UTSA looks to bounce back against North TexasUTSA looks to bounce back against North Texas
Jeff Huehn/UTSA Athletics
Football

UTSA looks to bounce back against North Texas

SAN ANTONIO — After playing the longest game in Conference USA history, UTSA (3-4, 2-2 C-USA) will look to get back in the win column on Saturday night when it hosts North Texas (4-3, 2-1 C-USA). Kickoff is scheduled for 6 p.m. at the Alamodome.

The Roadrunners are coming off last Saturday's 52-49, five-overtime loss to UTEP, which is tied for the fifth-longest contest in NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision annals.

Saturday will mark the 66th all-time game in school history, the 35th of which that will be played within the friendly confines of the Alamodome.

UTSA returned 41 letterwinners from last year's squad, including 14 starters (seven offense/five defense/two kickers).

TUNING IN: Saturday's game will be broadcast live locally in the Alamo City on KMYS-CW 35. Don Harris (play-by-play), Chuck Miketinac (analyst) and Hector Ledesma (sidelines) will call all the action in what will be the fourth of five local telecasts for the Roadrunners this season. The contest also can be heard live in San Antonio on Ticket 760 AM. Andy Everett (play-by-play) and Jay Riley (analyst) will handle the call. The pregame show will begin at 4 p.m. and there will be a 45-minute postgame show. The broadcast also can be heard live online at goUTSA.com or on your mobile device with the free iHeartRadio app.

SCOUTING NORTH TEXAS: North Texas (4-3, 2-1 C-USA) will bring a two-game winning streak to the Alamo City this weekend after posting victories against Marshall (38-21/Oct. 8) and at Army (35-18/Oct. 22) in its past two outings. The Mean Green, which has won three of its last four games overall, also owns wins at Rice (42-35 2OT/Sept. 24) and against Bethune-Cookman (41-20/Sept. 10) this fall. North Texas' three losses this year have come against SMU (34-21/Sept. 3), at Florida (32-0/Sept. 17) and against Middle Tennessee (30-13/Oct. 1). The Mean Green, led by first-year head coach Seth Littrell, returned 62 letterwinners, including 15 starters, from last year's squad that won just one game.

SERIES HISTORY: Saturday will mark the fourth all-time meeting between the two Lone Star State programs. North Texas ended a two-game losing streak to the Roadrunners with a 30-23 home victory last Halloween, which was its lone triumph of the 2016 season. UTSA picked up wins of 21-13 on Nov. 23, 2013, and 34-27 the following Nov. 29 in the first two matchups between the two schools that are separated by a little more than 300 miles.
 
UTSA/North Texas All-Time Series Results — UTSA leads, 2-1
Date — Score — Location

Oct. 31, 2015 — North Texas 30, UTSA 23 — Denton
Nov. 29, 2014 — UTSA 34, North Texas 27 — San Antonio
Nov. 23, 2013 — UTSA 21, North Texas 13 — Denton

UTEP OUTLASTS UTSA IN FIVE-OVERTIME THRILLER: Warren Redix caught a 6-yard touchdown pass from Ryan Metz just inside the front corner pylon to help lift UTEP to a 52-49 victory against UTSA in five overtimes on Saturday night at the Alamodome. The game was the longest in Conference USA history and tied for the fifth-longest in NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision annals. The Roadrunners took a 49-46 lead in the final extra period when Victor Falcon connected on a 33-yard field goal. Needing at least a field goal to force a sixth overtime, the Miners used rushing plays of eight, six and five yards to move down to the UTSA 6-yard line. Metz then rolled out to his right and found Redix on the sideline with the game-winning pass to put the visiting team on top for the fourth and final time and even the all-time series at two games apiece. It also snapped UTEP's five-game losing streak.

