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THIS WEEK: No. 2 seed North Dakota State (11-1) hosts No. 7 seed Wofford (10-2) in the quarterfinals of the NCAA Division I FCS playoffs Saturday, Dec. 9. Game time is 11 a.m. at Gate City Bank Field at the Fargodome (18,700). The winner advances to a semifinal game next week against either Kennesaw State (12-1) or Sam Houston State (11-1).
TELEVISION: ESPN2 will televise the game live with
Kevin Brown calling the play-by-play and
John Congemi as color analyst. Video streaming will be available on
WatchESPN.com and the ESPN app through
participating television providers.
RADIO: Coverage begins at 10:30 a.m. on the
Peterson Farms Seed Bison Radio Network with
Jeff Culhane play-by-play, NDSU and Buffalo Bills Hall of Famer
Phil Hansen analyst, and NDSU's
Jeremy Jorgenson sidelines. Extended coverage locally on 107.9 The Fox, Bison 1660 and 92.7 FM includes "Bison Tailgate" from 7:30-8:30 a.m. with
Brad Jones, "Bison Game Day" from 8:30-10:30 a.m. and "Bison Hotline" for two hours following the network broadcast with hosts
Keith Brake,
Chris Hanson and former NDSU defensive end
Cole Jirik.
TICKETS: Reserved tickets will go on sale at 8 a.m. Wednesday on
GoBison.com/tickets or at the Sanford Health Athletic Complex ticket office, open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. End zone seats are $30 and sideline seats are $40. Season ticket holders have until 5 p.m. Tuesday to renew their same seats. NDSU student tickets are $5 and available at the Memorial Union from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday and Tuesday or at the Sanford Health Athletic Complex during regular hours.
THE SERIES: North Dakota State is 5-0 against Southern Conference teams, including 4-0 at home in the FCS playoffs. The Bison topped Georgia Southern in the 2011 and 2012 semifinals, Wofford in the 2012 quarterfinals, and Furman in the 2013 second round. The lone regular-season game was a 2006 win at Georgia Southern.
LAST TIME VS. WOFFORD: Linebacker
Grant Olson set a school record with 29 tackles and the Bison forced two turnovers, blocked a field goal and did not allow an offensive touchdown in NDSU's 14-7 win in the 2012 FCS quarterfinals in Fargo. Wofford finished with a 326-262 edge in total yards led by fullback
Eric Breitenstein's 135 yards on 24 carries. The Terriers ran the ball on 51 of 58 plays.
Sam Ojuri led the Bison with 72 rushing yards including a 1-yard TD to cap a 10-play, 75-yard opening drive.
Blake Wylie's 35-yard interception return in the second quarter tied the game 7-7.
Brock Jensen's 16-yard pass to
Zach Vraa capped a 97-yard march that made it 14-7 before halftime.
SEVENTH STRAIGHT VALLEY TITLE: North Dakota State went 7-1 in the Missouri Valley Football Conference to win its third outright conference title (2012, 2013) and seventh straight title overall. Northern Iowa is the only other MVFC team to win seven in a row (1990-1996). NDSU's longest streak of conference titles is seven straight (1964-1970). The Bison have won 34 conference titles altogether, including 26 in the North Central Conference and one in the Great West Football Conference (2006).
13-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS: North Dakota State won its 13th football national championship in 2015. NDSU claimed three College Division national championships in 1965, 1968 and 1969, five Division II titles in 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988 and 1990, and was the first team in college football history to win five straight national championships with FCS titles in 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015.
EIGHTH STRAIGHT POSTSEASON: This is NDSU's eighth straight FCS playoff appearance and 31st postseason trip overall. The Bison are 60-15 in the postseason and 55-14 in the NCAA playoff format since 1973. North Dakota State has advanced to its eighth straight quarterfinal and a victory over Wofford would send NDSU to its seventh straight semifinal. Marshall is the only other FCS team to have made six straight semifinal appearances (1991-1996).
