Football

Football Set to Take on Wyoming

October 12, 1998

UNLV (0-6, 0-3 WAC) vs. WYOMING (4-1, 2-0 WAC)
DATE: Saturday, Oct. 17, 1998
KICKOFF: 4:00 pm PDT
SITE: Sam Boyd Stadium (35,000), Las Vegas
TV: None
RADIO: KXNT-840 AM, 3:30 pm PDT (Tony Cordasco & Hunkie Cooper)

UNLV (0-6) 1998 SCHEDULE

Date   Opponent            Result/TimeS. 5   at Northwestern      L, 41-7S. 12  AIR FORCE            L, 52-10S. 19  at Wisconsin         L, 52-7S. 26  at Colorado State    L, 38-16O. 3   NEVADA, RENO         L, 31-20O. 10  at BYU               L, 38-14O. 17  WYOMING (HC)         4 pm PDTO. 24  at SMU               2 pm CDTO. 31  TULSA                1 pm PDTN. 7   OPENN. 14  at Rice              2 pm CSTN. 21  TCU                  1 pm PST       WYOMING (4-1)

WYOMING (4-1) 1998 SCHEDULE
Date Opponent Result/TimeS. 12 MONTANA STATE W, 17-9S. 19 at Georgia L, 16-9S. 26 LOUISIANA TECH W, 31-19O. 3 UTAH W, 27-24O. 10 SMU W, 12-7O. 17 at UNLV 4 pm PDTO. 24 RICE 1 pm MDTO. 31 at TCU 2 pm CDTN. 7 at Colorado State 12 pm MSTN. 14 AIR FORCE 12 pm MSTN. 21 at Tulsa 2 pm CST

UNLV QUICK FACTS Location: Las Vegas, 89,154 Founded: 1957 Enrollment: 20,000 Nickname: Rebels (Not Runnin) Colors: Scarlet & Gray President: Dr. Carol C. Harter Dir. of Athletics: Charles Cavagnaro Conference: Western Athletic/Mtn. Div. Stadium: Sam Boyd Stadium Capacity/Surface: 35,000/Artificial Record in Stadium: 107-61-3 (26 seasons) UNLV All-Time Record: 175-161-4 (30 seasons) All-Time vs. WAC: 37-57-2 Head Coach: Jeff Horton (UNR 81) Record at UNLV: 13-39 (5th year) Record Overall: 20-43 (6th year) Off. Coordinator: Buzz Preston (Hawaii 82) Def. Coordinator: Ruffin McNeill (ECU 80) Offense: Multiple Defense: 4-3

GAME 7 PREVIEW

UNLV (0-6, 0-3) returns to Sam Boyd Stadium for a homecoming clash with surging Wyoming (4-1, 2-0) ... The Rebels, who have played four of their last six games on the road, will attempt to break an 11-game losing streak, which is one short of the school record set in 1995-96 ... Last week, UNLV fell at BYU 38-14 while the Cowboys gutted out a 12-7 victory over visiting SMU to stay undefeated in conference play ...

The Rebels are 19-11 all-time in homecoming games for a winning percentage of .634 ... Head Coach Jeff Horton is 3-1 in homecoming games at UNLV, including last years 41-6 win over Illinois State.

SERIES NOTES

The all-time series between the schools is tied 3-3 ... The Rebels won the first three games in the series by a total of 13 points but Wyoming now has a three-game winning streak over UNLV ... The Cowboys are one of six WAC teams, along with CSU, SDSU, UNM, UTEP and TCU, that UNLV does not have a losing record against ... The Rebels and Cowboys played four straight years (1978-81) when UNLV first thought itself headed into the WAC ... These two Mountain Division rivals will both join six other schools in leaving the WAC to form a new eight-team conference next season ... UNLVs first network television appearance as a Div. I- A program came on Oct. 3, 1981, when the Pokes won 45-21 before an ABC regional audience ... Former Rebel QB Jon Denton used the 1996 game in Las Vegas as a coming out party, throwing for a then-NCAA freshman record 486 yards and three touchdowns -- good enough to earn WAC Player of the Week honors.

Seven weeks later, Denton broke his own record with a school-best 503 yards vs. SDSU. That record, however, fell last week when UNRs David Neill passed for 611 yards in a loss to New Mexico State.