FIRST-TIME STARTERS: UTSA has seen a total of 20 first-time starters (11 defense/nine offense) take the field in the opening seven games of the season and that figure ranks fourth in the country (Bowling Green and Iowa lead with 23, while Missouri has 22). In the season opener against Alabama State, the Roadrunners' starting lineup featured a total of nine first-time starters, five on defense and another four on offense. Defensive first-time starters included junior CB N'Keal Bailey, redshirt freshman DT Baylen Baker, junior LB La'Kel Bass, senior S Jordan Moore and redshirt freshman LB Josiah Tauaefa. Meanwhile, offensive first-time starters included senior OT Gabriel Casillas, senior OT Jevonte Domond, sophomore RB Halen Steward and junior WR Josh Stewart. The Colorado State contest saw junior WR Brady Jones make his first career start in the slot and junior OG Stefan Beard, freshman CB Teddrick McGhee and junior WR Marquez McNair drew starting assignments against Arizona State (Sept. 16). Senior DE Ben Kane and junior TE Shaq Williams were in the starting lineup for the first time at Old Dominion (Sept. 24) and the Southern Miss (Oct. 8) game saw redshirt freshman WR Matt Guidry, junior CB Austin Jupe and senior RB Andrew King draw their inaugural starts. UTSA's lone first-time starter at Rice (Oct. 15) was sophomore S C.J. Levine and last Saturday saw redshirt freshman DT King Newton draw his first start against UTEP.

Football Bowl Subdivision Leaders — First-Time Starters
Team — No.

1. Bowling Green — 23
    Iowa — 23
3. Missouri — 22
4. UTSA — 20

BROTHERLY LOVE: Junior WRs Josh Stewart and Kerry Thomas Jr. became the first set of brothers to start the same game on offense for UTSA in its six-year history in the season opener against Alabama State (they have gone on to start the five of the past six contests together). Bennett (defense) and Evans (offense) Okotcha both started the 2013 season finale against Louisiana Tech (Nov. 30), but they did so on opposite sides of the line of scrimmage.

STURM WINS QUARTERBACK BATTLE: In a fall camp quarterback competition that went down to the wire, incumbent starter Dalton Sturm was under center to open the season and he responded with one of the best games of his career. The junior from Goliad connected on 20-of-25 passes for a career-high 274 yards and two touchdowns in the season-opening 26-13 victory against Alabama State (Sept. 3). The former walk-on who earned a scholarship this summer completed throws to 10 different receivers and also rushed three times for 52 yards and another score in his eighth consecutive starting assignment dating back to last fall's Louisiana Tech contest (Oct. 10). His 51-yard touchdown run in the second quarter was one-yard shy of a career best, a 52-yard non-scoring jaunt last season at UTEP (Oct. 3), and his 51-yard pass to junior TE Shaq Williams in the third quarter also was the second-longest in his three years as a Roadrunner. Sturm, who split time with senior Jared Johnson in the second half at Colorado State (Sept. 10), completed 15-of-23 throws for 176 yards and two more scores against the Rams. He connected on 19-of-37 throws for 229 yards and three touchdowns and added a career-high 82 rushing yards and another score, a 34-yarder in the third quarter, on 15 carries against Arizona State (Sept. 16). In the 55-32 victory against Southern Miss (Oct. 8), the 6-foot-2, 195-pounder was an efficient 10-of-12 for 193 yards, including a 71-yard TD to junior WR Kerry Thomas Jr. on the game's third play from scrimmage. At the time, it was second-longest passing play in program history, but he then connected with Thomas' brother, junior WR Josh Stewart, for a 77-yard catch-and-run on the first play of the following possession. Sturm completed 17-of-25 throws for 209 yards, including TD passes of 75 (third-longest passing play in school annals) and 28 yards to Stewart, at Rice (Oct. 15) and he was 18-of-34 for 214 yards and three scores in addition to rushing for 74 yards and another TD last Saturday against UTEP. He has completed 61.9 percent of his passes (107-of-173) for 1,398 yards and 13 scores through the season's first seven contests.

STURM AMONG NATIONAL LEADERS: Junior QB Dalton Sturm currently ranks just outside of the top 25 in the Football Bowl Subdivision in passing efficiency, as he stands 26th nationally with his mark of 149.9.

