Boise State Defense Shuts Down New Mexico, Roh Scores Three TDs In 28-14 Win

GAME SUMMARY

The Boise State football team held New Mexico’s option running attack to 198 yards, tight end Jake Roh scored three touchdowns and the Broncos survived their Mountain West opener without starting quarterback Brett Rypien, beating the Lobos 28-14 at Albertsons Stadium on Thursday night. Backup quarterback Montell Cozart, starting for Rypien who was injured the previous week at Washington State, completed 15-of-19 passes for 137 yards, and rushed for 71 yards and a 28-yard touchdown to open the scoring. He tossed two short TD passes to Roh, who also had a 6-yard TD run. The Broncos (2-1 overall, 1-0 Mountain West), who played their first three games in a 13-day span, ran for only 127 yards but also produced their eighth turnover of the season. Boise State finished last season with nine turnovers. The attendance was 28,385.

  • NEXT: Virginia at Boise State, Friday, Sept. 22, 6 p.m., Albertsons Stadium, ESPN2, KBOI 670 AM and KTIK 93.1 FM The Ticket.

PRATER’S POST-GAME POINTS

  • Boise State’s defense was phenomenal against the Lobos’ option, allowing 198 yards on 51 carries, and should be phenomenal all season despite only three seniors on the depth chart. Junior linebacker Leighton Vander Esch continues to be a menace and now has 36 tackles, three sacks, two forced fumbles and an interception. The hard-hitting Broncos have knocked out the starting quarterback in two straight games. Athletic – and physical – is a dangerous combination, and this defense is young and feisty enough to do it all season.
  • There have been 423 plays this Boise State season. Take away two (Cozart’s interception and the botched punt/fumble, both against Washington State) and the Broncos would be undefeated and nationally ranked.
  • The Broncos’ run game is “poor” and needs to get better, according to coach Bryan Harsin. Cozart is the leading rusher after three games (179 yards), No. 1 running back Alexander Mattison had only six carries for 10 yards against the Lobos (coaching curiosity), and the Broncos’ are 0-5 on fourth-down conversions this season. More Mattison, less Ryan Wolpin (13 total touches against New Mexico).
  • Cozart’s stats are solid after three games: 33-of-48, 68.8 percent, five touchdowns, one interceptions and a team-high 179 rushing yards and two TDs. The Kansas transfer has been on the roster for less than five months, and he’s 28th in FBS in passing efficiency (159.9). Rypien should start next week against Virginia, but if there are any signs of hiccups behind a struggling/improving offensive line, a full-on QB controversy could hit the Boise State football team. Regardless, Cozart has proven that he needs to be on the field as much as possible.
  • Chase Hatada’s ejection for a first-half targeting call was correct. He lowered his head, lead with his helmet, and hit New Mexico QB Lamar Jordan in the chin (out for the game). It was textbook targeting. It was an aggressive hit, hardly dirty, but I wouldn’t be surprised if the Mountain West takes a look at the video to determine if a suspension is necessary.
  • The crowd of 28,385 was poor, but there were 2,000 walk-up sales in the two days before the game, and a majority of the fans stayed until the end. Progress.


Mike Prater, editor of The Opinionator, co-hosts Idaho Sports Talk with Caves & Prater weekdays from 3-6 p.m. on KTIK 93.1 FM The Ticket and can be heard on Bronco GameNights after BSU football games on KBOI 670 AM and KTIK 93.1 FM. He can be reached at [email protected], and found @CavesandPrater(Facebook) and @MikeFPrater (Twitter).

POST-GAME NEWS & NOTES

  • Boise State’s 28-14 victory over New Mexico improved the Broncos to 8-1 overall against the Lobos, and to 2-1 overall on the season and 1-0 in Mountain West play.
  • New Mexico’s 14 points was its fewest against the Broncos since being shutout 45-0 on Dec. 3, 2011.
  • Boise State has won its conference opener 18 years in a row. The last loss in a conference opener was 17-10 loss to North Texas in Boise State’s Big West opener Oct. 16, 1999.
  • Redshirt junior linebacker Leighton Vander Esch made his second-career interception (first this season), forced a fumble, and made 13 tackles (seven solo).
  • Sophomore safety DeAndre Pierce made a career-high 12 tackles (eight solo), with 2.5 TFL. His previous high was six, posted last Saturday at Washington State.
  • Redshirt junior STUD Jabril Frazier made his second sack of the season.
  • Redshirt senior tight end Jake Roh scored three times, catching passes for five and 15 yards, respectively, and rushing for a six-yard score. The latter was his first-career carry. For the game, Roh caught three passes for 25 yards with the two scoring catches.
  • Redshirt freshman kicker/punter Joel Velazquez hit a career-long punt of 63 yards, and averaged 53.5 yards over two punts.
  • Boise State committed season-highs in penalties (eight) and penalty yards (73).
  • New Mexico rushed for 198 yards, becoming the first opponent to eclipse the century mark against the Broncos this season.
  • Redshirt junior defensive tackle David Moa was selected as the Boise State game-day captain, joining season-long captains Brett Rypien, Leighton Vander Esch and Cedrick Wilson.
  • Safety Skyler Seibold led the Broncos onto the field with The Hammer, cornerback Tyler Horton carried the “Bleed Blue” flag, and tight end Alec Dhaenens carried the United States flag.

Courtesy of Boise State Athletics