2012 San Jose State Spartans football team

2012 San Jose State Spartans football
Military Bowl Champions
Conference Western Athletic Conference
Ranking
BCS #24
Coaches #21
AP #21
2012 record 11–2 (5–1 WAC)
Head coach Mike MacIntyre (3rd year)
Kent Baer (interim)
Offensive coordinator Brian Lindgren (1st year)
Offensive scheme Multiple
Defensive coordinator Kent Baer (3rd year)
Base defense 4–3
Home stadium Spartan Stadium
(Capacity: 30,456)
2012 WAC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
#16 Utah State $   6 0         11 2  
#21 San Jose State   5 1         11 2  
Louisiana Tech   4 2         9 3  
UTSA*   3 3         8 4  
Texas State*   2 4         4 8  
Idaho   1 5         1 11  
New Mexico State   0 6         1 11  
  • $ Conference champion
  • Texas State and UTSA are not eligible for conference title nor bowl games as part of their transition to the FBS.
As of December 15, 2012; Rankings from AP Poll

The 2012 San Jose State Spartans football team represented San Jose State University in the 2012 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Spartans were led by third year head coach Mike MacIntyre and played their home games at Spartan Stadium. They were members of the Western Athletic Conference. This was the Spartans' final season as members of the WAC. They joined the Mountain West Conference on July 1, 2013.[1] They finished the season 11–2, 5–1 in WAC play to finish in second place. They were invited to the Military Bowl where they defeated Bowling Green.

Head coach Mike MacIntyre resigned at the end of the regular season to take the head coach position at Colorado. Defensive coordinator Kent Baer was the Spartans' interim head coach for the Military Bowl. San Diego head coach Ron Caragher was hired as the Spartans new head coach beginning in 2013.

Personnel

Coaching staff

Head coach Mike MacIntyre returned for his third season with San Jose State. Under MacIntyre, San Jose State went 1-12 in its 2010 season and improved to 5-7 in 2011.

On December 10, the University of Colorado at Boulder hired MacIntyre to be the new head coach of the Colorado Buffaloes football team. With a five-year, $10 million contract, MacIntyre would annually earn nearly quadruple his annual salary at San Jose State.[2] The following day, San Jose State named defensive coordinator Kent Baer to be interim coach for the 2012 Military Bowl on December 27, in which they defeated Bowling Green 29-20.[3] The previous week, MacIntyre stated that although other schools had contacted him about potential job openings, MacIntyre was not actively seeking another job. During San Jose State's late-season win streak, speculation occurred that MacIntyre might become head coach at Cal or Kentucky in 2013.[4]

Name Position Seasons at
San Jose State
Alma Mater
Mike MacIntyre Head coach 3 Georgia Tech (1989)
Klayton Adams Tight ends 2 Boise State (2005)
Kent Baer Defensive coordinator, linebackers, interim head coach 5 Utah State (1973)
Gary Bernardi Offensive line 3 Cal State Northridge (1976)
Charles Clark Defensive backs 3 Mississippi (2007)
Fred Guidici Special teams, running backs 1 San Jose State (1989)
Jim Jeffcoat Defensive line 2 Arizona State (1982)
Andy LaRussa Cornerbacks, special teams 2 Southern Utah (2002)
Brian Lindgren Offensive coordinator, quarterbacks 1 Idaho (2004)
Terry Malley Receivers, recruiting coordinator 4 Santa Clara (1976)
Reference:[5]

Departing starters

San Jose State lost 12 starters from the 2011 season, including quarterback Matt Faulkner, running back Brandon Rutley, safety Duke Ihenacho, and placekicker Jens Alvernik. Ihenacho went on to play for the NFL's Denver Broncos as an undrafted free agent.