HOT STARTS: Junior QB Dalton Sturm has made a habit of hot starts in six of the season's first seven games. Sturm was an efficient 7-of-8 to open last Saturday's contest against UTEP and that came on the heels of a 9-of-11 start in the 14-13 victory at Rice (Oct. 15) and a 10-of-12 performance in the 55-32 triumph against Southern Miss (Oct. 8). He completed his first six attempts and eight of his first 10 overall against Arizona State (Sept. 16), was 5-of-6 to open at Colorado State (Sept. 10) and 14-of-15 to start the season opener against Alabama State (Sept. 3). Those starts have helped Sturm rank 26th nationally in passing efficiency (149.9).

Dalton Sturm's Passing Starts
Date — Opponent — Comp-Att

Sept. 3 — Alabama State — 14-of-15
Sept. 10 — at Colorado State — 5-of-6
Sept. 16 — Arizona State — 5-of-6
Oct. 8 — Southern Miss — 10-of-12
Oct. 15 — at Rice — 9-of-11
Oct. 22 — UTEP — 7-of-8

SPREADING THE WEALTH: UTSA's two quarterbacks have distributed their 120 completions to a total of 14 pass-catchers this season. Leading the way is junior WR Kerry Thomas Jr., who has 17 receptions, five of which have resulted in touchdowns and that has tied UTSA's single-season record. A total of eight Roadrunners have caught TD passes this fall and six players have completed at least one pass.

UTSA Single-Season Receiving Touchdowns
Player (Years) — TDs

1. David Morgan II (2015) — 5
    Kerry Thomas Jr. (2016) — 5

BIG PLAY THREAT: Junior WR Josh Stewart leads UTSA with 356 receiving yards on just 15 receptions through the season's opening seven contests and he ranks fourth nationally in yards per catch (23.7). Stewart finished with a career-high 103 yards on the strength of touchdown catches of 75 and 28 yards in the 14-13 victory at Rice (Oct. 15). They were the first two TDs of his career and the 75-yarder stands as the third-longest passing play in program history. That came on the heels of team highs of two receptions for 85 yards in the 55-32 victory against Southern Miss (Oct. 8), a performance that included a 77-yarder that was the second-longest passing play in school annals. The walk-on who calls College Station home hauled in team highs of four catches for 80 yards at Old Dominion (Sept. 24). Stewart has totaled 11 receptions for 289 yards (26.3 avg.) in his past four outings.

Football Bowl Subdivision Leaders — Yards Per Reception
Player, Team — YPR (Rec-Yds)

1. Jalen Robinette, Air Force — 27.1 (21-568)
2. Alonzo Moore, Nebraska — 24.8 (13-324)
3. Mikah Holder, San Diego State — 23.9 (15-358)
4. Josh Stewart, UTSA — 23.7 (15-356)

UTSA All-Time Longest Passing Plays
Yards — Name — Opponent (Date)
82t — Kenny Bias (from Eric Soza) — at New Mexico State (Sept. 29 2012)
77 — Josh Stewart (from Dalton Sturm) — Southern Miss (Oct. 8, 2016)
75t — Josh Stewart (from Dalton Sturm) — at Rice (Oct. 15, 2016)
71t — Kerry Thomas Jr. (from Dalton Sturm) — Southern Miss (Oct. 8, 2016)


THOMAS SETS RECEIVING TOUCHDOWN MARKS: Junior WR Kerry Thomas led UTSA with five receptions for 89 yards, including touchdown catches of 53 and nine yards, last Saturday against UTEP. That tied the program's single-game record shared by five other players and it pushed his season total to a school-record-tying five while setting a new program mark with 10. He previously shared the career record with current Minnesota Viking and 2015 All-America TE David Morgan II. The College Station native hauled in a 71-yard touchdown pass on the third play from scrimmage against Southern Miss (Oct. 8) and the eighth scoring catch of his career also stands as the fourth-longest passing play in school history. The 6-foot, 205-pounder has a team-leading 17 receptions for 276 yards (16.2 avg.) this fall. UTSA's leading receiver from a year ago, Thomas Jr. is coming off a sophomore campaign that saw him catch a school-record 52 passes for 541 yards and four TDs en route to honorable mention All-Conference USA accolades. He opened his third season as a Roadrunner with three receptions for 41 yards, including a 25-yard score in the fourth quarter, against Alabama State (Sept. 3). Thomas Jr. added four catches for 41 yards and his second TD in as many weeks, a 10-yarder on UTSA's opening possession, at Colorado State (Sept. 10).

