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Nevada Wolf Pack football

The Nevada Wolf Pack football program represents the University of Nevada, Reno (commonly referred to as "Nevada" in athletics) in college football. The Wolf Pack competes in the Mountain West Conference at the Football Bowl Subdivision level of the NCAA Division I. It was founded on October 24, 1896, as the Sagebrushers in Reno, Nevada.

Nevada Wolf Pack football
First season1896
Athletic directorStephanie Rempe
Head coachKen Wilson
2nd season, 2–10 (.167)
StadiumMackay Stadium
(capacity: 27,000)
FieldChris Ault Field
Year built1966 (1966)
Field surfaceNatural grass (1966–1999)
FieldTurf (2000–present)
LocationReno, Nevada
NCAA divisionDivision I FBS
ConferenceMountain West
DivisionWest (2013–2019, 2021–present)
Past conferencesIndependent (1896–1924)
Far Western (1925–1939)
Independent (1940–1953)
Far Western (1954–1968)
College Division Independent (1969–1972)
Division II Independent (1973–1977)
Division I-AA Independent (1978)
Big Sky (1979–1991)
Big West (1992–1999)
WAC (2000–2011)
All-time record575–511–33 (.529)
Bowl record7–12 (.368)
Conference titles14
RivalriesUNLV (rivalry)
Boise State (rivalry)
San Jose State
Fresno State
UC Davis
Consensus All-Americans1 (1991)
ColorsNavy blue and silver[1]
   
Fight songHail to our Sturdy Team
MascotAlphie and Wolfie Jr.
Marching bandPride of the Sierra
WebsiteNevadaWolfPack.com

The Wolf Pack's home field is Mackay Stadium, located at the north end of its campus in Reno, having been moved from it original location which opened on October 23, 1909. The "new" Mackay Stadium saw its first game 57 years ago on October 1, 1966 with a seating capacity of 7,500 and has undergone several renovations. The stadium seats 27,000 and has played to crowds in excess (see attendance records), but decreased its capacity from 30,000 to 26,000 by the 2016 season to increase the quality of the experience in the stadium and later increased its capacity to 27,000 by the 2017 season.[2] The elevation of its playing field is 4,610 feet (1,410 m) above sea level.

Nevada has had three individuals inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. They are coach Chris Ault, running back Frank Hawkins, and former coach Buck Shaw. Fullback Marion Motley is the only Nevada player to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Three-time Super Bowl champion Charles Mann played for Nevada from 1979 to 1982 while being named Most Valuable Defensive Lineman in 1982.[3] Mann was inducted into the Nevada Athletics Hall of Fame in 1995.[4] Another Nevada alumnus with a long career in the NFL was free safety Brock Marion. He was selected in the seventh round of the 1993 NFL Draft by the Dallas Cowboys where he played most of his career, and won two Super Bowls. Marion was selected to three Pro Bowls and one All-Pro team.

Nevada has not fielded a Heisman Trophy winner; however, Stan Heath was fifth in Heisman voting in 1948 and Colin Kaepernick (QB) was eighth among 2010 candidates. Nevada football's rich tradition has produced 40 All-Americans and 45 All-American selections. Nevada's only consensus All-American was Matt Clafton (LB) in 1991, which was Nevada's last year in the Division I-AA; the Wolf Pack is awaiting its first FBS consensus All-American. The Wolf Pack has also produced two Academic All-Americans: David Heppe (P, 1982) and Erick Streelman (TE, 2002)[5]

History

Early history (1896–1958)

 
Allen Steckle served as head coach from 1901 to 1903

Nevada's football history began on October 24, 1896. However, there was no football program from 1906 to 1914 (only rugby), in 1918 (due to World War I) and in 1951.[6]

In 1896, the university, at that time the only institution of higher learning in the state of Nevada and called by the moniker Nevada State University, investigated the possibility of adding football to their short list of athletic programs and hired Frank Taylor from the University of California, Berkeley for the purpose of developing and fielding the U's first gridiron squadron. They played only three games that year, the first was Wadsworth AC and the second of which was scheduled against the Belmont preparatory school to take place on "the hill" at the original Mackay Stadium, located in the depression at the middle of campus where the Mack Social Sciences, Reynolds School of Journalism and the auspicious Lecture Hall currently exist. The result was a complete debacle as Belmont relentlessly thrashed the hapless Sagebrushers (later Wolf Pack) by the tally of 70–0. "But," the University of Nevada yearbook Artemesia would report five years later, "the team learned something about football by watching the Belmont boys play." Two weeks later and the 'Brushers met up with the Berkeley "Second Eleven" with much more favorable results (with NSU only giving up forty points). "Thus the initial chapter of the athletic history of the University was one of defeat", according to the 1901 Artemesia.

From 1901 to 1903, Allen Steckle served as the head football coach at the University of Nevada. In 1903, he was also appointed to the position as the university's physical director.[7] In his three seasons as the head coach, he compiled a 6–9–2 record. When Steckle's Nevada Sagebrush team defeated the University of California in 1903, it was the cause of a statewide celebration. The entire front page of the Daily Nevada State Journal was given to coverage of the game, and the banner headline read: "California's Proud Colors Lowered by the Doughty Eleven from Sagebrushdom".[8] Steckle's picture appeared on the front page, and the paper praised his efforts in turning Nevada into a football power:

Out of the eighty students of the N.S.U. have been selected eleven young men who were moulded into shape by Dr. Steckle, the best football coach who ever came to the Coast. He made of them the peers of the flower of the California universities.[8]

The victory of a university with only 80 students over the University of California with its 3,000 students was hailed as a historic accomplishment, and "Coach Steckle's brand of 'roughhouse'" play was given much of the credit.[8]

Steckle's star players at Nevada from 1901 to 1903 were his younger brother Ivan X. Steckle, who played halfback, and Abe Steckle, who played tackle. Ivan Steckle was reportedly "the hero of all Nevada during the football season of 1903, when in a game with the University of California on the U.C. field, he grabbed the football close to the Nevada goal line and made a wonderful 86-yard run to the California goal line, scoring a touchdown for the Sagebrush players and bringing victory to the team."[9] Ivan left Nevada after the 1903 season to follow his older brother to the University of Michigan Medical School. Ivan died from typhoid fever in 1909, and Steckle accompanied his brother's body to the family's old home in Freeport, Michigan.[9]

In 1919, a Nevada newspaper rated Steckle as the best football coach Nevada ever had and described his accomplishments as follows:

It was under the coaching of Dr. Steckle that Nevada was able to defeat the University of California and play a tie with Stanford as well as bang it over the crack athletic club teams that San Francisco boasted when the great college game was in its hey dey. He was rated at that time as one of the best coaches in the West.[10]

Steckle was also remembered at Nevada for his ability to instill "college spirit" in the school's student body. In 1919, a Nevada newspaper noted that "there was more enthusiasm displayed in college athletics while he was coach than there has been in all the years since he left."[10] As a medical doctor and athletic coach, Steckle was also known for his belief in physical conditioning. He was known to require every athlete to be in perfect physical condition before playing in any intercollegiate or "big" game.[10] After his success with the 1903 Nevada team, Steckle was offered a higher salary to take over as the football coach at Oregon State.[11]

In April 1919, Ray Courtright was hired to serve as director of athletics and head coach of the football, basketball, baseball and track teams.[12][13] Courtright was Nevada's football coach for five years from 1919 to 1923. During his years at Nevada, Courtright was "affectionately known as 'Corky'."[14] In his first year as Nevada's coach, Courtright led the team to an 8–1–1 record, doubling the highest season win total of any prior Nevada football team. The only loss came in the first game of the season, a 13–7 loss to the California freshman team. Courtright's 1919 Nevada team outscored its opponents 450 to 32, including scores of 132–0 over Pacific, 102–0 over the Mare Island Marines, and 56–0 over UC Davis.[15] At the time, Courtright called the 1919 Nevada team "the best team I ever had," and others called it the "best team that ever played on Mackay Field."[16] At the end of the 1919 season, the Reno Evening Gazette wrote:

It was a good move when the students and regents decided last spring to go east and get one of the best men to come to Nevada and build up a football team. In selecting a coach they also demanded an all-round man, who could coach basket ball, track, baseball and put into operation a regular system of physical culture for all the students as well. Coach Courtright fitted the requirements and the football season proves the wisdom of the selection ...[13]

In 1920, Courtright's team finished with a record of 7–3–1 with wins over both the Utah Utes (14–7) and Utah State Aggies (21–0), and losses to California (79–7), USC (38–7), and Santa Clara (27–21).[17] Courtright never reached the same level of success after the 1920 season, finishing 4–3–1 in 1921, 5–3–1 in 1922 and 2–3–3 in 1923.[17] However, his most notable game at Nevada was a scoreless tie with California on November 3, 1923. The 1923 California team was known as the "Wonder Team."[14][18] It had gone through three full seasons without a loss, and had outscored its opponents 151 to 0 in the first seven games of the 1923 season. Nevada had only 15 men on its football team in 1923 and was considered to be a decided underdog. When Courtright returned to the Nevada campus in 1961, he was shown souvenirs of his time at the school. Ty Cobb, then a sports columnist, accompanied Courtright and wrote: "Courtright chuckled when he saw a huge framed layout of newspaper headlines from 1923 – when Nevada tied the great California 'Wonder Team.' 'Yep, that WAS quite a game,' he chortled."[18] Courtright compiled a record of 26–13–7 while at Nevada, and his teams outscored opponents by a combined total of 993 to 464.[19] Shortly before his resignation in 1924, the Nevada State Journal credited Courtright with having "brought the Nevada eleven from the class of a second rate team to its present rank among the best of the western college football squads."[20]

Jim Aiken left Akron to take over Nevada's football program in 1939, and served as head coach for seven seasons, compiling a record of 38–26–4.[21] Aiken resigned as head coach after the 1946 season to accept the head coaching position at Oregon.[21]

Nevada experienced back to back nine-win seasons under Aiken's successor, Joe Sheeketski, 9–2 campaigns in 1947 and 1948, but the wheels came off the next two seasons as Nevada compiled records of 5–5 and 1–9, resulting in his resignation.

Jake Lawlor was the head coach from 1952 to 1954.

Gordon McEachron accepted the head coaching position at Nevada in 1955 for a $7,300 salary.[22][23] The university had demoted its football program from major college football status in 1951 due to a budget deficit and had struggled to remain competitive.[24] In 1956, the Nevada alumni association raised $4,500 for a part-time work program for football players.[25] The initiative, however, failed, and in October 1957, McEachron supported the players in their petition for a renewal of free room and board for the team during the season.[22][24] They offered to work part-time campus jobs in exchange. McEachron said, "We're not trying to go big-time again, just to compete on an equal basis."[24] McEachron offered his resignation on October 30, 1957, which reportedly "came as a complete surprise" to the athletic director. Art Broten said, "But I am totally indifferent—Mac took the job with the understanding we gave no aid to athletes."[22] McEachron remained on for one more year[26] and resigned in 1959. He had compiled a 6–23–1 record at Nevada.[27]

Dick Trachok era (1959–1968)

In April 1959, Nevada hired Dick Trachok as its head coach.[28] In November 1960, Trachok canceled a six-hour flight to Denver in favor of a 32-hour bus ride after a plane crash killed sixteen players from California Polytechnic.[29] The Nevada flight had been booked with Arctic-Pacific, the same carrier that Cal Poly had used.[29] Trachok finished his coaching tenure with a 40–48–3 record, and took over as Nevada's athletic director. He held that post until 1986.[30] In 1975, the university inducted Trachok into the Nevada Athletics Hall of Fame.[30]

Jerry Scattini era (1969–1975)

The University of Nevada, Reno hired Scattini as its head football coach, a position he held from 1969 to 1975. His teams compiled a 37–36–1 record.[31] Scattini was fired in December 1975 after a 3–8 season and was replaced with UNLV assistant Chris Ault.[32]

Chris Ault era, first stint (1976–1992)

 
Chris Ault

The winningest coach in school history is Chris Ault who was hired in 1976 after spending 3 years as assistant coach at UNLV under head coach Ron Meyer. Both Ault and Meyer left UNLV on the same year.

