south dakota state football program, 11-20-2010
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South Dakota State vs. North Dakota Football Program, Nov. 20, 2010TRANSCRIPT
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Official Game Program For Jackrabbit Football
SOUTH DAKOTA STATEVS.
NORTH DAKOTA•
MILITARY APPRECIATION DAY•
NOV. 20, 20101 P.M.
•COUGHLIN-ALUMNI STADIUM
BROOKINGS, S.D.
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‘RING THE BELLS’Ring the bells for South DakotaThe Yellow and the Blue;Cheer the team from South DakotaWith loyal hearts so true;Win the game for South DakotaThe school that serves us well;We will fight for South DakotaSo let's ring, ring, ring those bells.
‘THE YELLOW ANDTHE BLUE’
Oh S-D-S-U hurrah for the Yellow andBlue;Old S-D-S-U all honor and glory to you;For ever raise the songin praise both loud and longWith loyal hearts so true (so true)Oh loyal hearts and true (and true, so true)
‘The BUM’“The BUM” is in its 69th year as the
official program for South Dakota StateUniversity home football and basketballgames. It is edited and published by theJackrabbit Sports Information Service,Jason Hove, director.
“The BUM” is printed by the SouthDakota State University Printing Lab.
“The BUM” is published for each homefootball game, with the cost of this publi-cation paid for with non-state funds.
STADIUM FACTSCoughlin-Alumni Stadium, named after
Jackrabbit Sports Hall of Famer CharlesCoughlin (SDSU, 1909) opened Sept. 22,1962. There have been 32 crowds of11,000 or more in the history of Coughlin-Alumni Stadium, 18 of them for HoboDay games. The attendance record is16,345 for the 2007 season finale againstNorth Dakota State game.
ON THE COVERCover photo of senior running back KyleMinett by Eric Landwehr, South DakotaState University Relations.
2010 Jackrabbit Football
WELCOME TO SOUTH DAKOTA STATE UNIVERSITYSouth Dakota State University Athletics is proud to recognize the brave
and women — both past and present — who have fought to defend ourfreedom and American ideals. Thank you for joining us today in recog-nizing these selfless individuals who make up our Armed Forces.
Earlier this month, President Barack Obama signed a proclamation designating November as Military Family Month.
Following are excerpts of the president’s proclamation:We owe each day of security and freedom that we enjoy to the members
of our Armed Forces and their families. Behind our brave service men andwomen, there are family members and loved ones who share in their sacrifice and provide unending support.
During Military Family Month, we celebrate the exceptional contribu-tions of our military families, and we reaffirm our commitments to theseselfless individuals who exemplify the highest principles of our Nation.
Across America, military families inspire us all with their courage,strength, and deep devotion to our country. They endure the challenges ofmultiple deployments and moves; spend holidays and life milestonesapart; juggle everyday tasks while a spouse, parent, son, or daughter is inharm’s way; and honor the service of their loved ones and the memory ofthose lost.
Just as we hold a sacred trust to the extraordinary Americans willing tolay down their lives to protect us all, we also have a national commitmentto support and engage our military families. They are proud to serve ourcountry; yet, they face unique challenges because of that service.
As America asks ever more of military families, they have a right to expect more of us — it is our national challenge and moral obligation touphold that promise. If we hold ourselves to the same high standard ofexcellence our military families live by every day, we will realize the vision of an America that supports and engages these heroes now and fordecades to come.
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2 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
Two teams that will uncharacteristically finish with losing recordsclose out their 2010 seasons today as South Dakota State hosts the University of North Dakota in non-conference football action.
UND enters today’s game with a 3-7 overall record, including an 0-4mark in the Great West Conference. The Jackrabbits, meanwhile, are 4-6overall. SDSU completed a 4-4 slate in Missouri Valley Football Confer-ence play with a 31-24 loss last week at North Dakota State.
Longtime rivals in the North Central Conference when both schoolscompeted at the NCAA Division II level, the Jackrabbits and UND havenot played each other since 2003.
Today’s game also marks the final home contest for 19 Jackrabbit seniors. During their four-year careers, SDSU has compiled a 26-19record, winning the Great West Football Conference title in 2007 andqualifying for the Division I Football Championship Subdivision playoffs for the first time in 2009. This group of seniors played theirfinal three seasons in the Missouri Valley Football Conference, posting acombined 17-7 record in league play.
HOME-FIELD ADVANTAGE: The South Dakota State Universityfootball team has enjoyed a home-field advantage at Coughlin-AlumniStadium since making the move to the Football Championship Subdivi-sion level.
Since joining the FCS ranks at the start of the 2004 season, theJackrabbits have posted a 28-8 mark at CAS, including a 10-2 record inMissouri Valley Football Conference games.
Lights were installed at CAS prior to the 2001 season and SDSU hasturned in a 21-6 record in home night games.
Overall, SDSU has compiled a 161-99 record in 49 seasons at Coughlin-Alumni Stadium.
OH, DOMINO: Senior linebacker Derek Domino has picked upwhere he left off a season ago, when he emerged as the team’s top tackler.
A native of Spring Lake Park, Minn., Domino has tallied a team-high93 tackles so far this season, including a career-high 16 stops Sept. 25 atNebraska. Domino had his string of five consecutive games with doubledigits for tackles, dating back to the 2009 season, end in the Oct. 9 gameagainst Western Illinois, when he notched seven stops. He turned in hisfifth double-digit tackling performance of the season last weekend atNorth Dakota State, notching 13 stops.
In 2009, Domino led the team with 100 tackles as he registered 12tackles in a game three times, including SDSU’s playoff game at Mon-tana.
In addition, Domino upped his career interception total to nine in thegame at Nebraska. Last season, Domino shared the team lead with fiveinterceptions, including one he returned for a 22-yard touchdown atMinnesota. He also picked off two passes Oct. 17 against North DakotaState, returning his first interception of the game 16 yards for a touch-down.
During the 2008 campaign, Domino returned an interception 82 yardsfor a touchdown in the Hobo Day game against McNeese State (La.).His three career interception returns for touchdowns are tied for the mostamong all active FCS players.
KOOL CATCHES ON: Sophomore Tyrel Kool has made a seamlesstransition to wide receiver as he has been a standout performer on offense for the Jackrabbits this season.
A converted running back, Kool caught a game-high nine passes for107 yards in a losing effort in the season opener at Delaware, including aleaping 44-yard reception in the fourth quarter. He became the firstJackrabbit receiver this season to total double figures in receptions, haul-ing in 10 for 113 yards with his first career touchdown Oct. 2 at North-ern Iowa. He turned in third 100-yard receiving game this season withsix catches for 132 yards, including a career-long 68-yard touchdown,last week at North Dakota State.
Kool continues to lead the team with 58 receptions and 703 receivingyards, heading into today’s game. His 58 receptions are the seventh mostin a single season by a Jackrabbit player, four behind Glen Fox’s sixth-place total 62 catches in 2009 and five behind current receivers coachJosh Davis’ 2003 total of 63 for fifth place.
A Yankton native, Kool ranked third on the team in rushing in 2009with 96 yards, averaging 5.6 yards per carry.
BRODIE BREAKS AWAY: Senior captain Cole Brodie has been atop performer both defensively and on special teams for the Jackrabbitsthis season.
A cornerback from Dacula, Ga., Brodie leads the team with four inter-ceptions, two of which he has returned for touchdowns. His first touch-down was an 87-yarder — the second longest in school history — withhis other return touchdown covering 55 yards late in the fourth quarteragainst Missouri State on Nov. 6.
Brodie was named Missouri Valley Football Conference SpecialTeams Player of the Week after tallying 136 return yards in an Oct. 9victory over nationally ranked Western Illinois. For the season, Brodie isaveraging 22.4 yards per kickoff return and 10.9 yards per punt return.
QUICK HITS: Peter Reifenrath is 7-of-9 on field goals this season,including 4-for-4 on attempts of 40 or more yards ... the 68-yard passfrom Thomas O’Brien to Kool last week at North Dakota State was thelongest pass play since a 79-yarder from Ryan Berry to JaRon Harrisagainst McNeese State (La.) in 2008 ... SDSU is 0-6 this season whentrailing at the half ... the Jackrabbits tied a season high with three sackslast week at North Dakota State ... SDSU has allowed only six sacks allseason ... the Jackrabbits have outscored the opposition 135-111 in thesecond half this season
TODAY’S GAME
Today’s OfficialGame Sponsors
AveraOrthopedic Institute
MIKE LIEN closes in on a Delaware ball carrier in the 2010season opener. In his first season as a starter, Lien ranks second on the team with 86 tackles. Last week at NorthDakota State, Lien registered 18 tackles — the most by aJackrabbit player this season.
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
STATISTICAL COMPARISON
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2010 NORTH DAKOTA SCHEDULE AND RESULTS
DATE UND OPP. OPPONENT ATT./TIMESept. 2 0 45 at Idaho 11,466Sept. 11 17 23 at Northern Illinois 18,046Sept. 18 55 14 NORTHEASTERN STATE (Okla.) 9,719Sept. 25 49 24 NORTHWESTERN STATE (La.) 7,966Oct. 2 17 27 *at South Dakota 9,596Oct. 9 21 31 *SOUTHERN UTAH 10,215Oct. 23 21 22 *at Cal Poly 10,220Oct. 30 31 6 LAMAR (Texas) 6,238Nov. 6 16 35 *UC DAVIS 6,633Nov. 13 17 27 at Montana 24,151Nov. 20 at South Dakota State 1 p.m.
*Denotes Great West Football Conference game
2010 Home Attendance.........40,771 2010 Away Attendance.....73,4792010 Home Average ................8,154 2010 Away Average..........14,696
SCORING BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 OT TOTNorth Dakota 45 75 86 38 – 244Opponents 61 63 65 65 – 254
RUSHING GP ATT GAIN LOSS NET YPC YPG TD LGJosh Murray 10 109 646 32 614 5.6 61.4 4 74Mitch Sutton 8 65 289 16 273 4.2 34.1 2 50Brent Goska 8 42 280 18 262 6.2 32.8 2 41
UND Totals 10 350 1,803 241 1,562 4.5 156.2 14 74Opponents 10 390 1,863 326 1,537 3.9 153.7 14 79
PASSING COMP-ATT-INT PCT. YDS TD EFF. RTG. LG YPGJake Landry 110-178-6 61.8 1,328 11 138.12 85 166.0Brent Goska 31-50-0 62.0 323 1 122.86 57 40.4UND Totals 154-270-8 57.0 1,801 13 123.03 85 180.1Opponents 196-327-11 59.9 2,403 19 134.11 68 240.3
RECEIVING NO. YDS AVG. TD LGGreg Hardin 39 712 18.3 9 85Josh Murray 27 201 7.4 1 19Ryan Dressler 20 202 10.1 0 43R.J. McGill 17 102 6.0 0 16Mitch Sutton 15 148 9.9 0 26Catlin Solum 14 93 6.6 0 11UND Totals 154 1,801 11.7 13 85Opponents 196 2,403 12.3 19 68
TACKLES Solo Asst Total TFL SacksDan Hendrickson 50 19 69 7.5-35 3.5-27Kris Ankenbauer 38 15 53 1.5-7 0-0Dominique Hawkins 42 5 47 1.5-3 0-0Ross Cochran 30 15 45 8.0-40 3.5-23Ryan Kasowski 29 15 44 6.5-19 3.0-14
KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds Avg. TD LGDominique Hawkins 17 490 28.8 0 99R.J. McGill 9 215 23.9 0 54
UND Totals 40 950 23.8 0 99Opponents 45 893 19.8 0 53
2010 SOUTH DAKOTA STATE SCHEDULE AND RESULTS
DATE SDSU OPP. OPPONENT ATT/TIMESept. 11 3 26 at Delaware 19,854Sept. 18 14 24 *ILLINOIS STATE [Cereal Bowl] 12,425Sept. 25 3 17 at Nebraska 85,572Oct. 2 14 24 *at Northern Iowa 14,686Oct. 9 33 29 *WESTERN ILLINOIS [Beef Bowl] 11,353Oct. 16 31 10 *at Southern Illinois 11,136Oct. 23 30 20 *YOUNGSTOWN STATE [Hobo Day] 14,697Oct. 30 30 41 *at Indiana State 5,347Nov. 6 31 10 *MISSOURI STATE [Hall of Fame] 7,724Nov. 13 24 31 *at North Dakota State 17,037Nov. 20 NORTH DAKOTA [Military Appreciation]1 p.m.
*Denotes Missouri Valley Football Conference game
2010 Home Attendance.........46,199 2010 Away Attendance...153,6332010 Home Average ..............11,550 2010 Away Average..........25,606
SCORING BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 OT TOTSDSU 13 65 52 83 – 213Opponents 56 65 51 60 – 232
RUSHING GP ATT GAIN LOSS NET YPC YPG TD LGKyle Minett 10 234 1,224 16 1,208 5.2 120.8 12 62Tyler Duffy 10 82 351 13 338 4.1 33.8 3 35SDSU Totals 10 341 1,585 163 1,422 4.2 142.2 15 62Opponents 10 440 2,127 198 1,929 4.4 192.9 13 65
PASSING COMP-ATT-INT PCT. YDS TD EFF. RTG. LG YPGThomas O’Brien 182-337-15 54.0 2,001 10 104.77 *68 200.1Kyle Minett 1-2-1 50.0 6 0 -24.80 6 1.5
SDSU Totals 183-339-16 54.0 2,007 10 104.01 *68 200.7Opponents 168-299-7 56.2 1,941 14 121.49 64 194.1
RECEIVING NO. YDS AVG. TD LGTyrel Kool 58 703 12.1 2 *68Kyle Minett 28 192 6.9 0 33Colin Cochart 27 284 10.5 4 30Aaron Rollin 24 292 12.2 2 41Brandon Hubert 23 287 12.5 1 53SDSU Totals 183 2,007 11.0 10 *68Opponents 168 1,941 11.6 14 64
TACKLES Solo Asst Total TFL SacksDerek Domino 35 58 93 3.5-10 0-0Mike Lien 33 53 86 4.0-16 0-0Corey Jeske 39 38 77 3.5-30 2.0-28Anthony Wise 25 46 71 0-0 0-0Dirk Kool 29 34 63 4.5-14 1.0-9Andy Mink 20 36 56 4.5-15 3.0-10Cole Brodie 27 27 54 3.5-7 0-0
KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds Avg. TD LGCole Brodie 16 359 22.4 0 41Dominique Clare 13 296 22.8 0 38SDSU Totals 42 962 22.9 0 47Opponents 33 498 15.1 0 37
*Denotes Touchdown
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
John Stiegelmeier has built the South Dakota State University football team into a consistent winner and aprogram on the rise in the ranks of the Division I Football Championship Subdivision.
Overall, Coach Stig has led the Jackrabbits to an 87-66 record (.569 winning percentage). Entering the 2010season, SDSU had posted eight consecutive winning seasons, including the school’s first six campaigns at theFCS (formerly Division I-AA) level. The Jackrabbits have had a winning record in 11 of Stiegelmeier’s 14 yearsas head coach, including six with seven or more wins.
The 2009 season proved to be a memorable one as Stiegelmeier led the Jackrabbits to their first FCS playoffappearance and the program’s first postseason appearance in 30 years. The Jackrabbits finished as runner-up inthe Missouri Valley Football Conference with a 7-1 record and finished the season 8-4 overall. Nationally rankedfor the entire season, including appearing in the top 10 for two weeks, the Jacks finished the 2009 campaignranked 11th in both the FCS Coaches' and Sports Network media polls.
In 2008, the Jackrabbits entered another new era in their Division I pursuits as they joined the nine-team Missouri Valley Football Conference. With the transition from Division II completed, SDSU fell just short of aplayoff berth in its first season of eligibility, ending the year with a 7-5 overall record and 6-2 mark in the MVFC.Of SDSU’s five losses, four came against ranked FCS opponents, including conference co-champions NorthernIowa and Southern Illinois. The team’s other loss was at the hands of Football Bowl Subdivision opponent IowaState in the season opener.
The Jackrabbits cracked the FCS national polls for the first time in late October 2006, after posting back-to-back come-from-behind victories over CalPoly and UC Davis. After climbing as high as No. 19 on the final week of the regular season, the Jackrabbits finished the 2006 season ranked 22nd by theSports Network.
SDSU began the 2007 season in a preseason national poll for the first time, checking in at No. 20 in the Sports Network poll. The Jackrabbits droppedout of the rankings after a season-opening loss and didn’t return to the top 25 until the final poll of the season with a 19th-place showing.
The Jackrabbits continued their ascension at the FCS level during the 2008 season, reaching the 12th spot in the Sports Network poll after openingleague play with home victories over No. 14 Youngstown State and No. 15 Western Illinois in back-to-back weeks. In all, SDSU was ranked seven weeks.
During the 2007 season, SDSU claimed its first conference title since 1963 by winning the Great West Football Conference championship. After starting 0-3 for the second consecutive season, SDSU reeled off seven wins in its final eight games, including a 29-24 victory over previously undefeatedNorth Dakota State the final week of the season, to claim the GWFC title with a 7-4 overall record and 4-0 mark in league play.
In leading SDSU to the GWFC title, Stiegelmeier was named conference coach of the year and was honored by the American Football Coaches Association as the Division I Football Championship Subdivision Region 5 Coach of the Year. In addition, he was named as one of five finalists in the FCSfor the 2007 Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award.
After posting back-to-back 6-5 seasons in 2004 and 2005, the Jackrabbits rose another notch in 2006 as they compiled a 7-4 overall record, finishing theseason ranked 21st in the final FCS poll conducted by The Sports Network and 22nd in the College Sporting News coaches’ poll. Following an 0-3 start,the Jackrabbits rebounded by winning seven consecutive games for the first time since 1963. Three of the victories came in the closing minutes against nationally ranked teams, setting up a showdown with North Dakota State on the final week of the season for both the Dakota Marker and Great West Football Conference title. Although SDSU fell short in the championship game, the Jackrabbits finished with their most victories since 2003 and their bestmark in the three-year history of the GWFC at 3-1.
Stiegelmeier, 53, is the 20th head coach for the Jackrabbits. His tenure of 14 years as head coach is the second-longest head coaching stint in school his-tory.
The Selby, S.D., native first became acquainted with the Jackrabbit football program as a student assistant under John Gregory during SDSU’s onlyother NCAA playoff season in 1979. With the Jackrabbits’ victory at McNeese State (La.) on Sept. 30, 2006, Stiegelmeier passed Gregory (55-50-3 from1972-81) for sole possession of second place on the SDSU career wins list.
After graduating from SDSU with degrees in mathematics and physicaleducation, Stiegelmeier enrolled in graduate school at the University ofNorthern Iowa, where he served on the coaching staff of a Panther squadwhich posted a 7-4 mark in 1981.
Stiegelmeier coached at Eau Claire (Wis.) North High School from 1981-84, then returned to his home state as defensive coordinator, secondarycoach and recruiting coordinator at Northern State University from 1984-87.Northern was 8-3 in his last season with the Wolves and finished fourth inthe nation in total defense.
Stiegelmeier returned to his alma mater in July 1988, joining WayneHaensel’s Jackrabbit coaching staff as secondary coach and recruiting coordinator. After Haensel stepped down following the 1990 season,Stiegelmeier was elevated to defensive coordinator by new head coach MikeDaly.
In six seasons as defensive coordinator, Stiegelmeier helped guide theJackrabbits to a 41-23 record, turning in a winning record in all six seasons,including five seven-win seasons. That track record of success helpedStiegelmeier secure his first head coaching position in December 1996,when he was named Daly’s successor.
HEAD COACH JOHN STIEGELMEIER
YEAR-BY-YEARYEAR OVERALL CONF1997 4-6 3-61998 6-5 5-41999 8-3 6-32000 6-5 4-52001 5-6 4-42002 6-4 4-42003 7-4 4-32004 6-5 2-32005 6-5 2-32006 7-4 3-12007 7-4 4-02008 7-5 6-22009 8-4 7-12010 4-6 4-4TOTALS 87-66 59-42
HIGHLIGHTS• 2007 Great West Football Conference Coach of the Year
• 2007 American FootballCoaches Association FCS Region 5 Coach of the Year
• Two-time Liberty Mutual Coachof the Year Finalist (2007, 2009)
• 1999 North Central ConferenceCoach of the Year
• Second on SDSU career wins listwith 87
The Stiegelmeier File
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
ASSISTANT COACHES
CLINT BROWNCo-Defensive Coordinator • Defensive Line Coach •Recruiting Coordinator
LUKE MEADOWSAssistant Head Coach • Offensive Coordinator •Offensive Line
Luke Meadows continues his long association with South Dakota State University football as he entershis ninth season as offensive line coach. The longest-tenured assistant on John Stiegelemeier’s coach-
ing staff, Meadows is in his fifth year with the role of assistant head coach and also holds the title of offensivecoordinator.
A Hot Springs native, Meadows began his coaching career as an undergraduate student at SDSU. Afterearning a bachelor’s degree in 1999, he continued on as a graduate assistant with the Jackrabbits during the1999 and 2000 seasons, coaching the running backs, including Jackrabbit career rushing leader and All-American Josh Ranek.
He then spent a season as offensive line coach at Wartburg College in Waverly, Iowa, before returning toSDSU in July 2002.
In 2005, Meadows coached an offensive line that helped pave the way for the leading rushing attack in theGreat West Football Conference, averaging 227.4 yards per game. During Meadows’ time on staff, the
Jackrabbits have posted four of the top 10 single-season rushing totals in school history and five of the top 10 single-game rushing performances. Inaddition, SDSU has recorded four of the top-10 scoring averages in the program’s history, including 35.6 points per game in 2008. The 2008 squadalso set an SDSU single-season record with 427 points in 12 games, scoring 40 or more points in a game six times.
With Meadows on the coaching staff, SDSU has established 11 team single-game and single-season offensive records, including rolling up 689yards of total offense in the 2005 Hobo Day victory over Missouri-Rolla. Jackrabbit players he has coached also have established 30 new individualschool records during his tenure.
Under his guidance, Meadows has coached offensive linemen who have combined for six first-team all-conference selections and second-team accolades 10 times, including 2009 honorees Ryan McKnight (first team) and Casey Knips (second team). Three of his former pupils — Mitch Erickson (Seattle Seahawks), Casey Bender (Cleveland Browns) and Casey Knips (Arizona Cardinals) — were in NFL training camps this summer.
As a unit, the Jackrabbit offensive line yielded only 12 sacks for the entire season en route to winning the 2007 Great West Football Conferencechampionship.
Meadows also played a key role in SDSU’s successful transition to the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision by serving as theprogram’s recruiting coordinator for much of his tenure.
Clint Brown enters his second season as an assistant coach with the South Dakota State University football program, filling the roles of co-defensive coordinator, defensive line coach and recruiting
coordinator.
In 2009 with the Jackrabbits, Brown helped direct a defense that played a prominent role in SDSU’s berthin the Football Championship Subdivison playoffs. SDSU ranked among the national leaders in scoring defense for much of the season, before finishing the year ranked 16th after allowing an average of 17.4 pointsper game. Four times the Jackrabbits held an opponent without an offensive touchdown.
Additionally, SDSU posted top-20 national rankings in three other defensive categories: pass efficiency defense (fourth, 99.55); rushing defense (104.33 yards per game) and total defense (17th, 289.5 yards pergame).
Brown also served as position coach for All-America defensive end Danny Batten, who was honored as Co-Missouri Valley Football Conference Defensive Player of the Year and was later selected in the sixth roundof the NFL Draft by the Buffalo Bills.
Brown has coached at the collegiate level for 16 years. Most recently, Brown served as the defensive coordinator, recruiting coordinator and assistant head coach at Wayne State College (Neb.) for four seasons. During his tenure at Wayne, the Wildcats improved from four wins the first season to a 9-3 record and NCAA Division II playoff berth in 2008. The 2007 squad led the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference in sacks andranked second in total defense.
A native of Arlington, Neb., Brown earned two varsity letters at Nebraska and was a member of the Cornhuskers’ 1994 national championshipteam. While completing his bachelor’s degrees in secondary education biology and history, Brown began his collegiate coaching career as a studentassistant for the Cornhuskers during the spring of 1995. He moved on later that year to coach the outside linebackers at Nebraska Wesleyan, thenspent the 1996 season as a graduate assistant at Nebraska-Omaha.
Brown spent two more seasons as a graduate assistant at New Mexico State, working with the Sam linebackers in 1997 and the secondary in 1998.While in Las Cruces he completed a master of arts degree in curriculum and instruction. After a four-year stint as defensive coordinator and assistanthead coach at Bethel College (Kan.), Brown returned to New Mexico State for the 2004 season, coaching the Aggies’ safeties and special teams. Healso served as the team’s academic coordinator.
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
ASSISTANT COACHES
JOSH DAVISWide Receivers
JAY BUBAKCo-Defensive Coordinator • Secondary
Jay Bubak (last name is pronounced BOO-bock), begins his sixth season on the Jackrabbit coaching staff as co-defensive coordinator and secondary coach at South Dakota State University.
During the 2009 season, Bubak helped mentor a defense that ranked among the national leaders in scoring defense for much of the year, before finishing the campaign ranked 16th after allowing an average of 17.4points per game — its best showing in six seasons at the Division I Football Championship Subdivision level.Four times the Jackrabbits held an opponent without an offensive touchdown.
Additionally, SDSU posted top-20 national rankings in three other categories: pass efficiency defense(fourth, 99.55); rushing defense (14th, 104.33 yards per game) and total defense (17th, 289.5 yards pergame).
During the Jackrabbits’ run to the Great West Football Conference title in 2007, SDSU led the league in scoring defense (22.2) despite playing four teams that ranked in the top 15 for scoring in FCS. The Jackrabbitsalso led the GWFC in turnover margin (plus-14), creating a league-best 31 takeaways. In addition, SDSU rankedsecond in pass defense (202.7 yards per game) and sacks (26). Five defensive players earned first-team all-GWFC recognition, with three others honored on the second team.
Both of SDSU’s starting cornerbacks, Brock Gentile and Tyler Koch, were honored on the all-GWFC First Team after combining for 10 interceptions.Koch also was named to All-America squads by The Associated Press and Sports Network after tallying a league-best seven interceptions, three of whichhe returned for scores.
SDSU also played for the Great West title in 2006 as the Jackrabbit defense allowed only 21.4 points per game.
A 1993 graduate of Nebraska Wesleyan University in Lincoln, Neb., Bubak previously spent six seasons at Missouri Western State College in St.Joseph, Mo. After joining the Griffons’ coaching staff as secondary coach in 1999, Bubak was promoted to defensive coordinator in 2000, a position hefilled for five seasons.
While at Missouri Western, he helped lead the Griffons to a share of their first-ever Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association title in footballduring the 2003 season, finishing the season 9-3 overall and 7-2 in league play. The 2003 squad led the league with 30 turnovers forced and 33 sacks,paced by All-America free safety Pierre Thomas, who led all divisions of the NCAA with 14 interceptions and 362 interception return yards.
As a player, Bubak was a four-year letterman and team defensive most valuable player at safety for Nebraska Wesleyan University, in Lincoln, Neb,from 1989-92. He received all-conference and CoSIDA Academic All-America recognition, while also serving as team captain. NWU won two leaguechampionships and made a pair of NAIA playoff appearances.
Bubak began his coaching career in 1993 at Nebraska Wesleyan as an assistant in charge of the secondary. After a two-year stint as the defensive backfield and quarterbacks coach at Chase County High School in his native Imperial, Neb., he moved on to the University of South Dakota, where heserved two years as a graduate assistant working with the linebackers and one year as a full-time assistant coach, working with the defensive backs andspecial teams. Two players he tutored, Matt Chatham and Josh Stamer, went on to play in the NFL.
Josh Davis will face the challenge of molding a young group of wide receivers as he begins his second fullseason as a member of the South Dakota State University football coaching staff.
During the Jackrabbits’ 2009 playoff-qualifying season, Davis mentored a veteran group of receivers led bytwo-time second-team all-Missouri Valley Football Conference selection Glen Fox. The senior trio of Fox,Mike Steffen and Saunders Montague combined to account for 142 receptions, 1,875 yards and 10 touchdowns.
A native of Omaha, Neb., Davis previously served as a graduate assistant on John Stiegelmeier’s coachingstaff during the 2007 season and also served as a student intern in 2006 while completing his bachelor’s degree in health, physical education and recreation. He further gained coaching experience at the collegiatelevel by mentoring the wide receivers at Council Bluffs-based Iowa Western Community College in the springof 2009.
A record-setting wide receiver at SDSU from 2002-05, Davis still holds the Jackrabbit career mark of 225 receptions, while his 3,192 receiving yards rank second on the all-time SDSU charts. In addition, Davis holdsthe SDSU single-game record with 16 receptions, a feat he accomplished against Western Washington in 2002.He recorded at least 40 receptions in all four seasons and led the team in catches three times, including 70 in
2002, a figure which ranks in a tie for second place on the Jackrabbit single-season charts.
Davis was a first-team all-North Central Conference selection in 2003 and was a second-team all-Great West Football Conference honoree in 2005, theJackrabbits’ second season competing in the Division I Football Championship Subdivision.
In addition to his coaching duties, Davis helps coordinate the team’s travel and camps.
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
ASSISTANT COACHES
SHAWN MENNENGALinebackers
ERIC EIDSNESSQuarterbacks • Passing Game Coordinator
Eric Eidsness rejoins the Jackrabbit coaching staff as quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinatorafter serving as head coach at Southwest Minnesota State for the past six seasons.
In addition to his coaching responsibilities, Eidsness also serves as the program’s pro liasion.
Prior to taking over the SMSU program, Eidsness served as an assistant at SDSU under John Stiegelmeier ontwo separate occasions. He began his association with the Jackrabbits as a graduate assistant during the 1996and 1997 seasons, working with the team’s receivers. After a year as offensive coordinator at Ferris State(Mich.), Eidsness returned to SDSU in 1999 as offensive coordinator, while also coaching the team’s quarter-backs and running backs.
In five seasons directing the offense at SDSU, the Jackrabbits averaged 27.6 points per game while competingat the Division II level. During his tenure, the Jackrabbits set numerous school records both rushing the ball withAll-America running back Josh Ranek and throwing the ball with quarterback Dan Fjeldheim.
Eidsness left SDSU after the 2003 season to become head coach at Southwest Minnesota State. He compileda 26-40 career record during his tenure on the Mustang sideline, which included a 6-5 season in 2008 — onlythe eighth winning season in school history. His 26 victories as head coach rank second in program history.