UTSA Career Receiving Touchdowns
Player (Years) — TDs
1. Kerry Thomas Jr. (2014-present) — 10

2. David Morgan II (2011-15) — 8

WILLIAMS BREAKS UTSA'S ALL-TIME RUSHING RECORD: Senior RB Jarveon Williams became UTSA's all-time leading rusher two weeks ago in the Roadrunners' 14-13 victory at Rice (Oct. 15). After rushing for 104 yards on 21 carries (5.0 avg.) last Saturday against UTEP, the local product out of Converse Judson High School now has amassed for 1,890 yards during his four-year career and that has eclipsed David Glasco II's previous program record of 1,752 established from 2011-14. Williams racked up a season-best 122 yards and two touchdowns on just 15 carries (8.1 avg.) against Southern Miss (Oct. 8), including a 92-yarder late in the contest that was the longest play in school history. He now owns six of the 14 100-yard games in school annals. That came on the heels of a 93-yard effort at Old Dominion (Sept. 24). The 5-foot-9, 200-pounder rushed for just 38 yards on 24 carries in the opening three contests while dealing with an ankle injury sustained in the opening half of the season opener against Alabama State (Sept. 3).  Williams set new career highs of five receptions for 81 yards against Arizona State (Sept. 16). He became the first 1,000-yard rusher in program history last fall after running for 1,042 yards and eight touchdowns on 173 carries (6.0 avg.), which was an average of 94.7 per contest. All of those numbers were UTSA single-season records and he was an honorable mention All-Conference USA selection.

UTSA Career Rushing Yards
Player (Years) — Yards
1. Jarveon Williams (2013-present) — 1,786

2. David Glasco II (2011-14) — 1,752

UTSA Career 100-Yard Rushing Games
Player (Years) — No.

1. Jarveon Williams (2013-present) — 5
2. Evans Okotcha (2011-13) — 3
3. David Glasco II (2011-14) — 2
 
UTSA Career Rushing Touchdowns
Player (Years) — TDs

1. David Glasco II (2011-14) — 20
2. Eric Soza (2011-13) — 16
3. Evans Okotcha (2011-13) — 14
    Jarveon Williams (2013-present) — 14

RHODES HAS BREAKOUT PERFORMANCE: Sophomore RB Jalen Rhodes set career highs with 165 rushing yards, the third-best performance in program history, and a school-record-tying three touchdowns on just 14 carries (11.8 avg.) in the 55-32 victory against Southern Miss (Oct. 8). He had scoring runs of four, 80 and three yards and his second score was the fourth-longest rush in program history. Rhodes is the third player in school annals to rush for three touchdowns, as Evans Okotcha accomplished the feat on Sept. 15, 2012, at Georgia State and Eric Soza matched him on Nov. 11, 2012, at Idaho. The Rowlett native, who racked up a game-high 79 yards on 18 attempts in the 14-13 victory at Rice (Oct. 15) and 84 more on 15 carries (5.6 avg.) last Saturday against UTEP, has a team-leading 525 and four TDs on 93 caries (5.6 avg.) this season. He also has hauled in 13 receptions for 130 yards (10.0 avg.) and another score.

UTSA Single-Game Rushing Performances
Player (Game) — Yds (Att)

1. Jarveon Williams (at Charlotte/Nov. 14, 2015) — 186 (19)
2. Jarveon Williams (Colorado State/Sept. 26, 2015) — 170 (13)
3. Jalen Rhodes (Southern Miss/Oct. 8, 2016) — 165 (14)

UTSA Single-Game Rushing Touchdowns
Player (Game) — TDs

1. Evans Okotcha (at Georgia State/Sept. 15, 2012) — 3
    Jalen Rhodes (Southern Miss/Oct. 8, 2016) — 3
    Eric Soza (at Idaho/Nov. 11, 2012) — 3