SERIES RECORD: Tied 3-3
LAST MEETING: 1997 (UW 35-23)
UW at UNLV RECORD: 1-2
UNLV at UW RECORD: 1-2
UNLVs LARGEST WIN: 7 (33-26 in 1980)
UWs LARGEST WIN: 24 (45-21 in 1981)

SERIES SCORES:

DATE        SITE           RESULT11-11-78    Las Vegas      UNLV, 12-1010-27-79    Laramie        UNLV, 28-24 11-8-80    Las Vegas      UNLV, 33-26 10-3-81    Laramie        WYO, 45-21 9-28-96    Las Vegas      WYO, 33-2111-8-97     Laramie        WYO, 35-23

UNLV HEAD COACH JEFF HORTON

Jeff Horton, who turned 41 this summer, is in his fifth season at the helm of the Rebel football pro- gram and sixth as a Div. I-A head coach. The sev- enth head man in UNLVs 30 years of football his- tory, Horton has a career record of 20-43 and 13- 39 for the Rebels. Facing a half-decade in charge, Horton will tie original coach Bill Ireland (1968- 72) for second-longest stint leading UNLV football. Only Tony Knap (1976-81) coached the Rebels longer.

Named the 1994 Big West Co-Coach of the Year after leading UNLV to its second-ever league title and bowl win, Horton graduated from Nevada, Reno in 1981 and later received his masters from the Univ. of San Francisco. He came to Las Vegas after spending the 1993 season as head coach of UNR, where he also had been assistant coach from 1985-89 and 92. Horton also served a stint as a UNLV assistant from 1990-91. Born July 13, 1957, Horton is married to the former Teri Arden of Reno.

HORTONS CAREER RECORD

YEAR   SCHOOL    TOT    CONF   FIN1998   UNLV      0-6    0-3    --1997   UNLV      3-8    2-6    7th1996   UNLV     1-11    1-7    T7th1995   UNLV      2-9    1-5    10th1994   UNLV      7-5    5-1    T1st1993   UNR       7-4    4-2    3rdTOTAL 6 Years  20-43  13-24

INJURY UPDATE

Head Athletic Trainer Kyle Wilson reported two new injuries from the BYU game: DB Randy Black (shoulder) and RB Dahrin Footman (Hip) are both listed as Questionable. In addition, DL Faaolo Alovao dislocated his thumb in Sundays workout and also is questionable. Senior DB Quincy Sanders, who played in two games, will have ACL surgery this Friday in Las Vegas and will apply for a medical redshirt in order to play in 1999.

Following is a list of injured players and their status for the Wyoming game (RS=Will Redshirt):

PLAYER,            POS.    INJURY                     STATUS       GMS MISSEDFaaolo Alovao,     DL      Left Thumb Dislocation     Questionable    0Randy Black,       DB      Right Shoulder Sprain      Questionable    0Ernie Calanche,    OL      Right Elbow Surgery        Out             Season-RSDahrin Footman,    RB      Right Hip Bruise           Questionable    0Robert Jordan,     OL      Left Leg Fractures         Out             Season-RSDeJhown Mandley,   TE      Left Foot Fracture         Out             Season-RSSteve Newton,      LB      Torn Tendon-Left Finger    Out             2Danny Pacheco,     OL      Right Shoulder Strain      Doubtful        4Nick Palmer,       WR      Left Arm Stress Fracture   Out             5Quincy Sanders,    DB      Right ACL Surgery          Out             Season-RSShane Wagers,      OL      Left Knee Sprain           Out             SeasonAllen Williams,    OL      Left Wrist Fracture        Out             Season-RS

REBEL MEDIA POLICIES

A note to all media: Rebel players are available for both phone and live interviews on Tuesday and Wednesday each week. Please remember that the team no longer practices on Mondays. Coach Horton is generally available throughout the week. Please call Football SID Mark Wallington (702) 895-4472 with any requests.

WYOMING HEAD COACH DANA DIMEL

The youngest head coach in NCAA Div. I-A football when he was hired, Dana Dimel, now 36, is in his second season in Laramie as the 28th head man in Cowboy history. Named to succeed Joe Tiller on Dec. 7, 1996, Dimel has a career record of 12-6 and 6-4 in the WAC. After 10 successful years at his alma mater, Kansas State, the last two as of- fensive coordinator, Dimel led Wyoming to an 8-5 overall record as a rookie in 1997 as the Pokes played a school-record 13 games. The Columbus, Ohio, native was a two-year letterman for the Wild- cats in 1985-86, signed on as a graduate assis- tant and spent a decade as part of KSUs tremen- dous turnaround, which saw the team go to four straight bowl games.