Returning starters

Offense

Player Class Position
Noel Grigsby Junior Wide receiver
Chandler Jones Junior Wide receiver
Jabari Carr Sophomore Wide receiver
David Quessenberry Senior Offensive tackle
Nicholas Kaspar Junior Offensive tackle
Ryan Otten Senior Tight end
Peter Tuitupou Senior Tight end
Reference:[5]

Defense

Player Class Position
Travis Raciti Sophomore Defensive tackle
Travis Johnson Senior Defensive end
Keith Smith Junior Linebacker
Ronnie Yell Senior Cornerback
James Orth Senior Safety
Reference:[5]

Special teams

Player Class Position
Harrison Waid Junior Punter/placekicker
Reference:[5]

Depth chart

Starters and backups from the final depth chart:[6]

Defense
FS
James Orth
Simon Connette
WLB MLB SLB
Keith Smith Vince Buhagiar Hector Roach
Josh Fasavalu Tony Zizzo Doug Parrish
SS
Cullen Newsome
Travis Talianko
CB
Ronnie Yell
Bené Benwikere
DE DT DT DE
Travis Johnson Travis Raciti Anthony Larceval David Tuitupou
Sean Bacon Foloi Vae David Catalano Vincent Abbott
Marcus Howard Tony Popovich
CB
Bené Benwikere
Jimmy Pruitt
Damon Ogburn, Jr. or Forrest Hightower
Offense
WR
Jabari Carr
Kyle Nunn
LT LG C RG RT
David Quessenberry Ryan Jones Reuben Hasani Nicholas Kaspar Jon Meyer
Amar Pal Jeff Grattan David Peterson Nick Diaz Wes Schweitzer
Doug Blacksill
TE
Ryan Otten
Peter Tuitupou
Travis Lorius or Dasmen Stewart
WR
Noel Grigsby
Chandler Jones
Sean Linton
QB
David Fales
Blake Jurich
Joe Gray
RB
De'Leon Eskridge
Tyler Ervin
Jason Simpson
FB
Ina Liaina
Ray Rodriguez
Special Teams
PK Austin Lopez
PK Alex Anastasi
P Harrison Waid
P Ryan Harper
KR Forrest Hightower
PR Ronnie Yell
LS Ryan DiSalvo
H Daniel Bradbury

Final roster

2012 San Jose State Spartans final roster

Quarterbacks

  • 10 David Fales Junior
  • 16 Joe Gray – Freshman
  • 13 Jason Habash – Freshman
  • 14 Blake Jurich – Sophomore

Running backs

  • 30 Josh Brown – Senior
  •   2 De'Leon EskridgeSenior
  • 20 David Freeman – Senior
  • 40 Jarrod Lawson – Freshman
  • 42 Ina Liaina – Senior
  •   8 Jalynn McCain – Freshman
  • 46 Ray Rodriguez – Junior
  • 24 Cedric Simmons – Freshman
  • 32 Jason Simpson – Junior
  • 27 Ben Thompson – Sophomore

Wide receivers

  • 17 Daniel Bradbury – Freshman
  •   1 Jabari Carr – Junior
  • 23 Noel Grigsby Junior
  • 89 Chandler Jones Junior
  • 20 Chris Kearney – Freshman
  • 84 Sean Linton – Sophomore
  • 86 K.C. Pearce – Freshman
  • 19 Kyle Nunn – Junior
  • 35 Hansell Wilson – Freshman
  • 81 Jake Wilson – Freshman

Tight ends

  • 85 Keenan Brown – Senior
  • 38 Billy Freeman – Freshman
  • 88 Travis Lorius – Senior
  • 80 Max Miller – Junior
  • 82 Ryan Otten Senior
  • 18 Dasmen Stewart – Junior
  • 83 Jordan Thiel – Freshman
  • 37 Sam Tomlitz – Sophomore
  • 15 Peter Tuitupou – Senior
 

Offensive linemen

  • 78 Oscar Barron – G – Freshman
  • 71 Keith Bendixen – RG – Sophomore
  • 56 Doug Blacksill – LG – Freshman
  • 50 Nick Diaz – RG/C – Freshman
  • 54 Reuben Hasani – C – Junior
  • 74 Ryan Jones – LG – Junior
  • 75 Nicholas Kaspar – RG – Junior
  • 79 Jon Meyer – T – Junior
  • 64 Nick Oreglia – Freshman
  • 61 Amar Pal – LT – Junior
  • 51 David Peterson – C – Sophomore
  • 76 David Quessenberry – LT – Senior
  • 77 Evan Sarver – OT – Freshman
  • 72 Wes Schweitzer – RT – Freshman
  • 60 Michael Talafus – Freshman