The Wolf Pack competed in Division I-AA since the formation of that division in 1978, moving up from Division II and were undefeated as in the regular season.[33] Before joining the Big Sky Conference in 1979,[34][35] Nevada competed in the Far West Conference and was an independent in football for a decade. Nevada played in the Division I-AA playoffs in its first two seasons, when just four teams were selected. They returned to the national semi-finals in 1983 and 1985,[36] when the playoffs included 12 teams and 1986 with a 16-team field. The Wolf Pack reached the national championship game in 1990[37][38] and the quarterfinals in 1991.

In its 14 years in Division I-AA, Nevada made the playoffs seven times, and went undefeated during the regular season three times (1978, 1986, 1991), compiling an overall record of 122–47–1 (.721). Nevada had a record of 9–7 in the I-AA playoffs during their time in the Big Sky and in 13 years of membership, the Wolf Pack won four conference titles (1983, 1986, 1990, 1991). During most of its I-AA era, the school was known as "Nevada-Reno," "UNR" or "Reno." [35][36][39][40][41][42]

In its final season in Division I-AA in 1991, the top-ranked Wolf Pack recorded what still stands as one of the biggest comebacks in Division I NCAA football history when they defeated Weber State 55–49, after trailing by 35 points in the second half at home.[43] Backup sophomore quarterback Chris Vargas led a second-half Nevada comeback of 41 unanswered points to win the game.[44] After the game, Vargas was given the nickname, "The Comeback Kid," and would become one of the greatest quarterbacks to play for the Wolf Pack.

Nevada moved up to Division I-A in 1992 when it joined the Big West Conference. The change from Division I-AA to Division I-A brought a lot of excitement to Wolf Pack fans. That year, Nevada became the first NCAA football team to win a conference championship in its first Division I-A season. Nevada won the 1992 Big West title after beating Utah State in the final conference game of the season. Led by Vargas again coming off the bench, Nevada came from behind late in the 4th quarter to win, 48–47.

Jeff Horton era (1993)

Jeff Horton was promoted from wide receiver coach to head coach following Ault's first retirement. Horton resigned as head coach after the end of the season and later joined UNLV by the following year.

Chris Ault era, second stint (1994–1995)

Jeff Tisdel era (1996–1999)

Jeff Tisdel was an All-American quarterback for the Wolf Pack in the 1970s, then in Division II. He was promoted from assistant coach to head coach following Ault's second retirement. Tisdel's first season saw the Wolf Pack go 9–3 with a win in the Las Vegas Bowl, but from there things went downhill. In 1997, the Wolf Pack compiled a record of 5–6, then a 6–5 mark in 1998 before a 3–9 mark in 1999 and Tisdel resigned after the end of the season.[45]

Chris Tormey era (2000–2003)

Following the 1999 season, Idaho head coach Chris Tormey moved south from his alma mater on the Palouse to lead Nevada, which was leaving the Big West to join the WAC.[46][47] He succeeded alumnus Jeff Tisdel and compiled a 16–31 (.340) record over four seasons (20002003).[48] While his win totals improved each season (2, 3, 5, 6), he was released from the fifth and final season of his contract at the end of the 2003 season, the final game marked by a 56–3 blowout loss at No. 18 Boise State. Most notably, Tormey failed to defeat bitter in-state rival UNLV in the annual Battle for the Fremont Cannon; his teams were also winless against Boise State and Fresno State.[48] The Wolf Pack did defeat the Washington Huskies 28–17 in Seattle that final season (UW finished at 6–6.) Tormey was fired after the end of the season and athletic director Ault hired himself to succeed Tormey. In 2000, Nevada left the Big West and joined the Western Athletic Conference (WAC), hoping to upgrade its athletic program.

Chris Ault era, third stint (2004–2012)

In 2007, the Wolf Pack and the Boise State Broncos played in a historic game on October 14, setting a new NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision record for total points scored with 136. Boise State won the game 69–67 in the second half of the fourth overtime period, when Broncos LB Tim Brady stopped Nevada's freshman QB Colin Kaepernick on the mandatory two-point conversion attempt.

In 2009, Nevada players QB Colin Kaepernick, RB Vai Taua, and RB Luke Lippincott became the first trio of teammates in NCAA history to each rush for more than 1,000 yards in the same season.[49]

In 2010, Nevada would only lose one game against Hawaii on its way to a 13–1 record beating ranked California and Boise State teams, along with beating BYU on the road and Boston College in the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl. Led by Colin Kaepernick, Nevada would win a share of its first WAC title since 2005, and would ruin No. 4 Boise State's certain invitation to a BCS game.

On August 18, 2010, Nevada accepted an invitation to the Mountain West Conference along with Fresno State. Nevada and Fresno State have left the WAC and started the play in the Mountain West Conference in 2012. Both programs have joined Boise State who also left the WAC for the Mountain West in 2011. The move to the Mountain West placed Nevada in the same conference as in-state rival UNLV for the first time since 1995.

In 2012, Nevada left the WAC and moved to the Mountain West Conference (MW), along with fellow WAC member Fresno State, as part of the 2010–13 Mountain West Conference realignment. This move was influenced by Boise State's entrance, the increased strength of schedule and the intensity of Nevada's rivalries.

Ault was the head coach for Nevada for 28 seasons and was involved with Nevada football for 40 years before stepping down as head coach after the 2012 season. His record as Nevada head coach ended at 233 wins, 109 losses and 1 tie. Ault won 10 conference titles in the Big Sky, Big West and Western Athletic Conference. The only problem was his 2–8 bowl record. Ault brought popularity to the Pistol Offense when he implemented it after returning to the sideline during the 2004 season. Since then, the Pistol Offense has been used by multiple teams at every level of football including the NFL. Ault also served as the Nevada Athletics Director from 1986 to 2004 and played quarterback for Nevada from 1965 to 1967. In 2002, Ault was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. The field at Mackay Stadium was named Chris Ault Field in 2013 in appreciation for his numerous accomplishments.

Brian Polian era (2013–2016)

 
Brian Polian

Texas A&M special teams coordinator and tight ends coach Brian Polian was hired as Nevada's 25th head coach following Ault's third retirement.[50] Under Polian, the Wolf Pack compiled a record of 23–27 that included back to back seven-win campaigns and bowl appearances.[51] Nevada and Polian agreed to part ways after the 2016 season.[52] Polian later returned to the Notre Dame Fighting Irish football as special teams coordinator under head coach Brian Kelly after previously serving under head coach Charlie Weis from 2005 to 2009.

Jay Norvell era (2017–2021)

 
Jay Norvell

On December 6, 2016, Arizona State wide receivers coach and passing game coordinator Jay Norvell was hired as Nevada's 26th head coach.[53] Norvell's Wolf Pack posted four winning seasons in his five-year tenure and appeared in four post-season bowl games. Norvell led quarterback Carson Strong to receiving the Mountain West Conference Offensive Player of the Year award in both 2020 and 2021, becoming the fifth player in conference history to win the award in back-to-back years.[54] On December 6, 2021, it was announced that Norvell was hired by Colorado State as their next head coach, ending his time at Nevada.[55]

It was announced that Nevada running back coach Vai Taua would act as interim head coach and coach the Wolf Pack in the 2021 Quick Lane Bowl.[56]

Conference affiliations

[57]

Conference championships

Nevada has won 14 conference championship as a member of four different conferences as of 2022.[57]

Season Conference Record Conference record
1932 † Far Western 3–3–2 2–0–1
1933 4–4 3–0
1939 5–4 3–0
1983 Big Sky 10–4[n 1] 6–1
1986 13–1 7–0
1990 13–2 7–1
1991 12–1 8–0
1992 Big West 7–5 5–1
1994 † 9–2 5–1
1995 9–3 6–0
1996 † 9–3 4–1
1997 † 5–6 4–1
2005 † WAC 9–3 7–1
2010 † 13–1 7–1

† Co-championship

Playoff records

Year Playoff round Opponent Result
1978 Semifinal Massachusetts L 21–44
1979 Semifinal at Eastern Kentucky L 30–332OT
1983 1st Round at Idaho State W 27–20
Quarterfinal North Texas W 20–17OT
Semifinal at Southern Illinois L 7–23
1985 1st Round Arkansas State W 24–23
Quarterfinal at Furman L 12–35
1986 1st Round Idaho W 27–7
Quarterfinal Tennessee State W 33–6
Semi-Final Georgia Southern L 38–48
1990 1st Round Louisiana-Monroe W 27–14
Quarterfinal Furman W 42–353OT
Semifinal Boise State W 59–523OT
Championship at Georgia Southern L 13–36
1991 1st Round McNeese State W 22–16
Quarterfinal Youngstown State L 28–30

The Division I-AA playoffs included only four teams in 1978;
the field was expanded to eight in 1981, twelve in 1982, and sixteen in 1986.

Bowl games

Nevada has participated in 18 bowl games, with the Wolf Pack garnering a record of 7–12.

Season Coach Bowl Opponent Result
1947 Joe Sheeketski Salad Bowl North Texas W 13–6
1948 Joe Sheeketski Harbor Bowl Villanova L 7–27
1992 Chris Ault Las Vegas Bowl Bowling Green L 34–35
1995 Chris Ault Las Vegas Bowl Toledo L 37–40OT
1996 Jeff Tisdel Las Vegas Bowl Ball State W 18–15
2005 Chris Ault Hawaii Bowl UCF W 49–48OT
2006 Chris Ault MPC Computers Bowl Miami (FL) L 20–21
2007 Chris Ault New Mexico Bowl New Mexico L 0–23
2008 Chris Ault Humanitarian Bowl Maryland L 35–42
2009 Chris Ault Hawaii Bowl SMU L 10–45
2010 Chris Ault Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl Boston College W 20–13
2011 Chris Ault Hawaii Bowl Southern Miss L 17–24
2012 Chris Ault New Mexico Bowl Arizona L 48–49
2014 Brian Polian New Orleans Bowl Louisiana–Lafayette L 3–16
2015 Brian Polian Arizona Bowl Colorado State W 28–23
2018 Jay Norvell Arizona Bowl Arkansas State W 16–13OT
2019 Jay Norvell Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Ohio L 21–30
2020 Jay Norvell Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Tulane W 38–27
2021 Vai Taua Quick Lane Bowl Western Michigan L 24–52

† = Interim head coach

Rivalries

UNLV

The Battle for Nevada

The Nevada and UNLV Football programs have a strong disdain for each other. The in-state rivalry started on November 22, 1969, and had not been played from 1980 to 1982 and in 1984, 1986 and 1988 respectively. Nevada maintains an overall 27–18 lead in the series. The Fremont Cannon was introduced as the rivalry trophy in 1970 by Bill Ireland, who attended Nevada and was UNLV's first football coach.