THE LAST TIME THEY MET
LARAMIE, WYO. -- (Nov. 8, 1997)
WYOMING 35, UNLV 23

Looking for its first WAC road victory, UNLV (3-7) payed its first visit to Wyoming since 1981 but was outscored on a wintry day in Laramie, 35-23. In what was the coldest game ever for a Jeff Horton-led Rebel team, UNLV struck first with a field goal. The Cowboys came back to take a 14-3 lead but Amar Briscos school-record 84-yard fumble return set up a three-yard James Wofford TD run to pull the Rebels within four -- the closest they would get the rest of the day. UW took a 28-10 lead but the Rebels wouldnt go away. First, UNLV LB Scott Patton picked up another Poke fumble and raced 67 yards for his second score of the season. Then, after another UW touchdown, UNLV went on a 91-yard scoring drive capped by a 33-yard TD pass from Jon Denton to Len Ware. The TD ended the scoring but extended Dentons school-record streak of throwing a scoring pass to 18, despite the sophomore having his worst day passing as a collegian, completing a career-low 10 passes for 134 yards on 30 attempts.

DISAPPEARING INK -ANOTHER UNLV NCAA RECORD IS ERASED

During the first two months of the season, three national records set at UNLVs Sam Boyd Stadium were erased from the NCAA record books. When Louisiana Techs Troy Edwards piled up 405 yards receiving vs. Nebraksa on August 29, he trounced the previous single-game record of 363 held by UNLVs Randy Gatewood. Gatewood, a current Arena League player who still holds the national mark for catches in one game with 23, had 363 yards vs. Idaho on Sept. 17, 1994. On September 12, Kansas States Martin Gramatica kicked a 65-yard field goal (without a tee) against Northern Illinois that bested the record of 62 yards by Jason Hanson of Washington State, who recorded his big boot vs. the Rebels on Sept. 28, 1991. Then, last week in Reno, UNR quarterback David Neill threw for 611 yards vs. New Mexico State. A true freshman, Neill obliterated former Rebel signal-caller Jon Dentons NCAA record for single-game passing yards by a freshman. Denton had set the record by throwing for 503 yards vs. San Diego State on Nov. 11, 1996, in a stunning 44-42 upset of the Aztecs.

In a poll of the WACs media, UNLV was tabbed to finish in seventh place in the Mountain Division this fall. The Rebels took seventh in last years Pacific Division.

1998 WAC MEDIA POLL

MOUNTAIN DIVISION (1st Place Votes in parentheses) 1. Colorado State (38) * 2. Wyoming (1) 3. Air Force 4. Rice (1) 5. SMU 6. TCU 7. UNLV 8. Tulsa 
PACIFIC DIVISION 1. BYU (20) 2. Utah (14) 3. New Mexico (4) 4. San Diego State (1) 5. Fresno State 6. Hawaii (1) 7. UTEP 8. San Jose State *Predicted WAC Champion
UNLV also was picked to finish anywhere from 5th to 8th in its WAC division in a survey of most preseason publications.
PUBLICATION, WAC The Sporting News, 5th Athlon Sports, 6th Lindys, 6th Preview Sports, 5th College & Pro Football, 5th Bob Grieses, 6th Street & Smiths, 6th Sports Illustrated, 7th Playboy, 8th
TEAM
Category WAC NATRUSHING OFFENSE 91.8 15 99PASSING OFFENSE 141.5 11 88TOTAL OFFENSE 233.3 16 110SCORING OFFENSE 12.3 15 107RUSHING DEFENSE 239.7 15 107PASSING DEF. RATING 144.4 15 98TOTAL DEFENSE 476.2 16 107SCORING DEFENSE 42.0 16 110PUNT RETURNS 16.5 2 6KO RETURNS 20.4 11 62NET PUNTING 42.0 1 3TURNOVER MARGIN -5 11 84PENALTIES PER GAME 45.8 4 --QUARTERBACK SACKS 8 12 --3RD DOWN -- OFFENSE .253 14 --3RD DOWN -- DEFENSE .541 16 --

INDIVIDUAL*
Category WAC NATRECEIVING YPGLen Ware 51.0 13 --RECEPTIONS PGLen Ware 4.5 6 --TOTAL OFFENSEKevin Crook 97.8 16 --ALL-PURPOSE YARDAGEDuane James 98.2 17 --PUNTING AVGJoe Kristosik 47.1 1 2KICKOFF RETURNSDuane James 21.8 9 --PUNT RETURNSDuane James 16.3 T1# T7#*Individual National Ranking is among Top-50 only.# Rankings represent projections because James is less than onereturn short of qualifying for WAC & NCAA statistics.

