fbpx
Wikipedia

Sacramento State Hornets football

The Sacramento State Hornets football program is the intercollegiate American football team for the California State University, Sacramento located in Sacramento, California. The team competes in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) and are members of the Big Sky Conference. The school's first football team was fielded in 1954. The team plays its home games at the 21,195-seat Hornet Stadium.

Sacramento State Hornets football
First season1954
Athletic directorMark Orr
Head coachAndy Thompson
1st season, 0–0 (–)
StadiumHornet Stadium
(capacity: 21,195)
Field surfaceNatural grass (1969–2009)
FieldTurf (2010–present)
LocationSacramento, California
NCAA divisionDivision I FCS
ConferenceBig Sky
Past conferencesFWC (1954–1982)
NCAC (1983-1984)
WFC (1985–1992)
AWC (1993–1995)
All-time record313–395–8 (.443)
Bowl record0–2 (.000)
Playoff appearances3
Playoff recordDiv. I FCS: 1–3
Conference titles7
RivalriesUC Davis (rivalry)
Cal Poly
Pacific (defunct)
ColorsGreen and gold[1]
   
Fight songFight, Hornet, Fight!
MascotHerky the Hornet
Marching bandSacramento State Marching Band
Websitehornetsports.com

History Edit

In 1954, Dave Strong was named the first football coach for the Hornets football program. The program's first victory came in their second season, in 1955, when the Hornets defeated Southern Oregon by a point. Sacramento State was first affiliated with the Northern California Athletic Conference, from 1954 through 1984; the conference was known as the Far Western Conference until 1982. The Hornets were then members of the Western Football Conference from 1985 through 1992. In 1993, Sacramento State move the American West Conference, and then to the Big Sky Conference in 1996.[2] Hornet Stadium has been home to the football team since 1969.

Past success and notable games Edit

The Hornets have participated in two bowl games, the Pasadena Bowl in 1968 against Grambling State, where the Hornets lost, 34–7, and the Camellia Bowl in 1964, where Montana State defeated the Hornets, 28–7.

One of Sac State's most notable wins came on September 3, 2011, in the season opener against the Oregon State Beavers of the Pac-12 Conference at Reser Stadium. The Hornets upset the Beavers in overtime, 29–28 with a two-point conversion pass from quarterback Jeff Flemming to wide receiver Brandyn Reed, beating an AQ conference team for the first time in school history in front of an announced crowd of 41,581. The Beavers were a 23-point favorite coming into the game. Four weeks after the win over Oregon State, the Hornets defeated FCS national power Montana, the program's first win ever over the Grizzlies, on September 24, 2011. Hornets defeated the then No. 10 ranked Grizzlies by a score of 42–28 in Hornet Stadium.

On September 8, 2012, Sac State defeated Colorado Buffaloes of the Pac-12 conference, at Folsom Field as 20-point underdogs.[3] Colorado jumped to an early 14–0 start but the Hornets quickly answered back with a pair of touchdown passes from Hornets quarterback Garrett Safron and a 2-yard rushing touchdown by A.J. Ellis to lead 21–14 over the Buffaloes.[4] Sac State led 24–21 during intermission. With less than a minute left in the fourth quarter and down 28–27, Hornet's walk-on kicker, Edgar Castenada, made the 31-yard field goal winning kick for a final score of 30–28. After the game, Hornets head coach Marshall Sperbeck announced in the locker room that Sacramento State has offered Castendada a scholarship. This marked a consecutive year in which Sac State faced an AQ conference school (both in the Pac-12 conference) as heavy underdogs on the road and walked out with victories.

The Sacramento State football team were ranked for the first time ever in school history at the end of the 2019 season when they placed No. 3 nationally in both the STATS and the Coaches polls. Sacramento State was also ranked as the No. 4 team in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS playoff bracket, receiving a first-week bye in their road to the finals. The 2019 season was a major milestone in the teams' history as the season brought Sacramento State its first-ever Big Sky Conference Championship, its fifth conference title overall, and its first-ever appearance in the FCS playoffs. Prior to the 2019 season, Sacramento State was never ranked at the end of any season but had won four conference titles.

