Gerard Wicks

Football Washington State Athletic Communications

No. 23 Cougars Host No. 6 Washington For Apple Cup Showdown

No. 6 WASHINGTON at No. 23 WASHINGTON STATE
12:30 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 25  •  FOX
Martin Stadium (32,952)  •  Pullman, Wash.

NO. 23 COUGARS HOST NO. 6 WASHINGTON FOR APPLE CUP SHOWDOWN
No. 23 Washington State (8-3, 7-1 Pac-12) and No. 6 University of Washington (10-1, 7-1 Pac-12) meet in the 54th Apple Cup Friday at 12:30 p.m. on FOX. The winner will represent the North in next Friday's Pac-12 Championship game.

13 SENIORS TO PLAY FINAL GAME IN MARTIN STADIUM
Prior to Friday's game, WSU will recognize 13 seniors who will be playing their final game in Martin Stadium; Robert Barber (DL), Treshon Broughton (CB), River Cracraft (WR), C.J. Dimry (WR), Parker Henry (LB), Shalom Luani (S), Gabe Marks (WR), Eduardo Middleton (OL), Jeremiah Mitchell (DL), Riley Sorenson (OL), Paris Taylor (LB), Colton Teglovic (Nickel) and John Thompson (WR).

APPLE CUP HISTORY
Washington leads the all-time series 70-32-6 and have won the last three meetings and own a 17-14-1 record in Pullman. Friday will be the 54th Apple Cup after the game officially got the "Apple Cup" named in 1962. This will be the first time that both schools will be ranked (Associated Press) in an Apple Cup since 2001, UW (No. 16) and WSU (No. 9), a 26-14 Washington win.

COUGAR QUICK GAME
TEAM
•  WSU is bowl eligible for the second straight season and third time under coach Leach
•  WSU's 22 rushing touchdowns in 2016 are the most since the 1997 team rushed for 27 TD
•  WSU running backs lead all Pac-12 backs with 2,497 total yards and 30 total touchdowns
•  WSU RBs need 44 more receiving yards to become first team to have RBs reach 1,000 rushing yards and 1,000 receiving yards in a season under a Mike Leach coached team
•  WSU owns a school-record four 50-point games this season
•  WSU's win at Stanford was its first win over at Top-15 team since 2003 (vs. #5 Texas in Holiday Bowl)
•  WSU owns an 13-3 record when forcing multiple turnovers under defensive coordinator Alex Grinch
•  WSU is fifth in the Pac-12 with 21 forced turnovers, No. 24 in the country
•  WSU's 100-yard kickoff return for a TD at Arizona State was its first since 2003
•  WSU's 75-yard punt retrun for a TD vs. California was its first since 2005
•  In Pac-12 play, WSU ranks first in kick return (23.9), punt return (16.1)

INDIVIDUAL
•  Head Coach Mike Leach is a George Munger Coach of the Year Semifinalist for the second straight season
•  LG Cody O'Connell is a finalist for the Outland Trophy (top interior lineman in the country)
•  QB Luke Falk is the NCAA active career leader in passing yards-per-game (357.2), 12th in TD passes (87)
•  WR River Cracraft and Gabe Marks are first set of teammates with 200+ catches in Pac-12 history
•  Marks owns WSU records for receptions (301), touchdowns (36) and  receiving yards (3,314)
•  Marks broke Nelson Spruce's (CU) Pac-12 All-Time receptions record of 294 against California
•  Marks ranks 3rd among all active FBS receivers in career receptions (301) and career touchdowns (36)
•  Marks owns eight career games with 10+ receptions, most in WSU history, has a catch in 27-straight games
•  WR River Cracraft owns a catch in 39 consecutive games, ninth-longest current streak in the country
•  DL Hercules Mata'afa is tied for fourth in the Pac-12 with 12 tackles-for-loss

WASHINGTON STATE RANKED NO. 23 IN NATIONAL POLLS
Washington State appeared at No. 23 in the Associated Press Top-25, Coaches Top-25 and College Football Playoff Rankings this week. WSU moved into the Top-25 for the first time this season after the win at Oregon State, appearing at No. 25 in both polls before appearing at No. 23 after the win over Arizona and No. 20 after the California win. Last season, WSU was ranked the final two weeks of the regular season, appearing as No. 23 in the Coaches Poll after the win at UCLA and then No. 20 by the Associated Press after the win over Colorado. It was WSU's first national ranking since finishing the 2003 season No. 9.

COLLEGE GAMEDAY RECORD
Dating back to the beginning of the 2004 season, ESPN's College GameDay has had the WSU flag appear throughout the show. The streak is now at 190 after last week's appearance at Western Michigan. Two flags – Ol' Crimson and Gray – have been flown in the background of the GameDay set by dozens of friends and alumni. The Gray flag was added in 2014 after Whitey was retired in honor of Steve Gleason's "No White Flags." WSU recognized the GameDay flag wavers in a pregame ceremony prior to the Montana State game in 2010. In addition to the flags that fly, there is a traveling flag signed by the holders after each episode. The traveling flag is retired after each season, the first of which is hanging in WSU's Alumni Center.

YOUNG COUGS TAKE THE FIELD
Washington State has seen 18 players make their debuts in 2016 with 14 players recording their first career start including 10 on defense. Six true freshmen have played for the Cougars including Isaiah Johnson-Mack (WR), Frederick Mauigoa (OL), Derek Moore (DE), Dezmon Patmon (WR), Marcus Strong (CB) and Jalen Thompson (S). Thompson has started all 11 games at strong safety and Moore has started at End twice this season. Last season, the Cougars saw 23 players make their debuts and 11 make their first career start while 14 freshmen contributed including seven true freshmen.