GAME SIX IN REVIEW

BRIGHAM YOUNG 38, UNLV 14

PROVO, Utah -- UNLV (0-6) was shut out in the second half en route to its 11th-consecutive loss over two seasons in front of a homecoming crowd of 61,774 at BYU (3-3). The Rebels, who fell behind 14-0 in the first quar ter, stiffened on defense and would go on to earn their smallest halftime deficit of the season. UNLV scored two second-quarter touchdowns in less than a minute to pull even.

First, a Mark Hays punt block (the first for UNLV since 1995) set up a six-yard rushing touchdown by James Wofford. Then UNLV tied the game on perhaps the most bizarre scoring play in Rebel history. On second and five, BYU QB Drew Miller was sacked by Rebel defenders and fumbled into the hands of Couger offensive lineman Matt Johnson, who thought the play was dead as an incompletion. As players from both sides stood watching while Miller writhed on the ground, UNLV defensive lineman Justin Conway noticed that no whistle had stopped play. He stripped the ball from Johnson and rumbled into the end zone untouched before a stunned stadium.

BYU quickly regrouped to drive for a go-ahead field goal just before the break. Cougar QB Kevin Feterick led his team to three second-half touchdowns to put the game away as UNLVs offense posted records in futility. The Rebels earned a total of five first downs, including only one in the first half, and threw for just 21 yards passing, which broke the school record-low of 39 vs. Baylor in 1988. UNLVs five passing completions by first-time starter Chad Reed were just one shor t of the school record while senior WR Damon Williams saw his school-record streak of catching at least one pass snapped at 39 games -- seven short of the NCAA record. UNLVs Joe Kristosik shined by punting a school- and stadium-record 13 times for an average of 52.5.

ON THE OFFENSIVE...

UNLV started its third QB of the season last week at BYU. Fifth-year senior Kevin Crook started the first two games before redshirt freshman Chris Hayward took over. Crook then relieved Hayward in the second quarter of the CSU game and started the next week vs. UNR. However, against the Wolf Pack, senior Chad Reed came in for his first action and earned the starting nod at BYU. Against the Cougars Reed became the first Rebel QB to play an entire game this season ... Damon Williams, who became UNLVs career leader in receptions in the season-opener at Northwestern, had a school-record 39-game streak of catching at least one pass snapped at BYU. Williams, who was shut out for the first time in his four-year career, was seven short of the NCAA record of 46.

Last week, Williams was named as one of 32 players included on the 1998 Biletnikoff Award Watch List. Now in its fifth year, the award annually goes to the nations finest receiver ... After only completing seven passes the previous week, UNLV completed just five vs. BYU, the least since 1992 vs. UNR and just one off the school record of four set against Baylor in 1988.

FOR THE DEFENSE...

UNLVs six QB sacks at BYU last week doubled the teams output (three) in the previous five games ... When DL Justin Conway returned a fumble 24 yards for a touchdown at BYU, it marked UNLVs second defensive score this season and sixth in two years ... Of the Rebels five interceptions this season, only two are by defensive backs. DL Ted Darnell (who scored a TD with his) and Robin Maile join LB Greg Gales with one pick each this fall ... Preseason First-Team All-WAC DE Talance Sawyer was fourth in the conference in tackles for loss heading into last weeks game. After five at BYU, he now has 13 for 48 yards, including a team-leading four QB sacks. Sawyer also has four pass break-ups and two caused fumbles on the year ... When DE Laanui Correa tackled CSU RB Duan Ruff in the end zone at CSU, it marked the Rebels first defensive safety since Nov. 6, 1993, at Lousiana Tech ... Redshirt freshman and team captain James Sunia, who leads the team in tackles with a total of 69, had a team season-high 17 vs. Air Force. He was already among the WACs top-five before his 10 at BYU.

SPECIAL (TEAMS) DELIVERY...