Unlike the Rivalry with Boise State, the Fremont Cannon rivalry has lacked many games of importance. Nevada and UNLV have spent many years in different conferences. The mid-1990s being the exception when both schools were in the Big West. This time period also marks where a lot of the bitterness between the two schools came from. Nevada had just moved to the Big West from Division I-AA and had enjoyed success after winning a conference title in 1992. After his first coaching retirement, Chris Ault was replaced by Jeff Horton as the head coach in 1993. After one season Horton left for the same position at rival UNLV. Chris Ault would return to the Nevada sideline to coach Nevada in 1994 and 1995 until he could find another coach. In 1994, Nevada and UNLV would go on to become co-champions of the Big West, but UNLV won the head-to-head game against Nevada sending them to the post season bowl game. The next season the game was marred by pre and post game fights between both teams and with many fights between fans in the stands. Nevada would go on to win the game and the conference title outright. Since then the rivalry has lost some of its luster, but as of 2012, Nevada and UNLV became members of the same conference once again.

The Fremont Cannon is the heaviest and most expensive trophy in college football.[59][60] The current holder of the trophy is Nevada after defeating UNLV on October 31, 2020.

Boise State

Nevada has a long-standing rivalry with Boise State; the teams first met on September 25, 1971, and have played each other over 45 times as of 2022. The rivalry with Boise State does not seem to contain the same amount of bitterness as Nevada's intrastate rivalry against UNLV.

Some of the most important games in the history of both programs have been played against each other. In 1990, Nevada won the Big Sky Championship with an overall season record of 13–2. Nevada's only regular season loss was a 30–14 conference loss to the Broncos in Boise. Nevada and Boise State would both go on to the Division I-AA playoffs. The two teams met in the 1990 Division I-AA semifinals in Reno for a rematch of their earlier battle that year. With the winner going to the championship, the game took 3 overtime sessions. Nevada fullback Ray Whalen scored the decisive touchdown in the third overtime with an 8-yard run into the end zone. Nevada's defense held Boise State after the score on their turn during the alternating overtime sessions. This game was the second game in a row that Nevada needed 3 overtime periods to finish the game. (Nevada had defeated Furman the week prior in a triple overtime game.) There have been no other games postseason games played between the two teams to date. Nevada went to lose in the finals to Georgia Southern by a score of 36–13 in Statesboro, Georgia.[38]

In 2006, Nevada and Boise State would meet in Reno in Boise State's final regular season game. Boise State won the game, capping off an undefeated regular season and giving the Broncos a berth into the Fiesta Bowl. This would be Boise State's first BCS bowl game, where they would go on to beat Oklahoma in dramatic fashion. In 2008, the Broncos traveled to Reno, once again with aspirations of an undefeated regular season and BCS appearance. The Broncos defeated the Wolfpack in a nail-biter, coming down to the last play of the game. In 2009, the Wolfpack traveled to Boise, ID to face the Broncos in the hopes of foiling their undefeated season and BCS aspirations. Boise would end up winning the game and went on to win their second Fiesta Bowl in 4 years against TCU. In 2010, the two teams met in what would come to be known as the greatest win in Nevada football history and the most devastating loss in Boise State football history. Nevada overcame a 24-7 halftime deficit to tie Boise with 10 seconds remaining. On the last play of the game, Boise quarterback Kellen Moore threw a hail mary to receiver Titus Young, who dove and caught the ball close to the goal line with one second left. Extreme drama would ensue, as Boise State kicker Kyle Brotzman missed a chip-shot field goal from straight ahead, sending the game into overtime. Kyle Brotzman went on to miss another chip-shot field goal in overtime and the game was sealed by a field goal from Nevada's Anthony Martinez. Nevada beat Boise State 34–31, ending the Broncos' chances of playing in the Rose Bowl, and at the time, a potential BCS National Title. In 2011, Boise was once again undefeated and ranked in the top 10 when the Wolfpack visited Boise. With the usual BCS aspirations on the line, the Broncos defeated the Wolfpack at home in a fairly non-competitive matchup. This would be the last game that was crucially important between the two programs. Since 2011, the rivalry heat has continued, however, neither team has had much to lose in comparison to the games played between 2004 and 2011.

Fresno State

The Sierra Showdown

The 'Sierra Showdown' is named after the Sierra Nevada mountain range that runs along the California-Nevada border and is near the two cities of Fresno, CA and Reno, NV. As recent as November 2022 there was case made for the Nevada-Fresno State football game to add a Sierra Showdown Trophy [61] Paul Loeffler, the voice of the Fresno State Bulldogs, suggested on Twitter that Nevada and Fresno State should play for the Sierra Showdown Trophy that is half silver (for the Silver State) and half gold (for the Golden State). Loeffler was quoted as saying "You guys are on the eastern side of the Sierra. You're looking at the other side of the mountains that we're looking at from the western side. We have to go through or over that pass to play each other. We've been doing it forever. So why not make that mountain the symbol of this rivalry?" The Wolf Pack and Bulldogs have played each other 54 times. The series began in 1923 and has been played every season since 1998. The 54 match ups are more games than Nevada has played UNLV (48 times) or Boise State (45 times), two of its other main rivals. Fresno State is one of Nevada's two protected Mountain West Conference rivalries (along with UNLV) when the conference shifts to one division in 2023, meaning they will play every year. Fresno State leads the all-time series 31-22-1 as of 2022, including a 15–11 mark since the teams began playing regularly again in 1994.

San Jose State

The Sagebrushers/Wolf Pack and Spartans have met up over 35 times on the gridiron and Nevada leads the rivalry series 23-11-2 as of 2022. The Wolf Pack won the rivalry's first game, 6–0 in Reno, Nevada on Thanksgiving Day 1899. Bob Brule scored the game's only touchdown and fell into the water of an irrigation ditch behind the end zone, followed by three Cal State Normal School (San Jose State) Spartan players. The two schools did not play from 1901 to 1930 and again from 1949 to 1991. The Wolf Pack was 2-4-2 against San Jose State after the first eight games in the rivalry but has gone 21-6-0 since 1941. [62]

The 2 schools main campuses are approximately 250 miles apart,[63] and have played in the same conferences since 1992, 1st in the Big West Conference, in the 1990s, then in the 2000s the Spartans and Wolf Pack were both apart of WAC, Western Athletic Conference, and are division rivals in the Mountain West today.

Both schools are also the oldest public higher education institutions in their respective states of California and Nevada. San Jose State University was founded in 1857 while the University of Nevada, Reno was founded in 1874.[64]

UC Davis

The Aggie-Pack Battle

UC Davis and Nevada have not played each other since 2013, but have a historical rivalry dating back to the first match up in 1915 when the University Farm School Aggies beat the Nevada Sagebrushers 14–0 in Carson City, Nevada. They have played each other 54 times since.[65] The "Aggie-Pack" battle would regularly have old-fashioned rooters buses travel 146 miles (2.5 hours) down I-80 for this rivalry that was regularly "a battle for West Coast small-college supremacy ... in fact, the mid-November 1977 Nevada-UCD matchup drew 12,800 fans to Toomey Field, which still stands as a home attendance record ... and yes, the crowd-pleasing Aggies prevailed, 37-21 ..."[66] Nevada leads the series 29-21-3 as of 2022.

Retired numbers

No. Player Position Career Ref.
27 Frank Hawkins RB 1977–80 [67]
41 Marion Motley FB 1940–42 [67]

Hawkins was a three-time All-American (Division I-AA), and led Division I-AA in rushing twice. Selected in the tenth round of the 1981 NFL Draft by the Oakland Raiders, he played seven seasons with the Raiders and was a member of the 1984 team that won Super Bowl XVIII. He rushed for 5,333 yards at Nevada and also had 11 consecutive games in a season with at least 100 rushing yards per game. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1997.

Marion Motley played three seasons with the Wolf Pack,[68] and has been considered by many as "The Jackie Robinson of Football." Motley was one of four black players to break professional football's color barrier when he signed with the Cleveland Browns in 1946, and helped lead the Browns to four straight AAFC titles and the 1950 NFL title in their first year in the league. Motley was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1968 and was selected to the NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time Team in 1994.

College Football Hall of Fame

Name Years Position Inducted Ref
Buck Shaw 1925-1928 Head Coach 1972 [69]
Frank Hawkins 1977-1980 RB 1997 [70]
Chris Ault 1976-2012 Head Coach 2002 [71]

The Wolf Pack have two coaches and one player inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. The field at Mackay Stadium was named Chris Ault Field in 2013 in appreciation for Chris Ault's numerous accomplishments. While, Buck Shaw Stadium at Santa Clara University is named after famed coach Buck Shaw's numerous accomplishments. Frank Hawkins was a three-time All-American, and led Division I-AA in rushing twice and rushed for 5,333 yards total while at Nevada.

Pro Football Hall of Fame

Inducted Player POS Seasons at Nevada
1968 Marion Motley FB 1940-1942

Motley was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1968 and was selected to the NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time Team in 1994. Marion Motley has been considered by many as "The Jackie Robinson of Football." Motley was one of four black players to break professional football's color barrier when he signed with the Cleveland Browns in 1946, and helped lead the Browns to four straight AAFC titles and the 1950 NFL title.

National and Conference Awards

Eddie Robinson Award
Year Name Position
1991 Chris Ault Coach

The Eddie Robinson Award is awarded annually to college football's top head coach in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (formerly Division I-AA). It was established in 1987.

NFF Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award
Year Name Position
2015 James Dobrich LB

All-Americans

Nevada has had 1- Consensus 1st Team All-American, in program history as of the end of the 2022 season.[72]

Name Year Position Team Ref
James Bradshaw 1919 QB 1st [73]
James Bradshaw 1921 HB 2nd [74]
Buster McClure 1944 DT 3rd/ UP-4th [75]
Buster McClure 1945 DT 3rd [76]
Stan Heath 1948 QB 1st/2nd [77]
Matt Clafton 1991 LB Consensus 1st [78]

Coaches and notable players

Head coaches

List of Nevada head coaches.[79]

Year Coach Pct. Bowl rec. Playoff rec.
1896 Frank Taylor
1897 William H. Harrelson
1898 F. F. Ellis
1899 A. King Dickson
1900 James Hopper
1901-1903 Allen Steckle
1904 Bruce Shorts
1905 No Coach
1906-1914 No Team
1915-1917 Jack Glascock
1918 No Team
1919-1923 Ray Courtright
1924 Charles F. Erb
1925-1928 Buck Shaw
1929-1931 George Philbrook
1932-1935 Brick Mitchell
1936-1938 Doug Dashiell
1939-1946 Jim Aiken
1947-1950 Joe Sheeketski 1-1
1951 No Team
1952-1954 Jake Lawlor
1955-1958 Gordon McEachron
1959-1968 Dick Trachok
1969-1975 Jerry Scattini
1976-1992 Chris Ault 0-1 9-7
1993 Jeff Horton
1994-1995 Chris Ault 0-1
1996-1999 Jeff Tisdel 1-0
2000-2003 Chris Tormey
2004-2012 Chris Ault 2-6
2013-2016 Brian Polian 1-1
2017-2021 Jay Norvell 2-1
2021† Vai Taua 0-1
2022–present Ken Wilson

† = Interim head coach

Notable former players

Player Pos. Career
Carson Strong QB 2018–2021
Colin Kaepernick QB 2007–2011
Frank Hawkins RB 1977–1980
Marion Motley FB 1940–1942
Nate Burleson WR 2000–2002
Virgil Green TE 2008–2010
Joel Bitonio OL 2009–2013
Austin Corbett OL 2013–2017
Brandon Marshall LB 2007–2011
Malik Reed LB 2015–2018
Eric Beavers QB 1983-1986

Notable games

Nevada 0, California 0 on November 3, 1923: A game that will always be remembered in Nevada football history was the improbable scoreless tie against California in 1923. Cal entered the game in the midst of a 50-game undefeated streak, three consecutive national championships, three consecutive conference championships, and two consecutive Rose Bowl appearances in 1920, and 1921 that ended in a victory and a tie respectively. The team was so dominant it was known as the "Wonder Team".[80] The fact that the Wolf Pack, a much smaller program from a lower division, held powerhouse Cal scoreless in Berkeley makes this final score one of the most interesting in college football history. Cal would go on to finish the season with a 9–0–1 record, and would claim 1923 as their 4th consecutive national championship. The tie was the only regular season game for California that did not end in a victory in the four-year time frame.