While at the helm of the Mustang program, Eidsness coached 61 all-conference players, including 10 who earned all-region honors. SMSU increasedits scoring average each of his last four seasons, from 20.1 points per game in 2006 to 36.0 points in 2009, tying a school record with eight games of 30-plus points. The 2009 squad also averaged 396.2 yards of total offense per game.
A Sioux Falls native, Eidsness attended St. Cloud State University for two years before transferring to the University of Sioux Falls, where he gradu-ated in 1992. He spent two years playing in Europe, where he also began his coaching career with the Robinson Sphinx in Paris, France. Upon returningto the United States, Eidsness served as quarterbacks and receivers coach at Morningside during the 1994 and 1995 seasons before enrolling in graduateschool at SDSU.
A second-generation coach, Eidsness followed is the footsteps of his father, Lyle, who coached at the high school and collegiate levels throughout theUpper Midwest for more than 30 years. Lyle served on his son’s coaching staff at Southwest Minnesota State for four years (2004-07) as special teamsand running backs coach.
Shawn Mennenga prepares for his second season as linebackers coach for the South Dakota State University football team.
During SDSU’s run to its first-ever playoff appearance at the Division I level in 2009, Mennenga mentoredone of the top-performing and deepest linebacking corps in the Football Championship Subdivision. JuniorDerek Domino was honored as a first-team all-Missouri Valley Football Conference selection, while seniorsChris Johnson and Jimmy Rogers received honorable mention accolades. All three ranked among the team’stop six tacklers, combining for 241 tackles and 17 tackles for loss.
The linebackers played a prominent role on a defensive unit that ranked among the national leaders in scor-ing defense for much of the year, before finishing the campaign ranked 16th after allowing an average of 17.4points per game — its best showing in six seasons at the Division I Football Championship Subdivision level.Four times the Jackrabbits held an opponent without an offensive touchdown.
Additionally, SDSU posted top-20 national rankings in three other defensive categories: pass efficiency defense (fourth, 99.55); rushing defense (104.33 yards per game) and total defense (17th, 289.5 yards pergame).
Before joining the Jackrabbit coaching staff, Mennenga served four seasons as defensive coordinator at Fort Hays State (Kan.), where he coached18 all-conference performers and one all-region player. He also oversaw a kickoff coverage unit consistently ranked among the top 20 at the NCAADivision II level.
Prior to his stint at Fort Hays State, Mennenga oversaw a rebuilding process at Culver-Stockton College in Canton, Mo., where he served as headcoach for three seasons (2002-04). He was elevated to the head coaching position after serving as the team’s defensive coordinator in 2001, duringwhich his unit ranked 10th in the NAIA ranks for pass defense and 18th in total defense.
After serving as an assistant high school coach for one season, Mennenga began his collegiate coaching career in 1994 as a graduate assistant atSouthwest Baptist University in Bolivar, Mo. He was later hired as a full-time assistant, coaching the secondary during the 1995 and 1996 seasons.
In 1997, Mennenga moved up to the Division I-AA (now FCS) level, coaching the outside linebackers for a Western Kentucky team that reachedthe quarterfinals of the playoffs. The next year, Mennenga became a coordinator for the first time as he was hired as defensive coordinator at Hutchinson Community College (Kan.), where he stayed for three seasons.
As a player, Mennenga lettered as a defensive back at Missouri in 1992. A recipient of the Senior Scholastic Award, he earned a bachelor of sciencedegree in educational studies with an emphasis in exercise science in 1993. He added a master’s degree in education from Southwest Baptist in 1998.
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ASSISTANT COACHES
JESSE CURRIERDefensive Line
SHANNON MOORESpecial Teams Coordinator • Tight Ends
Shannon Moore has filled a variety of roles on John Stiegelemeier’s coaching staff as he approaches hisfifth season as a full-time assistant.
Moore coached the running backs and tight ends from 2006-08, before taking on the duties of specialteams coordinator and quarterbacks coach during the 2009 campaign. In 2010, Moore returns to coaching thetight ends, while retaining special teams responsibilities.
During his tenure with the Jackrabbits, Moore has coached three all-conference running backs. Anthony Watson and Cory Koenig ended their careers second and fifth, respectively, on SDSU’s career rushing chart,and Kyle Minett enters his senior year already in the top five after posting back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons.
Moore played an instrumental role in the development of two-time all-Great West Football Conferencetight end Chris Wagner, who later signed as a free agent with the Oakland Raiders. He also has served as amentor to tight end Colin Cochart, an honorable mention all-Missouri Valley Football Conference tight endeach of the past two seasons.
Aside from his coaching duties, Moore has performed a key role in the academic success of the Jackrabbitfootball team, which has led its league in the number of academic all-league selections each of the past five seasons. In addition, four Jackrabbitshave earned ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America honors, two have received Football Championship Subdivision Athletic Directors Associa-tion Postgraduate Scholarships and two players have been bestowed NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships.
Moore previously served as a graduate assistant at SDSU during the 2003 and 2004 seasons, working with the running backs, tight ends and specialteams while pursuing a master’s degree in education administration. He later added a master’s degree in sports administration at SDSU.
Prior to returning to Brookings, he served as head coach of the Wyoming Cavalry of the National Indoor Football League, where he compiled an18-11 record over two seasons. In 2005, Moore led the Casper-based Cavalry to a franchise-best 10-5 record and a playoff berth, while also serving asthe team’s offensive coordinator.
A native of Gordon, Neb., Moore played three seasons at Black Hills State in Spearfish, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in secondary educa-tion in 2000. He taught and coached at Sully Buttes High School in Onida for three seasons before enrolling in graduate school at SDSU.
Jesse Currier begins an expanded role with the Jackrabbit football coaching staff as a defensive line coachafter serving the previous two seasons as a graduate assistant.
Currier has worked on both sides of the ball as a member of the SDSU coaching staff. He helped mentor theJackrabbit running backs and tight ends in 2008, working with 1,000-yard rusher and second-team all-MissouriValley Conference selection Kyle Minett and honorable mention all-MVFC tight end Colin Cochart.
In 2009, Currier moved to defense, where he assisted co-defensive coordinator Clint Brown with the defen-sive line. As a unit, SDSU defensive linemen combined to record 42 tackles for loss and 24 sacks in 12 games tospearhead a run to the Football Championship Subdivision playoffs for the first time in program history.
Currier had the opportunity to help mentor All-America defensive end Danny Batten, who was honored asCo-Missouri Valley Football Conference Defensive Player of the Year in 2009 and was selected in the sixthround of the 2010 NFL Draft by the Buffalo Bills. Batten finished third in the voting for the 2009 BuckBuchanan Award, which honors the top defensive player in the FCS ranks.
A native of Iroquois, S.D., Currier served as an assistant coach at the high school level for five seasons beforejoining the SDSU coaching staff. His squad at Iroquois High School won the state Class 9B championship in 2006.
Currier graduated from SDSU in the spring of 2008 with a bachelor’s degree in history education. He recently completed a master’s degree in educa-tion administration.
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ASSISTANT COACHES
JIMMY ROGERSGraduate Assistant — Defensive Backs
THADD SHARRETTGraduate Assistant — Running Backs
Thadd Sharrett returns for his second season as a member of the Jackrabbit football coaching staff, andwill work with the team’s running backs.
During his first season at SDSU, Sharrett aided in the development of All-America running back KyleMinett, who became the first Jackrabbit player to rush for 1,000 yards in back-to-back seasons at the DivisionI level.
Prior to joining the SDSU coaching staff, Sharrett coached three seasons at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire while obtaining a master’s of education degree in professional development. While with the Blugolds, he coached the running backs during the 2006 and 2007 seasons, then moved to the defensive sideof the ball as inside linebackers coach in 2008. He also served as the team’s video coordinator all three seasons.
A native of Circleville, Ohio, Sharrett was a four-year starter at defensive back and outside linebacker for Marietta College (Ohio). He was named the team’s defensive most valuable player in 2004, when he alsoearned second-team all-Ohio Athletic Conference honors.
Sharrett earned a bachelor’s degree in history from Marietta in 2005.
Jimmy Rogers moves to the sidelines as a graduate assistant after a sucessful playing career with theSouth Dakota State University football team.
Rogers began his playing career as a defensive back, but switched to linebacker midway through his redshirtfreshman season in 2006. He led the Jackrabbits in tackles during both the 2007 and 2008 seasons with 110and 93 stops, respectively, and finished his four-year career with 312 total tackles.
A native of Chandler, Ariz., Rogers was named to the all-Great West Football Conference First Team as theJackrabbits won the league title in 2007, and was a second-team all-Missouri Valley Football Conference honoree in 2008. He closed his career in 2009 by receiving honorable mention all-MVFC recognition.
Rogers, who graduated with a degree in history, was named to the GWFC All-Academic Team in 2007 andwas an honorable mention selection to the MVFC All-Academic Team in 2009. He also was a recipient of theMVFC Academic Excellence Award. He is pursuing a master’s degree in sports pedagogy.
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SUPPORT STAFF
Tim DeWittEquipment Manager
Rob EssigFootball Equipment
Doug HagmanFacilities Manager
Tonya HohenthanerFootball Secretary
Mike JohnsonFootball Equipment
AndrewPearson
Student Manager
Andy PerryVideo Coordinator
Logan Robideau
Student Manager
Josh TutjeStudent Assistant
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
COACHING STAFF
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2010 JACKRABBIT FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF — Front Row: Video coordinator Andy Perry, defensive line coach Jesse Currier,graduate assistant Thadd Sharrett, graduate assistant Jimmy Rogers, student assistant Josh Tutje. Back Row: Strength and conditioningcoach Nate Moe, co-defensive coordinator Clint Brown, co-defensive coordinator Jay Bubak, assistant head coach/offensive coordinatorLuke Meadows, head coach John Stiegelmeier, passing game coordinator Eric Eidsness, linebackers coach Shawn Mennenga, special teamscoordinator/tight ends coach Shannon Moore, wide receivers coach Josh Davis.
JACKRABBIT SENIORS
2010 JACKRABBIT SENIORS — Front Row: General Parnell, Tyler Duffy, Matt Hylland, Kyle Minett, Cole Brodie, Corey Jeske. MiddleRow: Head coach John Stiegelmeier, Conrad Kjerstad, Ryan McKnight, Dean Priddy, Brian Fischer, Antonio Thompson, Derek Domino.Back Row: Justin Mitchell, Mao Lefiti, Jacob Ludemann, Colin Cochart, Alex Beyer, Ross Basham.
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING
BRAD SCHMIDTAssistant Strength and Conditioning Coach
NATE MOEHead Strength and Conditioning Coach
Nathan Moe is in his sixth year directing the strength and conditioning program at South Dakota State University.
Moe joined the Jackrabbit coaching staff in August 2005, after heading the strength and conditioning program at Eastern Illinois University for three years. Previously, he was the assistant coach for strength and conditioning at Rice University in Houston, Texas, where he worked with the football strength program, whilebeing directly responsible for men’s and women’s track, men’s and women’s tennis, women’s swimming,women’s soccer and men’s golf.
At SDSU, Moe has implemented the Iron Jacks program, which recognizes Jackrabbit student-athletes fromall 21 varsity sports who achieve a set of high standards for specific exercises in their respective sports.
From 1997 through spring of 1999, Moe was a graduate assistant in the strength and conditioning program atthe University of Texas. He has also worked in private business in the physical fitness profession in both Austin,Texas, and Fargo, N.D.
Moe is a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist, and a member of the National Strength and Condi-tioning Association, USA Weightlifting and the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association.
A 1997 graduate of Moorhead State University (Minn.), Moe was an all-conference linebacker for the 1995 Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conferencechampions.
Brad Schmidt is in his first season as assistant strength and conditioning coach at South Dakota StateUniversity.
Schmidt will oversee the development and implementation for all training aspects of women’s basketball,women’s soccer, track and field, cross country and wrestling.
Prior to his appointment, Schmidt interned at the United States Air Force Academy and Iowa State Universityand also served as a graduate assistant at SDSU for two years, working with the Jackrabbit women’s soccer, trackand field, cross country, swimming and diving and women’s equestrian programs.
Schmidt earned a bachelor of science degree from Iowa State in 2008 and completed his master’s of sciencedegree in health, physical education and recration at SDSU in the spring of 2010.
He is a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist through the National Strength and Conditioning Associ-ation and is a Certified Level I Sports Performance Coach through USA Weightlifting.
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2010 SDSU STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING STAFF — Headcoach Nate Moe, student intern EricAdolph, graduate assistant PaulKeizer, assistant coach BradSchmidt, graduate assistant ChrisShenkler.
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
SPORTS MEDICINE
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2010 JACKRABBIT FOOTBALL SPORTS MEDICINE STAFF — Front Row: Hillaree Leif, Dawn Torkelson, Katie Willmott. Middle Row:Team physician Dr. Merritt Warren, Tara Mathison, Amy Clemensen, Mark Moffatt, team physician Dr. Craig Smith. Back Row: BrandonTetrault ATC, Ben Heinze ATC, C.J. Wunder, team physician Dr. Peter Looby.
DR. PETE LOOBY • Team Orthopedic Surgeon
Dr. Looby is an orthopedic surgeon with Orthopedic Institute inSioux Falls and Brookings. He received his medical degree fromWashington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Dr. Loobycompleted his orthopedic surgery residency at the University ofNew Mexico Hospital and his fellowship in orthopedic sports med-icine at Harvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital,where he was the team orthopedic surgeon for the New EnglandPatriots football team, the Boston Bruins hockey team, the NewEngland Revolution soccer team, and the Harvard University sportsteams. Dr. Looby is also the team orthopedic surgeon for the SiouxFalls Storm.
Dr. Looby, a Sioux Falls native, resides in Sioux Falls with hiswife, Katherine, and their two children.
DR. MERRITT WARREN • Team Physician
Dr. Warren is a family medicine specialist with Avera BrookingsMedical Clinic. He received his medical degree from the University ofNebraska School of Medicine in Omaha. Dr. Warren did his familypractice residency in Sioux Falls and is certified by the American Boardof Family Medicine.
Dr. Warren resides in Brookings with his wife, Pam. They have threechildren.
DR. CRAIG SMITH • Team PhysicianDr. Smith is a specialist in sports medicine with Orthopedic Institute
in Sioux Falls and Brookings. He has an M.S. Degree in ExercisePhysiology from St. Cloud State University and received his medicaldegree from the University of North Dakota School of Medicine inGrand Forks. Dr. Smith completed his family practice residency inSioux Falls and completed a fellowship in sports medicine at the OhioState University where he served as a team physician for the Buckeyes.He is also a Team Physician for the Sioux Falls Storm.
Dr. Smith resides in Sioux Falls with his wife, Janice, and their threechildren.
BEN HEINZE • Athletic TrainerBen Heinze is in his fifth season working as an athletic trainer with the
South Dakota State University football team and oversees the sports medi-cine facilities in the Dykhouse Student-Athlete Center.
A native of La Crescent, Minn., he earned a bachelor’s degree in exer-cise science from Winona State University (Minn.) in 1998. He moved onto SDSU, where he added a master’s degree in athletic training in 2000.
After completing his master’s degree, Heinze spent two and a half yearsas the head athletic trainer at Franklin College (Ind.) and worked at an ath-letic training clinic. He returned to South Dakota State during the 2003-04school year, working primarily with the Jackrabbit women’s basketballprogram.
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
For more information, go to www.BrookingsMedicalClinic.org or call (605) 697-9500.
Member of Avera Medical Group
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
Coughlin-Alumni Stadium is in its 49th season as home of Jackrabbitfootball.
In the quest to maintain it as one of the top outdoor football facilities inthe Upper Midwest, Coughlin-Alumni Stadium has undergone majorchanges during the past decade.
A new scoreboard was installed in the south end zone prior to the 2005season. The scoreboard, which was manufactured by Brookings-basedDaktronics, measures approximately 121 feet wide by 56 feet high andfeatures a large full-color ProStar® video replay screen in the center withadditional statistical and advertising panels.
The football scoreboard was part of a $3 million upgrade to scoreboarddisplay systems and signage at SDSU athletic facilities.
Also in the past decade at Coughlin-Alumni Stadium, lights were added,parking lots were paved, new restrooms were constructed, a new ticketbooth added, and an organized tailgating area known as “The Backyard”was cleared directly north of the stadium.
CAS will see other changes this fall as the Dykhouse Student-AthleteCenter, located in the north end zone, will house the Jackrabbit footballteam for the first time.
With the addition of the lights during the summer of 2000, CAS also became the home of the Brookings High School Bobcats.
SDSU played its first game under the lights at CAS on Sept. 1, 2001,defeating Ferris State (Mich.), 34-24. The Jackrabbits have gone on tocompile a 19-5 record in night games at Coughlin-Alumni Stadium.
The natural-grass stadium opened Sept. 22, 1962, when the Jacks lost a9-7 decision to Arkansas State.
During its 49 years of operation, there have been 260 games against 59different opponents at Coughlin-Alumni Stadium, with SDSU holding a161-99 record (.619 winning percentage) on its home field.
Since moving to the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivi-sion in 2004, the Jackrabbits have posted a 27-8 mark at CAS. That in-cludes a 10-2 record at home against Missouri Valley Football Conferenceopponents.
The largest crowd ever to see a football game of any kind in SouthDakota came through the turnstiles on Nov. 17, 2007, when 16,345 fanswatched the Jackrabbits defeat North Dakota State, 29-24, for the GreatWest Football Conference title. NDSU entered the game undefeated andranked No. 1 in the FCS Coaches Poll.
SDSU also set a single-season attendance record during the 2007 cam-paign as an average of 11,218 fans attended each of the Jackrabbits’ sixhome games. Four of the games drew crowds better than 10,000 and threeranked among the 10 largest crowds in stadium history. The Jackrabbitshave performed well in front of large crowds, winning eight of the 10most-attended games.
The previous single-game attendance record was set on Hobo Day, Oct.19, 1985, when 16,193 fans saw SDSU defeat the University of SouthDakota 24-12. USD also was undefeated and ranked No. 1 in the nation atthe time.
The stadium project was started after Charles Coughlin, a 1909 graduateand former student-athlete, donated $50,000 towards the building of a newstadium to replace State Field. The remaining $250,000 of the original$300,000 cost was raised from alumni, students and friends of SDSU.
TOP 10 STADIUM CROWDS1. vs. North Dakota State 16,345 Nov. 17, 2007 W, 29-242. vs. South Dakota 16,193 Oct. 19, 1985 W, 24-123. vs. South Dakota 15,866 Oct. 18, 1975 W, 24-224. vs. Northern Iowa 15,523 Oct. 24, 2009 W, 24-145. vs. McNeese State 15,521 Oct. 4, 2008 L, 44-466. vs. Stephen F. Austin 15,338 Sept. 29, 2007 W, 45-07. vs. UC Davis 15,248 Oct. 28, 2006 W, 22-218. vs. South Dakota 15,153 Oct. 22, 1977 L, 10-159. vs. Texas State 14,920 Sept. 22, 2007 W, 38-3
10. vs. Youngstown State 14,607 Oct. 23, 2010 W, 30-20
YEAR-BY-YEAR HOME RECORDS
HOME RECORDS VS. OPPONENTS
COUGHLIN-ALUMNI STADIUM
1962 3-21963 4-01964 2-31965 1-31966 1-31967 1-41968 3-21969 1-41970 2-31971 1-41972 5-01973 3-41974 5-11975 4-11976 2-31977 2-31978 2-3
1979 5-11980 3-21981 4-21982 3-11983 2-41984 1-41985 5-01986 3-31987 3-21988 4-11989 3-31990 1-41991 4-11992 3-21993 5-11994 4-21995 2-4
1996 5-01997 3-21998 4-21999 4-12000 4-32001 4-12002 5-12003 5-12004 4-02005 5-22006 3-12007 5-12008 4-22009 4-12010 3-1
OPPONENT W L LAST Arkansas State 0 1 1962Augustana (S.D.) 18 4 2004UC Davis 1 1 2006Cal Poly 1 2 2008Central Arkansas 1 0 2006Central Missouri State 1 0 1988Chadron State (Neb.) 1 0 2002Colorado State 0 1 1966Drake (Iowa) 0 2 1969Eastern Montana 1 0 1972Ferris State (Mich.) 1 0 2001Georgia Southern 1 1 2009Grand Valley St. (Mich.)1 0 2000Hamline (Minn.) 1 0 1975Humboldt St. (Calif.) 1 0 2003Idaho State 1 0 1968Illinois State 1 1 2009Indiana State 1 0 2009McNeese State (La.) 0 1 2008Minnesota-Duluth 0 1 1967Minn. State, Mankato 6 10 2003Missouri-Rolla 2 0 2005Missouri State 2 0 2010Montana 0 1 1970Montana State 0 2 1964Moorhead St. (Minn.) 0 1 1978Morningside (Iowa) 19 2 2000Nebraska-Kearney 1 0 1991Nebraska-Omaha 10 3 2002North Dakota 9 12 2003North Dakota State 9 15 2009
OPPONENT W L LAST Northern Colorado 6 8 2005Northern Iowa 4 7 2009Northwestern (Iowa) 1 1 1974Northwest Missouri St. 2 0 2003Parsons (Kan.) 0 1 1965St. Cloud St. (Minn.) 13 4 2003St. Thomas (Minn.) 1 0 1970Slippery Rock (Pa.) 1 0 1994South Dakota 17 9 2002South Dakota Tech 2 0 1996Southern Illinois 0 1 2009Southern Utah 2 0 2007Southwest Minn. State 4 0 1993Stephen F. Austin (Texas)1 0 2007Texas State 1 0 2007Valparaiso (Ind.) 1 0 2005Wayne State (Mich.) 0 1 1971Wayne State (Neb.) 1 0 2000Weber State (Utah) 0 1 1968Western Illinois 2 1 2010Western Oregon 1 0 2004Western State (Colo.) 1 1 1973Western Washington 1 0 2002William Penn (Iowa) 1 0 2006Winona State (Minn.) 1 0 2004Wisconsin-La Crosse 1 1 2006Wis.-Stevens Point 1 0 1986Wisconsin-Stout 2 0 1998Youngstown State 3 2 2010Overall Record 161 99 .619
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
Ball ready for play*Untimed down
Start clock
Incomplete forw ard passPenalty declined
No play, no scor eToss option delayed
Illegal touching or30-second timeout First touching (NF)Sideline warningDisregard flag
Uncatchableforw ard pass Substitution infraction
Illegal shift - 2 handsIllegal motion - 1 hand
Loss of down
1 2 3 4 5 6
7
8
9 10 11 12 13 14
15
16
17
18 19 20 21 22
(NF) High School
First down
Ball deadTouchback (move
side to side)Safety
Offside defenseor free kick team
Encroachment (NF)
Official Football Signals
Failure to wearrequired equipment
Illegal helmetcontact
23 24 27
Illegal participation
28
Running intoor roughing kicker
or holder
Illegal fair catch signal (NF)Invalid fair catch
signal (NF)Sideline interference
Illegal battingIllegal kicking
(followed by pointingtoward toe for kicking)
29 30 31 32 33
Roughing passer Intentional grounding
34 35 36
Ineligible downfieldon pass Personal foul
37 38
Clipping
Blocking below waistIllegal block Chop block
Illegal block in the back Holding/obstructing
Illegal use of hands/arms
39 40 41 42 43
Helping runnerInterlocked blocking
44
Tripping
46
Player disqualification
47
National Collegiate Athletic Association
Note: Signal numbers 25 and 26 are for future expansion.
Time-out
Discretionary or injury time-out
(follow by tapping hands
on chest)TV/Radio time-out
Touchdown
Field goal
Point(s) after touchdown
Legal touching of forward
pass or scrimmage kick
Inadvertent whistle
(Face Press Box) End of period
False start
Illegal formation
Encroachment offense Delay of gameUnsportsmanlike conduct
Noncontact foul
Forward pass
interference
Kick-catching interference
Illegal pass
Illegal forward
handling
Grasping face mask orhelmet opening
45
www.ncaa.org
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
The newest athletic facility at South Dakota State University, theDykhouse Student-Athlete Center opened in early 2010.
The Dykhouse Student-Athlete Center will help Jackrabbit Athletics take another step forward in its mission to produce student-athletes as Lifelong Champions.
The 30,000-square-foot facility:• Houses an academic center for all SDSU student-athletes.• Serves as the home of Jackrabbit football with coaches offices,
locker room, meeting rooms, a strength and conditioning centerand athletic training facilities.
• Provides a dedicated area to showcase the program to recruitsand donors.
The Dykhouse Student-Athlete Center is equipped with sevenmeeting rooms for the Jackrabbit football team to accommodate offense, defense, special teams,as well as specified position space asnecessary.
The home of Jackrabbit football players consists of a state-of-the-art locker room, which is second to none in the region. It embodies everything that Jackrabbit Athletics stands for: Honor, Tradition and Excellence.
Players will have the opportunity to condition and train in the4,100-square-foot Strength & Conditioning Center, filled with thelatest strength training and fitness equipment.
The Dykhouse Student-Athlete Center was made possiblethrough leadership gifts from the Dana and La Dawn Dykhousefamily and South Dakota businessman and philanthropist T. DennySanford.
Dana Dykhouse, president and Chief Executive Officer of FirstPremier Bank in Sioux Falls, is a 1979 graduate of SDSU. He lettered three years for the Jackrabbit football team, earning honor-able mention all-North Central Conference honors as a defensivetackle in 1978. La Dawn Dykhouse also graduated in 1979 fromSDSU, where she was a Pride of the Dakotas Dakota Deb Member.They are the parents of two children: Dan (Kristina), a 2007 alum-nus and football letterwinner from 2004-06; and Alana, who gradu-ated from Black Hills State University in the spring of 2010 afterlettering four times in women’s basketball.
The Chicoine Champions Room is named in recognition of thegift provided by the Jeff and Chris Chicoine family of Lake Forest,Ill. Jeff Chicoine is a 1968 agricultural economics graduate andfootball letterwinner. The Chicoine Champions Room will serve asa hub for football recruiting and will be transformed to a donorhospitality suite on gamedays.
To date, the Dana and La Dawn Dykhouse family, T. Denny Sanford and nearly 50 other donors have given more than $6 million in support of the project. Many have accelerated their giftsto the University, which has increased the amount of the donationsthrough interest earned.
DYKHOUSE STUDENT-ATHLETE CENTER
Top: The exterior view of the Dykhouse Student-Athlete Center from inside Coughlin-Alumni Stadium. Second fromTop: A new locker room for the Jackrabbit football team ishoused inside the Dykhouse Student-Athlete Center. Thirdfrom Top: The Dykhouse Student-Athlete Center houses anacademic center for use by all Jackrabbit teams. BottomRight: Additional strength and conditioning facilities are located in the new facility.
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The South Dakota State University footballteam continues to gain conference and nationalrecognition for its academic pursuits during the2010 season.
Earlier this month, the Jackrabbits placedthree players on the ESPN Academic All-Dis-trict VII Team. SDSU’s three selections tiedwith Iowa for the most selections on the 25-player honor squad.
Headlining the list of Jackrabbit selectionswas senior running Kyle Minett, who wasnamed to the University Division team for thethird consecutive year. A senior from Ruthton,Minn., Minett has compiled a 3.67 grade-pointaverage in economics. A two-time first-teamESPN Academic All-America selection, Minetthas become the first player in SDSU history torush for 1,000 yards in three consecutive sea-sons, posting 1,208 yards and 12 touchdownsthrough 10 games. A candidate for the WalterPayton Award as the top offensive player in theDivision I Football Championship Subdivision,Minett has totaled more than 4,000 career yardsand has scored 47 career rushing touchdowns.
The Jackrabbits made a sweep at the runningback position as fellow senior Tyler Duffyearned a spot on the team with a perfect 4.0GPA while majoring in electrical engineering.Duffy ranks second on the team with 338 rush-
ing yards and has scored three touchdowns.Punter Dean Priddy also was a repeat selec-
tion to the academic all-district team. Priddy ispursuing a master's degree in mathematics andcarries a 3.71 GPA. A four-year starter, Priddy isaveraging 40.9 yards per punt so far this season,tallying seven punts of 50 or more yards. As ateam, the Jackrabbits rank fourth among FCSteams in net punting at 38.5 yards per attempt.
All three Jackrabbits will advance to the national ballot for Academic All-America con-sideration later this month. Selections to theESPN Academic All-District VII Team are basedon votes by members of the College Sports Information Directors of America from SouthDakota, North Dakota, Iowa, Nebraska, Mis-souri, Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming and Mon-tana. Student-athletes must be at least asophomore in athletic standing, maintain a mini-mum grade-point average of 3.3 and be a starteror key reserve to be nominated.
In 2009, the Jackrabbits posted a league-best10 selection, including three first-team honorees,on the MVFC All-Academic Team. It markedthe fifth consecutive season SDSU led its foot-ball conference in all-academic picks.
SDSU led the Great West Football Confer-ence in the number of academic all-conferenceselections from 2005 through 2007.
Nominees to the 2009 Missouri Valley Foot-ball Conference All-Academic team must havebeen starters or key reserves with a minimum3.0 cumulative grade-point average. Student-athletes must have reached sophomore academicand athletic standing at their institutions andmust have completed at least one full academicyear at their institution. League sports informa-tion directors voted on the team by designating11 players for first-team honors and 11 playersfor second-team recognition.SDSU also earnedits second consecutive MVFC Team AcademicAward during the 2009 campaign.
In addition, the league recognized 52 Jackrab-bit players following the conclusion of the 2009-10 academic year on the MVFC Honor Roll forposting a GPA of 3.0 or better while being en-rolled in at least 12 hours during the fall. Ofthose 52 players, 25 qualified for the Commis-sioner’s Academic Excellence Award, which re-quires a minimum 3.2 GPA for each of the previous two semesters and at least a sophomorein academic standing.
In addition, Duffy, Knips and Priddy receivedthe Presidents Council Academic Award, whichrequires a minimum 3.5 cumulative GPA andwithin 18 hours of graduation.
It’s through cooperation and teamwork that we connect our small town strengths
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
ACADEMIC SUCCESS
18 The Bum
18 - Misc., Dacotah-CHS_Layout 1 11/16/10 2:29 PM Page 1
-24- MATT
HYLLAND5-10, 185, Sr.Wide Receiver
Sioux Falls, S.D.Lincoln H.S.
