2010 Western Athletic Conference football season

The 2010 Western Athletic Conference (WAC) football season was an NCAA football season played from September 2, 2010 – January 9, 2011. The Western Athletic Conference in 2010 consisted of 9 members: Boise State, Fresno State, Hawaiʻi, Idaho, Louisiana Tech, Nevada, New Mexico State, San Jose State, and Utah State.

2010 WAC football season
LeagueNCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision
SportFootball
DurationSeptember 2, 2010
through January 9, 2011
Number of teams9
TV partner(s)ABC, ESPN, WAC Sports Network
2011 NFL Draft
Top draft pickQB Colin Kaepernick, Nevada
Picked bySan Francisco 49ers, 36th overall
Regular Season
ChampionsBoise State, Hawaiʻi, & Nevada (co-champions)
Season MVPQB Colin Kaepernick, Nevada
QB Kellen Moore, Boise State
DE Chris Carter, Fresno State
Football seasons
← 2009
2011 →
2010 Western Athletic Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
No. 11 Nevada +   7 1     13 1  
No. 9 Boise State +   7 1     12 1  
Hawaii +   7 1     10 4  
Fresno State   5 3     8 5  
Louisiana Tech   4 4     5 7  
Idaho   3 5     6 7  
Utah State   2 6     4 8  
New Mexico State   1 7     2 10  
San Jose State   0 8     1 12  
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

Boise State, Hawaiʻi, and Nevada all went 7–1 in conference play to share the WAC title. All three teams finished the regular season ranked in the top 25 of all four major polls. Boise State (12–1) was invited to the Maaco Bowl Las Vegas where they defeated Utah 26–3. Hawaiʻi (10–4) was invited to the Hawaiʻi Bowl where they lost to Tulsa 35–62. Nevada (13–1) was invited to the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl where they defeated Boston College 20–13. The only other WAC team to be bowl eligible was Fresno State (8–5), and they were invited to the Humanitarian Bowl where they lost to Northern Illinois 17–40.

This was Boise State's final season as a WAC member. Amid a realignment of NCAA conferences, the school announced on June 11, 2010 that it would leave the WAC for the Mountain West Conference effective July 1, 2011.[1]

Previous season edit

Boise State went 13–0 during the regular season, their second straight undefeated season, to win the conference championship for the second straight year and seventh time in eight years. They would be ranked No. 6 in the BCS at the end of the regular season and received an invitation to the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl to become the first team from a non-automatic qualifying conference to receive an at-large berth to a BCS bowl (other non-AQ teams had received automatic bids under BCS rules). The Broncos faced BCS No. 4 ranked TCU in the first matchup of two teams from non-AQ conferences in a BCS bowl. They defeated the Horned Frogs 17–10 and finished the season No. 4 in AP and coache's polls.

Other bowl-eligible teams in 2009 were Nevada (8–4), Fresno State (8–4), and Idaho (7–5). Nevada was invited to play in the Sheraton Hawaiʻi Bowl, where they lost 45–10 to SMU. Fresno State was invited to play in the New Mexico Bowl for the second straight year where they lost to Wyoming 35–28 in 2 overtimes. Idaho was invited to play in the Roady's Humanitarian Bowl where they defeated Bowling Green 43–42.

Spring ball edit

Team Start of Practice Spring Game
Boise State March 8 April 17
Fresno State March 15 April 16
Hawai'i April 1 April 30
Idaho March 23 April 23
Louisiana Tech March 17 April 10
New Mexico State April 5 May 1
Nevada March 5 April 3
San Jose State March 12 April 22
Utah State March 23 April 24

Preseason edit

WAC media days edit

During the WAC's football preview on July 26 in Salt Lake City,[2] Boise State was selected by both the coaches and media as favorites to win the conference. They received 42 of a possible 43 first place votes in the media poll with Nevada coming in second and receiving the other first place vote. The Broncos received eight of nine first place votes in the coaches poll, but Boise State head coach Chris Petersen was not allowed to vote for his own team in first place, thus the Broncos received all 8 possible first place votes.

Boise State quarterback Kellen Moore was selected as the preseason offensive player of the year and Nevada defensive end Dontay Moch was selected as the preseason defensive player of the year. Moore and Moch were the 2009 WAC players of the year.

