Mountain West Power Rankings: Final Regular Season Edition

Who topped the final rankings?

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Mountain West Power Rankings: Final Regular Season Edition


Who is at the top, well, it is obvious.


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

One last time.

The Mountain West title game is this week but we are not going to step away from our final power rankings of the year. We also will have one after bowl season and then get a stupid early one in after the championship game.

Back to the final rankings. It is no shock that Boise State claims every first place vote. Air Force comes in at a near-unanimous second-place finish with its 10-2 regular season record. West champion Hawaii comes in at third, moving up two spots, and then they are followed by all of the bowl-eligible teams in the league.

The middle spots are jumbled up a bit but as expected the bowl team are at the top and the rest fill out the bottom.

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Mountain West Football Media Announces 2019 Postseason All-Conference Team

The Mountain West football media revealed its players of the year and honored XX different teams on its postseason all-conference squad.

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Mountain West Football Media Announces 2019 Postseason All-Conference Team


The Mountain West football media revealed its players of the year and honored all 12 teams on its postseason all-conference squad.


Contact/Follow @MattK_FS & @MWCwire

A lot of props to go around.

mwwire’s 2019 postseason honors:

All-Conference Teams | Offensive Player of the Year | Defensive Player of the Year | Special Teams Players of the Year | Freshmen of the Year | Coach of the Year | Coordinator of the Year

Ahead of Championship Saturday, the Mountain West Conference announced the media’s selections for its annual individual honors and the traditional two-deep of all-conference athletes.

As you might imagine, the Boise State Broncos led the way in sweeping nearly all of the individual honors, claiming three of five after entering the title game with an 11-1 record: George Holani was named the Mountain West’s top freshman, while Curtis Weaver earned Defensive Player of the Year and Avery Williams was named Special Teams Player of the Year.

The two non-Broncos to earn the conference’s major awards are San Jose State quarterback Josh Love, named Offensive Player of the Year, and Hawaii head coach Nick Rolovich, who was named as the conference’s best in 2019..

Boise State and Utah State led the Mountain West with five selections each, while San Diego State has four and defending champion Fresno State has three. The only teams without representation on this year’s preseason all-conference list are San Jose State and New Mexico.

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Media Individual Honors

Offensive Player of the Year – Josh Love, QB, San Jose State
Defensive Player of the Year – Curtis Weaver, STUD, Boise State
Special Teams Player of the Year – Avery Williams, PR, Boise State
Freshman of the Year – George Holani, RB, Boise State
Coach of the Year – Nick Rolovich, Hawaii

First-Team All-Mountain West

Offense

QB – Josh Love, San Jose State
RB – Charles Williams, UNLV
RB – Xazavian Valladay, Wyoming
WR – Warren Jackson, Colorado State
WR – Cedric Byrd, Hawaii
WR – Tre Walker, San Jose State
TE – Trey McBride, Colorado State
OL – Scott Hattok, Air Force
OL – Nolan Laufenberg, Air Force
OL – Ezra Cleveland, Boise State
OL – John Molchon, Boise State
OL – Keith Ismael, San Diego State

Defense

DL – Mosese Fifita, Air Force
DL – Curtis Weaver, Boise State
DL – Dom Peterson, Nevada
DL – Myles Cheatum, San Diego State
DL – Cameron Thomas, San Diego State
LB – Justin Rice, Fresno State
LB – Mykal Walker, Fresno State
LB – Kyahva Tezino, San Diego State
LB – David Woodward, Utah State
LB – Logan Wilson, Wyoming
DB – Kekaula Kaniho, Boise State
DB – Jamal Hicks, Colorado State
DB – Luq Barcoo, San Diego State
DB – Alijah Halliburton, Wyoming

Special Teams

K – Dominik Eberle, Utah State
P – Ryan Stonehouse, Colorado
KR – Savon Scarver, Utah State
PR – Avery Williams, Boise State

Second-Team All-Mountain West

Offense

QB – Cole McDonald, Hawaii
RB – George Holani, Boise State
RB – Ronnie Rivers, Fresno State
WR – John Hightower, Boise State
WR – Jojo Ward, Hawaii
WR – Siaosi Mariner, Utah State
TE – Parker Houston, San Diego State
OL – Connor Vikupitz, Air Force
OL – Garrett Larson, Boise State
OL – Ilm Manning, Hawaii
OL – Daishawn Dixon, San Diego State
OL – Keegan Cryder, Wyoming

