Sept. 8, 2008
Complete Release in PDF Format 
BELLINGHAM, Wash. -
THIS WEEK'S GAME: Western Washington University Vikings (0-1, 0-1) vs. Humboldt State University Lumberjacks (1-1, 0-0) in a Great Northwest Athletic Conference (GNAC) contest on Saturday, Sept. 13 (6 p.m.) at the Redwood Bowl (7,000 cap., FieldTurf) in Arcata, Calif.
The Vikings are coming off a season and home-opening 36-27 loss to Western Oregon on Saturday. Humboldt State rallied for a 15-14 win at Southern Oregon last week after opening the season with a 45-13 loss at NCAA I-FCS Sacramento State.
Rob Smith is in his first season as head coach at Humboldt State. He returned to the sidelines after a two-year absence, following a 19-year coaching career at WWU, the last 17 as head coach. Smith led the Vikings to 109 wins and was inducted into the school's Athletic Hall of Fame in 2007.
SERIES HISTORY: 16th meeting. Western leads the series, 10-5. The Vikings lost the last meeting, 28-23, in their 2006 season opener on Aug. 31 at Arcata, Calif. That snapped a three-game series winning streak for Western, which has won 10 of the last 12 meetings, the only other loss during that span being 34-27 at Bellingham in 2004. HSU won the first three meetings of the series which began in 1956. The schools did not play from 1963 thru 1996.
RADIO: KBAI (930 AM-Bellingham) is broadcasting all Western football games live this season with sports director Doug Lange handling the play-by-play duties for the 13th consecutive season. The pre-game show with host Mark Scholten begins at 5:35 p.m. The KBAI broadcast can also be heard on the Internet at wwuvikings.com.
AUDIO WEBCAST INFORMATION: Viking football is again on the Internet for 2008. To listen to the live broadcast via the web, go to www.wwuvikings.com and follow the links. The web provides streaming audio of the KBAI 930 AM radio broadcast. The audio stream is only available during event broadcast times.
2007 RESULTS: Western finished 2-8 and placed ninth in the North Central Conference at 1-7. Humboldt State, competing as an independent, also had a 2-8 record.
STREAK AT SIX: Western has lost its last six games, finishing the 2007 campaign with five losses and dropping this year's opener. It is the Vikings' longest winless string since dropping seven straight in 1986.
NEW LEAGUE (KIND OF), NEW REGION: The Vikings spent the last two years as a football-only member of the North Central Conference, but when that league folded after an eight-decade history, WWU returned to the GNAC, which took a two-year hiatus from football. The top team in the conference not reaching the NCAA Division II playoffs earns a berth in the Rotary Bowl at St. George, Utah. The five GNAC schools will play each other home-and-home this season.
The five current GNAC football teams competed in the Northwest Region last season, but have been moved to the Southwest Region this fall. The region also includes the Lone Star Conference and the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association.
VIKING REPORT: Despite a season-opening loss, there were many positive signs last week for the Vikings. In particular, Western's offense, which has nine returning starters, played very well.
The Vikings put up 386 yards of offense, and would have been over 400 if not for lost yardage from a bad punt snap. Senior quarterback Adam Perry completed 23-of-38 passes for 278 yards and three touchdowns. He completed passes to eight different receivers and was not intercepted, marking the eighth time in 11 career starts he hasn't thrown an interception (has been intercepted just five times in 349 attempts). Perry threw for 1,587 yards with seven touchdowns and four interceptions in 2007.
Junior running back Randall Eldridge was a key offensive cog in his Western debut, rushing for 80 yards on 24 carries and adding 68 yards and a touchdown on six receptions. He redshirted last year after being the Golden Gate Conference Offensive Player of the Year at Chabot JC in 2006, rushing for 1,277 yards and 12 touchdowns in 10 games.
Senior wide receiver Travis McKee, who had 43 catches and was an honorable mention all-NCC pick a year ago (has been Vikings' leading receiver last two years), added five grabs for 96 yards, and senior tight end Logan Cullen had four catches for 68 yards and a touchdown.
The offense is anchored by an experienced line that returned four starters, led by senior center Dan Trask, an honorable mention all-league pick last season. They have 50 starts between them.
On defense, junior linebacker Caleb Jessup had 11 tackles, eight of them unassisted. Jessup is Western's leading returning tackler, notching 60 last season and earning honorable mention all-NCC status. Sophomore safety Zach Schrader had eight tackles and an interception, and sophomore tackle Don Thomas II led the line with two sacks.
