The 2020-21 season was certainly a journey for the Eastern Washington University football team, and the next trek is right around the corner.
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A little rest and relaxation – and a chance to celebrate what they accomplished – are top on the list for the Eagles after they concluded their 2020-21 season with a 5-2 record overall and a 14th appearance in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs.
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The Eagles led 14-0 and 20-7 at North Dakota State, the eight-time NCAA Division I Champions, but fell 42-20 on April 24 in the first round of the playoffs. Eastern had earned an at-large berth after finishing 5-1 and as the runner-up in the Big Sky Conference during a season delayed and impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic.
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"We'll take a deep breath and look back on all the things we conquered along this journey," Eastern head coach
Aaron Best said just minutes after his team's season concluded at the Fargodome in Fargo, N.D.
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Conceivably, all of Eastern players are eligible to return for the 2021 season, since eligibility was not impacted during the 2020-21 campaign. Eastern is scheduled to next play at UNLV of the Mountain West Conference on Thursday, Sept. 2 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada.
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"We'll get to those decisions once the dust clears in a week or two," said Best of what he expects his roster to look like in the 2020-21 season. "In the meantime we are going to do our thing and enjoy our time together as the spring season concludes."
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Addressing his players in the locker room once the season concluded was more difficult than normal, Best said.
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"It's never easy and is one of the most difficult things to do," he explained. "With any team when the season ends, those same heartbeats won't be together in the same locker room. There are players who go separate ways and different things happen, so it's tough.
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"But it's even tougher this time around because of all the obstacles and challenges Covid presented us. The pushback to the spring season ended with us in the playoffs, and you don't know when it's going to end. But you know it could end at any moment, so it makes it kind of doubly tough. It's even tougher when you love your kids you coach – day-in and day-out they've put a lot on the line."
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The Eagles put together a five-game winning streak amidst an environment that included lots of cancellations and postponements in FCS Football and within the Big Sky, but he was thankful those didn't impact the season schedule for his program. However, the Eagles weren't immune to the impacts of Covid, and Best himself had to miss EWU's opener versus Idaho on Sept. 27 after he had a non-symptomatic case of the disease.
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 "They've adjusted their schedules, whether it be athletic, academic, in the athletic training room, with the equipment room or in the strength and conditioning room," Best praised. "There are so many things that every football team in every sport has been thrown challenges with this past year. Our team has done an amazing job to get to this point. So it's even harder this time than any time you tell your team you are proud of them at the end of a campaign."
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In a typical spring, Eastern would have wrapped up spring football practice in late April and jumped head-long into preparations for the fall season and an August opening to training camp. But Best said the program will pause for a bit of time because of the rigors and injuries a delayed season created so close to the fall season.
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"We need some time off physically and mentally," he said. "This has been such an abnormal season in a lot of different ways – in a lot of good ways but a lot of weird, odd and challenging ways too. We'll give them some time off from football because this is draining. And now we end it and turn around in three months and do it again."
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Eastern closed the regular season ninth in the STATS Perform NCAA Football Championship Subdivision top 25 poll, and EWU was also ranked ninth by the coaches. While the Eagles were making their 14th appearance overall in the FCS Playoffs, Best made his 11th as an EWU player or coach.
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The Eagles were led by Walter Payton Award finalist and the Big Sky Conference Offensive MVP
Eric Barriere, who finished with 2,579 yards of total offense and 19 passing touchdowns in seven games. He helped Eastern's offense rank in the top eight in the nation in scoring (37.7), total offense (522.7) and passing offense (366.7). Eastern's passing average was the third-best in school history and the average of 522.7 yards per game of total offense was fifth, just behind the 2019 average of 524.8 which led FCS.
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In EWU's last 17 seasons (2004-2020/21), EWU has ranked in the top 10 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).
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Consistency has been a cornerstone of EWU Football, and the Eagles have extended to 17 seasons a current run of winning the league title and/or advancing to the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs at least every other year. Eastern has achieved that feat ever since its last back-to-back-empty seasons in 2002 and 2003.
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"We kind of have to go back to the drawing board to determine what is best for us," added Best, who is now 31-14 overall in four seasons at the helm, including a 24-6 mark in Big Sky games. "We'll look and see what we have injury-wise and see how the next few calendar months go. It's far enough away, and these guys have earned the right to hug each other and be proud of each other for the run that they've had. They won five games in a row and then had the ability to get into the playoffs."
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More on the Eagles
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Eastern won five-straight games since a season-opening loss to Idaho, and Weber State won all five of its games to capture the regular season Big Sky Conference title and the league's automatic berth.
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In the final two weeks of its regular season, Eastern beat No. 11 UC Davis 32-22 on the road, then won its 17th-straight at Roos Field in Cheney, Wash., with a come-from-behind 38-31 victory over Idaho.
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The Eagles were led by Walter Payton Award finalist and the Big Sky Conference Offensive MVP
Eric Barriere, who finished with 2,579 yards of total offense and 19 passing touchdowns in seven games. Twice he directed game-tying and game-winning scoring drives in the fourth quarter for EWU, and he went over the 10,000-yard mark in his career for offense (current total of 10,098).
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In finishing 5-1 in the Big Sky Conference 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 88-22 in the league for a .800 winning percentage.
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Head coach
Aaron Best made his 11th appearance in the FCS Playoffs as either an EWU player or coach. As head coach, he has led EWU to finishes of 6-2, 7-1, 6-2 and now 5-1 in the league in his four seasons at the helm, a 24-6 record and .800 winning percentage that currently ranks sixth in the 58-year history of the league (third among coaches with at least four seasons). Overall, Best is currently 31-14 for a .689 winning percentage to rank 12th all-time in the league (ninth among coaches with at last four seasons at the helm).
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EWU Playoff Notes
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* Eastern made its 14th appearance in the playoffs in 2020-21, becoming just the 12th team in FCS to have 14 or more appearances and ranked 12th all-time. The other appearances for the Eagles came in 1985, 1992, 1997, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018. With a 6-5 record during an injury-ravaged season in 2011, Eastern fell a victory shy of making its first back-to-back-to-back appearances, but accomplished that feat in 2012-13-14. The Eagles were also 6-5 in 2015 and missed the postseason, and 7-4 in 2017 when they were also passed over. Eastern was 7-5 in 2019 and also did not receive a bid.
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• The 2020-21 season was
Aaron Best's second playoff appearance as head coach and 11th overall. He was a player in 1997, then coached in 2004, 2005, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018 and now 2020-21). He has now been a part of 27 playoff games (17-10), with 24 as a coach (15-9) and three as a player (2-1). He has been involved in 21 of those games at home (15-6), just four on the road (1-3) and was offensive coordinator and offensive line coach in 2010 when the Eagles won the NCAA Division I title with a 20-19 victory over Delaware on a neutral field in Frisco, Texas. He returned to Frisco as head coach in 2018, with the Eagles falling 38-24 to North Dakota State. As a head coach, he is 3-2 in the playoffs.
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• Eastern has 11 playoff berths in a 17-year span (2004-2020/21), ranking the Eagles as one of only five schools in FCS to accomplish that feat. New Hampshire (2004-05-06-07-08-09-10-11-12-13-14-15-16-17) made the playoffs for the 14th-straight time in 2017, but has not qualified for the last three tournaments. James Madison (2004-06-07-08-11-14-15-16-17-18-19-20/21) has 12 appearances since 2004, while Eastern, North Dakota State (2010-11-12-13-14-15-16-17-18-19-20/21) and Montana (2004-05-06-07-08-09-11-13-14-15-19) have 11 in that stretch.
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• The Eagles have a 19-13 record in their 14 playoff appearances, ranking 10th all-time for wins, 12th for percentage (.594, 19-13) and 12th for appearances. Eastern has a 15-6 record at home, 3-6 on the road and 1-1 in the championship game on a neutral field. Eastern has advanced to the semifinals in the FCS Playoffs six times (1997, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2018) and is 2-4 in those games. The Eagles have won their opener 10 times (1985, 1997, 2004, 2007, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018) and are 6-4 in the quarterfinals. The Eagles won the title in 2010 in its first appearance in the championship game. The Eagles have received first-round byes in 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2018 (the playoffs were expanded to 20 teams in 2010 and to 24 teams in 2013, and reduced to 16 in 2020-21 because of the Covid-19 pandemic).
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* Not including championship games in 2010 and 2018, Eastern had played 17-straight preliminary games in the playoffs at home at Roos Field in Cheney, Wash., from 2010-2018. Eastern won 13 of them, falling in the semifinals at "The Inferno" in 2016, 2013 and 2012, and the quarterfinals in 2014. The streak ended in 2020-21 when EWU was picked to play at North Dakota State in the opening round.
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* Prior to the NDSU game in the 2020-21 season, Eastern's last road game in the playoffs was Nov. 28, 2009, in Nacogdoches, Texas, in a 44-33 loss to Stephen F. Austin. Eastern's last playoff road win was on Nov. 24, 2007, when Eastern upset second-seeded and No. 3 ranked McNeese State 44-15. The other two road victories for the Eagles came in 2004 over top-seeded and No. 1 ranked Southern Illinois (35-31), and in 1985 in EWU's first-ever playoff game at fifth-ranked/seeded Idaho (42-38).
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A Look at EWU's 2020-21 Regular Season . . .
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On Feb. 27 in the 2020-21 season opener for both teams, Eastern was finally able to begin its 112th season in school history after a delay of five months because of the Covid-19 pandemic. The Eagles opened a 14-0 lead at Idaho, but the Vandals would take their only lead of the game with 54 seconds left and won 28-21. Eastern had 426 yards of total offense – including 339 by
Eric Barriere – while holding the Vandals to 366 yards.
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Two days prior to that game, Eastern confirmed that Best had tested positive for Covid-19 and would miss the season-opening game at Idaho. He followed proper isolation protocols via CDC guidelines and the Spokane Regional Health District, and came out of isolation on Saturday, March 6 to coach versus Northern Arizona.
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The Eagles beat Northern Arizona 45-13 on March 6 in the first game on the new red Astroturf surface installed at "The Inferno" last summer. The Eagles then won on the road at Idaho State 46-42, needing two fourth quarter touchdowns to pull out that victory. Eastern followed with a 62-10 romp past Cal Poly at home on March 27, then EWU won at 11th-ranked UC Davis 32-22, extending EWU's streak of seasons with at least two road wins to 27. At ISU, EWU extended its streak of at least one road win to 52 seasons.
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Eastern closed the regular season with a come-from-behind 38-31 victory over Idaho, giving EWU its 17th-straight victory at Roos Field. The win also improve Barriere to 13-0 at "The Inferno."
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Weber State finished as the Big Sky Conference champion at 5-0, followed by Eastern Washington at 5-1 and UC Davis and Northern Arizona at 3-2. Idaho and Idaho State were 2-4, while the bottom two teams in the standings were Southern Utah (1-5) and Cal Poly (0-3).
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Season Notes
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Barriere Among 16 Finalists for Payton Award to be Announced May 15
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After a productive 2020-21 six-game campaign, Eastern quarterback
Eric Barriere is among the 16 finalists for the Stats Perform FCS Walter Payton Award, which is presented to the national offensive player of the year in college football's NCAA Football Championship Subdivision.
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A 40-member national media panel will select the winner from the unprecedented 2020-21 season, which has spanned the fall and spring semesters. Voting was conducted prior to the postseason, with the top three finishers announced on April 28 and the recipient announced on May 15.
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The Payton Award, named for the legendary running back and in its 34th season, has served as a stepping-stone for such NFL players as Steve McNair, Tony Romo, Brian Westbrook, Jimmy Garoppolo and former Eagle Cooper Kupp. Kupp was EWU's latest recipient in 2015, with other former Eagles honored including Erik Meyer (2005) and Bo Levi Mitchell (2011). Also, the most recent recipient in 2019, former North Dakota State quarterback Trey Lance, is projected to be one of the early selections in the NFL Draft on April 29.
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Barriere, who led Eastern to a 5-2 record and the first round of the FCS Playoffs, finished fifth in the voting as a junior in the 2019 season. He has made his case for the award in the 2020-21 season 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. In the other game, he had 284 passing/324 total offense in barely over two quarters of action in a 62-10 romp.
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Through seven games, Barriere ranked in the top 10 in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in total offense (sixth, 368.4 per game), passing offense (seventh, 347.9), passing touchdowns (second, 19) and points responsible for (ninth, 17.4 per game). In the 2020-21 season, he completed 61.8 percent of his passes for 2,435 yards, 19 touchdowns and 2,579 total yards of offense.
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"He's been phenomenal," said Eastern head coach
Aaron Best. "His play-making ability, ability to escape rush and ability to extend plays has been second-to-none. And we've had a first-hand glimpse of some great ones here. But Eric's development has been thorough and consistent."
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In his illustrious 38-game career, Barriere is now 20-9 as a starter, including 13-0 at home. In the FCS Playoffs he went over the 10,000-yard mark for total offense in his career with a current total of 10,098 – including 8,735 through the air. He ranks fifth in school history in both categories, as well as his career total of 75 TD passes. He's now fourth with 93 total touchdowns responsible for. Eastern career records in those categories are 13,308, 12,616, 110 and 121.
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Barriere has completed 60.3 percent of his passes in his career (646-of-1071), good for 8,735 yards, 75 touchdowns and 21 interceptions, and has rushed 287 times for 1,363 net yards and 18 more TDs. He had a passing efficiency rating of 146.9 as a sophomore, 151.6 in 2019 and a 148.0 mark in his career to currently rank fifth in school history. Barriere has surpassed the school record for rushing yards by a quarterback -- he now has 1,363 with Vernon Adams Jr. closing his career with 1,232. Eastern is 19-1 when Barriere has rushed for at least 21 yards, with the lone loss coming at Sacramento State (10/5/19) when he finished with 103.