Defense

DL – Chase Hatada, Boise State
DL – David Moa, Boise State
DL – Keshawn Banks, San Diego State
DL – Tipa Galeai, Utah State
LB – Kyle Johnson, Air Force
LB – Demonte Meeks, Air Force
LB – Riley Whimpey, Boise State
LB – Ethan Aguayo, San Jose State
DB – Kekoa Nawahine, Boise State
DB – Jalen Walker, Boise State
DB – Tariq Thompson, San Diego State
DB – Jericho Flowers, UNLV

Special Teams

K – Brandon Talton, Nevada
P – Tyson Dyer, New Mexico
KR – John Hightower, Boise State
PR – Austin Conway, Wyoming

All-Mountain West Honorable Mentions

Air Force: Milton Bugg III, DB; Jeremy Fejedelem, DB; Jordan Jackson, DL; Timothy Jackson, FB; Jake Koehnke, PK; Zane Lewis, DB; Geraud Sanders, WR; Kadin Remsberg, RB

Boise State: John Bates, TE; Sonatane Lui, DL; Eric Quevedo, OL; Khalil Shakir, WR; Avery Williams, DB

Colorado State: Anthony Hawkins, KR; Manny Jones, DL

Fresno State: Kevin Atkins, DL; Blake Cusick, P; Juju Hughes, DB

Hawaii: Cortez Davis, DB; Rojesterman Farris II, DB; Solomon Matautia, LB; Kaimana Padello, DL; Gene Pryor, OL; Taaga Tuulima, OL; Blessman Ta‘ala, DL
Nevada: Daniel Brown, DB; Romeo Doubs, WR, PR; Gabriel Sewell, LB; Toa Taua, RB

New Mexico: Ahmari Davis, RB; Alex Hart, LB; Teton Saltes, OL; Kyle Stapley, OL

San Diego State: Matt Araiza, PK; William Dunkle, OL; Darren Hall, DB; Brandon Heicklen, P; Dwayne Johnson Jr., DB

San José State: Bailey Gaither, WR; Troy Kowalski, OL; Matt Mercurio, PK; Jack Snyder, OL

UNLV: Julio Garcia, OL; Rayshad Jackson, LB; Justin Polu, OL; Javin White, LB

Utah State: Shaq Bond, DB; Gerold Bright, RB; Jordan Love, QB; Caleb Repp, TE; Christopher Unga, DL

Wyoming: Tyler Hall, DB; Logan Harris, OL; Cassh Maluia, LB

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MWwire’s 2019 Postseason All-Conference Mountain West Football Team

In looking back at the 2019 regular season, our staff has made its selections for the best of the best from Mountain West football.

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Mountain West Wire Presents Its 2019 Postseason All-Mountain West Football Teams


In looking back at the 2019 regular season, our staff has made its selections for the best of the best from Mountain West football.


Contact/Follow @MattK_FS and @MWCwire

Who stands out as the conference’s best from this season?

Before the Mountain West football championship kicks off in Boise this Saturday, our staff has put their heads together to determine who deserves recognition as part of our postseason all-conference teams. If you’re interested in our picks from 2018, you can find that here.

Unlike our preseason all-conference selections, our postseason honor roll only goes two deep. We have, however, maintained our efforts to better reflect the variety we see week in and week out throughout the Mountain West, too, so previous changes like the FLEX defender, differentiating between guards and tackles and centers rather than just selecting offensive linemen, and so on remain intact.

If you disagree with our choices, of course, feel free to let us know what you’d have done differently on Twitter or Facebook.

This year’s voters: Jeremy Mauss, Sean O’Toole (Air Force), Raja Prabahala and Collin Clovis and Erik Smiley (Boise State), Josh Fredlund and Brad Hubbard (Colorado State), Matthew Kenerly (Fresno State), Brandon Tamanaha (Hawaii), Brandon Blake (Nevada), Roger Holien (New Mexico), Ted McGovern and Erwin Mendoza (San Diego State), Logan Jones and Sam McConkie (Utah State), and Jesse Tachiquin (Wyoming)

