2009 Eastern Washington Eagles football team

2009 Eastern Washington Eagles football
FCS First Round, L 33–44, vs. #12 Stephen F. Austin
Conference Big Sky Conference
Ranking
Sports Network #13[1]
FCS Coaches #13[2]
2009 record 8–4 (6–2 Big Sky)
Head coach Beau Baldwin
Offensive coordinator Aaron Best
Defensive coordinator John Graham/Torey Hunter
Home stadium Woodward Field

The 2009 Eastern Washington Eagles football team represented Eastern Washington University in the 2009 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) college football season. They played their home games at Woodward Field in Cheney, Washington. The team finished 8–4 (6–2 Big Sky) and improved on their record from 2008 in which they finished 6–5.

Matt Nichols

Nichols now has twelve 300-yard passing games in his 35-game career and 14 performances with at least 300 yards of total offense. On EWU's career passing lists, Nichols ranks in the top five in all categories, including second in total offense (9,376) and second in passing yards (8,786) The record holder for both passing yards and total offense is 2005 Payton Award winner Erik Meyer (2002–05) with 10,261 passing yards and 10,942 yards of total offense. Meyer is the player Nichols replaced in 2006 as Eastern's starting quarterback. Nichols now owns the school record with 1,150 career pass attempts, and also ranks fifth in efficiency rating (136.0), second in touchdown passes (63, ranking only behind the 84 of Meyer), second in completions (698) and third in interceptions (40). With 590 rushing yards in his career, Nichols is approaching the EWU career record for a quarterback of 681 set by Meyer. Nichols has been a part of four of the 36-longest pass plays in school history of 70, 78, 80 and 85 yards, but just the 80-yarder was a touchdown. Nichols has the most starts among returning players in 2009 with 33. At the beginning of the 2009 season Nichols was again, named to the Walter Payton Award watchlist.[3]

Schedule

Date Time Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 4 7:00 p.m. (D-II)[4] Western Oregon* Woodward FieldCheney, WA W 35–14   3,113
September 12 3:30 p.m. at #10[5] California* #20 Memorial StadiumBerkeley, CA FSN L 7–59   58,083
September 19 12:00 p.m. Northern Colorado #20 Woodward Field • Cheney, WA SWX W 16–0   5,538
September 26 1:05 p.m. at Sacramento State #18 Hornet StadiumSacramento, CA W 56–30   10,175
October 3 6:05 p.m. at Idaho State #15 Holt ArenaPocatello, ID W 38–3   6,003
October 10 2:35 p.m. #21 Weber State #17 Woodward Field • Cheney, WA ALT L 13–31   5,370
October 17 3:30 p.m. at #3 Montana #21 Washington-Grizzly StadiumMissoula, MT (EWU-UM Governors Cup) SWX L 34–41   25,751
October 31 12:05 p.m. Montana Statedagger #21 Woodward Field • Cheney, WA SWX W 28–17   6,632
November 7 1:05 p.m. vs. Portland State #16 Qwest FieldSeattle, WA (Showdown on the Sound) W 41-10   6,124
November 14 1:05 p.m. at Southern Utah* #18 Eccles ColiseumCedar City, UT W 48–21   3,011
November 21 2:00 p.m. at #25 Northern Arizona #18 Walkup SkydomeFlagstaff, AZ W 49–45   5,023
November 28 12:00 p.m. at #12 Stephen F. Austin #14 Homer Bryce StadiumNacogdoches, TX (FCS First Round) CBSCS L 33–44   8,224
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming. #Rankings from The Sports Network FCS Poll at time of game. All times are in Pacific Time.

Western Oregon

Sophomore Taiwan Jones scored on an 87-yard run on his first carry as an Eastern Washington University running back. But it wasn't that easy the rest of the way in EWU's 35–14 non-conference college football victory against Western Oregon Saturday (Sept. 5) at Woodward Field in Cheney, Wash.

The Eagles, ranked 18th in the preseason NCAA Football Championship Subdivision rankings, scored 14 fourth-quarter points on a pair of Matt Nichols-to-Nathan Overbay touchdown passes as they survived for the win over the NCAA Division II Wolves.[6]

#10 California

Matt Nichols throwing a pass against Cal.