COUGARS OPENED PAC-12 PLAY 7-0, WILL PLAY FOR NORTH TITLE
Washington State started conference play 7-0 for the first time in program history and heads into Friday's meeting against Washington looking for a North Division title. WSU shared Pac-10 Conference titles in 2002 and 1997. This season, the Cougars own wins over Oregon, Stanford, UCLA and Arizona State in the same season for the first time since 2006. WSU beat Oregon for the second straight season for the first time since 2002-03, beat UCLA in two straight meetings for the first time since 2006-07 and notched their first win at Stanford since 2006. The win at Arizona State was Washington State's first win in Tempe since 2001. The eight-game winning streak was the longest since the 1930 team started the year 9-0 before falling to Alabama in the Rose Bowl.

AIR RAID NUMBERS ADD UP (Team Season REcords Page 26)
The Washington State Air Raid offense is putting up big numbers once again, heading into the Apple Cup second in the country in passing offense (380.0) and first downs (27.8/g), tenth in total offense (512.5) and scoring (42.5) and No. 12 in third down conversions (48.4). WSU is closing in on a couple WSU single-season records (Page 26), currently with best scoring average (42.5), tied with 1997 teams for the most touchdowns scored (64), second in points (467) and fifth in total offense (5,637).

FALK CONTINUES TO RACK UP THE NUMBERS (Page 19)
Quarterback Luke Falk picked up where he left off from 2015, as one of the leading quarterbacks in the country. Falk opened the season with 418 yards and four touchdowns against Eastern Washington, followed with 480 yards and four more scores at Boise State while nearly leading WSU to a fourth-quarter comeback. He added three more touchdown passes in the win over Idaho, threw for 371 yards in the win over Oregon and tossed four touchdowns in a 357-yard effort at Stanford. Falk, who did not throw a touchdown pass for the first time in his career against UCLA but followed with three touchdowns in the win at Arizona State. He tossed a season-high five touchdowns in the come-from-behind win at Oregon State, added four more in the win over Arizona and five in the win over California. The redshirt-junior enters the week third in the country in passing yards per game (357.7) and passing touchdowns (36) and tied with Oklahoma's Baker Mayfield for the nation's highest completion percentage (.741). Falk owns as school-record 23 career 300-yard games, is second in WSU history with 87 career touchdown passes, third in career passing yards (10,360) and owns the second-most wins by a QB in school history with 18, trailing Jason Gesser's school-best 24.

FALK RECORD WATCH
- Needs four TD passes to break Connor Halliday's WSU record for career TD passes (90)
- Needs three TD passes to break his own WSU single-season record for TD passes (38)
- Needs 554 passing yards to pass Alex Brink for second in career passing yards in WSU history
- Needs 663 passing yards to break Connor Halliday's WSU single-season record of 4,597 (2013)
- Sits seventh in Pac-12 history with 87 career TD passes (Page 5)
- In Pac-12 play, Falk owns 351.4 ypg, a 70.3 completion percentage, 25 TDs and two interceptions

NATIONAL AWARD WATCH FOR FALK
Quarterback Luke Falk is one of 18 semifinalists for the Maxwell Award, given to America's College Player of the Year, one of 18 semifinalists for the Davey O'Brien National Quarterback Award for the second straight year, one of 15 semifinalists for the Walter Camp Football Foundation Player of the Year and a finalist for the Burlsworth Trophy (Top former walk-on) for the second straight year. He was also named one for five finalists for the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award given to the nation's top junior or senior quarterback.  Falk was named to the Davey O'Brien "Great 8"quarterbacks following his performances in wins at No. 15 Stanford, at Arizona State, at Oregon State, vs. Arizona and California. He has also been named one of the Manning Award Stars for the Week three different times.

FALK SETS NCAA FBS RECORD FOR COMPLETION PERCENTAGE
In the win over Arizona, Luke Falk completed 32-of-35 passes for 311 yards and four touchdowns. His 91.4 completion percentage was a WSU record and a Pac-12 record for 30+ completions, breaking Dick Norman's (Stanford, 1959) previous record of 87.1. Falk completed 21 consecutive passes at one point, one away from Aaron Rodgers' (Cal) record of 22. The Cougars combined for a 90.3 completion percentage to set an NCAA FBS record for 30+ completions after going 47-of-52.

FALK ADDS ANOTHER FOURTH-QUARTER COMEBACK
Luke Falk is no stranger to leading fourth-quarter comebacks, recording the sixth of his career in the win at Oregon State Oct. 29. The first came in 2014 at Oregon State, WSU trailed early in the fourth and Falk led a pair of scoring drives for a 39-32 victory. In 2015, trailing by four with 1:31 remaining at Rutgers, Falk led WSU on a 10-play, 90-yard drive capped by an 8-yard touchdown pass to River Cracraft with 13 seconds remaining. In the win at Oregon, Falk led a pair of scoring drives late in the fourth quarter that erased a 10-point deficit and sent the game into overtime after an eight-yard touchdown pass to Dom Williams with one second remaining. In overtime, Falk rushed for a touchdown and then threw for another before the Cougar defense picked off a pass in the second overtime to clinch the win. Against Arizona State, trailing 24-17 to start the fourth quarter, Falk led the Cougars on three touchdown drives (73, 99 and 75 yards) in the quarter, capping each one with touchdown throws to post a 38-24 victory. His last one in 2015 came at No. 18 UCLA, trailing by three with 1:09 remaining, Falk led the Cougars on a seven-play 75-yard drive, capped by a 21-yard touchdown pass to Gabe Marks with three seconds remaining. In the win at Oregon State this season, the Cougars trailed by three early in the fourth quarter before Falk led WSU on an 80-yard scoring drive midway through the quarter. Falk capped the drive with a one-yard touchdown pass to Robert Lewis that proved to be the game-winner.