First Team

Offense

QB – Josh Love, San Jose State
RB – Charles Williams, UNLV
RB – Xazavian Valladay, Wyoming
WR – Warren Jackson, Colorado State
WR – Cedric Byrd, Hawaii
WR – John Hightower, Boise State
TE – Trey McBride, Colorado State
C – Garrett Larson, Boise State
G – Nolan Laufenberg, Air Force
G – Solo Vaipulu, Hawaii
T – Ezra Cleveland, Boise State
T – Parker Ferguson, Air Force

Defense

DT – Cameron Thomas, San Diego State
DT – Sonatane Lui, Boise State
DE – Dom Peterson, Nevada
DE – Myles Cheatum, San Diego State
OLB – Curtis Weaver (STUD), Boise State
OLB – Rayshad Jackson, UNLV
ILB – Logan Wilson, Wyoming
ILB – Kyahva Tezino, San Diego State
CB – Luq Barcoo, San Diego State
CB – Jericho Flowers, UNLV
S – Alijah Halliburton, Wyoming
S – Tariq Thompson, San Diego State
FLEX – Dwayne Johnson Jr. (AZTEC), San Diego State

Special Teams

K – Dominik Eberle, Utah State
P – Ryan Stonehouse, Colorado State
KR – Savon Scarver, Utah State
PR – Avery Williams, Boise State

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PODCAST: 2019 Week 14 Mountain West Football Recap

A look back at the final regular season games for the Mountain West.

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PODCAST: 2019 Week 14 Mountain West Football Recap


Final week of the regular season is complete.


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Boise undefeated, Nevada and UNLV fight.

Jeremy goes solo to recap the final week of the Mountain West regular-season which did not have much on the line except for Boise State who needed a win to remain in the hunt for a New Year’s Six bowl game. There were games where coaches were in their last game and no team had a chance to earn a bowl bid as there were no teams that could not get to six wins.

The big story of the weekend was the fight that broke out between Nevada and UNLV after the Rebels won in overtime. That took away from a competitive game that needed extra time to decide its winner.

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You can find the Mountain West Wire podcast below or subscribe to the show via AnchorStitcher RadioTuneIn, iTunes, and more. Listen in, subscribe and rate it and let us know what you think!

Here is our list of complete sponsors.

Or just help us out directly through our Patreon page through this link.

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What We Learned After Week 14 Of Mountain West Football

One final team we learned about each Mountain West team.

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What We Learned After Week 14 Of Mountain West Football


The regular season is in the books.


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

One last go around.

Air Force – Ten wins is a great turnaround from back-to-back five wins for the Falcons team. Quarterback Donald Hammond III is now a passing quarterback? Well, not really but he is one of the better passers in Falcon’s history as he ended the season with 1,286 yards and 13 touchdowns.

Boise State – Rename the Broncos quarterback factory. For the third-straight game, Jaylon Henderson led Boise State to a victory. It seemingly does not matter all that much about who is under center. We will see in the title game who gets the start.

Colorado State – The Rams continue to come up short in close games. They had a shot against most of their games this year with five games decided by 10 or fewer points but could not get over the hump.

Fresno State – The Bulldogs took a big step back compared to last year and it started with losses on defense and also quarterback play taking a huge step back. Quarterback Jorge Reyna wasn’t great either with so many late-game miscues. Overall, there were plenty of issues with this team but one of the few bright side of the season was running back Ronnie Rivers.

Hawaii – After 13 games there is still no clear answer as to who the starting quarterback is between Cole McDonald and Chevan Cordeiro, however the swapping back and forth has pretty much worked for the year. It is yet to be seen if it will work in the Mountain West title game.

Nevada – This season has been extremely odd as it saw the Wolf Pack not only used multiple quarterbacks this year en route to becoming bowl eligible. The oddest thing about how the Nevada season is having four of its five losses in the amount of 71, 51, 28, and 26 points.

New Mexico – The Bob Davie era is over is the most significant thing to happen this weekend for the Lobos. Hanging around with Utah State was a good sign despite knowing its head coach was out the door. Time to move on and find its new coach for the Lobos.

San Diego State – The Aztecs went with quarterback Carson Baker to replace the injured Ryan Agnew and he did a solid job. There were no turnovers, a touchdown pass, and an efficient 19 of 24 for 172 yards.

The defense shut down a BYU offense that had been clicking over the past month and the Aztecs shutdown the Cougar attack that was averaging 39.8 points during its five-game winning streak leading into this game.