Major: Business Economics
Matt has lettered each of the past three seasons as a reserve wide receiver and special teams player ... two-time recipient of the
Missouri Valley Football Conference Commissioner’s Academic Excellence Award and MVFC Honor Roll recognition
2010: Has played in six games, including four starts: at Delaware, versus Illinois State, versus Missouri State and at North Dakota State ...missed four games due to injury ... opened season with career-best performance, catching three passes for 29 yards, with long of 22 ... addedpair of receptions for 24 yards at North Dakota State
2009: Played in nine games, seeing action mostly on special teams ...credited with tackle in regular season finale at Western Illinois
2008: Came off the bench to play in seven games ... lone receptioncovered 24 yards on first play of game-winning drive late in fourth quarterat Stephen F. Austin ... member of Missouri Valley Football ConferenceHonor Roll and also named recipient of Commisioner’s Academic Excellence Award
2007: Earned letter after appearing in five games ... made collegiatedebut against Texas State ... did not factor into any statistics
2006: Redshirted ... performed well on the practice field, earningScout Special Teams Player of the Week recognition in preparation forMontana game and Scout Offense Player of the Week honors two weekslater leading up to contest with Nicholls State (La.)
BEFORE SDSU: Passed for 1,174 yards and rushed for 327 as asenior for coach Aaron Beavers at Lincoln High School ... three-yearstarter in football, finishing with 3,800 total yards, and was selected to theSioux Falls Argus Leader Elite 45 team ... also lettered in basketball andtrack
CAREER STATISTICSYear Rec Yds Avg LG TD2008 1 24 24.0 24 02010 5 53 10.6 22 0Career 6 77 12.8 24 0
2010 Jackrabbit Football
SENIOR PROFILE
COACH STIG’S COMMENTS“Matt Hylland has defined the phrase ‘paying his dues.’ He has worked through anumber of injuries that have not only prevented him from playing, but also practicing. While injured, many times hehelped tutor the young receivers, all just trying to make the team better. He also hadto battle a number of great receivers whowere ahead of him age-wise and experience-wise. Matt stayed the course and was alwaysready for any reps he got. Matt puts a ton ofpressure on himself to be perfect. It is impossible to be perfect. It is also near impossible to have the attitude Matt has hadand to be the Difference Maker he has been.”
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19 - Hylland Senior Profile_Layout 1 11/17/10 7:50 AM Page 1
20 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
SDSU RECORD BOOKRUSHING
ATTEMPTSGame: 42, by Kevin Klapprodt at Nebraska-Omaha, 10-1-1988Season: 329, by Josh Ranek, 1999Career: 1,131, by Josh Ranek, 1997-2001NET YARDSGame: 291, by Josh Ranek vs. St. Cloud State, 11-13-1999Season: 2,055, by Josh Ranek, 1999 (11 games)Career: 6,744, by Josh Ranek, 1997-01 (44 games)Per Game, Season: 186.8, by Josh Ranek, 1999Combined Yards By Two Opposing Backs: 533,by Kevin Lowe, Wyoming (302) and Rick Wegher,SDSU (231), 11-10-1984
PASSINGATTEMPTSGame: 57, by Mike Busch at Northern Arizona, 9-7-1985Season: 395, by Ryan Berry, 2008Career: 834, by Ryan Berry, 2005-08COMPLETIONSGame: 37 (of 55), by Dan Fjeldheim vs. St. CloudState, 9-28-2002Season: 256 (of 395), by Ryan Berry, 2008Career: 514, by Ryan Berry, 2005-08INTERCEPTIONS THROWNGame: 5, by Larry Armstrong at Mankato State, 10-19-1970; Fred Richardson vs. Morningside, 11-6-1971; Mark Dolan vs. North Dakota, 11-1-1980; Ryan Berry at Iowa State, 8-28-2008Season: 24, by Mike Law, 1983Career: 46, by Mike Law, 1981-83NET YARDS PASSINGGame: 460, by Dan Fjeldheim vs. St. Cloud State,9-28-2002Season: 3,141, by Brad Nelson, 2003Career: 6,023, by Ryan Berry, 2005-08TOUCHDOWN PASSESGame: 7, by Ryan Berry, vs. Illinois State, 11-8-2008Season: 30, by Ryan Berry, 2008Career: 56, by Ryan Berry, 2005-08
TOTAL OFFENSEATTEMPTSGame: 68. by Marty Higgins vs. Augustana (24rush, 44 pass), 10-31-1981Season: 441. by Ted Wahl, 1986 (11 games)Career: 1,172, by Ted Wahl, 1985-88NET YARDS Game: 439, by Ted Wahl at North Dakota, 10-29-1988 (123 rush, 316 pass)Season: 3,009, by Ryan Berry, 2008 (12 games)Career: 7,245, by Ted Wahl, 1985-88 (36 games)Per Game Average, Season: 269.5, by Ted Wahl,1986Per Game Average, Career: 201.2, by Ted Wahl,1985-88
RECEIVINGRECEPTIONSGame: 16, by Josh Davis (164 yards) vs. WesternWashington, 10-5-2002Season: 73, by Jeff Tiefenthaler, 1986Career: 225, by Josh Davis, 2002-05YARDSGame: 256, by Jeff Tiefenthaler at North Dakota, 9-27-1986 (12 receptions)Season: 1,534, by Jeff Tiefenthaler, 1986Career: 3,621, by Jeff Tiefenthaler, 1983-86TOUCHDOWNSGame: 4, by Don Bartlett vs. North Dakota State,1949Season: 13, by Jeff Tiefenthaler, 1985Career: 32, by Jeff Tiefenthaler, 1983-86Consecutive Games Catching TD Pass: 14, byJeff Tiefenthaler, from Oct. 27, 1984, through Nov.9, 1985*Games In Which Caught At Least One TD Pass:25, by Jeff Tiefenthaler (36 games)** Records were also NCAA Division II records at the time
SCORINGTOUCHDOWNSGame: 8, by Ross Owen vs. Columbus College,1922 Season: 28, by Josh Ranek, 1999Career: 69, by Josh Ranek, 1997-01POINTSGame: 48, by Ross Owen vs. Columbus College,1922 (8 TDs)Season: 170, by Josh Ranek, 1999 (28 TDs, 1 2-PAT)Career: 426, by Josh Ranek, 1997-01POINTS KICKINGGame: 20, by Parker Douglass vs. Western Oregon, 9-18-2004 (6 FGs, 2 PATs)Season: 99, by Parker Douglass, 2005 (19 FGs, 42PATs)Career: 321, by Parker Douglass, 2004-07 (62FGs, 135 PATs)EXTRA POINTS – KICKGame: 9, by Parker Douglass, vs. Valparaiso(Ind.), 9-10-2005Season: 42, by Parker Douglass, 2005 (42-of-43)and 2007 (42-of-44)Career: 135, by Parker Douglass, 2004-07 Attempts, Career: 138, by Parker Douglass, 2004-07Best Percentage, Season: 1.000, by Tony Harris, 1979 (28-of-28), by Russ Meier, 1981 (21-of-21), and by Parker Douglass, 2004 (29-of-29) and 2006 (22-of-22)Best Percentage, Career: .978, by Parker Dou-glass (135-of-138), 2004-07, and by Tony Harris (45-of-46), 1979-80Consecutive PAT, Season: 29, by Parker Douglass, 2004Consecutive PAT, Career: 66, by Parker Douglass, 2005-07FIELD GOALSGame: 6, by Parker Douglas vs. Western Oregon,9-18-2004 (34, 39, 27, 23, 43, 39)Season: 19, by Parker Douglass, 2005 (19-of-26)Career: 62, by Parker Douglass, 2004-07
Attempts, Game: 8, by Parker Douglas vs. Western Oregon, 9-18-2004Attempts, Season: 26, by Parker Douglass, 2005(19 FGM)Attempts, Career: 91, by Parker Douglass, 2004-07Percentage, Season: .823, by Brett Gorden, 1995(12-of-13) (min. 10 attempts)Percentage, Career: .697, by Tony Harris, 1979-80 (23-33) and by K.C. Johnson, 1984-86 (23-33)(min. 20 attempts)Consecutive Made: 13, by Parker Douglass, 2006-07Longest: 57 yards, by Parker Douglass, vs.Stephen F. Austin (Texas), 9-29-07
PUNTINGGame: 16, by Mike Doty at North Dakota, 10-9-1971Season: 83, by Mike Doty, 1971 (35.6 average)Average, Season: 44.8, by Tom O’Brien, 1997 (50att.)
PUNT RETURNSSeason: 34, by Paul Aanonson, 2007Career: 63, by Paul Aanonson, 2004-07Yards, Season: 482, by Paul Aanonson, 2007Yards, Career: 798, by Paul Aanonson, 2004-07
INTERCEPTIONSGame: 4, by Mike Jaunich vs. Morningside, 10-2-1993Season: 9, by Charlie Clarksean, 1972Career: 14, by Charlie Clarksean, 1970-73
SACKSGame: 6, by Mark Dunbar vs. St. Cloud State,9-2-1978Season: 21, by Mark Dunbar, 1978
KICKOFF RETURNSGame: 9, by Jerry Welch vs. Iowa State, 1952Season: 36, by Rick Wegher, 1984Career: 107, by Rick Wegher, 1981-84*Yards, Game: 258, by Jerry Welch at Iowa State,1952Yards, Season: 824, by Rick Wegher, 1984Yards, Career: 2,150, by Rick Wegher, 1981-84* Record was also NCAA Division II record at the time
ALL-PURPOSEYARDS
ATTEMPTSGame: 47, by Darwin Gonnerman vs. Augustana,11-11-1967 (41 rushes, 2 rec., 3 PR, 1 KOR)Season: 363, by Josh Ranek, 2001Career: 1,215, by Josh Ranek, 1997-01YARDS Game: 371, by Josh Ranek at North Dakota State,10-20-2001Season: 2,608, by Josh Ranek, 2001Career: 7,946 by Josh Ranek, 1997-01
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
SDSU RECORD BOOKLONGEST PLAYS
Run From Scrimmage: 95 yards, by Mike Lunde,vs. North Dakota, 10-16-1976Pass Play: 91 yards, Ted Wahl to Jeff Tiefenthaler,vs. St. Cloud State, 11-8-1986Punt Return: 95 yards, by Darwin Gonnerman, vs.North Dakota State, 10-1-1966Kickoff Return: 100 yards, by Kevin Brown, vs.Minnesota State, Mankato, 11-16-2002Interception Return: 99 yards, by Tyler Koch, vs.Southern Utah, 11-10-2007Punt: 88 yards, by Tim Hawkins, vs. MankatoState, 10-30-1989
RUSHINGATTEMPTSGame: 84, vs. Augustana, 1952Season: 645, in 1973YARDS Game: 567, vs. Missouri-Rolla, 10-22-2005Season: 3,685, in 1951 (10 games)Fewest Net Yards, Game: minus-52, vs. NorthDakota State, 10-16-1965Fewest Net Yards, Season: 509, in 1965 (10games)
PASSINGATTEMPTSGame: 57, at Northern Arizona, 9-7-1985Season: 415, in 2008 (12 games)COMPLETIONSGame: 37, at St. Cloud State, 9-28-2002Season: 270, in 2008 (12 games)Per Game: 22.5, in 2008 (12 games)INTERCEPTIONS THROWNGame: 6, at Mankato State, 9-19-1970; vs. NorthDakota State, 10-27-1973, and vs. South Dakota,10-29-1983Season: 31, in 1983Fewest, Season: 4, in 1963 (10 games), and in1955 (9 games)YARDSGame: 460, vs. St. Cloud State, 9-28-2002Season: 3,255, in 2003TOUCHDOWN PASSESGame: 7, vs. Illinois State, 11-8-2008Season: 31, in 2008
TOTAL OFFENSEATTEMPTSGame: 100, vs. Morningside, 10-17-1987 (64 rush,36 pass)Season: 870, in 1973 (11 games)YARDSGame: 689, vs. Missouri-Rolla, 10-22-2005Season: 4,863, in 2008 (12 games)Per Game: 437.7, in 1951
SCORINGPOINTSGame: 85 vs. Columbus College, 1922Season: 427 in 2008 (11 games)Per Game: 38.1 in 1950 (381 points in 10 games)Margin of Victory: 85 vs. Columbus College, 1922Game, Both Teams: 102 by SDSU (60) atMankato State (42) 11-6-1993
FIRST DOWNSMOST - GAME Total: 37, at Wyoming, 11-10-1984, and vs. NorthDakota, 9-28-1985Rushing: 30, at Morningside, 10-8-1977Passing: 20, vs. South Dakota, 9-14-1986FEWEST - GAMETotal: 3, at Morningside, 11-6-1971Rushing: 1, vs. Montana, 11-14-1970Passing: 0, nine times (last: vs. South Dakota, 9-27-1980)
FIRST DOWNS —OPPONENT
MOST - GAME Total: 32, by Montana, 9-9-2006Rushing: 27, by Georgia Southern, 10-29-2005Passing: 17, by Morningside, 9-15-1984FEWEST - GAMETotal: 2, by Hamline, 9-6-1975Rushing: 0, by Hamline, 9-6-1975Passing: 0, seven times (last: by North Dakota, 11-1-1980)Note: In the 1955 SDSU-South Dakota game, neither teamhad a first down by passing
PUNTINGATTEMPTS Game: 16, vs. North Dakota, 10-9-1971 (40.0 avg)Season: 86, in 1971 (34.4 average)AVERAGEGame: 54.8, vs. North Dakota State, 9-17-1988 (5-274) (min. 3 attempts)Season: 41.8, in 1996 (64 attempts)
PUNT RETURNSATTEMPTS Game: 8, vs. St. Cloud State, 9-23-1961Season: 44, in 1961 (407 yards)YARDSGame: 128, vs. St. Cloud State, 9-23-1961Season: 572, in 1962 (41 returns)Average, Season: 15.1, in 1955 (18 returns)
KICKOFF RETURNSATTEMPTSGame: 10, vs. Arizona, 9-29-1956 (164 yards)Season: 52, in 1966YARDSGame: 281, vs. Northern Colorado, 9-25-1993Season: 1,093, in 1966Average, Season: 27.8, in 1973 (33 returns)
FUMBLESTOTAL FUMBLESGame: 11, vs. North Dakota, 1952 (lost 5) and vs.North Dakota State, 10-20-1951 (lost 7)Season: 62, in 1952 (9 games)
FUMBLES LOSTGame: 7, vs. North Dakota State, 10-20-1951(11 fumbles), vs. North Dakota State, 1952 (8fumbles), vs. Morningside, 1952 (8 fumbles), vs.Northern Colorado, 9-25-1976 (7 fumbles). Season: 39, in 1952 (9 games)
FUMBLES — OPPONENT
TOTAL FUMBLESGame: 10, by Quantico Marines, 11-18-1972 (lost 5)Season: 46, in 1972FUMBLES LOSTGame: 7, by South Dakota, 1950 (7 fumbles); byAugustana, 1953 (8 fumbles); by North DakotaState, 1953 (7 fumbles); by North Dakota State,10-24-1959 (7 fumbles)Season: 25, in 1972 (46 fumbles), in 1952 (33fumbles) and in 1950 (37 fumbles)
INTERCEPTION RETURNS
MOST - GAME Game: 6, vs. Augustana, 1950, and vs. St. CloudState, 1952Season: 27, in 1993YARDSGame: 171, vs. Southern Utah, 11-10-2007 (5 returns)Season: 469, in 2007 (19 returns)
PENALTIESNUMBERGame: 15, vs. Morningside, 9-30-2000 (159yards), vs. St. Cloud State, 9-22-2001 (139) andvs. Northern Colorado, 11-20-2004 (153 yards)Fewest, Game: 0, vs. Mankato State, 11-14-1964Season: 86, in 2000 (for 887 yards in 11 games)YARDSGame: 159, vs. Morningside, 9-30-2000 (15 penalties)Season: 887, in 2000 (86 penalties in 11 games)
PENALTIES — OPPONENT
NUMBERGame: 19, by McNeese State (La.), 9-30-2006Season: 84, in 2000YARDSGame: 174, by McNeese State (La.), 9-30-2006(19 penalties)Season: 772, in 2000Fewest, Game: 1, for 1 yard, by Morningside, 11-2-1957
PENALTIES — BOTH TEAMS
NUMBERGame: 26, by SDSU (12 for 113 yards) vs. Nebraska-Omaha (14 for 133 yards), 10-28-2000;and by SDSU (7 for 80 yards) at McNeese State(La.) (19 for 174 yards), 9-30-2006YARDSGame: 254, by SDSU (80) at McNeese State(La.) (174), 9-30-2006
20-21 Record Book_Layout 1 9/10/10 10:48 AM Page 2
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
22 The Bum
2010 SEASON HIGHS
TEAMPOINTS: 33, vs. Western Illinois, 10-9-10RUSHES: 47, at Southern Illinois, 10-16-10YARDS RUSHING: 209, vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10YARDS PER RUSH: 7.0, at Northern Iowa, 10-2-10RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS: 4, vs. Western Illinois, 10-9-10PASSATTEMPTS: 45, at Delaware, 9-11-10 PASS COMPLETIONS: 24, vs. Illinois State, 9-18-10YARDS PASSING: 283, vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10YARDS PER PASS: 11.3, vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10PASSING TOUCHDOWNS: 2, at Northern Iowa, 10-2-10, and vs.Youngstown State, 10-23-10TOTAL PLAYS: 77, at Indiana State, 10-30-10TOTALOFFENSE: 492, vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10YARDS PER PLAY: 7.7, vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10FIRST DOWNS: 25, vs. Western Illinois, 10-9-10SACKS BY: 3, at Southern Illinois, 10-16-10, and at North DakotaState, 11-13-10TURNOVERS FORCED: 3 (2 interceptions, 1 fumble), at Nebraska, 9-25-10INTERCEPTIONS BY: 2, three times (last: vs. Missouri State, 11-6-10)FUMBLES RECOVERED: 2, at Indiana State, 10-30-10MOST PENALTIES: 9, at Northern Iowa, 10-2-10 MOST PENALTYYARDS: 83, vs. Illinois State, 9-18-10MOST TURNOVERS: 4, at Northern Iowa (1 fumble, 3 INTs), 10-2-10,and at North Dakota State (4 INTs)
INDIVIDUALRUSHES: 30, by Kyle Minett, at Southern Illinois, 10-16-10YARDS RUSHING: 185, by Kyle Minett, vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10LONG RUSH: 62 yards, by Kyle Minett, vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS: 3, by Kyle Minett, vs. Western Illinois, 10-9-10, and at Indiana State, 10-30-10PASSATTEMPTS: 45, by Thomas O’Brien, at Delaware, 9-11-10 PASS COMPLETIONS: 23, by Thomas O’Brien, at Delaware, 9-11-10,and vs. Illinois State, 9-18-10YARDS PASSING: 283, by Thomas O’Brien, vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10LONG PASS: 68 yards (for TD), by Thomas O’Brien (to Tyrel Kool), atNorth Dakota State, 11-13-10PASSING TOUCHDOWNS: 2, by Thomas O’Brien, at Northern Iowa, 10-2-10, and vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10RECEPTIONS: 10, by Tyrel Kool, at Northern Iowa, 10-2-10YARDS RECEIVING: 132, by Tyrel Kool, at North Dakota State, 11-13-10LONG FIELD GOAL: 47 yards, by Peter Reifenrath, vs. Missouri State,11-6-10PUNTS: 8, by Dean Priddy, at Nebraska, 9-25-10PUNTINGAVERAGE: 55.0 yards (4 punts), by Dean Priddy, atDelaware, 9-11-10LONG PUNT: 72 yards, by Dean Priddy, at Delaware, 9-11-10LONG PUNT RETURN: 35 yards, by Cole Brodie, vs. Western Illinois,10-9-10LONG KICKOFF RETURN: 47 yards, by Trevor Tiefenthaler, at IndianaState, 10-30-10TACKLES: 18, by Mike Lien, at North Dakota State, 11-13-10 TACKLES FOR LOSS: 2.0, by Andy Mink, at Northern Iowa, 10-2-10;by Jake Steffen, vs. Youngstown State, 10-23-10, and by Corey Jeske,at North Dakota State, 11-13-10LONG INTERCEPTION RETURN: 87 yards (for TD), by Cole Brodie, atSouthern Illinois, 10-16-10
22 - Misc., Farm Credit_Layout 1 11/16/10 7:59 AM Page 1
South Dakota State and North Dakota willmeet for the 84th time in football today — a series that dates back more than 100 years.
UND leads the all-time series by a 45-33-5margin, on the strength of winning 11 of thelast 15 meetings, including each of the lastfour. The Jackrabbits’ last victory in the seriescame on Hobo Day 1999, when SDSUrecorded a 21-7 victory.
Following is a year-by-year look at the seriesresults:
YEAR SCORE LOCATION1906 SDSU 5, UND 4 Brookings, S.D.1907 UND 24, SDSU 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1914 SDSU 14, UND 3 Grand Forks, N.D.1915 SDSU 0, UND 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1916 SDSU 14, UND 7 Grand Forks, N.D.1917 SDSU 13, UND 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1919 SDSU 9, UND 7 Brookings, S.D.1920 UND 6, SDSU 3 Grand Forks, N.D.1921 SDSU 27, UND 14 Brookings, S.D.1922 UND 16, SDSU 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1923 UND 12, SDSU 6 Brookings, S.D.1924 SDSU 7, UND 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1926 SDSU 6, UND 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1928 UND 6, SDSU 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1929 UND 7, SDSU 6 Brookings, S.D.1930 UND 21, SDSU 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1931 UND 34, SDSU 6 Brookings, S.D.1932 UND 13, SDSU 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1933 SDSU 18, UND 2 Grand Forks, N.D.
1934 UND 6, SDSU 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1935 SDSU 6, UND 6 Brookings, S.D.1936 UND 33, SDSU 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1938 UND 37, SDSU 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1939 SDSU 14, UND 13 Brookings, S.D.1940 UND 6, SDSU 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1941 UND 33, SDSU 15 Brookings, S.D.1942 UND 19, SDSU 8 Grand Forks, N.D.1948 UND 31, SDSU 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1949 UND 19, SDSU 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1950 SDSU 21, UND 21 Brookings, S.D.1951 SDSU 21, UND 12 Grand Forks, N.D.1952 SDSU 60, UND 6 Brookings, S.D.1953 SDSU 13, UND 13 Grand Forks, N.D.1954 SDSU 34, UND 20 Brookings, S.D.1955 SDSU 14, UND 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1956 SDSU 14, UND 13 Brookings, S.D.1957 SDSU 53, UND 21 Grand Forks, N.D.1958 UND 30, SDSU 12 Brookings, S.D.1959 SDSU 6, UND 0 Grand Forks, N.D.1960 UND 27, SDSU 23 Brookings, S.D.1961 UND 14, SDSU 13 Grand Forks, N.D.1962 SDSU 26, UND 0 Brookings, S.D.1963 SDSU 7, UND 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1964 SDSU 38, UND 35 Brookings, S.D.1965 UND 14, SDSU 7 Grand Forks, N.D.1966 UND 43, SDSU 0 Brookings, S.D.1967 UND 9,. SDSU 7 Grand Forks, N.D.1968 UND 21, SDSU 16 Brookings, S.D.1969 SDSU 19, UND 13 Grand Forks, N.D.1970 UND 36, SDSU 3 Brookings, S.D.1971 UND 35, SDSU 7 Grand Forks, N.D.
1972 UND 51, SDSU 21 Brookings, S.D.1973 UND 28, SDSU 20 Grand Forks, N.D.1974 SDSU 55, UND 6 Brookings, S.D.1975 UND 35, SDSU 14 Grand Forks, N.D.1976 SDSU 28, UND 6 Brookings, S.D.1977 SDSU 6, UND 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1978 SDSU 30, UND 19 Grand Forks, N.D.1979 UND 13, SDSU 0 Brookings, S.D.1980 UND 47, SDSU 13 Grand Forks, N.D.1981 SDSU 28, UND 16 Brookings, S.D.1982 UND 34, SDSU 13 Grand Forks, N.D.1983 SDSU 28, UND 27 Grand Forks, N.D.1984 UND 46, SDSU 7 Brookings, S.D.1985 SDSU 29, UND 23 Brookings, S.D.1986 SDSU 52, UND 21 Grand Forks, N.D.1987 SDSU 24, UND 9 Brookings, S.D.1988 UND 35, SDSU 34 Grand Forks, N.D.1989 SDSU 23, UND 13 Grand Forks, N.D.1990 UND 24, SDSU 21 Brookings, S.D.1991 UND 36, SDSU 10 Grand Forks, N.D.1992 UND 14, SDSU 3 Brookings, S.D.1993 SDSU 28, UND 0 Brookings, S.D.1994 UND 32, SDSU 6 Grand Forks, N.D.1995 UND 14, SDSU 3 Grand Forks, N.D.1996 SDSU 28, UND 23 Brookings, N.D.1997 UND 28, SDSU 7 Grand Forks, N.D.1998 UND 20, SDSU 6 Brookings, S.D.1999 SDSU 21, UND 7 Brookings, S.D.2000 UND 42, SDSU 0 Grand Forks, N.D.2001 UND 44, SDSU 9 Grand Forks, N.D.2002 UND 21, SDSU 13 Brookings, S.D.2003 UND 25, SDSU 24 Brookings, S.D.
2010 Jackrabbit Football
SDSU-UND SERIES HISTORY
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24 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
NCAA is a trademark of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
24 - FCS PSA_Layout 1 11/17/10 8:17 AM Page 1
SPORTS NETWORK POLL — NOV. 15PL. SCHOOL RECORD POINTS PR1. Delaware [116] 9-1 3,927 22. Appalachian State (N.C.) [28] 9-1 3,781 33. Eastern Washington [8] 8-2 3,563 54. Jacksonville State (Ala.) [2] 9-1 3,457 65. Stephen F. Austin (Texas) [1] 8-2 3,078 86. William & Mary (Va.) 7-3 2,959 17. Bethune-Cookman (Fla.) [4] 10-0 2,870 108. Montana State [1] 8-2 2,786 119. Wofford (S.C.) 8-2 2,729 4
10. Southeast Missouri State 9-2 2,480 711. Montana 7-3 2,236 1312. South Carolina State 8-2 2,099 1513. Northern Iowa 7-3 2,034 1614. New Hampshire 6-4 1,926 1715. Villanova (Pa.) 6-4 1,614 916. Pennsylvania 8-1 1,557 1817. North Dakota State 7-3 1,120 2418. Richmond (Va.) 6-4 1,118 2119. Massachusetts 6-4 1,052 1420. Jacksonville (Fla.) 10-1 983 2221. Liberty (Va.) 7-3 902 1222. Lehigh (Pa.) 8-2 608 NR23. Cal Poly 7-4 338 1924. Dayton (Ohio) 10-1 336 NR25. Grambling State (La.) 8-2 287 20Dropped out: Western Illinois (23), Robert Morris (25)Notes: First-place votes in brackets; opponents listed in boldOthers receiving votes: Georgia Southern 263, James Madison (Va.) 253, Chattanooga (Tenn.) 183, McNeese State (La.) 183, Texas Southern 136, WesternIllinois 123, Robert Morris (Pa.) 110, Sacramento State (Calif.) 105, FloridaA&M 81, Jackson State (Miss.) 78, Southern Utah 73, Weber State (Utah) 57,Yale (Conn.) 54, Old Dominion (Va.) 30, Indiana State 18, Eastern Kentucky 14,Elon (N.C.) 12, Harvard (Mass.) 7, Southern Illinois 7, Northern Arizona 6,Coastal Carolina (S.C.) 5, Furman (S.C.) 5, UC Davis 5, Stony Brook (N.Y.) 3,Bryant (R.I.) 2, Illinois State 2, Murray State (Ky.) 11, Central Connecticut State1, Alabama State 1, Colgate (N.Y.) 1, Drake (N.Y.) 1, Brown (R.I.) 1.
FCS COACHES’ POLL — NOV. 15PL. SCHOOL RECORD POINTS PR1. Delaware [26] 9-1 698 12. Appalachian State (N.C.) 9-1 666 33. Eastern Washington [1] 8-2 636 54. Jacksonville State (Ala.) 9-1 613 65. Stephen F. Austin (Texas) [1] 8-2 569 76. William & Mary (Va.) 7-3 520 27. Wofford (S.C.) 8-2 512 48. Montana State 8-2 503 109. Bethune-Cookman (Fla.) 10-0 474 12
10. Southeast Missouri STate 9-2 428 811. South Carolina State 8-2 396 1412. Northern Iowa 7-3 394 1613. New Hampshire 6-4 350 1514. Montana 7-3 332 1715. Villanova (Pa.) 6-4 315 916. Pennsylvania 8-1 264 1917. North Dakota State 7-3 227 2018. Liberty (Va.) 7-3 219 1119. Massachusetts 6-4 214 1320. Richmond (Va.) 6-4 181 2321. Jacksonville (Fla.) 10-1 123 2422. Lehigh (Pa.) 8-2 88 NR23. Cal Poly 7-4 71 1824. Grambling State (La.) 8-2 49 2225. Dayton (Ohio) 10-1 44 NRDropped out: Western Illinois (21), Robert Morris (25)Notes: First-place votes in brackets; opponents listed in boldOthers receiving votes: Georgia Southern 40, Western Illinois 28, Florida A&M25, Sacramento State (Calif.) 23, James Madison (Va.) 21, Robert Morris (Pa.) 17, McNeese State (La.) 16, Weber State (Utah) 14, Texas Southern 11, Chattanooga(Tenn.) 7, Southern Utah 5, Northern Arizona 3, Old Dominion (Va.) 2, IndianaState 2, Harvard (Mass.) 1.
2010 Jackrabbit Football
FCS POLLS
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OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK: ZachMacDowall, 6-2, 200, Sr., QB, Coastal Carolina (Acworth, Ga.). MacDowall accounted for four touchdowns and tied his ownschool record with 382 passing yards in CoastalCarolina’s 45-31 upset of then-No. 12 Liberty.
The senior quarterback completed 93 percentof his passes (25-of-27), including a stretch inwhich he completed 15 of 16. In addition tothree passing touchdowns, MacDowall also ranfor a score.
CO-DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Mario Kurn, 6-2, 220, Jr., DE, San Diego(Calif.) (Encinitas, Calif.). Kurn nearly set aFCS single-game record, tallying 7.5 tackles forloss in San Diego’s 29-15 victory over Davidson.The defensive end fell just a half-tackle shy ofthe FCS record. The dominating effort included3.5 sacks and 11 total tackles (including eightsolo stops).
While Kurn narrowly missed an individual
record, he spurred the defense to a school recordas the unit held Davidson to minus-10 yards on28 rushing attempts.
CO-DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Davonte Anderson, 5-9, 175, Fr., DB, StonyBrook (N.Y.) (Corona, Calif.). Anderson set aBig South single-game record with four inter-ceptions in Stony Brook’s 55-3 win over Gardner-Webb. The first interception came withStony Brook holding a slim 7-3 second-quarteradvantage and led to a touchdown on the nextplay, which sparked the rout.
In all, Anderson’s four picks led to 13 pointsfor the Seawolves. The freshman defensive backalso recorded a pass break-up and tallied 53 return yards off the interceptions.
SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Lawton Arnold, 6-2, 230, So., DE, CentralConnecticut State (Simsbury, Conn.). Arnoldreturned a kickoff for a touchdown and recordeda crucial field goal block in CCSU’s 49-48,
double-overtime victory over Monmouth (N.J.).After Monmouth tied the contest 21-21 in thesecond quarter, the 230-pound defensive endfielded a kickoff at the 30-yard line and rumbled70 yards for a touchdown.
More importantly, with under six minutes toplay in the fourth quarter, Arnold blocked a 24-yard field goal attempt that would have givenMonmouth a two-score advantage. The BlueDevils tied the game on the ensuing possession.
FRESHMAN OF THE WEEK: Dae’Quan Scott,5-9, 190, Fr., QB, James Madison (Va.)(Staunton, Va.). Scott replaced starter DrewDudzik at quarterback and led the Dukes to a30-24 upset of then-No 1 William & Mary. Thefreshman, who is officially listed as a wide receiver, ran 21 times for 125 yards and threetouchdowns. The Dukes attempted just one passagainst the Tribe (an incompletion) and rackedup all of their 266 yards of offense on theground.
FCS NATIONAL PLAYERS OF THE WEEK
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26 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
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-50- MAO
LEFITI6-4, 220, Sr.
Defensive LinemanKoneoham, Hawaii
Palomar CollegeMajor: Economics
Mao has added depth to the defensive unit at an end position for theJackrabbits this season
2010: Played in the Jackrabbits’ victory over Missouri State, but didnot record any statistics
2009: Appeared in the season opener against Georgia Southern, butdid not factor into any statistics
2008: Sat out the season as a redshirt
BEFORE SDSU: Played two seasons at Palomar Community College in San Marcos, Calif. ... selected to the all-Mission ConferenceAmerican Division First Team in 2007 after recording 22 tackles — onefor loss — with a fumble recovery
2010 Jackrabbit Football
SENIOR PROFILE
COACH STIG’S COMMENTS“Mao Lefiti has been a true servant in ourprogram. He, too, has suffered a number ofinjuries. Those injuries have hindered someof his progress and opportunities. Instead ofhanging his head, he has been a ‘Team First’player. He has helped the team to the extentof even playing some scout team. That defines servant leadership. Mao is a student-athlete who Makes a Difference.”
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
SOUTH DAKOTA STATE LINEUP
JACKRABBITS ON OFFENSEPOS. NO. NAME HT. WT. YR. HOMETOWNLT 76 Bryan Witzmann 6-7 300 R-Fr. Houlton, Wis.LG 65 Alex Parker 6-5 300 R-Fr. Brookings, S.D.C 60 Ryan McKnight 6-1 295 Sr. Sioux Falls, S.D.
RG 74 Zach Buchner 6-4 290 Jr. Coon Rapids, Minn.RT 67 Jon Fick 6-4 305 So. Hull, IowaTE 87 Colin Cochart 6-4 260 Sr. Kewaunee, Wis.TE 89 Alex Beyer 6-3 250 Sr. Neenah, Wis.WR 2 Tyrel Kool 5-10 185 So. Yankton, S.D.WR 24 Matt Hylland 5-10 185 Sr. Sioux Falls, S.D.WR 23 Brandon Hubert 5-11 190 R-Fr. Gretna, Neb.QB 4 Thomas O’Brien 6-2 205 So. Winona, Minn.RB 25 Tyler Duffy 5-10 210 Sr. Brookings, S.D.
JACKRABBITS ON DEFENSEPOS. NO. NAME HT. WT. YR. HOMETOWNDE 46 Jake Steffen 6-3 240 Jr. Mount Vernon, S.D.DT 52 Andy Mink 6-2 270 So. Greenwood, Neb.NT 98 Ross Basham 6-1 275 Sr. Bridgeport, TexasDE 54 Zacharia Bowers 6-0 235 Jr. Topeka, Kan.
WLB 48 Dirk Kool 6-2 230 Jr. Fairfield, IowaMLB 45 Mike Lien 6-0 215 Jr. Castaic, Calif.SLB 39 Derek Domino 6-3 225 Sr. Spring Lake Park, Minn.LCB 8 Darryl Jackson 5-9 180 Jr. Corona, Calif.SS 7 Corey Jeske 6-0 200 Sr. Buffalo, Minn.FS 22 Anthony Wise 6-1 195 Jr. The Colony, Texas
RCB 21 Cole Brodie 5-10 190 Sr. Dacula, Ga.
JACKRABBIT SPECIALISTSPOS. NO. NAME HT. WT. YR. HOMETOWNPK 99 Peter Reifenrath 5-11 185 Sr. Decorah, Iowa
Kickoffs 29 Kyle Harris 6-0 190 Jr. Florissant, Mo.P 51 Dean Priddy 6-3 215 Sr. Eden Prairie, Minn.
Long Snaps 48 Dirk Kool 6-2 230 Jr. Fairfield, IowaShort Snaps60 Ryan McKnight 6-1 295 Sr. Sioux Falls, S.D.Holder 51 Dean Priddy 6-3 215 Sr. Eden Prairie, Minn.KOR 26 Dominique Clare 5-11 215 Jr. Delano, Minn.KOR 84 Trevor Tiefenthaler 5-10 175 R-Fr. Sioux Rapids, IowaPR 21 Cole Brodie 5-10 190 Sr. Dacula, Ga.
QUICK FACTSCOLORS:Yellow and BlueNICKNAME: JackrabbitsENROLLMENT: 12,816 (fall, 2010)PRESIDENT: Dr. David L. ChicoineFACULTYATHLETICS REPRESENTATIVE:Dr. Mylo HellicksonDIRECTOR OFATHLETICS: Justin SellHEAD COACH: John Stiegelmeier (SDSU,1979), 14th season, won 87, lost 65ASSISTANT COACHES:• Clint Brown, co-defensive coordinator/defensive line (Nebraska, 1996);• Jay Bubak, co-defensive coordinator/secondary (Nebraska Wesleyan, 1993); • Luke Meadows, offensive coordinator/offensive line (South Dakota State, 1999); • Josh Davis, wide receivers (South DakotaState, 2006);• Eric Eidsness, passing game coordinator/quarterbacks (Sioux Falls, 1992);• Shawn Mennenga, linebackers (Missouri,1993);• Shannon Moore, special teams/tight ends(Black Hills State, 2000);• Jesse Currier, defensive line (SouthDakota State, 2008)LETTERMEN RETURNING: 37LETTERMEN LOST: 16STARTERS RETURNING: 14STARTERS LOST: 10HOME STADIUM: Coughlin-Alumni Stadium (Natural Grass -15,000)AFFILIATION: NCAA Division I FootballChampionship Subdivision; Missouri Valley Football Conference
2009 SCORESSEPTEMBER12 GEORGIA SOUTHERN W, 44-619 *INDIANA STATE W, 41-026 *at Illinois State W, 38-17OCTOBER
3 at Cal Poly L, 14-2110 *at Missouri State W, 24-1717 *NORTH DAKOTA STATE W, 28-1324 *NORTHERN IOWA W, 24-1431 *at Youngstown State W, 17-3NOVEMBER
7 *SOUTHERN ILLINOIS L, 15-3414 at Minnesota L, 13-1621 *at Western Illinois W, 27-728 ^at Montana L, 48-61
*Missouri Valley Football Conference game^FCS playoff game
2010 Jackrabbits By The Number ...1 Avery Boykin2 Tyrel Kool3 Jordan Thomas4 Thomas O’Brien5 Aaron Rollin6 Austin Sumner7 Corey Jeske8 Darryl Jackson
10 Dominique Wright11 Erich Feller12 Cedric Provost13 General Parnell14 Winston Wright15 Brad Iverson16 Alex Kling17 Travis Lindstrom18 Conrad Kjerstad19 Bo Helm20 Julian Wagner21 Cole Brodie22 Anthony Wise
22 Jeff Fish23 Brandon Hubert24 Matt Hylland25 Tyler Duffy25 Dale Cook26 Dominique Clare27 Mason Winterboer28 Rodkem Matthews29 Kyle Harris30 Kyle Minett31 Zach Zenner32 Brett Tigges32 Ethan Sawyer33 Brad Tunge34 Doug Peete35 Kyle VanVoorst36 Jack Sherlock37 Skyler Luxa38 Chris Tracy39 Derek Domino40 Ramel Crenshaw
41 Casey Cuppy41 Matthew Korus42 R.C. Kilgore43 Auston LaBlance43 Jacob Edwards
`44 Ross Shafrath45 Mike Lien46 Jake Steffen47 Kyle Sheehan48 Dirk Kool49 Justin Syrovatka50 Mao Lefiti51 Dean Priddy52 Andy Mink53 Taylor Gibson54 Zacharia Bowers55 Josiah Fitzsimmons56 Nick Krings57 Matt Peitz60 Ryan McKnight61 Alex Smith
62 Alex Olinger63 Tyler Luethje64 Josh Kage65 Alex Parker66 Trevor Greger67 Jon Fick68 Erik Dahl69 Justin Taylor70 Jorge Dunklau71 Nick Purcell72 Jacob Ludemann73 Ryan Ode74 Zach Buchner75 Alex Dominguez76 Bryan Witzmann77 Andrew Mueller78 Will Castle79 Brahn Olson81 Brandon Gant82 Vince Benedetto83 Jason Schneider
84 Trevor Tiefenthaler85 Taylor Suess85 Nick Lee86 Seth Daughters87 Colin Cochart87 Jeremy Hallowanger88 Luke Lansman89 Alex Beyer90 Eric Tuschen91 Antonio Thompson92 Eric Wood93 Chase Douglas94 Brian Fischer95 Dijon Starr97 Simote Moala98 Ross Basham99 Peter Reifenrath
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RossBasham-98-
Vince Bendetto-82-
Alex Beyer-89-
ZachariaBowers-54-
AveryBoykin-1-
ColeBrodie-21-
ZachBuchner-74-
Will Castle-78-
DominiqueClare-26-
ColinCochart-87-
DaleCook-25-
RamelCrenshaw-40-
CaseyCuppy-41-
ErikDahl-68-
SethDaughters-86-
AlexDominguez-75-
DerekDomino-39-
ChaseDouglas-93-
Tyler Duffy-25-
JorgeDunklau-70-
Jacob Edwards-43-
ErichFeller-11-
JonFick-67-
BrianFischer-94-
Jeff Fish-22-
JosiahFitzsimmons-55-
BrandonGant-83-
Taylor Gibson-53-
TrevorGreger-66-
JeremyHallowanger-87-
2010 Jackrabbit Football
JACKRABBIT PLAYERS
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29-30, 35-36 SDSU Headshots_Layout 1 11/12/10 2:13 PM Page 1
KyleHarris-29-
Bo Helm-19-
BrandonHubert-23-
Matt Hylland-24-
BradIverson-15-
DarrylJackson-8-
CoreyJeske-7-
Josh Kage-64-
R.C.Kilgore-42-
ConradKjerstad-18-
AlexKling-16-
DirkKool-48-
TyrelKool-2-
MatthewKorus-41-
NickKrings-56-
AustonLaBlance-43-
LukeLansman-88-
Nick Lee-85-
MaoLefiti-50-
MikeLien-45-
TravisLindstrom-17-
JacobLudemann-72-
Tyler Luethje-63-
SkylerLuxa-37-
RodkemMatthews-28-
RyanMcKnight-60-
KyleMinett-30-
AndyMink-52-
SimoteMoala-97-
AndrewMueller-77-
2010 Jackrabbit Football
JACKRABBIT PLAYERS
30 The Bum
29-30, 35-36 SDSU Headshots_Layout 1 11/12/10 4:06 PM Page 2
South Dakota State University
JACKRABBITS2010 Football Roster
NO. NAME POS HT WT YR HOMETOWN1 Avery Boykin DB 5-10 175 Fr. Goodyear, Ariz.2 Tyrel Kool WR 5-10 185 So. Yankton, S.D.3 Jordan Thomas QB 6-1 200 Jr. Anaheim, Calif.4 Thomas O’Brien QB 6-2 205 So. Winona, Minn.5 Aaron Rollin WR 6-1 215 So. Lee’s Summit, Mo.6 Austin Sumner QB 6-4 210 Fr. Brandon, S.D.7 Corey Jeske DB 6-0 200 Sr. Buffalo, Minn.8 Darryl Jackson DB 5-9 180 Jr. Corona, Calif.
10 Dominique Wright DB 5-10 165 Fr. Lee’s Summit, Mo.11 Erich Feller LB 6-1 220 Jr. Charles City, Iowa12 Cedric Provost DB 5-11 185 Fr. Moreno Valley, Calif.13 General Parnell DB 5-9 195 Sr. San Bernardino, Calif.14 Winston Wright DB 5-9 185 R-Fr. Lee’s Summit, Mo.15 Brad Iverson WR 6-4 200 Jr. Sioux Falls, S.D.16 Alex Kling DB 5-10 180 R-Fr. Belle Fourche, S.D.17 Travis Lindstrom DB 5-11 190 R-Fr. Oakland, Neb.18 Conrad Kjerstad DB 5-11 195 Sr. Wall, S.D.19 Bo Helm DB 5-10 185 So. Childress, Texas20 Julian Wagner WR 5-9 180 So. Fort Worth, Texas21 Cole Brodie DB 5-10 190 Sr. Dacula, Ga.22 Anthony Wise DB 6-1 195 Jr. The Colony, Texas22 Jeff Fish WR 6-1 190 So. Milbank, S.D.23 Brandon Hubert WR 5-11 190 R-Fr. Gretna, Neb.24 Matt Hylland WR 5-10 185 Sr. Sioux Falls, S.D.25 Tyler Duffy RB 5-10 210 Sr. Brookings, S.D.25 Dale Cook RB 5-9 170 Fr. Lake in the Hills, Ill.26 Dominique Clare RB 5-11 215 Jr. Delano, Minn.27 Mason Winterboer RB 5-11 195 R-Fr. Brookings, S.D.28 Rodkem Matthews DB 5-10 190 Jr. Kansas City, Mo.29 Kyle Harris K 6-0 190 Jr. Florissant, Mo.30 Kyle Minett RB 5-10 215 Sr. Ruthton, Minn.31 Zach Zenner RB 5-11 200 Fr. Eagan, Minn.32 Brett Tigges DB 6-1 200 So. Ringsted, Iowa32 Ethan Sawyer P 6-0 190 Fr. Brandon, S.D.33 Brad Tunge RB 5-10 200 Fr. Monroe, S.D.34 Anthony “Doug” Peete LB 6-3 220 R-Fr. Olathe, Kan.35 Kyle VanVoorst LB 6-0 200 So. Inwood, Iowa36 Jack Sherlock LB 6-2 215 Fr. Chicago, Ill.37 Skyler Luxa DB 5-11 210 So. Blair, Neb.38 Chris Tracy LB 6-1 225 So. Larchwood, Iowa39 Derek Domino LB 6-3 235 Sr. Spring Lake Park, Minn.40 Ramel Crenshaw DB 5-9 170 Fr. Grayson, Ga.41 Casey Cuppy WR 6-1 195 Jr. Harrold, S.D.41 Matthew Korus DB 5-10 195 Fr. Humphrey, Neb.42 R.C. Kilgore LB 6-1 205 R-Fr. Cottage Grove, Minn.43 Auston LaBlance DL 6-3 230 Fr. Kansas City, Mo.43 Jacob Edwards LB 6-0 200 Fr. Brandon, S.D.44 Ross Shafrath LB 6-1 220 So. Hampton, Iowa45 Mike Lien LB 6-0 215 Jr. Castaic, Calif.46 Jake Steffen DL 6-3 240 Jr. Mount Vernon, S.D.47 Kyle Sheehan TE 6-2 250 Sr. Grayson, Ga.48 Dirk Kool LB 6-2 230 Jr. Fairfield, Iowa49 Justin Syrovatka K 5-9 170 Fr. Sioux Falls, S.D.50 Mao Lefiti DL 6-4 220 Sr. Koneoham, Hawaii51 Dean Priddy P 6-2 215 Sr. Eden Prairie, Minn.52 Andy Mink DL 6-2 270 So. Ashland, Neb.53 Taylor Gibson LB 6-0 215 R-Fr. Clear Lake, S.D.
NO. NAME POS HT WT YR HOMETOWN54 Zacharia Bowers DL 6-0 235 Jr. Topeka, Kan.55 Josiah Fitzsimmons DL 6-3 250 So. Ames, Iowa56 Nick Krings DL 6-2 230 Fr. Humphrey, Neb.57 Matt Peitz DL 6-0 265 R-Fr. Crofton, Neb.60 Ryan McKnight OL 6-1 295 Sr. Sioux Falls, S.D.61 Alex Smith OL 6-4 240 Fr. Scottsdale, Ariz.62 Alex Olinger OL 6-3 290 So. Ames, Iowa63 Tyler Luethje OL 6-4 285 So. Gladbrook, Iowa64 Josh Kage OL 6-4 280 R-Fr. Omaha, Neb.65 Alex Parker OL 6-5 300 R-Fr. Brookings, S.D.66 Trevor Greger OL 6-3 300 Fr. Wagner, S.D.67 Jon Fick OL 6-4 305 So. Hull, Iowa68 Erik Dahl OL 6-7 285 Fr. Bloomington, Minn.69 Justin Taylor OL 6-5 275 Fr. Hallam, Neb.70 Jorge Dunklau OL 6-3 250 Fr. Wayne, Neb.71 Nick Purcell OL 6-1 285 Fr. Rapid City, S.D.72 Jacob Ludemann OL 6-6 315 Sr. Norfolk, Neb.73 Ryan Ode OL 6-6 270 Fr. Brandon, S.D.74 Zach Buchner OL 6-4 290 Jr. Coon Rapids, Minn.75 Alex Dominguez OL 6-4 280 Jr. Ridgecrest, Calif.76 Bryan Witzmann OL 6-7 300 R-Fr. Houlton, Wis.77 Andrew Mueller OL 6-2 230 Fr. Peculiar, Mo.78 Will Castle OL 6-2 315 So. Brandon, S.D.79 Brahn Olson OL 6-3 320 Fr. Hutchinson, Minn.81 Brandon Gant WR 5-8 195 Jr. Olathe, Kan.82 Vince Benedetto TE 6-3 245 R-Fr. Crystal Lake, Ill.83 Jason Schneider WR 6-3 210 Fr. Andover, Minn.84 Trevor Tiefenthaler WR 5-10 175 R-Fr. Sioux Rapids, Iowa85 Taylor Suess OL 6-3 275 R-Fr. Columbus, Neb.85 Nick Lee TE 6-5 235 Fr. Blue Earth, Minn.86 Seth Daughters TE 6-5 235 So. Winner, S.D.87 Colin Cochart TE 6-4 260 S. Kewaunee, Wis.87 Jeremy Hallowanger WR 6-1 175 Fr. Oakdale, Minn.88 Luke Lansman WR 6-2 190 Fr. Harlan, Iowa89 Alex Beyer TE 6-3 250 Sr. Neenah, Wis.90 Eric Tuschen DL 6-3 230 Fr. Sioux Falls, S.D.91 Antonio Thompson DL 6-3 275 Sr. Sioux Falls, S.D.92 Eric Wood DL 6-3 235 Jr. Flower Mound, Texas93 Chase Douglas DL 6-3 260 R-Fr. Brandon, S.D.94 Brian Fischer DL 6-3 255 Sr. Ashton, Iowa95 Dijon Starr DL 6-0 280 Fr. New Brighton, Minn.97 Simote Moala DL 5-11 315 R-Fr. Perris, Calif.98 Ross Basham DL 6-1 275 Sr. Bridgeport, Texas99 Peter Reifenrath K 5-11 185 Sr. Decorah, Iowa
COACHING STAFF• Head Coach: John Stiegelmeier• Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line: Luke Meadows• Co-Defensive Coordinator/Secondary: Jay Bubak• Co-Defensive Coordinator/Def. Line/Recruiting Coordinator: Clint Brown• Passing Game Coordinator/Quarterbacks: Eric Eidsness• Special Teams Coordinator/Tight Ends: Shannon Moore• Linebackers: Shawn Mennenga• Wide Receivers: Josh Davis• Defensive Line: Jesse Currier• Graduate Assistant-Running Backs: Thadd Sharrett• Graduate Assistant-Defensive Backs: Jimmy Rogers
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University ofNORTH DAKOTA
2010 Football Roster
NO. NAME POS HT WT YR HOMETOWN1 Breon Butler RB 5-11 172 Fr. Pittsburg, Calif. 2 Ross Cochran LB 6-2 245 Sr. Kenosha, Wis. 3 Jake Miller RB 5-11 158 Fr. Bismarck, N.D. 4 Daryl Brown DB 5-10 155 Fr. Plymouth, Minn. 5 R.J. McGill WR 5-10 165 Fr. Phoenix, Ariz. 6 Jake Landry QB 6-3 220 Sr. Grand Forks, N.D. 7 Kenny Watkins DB 5-10 180 Jr. Plano, Texas 8 Trey Demler QB 6-0 201 Fr. Oshkosh, Wis. 8 Ryan Dressler WR 5-8 151 Sr. Bismarck, N.D. 9 Brent Goska QB 6-3 216 Jr. Wisconsin Rapids, Wis.
10 Isaac Carrasco WR 5-10 152 Fr. Arlington, Texas 11 Zeb Miller K 6-1 195 R-Fr. Ankeny, Iowa 12 Brett Cameron K 6-1 185 So. Winnipeg, Manitoba13 Marcus Hendrickson QB 6-1 192 So. Perham, Minn. 14 Kris Ankenbauer DB 5-9 190 Sr. Murphy, Texas 14 Chris Comes QB 6-4 225 Fr. Danville, Calif. 15 Tyrhy Ivery WR 6-1 175 Fr. Garland, Texas 15 Seth Nichols QB 6-5 230 So. McVille, N.D. 16 Ben Buchl DB 6-0 180 So. Kasson, Minn. 17 Chavon Mackey DB 5-9 171 R-Fr. Jacksonville, Fla. 18 Eric Hagen WR 6-1 210 Fr. E. Grand Forks, Minn.19 Catlin Solum RB 5-10 220 Jr. Fargo, N.D. 20 Justin Belotti DB 5-11 197 Jr. Kenosha, Wis. 21 Joel Schwenzfeier DB 6-2 194 Sr. Hallock, Minn.22 Myles Jablonski LB 6-2 217 Fr. Omaha, Neb. 22 Ryan Kasowski LB 6-3 230 Sr. Grand Forks, N.D. 23 Ethan Magstadt RB 6-1 225 So. Maple Grove, Minn.24 Karl Hager DB 5-10 174 R-Fr. Larimore, N.D. 25 Damon Andrews LB 6-4 228 R-Fr. West Concord, Minn.26 Chris Hall DB 5-10 178 R-Fr. Jacksonville, Fla. 27 Josh Murray RB 5-11 209 Jr. Pepin, Wis. 28 Mitch Sutton RB 6-0 211 So. Plover, Wis. 29 Mitch Kudrna DB 6-1 185 Jr. Dickinson, N.D. 30 Dominique Hawkins DB 6-0 178 Jr. Plymouth, Minn. 31 Jarrel Davis WR 6-1 193 Sr. Miami, Fla. 32 Spencer Bickel RB 5-11 185 R-Fr. Minot, N.D. 33 Erik Mersereau DB 6-0 197 So. Port Washington, Wis.34 Cordero Finley LB 6-1 207 R-Fr. Kenosha, Wis. 35 Dan Hendrickson LB 6-0 222 Jr. Minot, N.D. 36 Johnnie Daniels, Jr. LB 6-0 206 Jr. Miami, Fla. 37 Joey Walker LB 6-1 205 Fr. San Jose, Calif. 38 Payton DeCoteau RB 5-10 225 Fr. Belcourt, N.D. 38 Curtis Dublanko LB 6-0 237 Sr. Thorsby, Alberta 39 Adam Shaugabay RB 6-1 188 Fr. Warroad, Minn. 40 Baylee Carr DB 5-9 182 Fr. Hazen, N.D. 42 Derrick Dulaney LB 6-1 201 Fr. Oak Creek, Wis. 43 Ekenna Anya-Gafu DE 6-2 246 Fr. Sacramento, Calif. 44 Joe Kingery TE 6-3 217 R-Fr. Bemidji, Minn. 45 Jay Nelson DL 6-4 255 So. Wheaton, Minn. 46 Dominique Bennett LB 6-1 210 R-Fr. DeSoto, Texas 47 Seth Wisthoff WR 6-4 268 So. Glenburn, N.D. 48 Paul German LB 6-1 240 Sr. Fargo, N.D. 49 Travis Greenwaldt FB 6-0 200 R-Fr. Puposky, Minn. 50 Alex Hickel LB 6-1 196 Fr. Grand Forks, N.D. 52 Matt Bakke OL 6-1 271 Sr. Grand Forks, N.D. 52 Ben Peters LB 6-2 234 Fr. Chandler, Ariz. 53 Garrison Goodman LB 6-2 218 R-Fr. San Ramon, Calif.
NO. NAME POS HT WT YR HOMETOWN54 Ian McGurran OL 6-4 282 So. Fargo, N.D. 55 Dwayne Pecosky OL 6-2 260 Fr. Commerce City, Colo.56 Mitch Goertz LB 6-2 227 Jr. Rothschild, Wis. 57 Brian Otto LB 6-1 207 R-Fr. West Allis, Wis. 58 Tanner Naastad K 6-0 170 Fr. Grand Forks, N.D. 59 Nick Albano LB 6-1 223 Fr. Farmington, Minn. 60 Samuel Pokornowski DL 6-0 245 Fr. Cokato, Minn. 61 Brock Keller OL 5-10 240 Fr. Minot, N.D. 62 Joe Kleason OL 6-4 293 Fr. Eagan, Minn. 65 Brandon QuesenberryOL 6-4 298 Jr. Billings, Mont. 67 Shea Walker OL 6-2 305 Fr. St. Paul, Minn. 68 Caleb Gillson OL 6-8 304 So. Buyck, Minn. 69 Ben Henson DL 6-1 311 Fr. Buffalo, Minn. 70 Creighton Schroyer OL 6-3 283 Sr. Pipestone, Minn. 71 Keith Queoff OL 6-7 287 Sr. Milwaukee, Wis. 72 Karl Holm OL 6-4 335 Fr. Cavalier, N.D.73 Darren Peterson OL 6-6 310 Fr. Maple Grove, Minn.74 Devin Barton OL 6-6 276 Fr. Carrington, N.D. 75 Caleb Nelson OL 6-3 257 R-Fr. Forman, N.D. 76 Darren DeNeui OL 6-8 281 R-Fr. Chancellor, S.D. 77 Connor McKendry OL 6-4 289 Jr. Costa Mesa, Calif. 78 Emmett Lynch OL 6-5 298 So. Winsted, Minn. 79 Jake Hoerchner OL 6-4 282 R-Fr. Menomonee Falls, Wis.80 Jon Heimler WR 6-3 190 So. Colfax, Wis. 81 Taylor Grant TE 6-5 228 Fr. Eden Prairie, Minn.82 Drew Daggett WR 6-4 201 Jr. Frazee, Minn. 83 Nick Long TE 6-4 234 Jr. Andover, Minn. 84 Greg Hardin WR 5-11 166 R-Fr. Bellevue, Neb. 85 Seth Stanchik DL 6-4 252 R-Fr. Hudson, Wis. 86 Blair Townsend WR 6-3 208 R-Fr. Coon Rapids, Minn.87 Tyler Jenson TE 6-5 235 Fr. Waupaca, Wis. 88 Chris Anderson WR 6-2 183 Jr. Duluth, Minn. 89 Brendan Mochoruk TE 6-5 229 R-Fr. E. Grand Forks, Minn.90 Devin Benjamin DL 6-3 287 So. Minneapolis, Minn.91 Brent Cole DL 6-6 231 R-Fr. Warroad, Minn. 91 Spencer Cummings DL 6-4 245 Fr. Hugo, Minn. 92 Brandon Dawson RB 6-2 206 Fr. Lindstrom, Minn. 95 Broc Bellmore DL 6-1 270 Jr. West Fargo, N.D. 96 Brock Lundeen DL 6-3 259 R-Fr. Huber Heights, Ohio97 Andrew Just DL 6-3 230 Fr. Beulah, N.D. 98 Ross Brenneman DL 6-4 252 So. Omaha, Neb.99 Ty Boyle DL 6-4 286 Sr. Int’l Falls, Minn.
COACHING STAFF• Head Coach: Chris Mussman• Assistant Head Coach/Co-Defensive Coordinator: Mike Mannausau• Co-Defensive Coordinator/Secondary: John Kelling• Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks: Greg Breitbach• Special Teams Coordinator/Inside Linebackers: Josh Kotelnicki• Receivers: Tim Belmore• Offensive Line: Rod Carey• Running Backs: Jace Schillinger• Tight Ends: Mike Kubes• Outside Linebackers: George Love• Defensive Assistant: Kyle Myers
34 The Bum
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ThomasO’Brien-4-
RyanOde-73-
AlexOlinger-62-
BrahnOlson-79-
AlexParker-65-
GeneralParnell-13-
DougPeete-34-
MattPeitz-57-
DeanPriddy-51
CedricProvost-12-
Nick Purcell-71-
PeterReifenrath-99-
AaronRollin-5-
Ethan Sawyer-32-
JasonSchneider-83-
RossShafrath-44-
KyleSheehan-47-
JackSherlock-36-
AlexSmith-61-
DijonStarr-95-
Jake Steffen-46-
TaylorSuess-85-
AustinSumner-6-
JustinSyrovatka-49-
JustinTaylor-69-
JordanThomas-3-
AntonioThompson-91-
TrevorTiefenthaler-84-
BrettTigges-32-
ChrisTracy-38-
2010 Jackrabbit Football
JACKRABBIT PLAYERS
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29-30, 35-36 SDSU Headshots_Layout 1 11/12/10 2:15 PM Page 3
BradTunge-33-
Eric Tuschen-90-
KyleVanVoorst-35-
JulianWagner-20-
MasonWinterboer-27-
AnthonyWise-22-
BryanWitzmann-76-
Eric Wood-92-
DomWright-10-
Winston-Wright-14-
ZachZenner-31-
2010 Jackrabbit Football
JACKRABBIT PLAYERS
36 The Bum
29-30, 35-36 SDSU Headshots_Layout 1 11/12/10 2:16 PM Page 4
2010 Jackrabbit Football
NORTH DAKOTA LINEUP
UND ON OFFENSEPOS. NO. NAME HT. WT. YR. HOMETOWNLT 70 Creighton Schroyer 6-3 283 Sr. Pipestone, Minn.LG 62 Joe Kleason 6-4 293 R-Fr. Eagan, Minn.C 54 Ian McGurran 6-4 282 So. Fargo, N.D.
