preseason polls.
 
 
Eric Barriere is on Watch Lists for the Walter Payton Award as well as the CFPA Performer of the Year
 
Eric Barriere has the opportunity to finish what he started as he was named to the prestigious Walter Payton Award Watch List by Stats Perform on Aug. 4. Later in August, Barriere was named to the College Football Performance Awards (CFPA) FCS National Performer of the Year Trophy Watch List.
 
The Walter Payton Award is given to the national offensive player of the year in college football's Division I subdivision. Barriere is no stranger to the list, as he's been a finalist the past two seasons. Last year, Barriere finished runner up to Southeastern Louisiana's Cole Kelley, coming just six votes shy (137-131) of the award. In 2019 as a junior, he finished fifth. He is one of 35 players on the list, along with Sacred Heart's Julius Chestnut who finished behind him in voting. More players can join the list during the regular season and a national media panel will select the winner at the end of the year.
 
Barriere is among 44 returning players across the FCS on the watch list for the CFPA award, including two others from the Big Sky Conference in quarterback Hunter Rodrigues from UC Davis and running back Josh Davis from Weber State. The award will be announced on January 22, 2022.
 
Barriere, a native of Inglewood, Calif., has a long list of preseason honors that include the Big Sky Conference Preseason Offensive MVP, and first team preseason All-America honors by Stats Perform, HERO Sports. Most recently, Barriere was named a first team FCS Preseason All-America quarterback by Phil Steele Publications.
 
He is coming off of a season that saw him lead Eastern Washington to the NCAA FCS Playoffs and was named a first team All-American by six different organizations, including being named the FCS Offensive Player of the Year by the FCS ADA.
 
The senior made a case for the Payton Award last year by passing for at least 300 yards in five of six regular games and having at least 400 yards of total offense in three of them. Barriere ranked in the top 10 in the FCS in total offense (fifth, 369.0 per game), passing offense (fifth, 348.4), passing touchdowns (third, 19) and points responsible for (ninth, 17.4 per game). He completed 61.8 percent of his passes for 2,439 yards, 19 touchdowns and 2,583 total yards of offense.
 

Eric Barriere, Tristen Taylor Make Stats Perform Preseason All-America Team

 
A pair of Eastern football seniors, Eric Barriere and Tristen Taylor, have been named to the Stats Perform Preseason All-America Team, as announced Aug. 2.
 
Barriere represents Eastern as a first team quarterback and Taylor is a second team offensive lineman. The duo is among 21 other Big Sky Conference student-athletes to make the team, the most among FCS conferences selections. In total, there are 120 preseason All-Americans from 60 schools and 15 conferences split into three 40-player teams.
 
Barriere, who hails from Inglewood, Calif., and is a 2016 graduate from La Habra High School, is picking up where he left off. He was named first team All-America by Stats Perform at the end of the spring 2021 season, becoming just the seventh All-American in school history. Last season, he was picked as the preseason Big Sky Offensive MVP and went on to earn the Big Sky Offensive Player of the Year honor at the end of the season, as well as being unanimously named to the first team. Additionally, Barriere finished runner-up in voting for the prestigious Walter Payton Award and was honored as a first team All-American by six different organizations at the end of the season. He was also named the FCS Offensive Player of the Year by the FCS ADA.
 
This year, Barriere was picked as the preseason Big Sky Offensive MVP again and made the All-Big Sky preseason team. The other quarterback to be named to the first team preseason Stats Perform All-America team is Cole Kelley, the reigning Walter Payton Award winner who Barriere finished runner-up to.
 
Taylor earned first team All-America honors by the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) at the end of last season. He joined Barriere on the preseason All-Big Sky team this year after being named to the first team at the end of the 2021 season, the fourth All-Big Sky honor of his career. He was a second-team selection in 2019 and honorable mention in 2016 and 2017.
 
More on Tristen Taylor . . . Entering his seventh season with the Eagles, Taylor, a Stockton, Calif., native and a 2015 Stagg HS graduate, has started all 55 games he's played in to own sole possession of the school record for career starts. Last year, he helped Eastern rank third in total offense in the FCS with an average of 522.7 yards per game. Eastern was also fourth nationally in passing (366.7) and eighth in scoring offense (37.7). The Eagles led the FCS in total offense during the regular season. Taylor missed the last 12 games in 2018 with a knee injury, but has started all 27 Eagle games since then. He had started 28-of-28 games as an Eagle until the season-ending injury kept him out of the lineup on Sept. 22, 2018, versus Cal Poly. He established a new school record for games played against Weber State on Oct. 23 (55, Shaq Hill, 2012-14) and has also broken the record for games started (52, Chris Schlichting, 2016-19 and Cooper Kupp, 2013-16). Already a four-time All-Big Sky selection, Taylor entered the 2021 season with the most starts on the offense and the most overall.
 
 
Eric Barriere, Seth Harrison Named HERO Sports Preseason All-Americans
 
A pair of Eagles have been named to the HERO Sports FCS Preseason All-America Teams. Eric Barriere, a senior quarterback, made the First Team Offensive squad, and redshirt-sophomore kicker Seth Harrison earned a spot on the Third Team Special Teams.
 
This is the second preseason All-America honor for Barriere, who was also named to the Stats Perform FCS Preseason All-America first team. Back in July, he was named the Big Sky Conference Preseason MVP and earned a spot on the All-Big Sky Preseason Team. Barriere is also on the Walter Payton Award watchlist after finishing runner-up last season.
 
This is the first preseason honor for Harrison, who was named to the All-Big Sky Conference second team following the spring 2021 season.
 
After going 12-of-12 as a freshman, Harrison was 6-of-9 in the 2020-21 season. The 2018 graduate of nearby Coeur d'Alene (Idaho) High School kicked a 55-yard field goal to match the third-longest in school history and also had boots of 47 and 50 yards. He is the seventh Eagle in school history to have at least three career field goals of 47 yards or more, and just the fourth with two of at least 50 yards.
 
Barriere, who hails from Inglewood, Calif., and is a 2016 graduate from La Habra High School, was honored as a first team All-American by six different organizations at the end of the 2021 season. He was also named the FCS Offensive Player of the Year by the FCS ADA.
 
He passed for at least 300 yards in five of six regular games during the unique 2021 spring season, and had at least 400 yards of total offense in three of them. He finished ranked in the top 10 in the FCS in total offense (fifth, 369.0 per game), passing offense (fifth, 348.4), passing touchdowns (third, 19) and points responsible for (ninth, 17.4 per game). He completed 61.8 percent of his passes for 2,439 yards, 19 touchdowns and 2,583 total yards of offense. Twice he directed game-tying and game-winning scoring drives in the fourth quarter for EWU.
 
More on Seth Harrison . . . Harrison made the first 12 field goal attempts of his career, and is now 24-of-33 for .727 accuracy which currently ranks fifth in school history. The career leader is Tyler McNannay, who was 11-of-12 (.917) in his two-year career from 2014-15. Harrison is also 118-of-125 kicking extra points in his career and has a 54.2 kickoff average (11 touchbacks). Harrison became just the seventh Eagle in school history to have at least three career field goals of 47 yards or more, and just the fourth with two of at least 50 yards. There have been just 44 total field goals of 47 yards or more and 22 of at least 50 all-time at EWU. This season, he is 6-of-12 kicking field goals and 43-of-44 on extra points. In the 2020-21 season, he was 6-of-9 kicking field goals, 25-of-27 on extra points and averaged 59.9 per kickoff (two touchbacks). Harrison ended his debut season in 2019 as the FCS leader in field goal percentage, and was the only kicker in FCS with at least one field goal attempt per game to make all of his field goals. He was 30th in field goals with an average of 1.09 per game) and earned Freshman All-America accolades. Twice Harrison kicked four field goals in a single game.
 