San Jose State – DeJon Packer had a huge game in helping the Spartans defeat Fresno State for the Valley Trophy, 17-16. Packer had 93 yards rushing and added four receptions for 35 yards with a touchdown. This was his third-straight game with over 100 yards from scrimmage.

UNLV – Tony Sanchez had his final game and the Rebels came out a winner over rival Nevada and keeping the Fremont Cannon red. Wide receiver Steve Jenkins who scored twice, including the game-winning score, on five catches for 140 yards. It was the first time in a month he has had a catch and his best game of the year by far.

Utah State – The running game came back alive — yes,  it was against New Mexico — as Gerold Bright had 113 yards and a score. This was his first 100-yard game since Oct. 19. That ground game is what has been missing over the past month and hindered the Aggies from getting a few more wins.

Wyoming – The surprise in this game is that Tyler Vander Waal got the start at quarterback. He was not the same as he had an interception and his typically solid rushing attack was non-existent.

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Mountain West Football Coaching Updates

Stay up to date with the latest in coaching news surrounding the Mountain West.

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Mountain West Football Coaching Updates


What Mountain West coaches are in and out.


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

Stay up to date with coaching moves within the league.

This will be a living document that will have updates from coaching changes, rumors and news about the Mountain West.

UNLV

Nov. 25: Tony Sanchez is relieved of his duties. He has a $650,000 buyout, per his contract, and is not subject to an offset.[Mountain West Wire]

Nov. 25: Five early candidates for the UNLV job. One includes LSU passing game coordinator Joe Brady. [Las Vegas Review-Journal]

Nov. 29: Tim DeRuyter a serious candidate for UNLV?

Nov. 30: Five outside the box names for the UNLV coaching job [Mountain West Wire]

New Mexico

Nov. 25: New Mexico will not retain Bob Davie. His buyout is $840,000, per his contract, paid in monthly installments through 2021 and subject to offset from any future coaching job. AD Eddie Nuñez has hinted that a different buyout may be worked out. [Mountain West Wire]

Nov. 27: Arizona State defensive coordinator was asked about the New Mexico and other jobs. He said that, “when people talk, you always listen. And I think that’s the best thing to do. When you’re wanted, it’s always nice.” [AZ Central]

Nov. 30: Five outside the box names for the New Mexico coaching job [Mountain West Wire]

Colorado State

Nov. 29: Barrnig any drastic change by AD Joe Parker, Mike Bobo will not be back in Fort Collins [Football Scoop]


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New Mexico Football: Five Deep Cut Coaching Candidates To Replace Bob Davie

Who will become the next head football coach of the New Mexico Lobos? There are names out there, but we have some ideas.

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New Mexico Football: Five Deep Cut Coaching Candidates To Replace Bob Davie


Who will become the next head football coach of the New Mexico Lobos? There are names out there, but we have some ideas.


Contact/Follow @MattK_FS & @MWCwire

A tough place to win might draw some intriguing candidates.

The regular season is set to come to a close today for the New Mexico Lobos and it will mark the end of Bob Davie’s eight-year tenure as head coach.

Albuquerque has remained a difficult place to win consistently, but a pair of bowl appearances and a nine-win season this decade prove that the right hire, and an ability to think outside the box, can lead to good surprises for a fan base starved for success.

There are already plenty of names being bandied about for the job, most notably Arizona State defensive coordinator and UNM alumni Danny Gonzales, but rather than repeat what’s already been reported elsewhere, we’d like to add a few names with a thought exercise rooted in conjecture rather than any sources. If you have any names that you think the Lobos should consider, feel free to let us know on Twitter.

Head Coaching Candidates for New Mexico

1. Troy Reffett, North Texas defensive coordinator (school bio). Our first candidate might be familiar to many Lobos fans already, having served on Rocky Long’s staff from 2004 to 2008, but he’s had a fairly impressive run since his time in the Land of Enchantment. He engineered a turnaround at Louisiana-Monroe in his first year there, 2011, when his defense allowed a full yard fewer per play, and built two top-80 defenses by SP+ in 2011 and 2014.

Most recently, Mason Fine may have gotten most of the Mean Green’s headlines last year, Reffett’s defense was a top-ten unit nationally by Line Yards Per Carry Allowed, Opportunity Rate and Stuff Rate. If the Lobos are interested in a coach cut from the Rocky mold, Reffett might be worth a look.