The Sacramento State football team would set numerous school records for the 2022 season. On September 24, 2022, the Hornets defeated Colorado State 41–10 at Canvas Stadium, making this their largest victory by margin over an FBS team. The 2022 team went on to go undefeated in the regular season for the first time in school history, finishing 11–0, alongside setting a record for most wins in a season at 12. The team also achieved the highest rankings in the major FCS polls, reaching as high as No. 2 in both the STATS and the Coaches Polls. They would set a school record for highest attendance for a football game, winning the Causeway Classic over UC Davis 27–21 in their regular season home finale with an official crowd of 23,073. They also clinched their first FCS playoff victory over Richmond in the NCAA Division I Second Round.

Classification history Edit

Conference affiliations Edit

Championships Edit

Conference championships Edit

Year Coach Conference Overall record Conference record
1964 Ray Clemons Far Western Conference 8–2–1 4–0–1
1966 8–2 6–0
1986 Bob Mattos Western Football Conference 6–4–1 5–1
1995 John Volek American West Conference 4–6–1 3–0
2019 Troy Taylor Big Sky Conference 9–4 7–1
2021 9–3 8–0
2022 12–1 8–0

Postseason results Edit

Division II playoffs Edit

The Hornets made one appearance in the Division II Playoffs. Their record was 2–1.

Year Round Opponent Result
1988 First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
UC Davis
North Carolina Central
North Dakota State
W, 35–14
W, 56–7
L, 20–42

Division I FCS playoffs Edit

The Hornets have made three appearances in the FCS Playoffs. Their record is 1–3.

Year Round Opponent Result
2019 Second Round Austin Peay L, 28–42
2021 Second Round South Dakota State L, 19–24
2022 Second Round
Quarterfinals
Richmond
Incarnate Word
W, 38–31
L, 63–66

Bowl games Edit

Season Bowl Opponent Result
1964 Camellia Bowl Montana State L, 7–28
1968 Pasadena Bowl Grambling State L, 7–34

Home stadiums Edit

  • 1955-1958
Grant Stadium -Sacramento, CA
Capacity (8,000)


  • 1954, 1959-1968
Hughes Stadium -East Sacramento, CA
Capacity (20,311)

Charles C. Hughes Stadium (commonly referred to as Hughes Stadium) is an outdoor stadium located at Sacramento City College. The stadium opened in 1928 and was initially known as Sacramento Stadium and Sacramento College Stadium.[5]

 
Hughes Stadium

It was renamed in November 1944 in honor of Charles Colfax Hughes, the first superintendent of the Sacramento City Unified School District, who died a month earlier.[6][7] In 2012, the stadium underwent a major overhaul, installing an artificial turf field surface, a new track surface, and a major refurbishment of the facilities documented in this video. Its present seating capacity is 20,311.





  • 1969-current
Hornet Stadium -Sacramento, CA
Capacity (21,195)

Fred Anderson Field at Hornet Stadium is a 21,195-seat college football and track stadium on the campus of California State University, Sacramento (Sacramento State).[8] It opened 54 years ago on September 20, 1969, it has also been the home stadium of the Sacramento Surge of the WLAF,[9] the Sacramento Gold Miners of the Canadian Football League[10] and the Sacramento Mountain Lions of the United Football League. It hosted the U.S. Olympic Trials for track and field in 2000 and 2004.