Media poll edit

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

Coaches poll edit

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

WAC vs. BCS matchups edit

WAC teams finished the season 5–9 against teams from BCS conferences. Boise State and Fresno State defeated two each with Nevada gaining the other win.

Date Visitor Home Notes Winning Team
September 2 USC Hawaiʻi USC
September 4 Cincinnati Fresno State Fresno State
September 4 San Jose State No. 1 Alabama Alabama
September 4 Utah State No. 8 Oklahoma Oklahoma
September 6 No. 5 Boise State No. 6 Virginia Tech Played at FedExField in Landover, Maryland Boise State
September 11 Idaho No. 7 Nebraska Nebraska
September 11 Louisiana Tech Texas A&M Texas A&M
September 11 San Jose State No. 11 Wisconsin Wisconsin
September 17 No. 24 California Nevada Nevada
September 18 Hawaiʻi Colorado Colorado
September 25 Oregon State No. 3 Boise State ESPN's College GameDay broadcast from Bronco Stadium Boise State
September 25 Fresno State Mississippi Mississippi
September 25 New Mexico State Kansas Kansas
December 3 Illinois Fresno State Fresno State

Regular season edit

Index to colors and formatting
WAC member won
WAC member lost
WAC teams in bold

The WAC has teams in 4 different time zones. Times reflect start time in respective time zone of each team (Central-Louisiana Tech, Mountain-New Mexico State, Boise State, Utah State, Pacific-Idaho, Fresno State, San Jose State, Nevada, Hawaiian-Hawaiʻi). Conference games start times are that of the home team.

Rankings reflect that of the USA Today Coaches poll for that week until week eight when the BCS poll will be used.

Week one edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
September 2 5:00 pm USC Hawaiʻi Aloha StadiumHonolulu, HI ESPN L 36–49 44,204
September 2 6:00 pm North Dakota Idaho Kibbie DomeMoscow, Idaho Altitude W 45–0 11,466
September 2 6:00 pm Eastern Washington Nevada Mackay StadiumReno, Nevada W 49–24 16,313
September 4 4:00 pm San Jose State No. 1 Alabama Bryant–Denny StadiumTuscaloosa, Alabama L 3–48 101,821
September 4 5:00 pm Utah State No. 8 Oklahoma Oklahoma Memorial StadiumNorman, Oklahoma FSN L 24–31 85,151
September 4 6:00 pm Grambling State Louisiana Tech Independence StadiumShreveport, Louisiana
(Port City Classic)
W 20–6 34,762
September 4 7:00 pm Cincinnati Fresno State Bulldog StadiumFresno, California ESPN2 W 28–14 37,238
September 6 6:00 pm No. 5 Boise State No. 6 Virginia Tech FedExFieldLandover, Maryland
(Allstate Kickoff in the Capital)
ESPN/ESPN 3D W 33–30 86,587

Players of the week:[3]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Kellen Moore Boise State Logan Harrell Fresno State Kyle Brotzman Boise State

Week two edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
September 11 7:00 am Hawaiʻi Army Michie StadiumWest Point, New York CBSCS W 31–28 30,042
September 11 9:30 am Idaho No. 7 Nebraska Memorial StadiumLincoln, Nebraska FSN L 17–38 85,732
September 11 11:00 am San Jose State No. 11 Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, Wisconsin ESPN L 14–27 78,469
September 11 6:00 pm Louisiana Tech Texas A&M Kyle FieldCollege Station, Texas L 16–48 77,579
September 11 6:00 pm San Diego State New Mexico State Aggie Memorial StadiumLas Cruces, New Mexico Altitude L 21–41 16,891
September 11 6:00 pm Idaho State Utah State Romney StadiumLogan, Utah W 38–17 18,347
September 11 7:30 pm Colorado State Nevada Mackay Stadium • Reno, Nevada ESPNU W 51–6 18,098

Players of the week:[4]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Bryant Moniz Hawaiʻi James-Michael Johnson Nevada Anthony Martinez Nevada