2. Rhett Lashlee, SMU offensive coordinator (school bio). After the success that the Mustangs had this year behind transfer quarterback Shane Buechele and wide receiver James Proche, it’s not hard to see the allure of this potential hire. Lashlee has been a Broyles Award finalist, given annually to the nation’s best assistant coach, multiple times, and it seems like he enjoys a challenge: He left Auburn for UConn, of all places, and took a pay cut to mold the Huskies into a top-50 offense in his only season out in Storrs.

He might be the kind of rising star, however, more likely to snag a gig replacing whatever AAC coach jumps to the Power 5 this off-season.

3. Sonny Cumbie, TCU offensive coordinator (school bio). After lighting up the scoreboard as a quarterback at Texas Tech, Cumbie’s coaching career has gotten off to a strong start under Gary Patterson. By SP+, he helped create three top-25 offenses in four years from 2014 to 2017 and had some successes with true freshman quarterback Max Duggan this fall.

The main drawback is that UNM might need to shell out a contract it may not be able to afford: According to USA Today’s coaching salary database, Cumbie made nearly a million dollars in 2018

4. Marvin Lewis, Arizona State special adviser (school bio). Hey, Herm Edwards has mostly worked for the Sun Devils so far, right? Cincinnati Bengals fans might be split on his lasting legacy with that NFL franchise, but he left with the most wins by any head coach ever there.

Keep in mind, too, that it wouldn’t be Lewis’s first stint with UNM, either, as he served as linebackers coach under Mike Sheppard from 1987 to 1989. If rumors are to be believed, however, Lewis’s name is already being dropped for other NFL jobs that may open up this offseason.

5. David Bailiff, Texas A&M-Commerce head coach (school bio). If you’re looking for a coach with experience winning at tough jobs, it’s hard to do better than the guy who posted five winning seasons, including two ten-win campaigns and the 2013 Conference USA title, in eleven years at Rice. He’s also hit the ground running at TAMU-Commerce, as well, guiding the Lions to the second round of the Division II playoffs this weekend.

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How To Livestream Utah State vs. New Mexico On Facebook

The Aggies and Lobos square off in Bob Davie’s last game as New Mexico’s head coach. Here’s how to find the game on Facebook.

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How to Livestream Utah State vs. New Mexico on Facebook


The Aggies and Lobos square off in Bob Davie’s last game as New Mexico’s head coach. Here’s how to find the game on Facebook.


Contact/Follow @MattK_FS@MWCwire

WEEK 14: Utah State Aggies (6-5, 5-2 Mountain West) vs. New Mexico Lobos (2-9, 0-7 MW)

WHEN: Saturday, November 30 — 2:00 PM MT/1:00 PM PT

WHERE: Dreamstyle Stadium; Albuquerque, New Mexico (39,224)

STREAMING: The game can be found on Facebook. Additionally, Utah State’s radio broadcast can be streamed via TuneIn and New Mexico’s broadcast can be found on 770 AM (KKOB).

The Utah State Aggies and New Mexico Lobos meet to conclude the regular season, with the game marking the last time Bob Davie will wander the UNM sideline. Fans interested in watching will want to head to Facebook to do so.

This is the second Mountain West football game that will be hosted by Stadium on the season’s last full Saturday — Wyoming and Air Force kick off earlier in the day — so be sure to tune in and see whether the Aggies can finish the season strong or whether the Lobos will send off their departing head coach with a victory.

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Week 14 Mountain West Football Picks, TV Schedule, Scoreboard

Stay up to date with everything on the Mountain West this final week.

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Week 14 Mountain West Football Picks, TV Schedule, Scoreboard


A couple of trophies are on the line.


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Boise State vs. Colorado State start Friday!

Boise State at Colorado State

Friday, 3:30 p.m. ET, TV: CBS Sports NetworkGet Tickets
Line: Boise State -14.5 | Staff Picks

Wyoming at Air Force

Saturday, 2 p.m. ET, TV: Facebook | Get Tickets
Line: Air Force -11 | Staff Picks

UNLV at Nevada

Saturday, 3 p.m. ET, TV: AT&T SportsNet | Get Tickets
Line: Nevada -7 |  Staff Picks

Utah State at New Mexico

4 p.m. ET, TV: Facebook | Get Tickets
Line: Utah State State -11.5 | Staff Picks

BYU at San Diego State

9 p.m. ET, TV: CBS Sports NetworkGet Tickets
Line: BYU -6 | Staff Picks

Fresno State at San Jose State

10:30 p.m. ET, TV: ESPN2 | Get Tickets
Line: Fresno State -3 | Staff Picks

Army at Hawaii

12:30 a.m. ET, TV: CBS Sports Network | Get Tickets
Line: Fresno State -3 | Staff Picks

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Week 14 Mountain West Football Expert Picks

Final week of picks for the regular season.

