1986 Washington State Cougars football team

http://dbpedia.org/resource/1986_Washington_State_Cougars_football_team an entity of type: Thing

The 1986 Washington State Cougars football team was an American football team that represented Washington State University in the Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10) during the 1986 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their ninth and final season under head coach Jim Walden, the Cougars compiled a 3–7–1 record (2–6–1 in Pac-10, eighth place) and were outscored 312 to 221. The Cougars tied eventual Rose Bowl champion Arizona State in Tempe in late September, then beat USC by twenty points in Pullman, but lost their final five games and dropped in the standings. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 1986 Washington State Cougars football team
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xsd:gMonthDay --11-23
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xsd:gMonthDay --09-06
xsd:date 1986-11-22
rdf:langString Adams 32 yard field goal
rdf:langString Blount 14 yard run
rdf:langString Collins 71 yard interception return
rdf:langString Jones 10 yard run
rdf:langString Obrastoff 44 yard field goal
rdf:langString Taylor 11 yard pass from Blount
rdf:langString Wood 15 yard pass from Blount
rdf:langString Woods 5 yard run
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rdf:langString *Jim Walden
rdf:langString Washington St
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rdf:langString Washington
rdf:langString WSU 14–0
rdf:langString WSU 21–0
rdf:langString WSU 7–0
rdf:langString WSU 24–7
rdf:langString WSU 21–7
rdf:langString WSU 31–7
rdf:langString WSU 34–14
rdf:langString WSU 34–7
rdf:langString First quarter *WASH – Rod Jones 3-yard pass from Chris Chandler . Washington 7–0. Drive: Second quarter *WSU – Ed Tingstad 3-yard run . Tie 7–7. Drive: *WSU – Kevin Adams 51-yard field goal. Washington St 10–7. Drive: *WASH – Tony Covington 2-yard run . Washington 14–10. Drive: *WASH – Matt Slater 25-yard pass from Chris Chandler . Washington 21–10. Drive: Third quarter *WASH – Matt Slater 38-yard pass from Chris Chandler . Washington 28–10. Drive: *WASH – Jeff Jaeger 43-yard field goal. Washington 31–10. Drive: *WASH – Jeff Jaeger 26-yard field goal. Washington 34–10. Drive: *WSU – Kerry Porter 2-yard run . Washington 34–17. Drive: Fourth quarter *WASH – Matt Slater 25-yard pass from Chris Chandler . Washington 41–17. Drive: *WSU – Kerry Porter 9-yard run . Washington 41–23. Drive: *WASH – Jeff Jaeger 27-yard field goal, 3:16. Washington 44–23. Drive:
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rdf:langString Washington State Cougars
rdf:langString WSU
rdf:langString UNLV
rdf:langString #12 Washington Huskies at Washington State Cougars
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rdf:langString UNLV
xsd:integer 1986
rdf:langString *Jim Burrow *Dave Elliott *Jon Fabris *Gary Gagnon *Lindsay Hughes *Steve Morton *Robin Ross *Mel Sanders *Ken Woody
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rdf:langString Pac-10
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rdf:langString ;Top passers *WASH – Chris Chandler – 15/20, 204 yards, 4 TD *WSU – Ed Blount – 16/30, 240 yards, 2 INT ;Top rushers *WASH – Vince Weathersby – 25 rushes, 177 yards *WSU – Kerry Porter – 25 rushes, 90 yards, 2 TD ;Top receivers *WASH – Matt Slater – 4 receptions, 106 yards, 3 TD *WSU – Rodd Olson – 6 receptions, 94 yards
rdf:langString The 1986 Washington State Cougars football team was an American football team that represented Washington State University in the Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10) during the 1986 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their ninth and final season under head coach Jim Walden, the Cougars compiled a 3–7–1 record (2–6–1 in Pac-10, eighth place) and were outscored 312 to 221. The Cougars tied eventual Rose Bowl champion Arizona State in Tempe in late September, then beat USC by twenty points in Pullman, but lost their final five games and dropped in the standings. WSU's statistical leaders in 1986 included senior quarterback Ed Blount with 1,882 passing yards, Kerry Porter with 921 rushing yards, and Kitrick Taylor with 523 receiving yards. Notable underclassmen included quarterback Timm Rosenbach, guard Mike Utley, and future head coach Paul Wulff. Walden departed for Iowa State in the Big Eight Conference in mid-December, and was succeeded by Dennis Erickson, who returned to the Palouse (four years at Idaho) in January 1987 after just one season at Wyoming.
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