 
Four Eagles Represent Eastern Washington on the Big Sky Preseason Team
 
A quartet of football players represent the Eagles on the 2021 Preseason All-Big Sky team. Eric Barriere, Talolo Limu-Jones, Tristen Taylor and Mitchell Johnson make up EWU's selections, as announced July 26 by the league as part of the Big Sky Media Kickoff.
 
All four selections are coming off seasons that saw them earn spots on the All-Big Sky first team.
 
Barriere was also picked as the conference's Preseason Offensive MVP, released July 25, and is the lone quarterback on the preseason team. The reigning Big Sky Offensive Player of the Year and unanimous first team selection also finished runner up in the prestigious Walter Payton Award voting and was honored as a first team All-American by six different organizations. Barriere finished ranked in the top 10 in the FCS in total offense (fifth, 369.0 per game), passing offense (fifth, 348.4), passing touchdowns (third, 19) and points responsible for (ninth, 17.4 per game).
 
Limu-Jones was one of three wide receivers to make the list. The senior was a unanimous All-Big Sky first team selection last season after ending the season fourth in FCS in receiving yards per game (108.4) and was ninth in receptions per game (6.9, total of 48). The Vallejo, Calif., native was also honored as a second team All-American by three different organizations.
 
Taylor, a senior offensive tackle, was also honored on the list after earning a spot on the All-Big Sky first team last year – the fourth All-Big Sky award of his career. He was a second-team selection in 2019 and honorable mention in 2016 and 2017.
 
Johnson is a junior defensive end who earned first team honors last year after earning a spot on the second-team as a freshman. He started six games a year ago and ended the season with 26 tackles, two sacks, two interceptions, four quarterback hurries and a pass broken up.
 
More on Talolo Limu-Jones . . . He now has 48 games of experience (15 as a starter), and has 127 career catches for 2,223 yards and 17 touchdowns – an average of 17.5 per reception. Jones currently ranks 19th in school history for career receiving yards and seventh for average per reception. He has averaged a touchdown every 7.5 career catches. Jones has had 16 receptions of at least 40 yards in his career, including five in 2021, six as a junior in 2019 and three more in the abbreviated 2020-21 campaign. He caught 11 passes (tied for 25th in school history) for 231 yards (eighth) in EWU's 34-28 victory versus fourth-ranked Montana on Oct. 2, 2021, including catches of 58, 51 and 40 yards. The two longest catches set-up EWU touchdowns, including the 58-yarder in the fourth quarter which gave EWU the lead for good. Limu-Jones earned second team All-America honors in 2020-21 from three organizations. He ended the regular season with three-straight performances with at least 140 receiving yards, and had a least a 66-yard catch in all three games.
 
More on Mitchell Johnson . . . Johnson has been an opportunistic player as EWU's "Buck" defensive end, and he now has 121 tackles in his 42-game career (25 as a starter). He has 11 1/2 sacks, five interceptions, 13 quarterback hurries, six passes broken up, three fumble recoveries and a trio of forced fumbles. In the 2020-21 season when he was awarded first team All-Big Sky accolades, Johnson had 26 tackles, two sacks, two interceptions, four quarterback hurries and a pass broken up. Included was his first career touchdown on a 34-yard interception return, and his fifth career interception with a leaping/twisting pick on fourth down with 1:29 remaining in a playoff-clinching victory over Idaho. He burst on the scene as a redshirt freshman in 2018 and earned second team All-Big Sky honors and freshman All-America accolades.
 
 
Phil Steele Publications Honors 11 Eagles, Including Trio as Preseason All-Americans
 
Phil Steele Publications honored 11 Eagles on a pair of preseason all-star teams released recently. Included were FCS Preseason All-America honors to senior quarterback Eric Barriere (first team), senior wide receiver Talolo Limu-Jones (second team) and senior offensive tackle Tristen Taylor (second team).
 
The 2021 Phil Steele Big Sky All-Conference offensive team consisted of Barriere, Limu-Jones and Taylor on the first team. Running back Tamarick Pierce made the second team and wide receivers Freddie Roberson and Andrew Boston along with Wyatt Musser represented EWU on the third team. The Phil Steele Big Sky All-Conference defensive team was made up of Mitchell Johnson and Joshua Jerome on the second team and Anthany Smith on the third squad. Kicker Seth Harrison rounded out Eastern's selections on the second team for special teams.
 
 
 
 
 
More Player Notes
 
 
Eight Current Eagles Have Completed Coursework Toward Degrees
 
Eight Eastern players have already completed requirements toward their bachelor's degree, including a pair of recent graduates in quarterback Eric Barriere and long snapper Cody Clements. Barriere earned his degree in communications and Clements was an English major.
 
Previously, linebacker Jack Sendelbach graduated following spring quarter of 2019 in marketing, and is now in a graduate program for sport and recreation administration. Linebacker Ty Graham is now working toward his master's degree in business administration after having already received his marketing degree from EWU with a minor in sports management. Linebacker Jusstis Warren has also received his bachelor's degree and is now a graduate student in communications studies. Cornerback Darreon Moore has received his management degree and is now working on his MBA like Graham. And offensive tackle Tristen Taylor has completed his criminal justice degree and is now working toward a second degree in psychology.
 
The eighth graduate is quarterback Ryan Kelley, a graduate transfer from Arizona State. He earned his bachelor's degree at ASU and is now working toward his master's in business administration at EWU.
 
Since 2001, Eastern has annually averaged more than 20 selections to the Big Sky All-Academic team. Eastern has had a league-most 475 selections from 2001-2020/21, and Eastern has won a total of 674 Big Sky All-Academic honors since joining the league in 1987. A total of 26 were honored in 2019, and a program-best 34 were recognized in the 2016 season. In the abbreviated 2020-21 season, 52 Eagles were honored, however, because of the Covid-19 pandemic, there were no participation requirements to be named to the team.
 
 
Senior Calin Criner Wears No. 4 Legacy Jersey for Eagles
 
Eastern senior safety Calin Criner is continuing the legacy of wearing the No. 4 jersey for the Eagle Football team, a tribute that has existed for more than 10 years.  Since the 2008 season when senior Jason Belford had the number, the coaching staff has selected a leader on defense to wear the jersey. It symbolizes the defensive player who most embodies the characteristics of defense at Eastern -- grit, toughness, effort, leadership and academic success.
 
In his career, Criner now has eight interceptions (including a 30-yard return for a touchdown versus Northern Colorado on Oct. 9, 2021), 244 tackles (21st in EWU history), 17 passes broken up, three forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries in his 49-game career (27 as a starter). He has five performances in his career with at least 10 tackles. The 2016 graduate of Rocky Mountain High School in Boise, Idaho, missed EWU's first four games of the 2020-21 spring season, then started in the final three to close the year with seven tackles and a pass broken up.
 
Criner has deep collegiate football roots. His father is a former player at Boise State (1990 graduate) and is now an assistant coach at Southern Miss with previous collegiate tenures at Idaho, Portland State, Utah State, Minnesota, Eastern Michigan, Cincinnati, Middle Tennessee State, Lamar, and Colorado State Pueblo. Calin is the grandson of former Boise State University head football coach Jim Criner (1976-82), who guided the Broncos to the 1980 NCAA Championship Subdivision (then I-AA) title and later was head coach at Iowa State (1983-86).
 
Although the honor isn't necessarily given to the most talented defensive player on the team, Eastern has had 11-straight players in that number earn All-Big Sky honors, and 13 of a possible 14 since Eastern joined the league in 1987. Below is the list of players who have worn that number since EWU became a member of the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in 1984 (Big Sky in 1987).
 