RG 78 Emmett Lynch 6-5 298 So. Lester Prairie, Minn.RT 71 Keith Queoff 6-7 287 Sr. Milwaukee, Wis.TE 47 Seth Wisthoff 6-4 268 So. Glenburn, N.D.WR 84 Greg Hardin 5-11 166 R-Fr. Bellevue, Neb.WR 88 Chris Anderson 6-2 183 Jr. Duluth, Minn.QB 9 Brent Goska 6-3 216 Jr. Wisconsin Rapids, Wis.FB 19 Catlin Solum 5-10 220 Jr. Fargo, N.D.RB 27 Josh Murray 5-11 209 Jr. Pepin, Wis.
UND ON DEFENSEPOS. NO. NAME HT. WT. YR. HOMETOWNDE 95 Broc Bellmore 6-1 270 Jr. West Fargo, N.D.NT 99 Ty Boyle 6-4 286 Sr. International Falls, Minn.DE 98 Ross Brenneman 6-4 252 So. Omaha, Neb.
OLB 2 Ross Cochran 6-2 245 Sr. Kenosha, Wis.ILB 38 Curtis Dublanko 6-0 237 Sr. Thorsby, AlbertaILB 35 Dan Hendrickson 6-0 222 Jr. Minot, N.D.OLB 22 Ryan Kasowski 6-3 230 Sr. Grand Forks, N.D.CB 30 Dominique Hawkins 6-0 178 Jr. Plymouth, Minn.SS 14 Kris Ankenbauer 5-9 190 Sr. Murphy, TexasFS 21 Joel Schwenzfeier 6-2 194 Sr. Hallock, Minn.CB 17 Chavon Mackey 5-9 171 R-Fr. Jacksonville, Fla.
UND SPECIALISTSPOS. NO. NAME HT. WT. YR. HOMETOWNPK 11 Zeb Miller 6-1 195 R-Fr. Ankeny, IowaP 12 Brett Cameron 6-1 185 So. Winnipeg, Manitoba
KOR 30 Dominique Hawkins 6-0 178 Jr. Plymouth, Minn.PR 27 Josh Murray 5-11 209 Jr. Pepin, Wis.
Holder 13 Marcus Hendrickson 6-1 192 So. Perham, Minn.Long Snaps 45 Jay Nelson 6-4 255 So. Wheaton, Minn.Short Snaps 47 Seth Wisthoff 6-4 268 So. Glenburn, N.D.
QUICK FACTSCOLORS: Kelly Green and WhiteENROLLMENT: 12,748PRESIDENT: Dr. Robert KelleyFACULTYATHLETICS REPRESENTATIVE:Sue JenoDIRECTOR OFATHLETICS: Brian FaisonHEAD COACH: Chris MussmanASSISTANT COACHES:• Assistant Head Coach/Co-Defensive Coordinator: Mike Mannausau• Co-Defensive Coordinator/Secondary: JohnKelling• Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks: GregBreitbach• Special Teams Coordinator/Inside Lineback-ers: Josh Kotelnicki• Wide Reeivers: Tim Belmore• Offensive Line: Rod Carey• Outside Linebackers: George Love• Tight Ends: Mike Kubes• Running Backs: Jace SchillingerLETTERMEN RETURNING: 32LETTERMEN LOST: 18STARTERS RETURNING: 15 (6 Off., 9 Def.)STARTERS LOST: 9HOME STADIUM: Alerus Center (ArtificialTurf - 12,283)AFFILIATION: NCAA Division I FootballChampionship Subdivision; Great West Conference (will join Big Sky Conference in2012)
2009 SCORESSEPTEMBER
5 at Texas Tech L, 13-3819 at Northwestern State (La.) W, 27-2026 at Stephen F. Austin (Texas) L, 31-65OCTOBER
3 *SOUTH DAKOTA W, 27-1210 STONY BROOK (N.Y.) W, 31-2417 SIOUX FALLS L, 13-2824 *at Southern Utah L, 10-3531 *CAL POLY W, 31-17NOVEMBER
7 SOUTHERN OREGON W, 30-2414 *at UC Davis L, 20-2828 at Central Arkansas W, 17-16
UND Players By The Number ...1 Breon Butler2 Ross Cochran3 Jake Miller4 Daryl Brown5 R.J. McGill6 Jake Landry7 Kenny Watkins8 Trey Demler8 Ryan Dressler9 Brent Goska
10 Isaac Carrasco11 Zeb Miller12 Brett Cameron13 Marcus Hendrickson14 Kris Ankenbauer14 Chris Comes15 Tyrhy Ivery15 Seth Nichols16 Ben Buchl17 Chavon Mackey18 Eric Hagen19 Catlin Solum20 Justin Belotti21 Joel Schwenzfeier22 Myles Jablonski
23 Ethan Magstadt24 Karl Hager25 Damon Andrews26 Chris Hall27 Josh Murray28 Mitch Sutton29 Mitch Kudma30 Dominique Hawkins31 Jarrel Davis32 Spencer Bickel33 Erik Mesereau34 Cordero Finley35 Dan Hendrickson36 Johnnie Daniels, Jr.37 Joey Walker38 Payton DeCoteau38 Curtis Dublanko39 Adam Shaugabay40 Baylee Carr42 Derrick Dulaney43 Ekenna Anya-Gafu44 Joe Kingery45 Jay Nelson46 Dominique Bennett47 Seth Wisthoff
48 Paul German49 Travis Greenwaldt50 Alex Hickel52 Matt Bakke52 Ben Peters53 Garrison Goodman54 Ian McGurran55 Dwayne Pecosky56 Mitch Goertz57 Brian Otto58 Tanner Naastad59 Nick Albano60 Samuel Pokornowski61 Brock Keller62 Joe Kleason65 Brandon Quesenberry67 Shea Walker68 Caleb Gillson69 Ben Henson70 Creighton Schroyer71 Ketih Queoff72 Karl Holm73 Darren Peterson74 Devin Barton75 Caleb Nelson
76 Darren DeNeui77 Connor McKendry78 Emmett Lynch79 Jake Hoerchner80 Jon Heimler81 Taylor Grant82 Drew Daggett83 Nick Long84 Greg Hardin85 Seth Stanchik86 Blair Townsend87 Tyler Jenson88 Chris Anderson89 Brendan Mochoruk90 Devin Benjamin91 Brent Cole91 Spencer Cummings92 Brandon Dawson95 Broc Bellmore96 Brock Lundeen97 Andrew Just98 Ross Brenneman99 Ty Boyle
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The University of North Dakota will attempt to end the 2010 season on a high notetoday as it resumes its long-standing rivalrywith South Dakota State.
UND, which will end with a losing seasonfor the first time since 2002, enters today’sgame with a 3-7 overall record, including an0-4 mark in the Great West Conference.
Redshirt freshman wide receiver GregHardin has shown big-play ability to lead theUND offense. Hardin has paced the squadwith 39 catches for 712 yards — an average of18.3 yards per reception — with nine touch-downs. He had an 85-yard touchdown recep-tion against Northern Illinois and added a63-yard touchdown run a week later againstNortheastern State (Okla.).
Josh Murray has been a dual threat out ofthe backfield, averaging 5.6 yards per carrywhile gaining a team-high 614 yards with fourtouchdowns. Murray also ranks second on theteam with 27 receptions and has thrown atouchdown pass this season. In addition, Murray has handled punt returns this season,averagng 11.4 yards per attempt, including a60-yard touchdown.
Ryan Dressler has reached the 20-receptionmark, as well, hauling in 20 catches for 202yards.
UND lost starting quarterback Jake Landrydue to injury last month and has turned toBrent Goska. A junior, Goska has completed62 percent of his passes (31-of-50) for 323yards and a touchdown. He has yet to throw aninterception this season behind an offensiveline anchored by senior right tackle KeithQueoff.
The UND defense has been led by junior inside linebacker Dan Hendrickson. TheMinot native has tallied a team-best 79 tacklesthis season, racking up 7.5 tackles for loss and3.5 sacks.
Strong safety Kris Ankenbauer ranks sec-ond on the team with 53 tackles.
An aggressive UND secondary has tallied11 interceptions this season, three of whichhave been returned for touchdowns. Freesafety Joel Schwenzfeier has recorded a team-high four interceptions, including a 100-yardreturn for touchdown in a conference loss atSouthern Utah on Oct. 9.
Chris Hall and Dominique Hawkins have
the other interception returns for touchdowns.Hawkins has been the primary kick returnerfor UND, averaging 28.8 yards on 17 returns.
R.J. McGill has added nine kick returns foran average of 23.9 yards per attempt.
Up front, UND’s 3-4 defense features nosetackle Ty Boyle. A senior, Boyle has 3.5 tack-les for loss and a sack among his 35 tackles.Flanking Boyle are Ross Benneman, who hasa team-high four sacks, and rush end RossCochran, who has tallied 3.5 sacks.
As a team, UND has sacked the quarterback25 times this season.
UND has been solid on special teams in2010, especially in the kicking game. Sopho-more punter Brett Cameron is averaing 39.4yards per punt, but has landed 22 of his 54 at-tempts inside the opponents’ 20-yard line.
Redshirt freshman kicker Zeb Miller is 9-for-15 on field goals this season, with all sixmisses on attempts of at least 41 yards. Millermade three field goals two weeks ago at UCDavis. His long field goal of 44 yards cameagainst the University of South Dakota in earlyOctober.
2010 Jackrabbit Football
ABOUT NORTH DAKOTA
Cameron Hardin Hendrickson Murray Queoff Schwenzfeier
Head Coach Chris MussmanChris Mussman is completing his third season as head coach of the University of North Dakota football
program. After leading UND to back-to-back six win seasons in his first two years as head coach, Mussman enters today’s game with a 15-16 overall record.
Mussman became the 25th head coach in UND football history on Jan. 4, 2008, after nine seasons onthe coaching staff, including the last four as assistant head coach and the last seven as offensive coordina-tor. He possesses nearly two decades of collegiate coaching experience. During his nine seasons as an assistant at UND, the squad went a combined 90-24 (.789), won a Division II national championship in2001, won five North Central Conference titles and made five NCAA Division II postseason appearances.
In 2007, Mussman directed arguably the most explosive offensive unit in the history of UND football,which set school records for total yards (5,924), total touchdowns (60) and regular season scoring average(40.7 points per game).
Offensive prominence was a staple of Sioux football during Mussman’s time as offensive coordinator.UND’s offensive record books are littered with accomplishments achieved under Mussman’s watch, including the top three single-season passing yardage performances, top seven completion percentage performances and seven of the top eight marks for single-season receptions. Also, six of the top 10 highest-rated passers in UND history were tutored by Mussman.
Prior to coming to UND, Mussman spent the previous eight seasons on the staff at Minnesota State University, Mankato. In 1996, Mussman was promoted to assistant head coach and offensive coordinator at MSU after serving as the Mavericks’offensive line and tight ends coach. Under Mussman, the 1996 Mavericks led the NCC in total offense.
Mussman holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from Iowa State and a master’s degree in sports management from MSU. He was a four-year letterwinner and starting offensive lineman at Iowa State, serving as a team captain in 1990.
38 The Bum
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
PAYTON AWARD WATCH LIST
APPETIZERS ENTREES BURGERS SANDWICHESSALADS & MORE
LLooccaatteedd iinn tthhee SSDDSSUU SSttuuddeenntt UUnniioonn
A perfect place for the campus community, fans, family & friends to meet up before or after the big game.
Come try one of our signature entrees!CCCCCCCCCCoooooooommmmmmmmmmeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee ttttttttttttttttttttttttttrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrryyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooonnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnneeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooofffffffffffffffffffffffffff oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooouuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuurrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr sssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiigggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaatttttttttttttttttttttttttuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuurrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrreeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeennnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnntttttttttttttttttttttttttrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrreeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeesssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss!!
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South Dakota State University running backKyle Minett remains one of 20 players on the official watch list for the 2010 Walter PaytonAward, which is awarded to the top offensiveplayerin the NCAA Division I Football Champi-onship Subdivision.
A native of Ruthton,Minn., Minett is cur-rently ranked secondamong active FCS backswith 4,277 career rush-ing yards — a total thatalso ranks second on theSDSU career charts.
A two-time second-team all-Missouri ValleyFootball Conference selection, he is the onlyplayer in Jackrabbit history to rush for 1,000yards in three straight seasons, reaching themilestone Oct. 30 at Indiana State. With 1,208yards for the season, Minett currently ranks 11thin rushing in the FCS with an average of 120.8yards per game.
Minett, who was named to the AssociatedPress All-America Third Team in 2009, is thefirst SDSU football player to be nominated forthe Walter Payton Award, which is sponsored byFathead.com and presented by The Sports Net-work. Ballots for the Walter Payton Award will
be sent to a panel of approximately 200 sportsinformation and media relations directors,broadcasters, writers and other dignitaries afterthe regular season on Nov. 22. Three finalists
will be announced on Dec. 1 and invited to TheSports Network/Fathead FCS Awards Presenta-tion Jan. 6 — the night before the FCS nationalchampionship game — in Frisco, Texas.
Minett
Matt Barr Sr. QB 6-2 210 Western IllinoisMike Brown Jr. QB 6-0 205 Liberty (Va.)Thomas DeMarco Jr. QB 5-11 205 Old Dominion (Va.)Pat Devlin Sr. QB 6-4 220 DelawareNate Eachus Jr. RB 5-10 216 Colgate (N.Y.)Chris Evans Sr. RB 6-1 215 Samford (Ala.)Henry Harris Sr. RB 5-8 185 Southeast Missouri StateBen Ijalana Sr. OL 6-4 320 Villanova (Pa.)Taiwan Jones Jr. RB 6-1 200 Eastern WashingtonDenarius McGee R-Fr. QB 5-11 203 Montana StateKyle Minett Sr. RB 5-10 215 South Dakota StateJeremy Moses Sr. QB 6-0 195 Stephen F. Austin (Texas)Tysson Poots Sr. WR 6-3 205 Southern UtahDeAndre Presley Jr. QB 5-11 170 Appalachian State (N.C.)Chase Reynolds Sr. RB 6-0 195 MontanaScott Riddle Sr. QB 6-1 215 Elon (N.C.)Casey Therriault Jr. QB 6-3 205 Jackson State (Miss.)Steve Valentino Sr. QB 5-10 175 Dayton (Ohio)Frank Warren Sr. RB 5-9 200 Grambling State (La.)Chris Whitney Sr. QB 6-2 230 Villanova (Pa.)
Walter Payton Award Watch List
39 - Misc., Aramark_Layout 1 11/16/10 8:05 AM Page 1
40 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
CAREER, SINGLE-SEASON LEADERSCAREER TOTAL OFFENSE
1. Ted Wahl, 1985-88..............................7,2452. Josh Ranek, 1997-01 ..........................6,7453. Ryan Berry, 2005-08 ..........................5,9714. Andy Rennerfeldt, 1997-2000 ............5,7655. Gary Maffett, 1977-79 ........................5,2826. Todd McDonald, 1990-93 ..................5,2487. Brad Nelson, 2001-04 ........................5,2188. Mike Busch, 1984-85 ........................4,9339. Dan Fjeldheim, 1999-2002 ................4,785
10. Mike Law, 1982-83 ............................4,724
CAREER PASSING YARDS1. Ryan Berry, 2005-08 ..........................6,0232. Ted Wahl, 1985-88..............................6,0163. Andy Rennerfeldt, 1997-00 ................5,3514. Brad Nelson, 2001-04 ........................5,3285. Dan Fjeldheim, 1999-02 ....................5,1766. Todd McDonald, 1990-93 ..................4,9997. Mike Busch, 1984-85 ........................4,9808. Shane Bouman, 1988-91 ....................4,6639. Noel Bouche’, 1996-98 ......................3,947
10. Bill Perron, 1994-96 ..........................3,747
CAREER RUSHING YARDS1. Josh Ranek, 1997-2001 ......................6,7442. Kyle Minett, 2007-present................4,2773. Anthony Watson, 2003-06 ..................3,7124. Dan Sonnek, 1984-87 ........................3,3045. Les Tuma, 1970-73 ............................3,0186. Cory Koenig, 2004-07 ........................2,9907. Darwin Gonnerman, 1966-68 ............2,5988. Rick Wegher, 1981-84 ........................2,2939. Paul Klinger, 1990-94 ........................2,161
10. Joe Thorne, 1959-61 ..........................2,156
CAREER RECEPTIONS1. Josh Davis, 2002-05 ..............................2252. Jeff Tiefenthaler, 1983-86......................1733. JaRon Harris, 2005-08 ..........................152
Glen Fox, 2006-09 ................................1524. Rusty Lenners, 1993-96 ........................1376. Darren Baartman, 1988-91 ....................1287. Dennis Thomas, 1982-85 ......................1278. Solomon Johnson, 2001-04 ..................1199. Mike Ethier, 1981-83 ............................118
10. Mike Myers, 1990-93 ............................116
CAREER RECEIVING YARDS
1. Jeff Tiefenthaler, 1983-86 ..................3,6212. Josh Davis, 2002-05 ..........................3,1923. JaRon Harris, 2005-08........................2,2414. Rusty Lenners, 1993-96......................1,9425. J.D. Berreth, 1986-88 ........................1,8686. Glen Fox, 2006-09..............................1,8327. Mike Myers, 1990-93 ........................1,8188. Mike Ethier, 1981-83..........................1,8169. Lionel Macklin, 1977-79 ....................1,700
10. Darren Baartman, 1988-91 ................1,658
SINGLE-SEASON TOTAL OFFENSE
1. Brad Nelson, 2003 ..............................3,0562. Ryan Berry, 2008................................3,0093. Ted Wahl, 1986 ..................................2,9654. Todd McDonald, 1993........................2,9375. Mike Busch, 1985 ..............................2,5176. Mike Busch, 1984 ..............................2,4177. Ted Wahl, 1988 ..................................2,4038. Andy Rennerfeldt, 1999 ....................2,3519. Dan Fjeldheim, 2002 ..........................2,257
10. Andy Kardoes, 2006 ..........................2,230
SINGLE-SEASON PASSING1. Brad Nelson, 2003 ..............................3,1412. Ryan Berry, 2008................................3,1063. Todd McDonald, 1993........................2,7154. Dan Fjeldheim, 2002 ..........................2,6635. Mike Busch, 1985 ..............................2,5546. Ted Wahl, 1986 ..................................2,5427. Mike Busch, 1984 ..............................2,4368. Dan Fjeldheim, 2001 ..........................2,2689. Brad Nelson, 2004 ..............................2,225
10. Ryan Berry, 2007................................2,132
SINGLE-SEASON RUSHING1. Josh Ranek, 1999................................2,0552. Josh Ranek, 1998................................1,8813. Josh Ranek, 2001................................1,8044. Dan Sonnek, 1985 ..............................1,5185. Rick Wegher, 1984..............................1,3176. Kyle Minett, 2009..............................1,3047. Kyle Minett, 2008..............................1,2898. Cory Koenig, 2007..............................1,2669. Kyle Minett, 2010..............................1,208
10. Dan Nelson, 1993 ..............................1,150
SINGLE-SEASON RECEPTIONS
1. Jeff Tiefenthaler, 1986 ............................732. Josh Davis, 2002......................................70
JaRon Harris, 2008 ..................................704. Glen Fox, 2008 ........................................665. Josh Davis, 2003......................................636. Glen Fox, 2009 ........................................627. Tyrel Kool, 2010 ....................................588. Rusty Lenners, 1995................................559. Jeff Tiefenthaler, 1985 ............................54
Mike Myers, 1991....................................54
40 - Misc., SD Corn_Layout 1 11/16/10 8:06 AM Page 1
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL SIGNS THREEHead coach Aaron Johnston announced Nov.
10 that three high school standouts signed aNational Letter of Intent, indicating they willenroll at South Dakota State University nextfall and compete for the Jackrabbit women'sbasketball program.
Signing on the first day of the Novembersigning period, were:
• Mariah Clarin, 6-foot-1, post, Princeton,Minn.;
• Megan Stuart, 6-2, wing/forward, Roseville, Minn., and
• Rachel Walters, 6-1, wing/forward, SiouxFalls, S.D
“We are very pleased to be adding three newJackrabbits to our family,” Johnston said.“Rachel, Mariah and Megan are great fits forour University, community, and basketball program.Our fans will love watching themcompete in the yellow and blue.”
Clarin has been a starter since her freshmanyear at Princeton High School and reached the1,000-point mark during her junior season. Atwo-time all-Mississippi 8 Conference selec-tion, Clarin led the league in scoring at 19.9points per game and averaged 13 rebounds and3.7 blocks per game as a junior, when she wasselected to the honorable mention Class 3AAll-State Team by the Minnesota BasketballNews. Clairn also has played at the AAU levelfor the Minnesota Stars and the North Tartan15U and Elite squads - the latter of which wonthe state AAU championship this past season.
In addition, Clarin was a member of theschool-record 4x400-meter relay in track andfield and has been an academic all-conferencehonoree.
Stuart has lettered in three sports at RosevilleArea High School, earning all-state honors inbasketball and track and field. On the court,Stuart averaged 18.6 points per game as junioren route to earning honorable mention all-staterecognition from the St. Paul Pioneer Pressand Minnesota Coaches Association, as well asall-Suburban East Conference accolades. Sheenters her senior season with 912 points.
Her extensive AAU basketball experiencewith the Minnesota Starts Borowicz team includes winning back-to-back Adidas NationalTournament titles and finishing in the top fourof the Disney Showcase in July 2010. The Starswon the state title in 2009 and finished as run-ners-up in 2010.
In other athletic pursuits, Stuart has letteredtwice in volleyball and placed in the top 10 atthe state track and field meet in both the triplejump and 4x200-meter relay. Stuart also hasexcelled in the classroom, earning academicall-state honors in all three sports.
Walters played a key role on WashingtonHigh School teams that won Class AA state titles in 2008 and 2010. A first-team all-state
selection and member of the Sioux Falls ArgusLeader First Five during her junior season,Walters averaged 13 points and seven reboundsper game, making 46 three-pointers. She alsohas been named an all-city each of the past twoseasons and earned three academic letters.
Walters also was honored on the Miss Basketball All-America Team in both 2009 and2010, as well as earning a spot on the DakotaShowcase Miss Basketball All-TournamentTeam each of the last two years.JACKRABBIT MEN ADD TWO ZACHS
The South Dakota State men's basketballteam signed a pair of standouts — both namedZach — to National Letters of Intent on Nov.10.
The two early signees were:• Zach Horstman, 6-5, 190, guard, Winner,
S.D., and • Zach Monaghan, 6-2, 165, guard, Palatine,
Ill.Already a three-year starter and the Winner
High School record holder for career points,steals and rebounds, Horstman gets one moreseason to add to those totals.
“We've been involved with Zach and hisfamily for more than two years now, and it’snice to finally be able to talk about him,”SDSU head coach Scott Nagy said. “He’s anextremely gifted athlete, we love his size at athe guard position and he can really shoot theball. Again, he’s another player who comesfrom a program that is used to winning and welove that. Any time we can get a player fromour state who can help us win at this level is ahuge advantage for our program.”
In addition to his career records, Horstmanaveraged 19.2 points, 5.4 rebounds and 4.3 assists per game as a junior, on his way to earn-ing first-team Class 'A' all-state honors and all-Big Dakota Conference honors for the thirdyear in a row. He also earned a second-teamClass A all-state selection as a sophomore.
More than a basketball player, Horstmanplayed on the 2009 Class 11B state footballtitle team and on the 2008 Class 11A state runner-up team.
A three-year starter himself, Zach Monaghancomes to South Dakota State from Fremd HighSchool in Palatine, Ill., where he led theVikings to a Mid-Suburban West League titleas a junior captain.
“Zach gives us versatility because he canplay both guard positions,” Nagy said. “He hasa tremendous basketball IQ with the skills todevelop into a great scorer. It’s important as wemove forward to recruit players who are usedto winning and Zach is definitely used to winning."
Monaghan averaged 16.8 points and 3.7 assists per game in his junior season with a 2:1assist to turnover ratio and 43 three-pointers,earning Mid-Suburban West co-Player of the
Year, Chicago Daily Herald all-area and Illinois Basketball all-state honorable mentionhonors. RANKED WRESTLER SIGNS WITH SDSU
Head coach Jason Liles and the SouthDakota State wrestling program announce thesigning of Colby Kloetzer, who inked a National Letter of Intent indicating his plans toenroll at South Dakota State University andcompete for the Jackrabbit wrestling team nextseason.
The Caldwell, Idaho native currently ranksNo. 6 at the 152-pound weight class and No. 47in the nation by Intermat. He is projected towrestle at either 149 or 157 pounds at the colle-giate level.
“Colby really bought into where we see ourwrestling program going and he felt comfort-able in the smaller school atmosphere,” saidLiles. “We’re excited to welcome him into ourwrestling family and look forward to the talenthe will add to the program.”
Kloetzer won the Idaho state championshipin 2008 and 2010 and earned runner up in2009. He holds a 125-5 record in the first threeyears of his prep career, including 100 wins byfall.
Kloetzer is a two-time Sierra Nevada Clas-sic Champion, three-time Fargo Freestyle All-American, eight time Cadet/Junior RegionalChampion, seven time Cadet/Junior StateChampion and Reno World of WrestlingChampion in both 2008 and 2010.
Kloetzer is set to compete in the final yearof his prep career at Caldwell High Schoolwhere his dad, Jeff Kloetzer, is the wrestlingcoach. Jeff Kloetzer wrestled for Liles at Mon-tana State-Northern and won the 1986 NAIANational Championship in the 142-poundweight class.
2010 Jackrabbit Football
JACKRABBIT SIGNEES
The Bum 41
For additional informationon Jackrabbit signees and
all 21 varsity sports atSouth Dakota State University, log on to
GoJacks.com
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42 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
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The Bum 43
2010 Jackrabbit Football
Jazz, classical concerts coming to PAC
AT STATE
Back-to-back concerts by two distinctly different SDSU musicgroups will take the stage of the Performing Arts Center Sunday andMonday, Nov. 21-22, on the SDSU campus.
Ensembles to perform works of jazz greatsJazz students at SDSU will put a little fire into a fall evening with a
concert featuring the works of Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk andothers.
Jazz Ensembles I and II will give a free performance at 7:30 p.m.Monday, Nov. 22, at the Performing Arts Center on campus.
Ensemble II is first on stage and will perform five tunes, including “ItDon’t Mean A Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)” by Ellington, and“’Round Midnight” by Monk featuring junior Sam Gould. The first halfof the concert will conclude with “Alianza,” an exciting Latin tune byEric Morales.
The second half of the concert will feature Jazz Ensemble I that willperform six tunes, including “Nica’s Dream” by Horace Silver and“Blues Machine” by Sammy Nestico, as well as a new composition byDan Gailey titled, “Point No Point.”
Each ensemble, formed by audition, has about 20 members, severalof whom are not music majors, according to Assistant Professor NathanJorgensen, who is in his fourth year at SDSU and directs the ensemblesas well as gives saxophone lessons.
In addition to fall and spring concerts, the jazz program at SDSUjointly hosts an annual jazz festival with the Brookings Optimist Club.The next festival is Thursday, April 7, 2011, in the Performing Arts Cen-ter and will conclude with an evening concert featuring the SDSU JazzEnsemble I with legendary drummer Victor Lewis.
Lewis is a Rutgers University faculty member who has been perform-ing on the national level since joining the Woody Shaw band in 1974 and
also performed 11 years with the Stan Getz band.For more information, call Jorgensen at 605-688-4092 or the Music
Department office at 688-5187.
Harry Potter scores to sound in PAC There will be magic in the air Sunday afternoon when the SDSU-
Civic Symphony gives its fall concert at 4 p.m. Nov. 21, in the Perform-ing Arts Center on campus.
Admission is free.The magic will come from selections from “Harry Potter and the
Chamber of Secrets.” Associate Professor John Brawand, director of thesymphony, said the Potter arrangement features “Fawkes the Phoenix,”“Gilderoy Lockhart,” “Dobby the House Elf,” “Moaning Myrtle,” and“Fawkes Heals Harry.”
Brawand hopes that audience appeal of the Potter theme will attractyoung people to dress up like Potter characters if they wish.
In addition to the Potter music, which was composed by JohnWilliams in the 21st century, the symphony will play compositions ofFranz Joseph Haydn written in the 18th century.
Sophomore pianist Laura Engelmann, of Brookings, a winner of theannual Concerto-Aria Competition on campus, will perform the Haydn“Piano Concerto in D ‘Vivace.’” The orchestra also will play the Haydn“Symphony No. 22 in E-flat” (“Philosopher”) and the Grieg “Peer GyntSuite No.1.”
The SDSU-Civic Symphony, informally known as the town andgown orchestra, is composed of about 40 college students and 15 com-munity members, including five high school students.
For more information, call Brawand at 605-688-4414 or the MusicDepartment office at 688-5187.
Assistant Professor Nathan Jorgensen directs Jazz Ensemble I at itsDecember 2009 concert at the Performing Arts Center. The 2010
version of the group will perform at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 22. TheSDSU-Civic Symphony is on stage Sunday, Nov. 21.
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Heading into the start of the 2010 football season, six former SouthDakota State standouts were in training camps of National Football Leagueteams, continuing the Jackrabbits’ long tradition of developing players intopro prospects.
Headlining the list was Adam Vinatieri of the Indianapolis Colts. Vinatierihas earned a reputation as one the most consistent and clutch kickers in theNFL. After two Pro Bowl selections (2002, 2004), he left New England following the 2005 season as the team’s career scoring leader. Vinatieri’s career totals include 338-of-412 on field goal attempts, 82 percent, and 1,530career points. He holds the second-longest streak of consecutive 100-pointseasons to start a career in NFL history with 13 — a streak that ended duringan injury-plagued 2009 campaign.
Vinatieri also has excelled in the postseason. He holds the distinction ofbeing the only kicker in NFL history to play in five different Super Bowlgames, and made a field goal four of those games. He kicked last-secondgame-winning field goals in Super Bowl XXXVI against St. Louis and SuperBowl XXXVIII versus Carolina, as well as a game-tying 45-yard field goalin a snowstorm against Oakland in the 2001 AFC Playoffs. His career post-season totals include 42-of-51 on field goals and a perfect 51-of-51 on extrapoints. Vinatieri’s field goal totals are NFL postseason records, as are his 177points.
Vinatieri began his professional career with the Amsterdam Admirals ofNFL Europe before signing with the New England Patriots in 1996.