Nevada 23, UNLV 14 on September 16, 1978: Nevada had not beaten UNLV in four straight tries, and was a 20-point underdog with the game being played in Las Vegas in 1978. Nevada would outplay the Rebels however, and go on to win 23–14. The story that came after the game is what makes the victory remembered by Wolf Pack alumni and fans. Chris Ault convinced the airport security to let the team disassemble the Fremont Cannon so that the team could bring it back to Reno on the plane. Nevada running back Frank Hawkins carried the barrel of the cannon onto the plane. Chris Ault would tell this story during the week of the UNLV game to get his players fired up.

Nevada 59, Boise State 52 (F/3OT) on December 8, 1990: Nevada and Boise State met for the second time in 1990 for the semi-final of the 1990 NCAA Division I-AA National Championship. Nevada had lost to Boise State earlier that year in a conference game 30–14. The Wolf Pack would play 3 overtimes periods for the second playoff game in a row, and would win 59–52 after running back Ray Whalen scored a touchdown. Nevada would go on to lose to Georgia Southern in the National Championship game the following week. This is still the only postseason game ever played between these two schools.

Nevada 55, Weber State 49 on November 2, 1991: Nevada recorded the largest come from behind victory in Division 1 NCAA history when it beat Weber State 55–49 in 1991. Nevada was down by 35 points at halftime when QB Fred Gatlin was replaced by Chris Vargas. Nevada would go on the score at will and only allow one touchdown by Weber State the entire second half. Nevada would go on to win the 1991 Big Sky Championship. Michigan State tied the record 35 point comeback when they beat Northwestern in 2006, and became the first school to do so in the FBS subdivision.

Nevada 48, Utah State 47 on November 14, 1992: Nevada would beat Utah State after a late 4th quarter comeback. Nevada was losing by 23 points with just over 5 minutes left when QB Chris Vargas would lead them to a one-point, 48–47 victory. The win clinched the Big West Conference title for Nevada in their first season after joining Division I-A. Nevada was the first program to win a conference title during their first year in the FBS (Division I-A), after entering the subdivision from a lower subdivision.

Nevada 18, Ball State 15 on December 18, 1996: Nevada and Ball State were expected to bring offensive fireworks for the 1996 Las Vegas Bowl. What ensued however was a hard nosed defensive display from both sides. After Nevada scored a touchdown on their opening possession, offenses found it a lot tougher to get points on the board. Nevada's starting QB John Dutton was substituted for proven backup Eric Bennett to try to spark the offense. Nevada LB Mike Crawford became the game's MVP with 14 tackles, a forced fumble, and a game sealing interception late in the 4th quarter. With the play of Crawford, plus the energy Bennett was able to give the offense off the bench in the second half, Nevada was able to win their first bowl game in 48 years.

Nevada 38, Fresno State 35 on November 26, 2005: Fresno State was ranked number 16 in the nation, and just came off a narrow defeat at the hands of the eventual National Champion USC Trojans. Nevada would take and early lead that it would only relinquish for a very short time in the 3rd quarter. Nevada QB Jeff Rowe passed for a touchdown, and ran for another while passing for 189 yards. Back-up running back Robert Hubbard would have a standout game as he rushed for 146 yards on 16 carries, with 3 rushing touchdowns, and a 16-yard catch. Nevada would recover a late Fresno State on-sides kick attempt to seal the 38–35 victory, and Nevada's first WAC Championship. This was also Nevada's first conference championship in 8 years.

Nevada 34, Boise State 31 (F/OT) on November 26, 2010 "Blue Friday": No. 19 ranked Nevada faced No. 3 AP (No. 4 BCS) ranked Boise State in Reno, a matchup hyped as the biggest sporting event in Reno for the last 100 years. Boise State had the nation's longest winning streak at 24 games, and were trying to jump Oregon in the BCS poll to have a shot at the national title with a win against Nevada. At the start of the second half, Nevada was trailing 24–7, but mounted a comeback when Nevada senior quarterback Colin Kaepernick scored an 18-yard rushing touchdown in the 3rd quarter, cutting the margin to 24–14. In the fourth quarter, the Wolf Pack scored a rushing touchdown when receiver Rishard Matthews broke through the defense on a reverse to cut the deficit to three at 24–21. On the next Wolf Pack possession, Nevada kicker Anthony Martinez tied the game 24–24 with a 23-yard field goal. Boise State answered with a quick touchdown, when Kellen Moore hit Doug Martin on a screen for a 79-yard touchdown pass to go up 31–24. With 4:53 remaining in the game, Kaepernick led the Wolf Pack on a 14-play drive, capping off with a touchdown pass to Rishard Matthews to tie the game at 31–31 with 13 seconds remaining. BSU's Moore then completed a Hail Mary pass downfield to the Nevada 9-yard line with 2 seconds left, but Bronco kicker Kyle Brotzman missed a 26-yard field goal as time expired in regulation. In overtime, Brotzman missed a 29-yard field goal during the Broncos' turn on offense during the first overtime. When Nevada got its turn on offense, Anthony Martinez kicked a 34-yard field goal to give Nevada the biggest win in the history of the program, and knocking Boise State out of BCS title and Rose Bowl contention. Nevada would go on to win a share of the 2010 WAC title 8 days later after beating Louisiana Tech 35–17.

Nevada 20, Boston College 13 on January 9, 2011: After beating No. 3 Boise State and Louisiana Tech to claim a share of the WAC title, Nevada entered the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl ranked No. 15 nationally. Defenses dominated most of the game, as even Nevada's high-powered offense only scored one touchdown, on a 27-yard pass from Colin Kaepernick to a wide open Rishard Matthews in the first quarter. The last touchdown of the game was a 72-yard punt return by Matthews later in that first quarter. Both teams scored two field goals each to finish off the game, as Nevada won by seven points. This was Nevada's first, and still only bowl victory against a power 5 conference school, and ended the season ranked No. 11, their highest ranking to date playing in the modern FBS/I-AA subdivision. Matthews was named the game's offensive MVP.

Future non-conference opponents

Announced schedules as of August 9, 2021.[81]

Notes

  1. ^ In 1985, UNLV was forced to forfeit all 7 wins from the 1983 season and all 11 wins from the 1984 season, including their victory in the California Bowl.[58] Chris Ault and his team were given a win on the Fremont Cannon as a result. See Wikipedia:WikiProject College football/Vacated victories for an explanation of how vacated victories are recorded.

