Weber State University Athletics

Wildcats Are Purrfect To A "T" In A 47-14 Home Field Win Over Cal Poly
11/21/2009 7:00:00 AM | Football
It truly was, “Senior Day” at Weber State as senior wide receiver TIM TOONE (5-10, 165) hauled in 11 passes for 176 yards and three touchdowns, and senior running back TREVYN SMITH (5-9, 210) carried 20 times for 107 yards and two touchdowns, leading the Wildcats to a convincing 47-14 non-conference win at home over Cal Poly.
Cal Poly took the opening drive and went 80 yards in 10 plays with Tony Smith finding David Mahr on a 28-yard touchdown pass to give the Mustangs their only lead of the game.
The Wildcats then opened the scoring flood gates with 38 answered points. It began with CAMERON HIGGINS (6-2, 210 Jr.) finding BO BOLEN (5-9, 200 RsFr. RB) on a 15-yard pass on WSU's first possession of the game making it 7-7 at the end of the first quarter.
Weber State then scored on its next five straight possessions with TREVYN SMITH (5-9, 210 Sr. RB) scoring on a three-yard run, followed by touchdowns passes from Higgins to Toone of 26 and 17 yards. Smith scored on a nine-yard run and MIKE SNOY (6-2, 180 Sr. P/K) finished it off on a 30-yard field goal with 20 seconds showing on the clock for a 38-7 half time lead.
Cal Poly's defense settled in during the third quarter to shut out the Wildcats. Tony Smith found Jordan Yocum on a 12-yard touchdown pass at the 4:05 mark for the quarter's only score.
The Wildcat's defense returned the favor, shutting out the Mustangs in the fourth quarter while Snoy connected on a 19-yard field goal and a crazy 44-yard pass from Higgins to Toone with 5:21 left in the game. Higgins was flushed from the pocket and began running to his left. He fumbled the ball, went down and scooped with up, set his feet, and found Toone all alone on the left sideline for the touchdown. Mike Snoy's point after was wide left to complete the scoring.
Toone's 11 receptions in the game, gave him 200 for his career. That is the 10th most in Big Sky Conference history and the second most in Weber State football history. Trevor Shaw holds the WSU school record with 206. Toone's 3,561 career receiving yards are now the 4th most in a career in Big Sky Conference history. His 29 career touchdown receptions are a Weber State school record and is now the 4th most in a career in Big Sky Conference history.
Trevyn Smith's 107 yards pushed him to 5,007 career rushing yards. He is the first WSU player to reach that plateau and only the third player in Big Sky Conference history to do so. Charles Roberts from Sacramento State has 6,553 and Charles Dunn of Portland State has 6,007. Smith's 6,376 career All-Purpose Yards is a WSU school record and is the 3rd most by a player in Big Sky Conference history.
Cameron Higgins is now second at Weber State in career passing yards with 9,595 and is now 8th on the Big Sky Conference career list. His 83 career touchdown passes are just four behind the WSU school record of 87 by Jamie Martin and 13 behind the Big Sky record of 96 by Dave Dickenson.
Weber State ends the 2009 regular season with a 7-4 record overall and a 6-2 mark in Big Sky play. The Wildcats end up in a tie with Eastern Washington for second place, but the Wildcats hold that tie-break with a 31-12 win over the Eagles in Cheney, Washington on October 10. Cal Poly ends the season at 4-7.
The Wildcats now wait for the 2009 NCAA Division I FCS selection show which will air on Sunday, November 22 at 1:00 p.m. (MST) on ESPNews to see if they capture one of the eight At-Large berth into the 16-team playoff. The University of Montana, the 2009 Big Sky champions at 8-0 (11-0 overall), receive the league's automatic berth.
Cal Poly took the opening drive and went 80 yards in 10 plays with Tony Smith finding David Mahr on a 28-yard touchdown pass to give the Mustangs their only lead of the game.
The Wildcats then opened the scoring flood gates with 38 answered points. It began with CAMERON HIGGINS (6-2, 210 Jr.) finding BO BOLEN (5-9, 200 RsFr. RB) on a 15-yard pass on WSU's first possession of the game making it 7-7 at the end of the first quarter.
Weber State then scored on its next five straight possessions with TREVYN SMITH (5-9, 210 Sr. RB) scoring on a three-yard run, followed by touchdowns passes from Higgins to Toone of 26 and 17 yards. Smith scored on a nine-yard run and MIKE SNOY (6-2, 180 Sr. P/K) finished it off on a 30-yard field goal with 20 seconds showing on the clock for a 38-7 half time lead.
Cal Poly's defense settled in during the third quarter to shut out the Wildcats. Tony Smith found Jordan Yocum on a 12-yard touchdown pass at the 4:05 mark for the quarter's only score.
The Wildcat's defense returned the favor, shutting out the Mustangs in the fourth quarter while Snoy connected on a 19-yard field goal and a crazy 44-yard pass from Higgins to Toone with 5:21 left in the game. Higgins was flushed from the pocket and began running to his left. He fumbled the ball, went down and scooped with up, set his feet, and found Toone all alone on the left sideline for the touchdown. Mike Snoy's point after was wide left to complete the scoring.
Toone's 11 receptions in the game, gave him 200 for his career. That is the 10th most in Big Sky Conference history and the second most in Weber State football history. Trevor Shaw holds the WSU school record with 206. Toone's 3,561 career receiving yards are now the 4th most in a career in Big Sky Conference history. His 29 career touchdown receptions are a Weber State school record and is now the 4th most in a career in Big Sky Conference history.
Trevyn Smith's 107 yards pushed him to 5,007 career rushing yards. He is the first WSU player to reach that plateau and only the third player in Big Sky Conference history to do so. Charles Roberts from Sacramento State has 6,553 and Charles Dunn of Portland State has 6,007. Smith's 6,376 career All-Purpose Yards is a WSU school record and is the 3rd most by a player in Big Sky Conference history.
Cameron Higgins is now second at Weber State in career passing yards with 9,595 and is now 8th on the Big Sky Conference career list. His 83 career touchdown passes are just four behind the WSU school record of 87 by Jamie Martin and 13 behind the Big Sky record of 96 by Dave Dickenson.
Weber State ends the 2009 regular season with a 7-4 record overall and a 6-2 mark in Big Sky play. The Wildcats end up in a tie with Eastern Washington for second place, but the Wildcats hold that tie-break with a 31-12 win over the Eagles in Cheney, Washington on October 10. Cal Poly ends the season at 4-7.
The Wildcats now wait for the 2009 NCAA Division I FCS selection show which will air on Sunday, November 22 at 1:00 p.m. (MST) on ESPNews to see if they capture one of the eight At-Large berth into the 16-team playoff. The University of Montana, the 2009 Big Sky champions at 8-0 (11-0 overall), receive the league's automatic berth.
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