Week three edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
September 17 7:00 pm No. 24 California Nevada Mackay Stadium • Reno, Nevada ESPN2 W 52–31 28,809
September 18 9:30 am Hawaiʻi Colorado Folsom FieldBoulder, Colorado FCS L 13–31 47,840
September 18 5:00 pm Southern Utah San Jose State Spartan StadiumSan Jose, California W 16–11 16,739
September 18 6:00 pm No. 3 Boise State Wyoming War Memorial StadiumLaramie, Wyoming CBSCS W 51–6 29,014
September 18 6:00 pm Navy Louisiana Tech Joe Aillet StadiumRuston, Louisiana ESPN3 L 23–37 23,122
September 18 6:00 pm Fresno State Utah State Romney Stadium • Logan, Utah WAC Sports Network FRES 41–24 19,059
September 18 7:00 pm New Mexico State UTEP Sun Bowl StadiumEl Paso, Texas
(The Battle of I-10)
L 10–42 39,214
September 18 7:30 pm UNLV Idaho Kibbie Dome • Moscow, Idaho ESPNU W 30–7 15,390

Players of the week:[5]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Colin Kaepernick Nevada Aaron Lavarias Idaho Trey Farquhar Idaho

Week four edit

ESPN's College GameDay broadcast from inside Bronco Stadium on the blue turf for the No. 3 Boise State vs Oregon State game.[6] This is the first time that College Gameday was broadcast from a WAC school.

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
September 25 1:00 pm Idaho Colorado State Hughes StadiumFort Collins, Colorado L 34–36 23,925
September 25 3:00 pm Nevada BYU LaVell Edwards StadiumProvo, Utah The Mtn. W 24–13 61,471
September 25 4:30 pm Fresno State Mississippi Vaught–Hemingway StadiumOxford, Mississippi CSS L 38–55 55,267
September 25 5:00 pm New Mexico State Kansas Memorial StadiumLawrence, Kansas FCS L 16–42 46,719
September 25 5:00 pm San Jose State No. 13 Utah Rice-Eccles StadiumSalt Lake City L 3–56 45,099
September 25 5:30 pm Charleston Southern Hawaiʻi Aloha Stadium • Honolulu, HI Oceanic PPV W 66–7 30,300
September 25 6:00 pm Oregon State No. 3 Boise State Bronco StadiumBoise, Idaho ABC W 37–24 34,137
September 25 6:00 pm Southern Mississippi Louisiana Tech Joe Aillet Stadium • Ruston, Louisiana ESPN3 L 12–13 22,344
September 25 6:00 pm Utah State San Diego State Qualcomm StadiumSan Diego L 7–41 45,682

Players of the week:[5]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Kellen Moore (2) Boise State James-Michael Johnson (2) Nevada Rufus Porter La Tech

Week five edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 1 6:00 pm BYU Utah State Romney Stadium • Logan, Utah
(Beehive Boot)
ESPN W 31–16 24,152
October 2 11:00 am Idaho Western Michigan Waldo StadiumKalamazoo, Michigan WAC Sports Network W 33–13 18,508
October 2 5:00 pm UC Davis San Jose State Spartan Stadium • San Jose, California L 13–14 17,844
October 2 5:30 pm Louisiana Tech Hawaiʻi Aloha Stadium • Honolulu, HI Oceanic PPV HAW 41–21 29,469
October 2 6:00 pm No. 3 Boise State New Mexico State Aggie Memorial Stadium • Las Cruces, New Mexico WAC Sports Network BSU 59–0 19,661
October 2 7:00 pm Cal Poly Fresno State Bulldog Stadium • Fresno, California W 38–17 37,069
October 2 7:00 pm No. 25 Nevada UNLV Sam Boyd StadiumWhitney, Nevada
(Fremont Cannon)
The Mtn. W 44–26 28,958

Players of the week:[7]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Kealoha Pilares Hawaiʻi Robert Siavii Idaho Shawn Plummer Fresno State

Week six edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 9 3:00 pm Utah State Louisiana Tech Joe Aillet Stadium • Ruston, Louisiana Alt/CST LT 24–6 16,073
October 9 6:00 pm Toledo No. 4 Boise State Bronco Stadium • Boise, Idaho WAC Sports Network W 57–14 33,833
October 9 6:00 pm New Mexico New Mexico State Aggie Memorial Stadium • Las Cruces, New Mexico
(Rio Grande Rivalry)
ESPN3 W 16–14 21,437
October 9 7:00 pm Hawaiʻi Fresno State Bulldog Stadium • Fresno, California ESPN3 HAW 49–27 38,494
October 9 7:30 pm San Jose State No. 23 Nevada Mackay Stadium • Reno, Nevada ESPNU NEV 35–13 20,636