NEW LOOK LINE TAKES OFFENSE TO NEW LEVEL
The offensive line's new look in 2016 has taken the Cougar offense to a similar elite level. Despite the departures of three-year starters left tackle Joe Dahl (5th-RD draft pick by Detroit) and Gunnar Eklund at left guard (45 starts), the new line has produced the second-ranked passing offense in the country and seven games with 100+ rushing yards including three 200-yard efforts. The Cougars returned a trio of starters in center Riley Sorenson (now with 32 starts), right guard Eduardo Middleton (36 starts) and right tackle Cole Madison (32 starts) who have started next to one another for the past two-plus seasons. Taking over at left tackle was redshirt-sophomore Andre Dillard who appeared at left tackle in three games last year, made his collegiate debut in the second half at UCLA and went on to start against Colorado and at Washington. At left guard, redshirt-junior Cody O'Connell is in his first season as a starter after playing on the field goal team all of last season.

O'CONNELL NAMED OUTLAND TROPHY FINALIST
Left guard Cody O'Connell has been named a finalist for the Outland Trophy, the Football Writers Association of America announced Monday. The Outland Trophy is presented to the best interior lineman in college football on offense or defense since 1946. O'Connell, a redshirt-junior from Wenatchee, Wash. is the first Cougar Outland Trophy semifinalist since defensive lineman Rien Long won the award in 2002. O'Connell has started ten games at left guard for the No. 23 Cougars and helped protect for the nation's second-rated passing offense (380.0) and blocked for a rushing attack that owns seven 100-yard efforts including three 200-yard performances and 22 rushing touchdowns. WSU's rushing offense has improved greatly this season, going from 80.1 ypg in 2015 to 132.0 ypg in 2016. O'Connell, nicknamed "The Continent" by coach Mike Leach, was named to the Midseason All-American First Team by FOX Sports and CBSSports.com and to the Midseason All-America Second Team by SportsIllustrated. Most recently, he was ranked second nationally among guards and the best in the country as a pass-blocker by Pro Football Focus. The two other finalists are Pat Elflein, Ohio State and Cam Robinson, Alabama.

OFFENSIVE LINE AMONG NATION'S BEST
According the website footballoutsiders.com, the Cougar offensive line sits near the top of a couple categories. WSU enters the week leading the country in "Stuff Rate" (11.4%) that is the percentage of carries by running backs that are stopped at or before the line of scrimmage. WSU also sits third in the country in "Power Success Rate" (85.2 %) that is the percentage of runs on 3rd or 4th down, two yards or less to go, that achieved a first down or touchdown. The Cougars also ranked seventh in "Opportunity Rate" (45.8%) that is the percentage of carries (when 5 yards are available) that gain at least five yards, i.e. the percentage of carries in which the line does its job. Most recently, Pro Football Focus rated the Cougar offensive line fourth in the country behind, LSU, Auburn and Alabama.

COUGAR OFFENSIVE LINE "BONE" AWARDS  
Each week, Washington State coaches give out the "Bone Award" to the offensive lineman who performs the best during the previous game. Left guard Cody O'Connell claimed the first three  "Bone" awards after the wins over Idaho, Oregon and at Stanford, right tackle Cole Madison earned the award after beating UCLA, center Riley Sorenson claimed the award after the win at Arizona State and left tackle Andre Dillard earned his first career "Bone Award" honor after the win at Oregon State. Madison earned the award after the big win over Arizona and again after last week's win over California, his second straight and third of the season. The awards in 2016: Eastern Washington: None; at Boise State: None; Idaho: Cody O'Connell; Oregon: Cody O'Connell; at Stanford: Cody O'Connell; UCLA: Cole Madison; at Arizona State: Riley Sorenson; at Oregon State: Andre Dillard; Arizona: Cole Madison; California: Cole Madison; at Colorado: None

OFFENSIVE LINE BULKED UP
Not only have the Cougars produced big offensive numbers, leading the country in passing the past two seasons, WSU has produced bigger offensive linemen. The size of the front five has gone up each season with the 2016 offensive line averaging 322.6 pounds. Last season, the Cougars averaged nearly 310 lbs after averaging 288.6 in 2012, 288.2 in 2013 and 309.4 lbs in 2014.

ALL-PURPOSE BACKS
The Cougar running backs have elevated their games in 2016 leading to a more balanced Air Raid. WSU has rushed for 100 yards seven times including three 200-yard efforts in wins over Idaho, Oregon and California. They added 101 yards (2 TDs) in the win at No. 15 Stanford, three rushing touchdowns in the win over UCLA, 137 rushing yards at Oregon State and 140 more with three touchdowns against Arizona. WSU enters the week averaging 132.5 yards-per-game and have rushed for 22 touchdowns, the most since the 1997 team ran for 27 scores. The trio of redshirt-juniors Jamal Morrow and Gerard Wicks, and redshirt-freshman James Williams headline the Cougar backs who lead the Pac-12 with 2,497 total yards and 30 total touchdowns while also combining for 113 receptions and average 235.2 all-purpose yards-per-game. Morrow enters the week No. 11 in the Pac-12 in all-purpose yards (100.1) while leading all Pac-12 running backs with 44 receptions.