Name – Year - Pos. - Hometown / Previous School
Hunter, Darryl - 1983-84-85-86 - DB - Tacoma, Wash. / Foss HS
%Corr, Dominic - 1986-87-88-89 - RB - Seattle, Wash. / Garfield HS
%Wright, Harold - 1990-91-92-93 - RB - Tacoma, Wash. / Lakes HS '89
Givens, Roderick - 1995 - DB - Auburn, Wash. / Auburn HS '94
#%Brightful, Lamont - 1998-99-00-01 - WR - Everett, Wash. /Mariner HS '97
%Williams, A.J. - 2002-03 - DB - Lacey, Wash. - North Thurston HS '01
%Dotson, Anthony - 2005-06-07 - DB - Federal Way, Wash. / Federal Way HS '03
%Belford, Jason - 2005-06-07-08 - DL - Tacoma, Wash. / Lincoln HS '04
#%Sherritt, J.C. - 2007-08-09-10 - LB - Pullman, Wash. / Pullman HS '06
%Brown, Allen - 2010-11-12-13 - DB - Tacoma, Wash. / Foss HS '09
%Raynes, Todd - 2012-13-14-15 - DB - Kenmore, Wash. / Inglemoor HS '11
%Zamora, Miquiyah - 2013-14-15-16 - LB - Pasco, Wash. / Chiawana HS '12
%Havili, Albert - 2013-14-16-17 - DL - Federal Way, Wash. / Federal Way HS '13
%Fettig, Mitch - 2015-16-17-18 - DB  - Olympia Wash. / Olympia HS '14
%Ledbetter, Dylan - 2016-17-18-19 - DL - West Seattle, Wash. / O'Dea HS '15
Criner, Calin – 2017-18-19-20 – DB – Boise, Idaho / Rocky Mountain HS '16
 
#All-America selection (Brightful was first team in 2001, second team in 2000 & second team in 1999 as return specialist, and honorable mention in 2001 as a wide receiver; Sherritt was the Buck Buchanan Award winner in 2010, and first team in 2009 and 2010 as a linebacker).
 
%All-Big Sky Conference selection (Corr was first team in 1989 & second team in 1989 as return specialist; Wright was Big Sky Newcomer of the Year in 1989, and first team in 1991 & second team in 1992 as a running back; Brightful was first team in 2001 as a wide receiver and return specialist, first team in 2000 as a return specialist, second team in 2000 as a wide receiver and first team in 1999 as a return specialist; Williams was honorable mention in 2003 and 2002 as a safety; Dotson was second team in 2007 as an outside linebacker; Belford was second team in 2008 and honorable mention in 2007 as a defensive end; Sherritt was the Big Sky Defensive MVP in 2010, first team in 2009 and 2010 as a linebacker & honorable mention in 2008 as a linebacker; Brown was second team in 2012 & honorable mention in 2013 as a safety; Raynes was third team in 2015 as a safety; Zamora was first team in 2016 & honorable mention in 2014 as a linebacker; Havili was second team in 2017 as a defensive end; Fettig was third team in 2018 & 2017 & honorable mention in 2016 as a safety; Ledbetter was honorable mention in 2018 and 2019 as a defensive tackle).
 
 
More on EWU Returning Offensive Players
 
Besides Eric Barriere, Gunner Talkington was the only player of the three to throw a pass in 2020-21, all when he made the first start of his career versus Cal Poly and finished with career highs for completions (6), yards (132), touchdowns (2), rushing yards (14), long rush (14) and total offense (146). He has completed 32-of-64 passes for 365 yards and five touchdowns in his career. He's thrown passes this season against Central Washington (5-of-9 for 58 yards), Western Illinois (2-of-3 for six yards), Northern Colorado (2-of-2 for 10 yards) and Idaho (2-of-3 for 24 yards and a TD).
 
Andrew Boston returns for his junior season after catching 26 passes 391 yards and three scores in 2020-21. A freshman All-America selection in 2018, Boston has 154 receptions (16th in EWU history) for 2,281 yards (16th) and 19 touchdowns (18 receiving to rank 16th all-time at EWU, 1 rushing) in 40 career games (32 as a starter) as an Eagle. He's now had six games with at least 100 yards receiving, including a career-high 175 versus Idaho on Oct. 16, 2021.
 
Also returning to the receiver position are Roberson and Anthony Stell Jr., a pair of former high school teammates who were impressive as redshirt freshmen in 2019 and then developed into standouts in 2020-21. Roberson started six games, finishing with 33 grabs for 470 yards and three touchdowns, and also had a 42-yard touchdown rush. He now has 24 games of experience (14 starts) in his career with totals of 75 receptions for 1,155 yards and seven touchdowns, with a quartet of 100-yard receiving performances, including a career-high 192 versus Idaho on Oct. 16, 2021. Stell had four starts in 2020-21, and finished the season with 17 catches for 282 yards and three scores. He now has 22 catches for 323 yards and three scores in his 20-game career, but has not played in the 2021 season.
 
Two true freshmen burst onto the scene in the winter/spring season, including two-game starter Efton Chism III. He caught 23 passes for 267 yards and a score, and was also EWU's punt returner. Nolan Ulm played considerably and had a catch for nine yards. In their careers, Chism has 57 catches for 789 yards and seven touchdowns in 15 games played (six as a starter), and Ulm has eight grabs for 60 yards and no scores in 14 games (one as a starter),
 
Senior Johnny Edwards IV did not play in the 2020-21 winter/spring season. He now has 40 games of experience (12 as a starter), and has career totals of 57 receptions for 976 yards and nine touchdowns. He had his best day as an Eagle on Sept. 18, 2021, at Western Illinois when he had three catches for 126 yards, including touchdown catches of 76 and 51 yards. As a junior in 2019, he was third on the team with 32 catches for 553 yards (17.3 per reception) and three scores.
 
Eastern also has a trio of experienced tight ends, led by returning starter Dylan Ingram. Mostly used as a blocking tight end, the junior has 40 games of experience (12 starts), and has caught 14 passes for 155 yards and five scores in his career.
 
Sophomore Aiden Nellor is also back with 25 games of experience (no starts) as an Eagle and seven career catches for 67 yards, as well as redshirt freshman Blake Gobel. Gobel now has 19 games of experience (one start), and has 15 career catches for 195 yards and seven touchdowns after leading the tight end corp with four receptions for 26 yards and two scores in the 2020-21 season.
 
The running back position returns a pair of seniors in Pierce, the returning starter, and Merritt. Both returned from injuries to earn All-Big Sky honors in the 2020-21 season and help keep the Eagle offense productive.
 
Pierce, forced to redshirt in 2019 while recovering from a knee injury at the end of the 2018 season, started six of the seven games he played in the 2020-21 season to earn first team All-Big Sky accolades. He finished the season with a team-high 462 yards rushing with five touchdowns and an average of 5.4 yards per rush. He also caught eight passes for another 31 yards, and had his first career 100-yard rushing game with 105 and two scores versus Northern Arizona.
 
Pierce now has a 5.98 career average per rush which currently ranks fifth in school history (Merritt is sixth at 5.64). Pierce has rushed for 1,476 yards and 23 touchdowns in 46 games as an Eagle (six as a starter) with 21 catches for 138 yards and another score. His 23 touchdowns scored is eighth all-time in Eastern history.
 