UNLV has not attempted a field goal since the third quarter of the Colorado State game -- a span of nine quarters ... Last week at BYU, the Rebels blocked a punt for the first time since Sept. 23, 1995, at Iowa State ... Against UNR, UNLV blocked a field goal for the first time since Nov. 13, 1993, vs. San Jose State ... As a team, UNLV leads the conference and is third nationally with a net punting average of 42.0 YPK ... Boosted by Duane "Toy Train" James 78-yard punt return vs. UNR, the Rebels are now second in the league and sixth nationally in team punt returns with 16.5 YPR.

A TEAM STRENGTH

It is doubtful that any teams strength coach demands as much respect as UNLVs Coordinator of Strength & Conditioning Mark Philippi. When youre Americas Strongest Man, people tend to listen about training techniques. Philippi earned that illustrious title last Sept. 29 when he won the United States version of the Worlds Strongest Man Contest recently made famous by ESPN coverage. The Rebels head man since 1993, Philippi is a national champion powerlifter who won his 319-pound weight class in 1996 with an 804-pound squat, 540-pound bench press and 821-pound dead lift.

Philippi, however, said he was looking for a new challenge and soon could be seen pulling cars and throwing barrels around the Lied Athletic Complex. That led to some competitions in Europe, the success at the strong-man event in Primm, Nev., and culminated on Oct. 13 when he finished seventh overall and first among Americans at the four-day competition at the Worlds Strongest Man Contest,later to be shown world-wide. Overall, Philippi won the slot-machine squat, placed second in the log lift and his 950-pound dead lift was runner-up to eventual champion Jouko Ahola of Finland.

EXPERIENCE THE REBEL

Premiering at Sam Boyd Stadium last year to rave reviews was the Rebel Experience. Situ- ated in the northwest parking lot, the official tailgate party of UNLV Football hosted more than 30,000 fans in its debut season. Always free to enter, the Rebel Experience features concessions, live music and interactice games both before and after each home game. The UNLV marching band, Rebel cheerleaders and popular local acts all perform in the 64,000- square foot area that is the designated tail- gating area for all fans, alumni and students. The Experience opens three hours before kick- off and resumes immediately after each game.

NO ORDINARY JOE

After a down junior season, UNLV punter Joe Kristosik is making his senior campaign the best of his career. In fact, he may just become the fourth punter in UNLV history to earn All-American honors. The Las Vegas native currently leads the WAC and ranks second in the nation with a 47.07 average coming on 44 attempts. He is less than one-half yard behind national leader Craig Jarrett of Michigan State, who has a 47.55 average on 15 less attempts.

Last week at BYU, Kristosik tied the UNLV and Cougar Stadium record for punts in one game with 13 and averaged an 52.5. Of those boots, eight went 50 yards or longer and four went 60 or longer, including two at a season long of 67 yards. On the year, Kristosik has an amazing 17 kicks that traveled at least 50 yards, including seven that went 60 yards or longer. The former prep quarterback at Bishop Gorman High School was named the WACs Special Teams Player of the Week on Sept. 29 after averaging 51.3 YPK at CSU, becoming the first punter in school history to earn a conference player of the week honor since the program joined the Big West in 1982.

DAMON IS DA MAN

With his first catch in the season-opener at Northwestern, senior wide receiver Damon Williams broke a tie with current Pittsburgh Steeler Henry Bailey for the schools career receptions record. Both players had 156 receptions but Williams finished the day with five grabs and has since raised his career total to 174.

Also, Williams needs just 10 more yards to move into second on the career receiving yards list and 129 to move past Bailey into the top spot (2,515). A quarterback in high school, Williams was pressed into service as a receiver as a true freshman in 1995. Since that opening game, he has grown into one of the nations top ball catchers. His 156 career receptions ranked him fifth in the nation for returning players and his 2,185 yards was seventh-best among all returning receivers.

A consensus first-team All-WAC player a year ago, Williams caught at least one pass in a school-record 39 consecutive games -- or every game of his career -- before being shut out last week at BYU. Rated the nations 18th-best receiver heading into fall by Lindys and 20th-best by The Sporting News, Williams is the only UNLV player in history to have two double-digit receiving games in career, which both came last season (11 at USC & 10 at Fresno State). Also, his seven 100-yard receiving games rank him second on the all-time list.