TAUAEFA LEADING DEFENSE IN DEBUT SEASON: Redshirt freshman LB Josiah Tauaefa is leading UTSA's defense through the season's opening seven contests. Tauaefa racked up 15 tackles at Old Dominion (Sept. 24), one shy of Cody Rogers' UTSA single-game record, and he added another 12 against Southern Miss (Oct. 8) en route to Conference USA Defensive Player of the Week accolades. The 6-foot-1, 230-pounder racked up 10 more in the 14-13 victory at Rice (Oct. 15) and another seven last Saturday against UTEP. That has pushed his team-leading total to a Football Bowl Subdivision freshman-best 75 in his inaugural season and he also has a team-best three sacks to go along with 5.5 TFLs and an interception. His 10.7 stops per game currently rank in an eighth-place tie nationally. Tauaefa had a debut to remember in the season-opening 26-13 victory against Alabama State (Sept. 3). The former defensive end, who made the transition to linebacker this past spring, racked up a team-high 13 tackles (9 solos), including a pair of sacks. Tauaefa proceeded to add nine stops in each of the next two outings at Colorado State (Sept. 10) and against Arizona State (Sept. 16). He is on pace to shatter UTSA's single-season record of 95, which was established by Brandon Reeves back in 2012 (Tauaefa projects to have 129 this year).

Football Bowl Subdivision Leaders — Tackles Per Game
Player, Team — TPG

1. Rodney Butler, New Mexico State — 14.6
2. Nate Holley, Kent State — 12.6
3. Ulysees Gilbert, Akron — 11.8
4. Khalil Hodge, Buffalo — 11.6
    Eric Wilson, Cincinnati — 11.6
6. Micah Kiser, Virginia — 11.0
    Jalen Young, Florida Atlantic — 11.0
8. Quin Blanding, Virginia — 10.7
    Josiah Tauaefa, UTSA — 10.7
    Andrew Wingard, Wyoming — 10.7

Football Bowl Subdivision Freshman Leaders — Total Tackles
Player, Team — TT (G)
1. Josiah Tauaefa, UTSA — 75 (7)

2. Bryan London, Texas State — 73 (7)

Josiah Tauaefa Tackles Tracker
Date — Opponent — TT

Sept. 3 — Alabama State — 13
Sept. 10 — at Colorado State — 9
Sept. 16 — Arizona State — 9
Sept. 24 — at Old Dominion — 15
Oct. 8 — Southern Miss — 12
Oct. 15 — at Rice — 10
Oct. 22 — UTEP — 7
Total — 7 games — 75

EGWUAGU SETS NEW CAREER BEST: Senior S Michael Egwuagu, a preseason All-Conference USA selection, racked up a career-high 12 tackles at Colorado State (Sept. 10). That topped his previous best of 10, which came against the Rams in last year's meeting that took place on Sept. 26 at the Alamodome. Egwuagu, who had 10 more stops against Arizona State (Sept. 16) and another nine at Rice (Oct. 15), ranks second on the squad with his 51 tackles this season.

BASS ROUNDING INTO FORM: Junior LB La'Kel Bass has been a force on the second level the past three games, as he has totaled 29 tackles, including a career-high 12 at Rice (Oct. 15). The 6-foot-1, 225-pound weak-side linebacker currently ranks third on the squad with 48 stops this season and his 5.5 behind the line of scrimmage leads the team.

DAVENPORT MOVING UP CAREER SACKS CHART: Junior DE Marcus Davenport opened his third campaign against Alabama State with two sacks, which pushed his career total to nine and he now ranks second on UTSA's career list. The 6-foot-7, 245-pound local product out of Stevens High School is tied with Cody Rogers (2011-14) and now trails only Jason Neill, who racked up 14 from 2011-15.

UTSA Career Sacks
Player (Years) — Sacks

1. Jason Neill (2011-15) — 14
2. Marcus Davenport (2014-present) — 9
    Cody Rogers (2011-14) — 9

BIG-TIME SACK ATTACK: UTSA registered a program-record six sacks in the season-opening 26-13 victory against Alabama State (Sept. 3). That broke the previous mark of five that had occurred six times (last: at Marshall; Oct. 5, 2013). Leading the way was the duo of junior DE Marcus Davenport and redshirt freshman LB Josiah Tauaefa, who both recorded two each.