Consecutive FCS Quarterfinals
8 - North Dakota State, 2010-2017
6 - Appalachian State, 2005-2010
6 - Marshall, 1991-1996
6 - Georgia Southern, 1985-1990
6 - Georgia Southern, 1997-2002
4 - Sam Houston State, 2014-2017
4 - McNeese State 1992-1995
4 - Youngstown State, 1991-1994
4 - Arkansas State 1984-1987
Consecutive FCS Semifinals
6 - North Dakota State, 2011-2016
6 - Marshall, 1991-1996
5 - Georgia Southern, 1998-2002
4 - Youngstown State, 1991-1994
ANDERSON APPROACHING 1,000 YARDS: NDSU junior running back
Bruce Anderson enters this week's game with a team-high 908 rushing yards on 184 attempts, about twice the number of carries and yards he had as a freshman in 2015. He is averaging 75.7 yards per game this year and has a chance to post NDSU's 27th 1,000-yard season.
King Frazier was the last Bison player to hit that mark with 1,158 rushing yards in 2015.
BISON, TERRIERS WILL RUN: Two of the top rushing teams in the FCS meet this week with North Dakota State ranked fifth at 268.1 yards per game and Wofford's triple-option attack seventh nationally with 254.0 yards per game. NDSU has rushed for over 300 yards in two of the last three contests after a season-low 108 at South Dakota State. Wofford is averaging 52 carries a game and rushed for 291 yards in last week's 28-10 win over Furman.
TOP RUSHING OPPONENTS: Wofford ran for 262 yards in the 2012 quarterfinals against a Bison team that had held its first 12 opponents to an average of 63.3 yards per game. Since then, only eight other NDSU opponents have rushed for 200 yards in a game and it remains the fourth-best rushing effort against NDSU back through the 2011 national championship season.
Most Opponent Rushing Yards, since 2011
277 - Northern Iowa, 10/10/2015
271 - Georgia Southern, 12/14/2012 (FCS semifinal)
267 - vs. Illinois State, 1/10/2015 (FCS championship)
262 - Wofford, 12/8/2012 (FCS quarterfinal)
253 - at Western Illinois, 10/4/2014
STOPPING THE RUN: The Bison, who have allowed just nine rushing TDs this year, continue to lead the Missouri Valley Football Conference in rushing defense with 87.7 yards per game (7th in FCS) and 2.76 yards per carry (8th in FCS). Only three other Division I NDSU teams have allowed fewer than 100 rushing yards per game in a full season.
NDSU Rushing Defense, since 2004
67.2 yards per game allowed in 2006 (2.5/carry)
87.7 yards per game allowed in 2017 (2.8/carry)
91.3 yards per game allowed in 2013 (2.9/carry)
93.9 yards per game allowed in 2012 (3.0/carry)
KLIEMAN, COX TAKE TOP MVFC HONORS: North Dakota State claimed three of the top five honors in the Missouri Valley Football Conference this year.
Chris Klieman was selected as the Bruce Craddock Coach of the Year for the first time in his career. Linebacker
Jabril Cox is the third player in conference history to sweep the Freshman of the Year and Newcomer of the Year awards, joining Northern Iowa quarterback Sawyer Kollmorgen and Youngstown State running back Martin Ruiz, and he is the first Bison player to win either award.
LEAGUE-BEST 11 ALL-CONFERENCE: North Dakota State had a league-high 11 players voted to the All-Missouri Valley Football Conference team, the third most for NDSU in its 10 years in the league. NDSU had six first team picks: fullback
Connor Wentz, right guard
Austin Kuhnert, long snapper
James Fisher, linebacker
Nick DeLuca, and safeties
Tre Dempsey and
Robbie Grimsley. Second team selections from NDSU were running back
Bruce Anderson, wide receiver
RJ Urzendowski, center
Tanner Volson, defensive tackle
Aaron Steidl and linebacker
Jabril Cox. Right tackle
Zack Johnson, kicker
Cam Pedersen, quarterback
Easton Stick and defensive tackle
Nate Tanguay earned honorable mention.
GRIMSLEY, STICK ACADEMIC HONORS: Junior safety
Robbie Grimsley was voted to the CoSIDA Academic All-District® team for the second straight season with a 3.56 GPA in criminal justice and is on the ballot for CoSIDA Academic All-America® honors. He and junior quarterback
Easton Stick (3.91, sport management) were voted to the Missouri Valley Football Conference for the second year in a row. Senior wide receiver
RJ Urzendowski (3.37, construction management) was an honorable mention to the MVFC team.
