Aug 31, 2003
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By TIM KORTE
AP Sports Writer
SEATTLE - Jonathan Smith ran 15 times for 160 yards and two touchdowns,
and Washington State gave Bill Doba a victory in his coaching debut as the
Cougars beat rival Idaho 25-0 Saturday night.
Doba joked earlier in the week that he was undefeated and unscored upon as a
head coach, and that's still the case after Washington State warmed up for next
week's visit to No. 20 Notre Dame.
The longtime defensive assistant was promoted after Mike Price left after 14
seasons to take over at Alabama. Doba looked at ease all night, walking the
sideline with several laminated cards stuffed into his pockets.
Smith had a great performance, and backup Chris Bruhn added 118 yards on
nine carries. The Cougars rushed for 331 yards, their best rushing output since
gaining 318 yards in a 54-14 victory over Montana State in 1993.
Drew Dunning kicked field goals of 46, 42, 29 and 35 yards and Matt Kegel,
replacing Washington State career passing leader Jason Gesser, completed 12 of
21 passes for 108 yards with one interception.
It was the 86th meeting between the schools, separated by eight miles on the
rolling wheat fields of The Palouse. This time, they moved their rivalry 300
miles and still drew a crowd of 50,113.
Washington State leads the series 66-17-3 and won its third straight over
the Vandals (0-1).
Last year, the Cougars beat Nevada 31-7 at 67,000-seat Seahawks Stadium and
attracted 63,588 fans.
Smith's second TD, on a 2-yard run late in the third quarter, put the
Cougars ahead 16-0. It was set up when Virgil Williams intercepted a pass
thrown by Idaho's Michael Harrington, the younger brother of NFL quarterback
Joey Harrington.
Smith broke a 49-yard run early in the second quarter, leading to his 6-yard
TD run and a 7-0 lead. It was 10-0 at halftime after Dunning connected on his
46-yarder with 1:51 left before the break.
Smith finished the first half with 121 yards rushing on nine carries.
Idaho's Brian Pope missed two first-half field goals, both blocked by
6-foot-8 Washington State tight end Cody Boyd. He swatted Pope's 39-yard try
early in the second quarter and got a hand on a 42-yard attempt at the end of
the half.