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"He was thrust into the role in the middle of 2018 and put the team on his shoulders, and really carried that team through a better part of that year," added Best. "He's only grown since then and is a very hungry individual. He studies his tail off and doesn't just rely on his talents. He's made reads and checked the ball down when necessary, he's tucked the ball and ran when necessary and he's gotten out of bounds when necessary. He's given our team the best chance to win play-in and play-out. I commend him 100 percent for his growth, including off the field. He's part of something special, not just on Saturdays."
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Stats Perform will also present the Buck Buchanan Award (FCS defensive player of the year), Jerry Rice Award (FCS freshman player of the year), Eddie Robinson Award (FCS coach of the year) and Doris Robinson Scholar-Athlete of the Year.
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Barriere is Big Sky Conference Offensive Player as 13 Eagles Are Honored
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All-America quarterback
Eric Barriere was selected as the Big Sky Conference Offensive Player of the Year after leading the Eastern Washington University football team to a 5-1 record and a berth in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs. The league's head coaches selected a total of 13 Eastern players to the All-Big Sky team announced on April 21 by the league office.
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Barriere, announced April 19 as a Walter Payton Award finalist, was the preseason league MVP and didn't disappoint during the six games played this winter/spring amidst the Covid-19 pandemic. Barriere was a unanimous first All-Big Sky selection, having earned third team honors each of the last two seasons. Senior wide receiver
Talolo Limu-Jones was also a unanimous choice as he was honored by the league for the first time.
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Also honored on the first team was senior offensive tackle
Tristen Taylor, who earned his fourth All-Big Sky award in his career. He was a second-team selection in 2019 and honorable mention in 2016 and 2017. He's started all 46 games he's played thus far in his EWU career.
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Senior running back
Tamarick Pierce was also on the first team, and was joined by a pair of defensive players – junior defensive end
Mitchell Johnson and junior safety
Anthany Smith. Johnson was a second-team All-Big Sky pick as a freshman in 2018.
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On the second team were sophomore wide receiver
Freddie Roberson, junior offensive lineman
Wyatt Musser, sophomore defensive back
Tre Weed and sophomore kicker
Seth Harrison. Senior running back
Dennis Merritt, sophomore defensive tackle
Joshua Jerome and inside linebacker
Ty Graham earned honorable mention. Harrison earned honorable mention All-Big Sky honors as a freshman in 2019.
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Now 20-9 as a starter with 38 games of experience, Barriere helped EWU to the 2018 NCAA Division I Championship game as a sophomore. He became the 11th different EWU player to combine for 13 honors in the last 20 seasons as the top offensive player in the league.
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In 2016, quarterback
Gage Gubrud and wide receiver Cooper Kupp became the first teammates to earn co-MVP honors. In 2015, Kupp became only the second wide receiver in 42 years to win the honor. Ten of EWU's MVP awards have been quarterbacks, including Gubrud, Vernon Adams (2014 & 2013), Bo Levi Mitchell (2011), Matt Nichols (2009 and 2007), Erik Meyer (2005 and 2004) Josh Blankenship (2002) and Harry Leons (1997), as well as running backs Jesse Chatman (2001) and Taiwan Jones (2010).
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With the selections of Taylor and Musser, a total of 62 Eastern offensive linemen have now earned All-Big Sky accolades in 34 seasons in the league (1987-20/21), including 28 who have earned first team honors. They have combined for 105 honors (34 first team, 25 second team, 3 third team, 42 honorable mention).
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A total of 112 first-team All-Big Sky Conference honors have been won by Eastern players since 1997 (through 2020/21). Since joining the Big Sky in 1987, Eastern has won a total of 512 All-Big Sky accolades (first, second, third, honorable mention).
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Talolo Limu-Jones ended the season fourth in FCS in receiving yards per game (108.4) and was is ninth in receptions per game (6.9, total of 48). He now has 42 games of experience (nine as a starter), and has 90 career catches for 1,600 yards and 15 touchdowns – an average of 17.8 per reception (currently sixth in school history). He has averaged a touchdown every 6.0 career catches,
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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. He caught four passes for 140 yards and a 66-yard touchdown reception versus Idaho on April 10 in EWU's come-from-behind 38-31 victory. On April 3 in a 32-22 win over 11th-ranked UC Davis on April 3, Limu-Jones had career highs with 154 yards receiving on 10 catches, including a key 77-yard TD in the third quarter which was his career long. He also scored on a 21-yard TD reception and was credited with a career-high two tackles.
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Tamarick Pierce 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. He made the first start of his Eastern career at Idaho on Feb. 27, 2021, and rushed for a team-high 63 yards on a 13 carries. He followed that with his first 100-yard rushing game with 105 and two scores versus Northern Arizona on March 6. He had a productive day in EWU's 32-22 win at 11th-ranked UC Davis on April 3, rushing for 84 yards on a career-most 23 attempts as the Eagles finished with 171 on the ground. He also had a career-high four receptions for 24 yards with a long of 17.
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Pierce now has a 5.98 career average per rush which currently ranks fifth in school history (teammate
Dennis Merritt is sixth at 5.92). 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. Although he was able to play in four games, he redshirted the 2019 season as he continued to rehabilitate a 2018 injury.
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Tristen Taylor and
Wyatt Musser helped Eastern rank third in total offense 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). In addition, the Eagles were 37th in rushing (158.0) and eighth in passing efficiency (151.1).
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While Taylor has started all 47 games he's played as an Eagle offensive tackle, Musser has 33 games of experience. He made the first start of his career at Idaho on Feb. 27, 2021, and started all seven games in the 2020-21 season at guard.
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Mitchell Johnson has been an opportunistic player as EWU's "Buck" defensive end, and for the season he had 26 tackles, two sacks, two interceptions, four quarterback hurries and a pass broken up. In EWU's 62-10 victory over Cal Poly on March 27, he had his first career touchdown on a 34-yard return just six minutes into the game to give EWU a 21-0 lead over the Mustangs. Two weeks later against Idaho on April 10, he had his fifth career interception with a leaping/twisting pick on fourth down against with 1:29 remaining to help seal the 38-31 victory. He also equaled his career high with nine tackles in that game and was credited with a half-sack. He now has 98 tackles, eight sacks, five interceptions, 11 quarterback hurries, four passes broken up, three fumble recoveries and a pair of forced fumbles in his 34-game career (17 as a starter).
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In EWU's last regular season game on April 10 versus Idaho,
Anthany Smith had 17 tackles -- equaling the 19th-most in school history – and finished with a team-leading 44 tackles in six games played (all as a starter). He made his starting debut versus the Vandals on Feb. 27, 2021, and had 10 tackles and a 71-yard interception return for a touchdown which was the 18th-longest in school history. Smith has 71 career tackles, three interceptions and three passes broken up in 24 games (six as a starter). Smith played in just three games in 2019 before being lost for the season with an injury.
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Freddie Roberson finished with 33 grabs for 470 yards and three touchdowns, and also had a 42-yard touchdown rush. Now with 18 games of experience (eight starts) in his career and with two 100-yard receiving performances, he had career highs of eight catches for 142 yards versus Idaho State on March 13. In the 2020-21 opener at Idaho on Feb. 27, Roberson had seven catches for 48 yards, and versus Northern Arizona on March 6 Roberson finished with 65 yards and a score on four catches.
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Seth Harrison kicked a 55-yard field goal to match the third-longest in school history in EWU's 62-10 win over Cal Poly on March 27. Later in the game he also kicked a 47-yarder which now equals the 33rd longest, and he also had a 50-yarder at Idaho State on March 20. He 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.
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For the season, he was 6-of-9 kicking field goals, 25-of-27 on extra points and averaged 59.9 per kickoff (two touchbacks). In his career he is 18-of-21 on field goals, 75-of-80 kicking extra points and has a 54.5 kickoff average (eight touchbacks). He made his only field goal attempt and all five of his extra points against Idaho on April 10 in swirling 25 mile-per-hour winds at Roos Field in Cheney.
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Tre Weed started all seven games for EWU at cornerback in the 2020-21 season, and had 22 tackles with a pair of passes broken up. He has now played 23 games as an Eagle (18 as a starter), and has career total of 68 tackles, two interceptions and nine passes broken up. He earned Freshman All-America accolades in 2018.
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A sixth-year senior,
Dennis Merritt 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 on April 10. He had 64 yards rushing in that game, second in his career behind the 67 he had earlier in the season versus Idaho State.
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He returned after suffering a serious lower leg injury versus Lindenwood on Sept. 7, 2019, and missing the remainder of the season. He opened the 2020-21 season at Idaho on Feb. 27 by catching a 27-yard touchdown pass early in the second quarter. He finished with three catches for 46 yards and another 41 yards rushing. He now has 846 career yards (5.92 average per rush to rank sixth in school history just behind teammate
Tamarick Pierce at 5.98) and eight touchdowns rushing, and another 18 catches for 270 yards and four scores in 37 games (two as a starter).
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Defensive tackle
Joshua Jerome had 41 tackles to rank third on the team, and had a team-leading three sacks and a pair of quarterback hurries. He made the first start of his career against Idaho on Feb. 27, 2021, and responded with eight tackles (three of them for loss), a sack and two quarterback hurries. He has played just 21 career games (seven as a starter), but already has 82 career tackles with 4 1/2 sacks, three quarterback hurries, a pass broken up, and a fumble recovery.
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Linebacker
Ty Graham was EWU's leading tackler through the regular season with 42 tackles, although he played just the first series versus Idaho on April 10 and was lost for the season with an injury. He had his EWU career high of nine tackles against Cal Poly on March 27. He also had a quarterback hurry in that game that led to a 34-yard interception return for a touchdown by
Mitchell Johnson.
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With his father, John Graham, on the EWU coaching staff as defensive coordinator for eight years, Graham grew up in Cheney, Wash., and eventually graduated from Cheney High School in 2016. He subsequently joined the University of Idaho program and played three seasons for the Vandals, but elected to transfer to EWU for the 2019 season. He had to redshirt that year, then, the 2020 season was delayed because of the Covid-19 pandemic. Thus, when he took the field to make his EWU debut – ironically against his former team – it was 833 full days since his last collegiate game. Ironically, that came on Nov. 17, 2018, in a 63-10 loss at Florida when he had six tackles and a forced fumble. Eastern was scheduled to open the 2020 season at Florida before that game was wiped out because of the pandemic.
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EWU All-Big Sky Conference Selections . . .
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Special Awards
Offensive Player of the Year - 3 -
Eric Barriere - 6-0 - 200 - Sr. - 3L* - Inglewood, Calif. / La Habra HS '16
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First Team
Quarterback - #3 - +^
Eric Barriere - 6-0 - 200 - Sr. - 3L* - Inglewood, Calif. / La Habra HS '16
Wide Receiver - #1 - +
Talolo Limu-Jones - 6-5 - 220 - Sr. - 3L* - Vallejo, Calif. / Grace Davis HS '16
Running Back - #24 -
Tamarick Pierce - 5-10 - 215 - Sr. - 3L* - Oakland, Calif. / Saint Mary's HS '16
Offensive Line - #65 - @
Tristen Taylor - 6-6 - 325 - Sr. - 3L* - Stockton, Calif. / Stagg HS '15
Defensive End - #5 - ~
Mitchell Johnson - 6-3 - 245 - Jr. - 2L* - West Linn, Ore. / West Linn HS '17
Defensive Back - #29 -
Anthany Smith - 5-11 - 190 - Jr. - 1L* - Everett, Wash. / Mariner HS '17
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Second Team
Wide Receiver - #11 -
Freddie Roberson - 6-3 - 185 - So. - 1L* - Seattle, Wash. / Rainier Beach HS '18
Offensive Line - #77 -
Wyatt Musser - 6-5 - 295 - Jr. - 2L* - Kennewick, Wash. / Kamiakin HS '17
Defensive Back - #7 -
Tre Weed - 6-0 - 190 - So. - 1L* - Sumner, Wash. / Sumner HS '18
Kicker - #83 - =
Seth Harrison - 5-10 - 180 - So. - 1L* - Coeur d'Alene, Idaho / Coeur d'Alene HS '18
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Honorable Mention
Running Back - #6 -
Dennis Merritt - 5-10 - 180 - Sr. - 2L* - Leavenworth, Wash. / Cascade HS '15
Defensive Tackle - #53 -
Joshua Jerome - 6-1 - 275 - So. - 1L* - Monroe, Wash. / Monroe HS '18
Inside Linebacker - #18 -
Ty Graham - 6-0 - 205 - Sr. - TR* - Cheney, Wash. / Cheney HS '16 & Univ. of Idaho
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+Unanimous All-Big Sky first team selection in 2020-21 season. @Second team in 2019 and honorable mention in 2017 and 2016. ~Second team in 2018. ^Third team in 2019 and 2018. =Honorable mention in 2019. *Has used redshirt season.
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Eagles Fall Short of Winning Second-Straight Total Offense Title
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Through seven games in the 2020-21 season, Eastern was third in FCS in total offense with an average of 522.7 yards per game. The Eagles had entered the postseason leading FCS in total offense and were looking to defend the title it won in 2019. However, the Eagles were held to 307 yards against eight-time NCAA Division I champion North Dakota State, coming up 208 yards short of the title (needed 515 overall in the game).
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Besides ranking third in total offense, Eastern was also fourth nationally in passing (366.7) and eighth in scoring offense (37.7). In addition, the Eagles were 37th in rushing (158.0) and eighth in passing efficiency (151.1). Eastern's passing average was the third-best in school history and the average of 522.7 yards per game of total offense was fifth, just behind the 2019 average of 524.8 which led FCS.
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In EWU's last 17 seasons (2004-2020/21), EWU has ranked in the top 10 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).