PLENTY BACK ON DEFENSE: The Roadrunners may return just five starters on defense, but they welcome back three of their top five tacklers from the 2015 season. Junior S Nate Gaines (76), junior LB Marcos Curry (74) and senior S Michael Egwuagu (62) ranked third through fifth, respectively, last fall.

SPECIAL TEAMS TURNOVERS LEADING TO POINTS: UTSA came up with its fifth special teams turnover in the 14-13 victory at Rice (Oct. 15) and that led to junior WR Josh Stewart's 28-yard touchdown catch from junior QB Dalton Sturm. The Roadrunners previously recovered a fumble on the opening kickoff of the season against Alabama State (Sept. 3), a pair of muffed punts against Arizona State (Sept. 16) and another mishandled punt against Southern Miss (Oct. 8). UTSA has scored a total of 30 points (four touchdowns/one field goal) following their opponent's special teams miscues this season.

KICKOFF COVERAGE AMONG NATION'S BEST: UTSA has limited the opposition to an average of 16.6 yards on 22 kickoff returns and that figure ranks eighth in the country and first among Conference USA teams.

Football Bowl Subdivision Leaders — Kickoff Coverage
Team                      Avg. (No-Yds)

1. Memphis — 14.9 (14-208)
2. Clemson — 15.4 (18-278)
3. San Jose State — 15.5 (6-93)
4. Bowling Green — 15.8 (24-380)
5. Boston College — 16.3 (26-424)
    Arkansas State — 16.3 (21-343)
7. Troy — 16.4 (28-459)
8. UTSA — 16.6 (22-366)

SECOND-TO-LAST: UTSA became the second-to-last Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) team to attempt a field goal when Victor Falcon connected from 26 yards out with 9:41 remaining in the third quarter at Old Dominion (Sept. 24). UNLV was the last remaining FBS program to attempt a field goal this season, but the Rebels successfully connected on three later that night against Idaho. Falcon has yet to miss on any of his three field goal attempts this season and he owns a long of 45 yards, which came last Saturday in the 55-32 victory against Southern Miss.

THREE ROADRUNNERS LAND ON PRESEASON ALL-CONFERENCE USA TEAM: Senior S Michael Egwuagu, senior RB Jarveon Williams and junior DE Marcus Davenport were named preseason All-Conference USA in a vote by the league's head coaches, the conference office announced on July 20 prior to its annual season kickoff event in Dallas. Egwuagu appeared in all 12 games (11 starts) last fall and registered 62 tackles (37 solos/25 assists), including 3.5 for loss and 1.5 sacks, as well as placing second on the squad with three interceptions and he added eight pass breakups. Meanwhile, Williams is coming off a junior campaign that saw him become the first 1,000-yard rusher in program history. The team captain played in the first 11 games (nine starts) before missing the season finale against Middle Tennessee. He posted school records of 1,042 yards on 173 carries (6.0 avg.) on the strength of four 100-yard games, averaged 94.7 yards per outing and also tied the program's single-season record with eight rushing touchdowns. Davenport started 11 contests but missed the Colorado State tilt due to injury a year ago. The San Antonio native recorded 49 tackles (30 solos/19 assists) and ranked second on the team with 7.5 TFLs and four sacks. He also racked up four QB hurries, three pass breakups and a pair of forced fumbles.

FOUR 2015 ALL-CONFERENCE USA PERFORMERS RETURN THIS FALL: The Roadrunners return four All-Conference USA honorees from a year ago — Marcus Davenport (Jr., DE), Michael Egwuagu (Sr., S), Kerry Thomas Jr. (Jr., WR) and Jarveon Williams (Sr., RB). All four earned honorable mention accolades from the league's head coaches.

GRADUATE TRANSFERS FILL OUT ROSTER: There are five senior graduate transfers among the many new faces on UTSA's roster this fall. OT Jevonte Domond, LB Ronnie Feist and S Jordan Moore all earned degrees from LSU before coming to the Alamo City, while QB Jared Johnson and TE Jordan Jones walked across the stage at Sam Houston State and Gardner-Webb, respectively.