COUGAR RUSHING ATTACK BREAKS OUT
The Cougar running game has erupted this year, rushing for 200+ yards three times against Idaho, Oregon and California. Against the Ducks, WSU rushed for 280 yards (most since 2006) and six touchdowns (the most since 1997). Jamal Morrow, Gerard Wicks and James Williams each scored twice and combined for 389 all-purpose yards while averaging 7.8 yards-per-carry in the win. In the week three win over Idaho, the Cougars rushed for 228 yards, led by Williams with 126 yards and a score, the first 100-yard rusher since Wicks ran for 123 against Colorado last season. Williams' mark was the most since Dwight Tardy posted 214 at UCLA in 2007 and was the first Cougar freshman to record a 100-yard game since Tardy in the 2006 Apple Cup. The Cougars had three different running backs score touchdowns in the win as Williams and Wicks each rushed for score, and walk-on Alijah Lee spun his way with a gritty six-yard touchdown carry to cap the day. Against California, WSU tallied 254 yards including a season-high 128 from Wicks who averaged a WSU single-game record 14.2 yards per-carry. All three backs own a 100-yard game this season. The Cougars have rushed for 100+ yards seven times this season after reaching that mark five times in 2015 and just four times in the previous three seasons combined. WSU averaged 80.1 rushing yards per game in 2015, doubling its average from 2014 (39.1).

MORROW SETS WSU RECORD FOR RECEPTIONS BY RUNNING BACKS
Running back Jamal Morrow has done a little of everything for the Cougar offense, rushing, receiving, blocking and owns the school record for receptions by a running back. The redshirt-junior owns 138 career catches, breaking Steve Broussard's previous top mark of 120. Morrow also sits 10 receptions away from moving into the WSU Top-10 for receptions. He enters the week leading the team with 1,101 all-purpose yards, averaging 100.1 all-purpose yards-per-game (11th in the Pac-12), with a team-high 543 rushing yards, third on the team with nine total touchdowns and fourth on the team with 44 catches.

CAPTAIN MORROW COME ON DOWN
Jamal Morrow has served as the WSU game captain for the past 20 games and coach Leach finally revealed why. In August of 2013, Morrow was a contestant on The Price is Right, reaching a showcase showdown and coach Leach thought he would be good at the coin toss. Morrow began the streak in WSU's double-overtime win at Oregon last season. The Cougars are 15-5 during the stretch and Morrow is 7-2 in correctly calling the toss, WSU is 6-2 when he wins a coin toss and WSU has been on the winning end of the toss 15 times in those 20 games.

SPREADING THE BALL AROUND
Washington State as continued to spread the ball each week. This season, the Air Raid has seen 10+ players catch a pass in every game but one (Idaho). Eleven players caught a pass in wins over Oregon, Stanford and Arizona State and 12 caught a pass in the win over California. In the win over Arizona, 14 players caught a pass, the most under Mike Leach at WSU. The Cougars enter the week as the only team in the country with five players owning 40+ catches. Last season, Washington State was the only team in the country with 10 players who recorded 20+ receptions last season and was the only Power-5 Conference team with two players owning double-digit touchdown receptions.

MARKS SETS WSU RECORDS FOR RECEPTIONS, RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS AND YARDS (Page 17)
Gabe Marks finished his climb up the Pac-12 Conference and Washington State record books, breaking the Pac-12 record for career receptions set by Colorado's Nelson Spruce with 294 and owns 301 career catches. Marks also tallied 87 receiving yards in the win over California, breaking the WSU record for career receiving yards (Marquess Wilson, 3,207) and now owns 3,314 career receiving yards. Marks also caught two more touchdowns, upping his school record to 36, five behind Dwayne Jarrett's (USC) Pac-12 record of 41. Marks enters the week with team highs of 12 touchdowns, 74 receptions, 755 receiving yards and three 100-yard games.

MARKS RECORD WATCH
- Marks became the 13th player in NCAA FBS history with 300 career catches, owns 301
- Needs six touchdowns to break Pac-12 Touchdowns record, Dwayne Jarrett (USC) - 41
- Owns a WSU record eight games catching multiple touchdowns

CRACRAFT CATCHES ON (Pages 19)
After a quiet first four games of 2016, senior wideout River Cracraft put up big numbers over his next six games. In the win at No. 15 Stanford, Cracraft caught seven passes for 130 yards and a touchdown, recording four plays of 20-plus yards in the win. In the win over UCLA, he caught six passes for a team-high 74 yards and followed with seven catches for 79 yards at Arizona State. He added four more catches including one for 27 yards in the win at Oregon State before catching a 71-yard touchdown against Arizona and three touchdowns in the win over California. The Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif. native is second in WSU history with 218 career receptions (18th in Pac-12 history) and sixth in school history with 2,701 career receiving yards. Cracraft is second on the team with 701 receiving yards, third in catches with 53 and owns the team-lead with 10 catches of 20+ yards.

FLORIDA WIDEOUTS SETTLE IN
Former high school teammates at William T. Dwyer High School in Belle Glade, Fla., sophomore Tavares Martin Jr. and freshman Isaiah Johnson-Mack have settled into the Cougar offense. Martin Jr. broke out against Boise State with 12 catches for 158 yards including an acrobatic 50-yard tumbling touchdown. He made the most of his two catches at No. 15 Stanford, scoring touchdowns on both, caught a 9-yard touchdown just before halftime to give WSU a lead in the win at Arizona State, added six catches for 82 yards and a 33-yard touchdown at Oregon State and caught two more touchdowns against Arizona. Johnson-Mack has also contributed, recording 31 receptions for 235 yards including a seven-catch game at Boise State and his first career touchdown in the win over Arizona. Martin Jr. is second on the team with 57 receptions for 671 yards and his seven touchdowns are second on the team.