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Week 14 Mountain West Football Expert Picks


Final week of the season is here.


Contact/Follow @JeremyMauss & @MWCwire

Who are you taking this week?

Boise State at Colorado State (+13.5)

Jeremy: SU: Boise State | ATS: Boise State | Score: Boise State 35, Colorado Stare 17

Raj: SU/ATS: Boise State, 34-17

Brandon T: SU/ATS: Boise State 41-21

Jesse: SU: Boise State | ATS: Colorado State

Brad: SU: BSU | ATS: BSU | BSU 38 – CSU 17

Matt K: SU: | ATS: | Score: Boise State 42-21

Sean: SU: BSU | ATS: BSU | BSU 31 – CSU 17

Wyoming at Air Force (-11)

Jeremy: SU: Air Force | ATS: Wyoming | Score: Air Force 28, Wyoming 18

Raj: SU: Air Force | ATS: Wyoming

Brandon T: SU/ATS: Air Force 38-17

Jesse: SU: Wyoming | ATS: Wyoming

Brad: S: WYO | ATS: WYO | WYO 24 – AF 21

Matt K: SU: Air Force | ATS: Air Force | Score: Air Force 24, Wyoming 14

Sean: SU: Air Force | ATS: Wyoming | Score: Air Force 17, Wyoming 14

UNLV at Nevada (-7)

Jeremy: SU: Nevada | ATS: UNLV | Score: Nevada 28, UNLV 27

Raj: SU/ATS: Nevada

Brandon T: SU/ATS: Nevada 28-14

Jesse: SU: UNLV ATS: UNLV

Brad: SU: UNR | ATS: UNLV | UNR 33 – UNLV 30

Matt K: SU: | ATS: | Score: Nevada 24, UNLV 20

Sean: SU: Nevada | ATS: Nevada | Score: Nevada 24, UNLV 17

Utah State at New Mexico (+11.5)

Jeremy: SU: Utah State | ATS: Utah State | Score: Utah State 46, New Mexico 13

Raj: SU: Utah State | ATS: New Mexico

Brandon T: SU/ATS: Utah State 31-14

Jesse: SU: Utah State ATS: Utah State

Brad: SU: USU | ATS: USU | USU 48 – UNM 20

Matt K: SU: Utah State | ATS:  Utah State | Score: Utah State 35, New Mexico 24

Sean: SU: Utah State | ATS:  Utah State | Score: Utah State 31, New Mexico 17

BYU at San Diego State (+3)

Jeremy: SU: BYU | ATS: BYU | Score: BYU 21, San Diego State 17

Raj: SU/ATS: BYU

Brandon T: SU/ATS: SDSU 10-3

Jesse: SU: BYU ATS: BYU

Brad: SU: BYU | ATS: BYU | BYU 26 SDSU 17

Matt K: BYU 17, San Diego 12

Sean: SU: BYU | ATS: BYU | BYU 24 SDSU 14

Fresno State at San Jose State (+3)

Jeremy: SU: San Jose State | ATS: San Jose State | Score: San Jose State 35, Fresno State 31

Raj: SU/ATS: Fresno State

Brandon T: SU/ATS: SJSU 38-28

Jesse: SU: SJSU ATS: SJSU

Brad: SU: SJSU | ATS: SJSU | SJSU 30 – FSU 24

Matt K: SU: | ATS: | Score: San Jose State 35, Fresno State 28

Sean: SU: SJSU | ATS: SJSU | Score: San Jose State 31, Fresno State 28

Army at Hawaii (-3)

Jeremy: SU: Hawaii | ATS: Hawaii | Score: Hawaii 35, Army 28

Raj: SU/ATS: Army (Upset Alert!)

Brandon T: SU/ATS: Hawaii 28-21

Jesse: SU: Hawaii ATS: Hawaii

Brad: SU: Hawaii | ATS: Army | Hawaii 45 – Army 43

Hawai 31, Army 21

Sean: SU: Army | ATS: Army | Hawaii 24 – Army 28

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