2001 North Dakota Fighting Sioux football team
http://dbpedia.org/resource/2001_North_Dakota_Fighting_Sioux_football_team an entity of type: Thing
The 2001 North Dakota Fighting Sioux football team represented University of North Dakota in the 2001 NCAA Division II football season. The Fighting Sioux won the NCAA Division II national championship, the team's first. Their head coach was Dale Lennon, a former fullback for the school. The team's quarterback was junior , who threw thirty-two touchdowns and seven interceptions. The leading rusher was , who rushed for almost eight-hundred yards and seven touchdowns. Three receivers had at least eight touchdowns; had ten, had nine, and had eight. Mac Schneider, an American attorney and politician running to represent North Dakota’s at-large congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, was a starting offensive lineman for the team and served as team captain his senior year
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
2001 North Dakota Fighting Sioux football team
xsd:integer
16493708
xsd:integer
1088049890
xsd:date
2001-11-11
rdf:langString
Dan Graf, Kelby Klosterman, Travis O'Neel, Eric Schmidt
rdf:langString
NCC champion
rdf:langString
NCAA Division II champion
rdf:langString
*Dale Lennon
rdf:langString
football
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
North Dakota Fighting Sioux
xsd:integer
2001
rdf:langString
W 17–14 vs. Grand Valley State
xsd:integer
7
<rod>
3.0
xsd:integer
14
rdf:langString
NCC
rdf:langString
f
rdf:langString
The 2001 North Dakota Fighting Sioux football team represented University of North Dakota in the 2001 NCAA Division II football season. The Fighting Sioux won the NCAA Division II national championship, the team's first. Their head coach was Dale Lennon, a former fullback for the school. The team's quarterback was junior , who threw thirty-two touchdowns and seven interceptions. The leading rusher was , who rushed for almost eight-hundred yards and seven touchdowns. Three receivers had at least eight touchdowns; had ten, had nine, and had eight. Mac Schneider, an American attorney and politician running to represent North Dakota’s at-large congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, was a starting offensive lineman for the team and served as team captain his senior year. The defense had a plus nineteen turnover margin and allowed fewer than thirteen points a game and just three rushing touchdowns all season. led the defense with ten sacks.
xsd:integer
4
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
15033