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External links

  • Official website  

nevada, wolf, pack, football, nevada, sagebrushers, football, redirects, here, newspaper, nevada, sagebrush, program, represents, university, nevada, reno, commonly, referred, nevada, athletics, college, football, wolf, pack, competes, mountain, west, conferen. Nevada Sagebrushers football redirects here For the newspaper see The Nevada Sagebrush The Nevada Wolf Pack football program represents the University of Nevada Reno commonly referred to as Nevada in athletics in college football The Wolf Pack competes in the Mountain West Conference at the Football Bowl Subdivision level of the NCAA Division I It was founded on October 24 1896 as the Sagebrushers in Reno Nevada Nevada Wolf Pack football2023 Nevada Wolf Pack football teamFirst season1896Athletic directorStephanie RempeHead coachKen Wilson 2nd season 2 10 167 StadiumMackay Stadium capacity 27 000 FieldChris Ault FieldYear built1966 1966 Field surfaceNatural grass 1966 1999 FieldTurf 2000 present LocationReno NevadaNCAA divisionDivision I FBSConferenceMountain WestDivisionWest 2013 2019 2021 present Past conferencesIndependent 1896 1924 Far Western 1925 1939 Independent 1940 1953 Far Western 1954 1968 College Division Independent 1969 1972 Division II Independent 1973 1977 Division I AA Independent 1978 Big Sky 1979 1991 Big West 1992 1999 WAC 2000 2011 All time record575 511 33 529 Bowl record7 12 368 Conference titles14RivalriesUNLV rivalry Boise State rivalry San Jose StateFresno StateUC DavisConsensus All Americans1 1991 ColorsNavy blue and silver 1 Fight songHail to our Sturdy TeamMascotAlphie and Wolfie Jr Marching bandPride of the SierraWebsiteNevadaWolfPack comThe Wolf Pack s home field is Mackay Stadium located at the north end of its campus in Reno having been moved from it original location which opened on October 23 1909 The new Mackay Stadium saw its first game 57 years ago on October 1 1966 with a seating capacity of 7 500 and has undergone several renovations The stadium seats 27 000 and has played to crowds in excess see attendance records but decreased its capacity from 30 000 to 26 000 by the 2016 season to increase the quality of the experience in the stadium and later increased its capacity to 27 000 by the 2017 season 2 The elevation of its playing field is 4 610 feet 1 410 m above sea level Nevada has had three individuals inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame They are coach Chris Ault running back Frank Hawkins and former coach Buck Shaw Fullback Marion Motley is the only Nevada player to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame Three time Super Bowl champion Charles Mann played for Nevada from 1979 to 1982 while being named Most Valuable Defensive Lineman in 1982 3 Mann was inducted into the Nevada Athletics Hall of Fame in 1995 4 Another Nevada alumnus with a long career in the NFL was free safety Brock Marion He was selected in the seventh round of the 1993 NFL Draft by the Dallas Cowboys where he played most of his career and won two Super Bowls Marion was selected to three Pro Bowls and one All Pro team Nevada has not fielded a Heisman Trophy winner however Stan Heath was fifth in Heisman voting in 1948 and Colin Kaepernick QB was eighth among 2010 candidates Nevada football s rich tradition has produced 40 All Americans and 45 All American selections Nevada s only consensus All American was Matt Clafton LB in 1991 which was Nevada s last year in the Division I AA the Wolf Pack is awaiting its first FBS consensus All American The Wolf Pack has also produced two Academic All Americans David Heppe P 1982 and Erick Streelman TE 2002 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1896 1958 1 2 Dick Trachok era 1959 1968 1 3 Jerry Scattini era 1969 1975 1 4 Chris Ault era first stint 1976 1992 1 5 Jeff Horton era 1993 1 6 Chris Ault era second stint 1994 1995 1 7 Jeff Tisdel era 1996 1999 1 8 Chris Tormey era 2000 2003 1 9 Chris Ault era third stint 2004 2012 1 10 Brian Polian era 2013 2016 1 11 Jay Norvell era 2017 2021 1 12 Conference affiliations 2 Conference championships 3 Playoff records 4 Bowl games 5 Rivalries 5 1 UNLV 5 2 Boise State 5 3 Fresno State 5 4 San Jose State 5 5 UC Davis 6 Retired numbers 7 College Football Hall of Fame 8 Pro Football Hall of Fame 9 National and Conference Awards 9 1 All Americans 10 Coaches and notable players 10 1 Head coaches 10 2 Notable former players 11 Notable games 12 Future non conference opponents 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksHistory EditEarly history 1896 1958 Edit Allen Steckle served as head coach from 1901 to 1903 Nevada s football history began on October 24 1896 However there was no football program from 1906 to 1914 only rugby in 1918 due to World War I and in 1951 6 In 1896 the university at that time the only institution of higher learning in the state of Nevada and called by the moniker Nevada State University investigated the possibility of adding football to their short list of athletic programs and hired Frank Taylor from the University of California Berkeley for the purpose of developing and fielding the U s first gridiron squadron They played only three games that year the first was Wadsworth AC and the second of which was scheduled against the Belmont preparatory school to take place on the hill at the original Mackay Stadium located in the depression at the middle of campus where the Mack Social Sciences Reynolds School of Journalism and the auspicious Lecture Hall currently exist The result was a complete debacle as Belmont relentlessly thrashed the hapless Sagebrushers later Wolf Pack by the tally of 70 0 But the University of Nevada yearbook Artemesia would report five years later the team learned something about football by watching the Belmont boys play Two weeks later and the Brushers met up with the Berkeley Second Eleven with much more favorable results with NSU only giving up forty points Thus the initial chapter of the athletic history of the University was one of defeat according to the 1901 Artemesia From 1901 to 1903 Allen Steckle served as the head football coach at the University of Nevada In 1903 he was also appointed to the position as the university s physical director 7 In his three seasons as the head coach he compiled a 6 9 2 record When Steckle s Nevada Sagebrush team defeated the University of California in 1903 it was the cause of a statewide celebration The entire front page of the Daily Nevada State Journal was given to coverage of the game and the banner headline read California s Proud Colors Lowered by the Doughty Eleven from Sagebrushdom 8 Steckle s picture appeared on the front page and the paper praised his efforts in turning Nevada into a football power Out of the eighty students of the N S U have been selected eleven young men who were moulded into shape by Dr Steckle the best football coach who ever came to the Coast He made of them the peers of the flower of the California universities 8 The victory of a university with only 80 students over the University of California with its 3 000 students was hailed as a historic accomplishment and Coach Steckle s brand of roughhouse play was given much of the credit 8 Steckle s star players at Nevada from 1901 to 1903 were his younger brother Ivan X Steckle who played halfback and Abe Steckle who played tackle Ivan Steckle was reportedly the hero of all Nevada during the football season of 1903 when in a game with the University of California on the U C field he grabbed the football close to the Nevada goal line and made a wonderful 86 yard run to the California goal line scoring a touchdown for the Sagebrush players and bringing victory to the team 9 Ivan left Nevada after the 1903 season to follow his older brother to the University of Michigan Medical School Ivan died from typhoid fever in 1909 and Steckle accompanied his brother s body to the family s old home in Freeport Michigan 9 In 1919 a Nevada newspaper rated Steckle as the best football coach Nevada ever had and described his accomplishments as follows It was under the coaching of Dr Steckle that Nevada was able to defeat the University of California and play a tie with Stanford as well as bang it over the crack athletic club teams that San Francisco boasted when the great college game was in its hey dey He was rated at that time as one of the best coaches in the West 10 Steckle was also remembered at Nevada for his ability to instill college spirit in the school s student body In 1919 a Nevada newspaper noted that there was more enthusiasm displayed in college athletics while he was coach than there has been in all the years since he left 10 As a medical doctor and athletic coach Steckle was also known for his belief in physical conditioning He was known to require every athlete to be in perfect physical condition before playing in any intercollegiate or big game 10 After his success with the 1903 Nevada team Steckle was offered a higher salary to take over as the football coach at Oregon State 11 In April 1919 Ray Courtright was hired to serve as director of athletics and head coach of the football basketball baseball and track teams 12 13 Courtright was Nevada s football coach for five years from 1919 to 1923 During his years at Nevada Courtright was affectionately known as Corky 14 In his first year as Nevada s coach Courtright led the team to an 8 1 1 record doubling the highest season win total of any prior Nevada football team The only loss came in the first game of the season a 13 7 loss to the California freshman team Courtright s 1919 Nevada team outscored its opponents 450 to 32 including scores of 132 0 over Pacific 102 0 over the Mare Island Marines and 56 0 over UC Davis 15 At the time Courtright called the 1919 Nevada team the best team I ever had and others called it the best team that ever played on Mackay Field 16 At the end of the 1919 season the Reno Evening Gazette wrote It was a good move when the students and regents decided last spring to go east and get one of the best men to come to Nevada and build up a football team In selecting a coach they also demanded an all round man who could coach basket ball track baseball and put into operation a regular system of physical culture for all the students as well Coach Courtright fitted the requirements and the football season proves the wisdom of the selection 13 In 1920 Courtright s team finished with a record of 7 3 1 with wins over both the Utah Utes 14 7 and Utah State Aggies 21 0 and losses to California 79 7 USC 38 7 and Santa Clara 27 21 17 Courtright never reached the same level of success after the 1920 season finishing 4 3 1 in 1921 5 3 1 in 1922 and 2 3 3 in 1923 17 However his most notable game at Nevada was a scoreless tie with California on November 3 1923 The 1923 California team was known as the Wonder Team 14 18 It had gone through three full seasons without a loss and had outscored its opponents 151 to 0 in the first seven games of the 1923 season Nevada had only 15 men on its football team in 1923 and was considered to be a decided underdog When Courtright returned to the Nevada campus in 1961 he was shown souvenirs of his time at the school Ty Cobb then a sports columnist accompanied Courtright and wrote Courtright chuckled when he saw a huge framed layout of newspaper headlines from 1923 when Nevada tied the great California Wonder Team Yep that WAS quite a game he chortled 18 Courtright compiled a record of 26 13 7 while at Nevada and his teams outscored opponents by a combined total of 993 to 464 19 Shortly before his resignation in 1924 the Nevada State Journal credited Courtright with having brought the Nevada eleven from the class of a second rate team to its present rank among the best of the western college football squads 20 Jim Aiken left Akron to take over Nevada s football program in 1939 and served as head coach for seven seasons compiling a record of 38 26 4 21 Aiken resigned as head coach after the 1946 season to accept the head coaching position at Oregon 21 Nevada experienced back to back nine win seasons under Aiken s successor Joe Sheeketski 9 2 campaigns in 1947 and 1948 but the wheels came off the next two seasons as Nevada compiled records of 5 5 and 1 9 resulting in his resignation Jake Lawlor was the head coach from 1952 to 1954 Gordon McEachron accepted the head coaching position at Nevada in 1955 for a 7 300 salary 22 23 The university had demoted its football program from major college football status in 1951 due to a budget deficit and had struggled to remain competitive 24 In 1956 the Nevada alumni association raised 4 500 for a part time work program for football players 25 The initiative however failed and in October 1957 McEachron supported the players in their petition for a renewal of free room and board for the team during the season 22 24 They offered to work part time campus jobs in exchange McEachron said We re not trying to go big time again just to compete on an equal basis 24 McEachron offered his resignation on October 30 1957 which reportedly came as a complete surprise to the athletic director Art Broten said But I am totally indifferent Mac took the job with the understanding we gave no aid to athletes 22 McEachron remained on for one more year 26 and resigned in 1959 He had compiled a 6 23 1 record at Nevada 27 Dick Trachok era 1959 1968 Edit In April 1959 Nevada hired Dick Trachok as its head coach 28 In