On special teams, junior Josh Lider won both the placekicking and punting jobs in fall camp. Junior Jordan Carey averaged 15.7 yards on six kickoff returns, and freshman Kevin Sampson blocked a punt and returned it for a touchdown.
Carey is a former state Class 4A Player of the Year who lettered two years at Oregon.
This week's team co-captains are Rick Copsey, Cullen, C.J. Green and Trask.
SCOUTING HUMBOLDT STATE: The Lumberjacks rallied from an eight-point second-half deficit for the 15-14 win over Southern Oregon. Coming off the bench to key that comeback was redshirt freshman quarterback Mike Proulx.
Proulx replaced senior Brian Hildebrand in the second half, completing 5 of 10 passes for 58 yards and one touchdown and running for 33 yards on nine carries. He scored the winning touchdown on an eight-yard scamper with 6:02 remaining.
Hildebrand has completed 19 of 35 passes for 137 yards this season. Last year, he threw for 869 yards and two touchdowns with 11 interceptions.
Junior running back Bobby Thomas is averaging 8.9 yards per carry with a total of 98 ground yards. Sophomore wide receiver Kevin Miles has a team-leading eight catches for 42 yards.
Anchoring the offensive line is senior Bryant Kendall, who was a third-team D2football.com all-independent selection.
Pacing the defense is sophomore transfer Guy Ricciardulli from San Diego Mesa. He tops the squad with 12 tackles and two pass interceptions.
Junior cornerback Justin Price had a game-saving interception at the HSU 18-yard line with just over a minute to play to end a Southern Oregon threat.
Sophomore inside linebacker Michael Lynch has 4.5 tackles for loss and 15 stops. Senior placekicker Enrique Leyva has made 3-of-4 field goals with a long of 44 yards.
In his first season as Lumberjacks' head coach is Rob Smith, who earned seven Coach-of-the-Year awards during his 17-year tenure as head coach at Western. He takes over a team that returned just eight starters, the fewest in the GNAC.
Smith's offensive coordinator is Eric Tripp, who was a Western assistant for 14 seasons, 13 under Smith and one with current Viking head coach Robin Ross. Ross was Smith's defensive coordinator in 1994 and 1995.
WWU INJURY REPORT: Wide receiver Rick Copsey suffered a quad contusion in the Western Oregon, but is expected to play Saturday. Backup defensive end Amitoelau Faalevao injured his knee in that same game and his status is indefinite.
BATTLE IN SEATTLE: The sixth annual Wells Fargo Battle in Seattle for the Cascade Cup between arch-rivals Western and Central Washington takes place Oct. 11 (6 p.m.) at Qwest Field. The attendance at the contest has surpassed 11,000 all five years with the 2003 meeting being played before 16,392, a record for a non-NCAA I collegiate football game in the state of Washington.
GNAC PRESEASON POLL: WWU was picked to finish third among five teams in the 2008 Great Northwest Athletic Conference preseason coaches poll. Arch-rival Central Washington was the first-place pick with Western Oregon second.
HEAD COACHES: Robin Ross (Washington State, 1977) is in his third year (7-15) as head coach at WWU and has three decades of coaching experience. He was the defensive coordinator for two of the finest Viking teams in school history in the mid-1990s.
Ross spent most of his career as an assistant at the NCAA Division I-A level. He also coached in the National Football League, being the linebackers coach with Oakland for two seasons, helping the Raiders have the ninth-ranked defense in the NFL in 2000, when they were 12-4 and reached the AFC Championship Game.
In 2005, Ross was linebackers coach at Oregon State, where the Beavers led the PAC-10 in run defense, allowing 108.0 yards per game. He spent the previous four seasons as special teams coordinator and tight ends coach at Oregon. The Ducks won the 2001 PAC-10 championship, finishing second in the ESPN Coaches Poll after defeating Colorado in the 2002 Fiesta Bowl. He was also at Oregon as an assistant during the 1997 and 1998 seasons.
Ross initially came to Western in 1994 and in his first season the Vikings led the NAIA Division II in scoring defense, allowing just 11.5 points a game and five times holding opponents without a touchdown. Western, which posted its first national playoff victory that season with a 21-2 triumph at No.1-ranked Linfield, ranked third nationally in rushing defense at 76.0 yards a contest and fifth in total defense (260.3) with 42 takeaways. In 1995, Western finished 9-1, going 9-0 for the school's first undefeated regular-season in 57 years and being ranked No.1 nationally in NAIA II for five weeks. The defense allowed 13.7 points a game, ranking seventh nationally in that category.