Players of the week:[8]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Vai Taua Nevada Donte Savage New Mexico State Tyler Stampler New Mexico State

Week seven edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 16 3:00 pm Idaho Louisiana Tech Joe Aillet Stadium • Ruston, Louisiana Alt/CST LT 48–35 19,750
October 16 5:00 pm No. 3 Boise State San Jose State Spartan Stadium • San Jose, California WAC Sports Network BSU 48–20 20,239
October 16 5:30 pm No. 21 Nevada Hawaiʻi Aloha Stadium • Honolulu, HI WAC Sports Network HAW 27–21 42,031
October 16 7:00 pm New Mexico State Fresno State Bulldog Stadium • Fresno, California ESPNU FRES 33–10 32,334

Players of the week:[9]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Ross Jenkins La Tech Corey Paredes Hawaiʻi Chris Potter Boise State

Week eight edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 23 2:00 pm New Mexico State Idaho Kibbie Dome • Moscow, Idaho SWX IDA 37–14 13,812
October 23 3:00 pm Hawaiʻi Utah State Romney Stadium • Logan, Utah Alt HAW 45–7 17,111
October 23 5:00 pm Fresno State San Jose State Spartan Stadium • San Jose, California
(rivalry)
WAC Sports Network FRES 33–18 11,314

Players of the week:[10]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Alex Green Hawaiʻi Corey Paredes (2) Hawaiʻi Kevin Goessling Fresno State

Week nine edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
October 26 6:00 pm Louisiana Tech No. 3 Boise State Bronco Stadium • Boise, Idaho ESPN2 BSU 49–20 32,026
October 30 5:30 pm Idaho Hawaiʻi Aloha Stadium • Honolulu, HI ESPN3 HAW 45–10 37,466
October 30 6:00 pm San Jose State New Mexico State Aggie Memorial Stadium • Las Cruces, New Mexico Altitude NMSU 29–27 13,117
October 30 7:30 Utah State No. 24 Nevada Mackay Stadium • Reno, Nevada ESPNU NEV 56–42 11,558

Players of the week:[11]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Bryant Moniz (2) Hawaiʻi Mana Silva Hawaiʻi Tyler Stampler (2) New Mexico State

Week ten edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 6 1:00 pm New Mexico State Utah State Romney Stadium • Logan, Utah USU 27–22 14,524
November 6 1:30 pm Hawaiʻi No. 4 Boise State Bronco Stadium • Boise, Idaho ESPNU/ESPN 3D BSU 42–7 34,060
November 6 2:00 pm No. 23 Nevada Idaho Kibbie Dome • Moscow, Idaho WAC Sports Network NEV 63–17 11,247
November 6 3:00 pm Fresno State Louisiana Tech Joe Aillet Stadium • Ruston, Louisiana
(Battle for the Bone)
WAC Sports Network FRES 40–34 17,057

Players of the week:[12]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Kellen Moore (3) Boise State Bobby Wagner Utah State Phillip Livas La Tech

Week eleven edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 12 6:00 pm No. 4 Boise State Idaho Kibbie Dome • Moscow, Idaho
(Battle for the Governor's Trophy)
ESPN2/ESPN 3D BSU 52–14 16,453
November 13 5:00 pm Utah State San Jose State Spartan Stadium • San Jose, California USU 38–34 12,239
November 13 6:00 pm Louisiana Tech New Mexico State Aggie Memorial Stadium • Las Cruces, New Mexico Alt 2 LT 41–20 12,486
November 13 7:30 pm No. 21 Nevada Fresno State Bulldogs Stadium • Fresno, California ESPN NEV 35–34 37,116

Players of the week:[13]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Colin Kaepernick (2) Nevada Javontay Crowe La Tech Chris Potter (2) Boise State