November 1960 Trachok canceled a six hour flight to Denver in favor of a 32 hour bus ride after a plane crash killed sixteen players from California Polytechnic 29 The Nevada flight had been booked with Arctic Pacific the same carrier that Cal Poly had used 29 Trachok finished his coaching tenure with a 40 48 3 record and took over as Nevada s athletic director He held that post until 1986 30 In 1975 the university inducted Trachok into the Nevada Athletics Hall of Fame 30 Jerry Scattini era 1969 1975 Edit The University of Nevada Reno hired Scattini as its head football coach a position he held from 1969 to 1975 His teams compiled a 37 36 1 record 31 Scattini was fired in December 1975 after a 3 8 season and was replaced with UNLV assistant Chris Ault 32 Chris Ault era first stint 1976 1992 Edit Chris Ault The winningest coach in school history is Chris Ault who was hired in 1976 after spending 3 years as assistant coach at UNLV under head coach Ron Meyer Both Ault and Meyer left UNLV on the same year The Wolf Pack competed in Division I AA since the formation of that division in 1978 moving up from Division II and were undefeated as in the regular season 33 Before joining the Big Sky Conference in 1979 34 35 Nevada competed in the Far West Conference and was an independent in football for a decade Nevada played in the Division I AA playoffs in its first two seasons when just four teams were selected They returned to the national semi finals in 1983 and 1985 36 when the playoffs included 12 teams and 1986 with a 16 team field The Wolf Pack reached the national championship game in 1990 37 38 and the quarterfinals in 1991 In its 14 years in Division I AA Nevada made the playoffs seven times and went undefeated during the regular season three times 1978 1986 1991 compiling an overall record of 122 47 1 721 Nevada had a record of 9 7 in the I AA playoffs during their time in the Big Sky and in 13 years of membership the Wolf Pack won four conference titles 1983 1986 1990 1991 During most of its I AA era the school was known as Nevada Reno UNR or Reno 35 36 39 40 41 42 In its final season in Division I AA in 1991 the top ranked Wolf Pack recorded what still stands as one of the biggest comebacks in Division I NCAA football history when they defeated Weber State 55 49 after trailing by 35 points in the second half at home 43 Backup sophomore quarterback Chris Vargas led a second half Nevada comeback of 41 unanswered points to win the game 44 After the game Vargas was given the nickname The Comeback Kid and would become one of the greatest quarterbacks to play for the Wolf Pack Nevada moved up to Division I A in 1992 when it joined the Big West Conference The change from Division I AA to Division I A brought a lot of excitement to Wolf Pack fans That year Nevada became the first NCAA football team to win a conference championship in its first Division I A season Nevada won the 1992 Big West title after beating Utah State in the final conference game of the season Led by Vargas again coming off the bench Nevada came from behind late in the 4th quarter to win 48 47 Jeff Horton era 1993 Edit Jeff Horton was promoted from wide receiver coach to head coach following Ault s first retirement Horton resigned as head coach after the end of the season and later joined UNLV by the following year Chris Ault era second stint 1994 1995 Edit Jeff Tisdel era 1996 1999 Edit Jeff Tisdel was an All American quarterback for the Wolf Pack in the 1970s then in Division II He was promoted from assistant coach to head coach following Ault s second retirement Tisdel s first season saw the Wolf Pack go 9 3 with a win in the Las Vegas Bowl but from there things went downhill In 1997 the Wolf Pack compiled a record of 5 6 then a 6 5 mark in 1998 before a 3 9 mark in 1999 and Tisdel resigned after the end of the season 45 Chris Tormey era 2000 2003 Edit Following the 1999 season Idaho head coach Chris Tormey moved south from his alma mater on the Palouse to lead Nevada which was leaving the Big West to join the WAC 46 47 He succeeded alumnus Jeff Tisdel and compiled a 16 31 340 record over four seasons 2000 2003 48 While his win totals improved each season 2 3 5 6 he was released from the fifth and final season of his contract at the end of the 2003 season the final game marked by a 56 3 blowout loss at No 18 Boise State Most notably Tormey failed to defeat bitter in state rival UNLV in the annual Battle for the Fremont Cannon his teams were also winless against Boise State and Fresno State 48 The Wolf Pack did defeat the Washington Huskies 28 17 in Seattle that final season UW finished at 6 6 Tormey was fired after the end of the season and athletic director Ault hired himself to succeed Tormey In 2000 Nevada left the Big West and joined the Western Athletic Conference WAC hoping to upgrade its athletic program Chris Ault era third stint 2004 2012 Edit In 2007 the Wolf Pack and the Boise State Broncos played in a historic game on October 14 setting a new NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision record for total points scored with 136 Boise State won the game 69 67 in the second half of the fourth overtime period when Broncos LB Tim Brady stopped Nevada s freshman QB Colin Kaepernick on the mandatory two point conversion attempt In 2009 Nevada players QB Colin Kaepernick RB Vai Taua and RB Luke Lippincott became the first trio of teammates in NCAA history to each rush for more than 1 000 yards in the same season 49 In 2010 Nevada would only lose one game against Hawaii on its way to a 13 1 record beating ranked California and Boise State teams along with beating BYU on the road and Boston College in the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl Led by Colin Kaepernick Nevada would win a share of its first WAC title since 2005 and would ruin No 4 Boise State s certain invitation to a BCS game On August 18 2010 Nevada accepted an invitation to the Mountain West Conference along with Fresno State Nevada and Fresno State have left the WAC and started the play in the Mountain West Conference in 2012 Both programs have joined Boise State who also left the WAC for the Mountain West in 2011 The move to the Mountain West placed Nevada in the same conference as in state rival UNLV for the first time since 1995 In 2012 Nevada left the WAC and moved to the Mountain West Conference MW along with fellow WAC member Fresno State as part of the 2010 13 Mountain West Conference realignment This move was influenced by Boise State s entrance the increased strength of schedule and the intensity of Nevada s rivalries Ault was the head coach for Nevada for 28 seasons and was involved with Nevada football for 40 years before stepping down as head coach after the 2012 season His record as Nevada head coach ended at 233 wins 109 losses and 1 tie Ault won 10 conference titles in the Big Sky Big West and Western Athletic Conference The only problem was his 2 8 bowl record Ault brought popularity to the Pistol Offense when he implemented it after returning to the sideline during the 2004 season Since then the Pistol Offense has been used by multiple teams at every level of football including the NFL Ault also served as the Nevada Athletics Director from 1986 to 2004 and played quarterback for Nevada from 1965 to 1967 In 2002 Ault was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame The field at Mackay Stadium was named Chris Ault Field in 2013 in appreciation for his numerous accomplishments Brian Polian era 2013 2016 Edit Brian Polian Texas A amp M special teams coordinator and tight ends coach Brian Polian was hired as Nevada s 25th head coach following Ault s third retirement 50 Under Polian the Wolf Pack compiled a record of 23 27 that included back to back seven win campaigns and bowl appearances 51 Nevada and Polian agreed to part ways after the 2016 season 52 Polian later returned to the Notre Dame Fighting Irish football as special teams coordinator under head coach Brian Kelly after previously serving under head coach Charlie Weis from 2005 to 2009 Jay Norvell era 2017 2021 Edit Jay Norvell On December 6 2016 Arizona State wide receivers coach and passing game coordinator Jay Norvell was hired as Nevada s 26th head coach 53 Norvell s Wolf Pack posted four winning seasons in his five year tenure and appeared in four post season bowl games Norvell led quarterback Carson Strong to receiving the Mountain West Conference Offensive Player of the Year award in both 2020 and 2021 becoming the fifth player in conference history to win the award in back to back years 54 On December 6 2021 it was announced that Norvell was hired by Colorado State as their next head coach ending his time at Nevada 55 It was announced that Nevada running back coach Vai Taua would act as interim head coach and coach the Wolf Pack in the 2021 Quick Lane Bowl 56 Conference affiliations Edit Independent 1896 1924 Far Western Conference 1925 1939 Independent 1940 1953 Far Western Conference 1954 1968 NCAA College Division independent 1969 1972 NCAA Division II independent 1973 1977 NCAA Division I AA independent 1978 Big Sky Conference 1979 1991 Big West Conference 1992 1999 Western Athletic Conference 2000 2011 Mountain West Conference 2012 present 57 Conference championships EditNevada has won 14 conference championship as a member of four different conferences as of 2022 57 Season Conference Record Conference record1932 Far Western 3 3 2 2 0 11933 4 4 3 01939 5 4 3 01983 Big Sky 10 4 n 1 6 11986 13 1 7 01990 13 2 7 11991 12 1 8 01992 Big West 7 5 5 11994 9 2 5 11995 9 3 6 01996 9 3 4 11997 5 6 4 12005 WAC 9 3 7 12010 13 1 7 1 Co championshipPlayoff records EditYear Playoff round Opponent Result1978 Semifinal Massachusetts L 21 441979 Semifinal at Eastern Kentucky L 30 332OT1983 1st Round at Idaho State W 27 20Quarterfinal North Texas W 20 17OTSemifinal at Southern Illinois L 7 231985 1st Round Arkansas State W 24 23Quarterfinal at Furman L 12 351986 1st Round Idaho W 27 7Quarterfinal Tennessee State W 33 6Semi Final Georgia Southern L 38 481990 1st Round Louisiana Monroe W 27 14Quarterfinal Furman W 42 353OTSemifinal Boise State W 59 523OTChampionship at Georgia Southern L 13 361991 1st Round McNeese State W 22 16Quarterfinal Youngstown State L 28 30The Division I AA playoffs included only four teams in 1978 the field was expanded to eight in 1981 twelve in 1982 and sixteen in 1986 Bowl games EditNevada has participated in 18 bowl games with the Wolf Pack garnering a record of 7 12 Season Coach Bowl Opponent Result1947 Joe Sheeketski Salad Bowl North Texas W 13 61948 Joe Sheeketski Harbor Bowl Villanova L 7 271992 Chris Ault Las Vegas Bowl Bowling Green L 34 351995 Chris Ault Las Vegas Bowl Toledo L 37 40OT1996 Jeff Tisdel Las Vegas Bowl Ball State W 18 152005 Chris Ault Hawaii Bowl UCF W 49 48OT2006 Chris Ault MPC Computers Bowl Miami FL L 20 212007 Chris Ault New Mexico Bowl New Mexico L 0 232008 Chris Ault Humanitarian Bowl Maryland L 35 422009 Chris Ault Hawaii Bowl SMU L 10 452010 Chris Ault Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl Boston College W 20 132011 Chris Ault Hawaii Bowl Southern Miss L 17 242012 Chris Ault New Mexico Bowl Arizona L 48 492014 Brian Polian New Orleans Bowl Louisiana Lafayette L 3 162015 Brian Polian Arizona Bowl Colorado State W 28 232018 Jay Norvell Arizona Bowl Arkansas State W 16 13OT2019 Jay Norvell Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Ohio L 21 302020 Jay Norvell Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Tulane W 38 272021 Vai Taua Quick Lane Bowl Western Michigan L 24 52 Interim head coachRivalries EditUNLV Edit Main article Fremont Cannon The Battle for NevadaThe Nevada and UNLV Football programs have a strong disdain for each other The in state rivalry started on November 22 1969 and had not been played from 1980 to 1982 and in 1984 1986 and 1988 respectively Nevada maintains an overall 27 18 lead in the series The Fremont Cannon was introduced as the rivalry trophy in 1970 by Bill Ireland who attended Nevada and was UNLV s first football coach Unlike the Rivalry with Boise State the Fremont Cannon rivalry has lacked many games of importance Nevada and UNLV have spent many years in different conferences The mid 1990s being the exception when both schools were in the Big West This time period also marks where a lot of the bitterness between the two schools came from Nevada had just moved to the Big West from Division I AA and had enjoyed success after winning a conference title in 1992 After his first coaching retirement Chris Ault was replaced by Jeff Horton as the head coach in 1993 After one season Horton left for the same position at rival UNLV Chris Ault would return to the Nevada sideline to coach Nevada in 1994 and 1995 until he could find another coach In 1994 Nevada and UNLV would go on to become co champions of the Big West but UNLV won the head to head game against Nevada sending them to the post season bowl game The next season the game was marred by pre and post game fights between both teams and with many fights between fans in the stands Nevada would go on to win the game and the conference title outright Since then the rivalry has lost some of its luster but as of 2012 Nevada and UNLV became members of the same conference once again The Fremont Cannon is the heaviest and most expensive trophy in college football 59 60 The current holder of the trophy is Nevada after defeating UNLV on October 31 2020 Boise State Edit Main article