Ross, 53, is a graduate of Washington State, where he was a second-team all-PAC-8 pick as an offensive lineman. He was a 10th round draft pick of the San Francisco 49ers in 1976, and spent one preseason with the Seattle Seahawks.
Rob Smith (Washington, 1981) is in his first season (1-1) as head coach at Humboldt State. He returns to the sidelines after a two-year absence, following a 19-year coaching career at Western Washington, the last 17 as head coach. Smith led the Vikings to 109 wins, which ranks third among collegiate coaches in the state of Washington behind only Frosty Westering (Pacific Lutheran) and Don James (Washington). Smith was inducted into the school's Athletic Hall of Fame in 2007.
At WWU, Smith earned conference Coach of the Year honors seven times - five in the Columbia Football Association and two in the GNAC. He was the American Football Coaches Association College Division Region V Coach of the Year in 1995 and 1996.
Smith led Western to five playoff berths, the only ones in school history. The Vikings reached the NAIA Division II national championship game in 1996, winning a school-record 11 games. In 1995, Western was 9-0 in the regular season, its first undefeated regular season since 1938, and was ranked No.1 in the NAIA II National Poll for five weeks, including in the final poll of the season.
LAST MEETING: Running back Calvin McCarty rushed for 139 yards and three touchdowns on 30 carries, but it wasn't enough as Western was unable to overcome an early deficit and fell to Humboldt State, 28-23, in its season opener on Aug. 31, 2006, at the Redwood Bowl.
It was the first game for Robin Ross as Western's head coach.
HSU marched 98 yards for a touchdown on its opening possession, and led the rest of the game, going up by 14 points on two occasions.
Western pulled to within five, 28-23, with 2:45 to play on a 3-yard run by McCarty, his third touchdown of the game. HSU recovered the ensuing onside kick, then put the game away with 1:45 left as quarterback Blake Moorman found wide receiver Joey Stein for a 12-yard completion on third-and-11, allowing the Lumberjacks to run out the clock.
Moorman completed 15-of-25 passes for 223 yards, three touchdowns and an interception, with Stein having two of the scoring grabs.
McCarty, a transfer from Reedley College (Calif.) playing his first Western game, became the first Viking to rush for three touchdowns in a game since Duncan Sherrard accomplished the feat against Western New Mexico on Oct. 5, 2002. In addition to his fourth-quarter touchdown, he scored on a 5-yard run with 28 seconds left in the first half, and an 8-yard run in the third period. McCarty had 98 yards on 19 carries in the opening half.
After the Vikings punted on the first possession of the game, HSU marched 98 yards in 15 plays, capped by a 19-yard touchdown pass from Moorman to a wide-open Stein, to take a 7-0 lead. The Lumberjacks extended the lead to 14-0 with 3:45 left in the first half, as Tyson Hampson intercepted a Monrean pass in the flat and returned it 18 yards for a touchdown.
Humboldt State's other touchdowns came on a 44-yard pass from Moorman to Richard Perkins in the third quarter, and a 28-yard Moorman-to-Stein connection in the fourth period.
Aside from McCarty's touchdowns, Western's other points came on a 33-yard Robby Smith field goal with 7:17 left. The Vikings then appeared to recover a short kickoff, but the recovery was negated by a penalty, and the Lumberjacks scored in just four plays on Moorman's second touchdown pass to Stein, putting the lead at 11, 28-17, with 5:34 to play.
Humboldt State had a 308-282 edge in total offense.
Western quarterback James Monrean completed 9-of-17 passes for 98 yards and two interceptions. The Vikings had a 184-85 advantage in rushing yards.
Linebacker Shane Simmons led the Western defense with 13 tackles, 11 of them unassisted.
LAST WEEK'S GAME: Running back Ben Kuenzi scored a pair of second-half touchdowns, leading Western Oregon to a 36-27 victory over Western Washington in a Great Northwest Athletic Conference football game Saturday at Civic Stadium.
The game was the season opener for WWU, which dropped its last five games in 2007. Quarterback Adam Perry completed 23-of-38 passes for 278 yards and three touchdowns for the Vikings.
Western Oregon, which was 9-2 last season and won the Rotary Bowl, improved to 1-1, 1-0 in league play.
The Vikings took a 27-23 lead with 4:38 left in the third quarter on a 10-yard pass from Perry to tight end Zach Hekker, a play set up by a 4th-and-1 completion for 24 yards to Logan Cullen.