Week twelve edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 19 7:30 pm Fresno State No. 4 Boise State Bronco Stadium • Boise, Idaho
(Battle for the Milk Can)
ESPN2 BSU 51–0 33,454
November 20 1:00 pm New Mexico State No. 18 Nevada Mackay Stadium • Reno, Nevada NEV 52–6 10,906
November 20 5:30 pm San Jose State Hawaiʻi Aloha Stadium • Honolulu, HI ESPN3 HAW 41–7 30,011
November 20 12:00 pm Idaho Utah State Romney Stadium • Logan, Utah IDA 28–6 14,072

Players of the week:[14]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Bryant Moniz (3) Hawaiʻi Aaron Brown Hawaiʻi Kyle Brotzman (2) Boise State

Week thirteen edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
November 26 7:15 pm No. 4 Boise State No. 19 Nevada Mackay Stadium • Reno, Nevada ESPN NEV 34–31 OT 30,712
November 27 5:00 pm Louisiana Tech San Jose State Spartan Stadium • San Jose, California LT 45–38 8,467
November 27 6:00 pm Hawaiʻi New Mexico State Aggie Memorial Stadium • Las Cruces, New Mexico WAC Sports Network HAW 59–24 11,841
November 27 7:00 pm Idaho Fresno State Bulldog Stadium • Fresno, California WAC Sports Network FRES 23–20 25,965

Players of the week:[15]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Alex Green (2) Hawaiʻi Travis Brown Fresno State Phillip Livas (2) La Tech

Week fourteen edit

Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
December 3 7:15 pm Illinois Fresno State Bulldog Stadium • Fresno, California ESPN2 W 25–23 30,625
December 4 1:00 pm Utah State No. 11 Boise State Bronco Stadium • Boise, Idaho WAC Sports Network BSU 50–14 32,101
December 4 2:00 pm San Jose State Idaho Kibbie Dome • Moscow, Idaho IDA 26–23 OT 8,011
December 4 2:00 pm No. 17 Nevada Louisiana Tech Joe Aillet Stadium • Ruston, Louisiana WAC Sports Network NEV 35–17 18,562
December 4 5:30 pm UNLV Hawaiʻi Aloha Stadium • Honolulu, HI W 59–21 34,746

Players of the week:[16]

Offensive Defensive Special teams
Player Team Player Team Player Team
Bryant Moniz (4) Hawaiʻi Dontay Moch Nevada Kevin Goessling (2) Fresno State

All-WAC Teams edit

First Team edit

Second Team edit

Players of the year edit

Coach of the year edit

Chris Ault–Nevada

Rankings edit

During the season Boise State, Hawaiʻi, and Nevada were the only WAC teams to be ranked.

Boise State
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking. ██ Decrease in ranking. ██ Not ranked the previous week. ( )= First place votes.
Poll Pre Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 3 Wk 4 Wk 5 Wk 6 Wk 7 Wk 8 Wk 9 Wk 10 Wk 11 Wk 12 Wk 13 Wk 14 Final
AP 3 (1) 3 (8) 3 (1) 3 (1) 3 (1) 4 (1) 3 (8) 2 (15) 2 (11) 2 (7) 4 (7) 3 (9) 3 (10) 9 10 9
Coaches 5 3 3 3 3 4 3 (1) 2 (11) 2 (5) 3 (3) 4 (3) 3 (5) 3 (5) 10 10 7
Harris Not released 3 (10) 2 (29) 2 (14) 3 (12) 4 (9) 3 (11) 3 (14) 10 10
BCS Not released 3 3 4 4 4 4 11 10
Hawaiʻi
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking. ██ Decrease in ranking. ██ Not ranked the previous week. RV=receiving votes.
Poll Pre Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 3 Wk 4 Wk 5 Wk 6 Wk 7 Wk 8 Wk 9 Wk 10 Wk 11 Wk 12 Wk 13 Wk 14 Final
AP RV RV RV RV 25 24 RV
Coaches RV RV RV RV RV RV RV 25 RV
Harris Not released RV RV RV RV RV RV RV 24
BCS Not released 24
Nevada
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking. ██ Decrease in ranking. ██ Not ranked the previous week. RV=receiving votes.
Poll Pre Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 3 Wk 4 Wk 5 Wk 6 Wk 7 Wk 8 Wk 9 Wk 10 Wk 11 Wk 12 Wk 13 Wk 14 Final
AP RV RV 25 21 19 RV RV 25 21 19 19 14 13 11
Coaches RV RV RV RV 25 23 21 RV RV 23 21 18 19 17 15 13
Harris Not released 20 25 24 23 21 18 19 15 14
BCS Not released 24 23 21 18 19 17 15