 
Fred Anderson Field – Home grandstand

Its alignment is nearly north-south, offset slightly northwest, and the street-level elevation is approximately 35 feet (11 m) above sea level. The field was natural grass for its first 41 seasons; FieldTurf was installed in 2010. In 1998, Permanent chairbacks were installed in Section 213 at the 50–yard line. In 2000 The stadium underwent a $1 million improvement in preparation for the U.S. Track and Field Olympic Trials; An Olympic–sized track was installed surrounding the field as well as a practice track north of the stadium.[11] In 2003 New scoreboard installed. In 2007 new public entrances were installed. IN 2008 Broad Fieldhouse opened, which included new offices, locker rooms, athletic training room, weight room and a VIP patio. In 2010 natural grass was replaced by FieldTurf Duraspine Pro, "The Well" opened next to the north end zone which provided paved areas for concessions and a Jumbotron was added below the scoreboard. On July 17, 1993, it was the site of the first regular season Canadian Football League (CFL) game ever played on American soil, where the Calgary Stampeders defeated the Gold Miners 38–36. Fred Anderson Field also hosted the largest crowd ever to witness an event at Fred Anderson Field was when the Sacramento Surge defeated the Barcelona Dragons in the World League playoffs on May 30, 1992 in front of 26,445 fans. The largest Sacramento State football crowd occurred on November 19, 2022 when 23,073 fans saw the Hornets complete an 11-0 season with a 27-21 victory over UC Davis in the Causeway Classic[12]

Rivalries Edit

UC Davis Edit

The Hornets plays the rival UC Davis Aggies, annually and usually the last game of the regular season. This rivalry game is known as The Causeway Classic, and each team competes for the Causeway Trophy, referring to the fact that the schools are connected by the long Yolo Causeway bridge over Yolo Bypass flood way. UC Davis leads the series 46–23. This game has drawn crowds up to 23,000 in the Hornet Stadium, and is widely popular in the local area.

Cal Poly Edit

"Green and Gold Rivalry"

While not commemorated with a trophy, Cal Poly and Sacramento State are designated as 'protected rivals' in scheduling by the Big Sky Conference, meaning they are guaranteed to play each other in foreseeable schedules.[13] From 1967 to 2022, the Mustangs and Hornets have met 41 times, with Cal Poly holding a narrow lead all-time, 21–20.


Other notable rivalries includes Portland State, Eastern Washington, Weber State, the Montana schools, Montana, Montana State and Big Sky conference foes. Also, regional rival Pacific before they discontinued their football program in 1995.

Head coaches Edit

Coach Tenure Record Pct.
Dave Strong 1954–1956 4–18–1 .196
Johnny Baker 1957–1960 15–22 .405
Ray Clemons 1961–1975 70–76–3 .480
Glenn Brady 1976–1977 2–18–1 .119
Bob Mattos 1978–1992 84–73–2 .535
Mike Clemons 1993–1994 9–11 .450
John Volek 1995–2002 31–57–1 .354
Steve Mooshagian 2003–2006 11–33 .250
Marshall Sperbeck 2007–2013 35–44 .443
Jody Sears 2014–2018 20–35 .364
Troy Taylor 2019–2022 30–8 .811
Andy Thompson 2023–present 0–0

College Football Hall of Fame Edit

College Football Hall of Fame
Name Position Year Inducted Ref
Ken O'Brien QB 1978 1997 [14]

National Award winners Edit

Eddie Robinson Award
Year Name Position
2019 Troy Taylor 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.

Past Hornets in the NFL Edit

[15]

Notable former players Edit

Most notable alumni include:

References Edit

  1. ^ "Sacramento State Colors". Retrieved December 5, 2022.
  2. ^ "Sacramento State Football Record Book" (PDF). HornetSports.com. Retrieved October 23, 2015.
  3. ^ Contreras, Victor (September 10, 2012). . www.sacbee.com. The Sacramento Bee. Archived from the original on November 5, 2012.
  4. ^ Stapleton, Arnie (September 8, 2012). "Sacramento State upsets Colorado 30–28 on late FG". Yahoo Sports. Retrieved January 26, 2015.
  5. ^ "Colleges To Compete in Sacramento Stadium". The Sutter Independent. Yuba City, California. November 8, 1928. p. 5. Retrieved April 30, 2022 – via Newspapers.com  .
  6. ^ "College Stadium Is Named For Charles C. Hughes". The Sacramento Bee. Sacramento, California. October 19, 1928. p. 28. Retrieved April 30, 2022 – via Newspapers.com  .
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on September 18, 2006. Retrieved November 8, 2009.
  8. ^ "Hornet Stadium". hornetsports.com. Retrieved 2017-08-01.
  9. ^ "Machine at Surge". The Sacramento Bee. April 4, 1992. Retrieved April 19, 2012.
  10. ^ "The Sacramento Gold Miners' 1994 Season". Canadian Football League Database. Retrieved February 11, 2014.
  11. ^ http://www.legacy.usatf.org/statistics/champions/OlympicTrials/HistoryOfTheOlympicTrials.pdf The History of the Olympic Trials, published by USATF
  12. ^ Davidson, Joe. "A Causeway Classic: Record crowd sees Sac State beat rival UC Davis for Big Sky three-peat". The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  13. ^ frank.gogola@406mtsports.com, FRANK GOGOLA Missoulian. "Montana, Montana State get new protected rivals in Big Sky Conference play for 2022-24 seasons". 406 MT SPORTS. Retrieved 2022-06-26.
  14. ^ "Inductee | Kenneth John O'Brien, Jr. 1997 | College Football Hall of Fame".
  15. ^ "Sacramento St. Players/Alumni". Pro-Football-Reference.com.