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Quarterback
Eric Barriere finished the 2020-21 season ranked in the top 10 in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in total offense (sixth, 368.4 per game), passing offense (seventh, 347.9), passing touchdowns (second, 19) and points responsible for (ninth, 17.4 per game). Wide receiver
Talolo Limu-Jones ended the season fourth in FCS in receiving yards per game (108.4) and was is ninth in receptions per game (6.9, total of 48).
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The Eagles were ranked 65th in total defense in the 2020-21 season, allowing an average of 382.2 yards per game and allowing 26.9 points per game to rank 56th. In third down conversion percentage, Eastern was 13th offensively (.462) and 57th defensively (.408), and on fourth down were 12th on offense (.700) and ninth on defense (.250).
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Eastern is 31-19 Since 2010 Versus Ranked Opponents
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After EWU's game versus North Dakota State on April 24, Eastern has now won 63 percent of its games (31-19) versus ranked teams since 2010. Eastern is 60-73 (.451) in 133 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.
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Eastern's game versus sixth-ranked NDSU in the FCS Playoffs was the 64th time and the most recent occasion Eastern has faced a team ranked in the top 10 in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (STATS). Eastern is 10-10 versus top 10 foes since 2010, including a 5-4 mark in the regular season and 5-6 in the playoffs Eastern is 19-45 in the 64 games all-time versus top 10 opponents. The Eagles are 9-35 all-time versus top 5 opponents (4-7 since 2010), including 2-8 versus No. 1 (0-2 since 2010).
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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.
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Eagles Have Played 63 Games in a Dome
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The game April 24, 2021, versus North Dakota State was Eastern's 63rd game inside a dome, where the temperatures are always at about 72 degrees and wind or humidity are not factors. After the 42-20 loss, Eastern is 32-31 all-time in domes, including 16-4 at Idaho State's Holt Arena, 4-10 at the Kibbie Dome, 10-7 at NAU's Walkup Skydome, 2-0 at North Dakota, 0-2 at North Dakota State, 0-1 at South Dakota, 0-6 at Northern Iowa and 0-1 at the Houston Astrodome.
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Playing in a dome is a far cry from what Eastern faced Sept. 14, 2019, in Jacksonville, Ala., where the game was delayed by 30 minutes to 3:35 p.m. because of lightning in the area. At kickoff it was 90 degrees with 67 percent humidity. That was the eighth-hottest game in recorded EWU history (since 1980), ranking behind the 106 at Arizona State (8/31/02 at 6 p.m.), 97 at Sacramento State (9/26/09 at 6 p.m.), 94 at Southwest Texas State (9/7/95 at 6 p.m. in San Marcos, Texas), 93 at Spokane's Albi Stadium versus Portland State (9/3/88 at 7 p.m.), 93 at Sacramento State (9/26/15 at 6 p.m.), 92 at Eastern Illinois (9/14/91 at 6:30 p.m.) and 91 at Nicholls State (9/2/04 at 6:30 p.m. at Thibodeaux, La.). On two other occasions the temperature has hit 90 degrees at kickoff.
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The temperature for the Nicholls State game in 2004 also came with considerable humidity, and a pre-game rain shower soaked Eastern's footballs prior to the 37-14 loss. Eastern also faced severe weather at Sam Houston State on Sept. 28, 2013, when a thunder, lightning and rain storm stopped the game for 78 minutes. With a temperature of 84 degrees and 81 percent humidity, Eastern fell 49-34. There was also a similar one-hour weather delay when Eastern played at Southwest Texas State in San Marcos, Texas, on a 94-degree day on Sept. 7, 1995. Eastern won that game 34-16.
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Eagles Have Won 80 Percent of Their Last 110 Big Sky Conference Games
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Eastern has had 23 winning seasons in the last 25 years (1996-2020), including a current school record string of 14-straight (2007-20) 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.
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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 88-22 for a .800 winning percentage.
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Head coach
Aaron Best has led EWU to league finishes of 6-2, 7-1, 6-2 and now 5-1 in the league in his four seasons at the helm, a 24-6 record and .800 winning percentage that currently ranks sixth in the 58-year history of the league (third among coaches with at least four seasons). Overall, Best is currently 31-14 for a .689 winning percentage to rank 12th all-time in the league (ninth among coaches with at last four seasons at the helm).
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Through the 2020-21 season, the Eagles have won 64 of their last 76 Big Sky Conference games (84.2 percent) since a 0-2 start in 2011. Included are stretches of 54 victories in the last 64 games (including two at the end of the 2012 season) and 32 of the last 38 (since 2016). Those are percentages of .844 and .842, respectively.
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Including three wins at the end of the 2009 season, Eastern has had a 74-15 record (.831) in league games since then. Including four non-conference victories (two versus MSU, and one each against Cal Poly and Northern Arizona), two playoff wins (Montana and UC Davis) and one loss (Idaho), the Eagles are 70-13 (.843) since the 0-2 start in 2011 and 60-10 (.857) since winning the last two games at the end of the 2012 campaign.
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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 56-year history of the league was Montana, which won 50 of 55 games from 1995-2002 and 46 of 51 from 2003-2009.
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What is perhaps most impressive is Eastern's ability to consistently win on the road versus conference foes, with records of 27-8 (77 percent) on the road, 32-3 at home (91 percent) and 59-11 overall (84 percent) in the last eight seasons since 2012. 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.
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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.
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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.
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Eagles Now 60-10 on the Red Turf with Record 17-Game Winning Streak
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Having won all five of its regular season home games in 2019 and all eight in 2018, Eastern has started the 2020-21 season 3-0 at home to give the Eagles a school-record 17-straight wins at Roos Field. Eastern is now 60-10 (85.7 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.
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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). Overall, the school record is 21 set from 1935-40. 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.
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Eastern has lost just six regular season games at "The Inferno" – 47-6 (88.7 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), as well as North Dakota State (2017).
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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 4-0 record versus rival Montana. The original red turf at Roos Field was replaced in summer of 2020 by a new AstroTurf surface.
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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 173-65 record (72.7 percent) in 238 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.
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Eagles Dominant During 17-Game Winning Streak at Home
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During Eastern's 16-game winning streak at Roos Field, the Eagles have had just three games decided by less than double figures and all but four decided by at least 21 points. In fact, Eastern has won by an average score of 52-23, more than doubling its opponents 877-393. The margin of victory in 13 of the 17 games has been at least 21 points, eight of them have been by at least 30, three by 40 or more and a pair have been won by at least 50 points (52 and 53, both versus Cal Poly).
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In EWU's last nine home games, EWU has won by an average score of 51-25 (462-229). 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 and 38-31 over Idaho on April 10, 2021, to end the 2020-21 regular season.
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Eagles Play Same Regular Season Foe for First Time Since 1969
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The rematch with Idaho on April 10 was the first time in 52 seasons EWU has played the same opponent twice in the regular season in the same year. The last time was in 1969 when Eastern was a member of the NAIA and the Evergreen Conference. Eastern played Central Washington, Western Washington and Whitworth twice that season, with the last rematch coming on 11/15/69 versus Central. Eastern has played three other opponents times twice in the same season, but all three times the second meeting came in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs. The first came in 1985 versus Idaho, then EWU played Montana twice in 2014 and UC Davis twice in 2018. Eastern won five of the games, losing only to Idaho in the regular season in 1985. In the 2020-21 season, EWU and UI split the series – Idaho won 28-21 on Feb. 27 in EWU's opener in Moscow, Idaho, then ended the regular season with a 38-31 victory over the Vandals in Cheney.
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Eagles Set Records With Monstrous Drive at UC Davis
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Eastern's 22-play, 94-yard touchdown drive that took 9:29 off the clock in the second quarter at UC Davis on April 3 set a pair of school records. The number of plays was the longest recorded drive in school history, ranking behind the previous mark of 19 set on 9/30/17 versus Sacramento State (92 yards, 7:29, ended with a made field goal). It was also the longest drive all-time at Eastern, breaking the previous mark of 9:06 on 9/26/98 at Cal State Northridge (17 plays, 78 yards, ended with a missed field goal). The drive at UC Davis was the 21st of seven minutes or longer, and there have now been a total of 35 drives of at least 94 yards. Eastern bumped that total to 36 one week later when it had a 95-yard TD drive in the second quarter versus Idaho (15 plays, 5:38). The record for longest drive is 99 set on seven occasions.
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Streak of At Least One Road Win Extended to 52 Seasons; Two Road Wins Now at 27 Seasons
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Against UC Davis, Eastern extended its streak of seasons with at least two road wins to 27 and is now 9-0 all-time versus the Aggies. 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 27-straight seasons with at least a pair. Eastern extended that from 25 to 26 against Cal Poly on Nov. 16, 2019.
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A 46-42 win at ISU earlier in the 2020-21 season extended EWU's current streak seasons with at least one road win to 52 and EWU won for the 12th-straight time over Idaho State. Â The year prior, EWU had also extended it with a win at ISU on Nov. 9, 2019. That streak now includes all 37 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.
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Eastern Now 58-0 Since 2010 When Winning the TO Battle
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In the last 13 seasons (2008-20), the Eagles are now 67-1 when they've won the turnover battle, 24-9 when they've been tied and 25-35 when they've lost (total of 116-45). 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.
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Thus, EWU is 58-0 since 2010 when they've won the turnover battle, 21-9 when they've been tied and 23-28 when they've lost. That's a collective record of 102-37 (73.4 percent), with 28 of those 37 losses (76 percent) coming in games EWU has lost the turnover battle and 57 percent of EWU's wins coming when they've won the turnover battle (77 percent when including ties).
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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.
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Total of 20 Players Have Made First Career Starts
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No Eagles made their starting debuts versus Idaho in EWU's final regular season game of the season on April 10, or in the playoffs versus North Dakota State on April 24. In the 2020-21 season, 20 players made the initial starts of their careers – 12 on defense and eight on offense.
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Sophomore
Ely Doyle, a transfer from Arizona State, started his first game as an Eagle at UC Davis on April 3 and finished with a team-high eight tackles. At the time, Doyle bumped himself to second on the team with 30 tackles, with all of those coming during EWU's four-game winning streak. He also has two passes broken up in the 2020-21 season, but missed the game versus Idaho on April 10.
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In addition, linebacker
Jack Sendelbach and safety
Calin Criner both made their season debuts against UC Davis after missing EWU's first four games of the spring season. Sendelbach and Criner are both senior co-captains for the Eagles, and started their 16th and 17th career games, respectively, at EWU. Sendelbach finished with six tackles and Criner had three versus the Aggies.
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Junior quarterback
Gunner Talkington made the first start of his career versus Cal Poly on March 27 and finished with career highs for completions (6), yards (132), touchdowns (2), rushing yards (14), long rush (14) and total offense (146). On Eastern's second play of the game, he found
Talolo Limu-Jones for a 71-yard gain and then followed with a 12-yard touchdown pass from Talkington to
Freddie Roberson to open the floodgates. The Eagles finished with 416 yards passing. Junior linebacker
Cale Lindsay also made his first career start versus the Mustangs and had a career-high eight tackles.
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Sophomore
Justin Patterson made the first start of his career at Idaho State on March 13, and had a pair of tackles in his debut. Â Four players made their first career starts in the Northern Arizona game, including three on the defensive side. Junior
Debore'ae McClain and redshirt freshman
Brock Harrison made their first starts, as did redshirt freshman nickel back
Marlon Jones Jr. The lone starting debut on offense was by sophomore
Brad Godwin at guard.
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In addition, true freshman kicker
Jackson Cleaver made his Eagle debut versus Northern Arizona and scored EWU's first points with a 28-yard field goal, then made all six of his extra point attempts after that.
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Six Eagles on both sides of the ball made their first starts of their careers at Idaho on Feb. 27, including true freshman offensive guard
Wyatt Hansen and true freshman wide receiver
Efton Chism III, who were playing their first games in college. The others on offense were guard
Wyatt Musser, tackle
Matt Shook, running back
Tamarick Pierce and wide receiver
Anthony Stell Jr. On defense, the first-time starters were end
Jusstis Warren, tackle
Joshua Jerome, tackle
Jacob Newsom, linebacker
Ty Graham, safety
Keshaun King and safety
Anthany Smith.
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Graham was playing his first game as an Eagle after playing previously at Idaho and redshirting in 2019, Warren is a sixth-year senior and played one game in 2019 after transferring from Washington. In all, a total of six true freshmen saw action and made their collegiate debuts at Idaho – several on special teams. The six true freshmen who played were Hansen, Chism, wide receiver
Nolan Ulm, linebacker
Conner O'Farrell, running back
Justice Jackson and defensive lineman
Ben Roe. In the NAU game, defensive backs
Kameron Lane and
DaJean Wells and defensive lineman
Matthew Brown all played as true freshmen.
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Eastern entered the 2020-21 season 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:
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Current Starts on Defense (149 starts by 21 players):
Calin Criner 19,
Tre Weed 18,
Jack Sendelbach 18,
Mitchell Johnson 17,
Darrien Sampson 10,
Kedrick Johnson 9,
Joshua Jerome 7,
Jacob Newsom 7,
Darreon Moore 7,
Ty Graham 6,
Brock Harrison 6,
Anthany Smith 6,
Keshaun King 4,
Marlon Jones Jr. 4,
Ira Branch 3,
Cale Lindsay 2,
Caleb Davis 2,
Ely Doyle 1,
Jusstis Warren 1,
Debore'ae McClain 1,
Justin Patterson 1.
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Current Starts on Offense (182 starts by 18 players):
Tristen Taylor 47,
Eric Barriere 29,
Andrew Boston 24,
Johnny Edwards IV 12,
Conner Crist 9,
Talolo Limu-Jones 9,
Freddie Roberson 8,
Dylan Ingram 7,
Wyatt Musser 7,
Matt Shook 7,
Tamarick Pierce 6,
Wyatt Hansen 5,
Anthony Stell Jr. 4,
Dennis Merritt 2,
Brad Godwin 2,
Efton Chism III 2,
Blake Gobel 1,
Gunner Talkington 1.