But an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for excessive celebration forced WWU to kick off from its own 15, and following the kickoff, WOU took the ball at the Viking 40. Five plays later, Kuenzi scored on a 6-yard run, giving the Wolves a 30-27 lead.
The Vikings had a chance to take the lead early in the fourth quarter. A Perry scramble on third-and-goal from the eight put the ball inside the one, but on fourth down, running back Randall Eldridge was stopped inches short of the goal line by WOU linebacker J.T. Gilmore.
The Wolves then went on an 11-play, 99-yard drive that chewed up six minutes of the clock. Kuenzi capped the march with a 16-yard touchdown run, putting WOU up 36-27 with just 3:49 to go and essentially putting the game out of reach.
Western Oregon had a 462-386 edge in total offense, rushing for 252 yards on 38 attempts. D.J. Jackson had 132 yards on 13 carries, and Kuenzi added 81 yards on 13 attempts. Quarterback Josh Riddell, a transfer from Mississippi State, completed 15-of-24 passes for 210 yards with two touchdowns and one interception.
Eldridge rushed for 80 yards on 24 carries for WWU, and also had six receptions for 68 yards, including an 18-yard touchdown catch in the second quarter. Travis McKee had five receptions for 96 yards, and Cullen had four grabs for 68 yards, including an 18-yard grab for the first Viking score.
WOU opened the scoring just four minutes into a game, as a bad snap on a WWU punt attempt gave the Wolves the ball on the Viking 16, setting up a 33-yard field goal by Juan Rodriguez.
That was just the start of a wild first half that saw the teams exchange the lead five times. The Vikings eventually grabbed a 20-17 halftime advantage as Kevin Sampson blocked a punt and returned it 13 yards for a touchdown with 2:40 left in the second quarter. The extra point failed because of a bad snap.
WOU regained the lead midway through the third quarter, as a 45-yard run by Jackson set up a 2-yard pass from Riddell to wide receiver Demario Ballard.
Linebacker Caleb Jessup had a game-high 11 tackles for the Vikings, and safety Zach Schrader had eight stops and an interception.
WWU PLAYERS OF THE WEEK for Aug. 31-Sept. 6:
Offense - Logan CullenDefense - Zach SchraderSpecial Teams - Kevin SampsonScout Team Offense - Tony GardinerScout Team Defensive - David JohnsonScout Team Special Teams - Kyle Tunney
TICKET INFORMATION: Tickets for Viking football cost $12 for reserved seating, $10 for general admission adults, $6 for students and seniors and $3 for Western students. For ticket information, contact the WWU Athletic Department at 360-650-2583 (BLUE). Season tickets are available for $33.
CIVIC STADIUM: Western is beginning its 47th year of playing home games at Bellingham's Civic Stadium. The Vikings have a 122-90-7 (.573) record at that facility which was built in 1961. Last year, Western finished 1-3 at home, the second time in three years after not having a losing record at Civic Stadium since 1990.
NEXT GAME: Western goes to Cheney, Wash., to play NCAA I-FCS Preseason No.7-ranked Eastern Washington on Saturday, Sept. 20 (6 p.m.) at Woodward Field. The Eagles, who are 0-2, have a bye this week before playing their home opener. Both of their losses have been on the road to NCAA I Bowl Championship Subdivision teams, 49-24 at No.12 Texas Tech and 31-24 at Colorado.
WEBSITE: For the latest results, statistics and updates, including reports on all WWU athletic events, visit the Vikings website at wwuvikings.com.