Merritt also returned to be highly productive in 2020-21 after suffering a serious lower leg injury versus Lindenwood on Sept. 7, 2019, and missing the remainder of the season. He earned All-Big Sky Conference honorable mention after playing in all seven Eastern games (one as a starter) as a running back. He had 287 yards and four touchdowns rushing for EWU, and caught another 10 passes for 123 yards and three more scores. He scored a team-high seven touchdowns, including three in EWU's final regular season game versus Idaho. He passed the 1,000 career rushing yards mark against Central Washington on Sept. 11, 2021, when he had what was then a career-high 120 yards (he followed that with a career-high 148 at Western Illinois on Sept. 18). He now has 1,524 career yards (5.64 average per rush to rank sixth in school history) and 21 touchdowns rushing, and another 39 catches for 570 yards and seven scores in 45 games (nine as a starter). Merritt has also averaged 20.7 yards on 30 career kickoff returns. His 21 rushing touchdowns rank 10th in EWU history, and his total of 28 TDs scored is 13th.
 
Sophomores Silas Perreiah and Micah Smith also return after seeing action in both 2019 and 2020-21. Perreiah played in EWU's first three games in 2020-21 and then missed the rest of the season. He has now played in 13 career games, and has 268 yards rushing with a touchdown, and three catches for seven yards and another score. Smith has played in 19 Eagle games in his career and has 260 yards rushing and two scores, plus four catches for 34 yards. Lewis, nor Perreiah or Smith, has not started for EWU.
 
Sophomore Isaiah Lewis now has a total of 15 games of experience as an Eagle, he played in two games early in the 2019 season and had 64 yards and a touchdown rushing versus Lindenwood, but shortly after that left the team. As a redshirt freshman in 2018, he played in three games and had 52 yards. He has 323 career rushing yards (7.2 per carry) with one TD, and has caught three passes for 40 yards. He had a career-high 86 yards versus Idaho on Oct. 16, 2021, including a career-long rush of 47 yards.
 
The biggest priority for EWU in 2020-21 was replacing four starters on the offensive line, a group which had combined for 193 games played and 141 starts in their careers through the 2019 season. One of the new starters was senior center Conner Crist, who now has 36 career games of experience and 16 starts under his belt. He recovered a fumble in the endzone against Central Washington for his first career touchdown, just the fourth offensive lineman in EWU history to score a touchdown.
 
Entering his seventh season with the Eagles, Tristen Taylor, a Stockton, Calif., native and a 2015 Stagg HS graduate, has started all 55 games he's played in. Wyatt Musser now has 41 games worth of experience in his career with 15 starts. Junior tackle Matt Shook was injured in 2019 and did not play, but returned to start all seven games in 2020-21 and now has 20 games worth of experience with 10 starts.
 
The fifth starter back from 2020-21 is Wyatt Hansen, a freshman who has started all 13 career games he played as an offensive guard. Sophomore Brad Godwin started the other two games in 2020-21, and now has 21 total games of experience with two career starts.
 
 
More on EWU Returning Defensive Players
 
Anthany Smith is a returning starting safety and had a stellar season in 2020-21 to earn first team All-Big Sky honors. The junior finished with a team-leading 44 tackles in six games played (all as a starter). In EWU's last regular season game versus Idaho, Smith had 17 tackles -- equaling the 19th-most in school history. He made his starting debut earlier in the season versus the Vandals (2/27/21) and had 10 tackles, a pass broken up and a 71-yard interception return for a touchdown which was the 18th-longest in school history. Smith has 79 career tackles, two interceptions and three passes broken up in 25 games (six as a starter). Smith played in just three games in 2019 before being lost for the season with an injury and made his 2021 season debut versus Weber State on Oct. 23.
 
Junior Keshaun King started EWU's first four games in 2020-21 before starting safety Calin Criner returned, and King finished with 33 tackles on the season. In the second game versus Idaho, he had nine tackles and his first career interception that led to EWU's game-winning score. King now has 60 tackles and an interception in his 29-game career (four as a starter).
 
Tre Weed and sophomore Darrien Sampson were both seven-game starters at cornerback for EWU in the 2020-21 season. Weed, honored on the All-Big Sky Conference second team, has now played 31 games as an Eagle (26 as a starter). He has career totals of 94 tackles, three interceptions and 12 passes broken up.
 
Sampson finished with 13 tackles and a pair of passes broken up in 2020-21, and has now played in 29 career games (18 starts). A former high school teammate of wide receivers Anthony Stell Jr. and Freddie Roberson, he now has 51 tackles, three interceptions and five passes broken up as an Eagle.
 
The fifth starter back in the secondary is nickel back Marlon Jones Jr., who saw action in all seven games as a redshirt freshman and started four times. He finished the year with 17 of his 24 tackles in EWU's last three games, including a pass broken up in the final game of the year versus North Dakota State. He also played in three games in 2019, and he now has a total of 16 games of experience (seven starts) and has a career total of 58 tackles with four passes broken up and interceptions versus Idaho on Oct. 16, 2021, and versus Montana on Oct. 2, 2021, in EWU's 34-28 victory over the fourth-ranked Grizzlies.
 
Also back for the Eagles in the secondary is 2019 starting cornerback Darreon Moore, now a junior. Moore has played in 30 career games (seven as a starter), and has 42 tackles with three passes broken up and a sack.
 
Arizona State transfer Ely Doyle provided a big boost in 2020-21 for Eastern after playing in five games in 2019 for the Sun Devils. He had 36 tackles in six games played to rank fourth on the team, including no tackles while playing sparingly in EWU's opener versus Idaho. But he quickly bumped himself up the leaders list, with 30 tackles during EWU's four-game winning streak. He also had two passes broken up in the 2020-21 season, and missed the rematch against Idaho which extended EWU's winning streak to five. He now has a total of 75 career tackles and five passes broken up in 14 games with the Eagles (nine starts). He had a career-high 10 tackles with a PBU in EWU's 34-28 victory over fourth-ranked Montana on Oct. 2, 2021.
 
Jack Sendelbach, a three-time team captain, and Graham headline a linebacker corp that includes five returning letterwinners. Graham was also a co-captain during the 2020-21 season when the University of Idaho transfer was playing his first collegiate games after a stretch of 833 days without.
 
Sendelbach finished with 33 tackles to rank sixth on the team despite playing in just three games. An Eagle since the fall of 2015 when he redshirted, Sendelbach now has 258 tackles (18th in school history) in his 46-game career (25 as a starter), and has had 14 performances in double figures. He also has six career sacks, 27 total tackles for loss, four fumble recoveries and three forced fumbles.
 
Graham had 42 tackles after starting all six of the games he played as a linebacker to earn honorable mention All-Big Sky honors. Graham had a then career-high nine tackles in his Eagle debut versus his former team, then in the rematch played just the first series versus Vandals before being lost for the season with an injury. The local product of Cheney (Wash.) High School played in 27 games at Idaho and had 133 tackles, 2 1/2 sacks, an interception, two passes broken up and a forced fumble in those three seasons for the Vandals. His father, John, is EWU's former defensive coordinator. In Eastern's season-opener at UNLV, he had a career-high 14 tackles for his first performance in double figures and has four in his career. In 14 career games with the Eagles (14 starts), he has 116 total tackles, three sacks, 12 total tackles for loss and one interception that he returned 43 yards for his first career touchdown.
 
Also back at linebacker is junior Cale Lindsay, who had 16 total tackles in seven games in the 2020-21 season. He made the first two starts of his career that season, and now has 65 tackles in 31 career games (five starts) along with five tackles for loss and one fumble recovery.
 
Now at linebacker is Warren, who transferred to EWU in 2019 from the University of Washington. He played in EWU's opener against his alma mater in 2019, but missed the rest of the season. In the 2020-21 season, he also played just one game as a starter at end before being lost for the remainder of the season. He has now played in seven games as an Eagle (two starts) and has 18 tackles. He made his second start as an Eagle on Oct. 16, 2021, versus Idaho and had eight tackles. In his 31-game career as a Husky, he had nine tackles, 1 1/2 sacks, a forced fumble and caught a 2-yard touchdown pass.
 