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Defense Has Impressive Performances
Offense pays the bills at Eastern, but the defense definitely cashed in with three impressive performances in the 2020-21 season. Although the Eagles fell to Idaho 28-21 on Feb. 27, the defense surrendered just 366 yards, including only 70 on the ground. In a 45-13 win the next week versus Northern Arizona, the defense surrendered just 338 – 128 rushing and 210 passing. In those two games, Eastern had a 344-yard advantage in total offense (1,048 to 704), and forced opponents to punt 13 times and settle for field goal attempts on four occasions.
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Eastern followed that by giving up 42 points and 512 total yards at Idaho State on March 13. The defense did allow just 93 yards rushing. Two weeks later in a 62-10 victory over Cal Poly, Eastern surrendered just 238 yards – 70 passing and 168 on the ground.
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The defense had a stellar first half against 11th-ranked UC Davis on April 3, and ended up allowing 397 total yards – 218 on the ground and just 179 passing. The Eagle defense was superb in the first half, allowing just 115 total yards and registering its first shutout in a half in the 2020-21 season – and first in its last 18 games. The last shutout in a half came in the FCS Playoffs in 2018 versus Maine (12/15/18) when EWU held the Black Bears scoreless in the first half in the 50-19 victory. Likewise, it was also the initial time the Aggies had been shut out in a half in the 2020-21 season. They had scored in 14 of 16 quarters entering the game versus EWU, and ended up punting on six of their first eight possessions, with another ending on an Eagle goal-line stand at the 1-yard line.
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Eastern surrendered 352 yards to Idaho on April 10, giving up 278 on 59 rushing attempts and 74 passing on 11 attempts. The Vandals, who didn't have the services of any of the three quarterbacks expected to come to Cheney, had two interceptions in the final quarter as EWU rallied for a 38-31 victory.
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Linebacker
Ty Graham was EWU's leading tackler through the regular season with 42 tackles, although he played just the first series versus Idaho on April 10 and was lost for the season with an injury. Safety
Anthany Smith had 17 tackles in that game – equaling the 19th-most in school history – and finished the seven-game schedule with a team-leading 44 tackles in six games played. Defensive tackle
Joshua Jerome has 41 tackles to rank third on the team, and had a team-leading three sacks. Safety
Ely Doyle, a transfer from Arizona State, had 36 tackles six games played, but had no tackles while playing sparingly in EWU's opener on Feb. 27. Safety
Keshaun King had 33 tackles in seven games, plus his first career interception against Idaho on April 10 that led to EWU's game-winning score. End
Mitchell Johnson finished with 26 tackles, two sacks and a pair of interception, including a leaping/twisting interception on fourth down against Idaho with 1:29 remaining to help seal the 38-31 victory on April 10.
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Additional Pre-Season Rankings Pegs Eastern No. 12 in Nation
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Eastern was ranked 12th nationally in the winter/spring preseason rankings released Feb. 9 by Athlon Sports, as well as the weekly poll of sportswriters and broadcasters released by Stats Perform on Feb. 22. Eastern fell to 22nd nationally in the Stats Perform poll released March 1, with Idaho jumping into the rankings at No. 19 and Weber State moving up to No. 2.
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In the poll released on March 8, Eastern moved up to No. 18 while Weber State remained second and UC Davis entered the rankings at No. 23 after beating Idaho 27-17. The Eagles beat Idaho State on March 13 and moved up one spot to 15th, while Weber State dropped one spot to third and UC Davis moved up to 21st after a close 18-13 victory for WSU over the Aggies. On March 22nd, Eastern was ranked 12th, Weber State was third and UC Davis was 15th, and on March 29th, Eastern was ninth, Weber State third and UC Davis 11th. Â In the April 5 poll, Eastern was ranked ninth for the third week in a row, Weber State was third and UC Davis fell to 13th.
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Eastern jumped up to No. 8 in the poll released April 12, but then fell back to No. 9 on April 19 after a bye week. North Dakota State fell from No. 2 to No. 6 in the final poll to end the regular season, while Weber State remained at No. 3 and UC Davis ranked 13th.
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Weber State was ranked No. 2 in the nation in the preseason Athlon poll behind North Dakota State, and Idaho was the other Big Sky Conference school in the rankings at No. 24. Weber State was picked No. 4 by Stats Perform in its initial poll of the season. UC Davis was listed "On the Cusp" in the Athlon rankings.
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The Athlon rankings came a day after Eastern was picked 14th in winter/spring rankings by Hero Sports, which also honored
Eric Barriere as the sole quarterback on its preseason All-America squad. Eastern earned five other top 25 preseason rankings last fall. The Eagles were picked 18th by Stats Perform, and Hero Sports and Street and Smith's also gave the Eagles that ranking. Eastern was No. 20 in the Athlon Sports Preseason Top 25 rankings and were ranked 23rd by College Football America.
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EWU 2020-21 EWU Preseason Rankings
(as of Feb. 8, 2021)
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FCS Top 25 Preseason Rankings
12th (winter/spring) - Athlon Sports (#1 NDSU, #2 Weber State, #24 Idaho)
14th (winter/spring) - Hero Sports (#1 NDSU, #3 Weber State)
18th (fall) – Stats Perform (#1 NDSU, #4 Weber State, #6 Montana State, #7 Montana, #12 Sacramento State)
18th (fall) - Hero Sports (#1 NDSU, #3 Weber State, #5 Montana State, #7 Montana, #12 Sacramento State)
18th (fall) - Street & Smith's (#1 NDSU, #5 Weber State, #8 Montana State, #9 Montana, #16 Sacramento State)
20th (fall) - Athlon Sports (#1 NDSU, #4 Sacramento State, #6 Weber State, #7 Montana State, #9 Montana)
23rd (fall) - College FB America (#1 NDSU, #6 Montana, #7 Montana State, #8 Weber State, #11 Sac State)
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Quarterback Eric Barriere Picked by Hero Sports as Lone QB on Its Preseason All-America squad
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Hero Sports honored quarterback
Eric Barriere as one of 29 players selected to its FCS All-America squad on Feb. 8 as selected by Sam Herder and Brian McLaughlin. The honor comes after a fall season in which he earned four other honors, including those picked by STATS Perform (third team), Hero Sports (second team), Phil Steele Publications (fourth team) and College Sports Journal (one of three quarterbacks on its 60-player preseason All-America squad). In addition, last July 24 the Big Sky Conference office announced Barriere as its choice as the preseason Offensive MVP of the league.
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Barriere hails from Inglewood, Calif., and is a 2016 graduate of La Habra HS. He is a communication studies major at EWU and has previously earned third team All-Big Sky honors as both a sophomore (2018) and junior (2019). 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.
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EWU 2020-21 EWU Preseason Honors
(as of Feb. 8, 2021)
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Senior Co-Captains
QB
Eric Barriere (2nd Year)
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Calin Criner (1st Year)
, LB
Ty Graham (1st Year), RB
Tamarick Pierce (1st Year)
, LB
Jack Sendelbach (2nd Year), OT
Tristen Taylor (1st Year)
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All-America
QB
Eric Barriere - 1st Team Hero Sports (winter/spring)
QB
Eric Barriere - 2nd Team Hero Sports (fall)
QB
Eric Barriere - 3rd Team STATS (fall)
QB
Eric Barriere - 4th Team Phil Steele Publications (fall)
QB
Eric Barriere - College Sports Journal (fall; one of three quarterbacks on 60-player team)
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All-Big Sky Conference
QB
Eric Barriere – Official Team Selected by League Office (also MVP on offense) & 1st Team Phil Steele Publications
OL
Tristen Taylor – Official Team Selected by League Office & 2nd Team Phil Steele Publications
WR
Andrew Boston – 3rd Team Phil Steele Publications
DL
Mitchell Johnson – 3rd Team Phil Steele Publications
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Seth Harrison – 3rd Team Phil Steele Publications
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68 Percent of EWU's Roster Are From Washington in 2020-21
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The Eagles currently have 94 players on its 2020-21 roster, and 64 of them – 68 percent – are from the state of Washington. Eastern's coaching staff is Washington-based as well, with eight of the team's 10 full-time coaches (80 percent) hailing from the Evergreen State. Head coach
Aaron Best is a 1996 graduate of Curtis High School in Tacoma, Wash.
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More About the Eagles in 2020-21
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A third team All-American as a junior,
Eric Barriere was one of four returning starters on an offensive squad which led the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in total offense in 2019. The Eagles also had six returning starters on defense, plus all three of their specialists.
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The Eagles opened the 2020-21 season with 43 returning letterwinners, as the fourth season under
Aaron Best got underway. The breakdown is 20 letterwinners back from the offense, 20 on defense, a kicker, a punter and a long snapper. Eastern lost eight returning players since the summer when the pandemic took its toll on the 2020 schedule, which was going to be Eastern's best home schedule in school history. The adjusted, abbreviated schedule will not count against the eligibility for all student-athletes.
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Eastern has 14 seniors on its squad, that coming after losing in excess of 20 in each of the past two seasons. Eastern had only 14 seniors in 2017 and 12 in 2016.
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Three of the returning players include All-Big Sky offensive tackle
Tristen Taylor, linebacker
Jack Sendelbach and running back
Dennis Merritt, who 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 in 2019. Conceivably, all four of those players could return in the fall of 2021 as well.
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Taylor had started 28-of-28 games as an Eagle until a season-ending knee injury kept him out of the lineup on Sept. 22, 2018, versus Cal Poly. He has now started all 47 games he has played in his career, and was a second team All-Big Sky selection in 2019 after earning honorable mention in both 2016 and 2017.
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Cheney native and Idaho transfer
Ty Graham redshirted in 2019 and is now playing in 2020-21, as well as previous letter winner
Tamarick Pierce (running back). Pierce retained his redshirt status in 2019 by playing in four games in 2019.
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More About the 2020-21 Winter/Spring Schedule
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The original winter/spring schedule was released on Nov. 4, and Sacramento State was the only team to announce then that the Hornets would skip the spring season and prepare for the fall 2021 campaign. But since Jan. 15, Montana, Montana State, Portland State and Northern Colorado announced they were playing a reduced schedule, leaving the league with eight teams to play the full six games.
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Essentially, league administrators came up with a schedule that replaced EWU's home game with the Grizzlies with the NAU contest, and EWU road games versus PSU and MSU with games at Idaho State and Idaho.
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Open dates in the schedule were set for March 20 and April 17 in case games need to be re-scheduled because of the Covid-19 pandemic. The 16-team NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs began April 24 and culminate with the championship game on May 16.
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The game with Cal Poly marked the return to EWU of new Mustang head coach Beau Baldwin, who spent 13 previous seasons as a coach at EWU. He was an assistant from 2003-06, and head coach from 2008-16.
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Eastern was 3-1 in the 2019 season versus opponents on this spring's schedule, including a league-opening 35-27 loss at Idaho on Sept. 21, 2019. Later, on consecutive weeks, Eastern defeated NAU (66-38), ISU (48-5) and Cal Poly (42-41). The Eagles haven't played UC Davis since a 34-29 victory in the quarterfinals of the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs in 2018, giving EWU a perfect 8-0 mark all-time against the Aggies entering the 2020-21 season.
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On Aug. 7 in response to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, the Big Sky Conference announced that all league schools – including Eastern – would move their 2020 schedule to winter/spring 2021. The NCAA had previously announced that the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs would not have its playoffs in the fall, and eventually announced their move to 2021.
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The 2020 schedule was going to be Eastern's best in school history, featuring home games versus Montana, Montana State, Idaho and two-time defending Big Sky Conference champion Weber State. The Eagles were scheduled to open Big Sky Conference play at Southern Utah on Sept. 26, followed by its conference home opener versus Montana on Oct. 3. The schedule also included non-conference home games versus Western Illinois and Northern Arizona, and a trip to play at Florida.
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League Schedules in 2021 Revert Back to 2020
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The best-ever home schedule is school history is back. Continuing the twists and turns created by the Covid-19 pandemic, the Big Sky Conference announced Feb. 17 that the league's league football schedule in the fall of 2021 will revert back to the 2020 schedules for all teams, meaning Eagle fans will be extremely happy.
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Eastern will now host Big Sky home games against the top three favorites of Eagle fans – Montana (Oct. 2), Idaho (Oct. 16) and Montana State (Nov. 6). The Eagles will also host reigning two-time league champion Weber State (Oct. 23) in a league counter.
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Hosting Idaho, Montana and Montana State in the same year will be the first time in EWU history that will have taken place. Eastern will play road contests at Southern Utah (Sept. 25), Northern Colorado (Oct. 9), UC Davis (Nov. 13) and Portland State (Nov. 20).
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Eastern originally announced the completion of its 2021 schedule back on Dec. 22, with the league games based previously on the announcement by the league in May 2019 of schedules from 2020 through 2023. But since then, Southern Utah announced it was leaving the conference, and that precipitated the change to revert back to the 2020 schedule for 2021. Schedules for 2022 and beyond will now be revised.
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Eastern's 2021 non-conference schedule will remain the same. The Eagles will host Central Washington on Sept. 11, 2021, at Roos Field in Cheney, Wash. Eastern will also play first-ever non-conference meetings on the road versus UNLV on Thursday, Sept. 2, and at Western Illinois on Sept. 18.
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The 2020-23 schedules announced in May 2019 after the addition of Idaho to the league had had all 13 Big Sky teams playing eight conference games with four at home and four on the road. Each team would have two "rivals" it will play each season, and EWU's would be Idaho and Portland State. Over the course of the four years, each Big Sky team was scheduled to play each other a minimum of two times.
