1995 Boise State Broncos football team

American college football season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1995 Boise State Broncos football team represented Boise State University in the 1995 NCAA Division I-AA football season, their last season in Division I-AA. The Broncos competed in the Big Sky Conference and played their home games on campus at Bronco Stadium in Boise, Idaho. Led by third-year head coach Pokey Allen, Boise State finished the season 7–4 overall and 4–3 in conference, ranked 21st in the final regular season poll.[1]

Sports NetworkNo. 21
Record7–4 (4–3 Big Sky)
Headcoach
Quick facts Boise State Broncos football, Conference ...
1995 Boise State Broncos football
ConferenceBig Sky Conference
Ranking
Sports NetworkNo. 21
Record7–4 (4–3 Big Sky)
Head coach
Defensive coordinatorTom Mason (3rd season)
Home stadiumBronco Stadium
Seasons
 1994
1996 
Close
More information Conf., Overall ...
1995 Big Sky Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 8 Montana $^6101320
No. 21 Boise State430740
No. 22 Northern Arizona430740
No. 17 Idaho ^430650
Weber State430650
Idaho State340650
Montana State250560
Eastern Washington160380
  • $ Conference champion
  • ^ NCAA Division I-AA playoff participant
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
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This was Boise State's final season as a member of the Big Sky and Division I-AA; they began play in Division I-A in the Big West Conference in 1996.

Schedule

More information Date, Time ...
DateTimeOpponentRankSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 9at Utah State*No. 5W 38–1420,909[2]
September 16Sam Houston State*No. 3W 38–1423,377[3]
September 231:05 pmat No. 6 MontanaNo. 3L 28–5418,504[4][5]
September 30Northwestern State*No. 11
  • Bronco Stadium
  • Boise, ID
L 17–2222,364[6]
October 7No. 18 Northern ArizonaNo. 19
  • Bronco Stadium
  • Boise, ID
L 13–3221,683[7]
October 14at Weber StateW 40–1411,428[8]
October 21No. 22 Idaho Statedagger
  • Bronco Stadium
  • Boise, ID
W 27–1723,621[9]
October 28No. 6 Portland State*No. 25
  • Bronco Stadium
  • Boise, ID
W 49–1418,128[10]
November 41:05 pmEastern WashingtonNo. 24
  • Bronco Stadium
  • Boise, ID
W 63–4418,051[11][12]
November 11Montana StateNo. 23
  • Bronco Stadium
  • Boise, ID
W 35–723,327[13]
November 184:05 pmat No. 25 IdahoNo. 16L 13–3316,295[14][15][16][17]
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[18][19]

Season

Coming off a successful previous season of 13–2 and the runner-up in the national championship,[20] BSU was ranked eighth in the preseason I-AA poll,[21] and climbed to third after an opening victory at Division I-A Utah State.[2][22] A three-game losing streak dropped them out of the poll by mid-season,[23] after wide-margin losses to Montana and Northern Arizona.[4][7]

After five consecutive wins, the Broncos climbed back to #16 prior to the regular season finale at rival Idaho,[24] whom they defeated the previous year in Boise to break a twelve-game losing streak in the series.[25] With a likely playoff berth on the line;[14][26] BSU lost by twenty in the Kibbie Dome to end their season in a four-way tied for second place.[15][16][17] Surging Idaho (6–4) was selected for the final at-large berth for the postseason,[27][28][29] but was matched against top-ranked McNeese State in southwest Louisiana and made a quick exit.[30][31][32]

Allen's cancer

Allen had been diagnosed in December 1994 with rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare form of muscle cancer.[33][34] The tumor in his upper right arm was removed in March and he underwent extensive chemotherapy and a stem-cell transplant in July at the Fred Hutchinson Center in Seattle.[35] He returned to coach the Broncos while going through treatment, and the cancer was declared in remission in December 1995, but the doctors warned of likely recurrence.

References

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