Four members of SDSU’s 2009 Football Championship Subdivision playoff team competed for NFL roster spots this summer, including defenisvestandout Danny Batten.
Batten became the first Jackrabbit player in 11 years to be taken in theNFL Draft, when he was selected by the Buffalo Bills in the sixth round. Adefensive end in college, Batten was moved to linebacker at the professionallevel, but will miss the 2010 season after suffering an injury.
Three other Jackrabbit standouts signed free-agent contracts following the2010 draft. Offensive linemen Casey Bender and Casey Knips agreed to
terms with the Cleveland Browns and Arizona Cardinals, respecively, whilelinebacker Chris Johnson originally received a tryout with the Chicago Bearsbefore signing with the Arizona Cardinals.
In addition, Mitch Erickson spent training camp with the Seattle Seahawks,after spending the 2008 and 2009 season on the practice squad for the DenverBroncos.
Another former Jackrabbit kicker, Parker Douglass, is playing profession-ally with the Sacramento Mountain Lions of the United Football League.Douglass kicked for the California Redwoods in 2009.
2010 Jackrabbit Football
JACKS IN THE PROS
FREE WHOPPER® WHEN YOU BUY ONEWHOPPER® AT REGULAR PRICE.Please present this coupon before ordering. Limit onecouponper customer. Not to be used with other couponsor offers.
Expiration Date: December 31, 2010
Good only at Burger King locations in Brookings:• 1825 6th Street• 3045 Lefevre Drive (just off the interstate at exit132)
A special thank you to thefollowing auto dealers that
support the Jackrabbit Athletics courtesy car
program:
Sharp Chevrolet —Watertown
Rapid City Chevrolet-Cadillac
Einspahr Auto Plaza —Brookings
Brookings Auto Mall
JACKRABBITS CURRENTLY IN THE NFL
DANNY BATTENBuffalo Bills
Lettered at SDSU 2006-09
ADAM VINATIERIIndianapolis Colts
Lettered at SDSU 1991-94
44 The Bum
44 - Misc., BK-Auto Dealers_Layout 1 9/14/10 4:32 PM Page 1
2010 Jackrabbit Football
JACKS IN THE PROS
De Smet Farm Mutual
Insurance Company of South DakotaFarm - Ranch - Home - Auto
• (605) 854-3337 •www.desmetfarmmutual.com
“Serving South Dakota From South Dakota.”• We Back The Jacks •
The Bum 45
SDSU PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL ALUMNI
Weldon Erickson • 1922, MinneapolisJohn Beasey • 1924, Green Bay
Weert Englemann • 1930-33, Green BayRay Jenison • 1931, Green BayIsrael Ginsberg • 1935, Boston
Alfred Arndt • 1935, Pittsburgh, BostonPaul “Whitey” Miller • 1936-38, Green Bay
Mark Barber • 1937, ClevelandRobert Pylman •1938-39, Philadelphia
Doug Eggers •1954-57, Baltimore; 1958, ChicagoCardinals
Jerry Welch • 1955-56, Calgary (CFL)Dominic “Dick” Klawitter • 1956, Chicago Bears
Pete Retzlaff • 1956, Detroit; 1956-66, PhiladelphiaWayne Rasmussen • 1964-74, Detroit
Ron Meyer • 1966, PittsburghDarwin Gonnerman • 1969-70, Ottawa (CFL)
Jim Langer • 1970-79, Miami; 1980-81, MinnesotaTim Roth • 1971-77, Saskatchewan (CFL)
Phil Engle • 1973, Birmingham (WFL)Lynn Boden • 1975-78, Detroit; 1979, Chicago
Bill Matthews • 1978-81, New England; 1982-83,New York Giants; 1984, Denver Gold (USFL)
Chuck Loewen • 1980-84, San DiegoBruce Klostermann • 1986-89, Denver; 1990-91, Los
Angeles RaidersMike Busch • 1987, New York GiantsBrian Sisley • 1987, New York Giants
Doug Miller • 1993-94, San DiegoDean Herrboldt • 1995-96, British Columbia (CFL)
Adam Timmerman • 1995-98, Green Bay; 1999-2006,St. Louis
Adam Vinatieri • 1996, Amsterdam (WFL); 1996-2005New England; 2006-present, Indianapolis
Steve Heiden • 1999-2001, San Diego; 2002-09,Cleveland
Josh Ranek • 2002, Dallas; 2002-05, Ottawa (CFL);2006, Hamilton (CFL); 2007, Edmonton (CFL),
Scott Connot • 2004-06, Kansas CityMitch Erickson • 2008-09, Denver (practice squad)
SDSU PLAYERSDRAFTED
BY NFL TEAMS1939: Bob Riddell, end, Philadelphia (17)1951: Harry Gibbons, back, Chicago (20)
1951: Dick Peot, tackle, Detroit (28)1953: Pete Retzlaff, back, Detroit (22)
1955: Jerry Welch, back, Baltimore (22)1956: Dick Klawitter, center, Chicago (8)
1957: Harwood Hoeft, end, Baltimore (24)1958: Wayne Haensel, tackle, N.Y. Giants (25)
1959: LeRoy Bergan, tackle, Baltimore (17)1961: Leland Bondhus, tackle, Green Bay (19)
1962: Joe Thorne, back, Green Bay (12)1962: Ron Frank, tackle, San Francisco (16)1964: Wayne Rasmussen, back, Detroit (9)1966: Ron Meyer, quarterback, Chicago (7)
1966: Ed Maras, end, Green Bay (20)1970: Tim Roth, def. end, Oakland (16)1973: Phil Engle, tackle, Green Bay (11)
1975: Lynn Boden, tackle, Detroit (1)1975: Jerry Lawrence, tackle, Houston (8)1976: Todd Simonsen, tackle, Houston (6)1976: Bob Gissler, def. end, Miami (14)
1978: Bill Matthews, LB, New England (5)
1980: Chuck Loewen, OT, San Diego (7)1986: Bruce Klostermann, LB, Denver (8)
1993: Doug Miller, LB, San Diego (7) 1995: Adam Timmerman, OL, Green Bay (7)
1999: Steve Heiden, TE, San Diego (3)2010: Danny Batten, DE/LB, Buffalo (6)
Note: Number in parentheses indicates round selected
JIM LANGER, left, is pictured with legendaryMiami Dolphins head coach Don Shula duringLanger’s induction into the Pro Football Hall ofFame in 1988. Langer is the only former NorthCentral Conference player enshrined in the Canton, Ohio, Hall of Fame. A replica of his bustand other memorabilia is on display in the GinnTrophy Room of the Stanley J. Marshall HPERCenter at SDSU.
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46 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
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PASSING YARDS 1. Dan Fjeldheim (37-55-1, 460, 2) ............460
• at St. Cloud State, 9-28-20022. Todd McDonald (17-28-1, 388, 4) ..........388
• at Mankato State, 11-6-20033. Mike Busch (26-45-3, 379, 2) ................379
• vs. Morningside, 9-15-19844. Ryan Berry (32-53-1, 375, 1) ..................375
• at Northern Iowa, 9-20-20085. Ted Wahl (26-49-3, 370, 3)......................370
• vs. South Dakota, 10-18-19866. Mike Busch (22-39-0, 361-2) ..................361
• vs. Nebraska-Omaha, 9-21-19857. Noel Bouche’ (20-27-0, 350, 4) ..............350
• vs. North Dakota State, 1997Ryan Berry (30-44-2, 350, 1) ..................350• at Stephen F. Austin (Texas), 9-27-2008
9. Mike Busch (20-31-0, 349, 1) ................349• vs. Morningside, 10-5-1985
10. Brad Nelson (17-23-0, 346, 3) ................346• at South Dakota, 10-25-2003
RUSHING YARDS1. Josh Ranek......................41 carries, 291 yds.
• vs. St. Cloud State, 11-13-19992. Josh Ranek......................39 carries, 282 yds.
• at North Dakota State, 10-24-19983. Dan Sonnek ....................41 carries, 268 yds.
• vs. Northern Colorado, 11-16-19854. Dan Sonnek ....................40 carries, 266 yds.
• vs. Augustana, 10-26-19855. Cory Koenig ..................21 carries, 259 yds.
• vs. Cal Poly, 10-20-2007
6. Josh Ranek......................26 carries, 254 yds.• at North Dakota State, 10-20-2001
7. Josh Ranek......................33 carries, 248 yds.• at South Dakota, 11-6, 1999
8. Josh Ranek......................30 carries, 245 yds.• at South Dakota, 10-27-2001
9. Ross Owen ......................................244 yds.• vs. Columbus College, 1922Josh Ranek......................31 carries, 244 yds.• vs. Morningside (at Vermillion), 11-14-1998
TOTAL OFFENSE1. Dan Fjeldheim (460 pass, -18 rush)..442 yds.
• at St. Cloud State, 9-28-20022. Ted Wahl (316 pass, 123 rush) ........439 yds.
• at North Dakota, 10-29-19883. Ted Wahl (370 pass, 64 rush) ..........434 yds.
• at South Dakota, 10-18-864. Marty Higgins (315 pass, 109 rush) 424 yds.
• at Augustana, 10-23-19825. Noel Bouché (350 pass, 66 rush) ....416 yds.
• vs. North Dakota State, 10-25-19976. Ted Wahl (304 pass, 91 rush) ..........395 yds.
• at Augustana, 10-25, 19867. Todd McDonald (388 pass, 6 rush)..394 yds.
• at Mankato State, 11-6-19938. Mike Busch (379 pass, -17 rush) ....362 yds.
• vs. Morningside, 9-15-19849. Mike Law (249 pass, 110 rush) ......359 yds.
• at Mankato State, 11-5-198310. Mike Busch (361 pass, -4 rush) ......357 yds.
• vs. Nebraska-Omaha, 10-6-1984
RECEIVING YARDS1. Jeff Tiefenthaler ..................12 rec., 256 yds.
• at North Dakota, 9-27-19862. Jeff Tiefenthaler ..................14 rec., 234 yds.
• at South Dakota, 10-18-863. Jeff Tiefenthaler ..................10 rec., 233 yds.
• at Morningside, 10-5-19854. Nate Millerbernd ..................9 rec., 202 yds.
• vs. Mankato State, 11-16-19965. Josh Davis..............................9 rec., 187 yds.
• vs. North Dakota, 10-11-20036. Jeff Tiefenthaler ....................8 rec., 179 yds.
• vs. Northern Colorado 11-15-1986
RECEPTIONS1. Josh Davis............................16 rec., 164 yds.
• vs. Western Washington, 10-12-20022. Jeff Tiefenthaler ..................14 rec., 234 yds.
• at South Dakota, 10-18-863. Jeff Tiefenthaler ..................12 rec., 256 yds.
• at North Dakota, 9-27-1986Josh Davis............................12 rec., 138 yds.• at Southern (La.), 9-25-2004Glen Fox..............................12 rec., 101 yds.• vs. Southern Illinois, 11-7-2009
6. Josh Davis............................11 rec., 155 yds.• at St. Cloud State, 9-28-2002Brian Janecek ......................11 rec., 141 yds.• vs. Augustana, 11-6-2004Rusty Lenners ......................11 rec., 114 yds• at North Dakota, 9-30-1995
Proud Supporters of the Jackrabbits
Pro o ou ud S Sup upp ppPrrroud Supporroud SupporaackckrkrJJJackrabJackrab
p ort te ter ers rs of of th th e or r rters of the rters of the rarabbbibititstsabb
e
2010 Jackrabbit Football
TOP SINGLE-GAME PERFORMANCES
The Bum 47
Listen to SDSU football allseason long on the
Jackrabbit Sports Network
Statewide coverage available on the following stations:
* Yankton - WNAX 570 AM (flagship)* Belle Fourche - KBFS 1450 AM
* Brookings - KJJQ 910 AM* Mobridge - KOLY 1300 AM
* Pierre - KGFX 1060 AM* Rapid City - KRKI 99.5 FM
* Watertown - KWAT 950 AM
47 - Misc., HyVee, Network_Layout 1 10/5/10 10:27 AM Page 1
48 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
COMPLIANCE CORNERA message from Kathy Heylens, Associate
Athletic Director for Compliance/SWA:If in doubt – ask!This simple phrase is a friendly reminder to
alumni, fans, and friends of SDSU that it is al-ways better to ask before you act! There aremany ways to be involved with athletic teams,but we must always be mindful to do so withinthe University, conference, and NCAA rules andregulations.
To this end, the athletic department compli-ance program is designed to:
• Create a culture of compliance among allconstituents of the athletic program, includingstudent-athletes, coaches, staff, and fans, inkeeping with NCAA, conference and institu-tional rules and regulations.
• Monitor all aspects of the athletic programto ensure compliance; identify and report all instances in which compliance has not beenachieved; and affirm that appropriate correctiveactions are taken, and
• Educate all constituents about applicableNCAA, conference and institutional rules.
It is our utmost goal to strive for athletic excellence, which can be achieved with ethicalconduct and integrity. We are grateful for yourloyal and continuing support, and rely upon youto partner with us creating a championship envi-ronment for all our athletic teams. Please feelfree to contact the compliance office by e-mail at
[email protected] or by phone at(605) 688-5308 if you have any questions orneed clarification.
With appreciation,Kathy HeylensAssociate Athletic Director for Compliance/
Senior Woman Administrator
You are a Representative of Athletics Interest (booster) if you:
~ Contribute to the Department of Athletics orits booster organizations (e.g. Jackrabbit Club)
~ Join or participate in SDSU’s various Athletics Department booster groups (e.g., sportspecific “friends of” groups, etc.)
~ Hold, or have ever held, season tickets~ Have a guardianship role over a student-
athlete (e.g., parent or legal guardian)~ Provide allowable benefits (e.g., summer
jobs) to enrolled student-athletes~ Promote SDSU Athletics in any wayRemember, once you are identified as a
booster, you retain that identity forever. Boost-ers are bound by NCAA and SDSU Universityrules. As a result, boosters are responsible fornotifying The Athletic Compliance Office of anypotential rules violations. Even if a violation isunintentional, the eligibility of a prospective stu-dent-athlete (recruit) or enrolled student-athletecould be placed in jeopardy.
Allowable Booster Activities~ Viewing a prospect’s game on your own
initiative~ Receiving a call from a prospect only if the
prospect initiates the call and it is not for a recruiting purpose
~ Continuing to have contact with an established family friend or neighbor who is aprospect
~ Notifying the coaching staff of outstandingprospects
As a Booster you may NOT:~ Contact or call a prospect~ Contact or call a prospect’s parent, coach,
principal or counselor~ Assist with the actual evaluation of talent~ Purchase a ticket from a student-athlete
As a booster you may NOT give/provide aprospect:
~ Cash or loans in any amount~ Gifts of any kind including on special
occasions such as birthdays, holidays, etc.~ Free or reduced cost services, rentals, or
purchases of any type (e.g., clothing, airline tickets, car repairs, meals, etc.)
~ Use of an automobile or transportation~ Ticket to an athletic or other event
Register your child or grandchild for the JuniorJacks Kids Club. The club is open to children ingrades K-8. Cost is only $35 per child and in-cludes the following:• Free admission to all home regular season athleticsevents during the 2010-11 season• A membership card• A Junior Jacks Kids Club T-shirt• The opportunity to be introduced with theJackrabbits before select home events• Early registration for youth clinics• NewsletterCall 1-866-GO JACKS for more information
Calling former Jackrabbit student-athletes
The mission of the SDSU Letterwinners Club is to foster a continued lifelong relationship withJackrabbit Athletics for all former letterwinners.We will strive to support the efforts of currentstudent-athletes academically, athletically and socially so that they can add to the istory and tradition that defines SDSU Athletics
For more information, contact Alex Kringen at (605) 688-5988 or [email protected]
48 - Compliance_Layout 1 9/14/10 10:28 AM Page 1
The Bum 49
2010 Jackrabbit Football
Sign up today for theJackrabbit Extra
• Live video streaming of all home football, volleyball, basketball andwrestling events, as well as select road contests
• Live audio streaming of all Jackrabbit broadcasts
• On-demand replays of selectgames
• Behind-the-scenes featuresFull packages start at $11.95 per month.
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50 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
MISSOURI VALLEY FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
The past four seasons have dealt great changeto the Missouri Valley Football Conference.Within that span, the league has lost a member,gained two members and changed its name.
Despite those developments, a quality nation-ally competitive product has been a constant forthe league, which celebrated its Silver Anniver-sary in 2009.
The Missouri Valley Football Conference en-ters its 26th year of existence this fall and hasproven to be one of the nation’s premier NCAAFootball Championship Subdivision (FCS)leagues.
There’s not much that has eluded the confer-ence in its first 25 years of existence. Theleague’s first two-plus decades have includednational championships, national players of theyear, national coaches of the year, No. 1 nationalrankings, and countless All-Americans.
Strong coaching and great players havehelped make the league a national force, but thestability and leadership of Commissioner PattyViverito -- the only commissioner the league hasever known -- has helped make the MissouriValley Football Conference a standard bearer onthe FCS scene. Indeed, all signs point to contin-ued national prominence for the Missouri ValleyFootball Conference as it enters its 26th seasonin 2010.
In June 2008, presidents of the nine-memberGateway Football Conference and the 10-mem-ber Missouri Valley Conference approved a rebranding initiative that changed the footballconference name from the Gateway FootballConference to the Missouri Valley Football Conference. It represented the second namechange for the football league. Initially, the conference competed as the Gateway CollegiateAthletic Conference (1985-91) and the GatewayFootball Conference (1992-2007).
Although the league shares the Missouri Val-ley name, the football-playing members com-pete under a separate administrative umbrella, asthe Missouri Valley Conference and the MissouriValley Football Conference will remain separateentities.
While the 2009 season didn’t produce a national championship, it was a successful one,as Southern Illinois and South Dakota State represented the conference in the playoffs,marking the 15th-straight season in which atleast two teams have participated in post-seasonplay. For three-straight weeks to close out theregular season, Southern Illinois enjoyed the No.1 national ranking, while RB Deji Karim ofSouthern Illinois and DE Danny Batten of SouthDakota State were finalists in the Walter PaytonAward and Buck Buchanan voting, respectively,with each finishing third.
The Missouri Valley Football Conference hastwo recent national championships (Western
Kentucky - 2002; Youngstown State - 1997), andleague members Youngstown State (3) andSouthern Illinois (1) own additional titles priorto their league membership, meaning six FCSchampionship trophies are housed on leaguecampuses, in addition to three (YoungstownState twice and UNI in 2005) runner-up finishes.Only five FCS leagues possess more than a single FCS championship trophy, and the Missouri Valley Football Conference is amongthat elite.
In recent years, the league has established it-self as a leader among FCS conferences. Duringthe past 13 years, the league has two nationalchampionships and eight other semifinal trips.The league’s 36-27 playoff mark in that span isthird-best among all FCS leagues, and the con-ference has had four teams reach the title gamesince 1997.
The Missouri Valley Football Conference success is not limited to the immediatepast. During the decade of the 1990’s, currentmembers of the league compiled a 34-19 markin the FCS playoffs, bettered only by the South-ern Conference, whose members were 37-19 inthat decade.
Team accomplishments have helped solidifythe Missouri Valley Football Conference as anFCS elite, but individuals at the league’s mem-ber institutions are the real source of pridewithin the conference. Thanks to great playersand strong coaching, the Missouri Valley Foot-ball Conference has reached and will maintainits place among the FCS best.
Last year, despite tough scheduling, six teamsin the conference had winning records, markingthe first time that’s ever happened in the 25-yearhistory of the league. The Missouri Valley Foot-ball Conference has had four teams (or more)with better than .500 records in the same season16 times now, including the past 12 seasons.
In 1997, Youngstown State grabbed thecrowned jewel for the conference, as the leaguehad one of its most successful seasons. In addi-tion to claiming the league’s first national cham-pionship, the Penguins finished the year rankedNo. 1, marking the first time a league memberhas held that spot in a season-ending poll. Thatyear, Western Illinois was at No. 6, marking thefirst time the league ended the year with twoteams ranked among the top six.
In 1999, the Missouri Valley Football Confer-ence trumped that, as Youngstown State finishedthe year No. 2 and Illinois State was No. 3. UNIalso finished in the top 20 in both nationally rec-ognized polls.
In 2002, Western Kentucky added to theleague’s national championship trophy case withan FCS crown, while both WKU (No. 1) andWestern Illinois (No. 5) finished among the nation’s top five in the season-ending polls. The Hilltoppers became the first school to earn
1818 Chouteau Ave.St. Louis, MO 63103Phone: (314) 421-2268Fax: (314) 421-3505Website: www.valley-football.org
VALLEY FOOTBALLSTAFF
Patty ViveritoCommissioner
Bill CarolloCoordinator of Officials
Mike KernAssociate Commissioner
for Media Relations
Mary MulvennaAssistant Commissioner
for Compliance
LEAGUE MEMBERS• Illinois State — Normal, Ill.• Indiana State — Terre Haute, Ind.• Missouri State — Springfield, Mo.• North Dakota State — Fargo, N.D.• Northern Iowa — Cedar Falls, Iowa• South Dakota State — Brookings, S.D.• Southern Illinois — Carbondale, Ill.• Western Illinois — Macomb, Ill.• Youngstown State — Youngstown, Ohio
50-51 MVFC_Layout 1 10/5/10 3:12 PM Page 1
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
MISSOURI VALLEY FOOTBALL CONFERENCEvictories against the tourney’s top three seeds enroute to their national championship.
In 2003, four Valley teams represented theleague in the 16-team NCAA playoffs, markingthe first time any league has sent that many tothe playoffs in the same year.
In 2004, Southern Illinois spent a league-record 11 weeks as the nation’s top-rankedteam, while all eight league teams received votesfor the Top 25 at some point in the season. Line-backer Boomer Grigsby of Illinois State earneda National Defensive Player of the Year honor,while SIU’s Jerry Kill was National Coach ofthe Year.
In 2005, UNI became the fourth leagueschool to reach the FCS championship gamesince 1997, while Southern Illinois and WesternKentucky combined to hold the nation’s No. 1ranking in the top-25 polls for five weeks.
In 2006, Youngstown State won its second-straight league championship and the Penguinswere joined in the playoff field by Illinois Stateand Southern Illinois. That marked only the second time in league history the league hadmore than two teams qualify for the 16-teamplayoff field. SIU’s Arkee Whitlock was a national player of the year award winner (College Sporting News) and was third in theWalter Payton Award balloting.
In 2008, six teams were nationally ranked inthe same poll, marking the first time in leaguehistory that had happened. Those six teams wereranked for four consecutive weeks. NorthDakota State held the nation’s No. 1 spot for itsfirst two weeks as a conference member, whilerookie coach Dale Lennon of Southern Illinoisbecame just the third mentor to win Coach of theYear honors in his first league season.
The original Gateway Conference wasfounded as a women’s athletic organization inAugust 1982, following the dissolution of theAssociation of Intercollegiate Athletics forWomen. In September of that year, Patty Viverito was named the first commissioner ofthe newly founded conference, a position shemaintains today. Before moving to its permanentheadquarters in St. Louis, the conference spentthree organizational months on the campus ofEastern Illinois University.
In July of 1992, the 10-team conference disbanded as its women’s programs realignedwith their men’s teams in their respective conferences. The league assumed its new nameon July 1, 1992, becoming the Gateway FootballConference, an NCAA FCS football leaguecomprised of seven Midwest institutions.
The Gateway Conference football divisionwas born on August 21, 1985, when the Gate-
way Conference President’s Council voted toadd a FCS football division for six of its mem-bers to the previously all-women’s athletics organization. Founding members of the footballdivision were Eastern Illinois, Illinois State,UNI, Southern Illinois, Southwest MissouriState (now Missouri State) and Western Illinois.The creation of the football division marked thefirst time in college annals that football wasadded to a women’s conference. In June of1986, Indiana State became the seventh memberof the conference.
In the 25 years of the football division, leaguemembership has been stable -- with only fivefluctuations since 1986 Eastern Illinois left theleague to join the Ohio Valley Conference in1996, while Youngstown State joined the confer-ence in 1997 to return league membership to itsoriginal seven-member status. League member-ship reached what was then an all-time high ofeight members for the start of the 2001 seasonwith the addition of Western Kentucky. The Hilltoppers left the league after six years to jointhe Sun Belt (FBS) North Dakota State andSouth Dakota State joined for the start of the2008 season, giving the league nine membersfor the first time.
The Missouri Valley Football Conference isamong 10 FCS conferences that receive auto-matic bids to the NCAA FCS Championship.The conference has had an automatic bid since1986, as the FCS Football Committee waivedthe league’s two-year waiting period and grantedthe league an automatic bid after just one year.
The Missouri Valley Football Conference isthe only automatic FCS qualifying conferencethat sponsors football as its only sport, as theleague completed its service to women’s athlet-
ics following the 1991-92 season. Although theleague no longer sponsors women’s sports, theleague has an historical place in the developmentof intercollegiate women’s athletics.
The 10 founders of the original Gateway Collegiate Athletic Conference currently belongto three conferences. Eight members joined theirmen’s programs in the Missouri Valley: Bradley,Drake, Illinois State, Indiana State, MissouriState, UNI, Southern Illinois, and Wichita State.Eastern Illinois is now in the Ohio Valley Conference, while Western Illinois competes inThe Summit League.
Members of the Missouri Valley FootballConference (and initial year of membership) include: Illinois State University (1985), IndianaState University (1986), Missouri State Univer-sity (1985), North Dakota State University(2008), the University of Northern Iowa (1985),South Dakota State University (2008), SouthernIllinois University (1985), Western Illinois Uni-versity (1985), and Youngstown State University(1997).
Five Missouri Valley Football Conferencemembers also compete in the Missouri ValleyConference (Illinois State, Indiana State, Missouri State, Northern Iowa, and SouthernIllinois). Three league schools compete in TheSummit League (North Dakota State, SouthDakota State, and Western Illinois), whileYoungstown State competes in the HorizonLeague for its other sports.
In its decade of operation, the Gateway spon-sored championships in 10 women’s sports andfootball. The women’s sports were basketball,cross country, golf, indoor and outdoor track &field, swimming and diving, tennis, softball, volleyball and, early on, field hockey.
SOUTH DAKOTA STATE officially opened the Missouri Valley Football Conference era bydefeating Youngstown State, 40-7, on Sept. 6, 2008, at Coughlin-Alumni Stadium. TheJackrabbits ended their inaugural season in the MVFC with a 6-2 league record.
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OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK: AlexJones, 6-3, 235, Jr., TE, Indiana State (Centerville, Ind). Jones caught five passes fora career-high 147 yards and a career-high twotouchdowns as Indiana State broke a 36-gameroad losing streak with a 30-24 win atYoungstown State. Jones scored on a career-longreception of 68 yards in the first quarter to giveISU its first lead, and hauled in an eight-yard TDpass in the third quarter to give ISU a lead itnever relinquished.
DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK: JaysonDiManche, 6-2, 220, So., OLB, Southern Illinois (Hamilton, N.J.). DiManche led an SIUdefense that held No. 21 Western Illinois to 160yards and 29 points under its per game averages.DiManche’s career-high three sacks, which wentfor a loss of 43 yards, helped SIU net a season-high with five sacks on the day. DiManche finished the game tying for the team lead withfive tackles and he added two quarterback hurries.
SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Carlos Anderson, 5-8, 172, So., RB, NorthernIowa (Blue Springs, Mo.). Anderson had threekickoff returns for 118 yards, including an 88-yard return for a touchdown on the game-open-ing kickoff against Missouri State. Anderson alsorushed for 41 yards and had 17 yards receivingfor the Panthers.
NEWCOMER OF THE WEEK: Ronnie Fouch,6-2, 215, Jr., QB, Indiana State (Redlands,Calif.). Fouch completed 16-of-23 passes for290 yards and four TDs in the 30-24 road winover Youngstown State. He has passed for fourTDs in a game three times this year, and has aschool-record 20 TD tosses for the season.OTHER NOTABLE PERFORMANCES:
OFFENSE• RB D.J. McNorton, NDSU — Rushed a career-
high 26 times for 138 yards and two touchdownsagainst South Dakota State;
• RB Steve Strother, SIU — Set career highs with 29carries and 150 yards against Western Illinois;
• WR Jarred Herring, UNI — Caught two passes —both for touchdowns — for 81 yards in win over Missouri State
• WR Lito Senatus, WIU — Recorded his fifth con-
secutive 100-yard receiving game and caught a 17-yardtouchdown pass against Southern Illinois
• WR Tyrel Kool, SDSU — Tallied six receptionsfor career-high 132 yards at North Dakota State
DEFENSE• CB Brandian Ross, YSU — Notched eight tack-
les, forced a fumble, recovered a fumble and inter-cepted a pass against Indiana State;
• DE Shelby Harris, ILS — Made five tackles (2TFLs) with a sack and added a blocked punt versusEastern Illinois;
• Jacolby Washington, INS — Made a career-high14 tackles (2.5 TFLs) with 1.5 sacks;
• Mike Lien, SDSU — Recorded a career-high 18tackles at North Dakota State
SPECIAL TEAMS• P Austin Pucylowski, SIU — Averaged 41 yards
on five punts, downing three inside the 20-yard line;• WR Justin Fuselier, MSU — Averaged 26.5 yards
on two punt returns, including career-long 49-yarder
2010 Jackrabbit Football
MVFC NOTES, STANDINGS
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2010 MVFC StandingsSCHOOL CONFERENCE PF PA OVERALL PF PANorthern Iowa 6-1 222 146 7-3 261 209North Dakota State 4-3 161 152 7-3 240 180Western Illinois 4-3 240 183 6-4 362 228Indiana State 4-3 210 210 6-4 330 279Illinois State 4-4 236 322 6-5 321 436South Dakota State 4-4 207 189 4-6 213 232Missouri State 3-4 217 245 4-6 331 374Southern Illinois 3-4 188 198 4-6 282 264Youngstown State 1-7 236 272 3-8 344 347
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THURSDAY, SEPT. 2Missouri State 31, Eastern Kentucky 9Western Illinois 45, Valparaiso (Ind.) 0Illinois State 55, Central Missouri 54Southern Illinois 70, Quincy (Ill.) 7
SATURDAY, SEPT. 4Penn State 44, Youngstown State 14
North Dakota State 6, Kansas 3Indiana State 57, St. Joseph’s (Ind.) 7
SATURDAY, SEPT. 11Northwestern (Ill.) 37, Illinois State 3Cincinnati (Ohio) 40, Indiana State 7
Delware 26, South Dakota State 3Purdue (Ind.) 31, Western Illinois 21Youngstown State 31, Butler (Ind.) 7Kansas State 48, Missouri State 24
Northern Iowa 16, North Dakota State 9Illinois 35, Southern Illinois 3
SATURDAY, SEPT. 18Western Illinois 56, Sam Houston State 14
Stephen F. Austin 22, Northern Iowa 20 Youngstown State 63, Central Connecticut St. 24
North Dakota State 35, Morgan State 9*Illinois State 24, South Dakota State 14
Southeast Missouri St. 24, Southern Illinois 21
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25*Western Illinois 40, Indiana State 7
*Youngstown State 31, Southern Illinois 28*Illinois State 44, Missouri State 41 (OT)North Dakota State 38, South Dakota 16
Nebraska 17, South Dakota State 3Iowa State 27, Northern Iowa 0
SATURDAY, OCT. 2*Southern Illinois 38, Illinois State 17
*Western Illinois 28, North Dakota State 16*Missouri State 35, Youngstown State 25
*Northern Iowa 24, South Dakota State 14Indiana State 56, Quincy (Ill.) 22
SATURDAY, OCT. 9*Southern Illinois 45, Northern Iowa 38 (OT)
*Indiana State 59, Illinois State 24*North Dakota State 34, Youngstown State 29
Murray State (Ky.) 72, Missouri State 59*South Dakota State 33, Western Illinois 29
SATURDAY, OCT. 16*Illinois State 34, North Dakota State 24
*South Dakota State 31, Southern Illinois 10*Indiana State 38, Missouri State 35 (OT)
Northern Iowa 19, South Dakota 14*Western Illinois 40, Youngstown State 38
SATURDAY, OCT. 23*Missouri State 31, Western Illinois 28
*South Dakota State 30, Youngstown State 20*North Dakota State 27, Indiana State 15
*Norhtern Iowa 42, Illinois State 14
SATURDAY, OCT. 30*Western Illinois 65, Illinois State 38
*Northern Iowa 34, Youngstown State 30*Missouri State 51, Southern Illinois 41*Indiana State 41, South Dakota State 30
SATURDAY, NOV. 6*South Dakota State 31, Missouri State 10
*Illinois State 41, Youngstown State 39*Northern Iowa 30, Indiana State 20
*North Dakota State 20, Southern Illinois 6
SATURDAY, NOV. 13*Indiana State 30, Youngstown State 24
*Soutehrn Illinois 20, Western Illinois 10Illinois State 27, Eastern Illinois 23
*North Dakota State 31, South Dakota State 24*Northern Iowa 38, Missouri State 14
SATURDAY, NOV. 20*Indiana State at Southern Illinois, 1 p.m.