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Montana, EWU's former rival prior to the return of Idaho, was in the rotation with the other 10 league schools. Thus, EWU was scheduled to host Montana just once in that four-year span (on Oct. 3, 2020), while going to UM on Oct. 8, 2022, and not playing the Griz in both 2021 and 2023. Under the previous schedules, EWU would have played Montana at Roos Field just once in a seven-year span from 2017 to 2023 – and that would have occurred in 2020. Eastern also was scheduled to host Montana State in 2020 and 2023 and play in Bozeman in 2021, but was not scheduled to play the Bobcats in the 2022 season.
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The 2021 schedule would have had Eastern's league schedule beginning on Sept. 25 versus Portland State, and would have also included home games against Southern Utah (Oct. 16), Sacramento State (Nov. 6) and Idaho State (Nov. 20). The four conference games on the road for EWU would have been at Montana State (Oct. 9), Cal Poly (Oct. 23), Idaho (Oct. 30) and Northern Arizona (Nov. 13).
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2021 Schedule
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Date - Opponent - Site - Series/Streak
Sept. 2 (Thursday) - at UNLV - Las Vegas, Nev. (Allegiant St.)Â - First Meeting
Sept. 11 - Central Washington - Cheney, Wash. - EWU 35-30-4/+2
Sept. 18 - at Western Illinois - Macomb, Ill. - First Meeting
Sept. 25
- at Southern Utah* - Cedar City, Utah - TBA - EWU 7-3/+1
Oct. 2 - Montana* - Cheney, Wash. - UM 28-17-1/-1
Oct. 9 - at Northern Colorado* - Greeley, Colo. - EWU 13-1/+12
Oct. 16 - Idaho* - Cheney, Wash. - UI 16-7/-1
Oct. 23 - Weber State* - Cheney, Wash. - EWU 19-16/-2
Oct. 30 - Bye
Nov. 6 - Montana State* - Cheney, Wash. - EWU 32-10/+7
Nov. 13 - at UC Davis* - Davis, Calif. - EWU 8-0/+8
Nov. 20 - at Portland State* - Hillsboro, Ore. - EWU 21-20-1/+4
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*Big Sky Conference Game.
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Player Notes
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Eagles Name Six Co-Captains for 2020-21 Season
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Six Eastern football players were selected by their teammates as co-captains for the 2020-21 season, including quarterback
Eric Barriere and linebacker
Jack Sendelbach who returned for their second seasons as captains. They were joined by fellow seniors
Tamarick Pierce (running back),
Calin Criner (safety),
Tristen Taylor (offensive tackle) and
Ty Graham (linebacker).
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Including Taylor and Graham, the six co-captains represented 211 total games worth of collegiate experience entering the 2020-21 season, including exactly 100 total starts. Sendelbach and Taylor are both sixth-year seniors who graduated from high school in 2015, while the other four were 2016 graduates and have all redshirted previously.
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The six players represent three different states, including Washington, Idaho and California. Sendelbach is a 2015 graduate of Bishop Blanchet High School in Seattle, Wash., and Graham is a 2016 graduate of Cheney (Wash.) HS. Criner graduated in 2016 from Rocky Mountain HS and is from Boise, Idaho, and the other three are from California. Pierce is from Oakland and graduated from Saint Mary's HS in 2016; Barriere hails from Inglewood and is a 2016 graduate of La Habra HS; and Taylor is from Stockton and graduated in 2015 from Stagg HS.
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Five Current Eagles Have Completed Coursework Toward Degrees
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Five Eastern players have already completed requirements toward their bachelor's degree. 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. Defensive lineman
Jusstis Warren, who like Sendelbach is a sixth-year senior, 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.
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Since 2001, Eastern has annually averaged more than 20 selections to the Big Sky All-Academic team. Eastern has had a league-most 423 selections from 2001-2019 (the school with the next-best total has 300), and Eastern has won a total of 622 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.
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Eric Barriere Goes Over 10,000 Yards of Total Offense
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Senior quarterback and Walter Payton Award finalist
Eric Barriere went over the 10,000-yard mark for total offense in his career in the FCS Playoffs at North Dakota State, giving him a current total of 10,098 – including 8,735 through the air. He ranks fifth in school history in both categories, as well as his career total of 75 TD passes. He's now fourth with 93 total touchdowns responsible for. Eastern career records in those categories are 13,308, 12,616, 110 and 121.
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Barriere now has 10 career performances with at least 400 yards of total offense, and 19 with 300+. He also has had 13 performances with at least 300 passing yards (five with at least 400). In his illustrious 38-game career, Barriere is now 20-9 as a starter, including 13-0 at home.
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Barriere has completed 60.3 percent of his passes in his career (646-of-1071), good for 8,735 yards, 75 touchdowns and 21 interceptions, and has rushed 287 times for 1,363 net yards and 18 more TDs. He had a passing efficiency rating of 146.9 as a sophomore, 151.6 in 2019 and a 148.0 mark in his career to currently rank fifth in school history. Barriere has surpassed the school record for rushing yards by a quarterback -- he now has 1,363 with Vernon Adams Jr. closing his career with 1,232. Eastern is 19-1 when Barriere has rushed for at least 21 yards, with the lone loss coming at Sacramento State (10/5/19) when he finished with 103.
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Through seven games, Barriere ranked in the top 10 in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in total offense (sixth, 368.4 per game), passing offense (seventh, 347.9), passing touchdowns (second, 19) and points responsible for (ninth, 17.4 per game). In the 2020-21 season, he completed 61.8 percent of his passes for 2,435 yards, 19 touchdowns and 2,579 total yards of offense. He passed for at least 300 yards in five of six regular season games and had at least 400 yards of total offense in three of them. In the other game, he had 284 passing/324 total offense in barely over two quarters of action in a 62-10 romp.
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Eric Barriere is the best player in America -- he is the most dynamic player at this level and we've known that for some time," said Eastern head coach
Aaron Best. "He played really, really well for a four or five game stretch. The final game against Idaho wasn't his best, but there were 40 mile-an-hour winds, and that plays no matter who is on the field. You can't just lean on one player to win games. We are all lucky that
Eric Barriere is part of our Eastern Washington football team for many reasons – not just because of his play on the field but also who he is as a person."
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Barriere closed the 2020-21 regular season by rallying the ninth-ranked Eagles to a 38-31 victory over Idaho on April 10 at Roos Field in Cheney, Wash., to keep alive EWU's postseason playoff hopes. Barriere passed for 309 yards and two touchdowns, and had another 40 on the ground to give him 349 yards of total offense in swirling, 25 mile-per-hour sustained winds. He directed Eastern to scoring drives of 63, 60, 95, 75, 87 and 78, with the latter two coming in the fourth quarter on game-tying and game-winning marches. Barriere was 5-of-10 for 50 yards and also rushed for another 33 yards on the final two drives, and finished 18-of-38 on the day with two touchdowns and no interceptions.
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Prior to that, three times the All-America quarterback was selected by the league office as the ROOT Sports Offensive Player of the Week in the 2020-21 season, giving his six such honors in his career. His latest award came after helping lead EWU to a 32-22 victory over 11th-ranked UC Davis on April 3 in Davis, Calif. Eastern out-gained the Aggies 563-397 in the game as Barriere passed for 392 yards and three touchdowns on his way to finishing with 435 yards of total offense. Barriere completed 30-of-41 passes, and also rushed six times for 43 yards. Barriere directed EWU to scoring drives of 68 and 84 yards on EWU's first two possessions, then another of 94 yards in the second quarter as EWU took a 16-0 lead. In the second half, he had a 77-yard TD pass to
Talolo Limu-Jones -- one of his two TD receptions of the game -- and then led EWU on a 91-yard drive in fourth quarter that gave EWU a 29-15 lead. The last scoring drive of 11 plays and 69 yards ended with a field goal late in the game as EWU took 5:37 off the clock.
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It's not often that a player wins a national player of the week honor, then comes off the bench in his next game, but that's what happened earlier in the 2020-21 season. A week after earning STATS Perform National Offensive Player of the Week honors, Barriere came off the bench on March 27 versus Cal Poly, which in turn gave backup
Gunner Talkington the starting nod and some meaningful – and productive -- snaps. After Talkington led EWU on a game-opening touchdown drive, Barriere took over after that and had 246 yards and three touchdowns in the first half alone. Eastern scored a school-record 45 points (as a member of FCS) in the first half of the 62-10 victory, and for the game Barriere was 23-of-33 for 284 yards and three touchdowns.
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A week earlier, Barriere helped rally the Eagles to a 46-42 Big Sky Conference victory over Idaho State on March 13 in Pocatello, Idaho. He has previously received national recognition as an All-American and received weekly honorable mention accolades, but it was his first national player of the week award from STATS. Barriere also earned the ROOT SPORTS Big Sky Conference Offensive Player of the Week Award on March 14.
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Barriere passed for 455 yards and five touchdowns versus ISU, rallying Eastern from a 42-31 deficit with 8:41 left. He completed 34-of-50 passes and had 19 yards rushing, giving him 474 yards of total offense. His passing yardage total was the second-best of his career and his total offense tally was third. Besides accounting for 30 points with his five TD passes, he had a key two-point conversion pass to bring Eastern to within a field goal of the Bengals. He passed for TDs on three of EWU's first four scoring drives of 80, 75, 70 and 62 yards. He then led EWU on a 10-play, 86-yard TD drive with 5:49 left to pull Eastern to within three after he passed for the two-point conversion. After an ISU punt, he directed EWU on a game-winning, nine-play, 60-yard drive that included a game-winning 6-yard touchdown pass to
Andrew Boston with 25 seconds to play.
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Barriere was honored by the Big Sky after he passed for 413 yards and three touchdowns in a 45-13 victory over Northern Arizona on March 6 at Roos Field in Cheney, Wash. Eastern piled up 622 yards of total offense in the 32-point victory.
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Barriere opened his senior season at Idaho on Feb. 27 by completing 32-of-57 passes for 330 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. Barriere extended his streak of passes without an interception to 250 when his pass went through an EWU receiver's hands and was picked off by the Vandals. His last interception came on his 14th attempt at Sacramento State on Oct. 5, 2019.
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He finished his junior season ranked second in total offense with an average of 355.8 yards per game (E.J. Perry of Brown was at 367.8). Barriere was third in passing (309.3, with Northern Arizona's Case Cookus at 342.8) and was sixth with 31 touchdown passes and fifth in points responsible for (20.2 per game with 31 TDs passing, eight rushing and a two-point conversion).
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He closed his junior season with 239 passes without an interception, setting the school's single season record for interceptions-to-attempts ratio. He had only four picks in 438 attempts, a miniscule average of .009 per attempt compared to the previous record of .010 set by Erik Meyer in 2005 (five interceptions in 410 attempts). His last interception came on his 14th attempt at Sacramento State on Oct. 5, 2019.
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Barriere finished with the seventh-most passing yards in school history with 3,712, and his 31 touchdown passes is eighth. Including 558 rushing yards, his 4,270 yards of total offense was third-most all-time at EWU.
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He ended the 2019 season with 260 yards and three touchdowns passing, and another 23 yards and a score on the ground in EWU's 53-46 win over Portland State on Nov. 23. He had pass completions of 46 and 50 yards, giving him 28 plays in his career of at least 40 yards. One game earlier, he had a career-best 164-yard rushing performance at Cal Poly, finishing with one TD rushing and one passing. He also had 176 yards through the air to give him his 340 yards of total offense.
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In Eastern's first two games in November, Barriere had a total of 935 yards of total offense to earn him two-straight ROOT Sports Offensive Player of the Week honors as announced by the Big Sky Conference office. He was honored twice in 2019 and once in 2018.
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His second honor in 2019 came after his 467-yard performance in a 48-5 win at Idaho State on Nov. 9, and he also received honorable mention as the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Offensive Player of the Week (STATS). Barriere passed for 406 and rushed for 61 versus the Bengals to finish with 467 yards total. He had three passes of at least 58 yards versus Idaho State (58, 59, 80), and the 80-yarder against ISU was the longest of his career.
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One week before the ISU game, he was rewarded for totaling 488 yards in EWU's 66-38 win over Northern Arizona on Nov. 2 by earning his player of the week honors from the Big Sky and also received honorable mention as the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Offensive Player of the Week (STATS) and Performer of the Week (College Football Performance Awards). He had 367 yards through the air and 101 on the ground for 468 yards of total offense versus the Lumberjacks. He had a trio of touchdown passes, and finished 30-of-46 with no interceptions for an impressive 183.5 passing efficiency rating. He had a 75-yard touchdown pass to
Talolo Limu-Jones on EWU's first offensive play of the game, and also caught a 20-yard pass from wide receiver
Johnny Edwards IV.
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In his previous home game on Oct. 12, he completed 28-of-43 passes for 445 yards and five touchdown passes for EWU in a 54-21 victory over Northern Colorado in which EWU led 40-0 at halftime. Coupled with his 41 yards rushing, his 486 yards were the second-most of his career.
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Barriere had 309 yards passing with two touchdowns and 103 rushing and a TD versus Sacramento State on Oct. 5. He accounted for 412 of EWU's 497 yards of total offense, including a 92-yard touchdown run after he was flushed out of the pocket by Sacramento State. That equaled the fourth-longest run in school history, ranking only behind runs of 96 by Taiwan Jones (2009 versus Idaho State), 95 by John Ditz (1954 versus Lewis & Clark) and 94 by
Sam McPherson (2018 versus Northern Arizona). It was the longest run by a quarterback, with the previous long set by Barriere versus Southern Utah in 2018 when he had an 85-yard TD run (he also had a 66-yard scoring run at Portland State in 2018). The Eagles had four runs of at least 81 yards in 2018.