Boise State Nevada football rivalry Nevada has a long standing rivalry with Boise State the teams first met on September 25 1971 and have played each other over 45 times as of 2022 The rivalry with Boise State does not seem to contain the same amount of bitterness as Nevada s intrastate rivalry against UNLV Some of the most important games in the history of both programs have been played against each other In 1990 Nevada won the Big Sky Championship with an overall season record of 13 2 Nevada s only regular season loss was a 30 14 conference loss to the Broncos in Boise Nevada and Boise State would both go on to the Division I AA playoffs The two teams met in the 1990 Division I AA semifinals in Reno for a rematch of their earlier battle that year With the winner going to the championship the game took 3 overtime sessions Nevada fullback Ray Whalen scored the decisive touchdown in the third overtime with an 8 yard run into the end zone Nevada s defense held Boise State after the score on their turn during the alternating overtime sessions This game was the second game in a row that Nevada needed 3 overtime periods to finish the game Nevada had defeated Furman the week prior in a triple overtime game There have been no other games postseason games played between the two teams to date Nevada went to lose in the finals to Georgia Southern by a score of 36 13 in Statesboro Georgia 38 In 2006 Nevada and Boise State would meet in Reno in Boise State s final regular season game Boise State won the game capping off an undefeated regular season and giving the Broncos a berth into the Fiesta Bowl This would be Boise State s first BCS bowl game where they would go on to beat Oklahoma in dramatic fashion In 2008 the Broncos traveled to Reno once again with aspirations of an undefeated regular season and BCS appearance The Broncos defeated the Wolfpack in a nail biter coming down to the last play of the game In 2009 the Wolfpack traveled to Boise ID to face the Broncos in the hopes of foiling their undefeated season and BCS aspirations Boise would end up winning the game and went on to win their second Fiesta Bowl in 4 years against TCU In 2010 the two teams met in what would come to be known as the greatest win in Nevada football history and the most devastating loss in Boise State football history Nevada overcame a 24 7 halftime deficit to tie Boise with 10 seconds remaining On the last play of the game Boise quarterback Kellen Moore threw a hail mary to receiver Titus Young who dove and caught the ball close to the goal line with one second left Extreme drama would ensue as Boise State kicker Kyle Brotzman missed a chip shot field goal from straight ahead sending the game into overtime Kyle Brotzman went on to miss another chip shot field goal in overtime and the game was sealed by a field goal from Nevada s Anthony Martinez Nevada beat Boise State 34 31 ending the Broncos chances of playing in the Rose Bowl and at the time a potential BCS National Title In 2011 Boise was once again undefeated and ranked in the top 10 when the Wolfpack visited Boise With the usual BCS aspirations on the line the Broncos defeated the Wolfpack at home in a fairly non competitive matchup This would be the last game that was crucially important between the two programs Since 2011 the rivalry heat has continued however neither team has had much to lose in comparison to the games played between 2004 and 2011 Fresno State Edit The Sierra ShowdownThe Sierra Showdown is named after the Sierra Nevada mountain range that runs along the California Nevada border and is near the two cities of Fresno CA and Reno NV As recent as November 2022 there was case made for the Nevada Fresno State football game to add a Sierra Showdown Trophy 61 Paul Loeffler the voice of the Fresno State Bulldogs suggested on Twitter that Nevada and Fresno State should play for the Sierra Showdown Trophy that is half silver for the Silver State and half gold for the Golden State Loeffler was quoted as saying You guys are on the eastern side of the Sierra You re looking at the other side of the mountains that we re looking at from the western side We have to go through or over that pass to play each other We ve been doing it forever So why not make that mountain the symbol of this rivalry The Wolf Pack and Bulldogs have played each other 54 times The series began in 1923 and has been played every season since 1998 The 54 match ups are more games than Nevada has played UNLV 48 times or Boise State 45 times two of its other main rivals Fresno State is one of Nevada s two protected Mountain West Conference rivalries along with UNLV when the conference shifts to one division in 2023 meaning they will play every year Fresno State leads the all time series 31 22 1 as of 2022 including a 15 11 mark since the teams began playing regularly again in 1994 San Jose State Edit The Sagebrushers Wolf Pack and Spartans have met up over 35 times on the gridiron and Nevada leads the rivalry series 23 11 2 as of 2022 The Wolf Pack won the rivalry s first game 6 0 in Reno Nevada on Thanksgiving Day 1899 Bob Brule scored the game s only touchdown and fell into the water of an irrigation ditch behind the end zone followed by three Cal State Normal School San Jose State Spartan players The two schools did not play from 1901 to 1930 and again from 1949 to 1991 The Wolf Pack was 2 4 2 against San Jose State after the first eight games in the rivalry but has gone 21 6 0 since 1941 62 The 2 schools main campuses are approximately 250 miles apart 63 and have played in the same conferences since 1992 1st in the Big West Conference in the 1990s then in the 2000s the Spartans and Wolf Pack were both apart of WAC Western Athletic Conference and are division rivals in the Mountain West today Both schools are also the oldest public higher education institutions in their respective states of California and Nevada San Jose State University was founded in 1857 while the University of Nevada Reno was founded in 1874 64 UC Davis Edit The Aggie Pack BattleUC Davis and Nevada have not played each other since 2013 but have a historical rivalry dating back to the first match up in 1915 when the University Farm School Aggies beat the Nevada Sagebrushers 14 0 in Carson City Nevada They have played each other 54 times since 65 The Aggie Pack battle would regularly have old fashioned rooters buses travel 146 miles 2 5 hours down I 80 for this rivalry that was regularly a battle for West Coast small college supremacy in fact the mid November 1977 Nevada UCD matchup drew 12 800 fans to Toomey Field which still stands as a home attendance record and yes the crowd pleasing Aggies prevailed 37 21 66 Nevada leads the series 29 21 3 as of 2022 Retired numbers EditNo Player Position Career Ref 27 Frank Hawkins RB 1977 80 67 41 Marion Motley FB 1940 42 67 Hawkins was a three time All American Division I AA and led Division I AA in rushing twice Selected in the tenth round of the 1981 NFL Draft by the Oakland Raiders he played seven seasons with the Raiders and was a member of the 1984 team that won Super Bowl XVIII He rushed for 5 333 yards at Nevada and also had 11 consecutive games in a season with at least 100 rushing yards per game He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1997 Marion Motley played three seasons with the Wolf Pack 68 and has been considered by many as The Jackie Robinson of Football Motley was one of four black players to break professional football s color barrier when he signed with the Cleveland Browns in 1946 and helped lead the Browns to four straight AAFC titles and the 1950 NFL title in their first year in the league Motley was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1968 and was selected to the NFL 75th Anniversary All Time Team in 1994 College Football Hall of Fame EditName Years Position Inducted RefBuck Shaw 1925 1928 Head Coach 1972 69 Frank Hawkins 1977 1980 RB 1997 70 Chris Ault 1976 2012 Head Coach 2002 71 The Wolf Pack have two coaches and one player inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame The field at Mackay Stadium was named Chris Ault Field in 2013 in appreciation for Chris Ault s numerous accomplishments While Buck Shaw Stadium at Santa Clara University is named after famed coach Buck Shaw s numerous accomplishments Frank Hawkins was a three time All American and led Division I AA in rushing twice and rushed for 5 333 yards total while at Nevada Pro Football Hall of Fame EditInducted Player POS Seasons at Nevada1968 Marion Motley FB 1940 1942Motley was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1968 and was selected to the NFL 75th Anniversary All Time Team in 1994 Marion Motley has been considered by many as The Jackie Robinson of Football Motley was one of four black players to break professional football s color barrier when he signed with the Cleveland Browns in 1946 and helped lead the Browns to four straight AAFC titles and the 1950 NFL title National and Conference Awards EditEddie Robinson AwardEddie Robinson AwardYear Name Position1991 Chris Ault CoachThe Eddie Robinson Award is awarded annually to college football s top head coach in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision formerly Division I AA It was established in 1987 National Football Foundation Scholar Athlete of the Year AwardNFF Scholar Athlete of the Year AwardYear Name Position2015 James Dobrich LBAll Americans Edit Nevada has had 1 Consensus 1st Team All American in program history as of the end of the 2022 season 72 Name Year Position Team RefJames Bradshaw 1919 QB 1st 73 James Bradshaw 1921 HB 2nd 74 Buster McClure 1944 DT 3rd UP 4th 75 Buster McClure 1945 DT 3rd 76 Stan Heath 1948 QB 1st 2nd 77 Matt Clafton 1991 LB Consensus 1st 78 Coaches and notable players EditHead coaches Edit List of Nevada head coaches 79 Year Coach Pct Bowl rec Playoff rec 1896 Frank Taylor1897 William H Harrelson1898 F F Ellis1899 A King Dickson1900 James Hopper1901 1903 Allen Steckle1904 Bruce Shorts1905 No Coach1906 1914 No Team1915 1917 Jack Glascock1918 No Team1919 1923 Ray Courtright1924 Charles F Erb1925 1928 Buck Shaw1929 1931 George Philbrook1932 1935 Brick Mitchell1936 1938 Doug Dashiell1939 1946 Jim Aiken1947 1950 Joe Sheeketski 1 11951 No Team1952 1954 Jake Lawlor1955 1958 Gordon McEachron1959 1968 Dick Trachok1969 1975 Jerry Scattini1976 1992 Chris Ault 0 1 9 71993 Jeff Horton1994 1995 Chris Ault 0 11996 1999 Jeff Tisdel 1 02000 2003 Chris Tormey2004 2012 Chris Ault 2 62013 2016 Brian Polian 1 12017 2021 Jay Norvell 2 12021 Vai Taua 0 12022 present Ken Wilson Interim head coach Notable former players Edit See also Nevada Wolf Pack football statistical leaders and List of Nevada Wolf Pack in the NFL draft Player Pos CareerCarson Strong QB 2018 2021Colin Kaepernick QB 2007 2011Frank Hawkins RB 1977 1980Marion Motley FB 1940 1942Nate Burleson WR 2000 2002Virgil Green TE 2008 2010Joel Bitonio OL 2009 2013Austin Corbett OL 2013 2017Brandon Marshall LB 2007 2011Malik Reed LB 2015 2018Eric Beavers QB 1983 1986Notable games EditNevada 0 California 0 on November 3 1923 A game that will always be remembered in Nevada football history was the improbable scoreless tie against California in 1923 Cal entered the game in the midst of a 50 game undefeated streak three consecutive national championships three consecutive conference championships and two consecutive Rose Bowl appearances in 1920 and 1921 that ended in a victory and a tie respectively The team was so dominant it was known as the Wonder Team 80 The fact that the Wolf Pack a much smaller program from a lower division held powerhouse Cal scoreless in Berkeley makes this final score one of the most interesting in college football history Cal would go on to finish the season with a 9 0 1 record and would claim 1923 as their 4th consecutive national championship The tie was the only regular season game for California that did not end in a victory in the four year time frame Nevada 23 UNLV 14 on September 16 1978 Nevada had not beaten UNLV in four straight tries and was a 20 point underdog with the game being played in Las Vegas in 1978 Nevada would outplay the Rebels however and go on to win 23 14 The story that came after the game is what makes the victory remembered by Wolf Pack alumni and fans Chris Ault convinced the airport security to let the team disassemble the Fremont Cannon so that the team could bring it back to Reno on the plane Nevada running back Frank Hawkins carried the barrel of the cannon onto the plane Chris Ault would tell this story during the week of the UNLV game to get his players fired up Nevada 59 Boise State 52 F 3OT on December 8 1990 Nevada and Boise State met for the second time in 1990 for the semi final of the 1990 NCAA Division I AA National Championship Nevada had lost to Boise State earlier that year in a conference game 30 14 The Wolf Pack would play 3 overtimes periods for the second playoff game in a row and would win 59 52 after running back Ray Whalen scored a touchdown Nevada would go on to lose to Georgia Southern in the National Championship game the following week This is still the only postseason game ever played between these two schools Nevada 55 Weber State 49 on November 2 1991 Nevada recorded the largest come from behind victory in Division 1 NCAA history when it beat Weber State 55 49 in 1991 Nevada was down by 35 points at halftime when QB Fred Gatlin was replaced by Chris Vargas Nevada would go on the score at will and only allow