MORE ABOUT THIS YEAR'S ROSTER: UTSA's 113-man roster features 22 seniors, 34 juniors, 24 sophomores and 33 freshmen. Meanwhile, 85 players hail from Texas, while another six call California home. There also are four players from both Florida and Mississippi, three from Louisiana, two each from Georgia, Illinois, Oklahoma and Tennessee and one from Arizona, Kansas and Missouri.

WILSON NEW MAN IN CHARGE: A new era of UTSA Football began on Jan. 15 when the Roadrunners hired Frank Wilson as their new head coach. Widely considered one of the most valuable assistant coaches in all of college football, Wilson came to the Alamo City following a successful six-year stint as the running backs coach and recruiting coordinator at LSU from 2010-15, where he also served as associate head coach for his final four seasons with the Tigers. He also has been an assistant coach at Tennessee (2009), Southern Miss (2008) and Mississippi (2005-07). While at LSU, he was recognized as the nation's top assistant coach at his position in 2011. Wilson also was named the 2011 Recruiter of the Year by Rivals.com, the 2014 NFL.com Top Recruiter in College Football and the 2015 Scout.com SEC Recruiter of the Year. As the recruiting coordinator at LSU, Wilson led the Tigers to back-to-back top-five recruiting classes in 2014-15 among five total groups that ranked among the top 10 nationally. He served as the lead recruiter for a long list of prominent players and has coached or recruited 25 individuals who have made it to the National Football League.

BROADCASTING THE BIRDS: Eleven of UTSA's 12 games this fall have been selected for broadcast across six different networks. The Roadrunners, who have seen their last 43 outings appear over the airwaves, will see that streak increase to at least 46 this season, as the first 10 contests have been picked for broadcast. The Nov. 19 tilt at Texas A&M is the only game that has yet to be selected, but the Southeastern Conference typically waits until 12 days out to announce its television selections, so UTSA's streak very well could increase to 48 by the end of the fall.

SEASON-OPENING SUCCESS: UTSA picked up its fifth season-opening victory in six tries when it downed Alabama State by a score of 26-13. The Roadrunners saw their four-game winning streak in season openers come to an end with last year's 42-32 loss at No. 22 Arizona. UTSA previously had won all four of its lid-lifters dating back to its inaugural 2011 campaign. The Roadrunners downed Northeastern (Okla.) State at the Alamodome by a score of 31-3 in the program's first-ever game back on Sept. 3, 2011, and the next three years saw them open the fall on the road. UTSA picked up its first-ever Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) and road victory with a come-from-behind 33-31 triumph at South Alabama on Sept. 1, 2012. The Birds then outlasted New Mexico by a count of 21-13 on Aug. 31 in its 2013 opener and the following year saw the Roadrunners stun Houston by a score of 27-7 on Aug. 29 in the first-ever game at brand-new TDECU Stadium.

All-Time Season Openers (5-1)
Date — Opponent — Score

Sept. 3, 2011 — Northeastern (Okla.) State — W, 31-3
Sept. 1, 2012 — at South Alabama — W, 33-31
Aug. 31, 2013 — at New Mexico — W, 21-13
Aug. 29, 2014 — at Houston — W, 27-7
Sept. 3, 2015 — at #22 Arizona — L, 32-42
Sept. 3, 2016 — Alabama State — W, 26-13

HOME SWEET HOME: This year's season opener marked UTSA's first at home since its inaugural 2011 campaign, which coincidentally also took place on a Sept. 3. The Roadrunners downed Northeastern (Okla.) State by a score of 31-3 that afternoon.

FBS STREAK COMES TO AN END: The season opener against Alabama State, which competes in the Football Championship Subdivision, ended a streak of 38 consecutive FBS opponents for UTSA. The Roadrunners previously played a non-FBS foe back on Nov. 10, 2012, when it downed McNeese State by a score of 31-24. The Roadrunners were in their first and only season as a member of the Western Athletic Conference that season.

UP NEXT: UTSA will return to the road to face Middle Tennessee (5-2, 2-1 C-USA) next Saturday, Nov. 5, at Johnny Floyd Stadium in Murfreesboro. The second all-time meeting between the two programs is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. The Blue Raiders downed the Roadrunners by a score of 42-7 at the Alamodome in UTSA's season finale a year ago.