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He accounted for all four of EWU's touchdowns with two rushing and two passing against Idaho on Sept. 21. He had just 74 passing yards at halftime, but finished 28-of-46 for 365 yards, with another 20 on the ground. His rushing TDs (2), pass attempts (46), and total plays of offense (57, including 11 rushing) were all career highs at the time, and his 424 yards of total offense was the second-most.
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He had perhaps his fastest start as an Eagle on Sept. 14 at Jacksonville State, completing 11-of-12 passes for 156 yards in the opening quarter to help EWU to a 28-7 lead. However, EWU failed to score in the fourth quarter and JSU won 49-45, as Barriere finished 24-of-43 for 294 yards, five touchdowns and two interceptions.
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One game earlier versus Lindenwood when EWU had a school-record 769 yards of offense, Barriere accounted for 556Â by himself to rank as the 14th-most in Big Sky Conference history and just four away from the school record. That helped him earn Big Sky Conference Offensive Player of the Week honors from College Sports Madness, as well as honorable mention from STATS for the National FCS Offensive Player of the Week award that wide receiver
Dre' Sonte Dorton won. Barriere completed 32-of-46 passes for 522 yards, five touchdowns and an impressive 200.76 passing efficiency rating. He recorded the second-most passing yards in school history and just missed the top 14 in the 56-year history of the league (528 yards is No. 14 on the list). He rushed for 34 more yards, giving him 556 to come four yards from the EWU total offense record of 560 set by
Gage Gubrud in 2017 versus Montana in which he also set the passing yards record of 549. Barriere's previous career highs were 352 passing yards and 405 yards of total offense.
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Barriere was extremely productive throwing the ball in 2018 as an injury replacement for All-American
Gage Gubrud, finishing 13th in FCS in passing efficiency (146.9), 29th for passing yards overall (2,450) and 13th in touchdown passes with 24 after setting school and FCS Playoff records with seven versus Maine on Dec. 15. He was ninth with 198 total points responsible for and was 26th in average per game (14.14). He also finished 45th in total offense per game (218.8). Barriere averaged 6.2 per carry and finished with 613 yards on the ground to break the school record of 606 set by Gubrud in 2016.
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In 2018, Eastern finished as the only school to rank in the top 20 in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision in total offense, rushing and passing. The Eagles averaged 528.2 yards on offense to rank third in FCS, including 255.9 rushing (10th) and 272.3 passing (20th). Eastern was also ranked fourth in scoring (43.1). The Eagles as a team finished the 2018 season with a school-record 6.62 average per rush on the season to break the previous record of 6.41 set in 2001. The Eagles set team records for rushing yards (3,839) and rushing touchdowns (41).
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Limu-Jones Becomes Top Receiver Target for Eagles
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The most dynamic receiver at the end of the 2019 season turned out to be
Talolo Limu-Jones, and he continued that in the 2020-21 season.
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He now has 42 games of experience (nine as a starter), and has 90 career catches for 1,600 yards and 15 touchdowns – an average of 17.8 per reception (currently sixth in school history). He has averaged a touchdown every 6.0 career catches, and was EWU's leading receiver in 2020-21 with 48 catches for 759 yards and four scores. His average of 108.4 yards receiving per game was fourth in FCS and he was ninth in receptions per game (6.9).
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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. He caught four passes for 140 yards and a 66-yard touchdown reception versus Idaho on April 10 in EWU's come-from-behind 38-31 victory. On April 3 in a 32-22 win over 11th-ranked UC Davis on April 3, Limu-Jones had career highs with 154 yards receiving on 10 catches, including a key 77-yard TD in the third quarter which was his career long. He also scored on a 21-yard TD reception and was credited with a career-high two tackles.
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One game earlier, he had seven receptions – all in the first half -- for 147 yards receiving in a 62-10 win over Cal Poly on March 27, 2021. He had a non-scoring 71-yard reception on the game's second play to help open the floodgates for EWU, which scored 45 points in the first half to set a school-record as a member of FCS. In the second quarter, he caught five passes for 76 yards with a long of 34, then played sparingly in the second half.
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Limu-Jones opened the season with what was a then a career-high nine catches for 93 yards versus Idaho on Feb. 27, 2021. He finished with 24 grabs for 577 yards in 2019, with his per-catch average ranking second in school history behind the record of 25.8). He was 63rd in FCS with seven touchdown catches and his average of 24.04 yards per catch closed the year second behind the 24.49 average of Isaiah Weston of Northern Iowa.
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After 833 Days Without Playing a Game, Ty Graham Finally Makes Eagle Debut
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He grew up around the Eastern football program, and a circuitous route – with some irony mixed in – had Eagle co-captain
Ty Graham playing his first game in an Eagle uniform against Idaho on Feb. 27, 2021. He responded with nine tackles in his EWU debut, and led the Eagles with 42 tackles through the regular season – including his EWU career high of nine against Cal Poly on March 27. He also had a quarterback hurry in that game that led to a 34-yard interception return for a touchdown by
Mitchell Johnson. He played just the first series in EWU's win over Idaho on April 10 in the rematch of a Feb. 27 loss against his former team, but was lost for the season with an injury.
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With his father, John Graham, on the EWU coaching staff as defensive coordinator for eight years, Graham eventually graduated from Cheney, Wash., High School in 2016. He subsequently joined the University of Idaho program and played three seasons for the Vandals, but elected to transfer to EWU for the 2019 season.
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He had to redshirt that year, then, the 2020 season was delayed because of the Covid-19 pandemic. Thus, when he took the field to make his EWU debut – ironically against his former team – it was 833 full days since his last collegiate game. Ironically, that came on Nov. 17, 2018, in a 63-10 loss at Florida when he had six tackles and a forced fumble. Eastern was scheduled to open the 2020 season at Florida before that game was wiped out because of the pandemic.
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While playing from 2016-18 for the Vandals, Graham had 133 tackles at Idaho, including 13 for losses. He had 2 1/2 sacks, an interception, two passes broken up and a forced fumble in 27 career games. As a junior in 2018 he had 65 tackles, including 12 in 38-14 loss at EWU at Roos Field on Oct. 27, 2018. He had 28 tackles as a sophomore and 40 as a true freshman in 2016.Â
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Now working toward his master's degree in business administration, Graham has already received his marketing degree from EWU with a minor in sports management. He had a 3.53 grade point average through spring quarter 2020 and previously won Big Sky All-Academic honors while a Vandal.
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John Graham spent a short time as Idaho's linebackers coach when Ty was on the roster there. Ty's older brother, Andrew, played football at Montana Tech and Central Washington. His grandfather, Dan Graham, spent 11 years as head coach at nearby Reardan (Wash.) High School.
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Harrison's Hits Third-Longest Field Goal in School History After Odd Twist to 2020-21 Campaign
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Sophomore
Seth Harrison put an exclamation point on his young career thus far by establishing some history in EWU's 62-10 win over Cal Poly on March 27. His 55-yard field goal late in the first half matched the third-best in school history and ranks only behind makes of 57 and 56 yards. It was the longest by an Eagle in more than 14 years, and helped EWU set a school record as a member of FCS for points in the first half with 45 (the previous record was 41).
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Later in the game he also kicked a 47-yarder which now equals the 33rd longest, and he also had a 50-yarder at Idaho State on March 20. He 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.
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He also made all eight of his extra point attempts and averaged 60.0 yards per kickoff versus Cal Poly with one touchback. For the season, he was 6-of-9 kicking field goals, 25-of-27 on extra points and averaged 59.9 per kickoff (two touchbacks). In his career he is 18-of-21 on field goals, 75-of-80 kicking extra points and has a 54.5 kickoff average (eight touchbacks). He made his only field goal attempts and all five of his extra points against Idaho on April 10 in swirling 25 mile-per-hour winds at Roos Field in Cheney.
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As a redshirt freshman in the 2019 season, he was the only player in FCS with an average of at least one field goal attempt per game to be perfect, going 12-of-12 in the 2019 season. However, his 2020-21 debut at Idaho on Feb. 27 had an odd twist. After his first career miss on a 50-yarder in the second quarter, he attempted a 24-yarder in the fourth quarter with the game tied at 21-all with 11:01 left. His kick was ruled as a miss, but was so high it appeared to hit the scoreboard as opposed to the upright. It was reviewed, however, there was no video proof at the time to overturn the play. The next day (Feb. 28), the Big Sky issued an apology for the error, saying in a social media post "After watching additional video footage, it is evident that the official incorrectly ruled it as a missed field goal. The Big Sky acknowledges and regrets this error in officiating."
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In 2019, Harrison was 31st in field goals with an average of 1.09 per game, including four field goals – the second time in four games he did that -- in a 48-5 victory over Idaho State on Nov. 9. He had makes of 40, 36, 21 and 36 in the first half, and his 40-yarder was a career long at the time. He also had 10 kickoffs for a 57.5 average with one touchback.
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Harrison was also 50-of-53 on extra points in 2019, having a string of 22-straight makes from Oct. 5 until missing his first attempt at Cal Poly on Nov. 16. He also averaged 52.9 yards on 78 kickoffs (six touchbacks). He received honorable mention All-Big Sky Conference honors and also earned Freshman All-America accolades.
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Harrison garnered Big Sky Conference Special Teams Player of the Week honors from the league after converting all nine of his extra point attempts and booting a 27-yard field goal in a 66-38 win over Northern Arizona on Nov. 2. He also had 10 kickoffs for a 50.8 average versus the Lumberjacks with one touchback.
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In EWU's previous home game, he kicked four field goals (32, 21, 21 and 23) and made all six of his extra points to finish with 18 points in Eastern's 54-21 romp over Northern Colorado on Oct. 12. All four of his field goals came in the first half as he came one kick away from the school record of five. He also had 10 kickoffs for a 52.9 average.
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Harrison had a field goal of 35 yards versus Montana on Oct. 26. In his first action as the No. 1 kicker on Sept. 14 versus Jacksonville State, Harrison made a 22-yard field goal, converted all six of his extra points, had eight kickoffs for a 58.1 average with two touchbacks and even recovered a fumble that led to an EWU touchdown.
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Harrison, a redshirt freshman from Coeur d'Alene (Idaho) High School, didn't even start out the year as EWU's kicker. That role fell to junior
Andre Slyter, who was 1-of-3 kicking field goals and later left the program. Harrison and Slyter were replacing EWU career and single season kick scoring leader
Roldan Alcobendas, who was a perfect 16-of-16 kicking field goals in 2018 to win the Fred Mitchell Award as the top placekicker in the nation (all levels but FBS).
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Thus, entering the 2020-21 spring season, Eastern kickers had made 29-of-31 field goal attempts since 2018.
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Senior Calin Criner Wears No. 4 Legacy Jersey for Eagles
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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.
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Since arriving at Eastern in the fall of 2016 from Rocky Mountain High School in Boise, Idaho, Criner has seven interceptions, 190 tackles, 11 passes broken up, two forced fumbles and a fumble recovery in his 41-game career (19 as a starter). He had four performances in his career with at least 10 tackles, and made his 2020-21 debut as a starter on April 3 and had three tackles, including a career-high 1 1/2 for losses.
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In 2019, Criner started all 12 Eastern games and was third on the team with 85 tackles on the season. He also had three passes broken up and four interceptions. His average of 7.1 tackles per game ranked 14th in the Big Sky and his average of 0.33 interceptions tied for second.
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Twice he received national accolades for his performances in individual games in 2019. He had his second two-interception game of his career and had eight tackles in EWU's 48-5 victory over Idaho State (11/9/19) to earn College Sports Madness Big Sky Conference Defensive Player of the Week honors. Playing in front of a crowd of 14 family and friends which included his well-known father and grandfather, he also broke-up a pass and one of his tackles was for a loss of two yards.
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Earlier in the season, Criner helped Eastern to a dominating 6-0 advantage in turnovers forced with another pair of interceptions and seven tackles in EWU's 35-20 victory over North Dakota (9/28/19). He was rewarded by earning honorable mention for STATS National Defensive Player of the Week honors.
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Criner is the son of long-time collegiate and professional coach Mark Criner. Calin's grandfather, Jim Criner, was head coach at Boise State from 1976-82 and guided the Broncos to the 1980 NCAA Championship Subdivision (then I-AA) title.
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In 2019, senior
Dylan Ledbetter wore the No. 4 jersey and went on to win honorable mention All-Big Sky Conference honors.
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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).
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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 - DBÂ - 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
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#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).
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%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).
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Boston Goes Over 100 Career Catches
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A freshman All-America selection in 2018,
Andrew Boston had 26 receptions in his junior season in 2020-21 after earning third team All-Big Sky honors in 2019. Including performances of eight receptions for 120 yards versus Northern Arizona on March 6 and another 10 for 143 yards and a pair of touchdowns versus ISU, he has 119 receptions for 1,652 yards and 12 touchdowns in 32 career games (24 as a starter) as an Eagle. He did not play in EWU's 2020-21 opener at Idaho on Feb. 27.
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He finished the 2019 season 79th in FCS in receptions per game (4.5 with a total of 50) and 75th in receiving yards per game (66.4 with a total of 730). He caught a career-high 10 passes for 147 yards and a pair of touchdowns against Idaho State on Nov. 9. Earlier in the season, he had six catches for 112 yards and a TD versus Washington in EWU's opener on Aug. 31.
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Boston finished his freshman season second on the team with 43 receptions for 531 yards (12.3 per catch) and four touchdowns. He had a career-high nine catches versus Idaho on Oct. 27, and had five grabs for a season-high 89 yards and a TD against Nicholls in the first round of the FCS Playoffs on Dec. 1. He scored a touchdown versus Maine in the semifinals, and had scores against Washington State and Cal Poly in back-to-back games early in the season.
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 He is from Puyallup, Wash., and is a 2017 graduate of Emerald Ridge High School. He was the 2017 co-Scout Team Offensive Player of the Year. He earned honorable mention freshman All-America honors from Hero Sports in 2018, and received third team accolades by from Phil Steele Publications. He earned third team All-Big Sky honors as a sophomore in 2019.