On the defensive line, freshman end Brock Harrison returns as a 2020-21 starter, as does Joshua Jerome and freshman tackle Jacob Newsom. Jerome earned honorable mention All-Big Sky honors.
 
Jerome started all seven of Eastern's games and had 41 tackles to rank third on the team, and also had a team-leading three sacks and a pair of quarterback hurries. He has played just 29 career games (15 as a starter), but already has 120 career tackles with 9 1/2 sacks, 25 total tackles for loss, five quarterback hurries, a pass broken up, three forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries.
 
Harrison took over as the starter at an end position in EWU's second game of the 2020-21 season and finished with a team-high five quarterback hurries to go along with 15 tackles. He's played in a total of 19 career games as an Eagle (six starts) and has 38 tackles, six total tackles for loss, five quarterback hurries, an interception, a fumble recovery and three passes broken up. Newsom also started all seven games as a tackle, and finished with 22 tackles in his debut season. He has two sacks, a pass broken up, a forced fumble, a quarterback hurry and 31 total tackles in 16 career games (seven starts).
 
Four other returning lettermen are back with starting experience, including junior Caleb Davis who missed the entire 2020-21 season. He now has 57 tackles and four sacks in 31 games (three as a starter), including 21 stops and one sack as a sophomore in 2019.
 
Junior Debore'ae McClain started once as a defensive end in the 2020-21 season and finished with 12 tackles in seven games. He now has 60 stops in 42 career games (nine starts), with 4 1/2 sacks, eight total tackles for loss, a forced fumble, a fumble recovery and seven quarterback hurries.
 
Sophomore Emmanuel Osuoha is the only other non-freshman returning, and was a linebacker in the winter/spring. Osuoha had a pair of tackles in six games played and now has 10 career stops in 11 games played.
 
 
More on EWU Returning Special Teams Players
 
Besides kicker Seth Harrison, sophomore punter Nick Kokich and sophomore long snapper Cody Clements return with two years of experience under their belts.
 
As a true freshman in 2019, Kokich made his season debut four games into the season and has held the punting position ever since. In 2020-21 he averaged 39.2 yards in 20 punts, with five downed inside the opponent 20-yard line and two of at least 50 yards with a long of 55. He averaged 39.0 yards in 2019, and now has a 39.8 career average with 22 downed inside the opponent 20-yard line and a long of 61 versus Weber State on Oct. 23, 2021, to equal the 26th longest in EWU history. He also has a 59-yarder to his credit to rank 39th. He punted just once in a two-game span in October (Northern Colorado and Idaho), and did not have to punt versus Idaho on Oct. 16, 2021, in EWU's 71-21 romp.
 
More Season Notes
 
 
Eagles Dominant During 20-Game Winning Streak at Home
 
During Eastern's 20-game winning streak at Roos Field with lasted from 11/18/17 to 10/16/21, the Eagles had just four games decided by less than double figures and all but five decided by at least 21 points. In fact, Eastern had more than doubled its opponents 1045-456 (average score of 52-23). The margin of victory in 15 of the 20 games was at least 21 points, 10 of them were by at least 30, five by 40 or more and a trio were won by at least 50 points (52 and 53 versus Cal Poly and 50 against Idaho).
 
In EWU's last 12 home games of that winning streak, it won by an average score of 53-24 (630-292). Those games came after EWU's 34-29 victory over UC Davis in the 2018 FCS Playoffs. The only other games decided by less than 10 points was a 53-46 victory over Portland State to end the 2019 campaign, 38-31 over Idaho on April 10, 2021, to end the 2020-21 regular season and 34-28 over fourth-ranked Montana on Oct. 2, 2021, to help EWU improve to 6-0 versus the Grizzlies since the red turf was installed in 2010.
 
Eastern Spends Two Weeks Ranked No. 2
 
At No. 2 in the nation in polls released on Oct. 11 and 18, Eastern owned the school's highest national ranking since ending the 2018 campaign second in both national polls. That came after the Eagles lost to North Dakota State 38-24 for the NCAA Division I title.
 
The Eagles have been ranked No. 1 in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in 2014, 2012, 2011 and 2010 for at least one week of the season. On its way to the national title, Eastern ended both the 2010 regular season and the playoffs as the No. 1-ranked FCS team by both The Sports Network and in the FCS Coaches Poll.
 
Eastern was also No. 1 in the first two polls of the 2011 season, two weeks in 2012 and once in 2014. The Eagles were as high as second in 2018 and 2013, as high as fourth in 2015 and as high as third in 2016. The school's highest ranking in 2019 was fourth and in the abbreviated 2020-21 campaign the Eagles were as high as ninth.
 
Eagles Record Best Back-to-Back Scoring and Offensive Games in School History
 
Eastern's 134 points in two games in October versus Northern Colorado (63) and Idaho (71) is the best two-game stretch in school history, and has continued a trend of out-of-this-world statistics for the Eagles.
 
Eastern's combined 1,427 yards of offense against Western Illinois (754) and Southern Utah (673) is the most in back-to-back games in school history. The previous most was 1,395 set in 2019 when the Eagles had 706 versus Northern Arizona on Nov. 2 and 689 a week later versus Idaho State.
 
The 754 yards EWU had versus the Leathernecks came just 15 from the school record, but was a program best versus a FCS or FBS foe. Additionally, Eric Barriere set the individual school record with 562 yards of total offense against WIU (542 passing), then EWU set a team record for passing yards with 554 at SUU (Barriere had 518 and the other 36 came on a fake punt). The school records would later be broken versus Idaho on Oct. 16 when EWU finished with 837 total yards and 624 passing, and Barriere set new marks with 577 total yards and 600 through the air.
 
Including the 645 yards EWU had versus Central Washington on Sept. 11, and the Eagles had 2,072 in a three-game stretch – an average of 690.7 per game. That is also a high for EWU in back-to-back-to-back games, and those three performances all rank in the top 22 in school history.
 
Eastern's 175 points (58.3 average) in those games is actually not EWU's best three-game stretch. That distinction goes to the 2018 squad, which had 181 points (and 1,871 total yards of offense) in victories over Northern Colorado (48 points, 578 yards), UC Davis (59 points, 669 yards) and Portland State (74 points, 624 yards). The point total in the latter two games – 133 points – is eight better than the combined 125 EWU scored this season versus Central Washington and Western Illinois, but was eclipsed on Oct. 16, 2021, when EWU scored 71 points versus Idaho a week after scoring 63 against Northern Colorado – a combined total of 134 points.
 
A Few More Superlatives From the Idaho Game
 
* The 71 points are the most ever scored at Roos/Woodward Field, fifth most all-time, and second most
against a Division I opponent (74 at Portland State, 11/16/18).
 
* Eastern set a school record for total offense (837), which was 39 short of the Big Sky record of 876. The 624 passing yards by the Eagles was also a school record, and was 36 short of the Big Sky record of 660. Eastern's team passing efficiency rating of 281.09 was the third-best in program history.
 
* At the point EWU took a 50-14 lead in the third quarter, the Eagles were averaging 13.4 yards per play (42 plays, 561 yards), a pace that would have broken the EWU and Big Sky record of 12.3 yards per play versus Montana State in 2013. Eastern finished the Idaho game with an average of 10.6 per play.

Eastern Now 63-0 Since 2010 When Winning the TO Battle
 
In the last 13+ seasons (2008-2021), the Eagles are now 72-1 when they've won the turnover battle, 25-9 when they've been tied and 25-36 when they've lost (total of 122-46). The last time EWU lost a game when it won the turnover battle came in the 2009 FCS Playoffs at Stephen F. Austin when EWU had two miscues and forced four in the 44-33 loss.
 