External links Edit

  • Official website  

sacramento, state, hornets, football, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, schol. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sacramento State Hornets football news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Sacramento State Hornets football program is the intercollegiate American football team for the California State University Sacramento located in Sacramento California The team competes in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision FCS and are members of the Big Sky Conference The school s first football team was fielded in 1954 The team plays its home games at the 21 195 seat Hornet Stadium Sacramento State Hornets football2023 Sacramento State Hornets football teamFirst season1954Athletic directorMark OrrHead coachAndy Thompson 1st season 0 0 StadiumHornet Stadium capacity 21 195 Field surfaceNatural grass 1969 2009 FieldTurf 2010 present LocationSacramento CaliforniaNCAA divisionDivision I FCSConferenceBig SkyPast conferencesFWC 1954 1982 NCAC 1983 1984 WFC 1985 1992 AWC 1993 1995 All time record313 395 8 443 Bowl record0 2 000 Playoff appearances3Playoff recordDiv I FCS 1 3Conference titles7RivalriesUC Davis rivalry Cal PolyPacific defunct ColorsGreen and gold 1 Fight songFight Hornet Fight MascotHerky the HornetMarching bandSacramento State Marching BandWebsitehornetsports com Contents 1 History 1 1 Past success and notable games 1 2 Classification history 2 Conference affiliations 3 Championships 3 1 Conference championships 4 Postseason results 4 1 Division II playoffs 4 2 Division I FCS playoffs 4 3 Bowl games 5 Home stadiums 6 Rivalries 6 1 UC Davis 6 2 Cal Poly 7 Head coaches 8 College Football Hall of Fame 9 National Award winners 10 Past Hornets in the NFL 11 Notable former players 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditIn 1954 Dave Strong was named the first football coach for the Hornets football program The program s first victory came in their second season in 1955 when the Hornets defeated Southern Oregon by a point Sacramento State was first affiliated with the Northern California Athletic Conference from 1954 through 1984 the conference was known as the Far Western Conference until 1982 The Hornets were then members of the Western Football Conference from 1985 through 1992 In 1993 Sacramento State move the American West Conference and then to the Big Sky Conference in 1996 2 Hornet Stadium has been home to the football team since 1969 Past success and notable games Edit The Hornets have participated in two bowl games the Pasadena Bowl in 1968 against Grambling State where the Hornets lost 34 7 and the Camellia Bowl in 1964 where Montana State defeated the Hornets 28 7 One of Sac State s most notable wins came on September 3 2011 in the season opener against the Oregon State Beavers of the Pac 12 Conference at Reser Stadium The Hornets upset the Beavers in overtime 29 28 with a two point conversion pass from quarterback Jeff Flemming to wide receiver Brandyn Reed beating an AQ conference team for the first time in school history in front of an announced crowd of 41 581 The Beavers were a 23 point favorite coming into the game Four weeks after the win over Oregon State the Hornets defeated FCS national power Montana the program s first win ever over the Grizzlies on September 24 2011 Hornets defeated the then No 10 ranked Grizzlies by a score of 42 28 in Hornet Stadium On September 8 2012 Sac State defeated Colorado Buffaloes of the Pac 12 conference at Folsom Field as 20 point underdogs 3 Colorado jumped to an early 14 0 start but the Hornets quickly answered back with a pair of touchdown passes from Hornets quarterback Garrett Safron and a 2 yard rushing touchdown by A J Ellis to lead 21 14 over the Buffaloes 4 Sac State led 24 21 during intermission With less than a minute left in the fourth quarter and down 28 27 Hornet s walk on kicker Edgar Castenada made the 31 yard field goal winning kick for a final score of 30 28 After the game Hornets head coach Marshall Sperbeck announced in the locker room that Sacramento State has offered Castendada a scholarship This marked a consecutive year in which Sac State faced an AQ conference school both in the Pac 12 conference as heavy underdogs on the road and walked out with victories The Sacramento State football team were ranked for the first time ever in school history at the end of the 2019 season when they placed No 3 nationally in both the STATS and the Coaches polls Sacramento State was also ranked as the No 4 team in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS playoff bracket receiving a first week bye in their road to the finals The 2019 season was a major milestone in the teams history as the season brought Sacramento State its first ever Big Sky Conference Championship its fifth conference title overall and its first ever appearance in the FCS playoffs Prior to the 2019 season Sacramento State was never ranked at the end of any