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Mitchell Johnson Adds First Career Interception for a TD to Go Along With 7 1/2 Career Sacks
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Junior "buck" defensive end
Mitchell Johnson has been an opportunistic player on the Eastern Washington defense in his career, and that certainly was the case in EWU's 62-10 victory over Cal Poly on March 27. He had had his first career touchdown on a 34-yard return just six minutes into the game to give EWU a 21-0 lead over the Mustangs. His return versus Cal Poly came thanks in part to a quarterback hurry by linebacker
Ty Graham. Johnson also broke-up a pass, had a quarterback hurry and had one tackle despite playing sparingly in the second half.
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Two weeks later against Idaho on April 10, he had his fifth career interception with a leaping/twisting pick on fourth down against with 1:29 remaining to help seal the 38-31 victory. He also equaled his career high with nine tackles in that game and was credited with a half-sack. He had 26 tackles, two sacks and a pair of interceptions in the 2020-21 season.
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He now has 98 tackles, eight sacks, five interceptions, four passes broken up, three fumble recoveries and a pair of forced fumbles in his 34-game career (17 as a starter). He had 1 1/2 sacks and eight total tackles versus Northern Arizona on March 6, 2021. In his sophomore season in 2019, he had 41 tackles with 1 1/2 sacks and an interception.
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In a big year for the defense at Eastern, redshirt freshman
Mitchell Johnson was awarded first team Freshman All-America honors in 2018 from Hero Sports and Phil Steele Publications, on his way to earning second team All-Big Sky honors.
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Mitchell burst on the scene in 2018 and responded with 31 tackles, a team-leading 4 1/2 sacks, a pair of interceptions, two passes broken up, a pair of quarterback hurries, a fumble recovery and a forced fumble. Johnson earned second-team All-Big Sky honors in his first season as an Eagle. He played in all 15 games as a backup in 2018, and had season highs of four tackles in three different games. He had four of his sacks in consecutive games versus Northern Arizona, Washington State and Cal Poly. Two of them came against the Cougars, and he also had a half-sack versus Maine on Dec. 15 to advance EWU to the NCAA Division I Championship Game on Jan. 5 in Frisco, Texas. Mitchell also had interceptions against Southern Utah in the regular season and UC Davis in the playoffs. His fumble recovery came against Weber State on Oct. 13 – Eastern's last setback until losing to North Dakota State in Frisco. He also had a sack and forced fumble against Cal Poly on Sept. 22 which was returned 62 yards for a touchdown by teammate
Jim Townsend.
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A 2017 graduate of West Linn (Ore.) High School, Johnson was EWU's Defensive Scout Team Player of the Year when he redshirted in 2017.
More on Eagle Offensive Players
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The four returning starters on offense in the 2020-21 season included quarterback
Eric Barriere, offensive tackle
Tristen Taylor and wide receivers
Johnny Edwards IV and
Andrew Boston. A total of 10 players returned on offense who have started games as Eagles.
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Eastern closed the 2019 season with the best offense in FCS, finishing at 524.8 yards per game. Eastern also ended the regular season second in scoring (40.6), fifth in passing (317.1) and eighth in turnover margin (+0.92 per game). The Eagles ranked 19th in rushing at 207.8 yards per game, and were the only team in FCS to rank in the top 24 in total offense, rushing and passing.
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Backing up Barriere in 2020-21 were junior
Gunner Talkington, sophomore
Simon Burkett and redshirt freshman
Trey Turner. Talkington was the only player of the three to throw a pass in 2019, completing 9-of-26 for 73 yards, a touchdown and two interceptions. He's completed 21-of-47 passes for 267 yards and four touchdowns in his career.
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Edwards returns for his senior season with 36 games of experience (12 as a starter), and has career totals of 52 receptions for 823 yards and seven touchdowns. As a junior, he was third on the team with 32 catches for 553 yards (17.3 per reception) and three scores, but did not play in the 2020-21 season.
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Also returning to the receiver position were sophomores
Freddie Roberson and
Anthony Stell Jr., a pair of former high school teammates who have both been productive in the 2020-21 season. Roberson finished with 33 grabs for 470 yards and three touchdowns, and Stell had 17 for 282 and three scores. Roberson also had a 42-yard touchdown rush in the 2020-21 season.
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Both were impressive as redshirt freshmen in 2019. Roberson closed the year with 14 catches for 220 yards and a score, and Stell had five grabs for 41 yards. In the 2020-21 opener at Idaho on Feb. 27, Roberson had a career-high seven catches for 48 yards, and Stell caught a career-high four for 70 with a touchdown. Stell topped that with five catches for 84 yards and a TD versus Northern Arizona on March 6, and Roberson finished with 65 yards and a score on four catches.
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All-Big Sky tight end
Jayce Gilder graduated, but three other tight ends from 2019 returned. Junior
Dylan Ingram now has 32 games of experience, and has caught six passes for 56 yards two scores in his career. Sophomore
Aiden Nellor is also back and has 18 games of experience (one career catch) as an Eagle, as well as redshirt freshman
Blake Gobel, who now has 11 games of experience (five career catches for 41 yards and three touchdowns).
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Gobel played in four games in 2019, making his debut on Oct. 26 versus Montana. He had his first career catch on a 15-yard touchdown on a fake field goal attempt, then started in EWU's 42-41 win over Cal Poly on Nov. 16. The Eagles started in a three tight end formation and turned it into a 25-yard rushing gain on EWU's first offensive play
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The running back position was void of one of the most productive backs in school history, but still returned senior
Tamarick Pierce, who received a redshirt in 2019
. Senior running back
Antoine Custer Jr. handled the majority of the carries in 2019 and finished 15th in FCS in rushing (102.3), 12th in total rushing yards (1,228) and 11th in rushing touchdowns (16). Custer finished the year with six 100-yard performances – including his last four games – and earned second team All-Big Sky honors.
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Pierce made the first start of his Eastern career at Idaho on Feb. 27, 2021, and rushed for a team-high 63 yards on a career-high 13 carries. He followed that with his first 100-yard rushing game with 105 and two scores versus Northern Arizona on March 6. He had a productive day in EWU's 32-22 win at 11th-ranked UC Davis on April 3, rushing for 84 yards on a career-most 23 attempts as the Eagles finished with 171 on the ground. He also had a career-high four receptions for 24 yards with a long of 17.
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He now has a 5.98 career average per rush which currently ranks fifth in school history (teammate
Dennis Merritt is sixth at 5.92). 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. He redshirted the 2019 season as he continued to rehabilitate a 2018 injury. A psychology major, Pierce has earned Big Sky All-Academic honors three times in his career thus far.
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After coming off an injury from the year before, Pierce made his 2019 debut versus Montana and had a team-leading 57 yards and a touchdown on just seven carries (long of 30). He finished with 177 yards in four games played, and retained his redshirt status.
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Sixth-year senior
Dennis Merritt returned after suffering a serious lower leg injury versus Lindenwood on Sept. 7, 2019, and missing the remainder of the season. He opened the 2020-21 season by catching a 27-yard touchdown pass early in the second quarter and finished with three catches for 46 yards (career high) and another 41 yards rushing. He now has 846 yards (5.92 average per rush to rank sixth in school history just behind teammate
Tamarick Pierce at 5.98) and eight touchdowns rushing in his career, and another 18 catches for 270 yards and four scores in 37 games (two as a starter). Merritt had 87 yards (7.2 per rush) in 2019 before he was injured.
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True freshman
Silas Perreiah and redshirt freshman
Micah Smith rounded out the running back corp in 2019, with both making their debuts as Eagles versus Lindenwood on Sept. 7. Perreiah has now played in 13 career games, and has 268 yards rushing with a touchdown and three catches for seven yards and another score. He had 126 yards rushing and a score versus North Dakota in 2019.
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Eastern received a boost at running back with the return of sophomore
Isaiah Lewis in 2020-21. 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, including 47 versus Southern Utah.
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The biggest priority for EWU in 2020-21 was replacing four starters on the offensive line, a situation which was helped considerably with the return of Taylor. He entered the 2020-21 season having started all 40 games he had played as an Eagle, but the four starters lost totaled 193 games played and 141 starts in their careers.
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Taylor has now started all 47 games he's played as an Eagle. He has earned All-Big Sky Conference honors three times previously at EWU. He was a second team choice in 2019 and received honorable mention in 2016 and 2017. He redshirted in 2015 and was lost to a knee injury after three games in 2018. He is now working on a second degree in psychology after having already earned a bachelor's degree in criminal justice.
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Senior starting center
Conner Crist now has 29 career games of experience and nine starts under his belt, including seven games and two starts in 2019. Junior starting guard
Wyatt Musser now has 33 games worth of experience in his career and made the first start of his career on Feb. 27, 2021, at Idaho. Junior tackle
Matt Shook also made the first start of his career against Idaho, and now has 17 games of experience after not playing in 2019 because of an injury.
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The team's fifth starter in the 2020-21 season is true freshman
Wyatt Hansen, and he started in his first collegiate game of his career on Feb. 27, 2021, at Idaho. Sophomore
Brad Godwin made his first career start at guard in the next game on March 6 against Northern Arizona and now has 16 games of experience.
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Eastern had 2,450 yards of offense in the last four games of the 2019 season (612.5 per game) to take over the national lead in total offense and maintain it. Eastern closed the year with 559 yards against Portland State on Nov. 23 and had 496 one game earlier at Cal Poly on Nov. 16. Prior to that, the Eagles had 706 versus Northern Arizona on Nov. 2 to rank fifth in school history, and 689 at Idaho State on Nov. 9 to rank seventh all-time. Eastern also had a school-record 769 in 2019 versus Lindenwood, and 637 against Northern Colorado on Oct. 12 to rank as the 19th most in EWU history.
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The four linemen honored on the All-Big Sky team in 2019 combined to start 171 games, with 194 total games of experience. Offensive tackle
Chris Schlichting (first team) started all 52 he played, and Taylor (second team) has started all 40 games he has played in his career. Center
Spencer Blackburn (first team) started the last 49 of his 51-game career, and
Kaleb Levao (third team) started 30 of the 51 he played. The fourth starter lost from 2019 was
Will Gram, who finished his career with 39 games worth of experience and 10 starts (all in 2019).
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Eastern had some impressive rushing performances in 2019, rushing for at least 174 yards eight times and at least 247 in six games (including the last four). The school's 5.29 average per rush ranked 13th in FCS. The Eagles had a season-high 320 versus Cal Poly on Nov. 16 as Barriere rushed for a career-high 164 and a score and Custer finished with 107 and four touchdowns on just nine carries.
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More on Eagle Defensive Players
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The six starters returning on defense featured a quartet in the secondary, plus the group was led by
Jack Sendelbach, who served as one of EWU's co-captains in the 2019 season and served again in 2020-21. The other starters back included safety
Calin Criner, rover
Kedrick Johnson, end
Mitchell Johnson and cornerbacks
Tre Weed and
Darreon Moore. A total of 10 players who had started previously returned, led by current totals of 19 starts of Criner and 18 by Sendelbach. Those 10 players entered the 2020-21 season with a combined 86 starts.
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Kedrick Johnson returned for his senior season, and has now played in 32 total games in his career (nine as a starter). He has 111 tackles, a pair of sacks and four passes broken up in his career after a 2019 campaign which saw him come on strong to finish with 50 tackles and a pair of PBUs. He played in just two games in the 2020-21 season and had 13 tackles, including eight in the last game of the season versus North Dakota State in the FCS Playoffs.
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Eastern's other two returning starters in the secondary were at cornerback where junior Moore and sophomore Weed returned. Weed has now played 23 games (18 as a starter) and has career total of 68 tackles, two interceptions and nine passes broken up. He earned Freshman All-America accolades after a season in which he had 44 tackles, two interceptions and seven passes broken up as an 11-game starter. Moore has played in 25 career games (seven as a starter), and has 40 tackles with three passes broken up and a sack. He made his 2020-21 season debut on April 3 versus UC Davis. Moore started seven games in 2019, and finished the season with 29 tackles and three passes broken up,
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Sophomore
Darrien Sampson started three games in 2019, with Sampson closing the year with 17 tackles and a pair of PBUs. Sampson has played in 21 career games now (10 starts) and has 32 tackles, two interceptions and four passes broken up.
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Other returning letterwinners in the secondary included senior
Tamir Hill, junior
Keshaun King, junior
Anthany Smith, and sophomore
Demetrius Crosby Jr. King and Smith both made their starting debuts as safeties in EWU's 2020-21 opener at Idaho on Feb. 27, 2021. Smith had a career-high 10 tackles and a 71-yard interception return for a touchdown which was the 18th-longest in school history. He had the first interception return for a touchdown for EWU since
Nzuzi Webster had a 48-yard return versus UC Davis on Nov. 10, 2018.
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King now has 40 tackles and an interception in his 21-game career (four as a starter), and Smith has 71 career tackles, three interceptions and three passes broken up in 24 games (six as a starter). Smith played in just three games in 2019 before being lost for the season with an injury.
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The secondary also includes Arizona State transfer
Ely Doyle, as well as redshirt freshman
Marlon Jones Jr. Doyle played in one game while at ASU, and had his first tackles of his EWU career against Northern Arizona on March 6 when he finished with seven.
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Doyle made the first start of his EWU career in EWU's 32-22 win at 11th-ranked UC Davis on April 3 and had a team-high eight tackles. Doyle finished fourth on the team with 36 tackles and also has two passes broken up. Jones had a career-high six tackles versus the Aggies, including a fourth-down stop on EWU's goal line stand in the first quarter and later his first career tackle for loss. He has 13 tackles on the season.