Thus, EWU is 63-0 since 2010 when they've won the turnover battle, 22-9 when they've been tied and 23-29 when they've lost. That's a collective record of 108-38 (74.0 percent), with 29 of those 37 losses (78 percent) coming in games EWU has lost the turnover battle and 58 percent of EWU's wins coming when they've won the turnover battle (79 percent when including ties).
 
In 2021, EWU won the turnover battle versus Central Washington (2-0), Western Illinois (1-0), Southern Utah (1-0), Northern Colorado (2-1) and Idaho (3-0), and lost to UNLV (3-2). The Eagles were tied versus Montana (2-2).
 
In 2020-21, EWU opened the year by falling to Idaho 28-21 after losing the turnover battle 2-1. Eastern beat Northern Arizona 45-13 on March 6, but also lost the turnover battle in that one, 3-0. Eastern beat Idaho State by both score (46-42) and the turnover battle (3-2). Eastern won the turnover battle 2-1 against Cal Poly on March 27, but lost 1-0 at UC Davis in a 32-22 victory on April 3. The Eagles closed the regular season by registered two four-quarter interceptions – the only turnovers of the game – in a 38-31 win over Idaho on April 10. In the FCS Playoffs, the lone turnover was an Eagle interception on offense as North Dakota State won the turnover battle 1-0.
 
Eagle Now 18-1 Versus FCS Schools in California From 2006-2020/21
 
Following a pair of wins in the abbreviated 2020-21 season, the Eagles have won 20 of their last 21 matchups against NCAA Football Championship Subdivision opponents from California. Eastern has won its last three games versus California foes, starting Nov. 16, 2019 against Cal Poly, and continuing in the 2020-21 season with victories over Cal Poly (62-10 on March 27, 2021) and UC Davis (32-22 on April 3, 2021).
 
The Sac State loss earlier in 2019 ended a 17-game streak versus FCS foes from California dating back to a 15-13 home loss to Sacramento State on Nov. 1, 2008. During that streak, EWU was 5-0 versus Sac State and 6-0 against both Cal Poly and UC Davis. Overall, the Eagles are now 38-7 against those three foes (84.4 percent), but are better on the road (19-3 for 86.4 percent) than at home (19-4 for 82.6 percent). Eastern is now 12-1 at Sacramento State (19-5 overall), 3-0 at UC Davis (9-0 overall) and 4-2 at Cal Poly (10-2 overall).
 
In addition, until the Eagles lost at Sacramento State on Oct. 5, 2019, it had been 14 years since Eastern had lost a road game to a FCS school in California – an 8-0 record starting back to 2008. Eastern was 2-0 versus Sacramento State, 3-0 against Cal Poly and 2-0 at UC Davis in that span, 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.
 
 Eagles Now 11-27 Versus FBS Members After UNLV Win
 
Since the early 1980's when it began the move to become a member of the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (in 1984), Eastern is now 11-27 all-time versus Football Bowl Subdivision teams. Eastern has won four of its last 11 games versus FBS foes after a 35-33 double-overtime victory at UNLV on Sept. 2, 2021, at the new Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. Eastern's most recent victory over an FBS foe came in the 2016 season with a 45-42 victory at Washington State. Since then, EWU had lost at Texas Tech in 2017 (56-10), at Washington State in 2018 (59-24) and at Washington in 2019 (47-14).
 
Against current Pac-12 Conference members, EWU is now 2-11 (2-13 including losses to Washington State in 1907 and 1908) with a 49-46 upset of 25th-ranked Oregon State in 2013 and a 45-42 win over Washington State in 2016. A 35-17 win over Connecticut on Sept. 8, 2001, snapped a five-game losing streak versus FBS foes, then a 20-3 win at Idaho in 2012 snapped a 10-game skid. Here are EWU's upcoming games versus FBS opponents:
 
2021 - at UNLV – Win, 35-33 (2 overtimes)
2022 - at Oregon (9/3/22)
2022 - at Florida (10/1/22) . . . re-scheduled from 2020
2023 - at Fresno State (9/9/23)
2026 - at Washington (date either 9/5, 9/12 or 9/19)
2028 - at Washington (date either 9/2, 9/9 or 9/16)
 
Series Notes
 
* The Eagles have won 14 of the last 16 meetings against the Bobcats, and are 32-10 overall in the 42-game series dating back to 1948. With a seven-game winning streak over Montana State, the last time EWU lost to MSU was by a 38-21 score at home in 2011. Eastern has won seven of the last eight in Bozeman and eight of the last nine meetings at home (including a 2003 win in Spokane). Overall, Eastern is 17-6 in Bozeman, 14-4 in home games and 1-0 on neutral fields.
 
* Eastern has won the last seven meetings, having not lost to the Bobcats since 2011 when MSU prevailed 36-21 at Roos Field in Cheney. That is one of only five conference losses for EWU at "The Inferno" since the school installed its red Sprinturf surface in 2010. In the last six meetings, Eastern has scored 267 points and generated 3,377 yards of total offense for averages of 44.5 points and 562.8 yards per game.
 
* The meeting in 2016 was the first time in seven seasons the Eagles and Bobcats did not enter their meeting both ranked nationally. The last time prior to that when both teams did not enter the game ranked, neither squad was. Interestingly, that 35-24 victory in Cheney on Oct. 24, 2009, started a current stretch in which EWU has won 78 of 94 Big Sky Conference games (83 percent). It also marked the date when EWU retired the No. 71 jersey of NFL standout offensive tackle Michael Roos (Tennessee Titans). Here are the rankings and results of the last six matchups between nationally-ranked squads, and this year's match-up between the No. 6 Bobcats and No. 7 Eagles will be the seventh:
2021 (Cheney) - #5 EWU vs. #4 MSU
2015 (Cheney) - #14 EWU 55, #11 MSU 50
2014 (Bozeman) - #2 EWU 52, #14 MSU 51
2013 (Cheney) - #3 EWU 54, #4 MSU 29
2012 (Bozeman) - #6 EWU 27, #2 MSU 24
2011 (Cheney) - #4 MSU 36, #21 EWU 21
2010 (Bozeman) - #17 MSU 30, #9 EWU 7
 
 
Last Meeting - #5 EWU 34, Montana State 17 (9/29/18)
 
Behind an offense that rolled up 490 yards of offense and a defense that pitched shutouts in the second and third quarters, the fifth-ranked Eagles scored 20 unanswered points to win 34-17 at Montana State on Sept. 29, 2018, at Bobcat Stadium in Bozeman. Quarterback Gage Gubrud had 345 yards of total offense, and the defense held MSU scoreless for nearly 40 minutes after giving up 10 quick points. The Eagles scored 20 unanswered points to take a 34-17 lead on a 57-yard touchdown run by Sam McPherson, his second of the day. Sixth-year senior Roldan Alcobendas kicked a pair of field goals and had four extra points to give him 244 points in his EWU career to establish a new school record for kick scoring points. The Eagles scored 17 points in the first 17 minutes of the game, but MSU scored 10 in its first two possessions and had 139 yards on 11 plays. After a two-play, 75-yard touchdown drive on its first possession, the Bobcats had a 10-play, 64 yard drive. But after that, Eastern held the Bobcats to 221 yards on 53 plays and just one more score – including a 38:49 scoreless stretch from the first quarter to the fourth period. Montana State had just a single score in its last eight possessions as the Eagles led for the final 53:15 of the game. In those seven empty possessions, EWU forced MSU to punt four times, had interceptions by senior Mitch Fettig and Josh Lewis and had a key fourth-down stop in the third quarter by senior Ketner Kupp.  Ahead just 17-10 late in the first half, Eastern opened a two touchdown lead thanks to the first two carries of the game by junior running back Tamarick Pierce. He started a two-play, 54-yard drive with a 34-yard run – more than double his previous career high of 15 yards – then drew a 12-yard personal foul penalty on MSU as well. He then capped the drive with a 12-yard scoring run to help give the Eagles a 24-10 lead at intermission. After a fast start, Montana State quarterback Troy Andersen was held in check for the final three quarters by the Eagle defense. He finished with 94 yards rushing and 156 through the air, but 83 of the passing yards and 35 of his yards on the ground came in MSU's first 11 plays. He averaged 14.7 yards per game in his first three carries, but then just 2.5 in his last 20. He came into the game averaging 105.8 yards rushing to rank 24th in FCS, but his 8.29 average per rush was eighth and his five rushing touchdowns were ninth. He entered averaging only 47.0 yards passing per game, but was coming off 318 yards of offense versus PSU with 211 rushing and 107 passing. Montana State finished that game with 323 yards and five TDs rushing in the 43-23 win, but had just 155 yards rushing versus the Eagles. Gubrud completed 27-of-41 passes for 311 yards, and also rushed for 34 yards. Junior Jayce Gilder doubled his previous career high of two receptions by finishing with four catches for 41 yards against MSU. He is from Corvallis, Mont., and is just the 11th player in school history from that state to letter in football.  Redshirt freshman Andrew Boston was one of four Eagle receivers with four catches apiece, finishing with 44 yards. Senior Nsimba Webster had four for a team-high 56 yards, and running back Antoine Custer also had four for 39 yards. McPherson scored on runs of 57 and 2 yards to finish with a team-high 74 yards on nine carries. Defensively, Kupp finished with seven tackles, with one for loss, and also had a pass broken up. Senior linebacker Kurt Calhoun added five tackles with a sack. Junior safety Dehonta Hayes had a career-high six tackles, eclipsing his previous high of five.
 