*North Dakota State at Missouri State, 1 p.m.*Northern Iowa at Western Illinois, 1 p.m.
North Dakota at South Dakota State, 1 p.m.
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MVFC COMPOSITE SCHEDULE
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*Missouri Valley Football Conference game. Note: All times are Central Time
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SCORING OFFENSE G TD FG XP 2XP DXP SAF Pts Avg1. Western Illinois 10 51 2 46 1 0 1 362 36.22. Missouri State 10 43 10 43 0 0 0 331 33.13. Indiana State 10 45 5 37 2 0 2 330 33.04. Youngstown State 11 44 12 38 3 0 0 344 31.35. Illinois State 11 40 14 35 2 0 0 321 29.26. Southern Illinois 10 37 7 35 1 0 1 282 28.27. Northern Iowa 10 31 15 30 0 0 0 261 26.18. North Dakota State 10 30 11 27 0 0 0 240 24.09. South Dakota St. 10 27 9 20 2 0 0 213 21.3
SCORING DEFENSE G TD FG XP 2XP DXP SAF Pts Avg1. North Dakota State 10 18 18 16 0 0 1 180 18.02. Northern Iowa 10 28 5 24 0 0 1 209 20.93. Western Illinois 10 30 7 27 0 0 0 228 22.84. South Dakota St. 10 29 10 24 2 0 0 232 23.25. Southern Illinois 10 33 11 33 0 0 0 264 26.46. Indiana State 10 37 7 30 2 0 1 279 27.97. Youngstown State 11 46 9 40 2 0 0 347 31.58. Missouri State 10 48 12 40 4 0 1 374 37.49. Illinois State 11 58 9 49 4 0 2 436 39.6
PASS OFFENSE G Att Cmp Int Pct. Yds Avg TD Yds/G1. Western Illinois 10 189 310 4 61.0 2,823 9.1 25 282.32. Illinois State 11 235 369 12 63.7 2,842 7.7 23 258.43. Indiana State 10 169 294 5 57.5 2,286 7.8 20 228.64. Missouri State 10 166 294 6 56.5 2,228 7.6 10 222.85. South Dakota St. 10 183 339 16 54.0 2,007 5.9 10 200.76. Youngstown State 11 180 309 8 58.3 2,167 7.0 12 197.07. Southern Illinois 10 160 270 12 59.3 1,797 6.7 14 179.78. Northern Iowa 10 110 196 12 56.1 1,711 8.7 9 171.19. North Dakota State 10 122 217 6 56.2 1,651 7.6 9 165.1
2010 Jackrabbit Football
MVFC TEAM LEADERSRUSHING OFFENSE G Att Yds Avg TD Yds/G1. Northern Iowa 10 438 2362 5.4 18 236.22. Youngstown State 11 503 2365 4.7 30 215.03. Missouri State 10 434 2118 4.9 29 211.84. Western Illinois 10 419 1978 4.7 26 197.85. Indiana State 10 382 1943 5.1 24 194.36. Southern Illinois 10 421 1855 4.4 19 185.57. North Dakota State 10 365 1581 4.3 17 158.18. South Dakota St. 10 341 1422 4.2 15 142.29. Illinois State 11 404 1437 3.6 13 130.6
TOTAL OFFENSE G Rush Pass Plays Total Yds/G1. Western Illinois 10 1,978 2,823 729 4,801 480.12. Missouri State 10 2,118 2,228 728 4,346 434.63. Indiana State 10 1,943 2,286 676 4,229 422.94. Youngstown State 11 2,365 2,167 812 4,532 412.05. Northern Iowa 10 2,362 1,711 634 4,073 407.36. Illinois State 11 1,437 2,842 773 4,279 389.07. Southern Illinois 10 1,855 1,797 691 3,652 365.28. South Dakota St. 10 1,422 2,007 680 3,429 342.99. North Dakota St. 10 1,581 1,651 582 3,232 323.2
TOTAL DEFENSE G Rush Pass Plays Total Yds/G1. Northern Iowa 10 968 2,317 654 3,285 328.52. Southern Illinois 10 1,501 1,851 647 3,352 335.23. Western Illinois 10 1,903 1,702 698 3,605 360.54. North Dakota St. 10 1,639 2,017 684 3,656 365.65. Indiana State 10 2,007 1,752 685 3,759 375.96. South Dakota St. 10 1,929 1,941 739 3,870 387.07. Youngstown State 11 1,727 2,796 696 4,523 411.28. Illinois State 11 2,198 2,711 756 4,909 446.39. Missouri State 10 1,680 3,019 722 4,699 469.9
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RUSHING G Att Yds Avg TD Long Yds/G1. Rennie, Tirrell-UNI 10 199 1,210 6.1 14 75 121.02. Minett, Kyle-SDSU 10 234 1,208 5.2 12 62 120.83. Cook, Jamaine-YSU 11 241 1,276 5.3 11 71 116.04. McNorton,D.J.-NDSU 10 182 1,080 5.9 9 67 108.05. Douglas,Chris-MSU 10 133 929 7.0 11 97 92.96. Gates, Darrius-INS 10 162 878 5.4 15 36 87.87. Anderson, C.-UNI 10 146 858 5.9 2 54 85.88. Ray, Caulton-WIU 10 176 759 4.3 7 36 75.99. Flowers, Bryce-WIU 10 126 734 5.8 8 41 73.410. Johnston,Stephe-MSU 10 140 719 5.1 5 61 71.9
PASSING AVG/GAME G Att-Cmp-Int Pct. Yds TD Avg/G1. Barr, Matt-WIU 10 187 - 306 - 4 61.1 2781 24 278.12. Brown,Matt-ILS 11 221 - 344 - 11 64.2 2665 22 242.33. Fouch, Ronnie-INS 10 168 - 288 - 5 58.3 2252 20 225.24. Kirby,Cody-MSU 10 165 - 290 - 6 56.9 2211 10 221.15. O’Brien, Thomas-SDSU 10 182 - 337 - 15 54.0 2001 10 200.16. Hess, Kurt-YSU 11 179 - 304 - 8 58.9 2117 12 192.57. Dieker, Chris-SIU 10 143 - 237 - 10 60.3 1537 11 153.78. Rennie, Tirrell-UNI 10 85 - 150 - 8 56.7 1423 8 142.39. Mohler,Jose-NDSU 9 90 - 148 - 5 60.8 1094 5 121.610. McIntosh, Paul-SIU 8 15 - 30 - 2 50.0 231 3 28.9
TOTAL OFFENSE G Rush Pass Plays Total Yds/G1. Barr, Matt-WIU 10 338 2,781 386 3,119 311.92. Rennie, Tirrell-UNI 10 1,210 1,423 349 2,633 263.33. Kirby,Cody-MSU 10 366 2,211 411 2,577 257.74. Brown,Matt-ILS 11 -8 2,665 383 2,657 241.55. Fouch, Ronnie-INS 10 -17 2,252 319 2,235 223.56. Hess, Kurt-YSU 11 141 2,117 366 2,258 205.37. O’Brien, Thomas-SDSU 10 -71 2,001 345 1,930 193.08. Dieker, Chris-SIU 10 231 1,537 322 1,768 176.89. Minett, Kyle-SDSU 10 1,208 6 236 1,214 121.410. Mohler,Jose-NDSU 9 -18 1,094 207 1,076 119.6
RECEPTIONS/GAME G Rec Yds TD Long Avg/C Rec/G1. Sanders,Marvon-ILS 11 73 754 2 51 10.3 6.62. Barnes, D.-YSU 11 67 911 4 80 13.6 6.13. Kool, Tyrel-SDSU 10 58 703 2 68 12.1 5.84. Senatus, Lito-WIU 10 55 990 12 70 18.0 5.5
Allaria, Joe-SIU 10 55 491 2 37 8.9 5.56. Walker,Tyrone-ILS 11 59 974 12 80 16.5 5.47. Saffold,Jermaine-MSU 10 51 853 5 66 16.7 5.18. Crump, Terriun-WIU 10 45 721 5 74 16.0 4.59. Evans, Jeff-SIU 9 39 528 3 57 13.5 4.310. Kent, Bryant-INS 10 40 555 5 52 13.9 4.0
TACKLES (All positions)Player Cl G Solo Ast Total Avg/G Sack1. Glazier, Kyle-WIU SR 10 59 70 129 12.9 32. Howe,Josh-ILS JR 11 49 63 112 10.2 13. Domino, Derek-SDSU SR 10 35 58 93 9.3 04. Thompson, Jamar-UNI SR 10 45 44 89 8.9 25. Lien, Mike-SDSU JR 10 33 53 86 8.6 0
Wilkinson,Antoi-MSU SR 10 35 51 86 8.6 47. Sasson, John-YSU JR 11 44 45 89 8.1 08. Washington, Jac-INS SO 10 53 26 79 7.9 59. Jeske, Corey-SDSU SR 10 39 38 77 7.7 2
Smith,Skylar-MSU SR 10 51 26 77 7.7 0
INTERCEPTIONS Cl G No Yds TD LG1. Jones,EJ-ILS SR 11 7 28 0 182. Strong,Jimmie-MSU JR 8 4 75 1 47
Martin, Andre-UNI SO 10 5 66 1 62 Burnett, Calvin-INS FR 10 5 39 0 39
5. Brodie, Cole-SDSU SR 10 4 154 2 87
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2010 Jackrabbit Football
MVFC INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
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56 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
JACKRABBIT ATHLETICS SCHEDULENOVEMBER19-20 Volleyball at Summit League Championship; Fargo, N.D.20 Football vs. North Dakota [Military Appreciation Day], 1 p.m.
Men’s Swimming & Diving vs. South Dakota, 2 p.m.Women’s Swimming & Diving vs. South Dakota/Nebraska, 2 p.m.Wrestling at Kaufman-Brand Open; Omaha, Neb.
23 Men’s Basketball vs. Idaho State, 7 p.m.24 Women’s Basketball vs. Illinois State, 7 p.m.27 Men’s Basketball vs. Eastern Illinois, 7 p.m.
Wrestling vs. Bucknell (Pa.)/Nebraska; Lincoln, Neb., 2 p.m.28 Women’s Basketball at Middle Tennessee State, 2 p.m.30 Men’s Basketball vs. Nevada, 7 p.m.
Women’s Basketball at Kansas State, 7 p.m.DECEMBER3-5 Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving at Iowa Invitational;
Iowa City, Iowa4 Women’s Basketball vs. North Dakota State, 5 p.m.
Men’s Basketball vs. North Dakota State, 7:30 p.m.Men’s and Women’s Indoor Track & Field at North Dakota State Open; Fargo, N.D.
7 Women’s Basketball at Washington State, 7 p.m. PT8 Men’s Basketball vs. Mayville State (N.D.), 7 p.m.11 Men’s Basketball vs. Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 7 p.m.
Women’s Basketball at Northern Iowa, 3 p.m.12 Wrestling hosts Jackrabbit Triangular: vs. Northern State, noon;
vs. Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, 4 p.m.16 Women’s Basketball vs. Arizona State, 7 p.m.18 Women’s Basketball vs. Iowa [Shrine Game], 5 p.m.
Men’s Basketball at Western Michigan, 2 p.m. ET19 Wrestling at Reno Tournament of Champions; Reno, Nev.20 Women’s Basketball at Utah State, noon MT
Men’s Basketball at Central Michigan, 7 p.m. ET23 Men’s Basketball at Minnesota, 7 p.m.29 Women’s Basketball at Southern Utah, 7 p.m. MT29-30 Wrestling at Midlands Championships; Evanston, Ill.30 Men’s Basketball at UMKC, 7:05 p.m.31 Women’s Basketball at UMKC, 7 p.m.JANUARY1 Men’s Basketball at Southern Utah, 7 p.m. MT4 Women’s Basketball at Arkansas-Little Rock, 7 p.m.6 Men’s Basketball vs. Centenary (La.), 7 p.m.8 Women’s Basketball vs. Oral Roberts (Okla.), 5 p.m.
Men’s Basketball vs. Oral Roberts (Okla.), 7:30 p.m.10 Women’s Basketball vs. Centenary (La.), 7 p.m.13 Men’s Basketball at Western Illinois, 7 p.m.15 Wrestling vs. Northern Iowa, 7 p.m.
Men’s and Women’s Indoor Track & Field at South Dakota Open;VermillionWomen’s Basketball at IUPUI, 4:30 p.m. ETMen’s Basketball at IUPUI, 7 p.m. ETMen’s and Women’s Swimming & Diving at Saint Louis (Mo.),5 p.m.
16 Men’s and Women’s Swimming & Diving at Saint Louis (Mo.), 10 a.m.
17 Women’s Basketball at Western Illinois, 7 p.m.20 Men’s Basketball vs. Oakland, 7 p.m.21 Wrestling vs. Northern Colorado, 7 p.m.
Men’s and Women’s Swimming & Diving at South Dakota, 6 p.m.
21-22 Men’s and Women’s Indoor Track & Field at Jack Johnson Invitational; Minneapolis
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PERPETUALSCHOLARSHIPSEndowed scholarshipsof $10,000 or more
Brian and Denise Aamlid Gerald and Lynne Todd Acheson
Amundson Men’s Golf Amundson-Stavenger Women’s Golf
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Ball HogsMatt Beier — Burger King
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Jackrabbit Athletic ScholarshipRoy Jackson
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Paul and Doris Moriarty Merlin Newman
Oien Family Ella Ollenburg
Chuck Olsen FamilyRobert W. and Ardith G. Olson
Osmundson FamilySteve and Rachel Paula
Wayne PaulsenMarv and Jodi Peterson
Phillip and Darlene PlumartMerle PochopHenry PoppenPrairie Lanes
Ray’s Corner — Mike FergenFred and Ardyne Rittershaus
Les and Michael Roberts Dennis Ryland
Howard M. SauerMarjorie Rogers Sauer
Becky Schmieding Orville and Trudy Schmieding
SDSU FootballSDSU Football Parents
SDSU WrestlingJ. Craig and Ann Seely
Sharp Family ScholarshipJeff and Sue Schumacher
Harold ShunkSioux Empire Staters Club
Bonnie SivageArt and Lois Skaggs
V.J. Smith Family Terry Sorenson
South Dakota Quarter Horse Association
Melvin StokerMatt and Helen Sutton
Red Threllfall/Dick EmmerichKevin Tetzlaff
Joe ThorneRalph Towers
Kim Tyler/Joe WalkerCliff VanHove
Robert T. and Mary K. Wagner Warren Athletic Scholarship
George WeberFrank and Louise Welch
Mildred Stoker White Roger L. White
Geoffrey and Macee Wilber Warren Williamson
Verne Winter Family Lance and Amy Wipf — Burger King
Wings of ThunderLarry and Linda Youngren Family
Zenk Family Tom and Lynne Zimmer
ACORN ENDOWMENTSEndowed scholarshipsof less than $10,000
Sonja Anderson Family Baszler Family
Monty and Peggy BechtoldFrank and Beverly BlazeChuck and Kay Blazey
Blue Stem Brookings Men’s Day Golf
Burgers FamilyDakota Abstract & Title Co., Inc.
Bob EhrkeDavid Fremark Family
Paul and Delores GilbertHeineman Family
Don and Lois HouwmanJackrabbit Fastpitch
Ryan Johnson FamilyKonechne Family
Lenz FamilyLetterwinners Legacy Fund
Liles FamilyPeter and Katherine Looby
Mahlum FamilyTim and Diane Meyer
Nate and Sarah Millerbernd Nancy Neiber
Osborne FamilyPederson-Isenberg Volleyball
EndowmentPiearson Family Popowski FamilyPrairie Striders Prest Family
Doug Sayler Memorial Vern and Ruth Schaefer
Bob Price Memorial Wayne Rasmussen Family
Doug Sayler MemorialBob and Carla Schmidt
SDSU Baseball SDSU Golf
SDSU SoccerSDSU Track and Field
Mark and Jill SweetmanGus and Donna Theodosopoulous
Matt and Geri Thorn Craig and Della Tschetter Family
Steve and Marni WardWurth Family
Darrell and Richard Zimmerman
JACKRABBIT ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIP DONORS
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Jackrabbit Athletic Scholarship EndowmentThe opportunity to provide a gift to South Dakota State University athletics in your name or in the name of a loved onewill truly make a difference in the lives of Jackrabbit student-athletes for years to come. Endowments help ensure the
long-term sustainability of Jackrabbit Athletics and its programs. A pledge of $20,000 is needed to start an endowment.Payments may be structured toward the endowment a number of different ways. Once the fund reaches the $20,000
mark, distributions from the fund are used to support scholarships for student-athletes of South Dakota State University. For more information on giving opportunities, contact Mike Burgers, Associate Athletic Director for Development at
(605) 697-7475 or by email at: [email protected].
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CHAMPIONSCLUB
Contributions of$10,000 or more
Bowes Construction Central Business Supply
Jeff and Christine Chicoine Concrete Contractors, Inc.
Cubby’s Sports Bar and GrillRick and Barb Dohrer
DTS, Inc.Dana and LaDawn Dykhouse Mylo and Lillian Hellickson
Holiday Inn City CentreGregory Holtquist
Todd and Seena Hyde Roy Jackson
J.B. EnterprisesRich Koenigsfeld
David and Shari LaneDr. Peter and Katherine Looby
Tim and Diane MeyerMidwest Glass — Jim and Joanne
SkybergMillborn Seeds
Fred and Ardyne RittershausLes Roberts
Rebecca SchmiedingJerome Stiegelmeier
Matt and Helen SuttonKim Tyler and Joseph WalkerMerritt and Pamela WarrenTom and Mavis Willmott
Winter, Inc.
DIRECTOR’SCLUB
Contributions of$5,000-$9,999Brian and Denise Aamlid
V.J. Ahlers ExcavationSonja Anderson
Rusty and Sherry AntonenAustreim Landscaping
Barrett’s FlooringBrookings Wrestling Association
Clites ElectricMary Lou and Bob Ehrke
Harry and Charleen ForsythDavid and Lori Fremark
Phil Haskett and Janet SimonitschHungerford Chiropractic
Denny and Cindy JosephsonDean and Linda Krogman
Jake and Phyllis KrullNathan and Sarah Millerbernd
Papa John’sDennis Ryland
Rich and Jo WaldnerWarne Chemical and Equipment
Geoffrey and Macee WilberLarry and Linda Youngren
STATE CLUBContributions of$2,500-$4,999
Jeff and Jean AlbrechtAllegra Print and Imaging
Monty and Peggy BechtoldSherwood Beek
Dr. Bruce and Florence BeierSid and Barbara Bostic
Dana Brandys Don and Donna Broksieck
Zach CarterDon Charlson
Chester Farm ServiceDavid and Marcia Chicoine
Comfort InnBrad and Christine Cordts
Scott and Karla DagelDakota Abstract and TitleArlo and Barbara DeKraaiRon and Cheryl Deutsch
Steve and Michelle ErpenbachDenny and Janet Everson
First Bank and TrustDan and Rae Jean Gee
Linda GroonBruce Gunderson
Bruce HaggarHampton Inn
Robert and Tina HillmanRob Hillman
Casey HillmanHillman Plumbing and Heating
Holiday Inn ExpressSteven Holwerda
Gary and Joan IsenbergAaron Johnston
Dean and Kendra KattelmannDan Kippley
Bill Lindsey Memorial Golf TourneyJack and Ellie MarshmanJohn and Kristin Morse
Scott and Kristin MungerDavid and Sela NagelhoutChuck and Kathleen Olsen
Jay and Michelle ParkerDavid Peterson
John and Patsy PopowskiRamsdell’s Fertilizer and Propane
Mike and June RedmondMike and Pat Reger
Robert and Charlotte RoeSchoon’s Pump N PakJustin and Jennie Sell
Jason and Shannon SempsrottHoward and LaVae SigatySuper 8 Motel - Brookings
Jim TalbertCraig and Kate Treiber
Arlen WallumSteve and Marni Ward
Skip and Sharon WebsterJason and Rochelle Wurth
YELLOW ANDBLUE CLUBContributions of$1,000-$2,499Glen and Sharon Anderegg
Dick and Jan AndersonMary ArnoldAvera Health
Wayne and Shari Budahl AveryAl and Joan Hegerfeld Baker
Keith and Glynn BartelsBob BartlingJason Baszler
Steve and Jody BauerJohn Baumiller
Roger BellJerry and Shirley Bergum
Dave and Kathy BesteRob and Kristen BeyerBobcat of BrookingsBob and CeCi Bode
Jim and Kathy BooherBryan Bowne
Bozied Oil CompanyBrookings Auto MallBrookings FoundationBob and Eleda Brotsky
Chris BrownJoseph and Roxann ByrnesChris and Margie CarpenterLance and Donna CarsonLloyd and Carol CarsonCharles and Mary Cecil
Gene and Jo Ann CheeverRober M. Christensen
James and Erma ChristophersenJustin Clarke
Mardell ColbeckDuane and Eunice ColburnStanley and Neva Corlett
Erik and Kay DahlJeff and Paula Davis
Chuck and Amy DerdallJames and Maxine DornbushDr. Michael and Brenda Doty
Thomas DreesenTerry and Danita DuffyJim and Rita Edwards
Ron and Jon Anne EinspahrGale and Marie Erickson
Eyecare AssociatesFairfield Inn and Suites
Dennis FehrmanFergen Enterprises
Tim and Janet FergenJim and Vicki Field
Fischer, Rounds and AssociatesVan and Barb FishbackKelly and Paula Fitts
Ron and Anita FrankensteinRon and Kathy Fujan
Keith and Irene GoehringFather Mike Griffin
Chad GroosJohn and Millie Gross
Austin HansenGary and Kathy Hansen
Doug HansonDan and Judy HansonJoe and Dawn Hardin
Duane and Barbara HarmsSpencer and Barbara Hawley
HDR EngineeringFlash and Kathleen HelmRich and Mary Helsper
Marnie HerrmannDale and Janet Hill
Kevin and Joan HoferTodd and Chaille HoflandEric and Mona Hohman
Les and Michelle HowardClair Husby
Marlin and Cheryl JennerKeith and Cherie Jensen
Robert and Mary Ellen JibbenAaron and Heather Johnson
Gene and Diane JohnsonDennis and Terri Jones
Cory and September KirbyGreg and Pam Kneip
Randy and Sue KnutzenMark and Marcia KozelAl and Irene Kurtenbach
Matthew and Melissa KurtenbachCarl and Carol LarsonJeff and Sarah Larson
Keith and Marlys LarsonPhillip and Jane Lee
Art and Marla LeitzkeGary Lindner
Don and Cleo LockwoodPat and Becky Lockwood
Darwin LongieliereForrest and Veva LothropDavid and Bobbi Lower
Nick LumbyMichael and Pat LundKeith and Sue MahlumTom and Jeanne ManzerBill and Lynn MatthewsJohn and Diane Maynes
Joe MendelMetaBank
Matt and Lisa MillerHarvey and Midge Mills
Charlie MoePaul and Doris MoriartyTerry and Amy Nemitz
John and Christina NiederauerDolores Ostroot
Steve and Kathy OtterbyMarv and Jodi PetersonDoug and Lori Peterson
Joe and Michelle PieczynskiMichael and Beth PietilaPrescription Shop, Inc.
George PrestTimothy Prince
Qdoba Mexican GrillDave and Shar Quam
Harlan and Jan QuenzerWayne and Glenda Rasmussen
Greg RedigerDale and Joanne Reeves
Carl ReinhardtHoward and Mary RiceTom and Kristi Richter
Rodney RiehlRobbins Construction
Kevin and Debra RobertsKeith Rounds and Cathy VanderWal-
RoundsLyle and Rhonda Rowen
Thomas SannesKevin and MaryAnn SargentVernon and Ruth SchaeferRod and Debra Schaefer
Scheels SportsDave Schmidt Insurance Agency
Bob and Carla Schmidt
JACKRABBIT ATHLETIC DONORS
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JACKRABBIT ATHLETIC DONORSYELLOW ANDBLUE CLUB
(cont.] John T. SchultzAlissa SeidlitzJeff Siekmann
Deb SimetMichael Sisko
Jeff and Lori SkinnerDan and Barb Somsen
Lowell and Karen SomsenTrent and Robin Sorbe
Staurolite Inn and SuitesLyle and Janelle Stewart
John and Laurie StiegelmeierMilton and Phyllis Stiegelmeier
John SturdevantSubway
Mark SweetmanIla SwenningT.P. ServicesTaco John's
Ronold and Janice TeschKevin and Erin Tetzlaff
David and Nancy ThomasLarry and Gail TidemannDave and Vicki Tjaden
Craig and Della TschetterGary and Sharon Van RiperJohn R. and Loretta WaltnerJerry and Carolyn Warmann
Kevin and Lynn WattsMarvin and Elaine Wieman
Kirk and Joyce Wilson - Martin DrugJames and Penny Woster
Tom and Kim Young
BLUE CLUBContributions of
$500-$999Adee Honey Farms
J.D. and Debra AlexanderDoug Algra
Allegiant AirRonald Amundson
David AndersenLaVerne and Francis AndershJohn and Ruth Ann Anderson
Terry Anderson InsuranceTroy Anderson
Mark and Gayle AndrewsBanner Associates
Brad and Dawn BargmannBrent Bargmann
Ron BartelsJared and Ashley Baszler
Marvin and Luanne BebenseeSteve and Benda Berseth
Bierschbach Equipment and SupplyHarry and Mardella BirathFrancis and Beverly Blaze
Jeff BooherPeter and Barbara Boucher
Mary BowneRobert Bresee
Roger and Maxine BrinkBrookings Health System
Brookings Tennis ClubRobert and Nicki Brooks
Frank BrostJack and Ellen Brown
Keith and LaShelle BruinsmaRobert and Renae Buchheim
Bruce BurckhardtBruce and Judy Burrell
Busse Plumbing, Heating and A/CKarol Rue Busta
Clyde and Karan CalhoonSteve and Karla Carpenter
Robert CarrChain Gang Tailgate
Clark Insurance AgencyRobert Clarksean
John CoatsJames Combellick
Walter and Marjorie ConahanClayton and Karen Cook
Leon and Heather CostelloChad and Jill Cravens
Culver’sDan Cutler
Michael and Carol DalyDavisco Foods International
Debra DeBatesJerry and Nancy deBlonk
Doug and Kay DeckerDoug and Sherry DeJongRobert and Kelly DeJong
Sean DonahoeJason Dorman
Dow AgroSciencesRobert and Pamela Drake
Anna DrewDan DrydenPat Duncan
Barry and Jane DunnJane Dvorak
Craig and Bonnie DybedahlDoug Edwards
James and Evelyn EdwardsDal and Carol Eisenbraun
Virgil and Georgan EllerbruchDaryl and Marlys EnglundGary and Connie Englund
Lewayne and Nancy EricksonTedd and Bev Evans
Falcon PlasticsAdolph Fejfar
Jerry and Mary FiedlerEd and Patti Fiegen
David and Pamela FischerBob and Pat Fishback
Mary FlemingJeffery and Bridget Fliehs
Maurice ForsythFoster Farms - Rod and Lori Foster
Gregg FritzTom and Marilyn Gannon
Dave and Jo GibsonBarb and Howard Goodfellow
Great Plains BrokerageGarry and Marge Grorud
David and Elaine GullicksonTrecia and Broc Gulseth
Jerry GustadLori Haas
Claud and Patty HackerDoug and Anne HajekDoug and Teresa Hall
Carlyle HalvorsonKyle and Jennifer Hansen
Jason HarmsChris and Anne Harris
Dan and Jessi HeggHeggvale Farms
Jim HeinitzWilliam Hennrich
Jim HerrboldtRoger Herrick
Kathy and Bill HeylensDavid and Julie Hilderbrand
Terry and Priscilla HillJT Hittle
Edward and Joan HoganPhil and Darrylin Hogie
Hometown Service and TireChip and Cheri Hortness
Houwman Investment GroupRonald and Dorothy HuetherMick and Connie Hurlburt
Richard and Sherry JamesonJoe and LouAnn Jensen
Carl and Lynnette JohnsonDelmyn and Arlys Johnson
Johnson-Henry Funeral HomeRobert and Jean JostadAlex and Judith Kahler
Dave and Sue KarolczakKeith and Teresa Kathol
Kendall's Home Medical ServicesDon and Peggy Kenefick
Michael KjellsenDoug and Debora Klein
Jon KleinjanCandace Klingemann
Rob KlinkefusKip and Kim KludtDelores L. Koepsell
Paul and Brooke KonechneRay and Susan Kontz
Donald and Brenda KrullGayle KvistadJoanna Lane
Lantern LoungeBret and Mary Larson
Doug and Shirley LarsonDonald Lee
Jeff and Joann LeeJason and Holly Liles
Tom and Peggy LombardBruno and Barbara Lorenz
Paul and Dawn MarsoNorm Martin
Mike and Kathy McClemansGladys McCracken
Megan McGeeTeresa McKnight
Michael and Nancy McKnightLaurie Melum
Kenneth MertensDavid and Patricia Meyer
Dennis and LaDonna MickoLarry and Linda MitchellJohn and Corliss MollerDavid and Sheila Monke
Clement and Karen MorganThomas and Renae Morog
Ellen MulderLee Munger
Cindy and Gabe MydlandJerry and Ann NachtigalScott and Jamie Nagy
NAPA Auto PartsJim and Eileen NawrothBarry and Kay NelsonJeff and Joan NelsonCurt and Cheryl Ness
Coke and Paulette NewmanTim and Laurie Nichols
Greg and Jane OdeMike and Terri Olinger
Roberta and David OlsonMichael and JoAnn Oster
James and MariLyn PedersenJames Petersen
Dick and Theanne PetersonBrad and Michele Pfeifle
Paul and Ann PhillipsBrian and Holly PiearsonRandy and Karmen PiperStephen and Kathy Pohl
Brad and Jill PowellPush Pedal Pull
James and Jill QuigleySteven and Marysz Rames
Tim and Mary ReedChris Reiner
Butch ReineschMarc and Viola RichardsJames and Annette Roby
Todd RohrKendell Rohrbach
Dwayne and Helen RollagMichael and Patricia Roth
Mike and Patrice RothTim and Margo Roth Family
Rude's Funeral HomeRun for Beef and Eggs
Craig and Kristi RussowDavid and Sandra RustenGary and Kellie SandquistRoland and Sandra Sayler
Greg SaylerJoe and Katie Schefers
Mark and Amy SchoenemanJim and Karen Schramm
Jodi SchulzChris and Linda SchumacherMark and Deb Schuttloffel
Bonnie SivageDean and Nancy Skoglund
Orville B. and Charlotte L. SmidtJerry F. Smith
Millard and Amber SmithRichard and Judy Smith
SD Quarter Horse AssociationBrian Stahl
Gary and Cindy StenstromRich and Darla Strande
Neil and Debra SunnarborgTodd and Cheryl TelfordThomas and Sue Thelen
Jim and Susan ThompsonMatt and Geri ThornMike and Mary Tofte
Nate and Gina TrebilcockWes Tschetter
Bill TylerMark Uckert
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BLUE CLUB(cont.)