NATIONAL AWARD FINALISTS: North Dakota State has three finalists for the top four national awards presented by STATS FCS. For the third time in four years as head coach,
Chris Klieman is a finalist for the Eddie Robinson Award presented to the FCS coach of the year. Senior linebacker
Nick DeLuca is a finalist for the Buck Buchanan Award presented to the top defensive player, and linebacker
Jabril Cox is a finalist for the Jerry Rice Award presented to the top freshman in the FCS.
KLIEMAN WINS 50th GAME: Chris Klieman won his 50th game as North Dakota State head coach in the regular-season finale at Illinois State. He is just the fifth Bison coach to reach that mark and the second fastest to 50 wins behind
Ron Erhardt. Klieman has a 51-6 record at NDSU and has guided the Bison to their seventh straight conference championship and two national titles. The Bison are 28-4 in the MVFC the past four seasons, have gone 30-5 against FCS Top 25 teams, and have an FBS Top 25 win over No. 11 Iowa. North Dakota State is 11-1 this season and has an FCS-best six Top 25 victories.
DeLUCA SELECTED FOR SENIOR BOWL: North Dakota State linebacker
Nick DeLuca has accepted an invite to play in the Reese's Senior Bowl scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 27, in Mobile, Ala. The game will be televised live on NFL Network. DeLuca is the seventh NDSU player to be invited and the fourth since 2014 behind current Broncos OL
Billy Turner, Colts OL
Joe Haeg and Eagles QB
Carson Wentz. Other NDSU players in the Senior Bowl were WR
Stacy Robinson (1985), RB
Lamar Gordon (2002) and P
Mike Dragosavich (2008).
AFTER THE OPEN WEEK: NDSU's win over San Diego was the 26th straight after an open week in the regular season and playoffs since a 2005 home loss to UC Davis. That streak includes 16 home games, five road games and five national championship games in Frisco, Texas.
BOUNCING BACK: The win over South Dakota was NDSU's 15th straight victory after a loss. NDSU's last consecutive losses came in 2009 when the Bison lost five straight. Since then, South Dakota was the highest-rated opponent NDSU has faced after a loss, behind No. 18 Indiana State (2015) and No. 12 Western Illinois (2016).
BISON AT HOME: NDSU is 62-6 at home since 2010. The Bison have won 57 of the last 59 home games over non-conference opponents including 45 straight before last year's NCAA semifinal loss to James Madison. NDSU is 18-4 at home all-time against FCS Top 10 teams and 19-1 at home in the FCS playoffs. North Dakota State ranks sixth in FCS this year with an average home attendance of 18,530 and has drawn 18,000-plus to 54 straight home contests.
AFTER HALFTIME: North Dakota State has scored on its opening drive of the half 17 of 24 times this year with 15 touchdowns and two field goals. That includes touchdowns on the opening drive of the second half in 9 of 12 games. The Bison are averaging nearly 18 minutes in time of possession and outscoring opponents 235-56 after halftime.
INTERCEPTION LEADERS: Safety
Tre Dempsey leads NDSU with five interceptions and his 15 career picks are tied with Tremon Smith of Central Arkansas for second most among active FCS players behind Southern's Danny Johnson (16). Dempsey's 15 picks are third most in NDSU history behind
Marcus Williams (21) and
Steve Krumrei (16).
URZENDOWSKI ON NDSU CAREER LISTS: Wide receiver
RJ Urzendowski continues to climb the NDSU charts for receptions, yards and touchdowns. He has caught at least one pass in 50 of 57 career games.