Bowl games edit

Bowl Date Winner* Score Loser* Score Location Time+ Network Notes
UDrove Humanitarian Dec. 18, 2010 Northern Illinois 40 Fresno State 17 Boise, Idaho 2:30 pm ESPN
Maaco Bowl Las Vegas Dec. 22, 2010 #10 Boise State 26 No. 19 Utah 3 Whitney, Nevada 5:00 pm ESPN
Sheraton Hawaiʻi Bowl Dec. 24, 2010 Tulsa 62 #25 Hawaiʻi 35 Honolulu 5:00 pm ESPN
Kraft Fight Hunger Jan. 9, 2011 #15 Nevada 20 Boston College 13 San Francisco 6:00 pm ESPN
*WAC team is bolded. +Time given is Pacific Time Rankings reflect Coaches Poll

Attendance edit

Team Stadium (Capacity) Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4 Game 5 Game 6 Game 7 Total Average % of Capacity
Boise State Bronco Stadium (33,500) 34,137 33,833 32,026 34,060 33,454 32,101 199,611 33,269 99.3%
Fresno State Bulldog Stadium (41,031) 37,238 37,069 38,494 32,334 37,116 25,965 30,625 238,841 34,120 83.2%
Hawaiʻi Aloha Stadium (50,000) 44,204 30,300 29,469 42,031 37,466 30,011 34,746 248,227 35,461 70.9%
Idaho Kibbie Dome (16,000) 11,466 15,390 13,812 11,247 16,453 8,011 76,379 12,730 79.6%
Louisiana Tech Joe Aillet Stadium (30,600) 23,122 22,344 16,073 19,750 17,057 18,562 116,908 19,485 63.7%
Nevada Mackay Stadium (29,993) 16,313 18,098 28,809 20,636 11,558 10,906 30,712 136,032 19,433 64.8%
New Mexico State Aggie Memorial Stadium (30,343) 16,891 19,661 21,437 13,117 12,486 11,841 95,433 15,906 52.4%
San Jose State Spartan Stadium (31,218) 16,739 17,844 20,239 11,314 12,239 8,467 86,842 14,474 46.4%
Utah State Romney Stadium (25,513) 18,347 19,059 24,152 17,111 14,524 14,072 107,265 17,878 70.1%

Expanded WAC standings edit

Western Athletic Conference
Conf Overall
Team W L W L PF PA STREAK
T1 No. 13 Nevada 7 1 13 1 574 300 W 7
T1 No. 10 Boise State 7 1 12 1 586 166 W 2
T1 No. 24 Hawaiʻi 7 1 10 4 554 357 L 1
4 Fresno State 5 3 8 5 377 390 L 1
5 Louisiana Tech 4 4 5 7 321 368 L 1
6 Idaho 3 5 6 7 346 322 W 1
7 Utah State 2 6 4 8 264 405 L 2
8 New Mexico State 1 7 2 10 188 474 L 4
9 San Jose State 0 8 1 12 209 451 L 10

References edit

  1. ^ "Mountain West Conference Adds Boise State University" (Press release). Mountain West Conference. June 11, 2010. Archived from the original on September 15, 2012. Retrieved June 11, 2010.
  2. ^ Boise State Named WAC Favorite in Both Media and Coaches Polls – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2016-01-30 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-07-26). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  3. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-10-07 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-09-07). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  4. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-10-07 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-09-13). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  5. ^ a b Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-10-07 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-09-20). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  6. ^ ESPN College GameDay & ABC Sports Headed To Boise – Broncosports.com – The Official Athletics Website Of Boise State University Archived 2012-03-10 at the Wayback Machine. Broncosports.com (2010-09-18). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  7. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-10-04). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  8. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com. Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  9. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-10-18). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  10. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-10-25). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  11. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-11-01). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  12. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-11-08). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  13. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-11-15). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  14. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-11-22). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  15. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2011-10-03 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-11-29). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.
  16. ^ Verizon WAC Football Players of the Week – WACSports.com—Official Web Site of the Western Athletic Conference Archived 2011-10-03 at the Wayback Machine. Wacsports.com (2010-12-06). Retrieved on 2010-12-22.