PROBABLE TWO DEEPS
WESTERN WASHINGTON
OFFENSE
TE 86 Logan Cullen (6-3, 245, Sr., Anacortes, WA) 83 Zach Hekker (6-4, 240, Jr., Bothell, WA)LT 56 Nick Bassett (6-4, 290, So, Gig Harbor, WA) 63 Jason Paull (6-3, 270, Jr., Vancouver, WA)LG 72 Russell Piette (6-4, 300, So., Vancouver, WA) 76 Scott Allanson (6-4, 280, Sr., Everett, WA)C 66 Dan Trask (6-3, 275, Sr., Aberdeen, WA) 67 Mike Spears (6-1, 285, R-Fr., Vancouver, WA)RG 78 Phil Hayes (6-4, 330, Sr., Renton, WA) 52 Travis Pierce (6-2, 305, Jr., Redmond, WA) 57 Zach Myers (6-2, 280, Sr., Sammamish, WA)RT 68 Chris Corey (6-4, 285, Sr., Federal Way, WA) 70 Chris Awambu (6-6, 350, Jr., Hayward, CA)WR 7 Pat McCann (6-2, 205, Jr., Olympia, WA) 87 Augustine Agyei (6-0, 185, Jr., Aurora, CO)WR 3 Travis McKee (6-5, 210, Sr., Bothell, WA) 4 Rick Copsey (5-8, 175, Jr., Camas, WA)TB 10 Randall Eldridge (5-10, 200, Jr., Lynnwood, WA) 27 Kevin Sampson (5-9, 170, R-Fr., Seattle, WA)QB 6 Adam Perry (6-0, 190, Sr., Longview, WA) 17 Cole Morgan (6-3, 205, Jr., Seattle, WA)FB 42 Matt Clark (6-1, 240, Sr., College Station, TX) 38 Jeff Twining (6-0, 230, Jr., Shoreline, WA)
DEFENSE
LE 93 Nick Rocco (5-11, 225, So., Sammamish, WA) 92 Danny Hawkins (6-2, 240, R-Fr., Seattle, WA)T 79 Don Thomas (6-0, 245, So., Kent, WA) 58 William Jackson (6-1, 260, Jr., Seattle, WA)N 53 Shea Thorstad (6-0, 265, Sr., Stanwood, WA) 96 Justin Mundell (5-9, 230, Jr., Maple Valley, WA)RE 91 Casey Hamlett (6-3, 235, So., Edmonds, WA) 54 David Johnson (6-2, 215, Fr., Odessa, WA) 95 Amitoelau Faalevao (6-3, 235, Sr., American Samoa)OLB 5 C.J. Green (5-8, 190, So., Jr., Federal Way, WA) 36 Derek Diaz (5-11, 240, Jr., Antioch, CA)MLB 9 Caleb Jessup (6-0, 220, Jr., Kenmore, WA) 32 Dan Winter (6-0, 220, Jr., Lacey, WA)OLB 34 Nick Cragin (5-10, 210, So., Sammamish, WA) 29 Jared Young (5-8, 185, So., Kennewick, WA)LC 1 Kevin Jones (5-9, 175, Sr., Seattle, WA) 28 Anthony Rosso (5-11, 180, Sr., Walla Walla, WA)FS 11 Zach Schrader (6-1, 195, So., Issaquah, WA) 31 Joshua Gray (5-11, 195, So., Tacoma, WA)SS 30 Danny Cumming (6-0, 180, Jr., Friday Harbor, WA) 15 Jordan Carey (6-0, 200, Jr., Olympia, WA)RC 2 Anthony Zackery (5-11, 200, So., Spokane, WA) 20 Reggie Christor (6-0, 200, R-Fr., Spanaway, WA)
SPECIAL
P 26 Josh Lider (6-2, 195, Jr., Bellevue, WA) 16 Ace Younggren (6-0, 195, Jr., Snohomish, WA)PR 15 Jordan Carey (6-0, 200, Jr., Olympia, WA) 4 Rick Copsey (5-8, 175, Jr., Camas, WA)KO 16 Ace Younggren (6-0, 195, Jr., Snohomish, WA) 26 Josh Lider (6-2, 195, Jr., Bellevue, WA)FG/ 26 Josh Lider (6-2, 195, Jr., Bellevue, WA)PAT 16 Ace Younggren (6-0, 195, Jr., Snohomish, WA)KOR 2 Anthony Zackery (5-11, 200, So., Spokane, WA) 15 Jordan Carey (6-0, 200, Jr., Olympia, WA) 4 Rick Copsey (5-8, 175, Jr., Camas, WA) 87 Augustine Agyei (6-0, 185, Jr., Aurora, CO)H 8 Tony Gardiner (5-10, 200, Sr., Bothell, WA) 17 Cole Morgan (6-3, 205, Jr., Seattle, WA)LS 32 Dan Winter (6-0, 220, Jr., Lacey, WA) 89 J.D. Neumeister (6-3, 230, So., Gig Harbor, WA)SS 56 Nick Bassett (6-4, 290, So, Gig Harbor, WA) 32 Dan Winter (6-0, 220, Jr., Lacey, WA)