DEFENSE CONTINUES TO MAKE STRIDES UNDER GRINCH
The Cougar defense has improved each week under defensive coordinator Alex Grinch. So far this season, WSU has forced 21 turnovers and held opponents to a Pac-12-best 129.7 rushing yards per game, and is sixth in the conference allowing 25.5 ppg. Last season, the defensive unit allowed 27.7 ppg and 416.6 ypg while forcing 24 turnovers. By removing special teams touchdowns allowed in 2015, WSU allowed 23.3 ppg, a vast improvement after allowing 38.6 ppg in 2014. The Cougars finished last season with 24 turnovers forced, tripled the amount of turnovers from 2014 (8).

COUGAR DEFENSE DIALS IT UP
The Washington State defense has turned things up in Pac-12 play, forcing 15 turnovers in the eight games including four in the win over UCLA and three against Arizona. WSU enters the week tied for second in the Pac-12 and 12th in the country in turnover margin (+9), No. 24 in the country with 21 forced turnovers and tops in the league in rushing defense (129.7), good for No. 24 nationally. In the week three win over Idaho, WSU did not allow a touchdown in the 56-6 victory, surrendering just 257 yards of total offense, the fewest allowed since 2013 against the Vandals (253). Against Oregon, the Cougars tallied eight tackles-for-loss before adding three sacks at No. 15 Stanford while holding the Cardinal to just 61 yards rushing including Christian McCaffrey to 35 yards. Against UCLA, the Cougars shutout the Bruins in the first half and held them to just 43 rushing yards in the game. In the win at Arizona State, WSU held the Sun Devils to 280 yards of total offense and 12 first downs. In the comeback in at Oregon State, the Cougars held OSU just 104 yards of total offense in the second half including 11 yards rushing. WSU held Arizona to just seven points and 286 yards of total offense and held California to its lowest point total of the season (21). In Pac-12 play, WSU owns the league's third rated run defense (139.8) and is third in turnover margin (+6), forcing 15 turnovers.

GET THE BALL BACK
Defensive coordinator Alex Grinch has emphasized the need to force turnovers and get the ball back to the Air Raid offense. The Cougars did that in 2015, forcing 24 turnovers, fourth in the Pac-12 and three times as many as the 2014 total of eight. The trend has continued this season, WSU has forced 21 turnovers in 2016, picking off three passes at Boise State, recovered two fumbles against Idaho, had an interception, a fumble recovery and a safety in the win over Oregon and added three more turnovers in the win at Stanford. WSU forced four in the win over UCLA, recovered a fumble at Arizona State and added three more against Arizona (2 INT, fumble). WSU owns nine fumble recoveries and 12 interceptions. Under Grinch, the Cougars are 13-3 when forcing multiple turnovers in a game.

LINEBACKERS LEAD THE WAY
The Cougar linebackers filled up the stat sheet last season with All-Pac-12 honorable mention Peyton Pelluer tying for fifth in the Pac-12 with 7.8 tackles-per game (101 total) along with 11 tackles-for-loss. The redshirt-junior started the 2016 season with a game-high 10 tackles against EWU including one for loss, tied for the team lead in the win over Idaho with seven and added at tackle-for-loss against Oregon. Pelluer, coming off a 12-tackle game against California and a career-high 16 at Colorado, paces the Cougars with 80 tackles, sixth-most in the Pac-12. Making his first career start as a linebacker, Isaac Dotson made five tackles against EWU and in his first career start, WIL linebacker Frankie Luvu made a career-high seven tackles including 1.5 for loss against Idaho. Dotson recorded his first career interception in the win over Oregon before recovering a fumble and making a diving interception in the win at No. 15 Stanford. He made a team-high eight tackles at Arizona State, made a game-high seven tackles, 2.5 for loss and forced a fumble against Arizona, ranks fourth on the team with 52 stops.

DEFENSE CONTINUES TO PUT THE PRESSURE ON
Last season, Washington State racked up 33 sacks and was eighth in the country with 7.8 tackles-for-loss per game (102 Total), the second-best average in the Pac-12 and the second-highest total in WSU history. All-Pac-12 honorable mention defensive lineman and Freshman All-American Hercules Mata'afa shared the team-lead with seven sacks, tied for fourth-most in the conference. WSU finished 2015 with five players owning 10+ tackles-for-loss, the most players by any Pac-12 team and tied for the most in school history (2002). This season, Mata'afa is tied for fourth in the conference with 12 tackles-for-loss and recently tallied a career-high seven tackles including one for loss against UCLA. Rush LB Dylan Hanser is tied for third in the Pac-12 with three forced fumbles and defensive end Nnamdi Oguayo recorded three sacks in the win over Arizona.

YOUNG SECONDARY
The Cougar secondary went through a youth movement last season and has settled in as a strength this season. Sophomore Darrien Molton, named the top freshman cornerback in the country by Pro Football Focus last season, is second on the team with 64 tackles and has broken up five passes. Senior Shalom Luani, an All-Pac-12 honorable mention safety last season, has picked up where he left off, owning 51 tackles including 8.5 tackles-for-loss and a team-best four interceptions. Junior cornerback Marcellus Pippins, owner of three INT last season, has two interceptions and five pass breakups while redshirt-junior safety Charleston White also owns two picks. Junior college transfer safety Robert Taylor has stepped in with Luani playing at nickel, and recorded 54 tackles and recovered a team-best three fumbles. True freshman Jalen Thompson enrolled early and took over at strong safety and owns 39 tackles, six pass breakups, including a game-high seven tackles at Stanford.

