Weber State football: Wildcats hope for more after big year

Published: Wednesday, Dec. 10 2008 12:11 a.m. MST

Weber State's Treyvn Smith (25) helped lead the Wildcats to the FCS quarterfinals and a Big Sky title this season with his third-straight conference rushing title.

Scott G. Winterton, Deseret News

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OGDEN — The 2008 football season didn't end the way the Weber State Wildcats wanted it to when they were defeated by Big Sky rival Montana 24-13 in the Football Championship Subdivision quarterfinals on Saturday.

But their breakthrough year will be remembered for much more than how it ended. The Wildcats are hoping that the 2008 season raised the bar of expectations at the school and that a solid foundation for future success has been built.

Weber State (10-4) won 10 games for just the second time in school history, and the Wildcats won just their second FCS playoff game. They reached the playoffs for the first time in 17 years and won a share of the Big Sky championship for the first time in 40 years.

The Wildcats had a formidable mix of seniors and younger players contribute to their success in 2008. While the team returns several explosive players in 2009, those returning players realize that seniors such as Derek Johnson, Bryce Scanlon, Marcus Mailei, Scotty Goodloe, Bryant Eteuati, J.D. Folsom, Ryan Galovic, Biff Swan, Pate Moleni, Lawaia Naihe and Paul Carpenter helped set the tone for what was arguably the best season of football in Weber State history.

"I want to thank the seniors," said junior safety Beau Hadley. "They've done something that will really help us to continue to expect to win and get to these type of games (the FCS quarterfinals). The seniors were great leaders on and off the field. They never missed workouts. They set the tone for us, and that's something the underclassmen coming back need to do next year."

Younger players will need to take leadership roles to keep Weber State among the Big Sky elite next season. Their production in 2008 was undeniable.

Quarterback Cameron Higgins had an outstanding sophomore year, as he set a Big Sky single-season record with 4,477 passing yards. He was second in the nation with 36 touchdown passes, a total that was also a Weber State single-season record. He completed 65 percent of his passes and finished sixth in the voting for the Walter Payton award.

Running back Trevyn Smith rushed for at least 100 yards in each of Weber State's final seven games. He became the Wildcats' all-time leading rusher this season in just his junior year, and won his third consecutive Big Sky rushing title. He scored 28 touchdowns, which tied him with two other players for the conference's single-season record.

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