Washington State Cougars football | |||
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First season | 1893 | ||
Head coach | Mike Leach | ||
1st year, 0–0 (—) | |||
Home stadium | Martin Stadium | ||
Year built | 1972 | ||
Stadium capacity | 35,117 | ||
Stadium surface | FieldTurf - (2000-present) | ||
Location | Pullman, Washington | ||
Conference | Pac-12 | ||
All-time record | 501–513–45 (.494) | ||
Postseason bowl record | 6–4 | ||
Claimed national titles | 0 | ||
Conference titles | 4 (1917, 1930, 1997, 2002) | ||
Heisman winners | 0 | ||
Consensus All-Americans | 5 | ||
Current uniform | |||
Colors | Crimson and Gray | ||
Fight song | Washington State University Fight Song | ||
Mascot | Butch T. Cougar | ||
Marching band | Cougar Marching Band | ||
Major Rivals | Washington Huskies Idaho Vandals Oregon Ducks Oregon State Beavers |
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Website | WSUcougars.com |
The Washington State Cougars football team is the intercollegiate football team of Washington State University. The team is a member of the Pacific-12 Conference. Beginning with the 2012 season, they will be coached by Mike Leach, who is replacing Paul Wulff, who was fired following the 2011 season.
The Cougars play home games on campus at Martin Stadium, which opened in 1972; the site dates back to 1892 when it was called Soldier Field. Its present seating capacity is 35,117.
Contents |
Tenure | Coach | Years | Record | Pct. |
1894 | William Goodyear | 1 | 1-1 | .500 |
1895 | W.W. Waite | 1 | 2-0 | 1.000 |
1896 | David Brodie | 1 | 2-0-1 | 1.000 |
1897 | Robert Galley | 1 | 2-0 | 1.000 |
1898-99 | Frank Shively | 2 | 1-1-1 | .500 |
1900, 1902 | William Allen | 2 | 6-3-1 | .650 |
1901 | William Namack | 1 | 4-1 | .800 |
1903 | James Ashmore | 1 | 3-3-2 | .500 |
1904-05 | Everett Sweeley | 2 | 6-6 | .500 |
1906-07, 1912-14 | John R. Bender | 5 | 21-12 | .636 |
1908 | Walter Rheinschild | 1 | 4-0-2 | .833 |
1909 | Willis Keinholz | 1 | 4-1 | .800 |
1910-11 | Oscar Osthoff | 2 | 5-6 | .454 |
1915-17 | William Henry Dietz | 3 | 17-2-1 | .875 |
1918 | Emory Alvord | 1 | 1-1 | .500 |
1919-22 | Gus Welch | 4 | 16-10-1 | .611 |
1923-25 | Albert Exendine | 3 | 6-13-4 | .348 |
1926-40 | O.E. Hollingbery | 15 | 93-53-14 | .625 |
1941-42 | Rick James | 2 | 2-14 | .180 |
1943-44 | World War II - no teams | |||
1945-49 | Phil Sarboe | 5 | 17-26-3 | .402 |
1950-51 | Forest Evashevski | 2 | 11-6-2 | .632 |
1952-55 | Al Kircher | 4 | 13-25-2 | .350 |
1958-63 | Jim Sutherland | 8 | 37-39-4 | .488 |
1964-67 | Bert Clark | 4 | 15-24-1 | .388 |
1968-75 | Jim Sweeney | 8 | 26-59-1 | .308 |
1976 | Jackie Sherrill | 1 | 3-8 | .273 |
1977 | Warren Powers | 1 | 6-5 | .545 |
1978-86 | Jim Walden | 9 | 44-52-4 | .460 |
1987-88 | Dennis Erickson | 2 | 12-10-1 | .543 |
1989-2002 | Mike Price | 14 | 83-78 | .516 |
2003-07 | Bill Doba | 5 | 30-29 | .508 |
2008-11 | Paul Wulff | 4 | 9-40 | .184 |
2011- | Mike Leach | -- | -- | -- |
Totals | 33 coaches | 116 seasons | 501-513-45 | .494 |
From 2001 through 2003 Washington State had three consecutive 10 win seasons, also finishing ranked among the top ten teams in the nation each year. They finished the 2001 season beating Purdue in the Sun Bowl 33-27. The Cougars then lost to Oklahoma 34-14 in the Rose Bowl January 1st, 2002. They capped the three year ride with a 28-20 victory over then #5 ranked Texas in the 2003 Holiday Bowl.Cougar Media Guide
Washington State has made 10 bowl appearances, and has a bowl record of 6–4. The Cougars have played in the Rose Bowl (1 win, 3 losses), the Holiday Bowl (1 win, 1 loss), the Aloha Bowl (1 win), the Copper Bowl (1 win), the Alamo Bowl (1 win), and the Sun Bowl (1 win).[1]
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