Eastern Washington scored on an 83-yard drive in the first quarter, but the California Bears performed as advertised after that to score 52 unanswered points and record a 59–7 victory over Eastern Washington Saturday (Sept. 12) at Memorial Stadium in Berkeley, California. In a match-up between the Big Sky Conference and the Pacific-10 Conference, Eastern entered the game ranked 18th in the Sports Network FCS poll. Cal, meanwhile, was ranked 10th in the Associated Press poll in the NCAA Football Bowl Division and represented the second-highest ranked team EWU has ever played (West Virginia was sixth when they beat EWU 52–3 in 2006).

Heisman Trophy candidate Jahvid Best rushed for 144 yards on 17 carries and scored twice for the Golden Bears, who are now 2–0. The Eagles, now 1–1, were out-gained 392–14 on the ground. In all, California had 507 yards of offense to EWU's 235.[7]

Northern Colorado

The defense forced four turnovers and was equally effective on fourth down as Eastern Washington University shut-out Northern Colorado 16–0 Saturday (Sept. 19) in the Big Sky Conference football opener for both schools at Woodward Field in Cheney, Wash.

The Eagles recovered three fumbles and had an interception in Eastern's first shutout at Woodward Field since 1983. The Eagles have had six other shutouts since then either on the road or in Spokane, including a 34–0 win over UNC in 2006. Eastern also held the Bears to a 0-of-4 performance on fourth down and had four sacks.[8]

Sacramento State

Hornet Stadium is definitely a home-away-from-home for the Eastern Washington University football team. The Eagles are now a perfect 10–0 against the Hornets in Sacramento, and avenged a 15–13 home setback to the Hornets last season.

The 19th-ranked Eagles scored 35 first-half points and went on to hold-off Sacramento State 56–30 Saturday (Sept. 26) in sweltering heat at Hornet Stadium in Sacramento, Calif. The win puts the Eastern Washington Eagles in first place in the Big Sky Conference, and also makes a statement in FCS play as EWU is now ranks #17.

Idaho State

Running back Taiwan Jones had another big day, but so did quarterback Matt Nichols and wide receiver Aaron Boyce as Eastern Washington remained unbeaten in the Big Sky Conference football standings with a 38–3 victory over Idaho State Saturday (Oct. 3) at Holt Arena in Pocatello, Idaho. Jones rushed for 168 yards and three touchdowns on just 14 carries (12.0 per rush), including a school-record 96-yard rush for a score in the third quarter. He broke the previous record of 95 yards set by John Ditz against Lewis & Clark in 1954. Last week, Jones had 190 yards and four touchdowns against Sacramento State to earn national player of the week honors.

Nichols completed 27-of-38 passes for 293 yards and a pair of touchdown passes to Boyce, who caught 10 passes for 149 yards. Nichols came up just short of his 13th 300-yard passing performance in his career, but it was the 12th 100-yard receiving output for Boyce. Eastern, which entered the game ranked 17th in the Sports Network NCAA Football Championship Subdivision poll, is now 4–1 overall, and has its third 3–0 start in Big Sky history (1992, 2004).

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2009 Eastern Washington Eagles football team.
  1. Sports Network's FCS College Football Poll
  2. 2009 FCS Coaches Poll
  3. "GoEags – 2009 Football Roster". Archived from the original on 2009-09-18. Retrieved 2009-09-16.
  4. "Eastern Washington University Football". Eastern Washington University Department of Athletics. Archived from the original on September 7, 2009. Retrieved September 5, 2009.
  5. "The Sports Network – Football Championship Subdivision". Sports Network. Archived from the original on September 10, 2009. Retrieved September 8, 2009.
  6. "GoEags – Eastern Pulls Away From Western Oregon". Archived from the original on 2009-09-18. Retrieved 2009-09-16.
  7. "GoEags – Cal Downs Eagles".
  8. "EWU Football – Eags get shutout.". Archived from the original on December 27, 2010.
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