NDSU Career Receptions
195 - Zach Vraa, 2011-15
178 - Kole Heckendorf, 2005-08
163 - Travis White, 2002-06
161 - Warren Holloway, 2008-11
147 - Ryan Smith, 2010-13
143 -
RJ Urzendowski, 2014-17
NDSU Career Receiving Yards
2957 - Zach Vraa, 2011-15
2732 - Kole Heckendorf, 2005-08
2544 - TR McDonald, 1990-93
2342 -
RJ Urzendowski, 2014-17
NDSU Career Receiving TDs
28 - Zach Vraa, 2011-15
26 - Tim Strehlow, 1996-99
24 - Len Kretchman, 1985-88
22 - TR McDonald, 1990-93
22 -
RJ Urzendowski, 2014-17
STICK SET TO PASS WENTZ IN COMPLETIONS: Junior quarterback
Easton Stick will make his 35th career start against Wofford needing only four completions to pass
Carson Wentz for third place in the NDSU career record book. Here is a look at the top four passers, statistically, in NDSU history:
Quarterback |
Comp. |
Att. |
Yards |
TD |
Starter W-L |
Brock Jensen, 2010-13 |
703 |
1124 |
8598 |
72 |
*47-5 |
Steve Walker, 2004-07 |
534 |
841 |
7033 |
60 |
30-6 |
Easton Stick, 2015- |
389 |
644 |
5467 |
52 |
31-3 |
Carson Wentz, 2012-15 |
392 |
612 |
5115 |
45 |
20-3 |
*FCS record 48 total wins |
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JORDHEIM, DeLUCA TIE RECORDS: Linebacker
Levi Jordheim's three fumble recoveries against Northern Iowa tied the NDSU record set by Don Meyer at Northern Michigan in 1976 and the Missouri Valley Football Conference record set by Missouri State's Dempster Jackson in 1985 vs. Southern Illinois. Linebacker
Nick DeLuca's two strip sacks tied the NDSU record of two forced fumbles done 31 times by 28 players, most recently by defensive end
Cole Jirik in the 2012 win at Illinois State.
TIGHT END PRODUCTION: NDSU tight ends have been a steady weapon in the NDSU passing game this season. Seniors
Connor Wentz and
Jeff Illies, junior
Nate Jenson and sophomore
Ben Ellefson have combined for 38 catches totaling 580 yards and eight TDs.
PLAYERS OF THE WEEK: North Dakota State has had seven players earn nine Missouri Valley Football Conference player of the week honors this season:
—
Tanner Volson, Offensive Line (2x)...Graded 100% assignment and 87% technique with zero sacks against Mississippi Valley State...NDSU averaged 17.5 yards per carry while in the game...Graded 97% assignment and 83% technique with team-high seven knockdowns and zero sacks in win over South Dakota.
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Robbie Grimsley, Defensive...Two interceptions, two pass breakups and four tackles at Eastern Washington...Part of a defense that held EWU to 73 yards in the final three quarters.
—
Lance Dunn, Offensive...Scored four TDs on four plays against Robert Morris...Had runs of 61, 5 and 45 yards and a 10-yard catch for 121 all-purpose yards.
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Jabril Cox, Newcomer (2x)...Team-high eight tackles including four on kickoff coverage, a fumble recovery and a tackle for loss as NDSU held Robert Morris to 57 total yards, four first downs and one trip past midfield...
STATS FCS Freshman of the Week after a career-high eight tackles with two sacks and another key tackle for loss in overtime of a win at Youngstown State
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Cam Pedersen, Special Teams...Kicked a 36-yard game-winning field goal in overtime at Youngstown State...Also had a 19-yarder to tie the game at halftime and went 3 of 3 on PATs.
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Easton Stick, Offensive...Completed first 11 passes and finished 11 of 12 for 307 yards and a TD in the win over South Dakota...Also rushed seven times for 39 yards and a TD.
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Jalen Allison, Defensive...Team-high and career-high 10 tackles with one sack in the win over South Dakota...Part of a defensive effort that registered four sacks, nine QB hurries, and held USD to 14 points, its lowest scoring output in two years.
SENIOR CLASS: North Dakota State's 20-man senior class includes 17 fifth-year seniors who arrived on campus for the 15-0 national championship season in 2013 plus wide receiver
RJ Urzendowski, who played as a true freshman in 2014. The Bison have a 51-6 record since 2014 with two NCAA FCS championships, four Missouri Valley Football Conference titles, a 31-3 home record, an 11-1 postseason record, and a 30-5 record over FCS Top 25 opponents.