one touchdown by Weber State the entire second half Nevada would go on to win the 1991 Big Sky Championship Michigan State tied the record 35 point comeback when they beat Northwestern in 2006 and became the first school to do so in the FBS subdivision Nevada 48 Utah State 47 on November 14 1992 Nevada would beat Utah State after a late 4th quarter comeback Nevada was losing by 23 points with just over 5 minutes left when QB Chris Vargas would lead them to a one point 48 47 victory The win clinched the Big West Conference title for Nevada in their first season after joining Division I A Nevada was the first program to win a conference title during their first year in the FBS Division I A after entering the subdivision from a lower subdivision Nevada 18 Ball State 15 on December 18 1996 Nevada and Ball State were expected to bring offensive fireworks for the 1996 Las Vegas Bowl What ensued however was a hard nosed defensive display from both sides After Nevada scored a touchdown on their opening possession offenses found it a lot tougher to get points on the board Nevada s starting QB John Dutton was substituted for proven backup Eric Bennett to try to spark the offense Nevada LB Mike Crawford became the game s MVP with 14 tackles a forced fumble and a game sealing interception late in the 4th quarter With the play of Crawford plus the energy Bennett was able to give the offense off the bench in the second half Nevada was able to win their first bowl game in 48 years Nevada 38 Fresno State 35 on November 26 2005 Fresno State was ranked number 16 in the nation and just came off a narrow defeat at the hands of the eventual National Champion USC Trojans Nevada would take and early lead that it would only relinquish for a very short time in the 3rd quarter Nevada QB Jeff Rowe passed for a touchdown and ran for another while passing for 189 yards Back up running back Robert Hubbard would have a standout game as he rushed for 146 yards on 16 carries with 3 rushing touchdowns and a 16 yard catch Nevada would recover a late Fresno State on sides kick attempt to seal the 38 35 victory and Nevada s first WAC Championship This was also Nevada s first conference championship in 8 years Nevada 34 Boise State 31 F OT on November 26 2010 Blue Friday No 19 ranked Nevada faced No 3 AP No 4 BCS ranked Boise State in Reno a matchup hyped as the biggest sporting event in Reno for the last 100 years Boise State had the nation s longest winning streak at 24 games and were trying to jump Oregon in the BCS poll to have a shot at the national title with a win against Nevada At the start of the second half Nevada was trailing 24 7 but mounted a comeback when Nevada senior quarterback Colin Kaepernick scored an 18 yard rushing touchdown in the 3rd quarter cutting the margin to 24 14 In the fourth quarter the Wolf Pack scored a rushing touchdown when receiver Rishard Matthews broke through the defense on a reverse to cut the deficit to three at 24 21 On the next Wolf Pack possession Nevada kicker Anthony Martinez tied the game 24 24 with a 23 yard field goal Boise State answered with a quick touchdown when Kellen Moore hit Doug Martin on a screen for a 79 yard touchdown pass to go up 31 24 With 4 53 remaining in the game Kaepernick led the Wolf Pack on a 14 play drive capping off with a touchdown pass to Rishard Matthews to tie the game at 31 31 with 13 seconds remaining BSU s Moore then completed a Hail Mary pass downfield to the Nevada 9 yard line with 2 seconds left but Bronco kicker Kyle Brotzman missed a 26 yard field goal as time expired in regulation In overtime Brotzman missed a 29 yard field goal during the Broncos turn on offense during the first overtime When Nevada got its turn on offense Anthony Martinez kicked a 34 yard field goal to give Nevada the biggest win in the history of the program and knocking Boise State out of BCS title and Rose Bowl contention Nevada would go on to win a share of the 2010 WAC title 8 days later after beating Louisiana Tech 35 17 Nevada 20 Boston College 13 on January 9 2011 After beating No 3 Boise State and Louisiana Tech to claim a share of the WAC title Nevada entered the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl ranked No 15 nationally Defenses dominated most of the game as even Nevada s high powered offense only scored one touchdown on a 27 yard pass from Colin Kaepernick to a wide open Rishard Matthews in the first quarter The last touchdown of the game was a 72 yard punt return by Matthews later in that first quarter Both teams scored two field goals each to finish off the game as Nevada won by seven points This was Nevada s first and still only bowl victory against a power 5 conference school and ended the season ranked No 11 their highest ranking to date playing in the modern FBS I AA subdivision Matthews was named the game s offensive MVP Future non conference opponents EditAnnounced schedules as of August 9 2021 81 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2029 2031at USC at Troy at Penn State at Washington UTEP TroyIdaho Georgia Southern Sacramento State at KansasKansas at Minnesotaat Texas State Eastern Washington at UCLANotes Edit In 1985 UNLV was forced to forfeit all 7 wins from the 1983 season and all 11 wins from the 1984 season including their victory in the California Bowl 58 Chris Ault and his team were given a win on the Fremont Cannon as a result See Wikipedia WikiProject College football Vacated victories for an explanation of how vacated victories are recorded References Edit Visual Identity The Block N Logo Retrieved September 11 2022 Murray Chris December 5 2014 Regents approve 11 5 million Mackay Stadium renovation Reno Gazette Journal Retrieved December 6 2014 Charles Mann 1980 82 Football Nevada Wolf Pack Retrieved February 12 2009 Nevada Athletics Hall of Fame Nevada Wolf Pack Archived from the original on March 21 2016 Retrieved February 12 2009 2014 NCAA Football Records Award Winners PDF NCAA org Academic All Americans by School NCAA p 50 Retrieved February 22 2015 NCAA Football Added and Discontinued Programs PDF NCAA org Discontinued Programs Since 1950 NCAA p 3 Retrieved November 25 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link Physical Director Daily Nevada State Journal 1903 02 22 a b c California s Proud Colors Lowered by the Doughty Eleven from Sagebrushdom Daily Nevada State Journal 1903 11 08 a b News Comes of Death of Ivan Steckle Reno Evening Gazette 1908 09 09 a b c Nevada May Get Noted Coach Again Reno Evening Gazette 1919 03 31 Nevada Coach of 1903 Tells of Victories Dr A C Steckle Here for Visit Taught Boys Lots of Football Reno Evening Gazette 1931 09 03 Courtright Wins Place as Coach at University Reno Evening Gazette 1919 04 20 a b Lyle Kimmel 1919 11 29 Nevada Varsity of 1920 Finishes Great Season All but Two of Varsity Will Probably Be Back Next Year and Big Games with Best on Coast Assured Reno Evening Gazette a b Courtright Plans To Play Pro Baseball Reno Evening Gazette 1921 02 01 The climax of his work in Nevada came during the past season when the Wolf pack held California to a 0 to 0 tie Nevada Yearly Results 1915 to 1919 College Football Data Warehouse Archived from the original on 2012 10 19 Retrieved 2017 01 11 Nevada Runs Away With Game With Davis Farm Reno Evening Gazette 1919 11 28 a b Nevada Yearly Results 1920 to 1924 College Football Data Warehouse Archived from the original on 2012 10 19 Retrieved 2017 01 11 a b Ty Cobb 1961 09 14 Ex Nevada Football Coach Returns to Scene of Old Time Glory Nevada State Journal Dick Stoddard 1935 12 04 Courtright Named As Likely Coach for Wolves Nevada State Journal U N line Coach Adds to Tangle Courtright Considers Move to New Fields Nevada State Journal 1925 02 22 a b Eugene Register Guard Google News Archive Search news google com a b c Nevada Coach Offers to Quit Lewiston Morning Tribune October 30 1957 McEachron Gets Nevada Grid Job The Spokesman Review June 7 1955 a b c Nevada Gridders Win Seek Free Room and Board Eugene Register Guard October 16 1957 Nevada Alumni Raise 4 500 For Gridders permanent dead link The Modesto Bee September 27 1956 Nevada s Grid Fortunes Near Folding Point Eugene Register Guard September 6 1958 Trachok New Coach of Nevada s Eleven The New York Times April 12 1959 Trachok New Coach Of Nevada s Eleven The New York Times April 12 1959 a b Team Cancels 6 Hour Flight For Bus Ride permanent dead link The Palm Beach Post November 16 1960 a b Nevada Athletics Hall of Fame Archived 2011 06 10 at the Wayback Machine University of Nevada Reno October 25 2010 Jerry Scattini Records by Year Archived 2010 10 31 at the Wayback Machine College Football Data Warehouse retrieved December 31 2010 Stram Headed To Saints Eugene Register Guard December 22 1975 NCAA announces football playoffs Ellensburg Daily Record Washington UPI November 21 1978 p 11 Big Sky Conference invites Nevada Reno Ellensburg Daily Record Washington UPI May 24 1978 p 15 a b Nevada Reno added to Big Sky Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press May 26 1979 p 5B a b Furman to play Reno in football semifinals Wilmington Morning Star North Carolina Wire services December 14 1985 p 5B Division I AA Nevada Big Sky s hope in title game Idahonian Moscow Associated Press December 15 1990 p 5E a b Georgia Southern thumps Nevada 36 13 Lewiston Morning Tribune Idaho Associated Press December 16 1990 p 1B Division I AA playoffs Lewiston Morning Tribune Idaho Associated Press December 16 1986 p 2B Enthusiasm abundant as Big Sky football coaches meet the press Idahonian Moscow Associated Press July 25 1987 p 16 Stalwick Howie September 30 1990 Vandals don t get kick out of Reno The Spokesman Review Spokane Washington p C1 You can bet on Reno name change The Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Staff and wire reports August 3 1991 p B4 Nevada stages miracle rally beats Weber Lewiston Morning Tribune Idaho Associated Press November 3 1991 p 1B For the record Idahonian Moscow November 4 1991 p 1B All Time Coaching Records by Year www cfbdatawarehouse com Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2017 01 11 Meehan Jim December 9 1999 Tormey accepts Nevada head coach job Spokesman Review Spokane Washington p C1 Pond Alex December 9 1999 Idaho players understand coach s decision Moscow Pullman Daily News Idaho Washington p 1B a b Meehan Jim December 1 2003 Nevada fires coach Tormey Spokesman Review Spokane Washington p C3 Nevada trio honored at College Football HOF ESPN com 2010 08 04 Retrieved 2020 10 30 Nevada officially hires Brian Polian Brian Polian Coaching Record College Football at Sports Reference com College Football at Sports Reference com Nevada coach Polian part ways after 4 seasons Sources Nevada hires Arizona State s Norvell MW Announces 2021 Football All Conference Teams and Individual Honors Mountain West Conference November 30 2021 Retrieved December 6 2021 Source Norvell to be next Colorado State coach ESPN com 2021 12 06 Retrieved 2021 12 06 It s official Wolf Pack football coach Jay Norvell leaves Nevada for Colorado State job Reno Gazette Journal December 6 2021 Retrieved December 6 2021 a b 2017 Nevada Wolf Pack Media Guide PDF NevadaWolfPack com Nevada Athletics pp 135 142 Retrieved January 4 2018 McCurdie Jim March 13 1985 UNLV Punished for Using Ineligible Football Players Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 1 2020 Murray Chris November 22 2017 Murray Fremont Cannon s place among top 10 rival trophies in college football Reno Gazette Journal Retrieved November 27 2017 Kantowski Ron October 3 2009 The Elevator Fremont Cannon edition Las Vegas Sun Retrieved October 5 2009 The case to add a Sierra Showdown Trophy The Rivalry San Jose California Directions to Reno Nevada Training Session for Inkblot Employees PDF pp 18 on page 15 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 28 2013 UC Davis Football 2015 Team Information Guide PDF Bob Dunning Reno paper takes swipe at UCD football a b Retired numbers at Nevada at Wolfpack site Nevada to Honor Anniversary of Marion Motley s Hall of Fame Induction This Season Nevada Wolf Pack August 29 2008 Archived from the original on April 14 2012 Retrieved November 2 2011 https www cfbhall com about inductees inductee buck shaw 1972 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help https www cfbhall com about inductees inductee frank hawkins 1997 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help https www cfbhall com about inductees inductee chris ault 2002 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help PDF https nevadawolfpack com documents 2020 10 19 FULL FB 2020MEDIAGUIDE modified Oct18 pdf a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help All American Team Picked by Hahn for Gazette Reno Evening Gazette 1919 12 05 All America Addendum Part 2 PDF College Football Historical Society Newsletter November 2008 2020 Football media guide PDF 2020 Football media guide PDF 2020 Football media guide PDF 2020 Football media guide PDF Nevada Wolf Pack Coaches California Historical Series Stassen College Football Information Retrieved January 25 2009 Nevada Wolf Pack Football Future Schedules FBSchedules com Retrieved January 17 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nevada Wolf Pack football Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nevada Wolf Pack football amp oldid 1152538759, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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