HUMBOLDT STATE
OFFENSE
QB 15 Brian Hildebrand (6-2, 212, Sr., Corona, CA) 16 Mike Proulx (6-0, 195, RSFr., Castro Valley, CA) 8 Garrett Hubrich (6-2, 215, Sr., Hillsboro, OR)RB 3 Bobby Thomas (5-7, 195, Jr., Lancaster, CA 33 Joevany Cueva (5-9, 200, Sr., Santa Ana, CA)LT 62 Lorenzo Arenas (6-2, 270, Sr., Medford, OR) 72 Brett Frydendahl (6-4, 270, Fr., Corona, CA)LG 54 Bryant Kendall (6-2, 265, Sr., Modesto, CA) 55 Chris Vicory (5-11, 295, Sr., Rio Linda, CA)C 50 Taylor Boggs (6-3, 278, So., Pasadena, CA) 54 Bryant Kendall (6-2, 265, Sr., Modesto, CA)RG 67 Chris Holmes (6-2, 271, So., Anchorage, AK) 55 Chris Vicory (5-11, 295, Sr., Rio Linda, CA)RT 59 Adam Fountain (6-3, 289, Sr., South Lake Tahoe, CA) 65 David Looney (6-4, 290, Sr., Denair, CA)TE 84 Matt Devlin (6-3, 235, So., Chugiak, AK) 86 D'Andre Henry (6-1, 215, Jr., Los Angeles, CA)WR 5 Kevin Miles (5-8, 175, So., Sacramento, CA) 83 Lance Walkup (6-2, 208, Jr., Santa Cruz, CA)WR 82 Mike Streck-Woodard (5-11, 196, R-Fr., East Palo Al to, CA) 23 Matt Smith (6-5, 200, Sr., San Francisco, CA)WR 2 Tim Simmons (6-1, 205, Sr., Compton, CA) 18 Devin Stearns (6-2, 195, Jr., Gardena, CA)
DEFENSE
LE 49 Brad Hunkins (6-2, 250, Sr., Sutter Creek, CA) 87 Derrick Garrett (6-5, 285, Jr., Los Angeles, CA)T 99 Desmond Maxwell (6-0, 285, Sr., Pomona, CA) 90 Brian Wilson (6-2, 290, Jr., Paldale, CA)T 58 Luke Swangler (6-1, 270, Jr., Paso Robles, CA) 69 Jacob Accetta (6-0, 290, Sr., San Pedro, CA)RE 77 Justin Rose (6-4, 262, Sr., Juneau, AK) 43 Justin Hornsby (6-3, 230, Jr., Jamul, CA)OLB 37 Michael Lynch (5-10, 225, So., Sacramento, CA) 48 Calvin Robinson (5-11, 215, Jr., Fresno, CA)ILB 9 Allen Brunner (5-11, 230, Sr., Oxnard, CA) 45 Bubba Reynolds (5-11, 220, Jr., Huntington Beach, CA)OLB 1 Justin Calcote (5-11, 223, Sr., Los Angeles, CA) 29 Kevin Duley (6-0, 185, R-Fr., Goleta, CA)LC 6 Barry Davis (6-1, 197, Jr., Los Angeles, CA) 41 Devyn Clayborn (5-8, 180, Jr., Los Angeles, CA)FS 21 Jeff Williams (5-10, 200, Sr., Inglewood, CA) 28 Dan Compton (6-2, 210, Jr., Santa Cruz, CA)SS 11 Guy Ricciardulli (5-11, 200, So., San Diego, CA) 32 Adam Reyes (5-9, 185, So., Newhall, CA)RC 25 Justin Price (5-11, 185, Jr., Los Angeles, CA) 22 Corey Green (5-9, 165, R-Fr., Cerritos, CA)
SPECIAL TEAMS
P 44 Kyle Schieholt (5-10, 190, Jr., Chugiak, AK) 14 Enrique Leyva (5-10, 190, Sr., Vista, CA)PR 5 Kevin Miles (5-8, 175, So., Sacramento, CA) 11 Guy Ricciardulli (5-11, 200, So., San Diego, CA)KO 14 Enrique Leyva (5-10, 190, Sr., Vista, CA) 44 Kyle Schieholt (5-10, 190, Jr., Chugiak, AK)PK 14 Enrique Leyva (5-10, 190, Sr., Vista, CA) 44 Kyle Schierholt (5-10, 190, Jr., Chugiak, AK)KOR 27 Brian Stuart (5-8, 195, Jr., Van Nuys, CA) 20 Corey Stollmeyer (6-1, 185, Jr., Morro Bay, CA)H 16 Mike Proulx (6-0, 195, R-Fr., Castro Valley, CA) 8 Garrett Hubrich (6-2, 215, Sr., Hillsboro, OR)LS 2 Tim Simmons (6-1, 205, Sr., Compton, CA) 93 Matt Roi (6-3, 235, Fr., Redding, CA)