WILSON THIRD FRESHMAN TO PLAY: Running back
Seth Wilson from Holmen, Wis., made is debut in the Northern Iowa game and is the third true freshman to play for NDSU this season. Defensive end
Logan McCormick from Appleton, Wis., and cornerback
Josh Hayes from Lakeland, Fla., have played since the season opener against Mississippi Valley State. They were the first true freshmen to play for NDSU since 2015. NDSU redshirted its entire freshman class in 2016, the only time that has happened in 14 years of Division I football.
PEDERSEN TIES PAT RECORD: Junior placekicker
Cam Pedersen tied the 49-year old school record of 10 PAT kicks made in the 72-7 win over Mississippi Valley State. The mark was set in 1968 by
Ken Blazei against Augustana (S.D.). Pedersen ranks third all-time at NDSU for PAT kicks made (166) and attempted (172). He also ranks fourth in field goals made (36) and attempted (57). Pedersen connected on a season-long 47-yard field goal vs. San Diego.
RECORD DAY FOR BISON OFFENSE: North Dakota State set highs for points, rushing yards and total offense in 14 years of Division I football in the 72-7 win over Mississippi Valley State. The 683 yards of total offense were the most for the Bison in 29 years and the fourth highest in school single-game history. NDSU's 498 rushing yards ranked seventh in school history. NDSU scored touchdowns on its first five possessions with only one drive longer than three plays, and the Bison built a 44-0 lead early in the second quarter.
EARLY-SEASON SCORING: North Dakota State's 168 points scored through the first three games was the most in NDSU's Division I history and second most in the modern era of the program. The 2000 NCAA playoff team scored 169 over its first three contests. NDSU's previous Division I high through three games was 140 points by the 2012 team.
DECADE LEADER: North Dakota State's 103 wins this decade are more than any other program in college football. NDSU is 94-8 since the beginning of 2011, the first of five national championship seasons. North Dakota State holds the distinction of being the winningest Division II program of the 1980s, going 103-20-2 from 1980-89 with four national titles in that span.
FCS Winningest Teams, 2010s (by wins)
103 - North Dakota State (103-13)
85 - Sam Houston State (85-26)
78 - Eastern Washington (78-28)
76 - Jacksonville State (76-24)
71 - James Madison (71-28)
70 - New Hampshire (70-34)
FCS Winningest Teams, 2010s (by pct.)
.888 - North Dakota State (103-13)
.800 - Harvard (64-16)
.766 - Sam Houston State (85-26)
.760 - Jacksonville State (76-24)
.736 - Eastern Washington (78-28)
MORE THAN 700 WINS: North Dakota State has played 1,112 games with a 707-371-34 record in 120 seasons of football, good for a .651 winning percentage. Only four Ivy League teams each with at least 20 more years of football have more wins at the FCS level: Yale (902), Harvard (869), Penn (850) and Princeton (821). Northern Iowa has the second most wins among Missouri Valley Football Conference programs with 663. NDSU's 94 victories since 2011 are more than any other team in Division I football ahead of Alabama (87), Clemson (82), Sam Houston State (79) and Ohio State (78).
SUCCESS VS. THE FBS: North Dakota State has a 9-3 record against Football Bowl Subdivision opponents and has won six in a row against FBS foes since 2010 with wins at Kansas (6-3), Minnesota (37-24), Colorado State (22-7), Kansas State (24-21), Iowa State (34-14) and 11th-ranked Iowa (23-21). NDSU has three future FBS games against Oregon in 2020, Arizona in 2022 and Colorado in 2024. NDSU's first three FBS wins were against Ball State (2006), Central Michigan (2007) and Minnesota (2007).
BIG LEAGUE BISON: North Dakota State will host Butler at Target Field in Minneapolis in the season opener August 31, 2019. It will be the first Division I football game at the Major League Baseball stadium, which hosted a Division III game this year between in-state rivals St. Thomas and Saint John's. NDSU has more than 12,000 alumni in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area and nearly 26,000 alumni across Minnesota. The game is in addition to a six-game home schedule at Gate City Bank Field at the Fargodome in 2019, which is a 12-game regular season.