season but had won four conference titles The Sacramento State football team would set numerous school records for the 2022 season On September 24 2022 the Hornets defeated Colorado State 41 10 at Canvas Stadium making this their largest victory by margin over an FBS team The 2022 team went on to go undefeated in the regular season for the first time in school history finishing 11 0 alongside setting a record for most wins in a season at 12 The team also achieved the highest rankings in the major FCS polls reaching as high as No 2 in both the STATS and the Coaches Polls They would set a school record for highest attendance for a football game winning the Causeway Classic over UC Davis 27 21 in their regular season home finale with an official crowd of 23 073 They also clinched their first FCS playoff victory over Richmond in the NCAA Division I Second Round Classification history Edit 1954 1955 No classification 1956 1972 NCAA College Division 1973 1992 NCAA Division II 1993 present NCAA Division I AA FCSConference affiliations EditFar Western Conference 1954 1982 Northern California Athletic Conference 1983 1984 Western Football Conference 1985 1992 American West Conference 1993 1995 Big Sky Conference 1996 present Championships EditConference championships Edit Year Coach Conference Overall record Conference record1964 Ray Clemons Far Western Conference 8 2 1 4 0 11966 8 2 6 01986 Bob Mattos Western Football Conference 6 4 1 5 11995 John Volek American West Conference 4 6 1 3 02019 Troy Taylor Big Sky Conference 9 4 7 12021 9 3 8 02022 12 1 8 0Postseason results EditDivision II playoffs Edit The Hornets made one appearance in the Division II Playoffs Their record was 2 1 Year Round Opponent Result1988 First RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals UC DavisNorth Carolina CentralNorth Dakota State W 35 14W 56 7L 20 42Division I FCS playoffs Edit The Hornets have made three appearances in the FCS Playoffs Their record is 1 3 Year Round Opponent Result2019 Second Round Austin Peay L 28 422021 Second Round South Dakota State L 19 242022 Second RoundQuarterfinals RichmondIncarnate Word W 38 31L 63 66Bowl games Edit Season Bowl Opponent Result1964 Camellia Bowl Montana State L 7 281968 Pasadena Bowl Grambling State L 7 34Home stadiums Edit1955 1958Grant Stadium Sacramento CA Capacity 8 000 1954 1959 1968Hughes Stadium East Sacramento CA Capacity 20 311 Main article Charles C Hughes Stadium Charles C Hughes Stadium commonly referred to as Hughes Stadium is an outdoor stadium located at Sacramento City College The stadium opened in 1928 and was initially known as Sacramento Stadium and Sacramento College Stadium 5 nbsp Hughes StadiumIt was renamed in November 1944 in honor of Charles Colfax Hughes the first superintendent of the Sacramento City Unified School District who died a month earlier 6 7 In 2012 the stadium underwent a major overhaul installing an artificial turf field surface a new track surface and a major refurbishment of the facilities documented in this video Its present seating capacity is 20 311 1969 currentHornet Stadium Sacramento CA Capacity 21 195 Main article Hornet Stadium Sacramento Fred Anderson Field at Hornet Stadium is a 21 195 seat college football and track stadium on the campus of California State University Sacramento Sacramento State 8 It opened 54 years ago on September 20 1969 it has also been the home stadium of the Sacramento Surge of the WLAF 9 the Sacramento Gold Miners of the Canadian Football League 10 and the Sacramento Mountain Lions of the United Football League It hosted the U S Olympic Trials for track and field in 2000 and 2004 nbsp Fred Anderson Field Home grandstandIts alignment is nearly north south offset slightly northwest and the street level elevation is approximately 35 feet 11 m above sea level The field was natural grass for its first 41 seasons FieldTurf was installed in 2010 In 1998 Permanent chairbacks were installed in Section 213 at the 50 yard line In 2000 The stadium underwent a 1 million improvement in preparation for the U S Track and Field Olympic Trials An Olympic sized track was installed surrounding the field as well as a practice track north of the stadium 11 In 2003 New scoreboard installed In 2007 new public entrances were installed IN 2008 Broad Fieldhouse opened which included new offices locker rooms athletic training room weight room and a VIP patio In 2010 natural grass was replaced by FieldTurf Duraspine Pro The Well opened next to the north end zone which provided paved areas for concessions and a Jumbotron was added below the scoreboard On July 17 1993 it was the site of the first regular season Canadian Football League CFL game ever played on American soil where the Calgary Stampeders defeated the Gold Miners 38 36 Fred Anderson Field also hosted the largest crowd ever to witness an event at Fred Anderson Field was when the Sacramento Surge defeated the Barcelona Dragons in the World League playoffs on May 30 1992 in front of 26 