SPECIAL TEAMS REACHES MILESTONES
WSU special teams has produced this season, owning two Pac-12 Special Teams Players of the Week and the 12th-ranked punt return unit in the country (12.6 per return). At Arizona State, Robert Taylor returned a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown, WSU's first since 2003, and last week, Kaleb Fossum returned a punt 75 yards for a touchdown, WSU's first since 2005, both players earned Pac-12 weekly awards. It is the first time WSU has had two conference special teams player of the week awards in the same season since 2006. Kicker Erik Powell has rebounded from a rough start to the season by making his last six of his last seven attempts and currently sits eighth in WSU history with 28 career makes. In Pac-12 play, the Cougars lead the league in kick return average (23.9) and punt return (16.1).

IN THE WIN OVER IDAHO
Cougar special teams provided a couple highlights in the win over Idaho week three, scoring a pair of touchdowns, blocking a field goal and recovered a fumble, scoring touchdowns on both plays. Midway through the second quarter, Robert Barber blocked a 32-yard field goal attempt and Marcellus Pippins picked up the loose ball and raced 72 yards for the touchdown, giving WSU its first touchdown return of a blocked field goal in school history (dating back through the 1983 season). It was the first touchdown scored on special teams since Michael Bumpus returned a punt 87 yards for touchdown at Nevada in 2005. Midway through the fourth quarter, the Cougar kickoff team forced a fumble that Gerard Wicks scooped up and returned 11 yards for a touchdown. It was the first time the Cougars scored two special teams touchdowns in the same game since returning two punts for touchdowns against Idaho in 1973. WSU also rushed for 228 yards, the most since 2011.

IN THE WIN OVER OREGON
Washington State's win over Oregon was the first time beating Oregon two straight seasons since 2002-03 and first win over the Ducks in Pullman since 2006. WSU's 280 rushing yards were the most since rushing for 344 against Idaho in 2006 and most against a conference foe since going for 330 against UCLA in 2005. The Cougars' six rushing touchdowns were the most since rushing for six against Southwest Louisiana in 1997 and most against a conference opponents since Oregon in 1984. It was also the first time WSU rushed for 200+ yards in back-to-back games since 2005.

IN THE WIN AT NO. 15 STANFORD
The Cougars recorded their first win over Stanford since 2007, snapping an eight-game skid and notched their first win at Stanford since 2006. It was also WSU's first win over a Top-15 team since beating No. 5 Texas in the 2003 Holiday Bowl and first regular season win over a Top-15 teams since winning at No. 10 Oregon in 2003. Washington State registered its first sweep of Oregon and Stanford in the same season since 2006 and rushed for 100+ yards for the third straight game.

IN THE WIN OVER UCLA
WSU notched its first win over UCLA in Martin Stadium since 2007 and beat the Bruins for the second straight year for the first time since 2006-07. The Cougars also recorded their first four-game winning streak since 2003.

IN THE WIN AT ARIZONA STATE
Washington State recorded its first win at Arizona State since 2001 and has beaten ASU in two straight years for the first time since 2002-03. The win was the fifth in a row for the Cougars who own a 4-0 record in Pac-12 Conference play, both marks are the first time since 2003.

IN THE WIN AT OREGON STATE
The Cougars recorded its third-straight win over Oregon State, coming back from a 21-0 deficit with a 22-point third quarter and a defense that held the Beavers to just 104 yards of offense in the second half. Luke Falk threw for 415 yards and five touchdowns in his sixth career fourth-quarter comeback win. Gabe Marks caught eight passes for 110 yards including two acrobatic touchdown catches, the second giving him the WSU record for touchdown catches. In his three career games against Oregon State, Falk as gone 116-of-157 for 1,293 yards (431.0 ypg) with 16 touchdowns and two interceptions, winning all three contests.

IN THE WIN OVER ARIZONA
In the 69-7 victory over Arizona, the Cougars recorded its seventh straight win and improved to 6-0 in conference play for the first time since 2002. WSU's 24 points in the first quarter were the most since scoring 28 in the opening quarter at Arizona in 2001 and the 31-point halftime lead (38-7) was its largest since leading 40-0 against Idaho State to open the 2011 season. The 69 points were the most scored under Mike Leach, were the most scored against a conference opponent in school history, were the most since beating SW Louisiana 77-7 in 1997 and was the seventh-most in school history. The 62-point margin was the largest margin of victory against a conference opponent. WSU recorded season-highs of 10 tackles-for-loss and five sacks, tallied 34 first downs, tying for the sixth-most in WSU single-game history and the 90.3 team completion percentage (47-of-52) was an NCAA FBS Record with 30+ completions (Entering the 2016 season). The game time temperature of 63 degrees tied for the second-warmest for a November game in Pullman.

IN THE WIN OVER CALIFORNIA
In WSU's 56-21 win over Cal, the Cougars recorded their eighth straight win for the first time since 1930 and improved to 7-0 in Pac-12 play for the first time in school history. Kaleb Fossum's 75-yard punt return for a touchdown was the first for WSU since 2005, Michael Bumpus (87 yards at Nevada).     WSU's 254 rushing yards is the third game with 200+ rushing yards this season and the  654 yards of total offense tied for the sixth-most in WSU single-game history. The Cougar defense held California to its lowest point-total of the season (21). The Cougars wore white helmets with numbers on the side, wore the same helmets against Colorado last season. Only time prior was 1963.