Glen and Beth UkenChuck and Kathy Van Hove
Daniel and Nichole Van RoekelPatti VanDerBurg
Doug and Betty VanDerWerffJohn and Linda VanHove
Rick and LaRayne WahlstromJB and Elaine Weber
Lang and Tabatha WedemeyerWells Fargo Bank
Wink’s Fine Jewelry - Jerry and JudyMiller
Verne and Bonita WinterLance and Amy Wipf
Rod WipfMilton and Mary Woken
Roger and Bonnie WoltersCorey and Carin WulfLeon and Joyce WrageTom and Gwen Yseth
Roger and Helen ZebarthBradley and Elaine Zell
William Zink
YELLOW CLUBContributions of
$300-$499Michael and Barbara Adelaine
Richard and Brenda AklandDavid and Kelly AndersonLyle and Patricia Anderson
Aurora Auto Body and GlassMarvin BahrHal Bailey
BankStar FinancialTom and Linda Bartholomew
Herb BartlingKurt and Susan Bassett
James BaszlerChristopher and Erin Bauman
Bob BellingerGreg and Janice Benning
Larry BerghJames and Kathryn Berreth
Michael and Michaela BertramTom and Gayle Birath
Kelly BittnerPhil and Jackie Blackford
John and Victoria BlatchfordGreg and Ellen Boekelheide
Brian and Stacy BoomgaardenKaren Brandt
Jennifer BriggsMark and Rhonda Britzman
Walt and Kris BrownJohn and Kathy Bruce
Keith and Diane BurckhardtJim and Patty Cain
Craig and Kim CarsonEd and Debbie Catani
Dwaine and Gayle ChapelCousin Construction
Luverne and Barbara CrosserDakota Insurance Agency
Russ and Angela DalyLaRon and Lori DeBoer
Don Deibert
Arvid DillsMary Pullman Dodge
Ray and Vi DornJeff and Missy Eckerle
Ted and Lou EggebraatenRick and Becky Eggebrecht
Jeff EidenshinkK. Janice Embry
Brad and Jennifer EricksonSteve Everson
Joan FinkBill and Karissa FischerJon and Anna Fischer
Vance and Ericka FlaniganLarry Frahm
Peter and Marion FranzMatt and Kari Fuks
Ned and Jenny GavlickErik Gerlach
Heather and Kelvin GessnerHarry and Shirley GibbonsSteve and Debra Griffith
Brad and Candace GrossenburgCal and Ellona Grosz
John and Julie HanowskiRuss and Shari Hansen
Wayne HansenDoug and Jeanne Hanson
Eric HarryJeff and Angela Hebbert
David HelgelandBen Hellmann
Ruth HevleGeorge and Nancy Hohwieler
Daniel HokeJames and Rebecca Hollenbeck
Betty and Don HollidayRichard and Joanie HolmTim and Tammy HolzerJason and Laura Hove
Howalt-McDowell InsuranceDavid and Mary HowardRyan and Stacy HowlettDave and Bonnie HubbsJames and Patricia HulsDonald and Adele Huls
Richard and Connie JenningsEllis and Mary Ellen Jensen
Alan and Carole JohnsonErik and Darla JohnsonJim and Diane JohnstonHarry and Helen Jones
David JonesSteve and Linda Karlstad
Beverly KingJay and Michelle KnuppeBen and Molly KnutzenPaul and Laurie KonradAndy and Kayla KoobShane and Sara Kuehl
Russ LangerKen and Vicki Lanier
Greg and Heather LenzRon and Eris Lenz
Life's Great MomentsNorman and Sarah LingleDarin and Tammy Loban
Mac MacDougalDavid and JoAnn Manke
David and Linda Marquardt
Randy MarsoTom and Judy MartinShayne McDougall
Chuck and Marcia McMullenRoger and Clarice MegardKurt and Angela Meister
Bob and Pat MeyerJerry and Karen Minett
George MinkModern Woodmen of America
Kevin and Amber MoeGary and Lois Morris
Laurence and Susan MungerTom and Michelle Munger
Ralph NachtigalNagel's Bump and Paint Shop
NBD InternationalJoel and Carrie NelsonDoug and Judy Nemitz
David NettletonDonald and Betty Nettleton
Roderick NitzscheJim and Julie Olson
Gerry and Becky OstgaardJohn and LaFaye Panariello
Edward ParkhurstDelayne ParletPaul Paterson
Steve and Rachel PaulaCraig and Kellie Peters
Carol and Charles PetersonRob PetersonSteven Pietila
Derrick and Cami PowersPrairie Coach TrailwaysJason and Kellie Reaves
Redfield Golf OutingPete and Patty Retzlaff
Fredrick and Barbara RichardsonJim RickeRoger Rix
Thomas RobertsScott Roby
Bob and Carmen RotertMarian Rude
Clifford RuesinkRollie Ryan
Duane and Shirley RykhusDavid and Kimberly St. John
Craig and Nancy SchoenGalen Schoenefeld
Pamela and Michael SchroederRyan and Terra Schuchhardt
Robert and Lorna SchultzRonald and Janet SeeleyLewis and Betty ShelstaArden and Lavonne Sigl
Louis and Mary Ann SkubicSkyview Junction, LLC
Leonard and Ruth SpanjersBonny Specker and Howard Wey
Nick and Bonnie SpielmannLeo and Elaine Spinar
Stapleton SeedsTravis and Jenny StarksRobert and Diane Steers
Lynn and Laurie StoltenburgJohn and Jan Stone
Todd StratmoenDennis Stroh
Larry SuttonMatt and Somer Sutton
Justin SwansonSteve and Cathy Swartos
Clayton and Nancy TheobaldDavid and Gina Thompson
Robert ThompsonJeff Thue
Mike and Heidi TietjenJoel and Brienne Torgrude
Bob TracyEmery Tschetter and Jenny Crickard
Richard and Pat TurnerTom and Darla Van Asselt
Ron and Judy VanderheidenMick and Lynn VarilekJeff and Stacey Vostad
Wayne WaltzDarin and Anita Weber
Wensman SeedGayle West
Gale and Esther WestburgJoe and Courtney Wiemann
Jim and Doniese WilcoxDaniel Wilde
Willert Wellness and ChiropracticJim and Venita Winterboer
Bruce WosjeKevin and Barb Wurtz
Matt and Jill ZensDarrell Zimmerman
CENTURY CLUBContributions of
$100-$299David and Donna AchesonPhil and Cindy Adkison
Brad and Kathleen AlfredNana Allison-Brewer
Wendy AlsakerForrest and Betsy AndersonJames and Betty Anderson
Matt AndersonEd Anglin
Deane AntoineJoe and Ashley ArthurEddie and Jean Asbill
Jane AsmusAssociated Consulting Engineering
Back In Motion ChiropracticDavid and Sheryl Baldwin
John and Dorean BallVerlie Barg
Duane BarnesJesse Barthol
Dave and Judy BartlingGerry Bass
Russell BassJanine Bassett
Bret and Constance BatchelderChris Bauer
Steve and Shelly BayerJerry Beckler
Brooks BehrendSusan Bell
Kristin BelzungJohn and Sara Bennetts
Charles and JoElle BensonJustin BensonLisa Berens
JACKRABBIT ATHLETIC DONORS
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CENTURYCLUB(cont.)
Lon and Jean BernthCharles and Mary Lou Berry
Dale and Eileen BertschStephen Beukelman
David M. BiggarDaniel and Kathy Billet
Jerome BinfetCurtis and Betty BisgardDaniel and Kris Bjerke
Lee and Betty BjorkmanLarry Bjurstrom
Brad BlahaMichael and Jennifer Blazey
Lori BlomBlue Goat Capital
Jean BlumeLori Bocklund
Arvid BoeCharlie Boese
Tim BoldtSherwin and Leslie Bolks
Joseph and Coral BonnemannKenneth and Deborah Bonte
Adam BoothDave and Sherry Fuller Bordewyk
Bob and Linda BorkJoseph Bormann
John and Margie BornhoftRuss and Laura Bortnem
John BoscardinKraig BougherCorey Bowman
Todd and Karen BoydDon and Crystal BradleyVerne and Debra Brakke
Kevin BraleyMike Brandt
Gary and Rose BraunDarryl Breeschoten
Carey BretschCollin Breyfogle
Don BriggsBill and Barb Brinker
Steve and Lyndy BritzmanBroadway Chiropractic Center
Brian and Jan BrockelChad BroksieckDonald J. Brown
John BrunerToby and Amber Rae Bryant
Jay BubakGary Buller
Nathan and Susan BullerBrian and Kendra Bunkers
Mark BurgersBob BurgersMike Burgers
Matt and Tammy BurkhartBob and Donna Burns
Tim BurnsGalen BuschMarlyn BussMichael BussAmy Busse
Terry and Galen BusseTim Buterbaugh
Tim and Rita ButlerDan and Vicki Buum
Tim and Monica CampbellJames and Dawn Canada
Bruce CardAndy Carlson
Philip and Pamela CarlsonSteve and Penny Carlson
TJ CarlsonGalen CarverAdam Case
Terry and Sharon CaseyKim Cassel
Richard CaugheyMatt Cecil and Jennifer Tiernan
Abie ChadderdonNeil Chaney
Richard and Marilyn ChapmanSteve and Jean ChappellChris and Mary ChasePaul and Kim Chase
Bob and Michelle CheeverChris Christopherson
Clark EngineeringLyle and Mary Claussen
Kileen ClebergRichard and Eleanor Coddington
Brenda (Davis) ComstockConfluence
Chris ConradWilliam CookBrian CooleySteven Cooley
Keith and Roxanne CorbettDave and Alicia CornemannThomas and Kathy Coughlin
Counterpart, Inc.Beverly Craddock
Jim CraigLeon and Pat Crossman
CSC High PlainsJay Culver
Jesse Currier and Ron RoundsSteven Cutler
D&D Crop ServiceArt and Florence Dahms
DairyNet2000Dakota Mobile Hydraulics
Ken and Karen DalyPaul and Sara Danger
Josh DavisDarrell and Ruth DeBoer
Philip DeGrootWade and Stacie DeGroot
Rod DeHavenDoug and Gail Deibert
Bob DemaraisJason Dempster
Roger and Constance DenkerEric Denning
Jeff and Kathy DesLauriersJeremy Deutsch
Jason and Jodi DevineAl and Beth Devitt
Arden and Marilyn DewaldSteve and Sheila Dewald
Tim DeWittMark Diesch
Dennis and Yvonne DietterleJay and Diane Dirksen
Kevin and Diane DobbsDale Dodge
Brian and Judith DonahoeTerri Douglas
Greg and Karla DralleGary and Judy Duffy
Daniel DuitscherMark and Joline Dunbar
Dan and Kristina DykhouseJim Dzurisin
Cody EastmanShane EastmanWade EastmanDoug Eggers
Bob and Carolyn EideEidsness Funeral Home
John EidsnessDave and Jan Eiesland
Mark and Becky EkelandChuck Elhoff
David and Kandace EllisHolly Eng
Eric EricksonHart and Ruth EricksonCasey and Erica Estling
Curtis and Roxann EversonExpress Attorney Services
Pete FahlbergDavid and Katie FalcoGreg and Lora Fargen
Mitch FargenLindsey FastScott Fausti
James and Ann FayGerald Feikema
Bill and Peggy FellerFirst National Bank of VolgaClayton and Cathy Fischer
Lori FishRichard and Kerry Fish
Terry FisherDan and Melissa Fjeldheim
Jonathan and Mandilyn FliehsBrian and Kari Flom
Becka FoersterPatricia Neisen Foley
Ben and Rosemarie FoleyDan and Valerie Foster
Robert S. and LaVetta FosterAndrea Fouberg
Glen and Sue FoxRonald Frank
Ronda and Josh FrayRandy and Cindy Frederick
Joe and Trisha FrenchColin and Jenna Friedrich
BJ FriedrichsFrohling Law Office
Jeanne GackeLeo and Teresa Garcia
Kris GarryLee Gavlick
GHP SystemsRandy and Paula Gibson
Tara GibsonWilliam Gilbert
Paul and Delores GilbertJoseph GillenJoseph GilpinTom Gilsrud
David GirardDoug and Judy GjesdalTodd and Lisa Glanzer
Vic GodfreyDarwin Gonnerman
Doug GoodaleGP Auto Service and Repair
Daren GravleyBrad Gregory
John and Karen GreinChris Gruenhagen
Terry GukeisenEd and Linda GullicksonJason and Gail Gullickson
Matt GundersonWayne GuptillEmilee Gusso
John C. GustafsonKaroline and Jacob Gustafson
Doug HagmanDarrel and Karen Hahn
David HalterLeo Hammrich
Al HamreChad and Jill Hansen
Kip and Jeanne HansenSeth and Ann Hansen
Rolf and Esther HansonClark and Lyla Hanson
Dana HansonDon Hanson
Marty HansonMatt and Kelli Hanson
Tim HarmsNicholas and Audrey Harrington
Bob and Judy HarrisMac Harris and Tammy Hacker
Greg HasselChad Hauge
Barbara HauschildBrian Havlik and Rebecka Richter-
HavlikShad and Patti HawkeyTim and Gina HawkinsKristi and Tim Healy
Dennis and Susan HedgeTodd HeerJeff Hegge
Steven and Heather HeilJim and Deb Heine
Rod and Debbie HeinrichBen and Tara Heinze
Greg HeitmannMichael and Clare Helling
Shawn HelmboltDale and Heidi Henderschiedt
Laura HennenCynthia HenningDianne Herrmann
Jeff and LaDonna HiebRichard and Brenda Hieb
Steve and Tara HietpasMarty and Valorie Higgins
Lois HilbersJerry and Kathleen Hill
Scott and Nancy HodgesDennis and Bonnie Hofer
John and Beth HoferRoger and Celeste Hofer
Blaine Hoff
JACKRABBIT ATHLETIC DONORS
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CENTURYCLUB(cont.)
Darren HoffSteve and Jeanne Hoff
Wade and Kristi HoffmanRon Hofmeister
Hofmeister-Jones Funeral HomeLynn Hohensee
Tonya HohenthanerScott and Carleen Holm
Gary and Connie HoltquistBob and Beth Holzwarth
Kathy and Michael HolzworthTom Honkomp
Fran HoogestraatMike and Kathy Hotvet
Richard and Jane HowardRobert Hull
Joe HumphreyJarrod and Jody Huntimer
Gary HydeDan Hylland
Douglas IdemaIndustrial Machine and EngineeringEvan and Pat McGee Ingebrigtson
Jack and Pamela IngemansenKevin Ishol
James P. IversonDoug and Connie Jackson
Farrel JacobsenJoan Jacobsen
Jamboree Foods - Bob PiddeDick and Donna James
Dr. Matt JamesMicah JamesLarry Janssen
Doug and Kathleen JatonLarry Jensen
Mark and Jonda JensenTim Jensen
Vaughn Jensen and Susan MoeDave Jibben
Jill Sutton JohannsenJim and Laurie Johansen
Alan A. JohnsonAlvin and Beverly Johnson
Danny JohnsonDean Johnson
James and Ardis JohnsonLuke and Sharon JohnsonLyndon and Pam Johnson
Ryan and Jill JohnsonDorothy Jones
Matt and Katie JonesGalen and Ann Jordre
Karen JorenbyDon and Mary Jorgenson
Philip and Darla JorgensonTodd and Patricia Jorgenson
Rick and Jane JuchemsLauren and Sheila Kaemingk
Chuck and Cindy KaiserDr. Chad Kalil
Lisa Kannegieter-BaheAndy and Tracy KardoesLarry and Jackie Kasten
Pastor Dave and Jeanne KaufmanHenry Keizer
Mike KelleyKenner PlumbingDorothy Kepford
Jerry and Lynn KernsTeresa Kerr
Mike and Jessie KeslerSam and Crystal Kezar
Mary KidwilerKelsey and Carrie Kindopp
Dan KingKinner and Company
Paul and Susan KippleyKarna KittelsonDerek Kjelden
Russell and Barbara KleinjanMary KleinjanDavid M. Kline
Paul KlingerJim Klinker
Steven and Stacia KlockMartin and Gloria Kloster
Arlen KlosterboerDavid Knefelkamp
John KnoblochKeith KnuppeRoger D. Koch
Tom Koch and Lora Hummel-KochBrett and Lori Koenecke
Jeff KoenigCordell Koistinen
Mark KoolMolly Kopp
Dona KornbaumLoretta Kortan
Tim and Betsy KosierDavid KragnessNicholas Kranz
Stephen Krebsbach and Judy Vondruska
Bruce and Christine KreutnerAlex Kringen
Jon and Beth KringenTim Kromminga
Jimmy and Linda KrsnakDeric and Erica Kruse
Steven KruseChris and Alissa Kuhl
Richard and Sharon KuhnsDeanna Kunkel
Frank and Jean KurtenbachStacey Kutil
Tim KwapnioskiRuss and Nancy Lampy
Eric LandisJim Langer
Tracy and Kristen LangerJay and Kathy Larsen
Laird LarsonNeil Larson
Roger LarsonRoss and Jolene Larson
Russell LarsonJoseph Lavell
Dave LawDonna Lease
David LeeNeil and Nancy Lee
Richard and Mary Jo LeeDoug and Julie Leighton
Rusty Lenners
Jerald and JoAnn LewisBob and Patricia Lewis
Lewis DrugCory and Jennifer Lichty
Daniel and Gail LienJennifer Like
Rick and Traci LindnerDavid and Joni Lingle
Renee ListonWayne and Marian Livingston
Mike LockremNicole LograssoRussell Lokken
Jim LongVictor and Susan Lopez
Brad LoweryDennis and Barbara Luethje
Steve LuethjeAllyn Lunden
Leslie and Marie LyonBarry Mack
Hugh and Cari MackMatt and Lora MagersDoug and Mary Malo
John and Darlene MandelkeEd Maras
Valeria MarcilTony and Shelley Martin
Glen and Lisa MartsNick Mashek
Monte and Ruth MasonRichard MaxJimmy MayLori MaynesHank McCall
Todd and Tina McDonaldGreg and Karen McDougallMarty and Lisa McInerney
Merlyn McKenneyKenneth and Mardis McKenzie
Rob McTaggartLuke and Rochelle Meadows
George MedchillTim and Gail Meland
Ryan and Nichole MeliusRoger Mellendorf
Raymond Mernaugh, Ph.D.Brian and Ruth MeyerJim and Paula Meyer
Randy MeyerGreg and Jane Miller
Bryan MillerJoel and Karen Minett
Matt MinichDan Minor
Keith and Karen MoeNathan and Colleen Moe
Richard MoeDave and Dori MoffattRoger and Sue Mofle
Marc and Julie MooneyShannon MooreDr. Paul Morgan
James and Dorothy MorganThomas Morgan
Jason MorkKeith and Kim Murfield
Markus MurphyMaynard and Sharon Nagelhout
Rich Naser
Nancy NeiberBrian and Vicki NelsonBruce and Rita Nelson
Jamie NelsonKristine Nelson
Dave and Laurie NelsonLarry and Sandra Nelson
Neal NelsonRonald Nelson
George NewmanDavid and Karen NicholsonGreg and Connie Niederauer
Gordon and Susan NivaDarryl and Tracy Nordquist
Ken and Arlene OddeBruce and Stephanie Ode
Lee and Nancy OdeTracy and Darilyn Odegaard
Dave and Diane OdensJerry and Linda Oines
Mike and Joannie OlenichChad Oletzke
Bill and Audrey OligmuellerLawrence and Kathryn Oliver
Linda OlsonStewart and Bernadette Olson
Mackenzie Osadchuk and DaltonDecker
Keith OsierBob and Lisa Otterson
Ivan Palmer and Susan Hardin-Palmer
Tom PalmerDavid Paquette
Jeff and Heidi PavlovichPE Group Engineers
Tim and Mary PearsonRichard Peiper
Lyle and Garnet PermanJoann Perso
Dave and Rebecca PetersTodd Petersen
Derek and Janet PetersonEric and Miranda PetersonEric and Leigha Peterson
Sharon and Jim PetrikSteve Pier
Jayson and Jaclyn PlampBruce Pochardt
Virgil PolakNathan and Angel PolflietMarlyn and Pam Poppens
Dave PorterDwayne Postma
Patrick and Margie PowersStacey Pratt
Charles and Kelley PriceRitchie PriceBrent PrusaKent QuailNate Quam
Ed and Patricia RadaMelvin Radke
Don and Linda RayEric Ray
Razor's Edge Barber ShopBeth ReamsRuth Rehn
Ronnie and Sally ReimerMaurice and Connie Reiner
JACKRABBIT ATHLETIC DONORS
The Bum 63
2010 Jackrabbit Football
59-64 Jackrabbit Club_Layout 1 11/16/10 8:17 AM Page 5
JACKRABBIT ATHLETIC DONORS
DIFFERENCE-MAKER CLUB MEMBERS
CENTURYCLUB(cont.)
Mike and Annie ReinerWayne and Colene Reiser
Tom ReitterDavid and Rina Reynolds
Art RezacElizabeth Rezek
Les and Lynne RhodesDavid Rialson
Randy RichardsJack Richardson
Shane RientsAngela RimeJoel Ripley
Mark RittenhouseClayton and Pamela Roberts
Brent RohlfsJesse and Teri Ronning
Larry and Robin Grinager RossowMarlyn Rudebusch
Rude's Home FurnishingsCody and Laurie Rufer
Bob and Maureen RuttenLinda SalmonsonAustin SalonenMichael Salter
Casey and Stephanie SampsonRick and Lynn Sandager
Max and Stephanie Herseth SandlinOran and Virginia Sattler
Thomas ScarboroughKaron Schaack
Roger and Kay ScheibeChristopher and Molly Schenkel
Brandon SchillingRoger and Desaray Schmaltz
Brad SchmidtGregg Schmidt
Lee and Pam SchmidtMartin and Shawna De Smet Schmidt
Barry and Ann SchmittRoger and Jan SchneeklothGene and Nancy Schneider
Fran SchoenfelderMark and Bobbi SchrammMatt and Natasha Schreiber
Schuller FarmsDan and Sarah SchulteJoe and Mary Schulte
Steve SchultzJeff Schumacher
Cletus SchuttloffelEarl and Elaine Schwandt
Chuck SeamanBrad Seely
Micky and Heidi SehrThomas Settje
Gary and Linda SheeleyMarvin Sherrill
Aaron and Deanna ShivesNicole Siebrasse
Patrick SiglChuck and Robin Sjogren
Gaye Skelly-PetersonSkinner's Pub
Dave SkoglundJason and Lisa Skovlund
Terry SlatteryTom Slattery
Todd SmetanaJodi Smith-Risdal
Norman and Jaye SmithKiri Solberg
Ray SpellmanJim and Trish Spinar
Spink County Grain CleanersLisa Spors
Emil StanecOwen Stanley
Brett and Mary StarkSteen Bookkeeping ServiceDave and Audrey Stenberg
Brian SterudJim and Cindi Stitz
Lynn and Jan StofferahnMark Stolt
Chris StoltenbergJason Stripling
Lee and Yvonne StroupMark and Jenni StruckMike and Ginny StruckBen and Jennifer Studer
Paula StudtMichael Suhn
Jacob and Courtney SukalskiMatt and Helen Sutton
Steve SuttonDan and Karen Swanda
Aaron and Kristina SwansonPaul and Kelly Swartos
Ryan Sweeter
Mark and Karin SwensonRob Swenson
LaDell and Phyllis SwidenTom Tabor
Bill and Dawn TaylorBrandon Thiesse
Paul and Anita ThomasBrock Thompson
Charles D. ThompsonDoug and Nancy ThompsonMark and Mary Thompson
RJ and Mary ThompsonBryan Thoreson
Dale and Teresa ThunkerWayne Tidemann
LaMoine TorgersonRyan and Megan Torgrude
Dennis TreiberTim and Gete Treinen
Jay TrenhaileJason Tronbak
Jayme and Rebecca TrygstadLes and Cherry Tuma
Roger and Lissa TurbakGerald and Lora Turner
Daryl TutjePaul and Dawn Twenge
Twin City Fan and BlowerPat Uckert
The UPS StoreTammy Uttecht
Ron and Mari Van ZantenRyan VandeKieft
Cory VandeWetteringRoger and LeAnne Vaske
Donald VealCami Veire
Kevin and Lynne VermeulenAaron and Hilary Veskrna
Brian VilhauerTodd Voss
Gene and Susan VostadNancy Wadsworth
Kenneth and Joan Wagner
Ted and Corinna WahlRobert and Jane Wahlstrom
James WalkerRon and Judith Waltz
Paul WeberKent WeckwerthPaula WeeldreyerPamela Weiland
Larry WeissDennis and Janice Welbig
Thomas WestRobert Westergard
James WhitePerry and Toni Wiechmann
Terry and Sharon WieczorekRhonda Wiering
David and Julia WikJohn Wilber
John Willard, IIIGordon and Kathryn Willcutt
Christi WilliamsDavid and Susan Willis
Ernest WingenDavid and Marcia Withrow
Farmers Insurance - Leonard WitteDale and Egli Wittler
Delmer and Eileen WolkowBrian WollmanGlenn Wollman
Kelsey WorcesterCody and Stephanie Wright
Paul WyczawskiRob and Sara WylieXtreme Recognition
Denny YorkRobert and Laurie Young
Kelley YsethNesa Rae Zielinski
Jason and Kyrsten ZimmermanSteve and Monica Zirbel
David ZoelleGene and Mary Zulk
Jo Ann ZwanzigerMark and Julie Zweep
64 The Bum
2010 Jackrabbit Football
For questions regarding the Jackrabbit Club,contact Annual Fund Coordinator Ned Gavlick
Greg BenningPete and Jo Binker
Chuck CecilDon and Angie Charlson
David and Marcia ChicoineMike Daly
Dana Dykhouse
Gregg FritzDuane HarmsJason Harms
Spence HawleyClair Husby
John and Diane MaynesScott McMacken
Matthew and Lisa MillerBrad and Jill Powell
Mike and June RedmondSteve Roach
Gary and Kellie SandquistJohn T. Schultz
Mark and Jill Sweetman
James N. TalbertKevin Tetzlaff
Betty Van Der WerffRich and Jo Waldner
Skip Webster
59-64 Jackrabbit Club_Layout 1 11/16/10 8:17 AM Page 6
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IBC - FB&T_Layout 1 9/7/10 2:10 PM Page 1
Together, Megan Vogel, Josh Ranek and Paul Keizer thrilled
SDSU sports fans with their superior play, awesome finesse,
and love of the game. And they each have chosen one place
for the best injury treatment and rehab: Orthopedic Institute.
From pulled muscles to reconstructive surgery, the experts at
Orthopedic Institute are prepared to handle any sports injury.
THREE SDSU LEGENDS.ONE TRUSTED ORTHOPEDIC SOURCE.
ORTHOPEDIC INSTITUTE.
PROUD TO BE THE OFFICIAL TEAM PHYSICIAN FOR SDSU ATHLETES. AND YOU.
MEGAN VOGEL
Two-time first-team All-Independent selection
Second on SDSU career scoringlist with 1,850 points
2007 second-round draftchoice of the WNBA’s
Washington Mystics
Three-time Division II All-American running backCareer leader at SDSU with6,744 yards rushing and 69touchdownsMember of Canadian FootballLeague 2002-2006
“Throughout my professional career, I always came back to OI to get their treatment and care.”
Three-time All-Conferenceselection as both offensivelineman and tight endMember of the Sioux Falls Storm
“They care about your success. They want you to getback in the game.”
JOSH RANEK
PAUL KEIZER
810 E. 23RD STREET, SIOUX FALLS, SD 605-331-5890 • 407 22ND AVE, BROOKINGS, SD 605-692-7666 • OR TOLL-FREE 888-331-5890WWW.ORTHO-I.COM
“There was no other place I would have considered
going for treatment otherthan Orthopedic Institute.”
FB Cover 091810_Cover Film 9/7/10 2:19 PM Page 1