 
Last Time in Cheney - #10 EWU 31, Montana State 19
 
It was a turnover turnaround for the Eastern football team. After nearly giving away the lead with fumbles on back-to-back possessions, the defense for No. 10/9 Eagles did the same moments later to help preserve a 31-19 EWU victory over Montana State Oct. 14 at Roos Field in Cheney, Wash. Running back Antoine Custer Jr. rushed for what was then a career-high 147 yards and two touchdowns and quarterback Gage Gubrud had 227 passing yards and a TD. But the difference was turnovers, as EWU ended up with four takeaways – including two in the red zone -- and three giveaways, to improve to 40-0 since 2010 when they've won the turnover battle. While the Eagles finished with 451 yards of total offense, Eastern's defense held MSU to 353 yards. There were no lead changes, but the game featured runs of 10 and 14 consecutive points by Eastern, and a run of 12 points by MSU. Although the Eagles had three turnovers themselves that turned into seven points, Eastern's Keenan Williams recovered a fumble with 8:52 to play and Victor Gamboa had an interception with 2:01 remaining to turn the tide in EWU's favor. Montana State's three fumbles in the game were turned into 17 Eagle points, including a nearly six minute touchdown drive that clinched the win in the fourth quarter for EWU. Gubrud completed his first 16 passes as he finished 25-of-31 for 224 yards and a touchdown. He also rushed for 21 net yards despite getting sacked four times, two ending on lost fumbles. Linebacker Ketner Kupp finished with 12 tackles and Williams had nine, a key fumble recovery in the fourth quarter and a quarterback hurry.  Mitch Fettig also had nine tackles, linebacker Kurt Calhoun added seven tackles and a fumble recovery, and Tysen Prunty also had seven stops with a pass broken up. He was making the first start of his career as an injury replacement at safety.
 
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Eastern Comes Up Short at Home Against Weber State
 
The No. 2-ranked Eagles rallied in the fourth quarter, but Weber State prevailed 35-34 on Oct. 23, 2021, at Roos Field in Cheney, Wash., in EWU's 94th annual Homecoming game.
 
The loss was the first of the year in eight outings for the Eagles, who fell to 4-1 in Big Sky Conference play. It also snapped the nation's longest active home winning streak at 20 games at Roos Field for the Eagles. Ironically, the last loss at home for EWU was against Weber State on Nov. 4, 2017. The Wildcats entered the game with just a 2-4 record overall after a trio of losses to nationally-ranked FCS foes and one to a FBS opponent, and are the four-time defending Big Sky Champions.
 
Redshirt senior quarterback Eric Barriere became Eastern Washington's and the Big Sky Conference's all-time leader in career total offense, now sitting at 13,558 to break the previous record of 13,308 held by former EWU quarterback Matt Nichols. Barriere threw for 245 yards passing and two touchdowns, plus one of his own on the ground, and completed 19 of his 39 pass attempts plus an interception. He was the team's leading rusher with 85 yards.
 
Talolo Limu-Jones led the way with 47 receiving yards on three catches, followed by Robert Mason III who had 40 on three as well. Dennis Merritt rushed for 30 yards with two touchdowns. Tight ends Blake Gobel and Dylan Ingram were the recipients of Barriere's two touchdown passes.
 
Calin Criner led the team in tackles with 12, followed by Jack Sendelbach with 11. Criner also had a fumble recovery and half of a sack, plus a break-up. Debore'ae McClain had two sacks for a loss of 18 yards, plus a quarterback hurry. Mitchell Johns had four tackles, 1.5 sacks and a forced fumble.
 
The Eagles had 434 yards of total offense (189 rushing, 245 passing) compared to Weber State with 482 total yards, 213 of which came on the ground and 269 through the air.
 
Eastern struck first at the 7:49 mark of the first quarter. Barriere scored on an 11-yard rushing touchdown, capping an 11-play, 80-yard drive. Seth Harrison, who was 4-for-5 on extra points, helped the Eagles take a 7-0 lead. The Eagles had five fumbles in the first quarter, two of which were covered by Weber State, but Eastern Washington still led 7-0 after one quarter of play.
 
It didn't take Weber State long to respond in the second quarter, scoring on a one-yard rushing touchdown that capped a seven-play, 65-yard drive, tying the game 7-7 after the extra point. Eastern Washington regained the lead when Barriere found Ingram for a three-yard touchdown, following a drive that took 4:48 off the clock on 13 plays and 88 yards.
 
The Wildcats brought all their tricks to Cheney, executing three fake punts. The first came on fourth and three midway through the second quarter and it led to a 31-yard field goal attempt, cutting EWU's lead to 14-10. Eastern Washington looked to get the ball back following a stalled drive from the Wildcats, but another fake punt gave WSU a fresh set of downs, eventually leading to a 45-yard field goal attempt through the uprights. Eastern held a 14-13 lead at the half.
 
The second half started with a Mitchell Johnson sack and forced fumble that was recovered and returned 33 yards by Caleb Davis, Merritt scored a four-yard rushing touchdown and the Eagles took a 21-13 lead after the extra point. On the ensuing drive, a seven-yard rushing touchdown from Weber State cut EWU's lead to one-point, 21-20, after the extra point, capping a 60-yard drive.
 
The Eagles were held to just nine yards of total offense in the third compared to Weber State's 122. Still, it was 21-20 Eastern Washington heading into the fourth. A third fake punt in the fourth quarter by WSU on fourth and four kept the Wildcats alive, and it helped them take their first lead of the game after a nine-yard rushing touchdown. Another 13-yard rushing touchdown on Weber's next drive extended the lead to 35-21 and complete a 22-0 Wildcat scoring run.
 
After going 22:03 without a score, Eastern Washington found some fourth quarter magic, as Barriere hit Gobel for a 30-yard TD pass and the lead was cut to 35-28. On Weber State's next possession, EWU's Joshua Jerome forced a fumble that was recovered by Calin Criner at Weber's 39-yard line.
 