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Sendelbach headlines a linebacker corp that included four returning letterwinners (the fifth was
Chris Ojoh, who was taken off the roster in the middle of 2020-21 season). Sendelbach played his first game in 2020-21 as a starter in EWU's 32-22 win at 11th-ranked UC Davis on April 3, and now has 192 tackles in his 39-game career (18 as a starter), and has had 10 performances in double figures. He has earned Big Sky Conference All-Academic honors three times as an Eagle, and has already received his bachelor's degree in marketing. He is now in a graduate program for sports and recreation administration. Sendelbach was second on the team with 94 tackles with three sacks as an 11-game starter in 2019.
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Four other returning lettermen were back for a defensive line which routinely rotates 9-12 players a game. Junior
Caleb Davis has been productive in his first two years in the program with 47 tackles and a pair of sacks in 23 games, including 21 stops and one sack as a sophomore. But he did not play in the 2020-21 season.
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Sophomore
Joshua Jerome made the first start of his career against Idaho on Feb. 27, 2021, and responded with eight tackles (three of them for loss), a sack and two quarterback hurries. He has played just 21 career games (seven as a starter), but already has 82 career tackles with 4 1/2 sacks, a pass broken up and a fumble recovery.
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Junior
Debore'ae McClain had 11 tackles in 2019, and now has 33 in 34 career games with 1 1/2 sacks. He made the first start of his career against Northern Arizona on March 6 and had three tackles.
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Also back on the defensive line was
Jusstis Warren, who transferred to EWU in 2019 from the University of Washington. He made his first start as an Eagle on Feb. 27, 2021, versus Idaho, and finished with four tackles, but was unable to play the rest of the season. He played in EWU's opener against his alma mater in 2019, but missed the rest of the season. 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.
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Five redshirt freshmen are also on the roster –
Warren Hardin, Brock Harrison, Jacob Newsom, Soli Paleso'o and
Jacobe Lee. All but Lee played as true freshmen in 2019, with that quartet combining for eight games played. Paleso'o had two tackles in two games played, and Harrison also had a pair in four games worth of action. Newsom made the first start of his career on Feb. 21, 2021, at Idaho.
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More on Eagle Special Teams Players
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A year after having new players at each position, in the 2020-21 season Eastern has some semblance of experience with sophomore kicker
Seth Harrison, sophomore punter
Nick Kokich and sophomore long snapper
Cody Clements.
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As a true freshman, Kokich made his season debut four games into the season and held the punting position the rest of the year. He averaged 39.0 yards in 41 punts in 2019, with 10 downed inside the opponent 20-yard line and a long of 59 to equal the 38th longest in EWU history. In 61 career punts, he has averaged 39.1 per kick with a long of 59.
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Eastern's kickoff return team suffered a jolt in 2019 when senior Dre'Sonte Dorton was injured and lost for the year at mid-season. However, that provided opportunities for other players who could potentially step into future full-time return roles.
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Stell ended up returning four kickoffs for a 20.0 average, and
Marlon Jones Jr. had a pair for 62 yards and a long of 40 during limited action as a true freshman. Weed returned three for 50 yards, and
Talolo Limu-Jones ended the year with two for 44 yards in EWU's season finale. Earlier in the season,
Johnny Edwards IV returned three for 41 yards and Smith had a pair for 29.
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Eastern used several players as punt returners in 2019, including Criner, Weed and Sampson. Weed has the best return of the year with a 13-yarder to end the season versus Portland State.
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Recent Game Recap
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Ninth-Ranked Eagles Fall to No. 6/8 Bison 42-20
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Eastern opened early leads of 14-0 and 20-7 over North Dakota State, but the Bison scored 35 unanswered points for a 42-20 victory in a first-round game in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoffs on April 24, 2021, at the Fargodome in Fargo. N.D. Eastern scored touchdowns the first three times they had the ball, only to have the Bison get their running game untracked and eventually lead 21-20 at halftime. North Dakota State outscored EWU 21-0 in the second half as it finished with 422 yards rushing on the ground. Thanks to a fast start, Walter Payton Award finalist and Big Sky Conference Offensive MVP
Eric Barriere went over the 10,000 yard mark in total offense in his career in the first half versus the Bison after needing just 157 to hit that mark. An 18-yard scramble put him over the top as he completed 10 of his first 11 passes for 178 yards and another 27 rushing. He finished the game 17-of-28 for 246 yards passing, with another 32 on the ground. North Dakota State had the ball for 21:50 of the second half after EWU held it for 16:27 in the first half. Senior
Andrew Boston was EWU's leading receiver with five catches for 88 yards, and senior
Talolo Limu-Jones added four for 38 yards as his stretch of 100-yard receiving games ended at three. True freshman
Efton Chism III had three for 56. Defensively, linebacker
Jack Sendelbach had 13 tackles for EWU to hit double figures for the 10th time of his career. Senior rover
Kedrick Johnson added eight and sophomore safety
Ely Doyle had six. Eastern's defense recorded no sacks while the Bison had five, plus recorded the lone takeaway of the game with an interception. Eastern allowed North Dakota State to average just 2.3 yards on its first four rushes and 3.5 on its first nine. But the Bison finished the game with 422 on 57 rushes for an average of 7.4 per carry. North Dakota State finished with 472 yards overall and EWU had 307, including 246 through the air. Eastern scored on touchdown drives of 85 and 53 yards to open the game, with both capped by 3-yard touchdown runs by
Tamarick Pierce then Barriere. After a NDSU touchdown, Eastern scored on its third possession on a 12-play, 79-yard drive, capped by Barriere's 3-yard TD pass to Boston. It was during that drive that Barriere had his 18-yard run to put him over 10,000 yards of total offense in his career. The Bison scored again in the second quarter, then Eastern drove again on its fourth drive of the game. Barriere was flushed out of the pocket on a third-and-13 play, but somehow found Limu-Jones for a 26-yard gain. Another gain of 19 to
Jakobie James put EWU at the NDSU 23-yard line, but a sack helped result in a missed 53-yard field goal attempt. The Bison had a 42-yard on its first play after that, and turned it into a four-play, 64-yard drive to take a 21-20 lead. The Bison had 163 yards rushing at halftime, although EWU still led in total yards 243-212, with 178 through the air. Eastern got a fourth-down stop to open the third quarter, only to give it right back on an interception by Barriere. The Bison pounced, and drove 41 yards on three plays to take a 28-20 advantage with 9:29 left in the quarter. Eastern punted the next two times it had the ball, and the Bison put the game away with scoring drives of 86 and 72 yards.
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On NDSU Loss: "Unfortunately, the season ends for us in the round of 16. We will continue to learn and battle along the way, but it's been an amazing season. We tip our hat to North Dakota State at their home venue. Time of possession wasn't in our favor and we couldn't get off the field on defense in the second half after battling immensely in the first 30 minutes. We were down just 21-20 at halftime and just couldn't continue the momentum in the second half. Things didn't go our way. We played a good football team on the road in North Dakota State, and give great credit to a well-coached team. They dictated the tempo in the second half and did what they do best – and that's run the ball, move the sticks and stay on the field. They did what they intended to do and that was keep our No. 3 off the field. They did a great job of that in the second half."
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On Outcome of NDSU Game: "We couldn't get untracked in the second half. We jumped out to a 14-0 lead, but it's not how you start but how you finish. We just couldn't grasp that momentum again. Give credit to the team in green on offense – they kept the best player in America off the field in the second half, and we just couldn't get into a rhythm like we did in the first half."
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On Fast Start in First Half Changing After Halftime Versus NDSU: "We were clicking in the first half and found a few third downs to get new sets of chains. Coach (Ian) Shoemaker did a great job keeping them off-balance – run situations when they thought pass was coming, and pass when they thought a run was coming. We mixed in the screen game and we were efficient in the red zone. We just never got there in the second half. Their cornerback made a great play in a pass situation on our first possession of the second half after the defense got a stop. They quickly kind of grabbed hold of the momentum in the second half. From there it seemed like there were two or three 6-8 minute possessions for their offense."
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On Makeup of Team and Defense At NDSU: "The 64 players we traveled to this game did a fabulous job. There were probably 10-15 players who played in this game who probably wouldn't have probably played in a normal 2020 fall campaign due to various reasons. Our two-deep at the inside tackle position on offense were all freshmen and sophomores. We use what we have, do what we can and go as far as we can. We went against a team that liked to load it up and we knew it was going to be tough. We got them in some third-and-medium and third-and-long situations, but they kept us on our toes defensively. They did what they needed to do. They used their tandem of tailbacks effectively and it just wasn't our day. We prepared well and knew what was going to come. We played against a very good offensive line and didn't have our best day."
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On Being One of the Last Teams Announced During the Bracket Reveal: "There were 12 other teams who saw their logos before we did. We just happened to be hooked-up with the Bison in Fargo as the last two at-large teams on the bottom half of that quadrant of the bracket. It's exciting to get in. We were fortunate enough to do enough during the six-game schedule to get in."
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On This Year's Tournament Being Special in a Special Season: "It's been different with a capital D, and we've all just navigated it daily. We've all gone through it – testing weekly and having two-deeps changing almost daily because of Covid and injuries. Given the opportunity to play, I believe we relished the opportunity to be able to compete this spring. We did not want to scrimmage teams; we wanted to compete against teams and that's what we've done. That's what makes this 16-team bracket that much more special. There were only six at-large berths, and a lot of teams have gone over a lot of hurdles that are way outside of football. This 16-team bracket will be remembered for years to come. We have kept our eyes forward, and our players have been very resilient throughout the process. Our team did a remarkable job to go 5-1 and give our school an opportunity to be a part of this playoff bracket."
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On Memorable Season as EWU Entered Playoffs: "We talked about it in January, that this was going to be the most memorable season we'll ever play. We didn't know what those memories were going to be – a lot were induced by protocols and certain limitations we had. We have a pretty resilient and fun bunch, and they are very wise beyond their years. I wouldn't want to do it with any other group. Each team is different and has its nucleus. I think we are playing some pretty good football at a pretty good time. Everybody has gone through these protocols, and it's been really, really tough on administrations. From a head coach perspective it's been really, really tough too. But our guys have handled it well and haven't flinched in any shape or form. It's been all about playing ball. Dr. (David) May has given us the opportunity and it was substantiated by
Lynn Hickey to do this, as long as we follow protocols along the way. We've done that and with minimal Covid positives along the way. We want players who want to be here, and through thick and thin they've done a great job from the start to where we are now."
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On Idaho Win & Plays Down the Stretch by the Defense: "It was astounding. The average field position for Idaho was about the 35-40 yard line (officially the Idaho 41). No matter who is running an offense, it's going to be extremely difficult for your defense when it's out there every time at mid-field. We have to cover kicks better and the wind didn't heed us in the punt game. We did enough to win this game and that's what it's all about."
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On Win Over UC Davis: "Our defense did a magnificent job all day long, and then the offense got going when it needed to. We were out of sync at times, but it's not easy when you expect to score seven points every drive. It was a fun game to watch and be a part of, and great for our team to enjoy a victory over a really, really good ballclub. We knew this was their last regular season game, so we knew they would throw the kitchen sink at us and they did. We withstood all they could give us and we ended up on top by 10 points."
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On First Half at UC Davis: "We won the first half decisively on the scoreboard and in time of possession. The game was won up front. We held them to 21 plays in the first half alone, and that's not what UC Davis is all about. They are up-tempo and they usually get 40-45 plays a half. We got them out of their rhythm a little bit. A lot had to do with the offensive execution, but even better was our defense in getting them off the field and punting a few more times than normal. It was methodical at times in the first half, but methodical is okay when you are putting up zeros on defense for 30 minutes of football."
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On Win over Cal Poly: "Our guys came out and flat-out played relentless from the first snap of the game. We went down and scored on our first two possessions on offense, and scored a defensive touchdown too. When you can get up in a game early, it creates momentum – especially when the defense gets stops and the offense scores points. It was a total team win by all three phases. There were a lot of players who had a hand in the winning effort today."
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On Eric Barriere's Performance at ISU: "Eric is flat-out the best player in the country. In my estimation, the ISU game was his best game as an Eagle bar none. I know his stats were immense and he's played a lot of good football, but in that game he played calm, cool and collected. He ran the ball and extended plays when he needed to, and he kept his eyes downfield. Even though we are amazed by the feats he shows us in games, his response in so many situations in the ISU game was so very mature. It was so fun to watch. He was taking what they were giving him and made plays when he needed to make plays. He's the best player in America at our level, just watch the video."
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On Long Road Trip to Idaho State: "It takes a little bit of wind out of your sails when you take two days to get to a destination to play an early-evening/late-afternoon game on Saturday. But our team fought and fought hard. It was a very, very gutsy performance and far from perfect in a lot of ways. We just ended up making a couple of plays at the end when we needed to. It was a very good team victory, and I thought our special teams group stepped their game up quite a bit from the NAU game. We played more consistently in the main four special teams units, and it was good to have
Seth Harrison back to kick that 50-yard field goal. That was a boost in the arm. We just made more plays in the end."
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On Anthany Smith: "He's an emotional leader for us, and he absolutely knows where he needs to be. He's a physical and vocal leader for us – he plays on the backend so everybody hears him. He plays the game the way it's supposed be played – very fast, very fearless and very physical. That's what we want out of any defensive player, especially one who is playing center field like he does. There is no doubt he's been a force these last three games, and we lean on him to make plays."
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On Offensive Explosion Versus NAU After 426 Yards and 14 Points from Offense at Idaho: "We are thankful for what we have. We sometimes get so accustomed to offensive fireworks at Eastern and sometimes there aren't as many fireworks. Fourth of July happens only once a year, and fans expect that every Saturday – I do as well. But this is the second time two weeks in that our defense has allowed us to rely on some different things. We can play more team ball together, and we've done that for two weeks. We came up short against Idaho, but against NAU we put 45 points up on the board. But that doesn't come without a ton of hard work."
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