445 fans The largest Sacramento State football crowd occurred on November 19 2022 when 23 073 fans saw the Hornets complete an 11 0 season with a 27 21 victory over UC Davis in the Causeway Classic 12 Rivalries EditUC Davis Edit See also Causeway Classic The Hornets plays the rival UC Davis Aggies annually and usually the last game of the regular season This rivalry game is known as The Causeway Classic and each team competes for the Causeway Trophy referring to the fact that the schools are connected by the long Yolo Causeway bridge over Yolo Bypass flood way UC Davis leads the series 46 23 This game has drawn crowds up to 23 000 in the Hornet Stadium and is widely popular in the local area Cal Poly Edit Green and Gold Rivalry While not commemorated with a trophy Cal Poly and Sacramento State are designated as protected rivals in scheduling by the Big Sky Conference meaning they are guaranteed to play each other in foreseeable schedules 13 From 1967 to 2022 the Mustangs and Hornets have met 41 times with Cal Poly holding a narrow lead all time 21 20 Other notable rivalries includes Portland State Eastern Washington Weber State the Montana schools Montana Montana State and Big Sky conference foes Also regional rival Pacific before they discontinued their football program in 1995 Head coaches EditCoach Tenure Record Pct Dave Strong 1954 1956 4 18 1 196Johnny Baker 1957 1960 15 22 405Ray Clemons 1961 1975 70 76 3 480Glenn Brady 1976 1977 2 18 1 119Bob Mattos 1978 1992 84 73 2 535Mike Clemons 1993 1994 9 11 450John Volek 1995 2002 31 57 1 354Steve Mooshagian 2003 2006 11 33 250Marshall Sperbeck 2007 2013 35 44 443Jody Sears 2014 2018 20 35 364Troy Taylor 2019 2022 30 8 811Andy Thompson 2023 present 0 0 College Football Hall of Fame EditCollege Football Hall of FameName Position Year Inducted RefKen O Brien QB 1978 1997 14 National Award winners EditEddie Robinson AwardEddie Robinson AwardYear Name Position2019 Troy Taylor 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 Past Hornets in the NFL EditMain article List of Sacramento State Hornets in the NFL Draft 15 Otis Amey San Francisco 49ers 2005 McLeod Bethel Thompson Minnesota Vikings amp San Francisco 49ers 2011 2016 DaRon Bland Dallas Cowboys 2022 present DeAndre Carter Las Vegas Raiders 2015 present Mike Carter Green Bay Packers 1970 1972 Tony Corbin San Diego Chargers 1997 Todd Davis New Orleans Saints amp Denver Broncos 2014 2021 John Gesek Los Angeles Raiders 1987 1995 Jon Kirksey New Orleans Saints 1996 Lorenzo Lynch Chicago Bears 1987 1997 Marte Mapu New England Patriots 2023 present Zack Nash Arizona Cardinals 2012 Lonie Paxton New England Patriots amp Denver Broncos 2000 2011 Darnell Sankey Indianapolis Colts amp New Orleans Saints 2016 2019 Kato Serwanga New England Patriots 1998 2003 Wasswa Serwanga San Francisco 49ers 1999 2001 Daimon Shelton Jacksonville Jaguars 1997 2006 Notable former players EditMost notable alumni include Clancy Barone DeAndre Carter Ryan Coogler Todd Davis Aaron Garcia John Gesek Lorenzo Lynch Ricky Ray Charles Roberts Daimon SheltonReferences Edit Sacramento State Colors Retrieved December 5 2022 Sacramento State Football Record Book PDF HornetSports com Retrieved October 23 2015 Contreras Victor September 10 2012 Leading Off Sac State s upset will mean nothing with a loss www sacbee com The Sacramento Bee Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Stapleton Arnie September 8 2012 Sacramento State upsets Colorado 30 28 on late FG Yahoo Sports Retrieved January 26 2015 Colleges To Compete in Sacramento Stadium The Sutter Independent Yuba City California November 8 1928 p 5 Retrieved April 30 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp College Stadium Is Named For Charles C Hughes The Sacramento Bee Sacramento California October 19 1928 p 28 Retrieved April 30 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Sacramento City Unified School District Archived from the original on September 18 2006 Retrieved November 8 2009 Hornet Stadium hornetsports com Retrieved 2017 08 01 Machine at Surge The Sacramento Bee April 4 1992 Retrieved April 19 2012 The Sacramento Gold Miners 1994 Season Canadian Football League Database Retrieved February 11 2014 http www legacy usatf org statistics champions OlympicTrials HistoryOfTheOlympicTrials pdf The History of the Olympic Trials published by USATF Davidson Joe A Causeway Classic Record crowd sees Sac State beat rival UC Davis for Big Sky three peat The Sacramento Bee Retrieved 20 November 2022 frank gogola 406mtsports com FRANK GOGOLA Missoulian Montana Montana State get new protected rivals in Big Sky Conference play for 2022 24 seasons 406 MT SPORTS Retrieved 2022 06 26 Inductee Kenneth John O Brien Jr 1997 College Football Hall of Fame Sacramento St Players Alumni Pro Football Reference com External links EditOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sacramento State Hornets football amp oldid 1179110506, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.