Barriere began EWU's next drive with a 24-yard rush where he hurdled a Wildcat defender and Eastern marched down the field. Merritt would find his second rushing touchdown on a one-yard scamper, but the extra point missed wide left, and EWU missed out on the chance to tie the game at 35. Weber State ran out the remaining 2:51, picking up a pair of key first downs.
   
 

Aaron Best Comments
 
On Bye Week After Weber State Loss: "The goals were the same regardless of the outcome of (the Weber State) game. We want to get into the training room and get back as many players as we can, but we aren't out a ton of guys. Our eighth game came against a very physical defense and special teams unit, and our defense faced 95 snaps. So there are going to be some bumps and bruises we endured that we'll need to take care of. Win or lose, you have to flush it – you get 24 hours. This one is going to sting, and it stings even more because you can't score again until the next home game, which is two weeks away. That's the hard part. You can't go back and re-do it – we understand that. But you also can't make up for it either. Our opponent is going to be a new team we face, and it's a team that is undefeated in the conference up to this point."
 
On Weber State Loss: "Weber State had a high today in offensive output, and a lot of that is due to the fact that our defense was out on the field too much. Three of those times, Weber State had fake punts, so give credit to them because we were out-coached, and Weber State took advantage. Coach (Jay) Hill is a great coach, he's a special teams coach and a defensive guy. They held us in check and just kind of off of our rhythm for the better part of the game until we got into a fourth quarter rhythm after our score and the turnover by our defense. We had too many dropped balls on offense, we put the ball on the ground too many times and had three turnovers. We had too many errors, forced errors by us, so credit Weber State's defense. But their offense came in and dictated the outcome of the game. We were an extra point away from seeing the game go to overtime, but we didn't because we didn't execute and that was the theme of the day."
 
On Idaho Victory: "One word comes to mind -- awesome. It was a collective effort, awesome, by coaches, by players, by all involved. Our team has taken every challenge and we've succeeded on every challenge thus far. How much better can we get? That's to be determined. The challenge is to stay at the level that we're at. Because if we're not at that level, then everyone wants to know why we aren't. The bar is high, extremely high. Eric Barriere, again, substantiates himself as the best player in the land at this level. Period, bar none, zero discussion as far as I'm concerned. He is explosive, he is selfless and he understands the run game complements the pass game. The run-pass-options open up because we have a respected run game, and we did a good job moving the ball against a very solid defense, on paper, going into this game."   
 
On Northern Colorado Win: "Any time you play that well and probably play 54 or 55 of the 60 players you travel, that means you did a lot of good things. I think we came out of the game unscathed, but a lot of players were playing out of their normal positions, and we used a lot of bodies in this game. We knew going in with the players we had on the plane, that it was going to be a grind, and it was. We started fast and we ended the second half a bit like we ended the first half, and that was our theme at halftime. We're a different team than we were when we were at Western Illinois and up 55-21. We have a lot of work to do in the last 30 minutes and we stayed aggressive both in coaching and in playing. Our players had a lot of fun, there are a lot of smiles, and a lot of players made big plays and created turnovers. We were on the plus side (of the turnover battle) to improve to 62-0."
 
On Montana Victory: "It was one of those classic, in the moment games that is an instant classic right away. At the end of the day, there were a lot of plays on both sides of the ball between two awesome teams. We were playing on our home field with awesome fans on both sides. Like I've said many times, it's unfortunate that somebody has to lose in this game. We knew it was going to be back-and-forth and they had the upper hand in the first half. We kind of held it together, and our defense played outstanding and the offense got points when they needed to get points. We gave up the late kick return to kind of give the game a little bit more of a twist when we were up 10, and they grabbed momentum at that point. Again, number three (Eric Barriere) without a doubt showed why he's the best player in America at our level. There's no argument, there is zero argument. We heard all week that they'd only given up two touchdowns and our guys were up for the challenge. At the end of the day, when those things are said, those don't go on the bulletin board those things are just remembered."
 
On Southern Utah Win: "We're playing consistently on offense. Outside of the penalties tonight, we ultimately played a good football team and really clean game. We had a boo-boo with our PAT and the penalties, but those are the only two things that come to mind right now that we could clean up. We were aggressive from the jump with the fake punt out of the gate, we've been repping that for a while now, and it was time. It was a surprise element, and Eric Barriere did Eric Barriere things. Our receivers stepped up after Freddie Roberson went down early in the game, and we moved the ball well against a good defense on the road against a team we lost to here in 2017. Make no bones about it, that was in my head from 2017, selfishly. We didn't overlook our opponent, we never will, and we came out on top."
 
On Defense at Southern Utah: "At halftime we talked as coaches and as a team about urgency. It was a one-word message at halftime: urgency. We were playing okay, but our lack of urgency allowed us not to play as well as we could. Whether that be calls or tackling, it wasn't perfect by any means, but we had more urgency in the last 30 minutes after giving up a touchdown on the first series on defense. We buckled down, knocked the ball out late, and our defense finally found a little bit of magic after we got things going on offense in the second half. I couldn't be prouder, going on the road and winning by 29 points."
 
On Western Illinois Win: "It was a tale of two halves. We had a lot of fight in the first half on offense, and we had a really solid second quarter on defense. In the second half, we scored on the first play offensively with Dennis Merritt's long run, but we couldn't muster up enough to get stops or get the ball back. We hurt ourselves with penalties and inconsistent drives, we had too many three, and four, and outs. Half of America loses every week, and we weren't in that half. It is a win, but we have a lot of things to clean up."
 
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Players Mentioned

Eric Barriere

#3 Eric Barriere

QB
6' 1"
Redshirt Senior
4L
Andrew Boston

#9 Andrew Boston

WR
6' 3"
Redshirt Junior
3L
Matthew Brown

#90 Matthew Brown

DL
6' 2"
Freshman
1L
Efton Chism III

#89 Efton Chism III

WR
6' 0"
Freshman
1L
Cody Clements

#47 Cody Clements

LS
6' 2"
Redshirt Junior
2L
Calin Criner

#4 Calin Criner

DB
5' 10"
Redshirt Senior
4L
Conner Crist

#78 Conner Crist

OL
6' 3"
Redshirt Senior
4L
Luke Dahlgren

#57 Luke Dahlgren

OL
6' 3"
Redshirt Freshman
1L
Caleb Davis

#99 Caleb Davis

DL
6' 3"
Redshirt Junior
2L
Ely Doyle

#25 Ely Doyle

DB
6' 1"
Redshirt Sophomore
1L
Johnny Edwards IV

#8 Johnny Edwards IV

WR
5' 11"
Senior
3L
Blake Gobel

#82 Blake Gobel

TE
6' 6"
Redshirt Freshman
1L

Players Mentioned

Eric Barriere

#3 Eric Barriere

6' 1"
Redshirt Senior
4L
QB
Andrew Boston

#9 Andrew Boston

6' 3"
Redshirt Junior
3L
WR
Matthew Brown

#90 Matthew Brown

6' 2"
Freshman
1L
DL
Efton Chism III

#89 Efton Chism III

6' 0"
Freshman
1L
WR
Cody Clements

#47 Cody Clements

6' 2"
Redshirt Junior
2L
LS
Calin Criner

#4 Calin Criner

5' 10"
Redshirt Senior
4L
DB
Conner Crist

#78 Conner Crist

6' 3"
Redshirt Senior
4L
OL
Luke Dahlgren

#57 Luke Dahlgren

6' 3"
Redshirt Freshman
1L
OL
Caleb Davis

#99 Caleb Davis

6' 3"
Redshirt Junior
2L
DL
Ely Doyle

#25 Ely Doyle

6' 1"
Redshirt Sophomore
1L
DB
Johnny Edwards IV

#8 Johnny Edwards IV

5' 11"
Senior
3L
WR
Blake Gobel

#82 Blake Gobel

6' 6"
Redshirt Freshman
1L
TE