DAMON WILLIAMS CAREER RECEIVING

YEAR   REC    YDS   AVG   TD   LG1998    18    202   11.2   1   201997    61    770   12.6   5   491996    54    900   16.7   1   751995    41    515   12.6   2   39TOTAL  174  2,387   13.7   9   75UNLV CAREER RECEIVING LIST 
RECEPTIONS
PL PLAYER YEARS REC1. Damon Williams 1995-pr. 1742. Henry Bailey 1991-94 1563. Michael Morton 1978-81 1554. Carlos Baker 1995-pr. 1545. Demond Thompkins 1991-93 142RECEIVING YARDS
PL PLAYER YEARS YDS TD1. Henry Bailey 1991-94 2,515 242. Demond Thompkins 1991-93 2,396 173. Damon Williams 1995-pr. 2,387 94. Keenan McCardell 1987-90 2,189 155. Carlos Baker 1995-pre. 2,061 11

CARLOS CATCHES ON

A true senior in 1998, Carlos Baker is one- third of a trio that anchors arguably the WACs top receiving corps. Baker, who finished 14th in the conference with 38.9 YPG in 1997 and was 19th in RPG with 2.9, is looking to regain his 1996 form that earned him Offensive MVP honors as one of the nations top possession receivers.

The Burbank, Calif.-native currently stands in fourth place on the schools career receptions list with 154 and will move into third with one more catch and will tie for second with two more grabs. Also, Bakers 2,061 yards are good for fifth place at the school while his 2,767 all-purpose yards put him 10th all-time.

A defensive back in high school, Baker conver ted to offense as a true freshman in 1995 and earned 585 yards through the air, which included becoming the first Rebel rookie to earn back-to-back 100-yard games. His 71 receptions as a sophomore broke the UNLV sophomore record of 54 set by Demond Thompkins in 1992.

In 1996, Baker finished four th in the WAC and 19th nationally with 5.9 RPG. In 1998, he had a career-high 28-game catch streak broken in the season-opener at Northwestern before posting a six-catch, 114- yard day vs. Air Force in game two.

CARLOS BAKER CAREER RECEIVING

YEAR   REC    YDS   TD1998    14    161    11997    32    428    01996    71    887    71995    37    585    3TOTAL  154  2,061   11

BAKERS DOZEN
Year Opp Rec Yds1996 at SJSU 10 1681996 at Tenn. 9 401996 FSU 8 911995 USU 8 741995 at SJSU 7 1541995 NMSU 7 1111996 AFA 7 961996 at TCU 7 791996 at CSU 7 781998 AFA 6 1141997 at SDSU 6 451995 at UNR 5 114

RECEIVING ATTENTION
WARE THE BALLS ARE

One of the WACs top scoring threats through the air, Len Ware is a sure-handed star who has be- come a large part of the Rebel offense. A former defensive back as a prepster, Ware moved over to offense in college and redshirted in 1995. He burst on to the scene a year later by breaking the schools freshman receptions record with 42. His 1,740 yards currently put him in 11th place on the schools all- time list while his two catches at BYU moved him all alone into eighth place with with 118.

Ware also has his sights set on the schools career TD reception record as well. His 15 scores currently place him nine behind former Rebel great Henry Bailey. Known for his long scores, Ware has two 82-yard scoring receptions, which are tied for second-longest pass plays in school history. In addition, the Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.-native has seven career 100-yard receiving games, which puts him in a tie for second. He is only one game off tying the record of eight held by Randy Gatewood (1993-94) and Jim Sandusky (1981).

LEN WARE CAREER RECEIVING

YEAR   REC    YDS    AVG   TD   LG1998    25    297   11.9    1   771997    49    818   16.7    6   821996    42    628   15.0    8   82TOTAL  118  1,740   14.8   15   82WARES TOP GAMES 
YEAR OPP REC YDS TD1998 at NW 8 136 01997 UH 8 108 1 1996 SDSU 7 200 21997 SJSU 7 150 01997 ISU 7 105 21997 at USC 7 96 11996 AFA 6 45 01997 TCU 5 117 01996 at UH 5 73 31998 at CSU 5 52 01998 at WISC 5 41 01997 at AFA 4 121 1UNLV CAREER 100-YARD GAMES
PL PLAYER YEARS GMST1. Randy Gatewood 1993-94 8T1. Jim Sandusky 1981 8T3. Damon Williams 1995-pr. 7T3. Len Ware 1996-pr. 7T3. Sam Greene 1979-80 7T3. Keenan McCardell 1987-90 7
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