PELLUER NAMED CoSIDA DISTRICT VIII ALL-ACADEMIC FIRST TEAM
Peyton Pelluer was named to the 2016 District VIII All-Academic First Team as selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA). The Sammamish, Wash. native is a two-time honoree as a redshirt junior, repeating from the 2015 season. The linebacker boasts a 3.43 GPA while majoring in history with an emphasis in secondary education.

MARKS NAMED TO 2016 BILETNIKOFF, Maxwell AWARD WATCH LISTS
Wide receiver Gabe Marks was named to the 2016 Biletnikoff Award and Maxwell Award Watch Lists. The Biletnikoff Award recognizes the nation's most outstanding receiver each year and the Maxwell Award is presented to the nation's Player of the Year. Marks was one of 10 Biletnikoff Award semifinalists last season, earning All-Pac-12 First Team honors and tallied 104 receptions for 1,196 yards and a school-record 15 touchdowns. Marks led the Pac-12 in receptions, touchdown catches and was second in receiving yards while also tallying four 100-yard games.

SORENSON NAMED TO 2016 RIMINGTON TROPHY WATCH LIST
Center Riley Sorenson was named to the 2016 Rimington Trophy Watch List. Sorenson, a senior from Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif., has started 21 games over the past two seasons and has been one of the anchors for a Cougar offensive line that helped WSU lead the nation in passing each of the last two years. Additionally, he was named a 2015 All-Pac-12 honorable mention selection. Sorenson also received the 2016 Pac-12 Sportsmanship Award for the strength of character and dedication to his team that he displayed throughout the 2015 season even while he and his family faced extreme personal challenges. The Rimington Trophy is presented annually to the Most Outstanding Center in NCAA Division I-A College Football.

SORENSON NAMED CAPITAL ONE ORANGE BOWL-FWAA COURAGE AWARD NOMINEE
Riley Sorenson is a nominee for the 2016 Capital One Orange Bowl-FWAA Courage Award. Over the past nine months alone, Sorenson, a senior center, lost his father and mother to a heart attack and cancer, respectively. On top of that, Sorenson was diagnosed with testicular cancer just days after his mother's funeral in May. He had surgery to remove a testicle and, after receiving five opinions, was eventually told that chemotherapy would not be needed. Sorenson stayed at home in Southern California this summer to take care of his younger brother and sister. He returned to Pullman for the start of fall camp and has not missed a practice or game, starting all three contests for the Cougars. "I was just starting to come to terms with my dad being gone and then my mom's thing happened," Sorenson told the (Spokane) Spokesman-Review in August. "It was pretty bad. But even when it comes to something like that, everyone's going to understand if you get hung up or need to take some time off. I feel like I'm pretty comfortable with it mentally. I've still got some stuff I need to think through, but I'm good to play, I'm good to be around people." Sorenson currently lives with his brother in Pullman, and his sister is now a freshman at Boise State. The Courage Award was first presented by the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) in 2002. A select group of writers from the FWAA vote on the winner each year. The requirements for nomination include displaying courage on or off the field, including overcoming an injury or physical handicap, preventing a disaster or living through hardship. The winner of the award will be included in festivities during Capital One Orange Bowl week and receive his trophy at an on-field presentation.

RANCHO SANTA MARGARITA TAKEOVER
The Cougars have tapped into the Rancho Santa Margarita High School pipeline, currently owning four players from the school in center, Riley Sorenson, defensive lineman Nick Begg and receivers River Cracraft and Kyle Sweet. One other Coug who went to RSMHS...Golden State Warrior Klay Thompson.

POLYNESIAN PIPELINE
The Washington State roster has seen an influx in Polynesian players since Mike Leach and his coaching staff arrived in 2012. Assistant Head Coach / Defensive Line Coach Joe Salave'a, a native of Pago Pago, American Samoa and a nine-year NFL veteran, has helped bring a number of players to Pullman in his three seasons at Washington State. The 2016 roster has 16 players who are of Polynesian decent including seven who list their hometown from American Samoa.

LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON
Three Cougars share a unique bond with their dads and/or grandpa, each have worn the crimson a gray. Redshirt-sophomore left tackle Andre Dillard's dad, Mitch was an offensive lineman and tight end for the Cougars in the late 1980's; redshirt-junior linebacker Isaac Dotson's dad, Michael was an All-American wrestler for WSU from 1983-86; redshirt-junior linebacker Peyton Pelluer's dad, Scott also played linebacker for the Cougs, matching Peyton's No. 47 from 1977-80; Peyton's grandpa, Arnie played end for WSU in the mid 1950's and his great grandpa, Carl, played flanker in the 1920's.

SEVEN COUGARS INDUCTED INTO WSU HALL OF FAME
The WSU Hall of Fame welcomed in seven new members Sept. 17. Joining the current 206 members was Marv Chamberlain (Baseball), Erin Elridge (Swimming), Jason Gesser (Football), Mark Hendrickson (Basketball/Baseball), Mike Price (Football Coach), Jennifer Robertson (Track & Field) and Marcia Saneholtz (WSU Administrator).

FALK NAMED TO 2016 AWARD WATCH LISTS
Quarterback Luke Falk was named to the 2016 Davey O'Brien Award, Rotary Lombardi Award and the Maxwell Award Watch List. Falk is one of 30 quarterbacks named to the watch list for the Maxwell Award presented annually to the nation's best college quarterback and was also named to the Maxwell Award Watch List for America's Player of the Year. Falk, a redshirt-junior, was an All-Pac-12 first-team selection last season after leading the country in passing at 380.5 yards-per-game and guiding the Cougars to a 9-4 record capped by a Sun Bowl victory over Miami. The Logan, Utah native set a school record with 38 touchdown passes, good for fourth in the nation, and was second in school history with 4,566 yards. Falk tallied three Pac-12 Player of the Week honors and was Pac-12 All-Academic honorable mention.

STEVE GLEASON RECRUIT SUITE DEBUTS IN COUGAR FOOTBALL COMPLEX
WSU announced the naming of the Steve Gleason Recruit Suite, inside the Cougar Football Complex this summer. Gleason, the Washington State Athletic Hall of Famer who played football and baseball in a Cougar uniform from 1995-99, was on hand as the room all future Cougar football players will walk through was named in his honor. The opportunity arrived courtesy of Cougar alumnus Glenn Osterhout's naming donation of $250,000. With his pledge, Osterhout, a 1983 graduate who is a certified financial planner in Bellevue, was presented the opportunity to name the recruiting room inside the Cougar Football Complex.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYOFF EXTRA YARD FOR TEACHER
The Extra Yard for Teacher's Program kicked off Sept. 17 with the College Football Playoff Foundation.  The CFP is awarding each institution within the Pac-12 $10,000 to benefit an elementary school teacher or teachers in your community throughout the season, concluding at the 2016 Pac-12 Football Championship Game. Washington State will gift three elementary schools in Pullman with Google Chrome Books as part of the program.

NICHOL, SHEPHARD JOIN COUGAR COACHING STAFF
The Cougar coaching staff added two new position coaches as Dave Nichol joined the staff as the outside receivers coach and JaMarcus Shephard as the inside receivers coach. Nichol is no stranger to a Mike Leach-coached team, having spent three seasons (2003-05) as an offensive line assistant at Texas Tech under the current Cougar head coach. Most recently, Nichol served as the offensive coordinator at East Carolina in 2015. Shephard arrived at WSU following two seasons as the receivers coach at Western Kentucky University. In addition to his duties as receivers coach the past two seasons, Shephard added special teams duties for the 2015 season.

COUGAR FOOTBALL BROADCAST TEAM
Hall of fame announcer Bob Robertson is in his 50th season calling Cougar football games, and according to a nation-wide survey of sports information directors, is the longest tenured radio announcer in the country with the next closest being Bill Hillgrove who has announced 46 straight seasons at Pitt. Robertson began calling WSU games in 1964 and with the exception of a three-year period in 1969-71, has been calling Cougar games ever since. Robertson now hosts the Cougars pre, halftime and postgame shows, while also providing analysis during the games. Matt Chazanow is in his second season as the play-by-play voice for Cougar football, men's basketball and baseball broadcasts. Joining Chazanow and Robertson in the booth for his third season will be Cougar legend Jason Gesser who quarterbacked WSU to the 2001 Sun Bowl and 2003 Rose Bowl. Returning for her fifth season as the sideline reporter is Jessamyn McIntyre, an executive producer for 710 ESPN Seattle.  
 
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Players Mentioned

Joe Dahl

#56 Joe Dahl

OL
6' 5"
Redshirt Senior
Gunnar Eklund

#63 Gunnar Eklund

OL
6' 7"
Redshirt Senior
Dom Williams

#80 Dom Williams

WR
6' 2"
Redshirt Senior
Robert Barber

#92 Robert Barber

NT
6' 3"
Redshirt Senior
Nick Begg

#89 Nick Begg

DL
6' 5"
Redshirt Sophomore
Treshon Broughton

#16 Treshon Broughton

CB
6' 0"
Senior
River Cracraft

#21 River Cracraft

WR
6' 0"
Senior
Andre Dillard

#60 Andre Dillard

OL
6' 5"
Redshirt Sophomore
Isaac Dotson

#31 Isaac Dotson

LB
6' 1"
Redshirt Junior
Luke Falk

#4 Luke Falk

QB
6' 4"
Redshirt Junior
Kaleb Fossum

#83 Kaleb Fossum

WR
5' 10"
Sophomore
Dylan Hanser

#33 Dylan Hanser

RUSH
6' 4"
Junior

Players Mentioned

Joe Dahl

#56 Joe Dahl

6' 5"
Redshirt Senior
OL
Gunnar Eklund

#63 Gunnar Eklund

6' 7"
Redshirt Senior
OL
Dom Williams

#80 Dom Williams

6' 2"
Redshirt Senior
WR
Robert Barber

#92 Robert Barber

6' 3"
Redshirt Senior
NT
Nick Begg

#89 Nick Begg

6' 5"
Redshirt Sophomore
DL
Treshon Broughton

#16 Treshon Broughton

6' 0"
Senior
CB
River Cracraft

#21 River Cracraft

6' 0"
Senior
WR
Andre Dillard

#60 Andre Dillard

6' 5"
Redshirt Sophomore
OL
Isaac Dotson

#31 Isaac Dotson

6' 1"
Redshirt Junior
LB
Luke Falk

#4 Luke Falk

6' 4"
Redshirt Junior
QB
Kaleb Fossum

#83 Kaleb Fossum

5' 10"
Sophomore
WR
Dylan Hanser

#33 Dylan Hanser

6' 4"
Junior
RUSH