Defensive linemen

  • 53 Vincent Abbott – LDE – Senior
  • 95 Sean Bacon – RDE – Sophomore
  • 85 Keenan Brown – DE – Junior
  • 69 David Catalano – LDT – Freshman
  • 57 Nate Falo – DT – Freshman
  • 86 Christian Hill – DE – Freshman
  • 96 Marcus Howard – RDT – Sophomore
  • 43 Travis Johnson – RDE – Senior
  • 97 Anthony Larceval – LDT – Junior
  • 45 Lemaki Musika – DE – Freshman
  • 91 Joe Nigos – RDT – Senior
  • 98 Tony Popovich – LDE – Freshman
  • 90 Travis Raciti – RDT – Sophomore
  • 94 Eugene Taylor – DE – Freshman
  • 41 David Tuitupou – LDE – Senior
  • 93 Foloi Vae – RDT – Sophomore
 

Linebackers

  • 99 Nick Brown – Freshman
  • 36 Vince Buhagiar – OLB – Junior
  • 11 Josh Fasavalu – Freshman
  • 33 Brad Kuh – Freshman
  • 55 Ryan McAleenan – Freshman
  • 34 Derek Muaava – Sophomore
  • 15 Doug Parrish – Sophomore
  • 22 Hector Roach – Freshman
  • 31 Keith Smith – ILB – Junior
  •   4 Christian Tago – Freshman
  • 94 Eugene Taylor – Freshman
  • 44 Tony Zizzo – Junior

Defensive backs

  • 21 Bené Benwikere – LCB – Sophomore
  • 28 Simon Connette – FS – Freshman
  • 13 Tim Crawley – DB – Freshman
  •   7 Tyler Ervin – CB – Sophomore
  • 24 Rob Fiscalini III – S – Junior
  •   5 Dasheon Frierson – CB – Junior
  • 40 Ryan Harper – S – Sophomore
  • 12 Forrest Hightower – LCB – Sophomore
  • 29 Chris Hill – CB – Junior
  • 87 Akeem King – S – Sophomore
  • 16 Miles Milner – CB – Freshman
  • 39 Cullen Newsome – SS – Senior
  •   6 Damon Ogburn, Jr. – LCB – Junior
  • 81 James Orth – FS – Senior
  •   8 Jimmy Pruitt – LCB – Freshman
  • 26 Travis Talianko – SS – Freshman
  • 25 Ronnie Yell – RCB – Senior

Special teams

  • 22 Alex Anastasi – PK – Freshman
  • 59 Ryan DiSalvo – LS – Freshman
  • 39 Arthur Gilbreath – LS – Junior
  • 40 Ryan Harper – P – Sophomore
  • 12 Austin Lopez – PK – Freshman
  • 41 Jeffrey Telles – LS – Sophomore
  • 10 Harrison Waid – P – Junior
Reference:[7]

Schedule

The 2012 schedule was officially released on March 5, 2012. The schedule had six home games and six road games.[8] Because the WAC had only seven football member schools by 2012 due to conference realignment, San Jose State played six conference games and six non-conference games for the season. San Jose State played against all six other WAC member schools: Idaho, Louisiana Tech, New Mexico State, Texas State, UTSA, and Utah State. The non-conference games were against: Colorado State and San Diego State of the Mountain West Conference, Stanford of the Pac-12 Conference, UC Davis of the Big Sky Conference, and FBS independent schools BYU and Navy.

On November 3, San Jose State became bowl eligible for the first time since 2008 after beating Idaho and attaining six wins against FBS schools.[9] However, the win over UTSA did not count, because UTSA was not yet a full FBS member school.[10]

Six games were nationally televised this season. ESPN showed the Military Bowl on December 27, ESPN2 showed the games against BYU and Louisiana Tech, CBS Sports Network showed the game against Navy, and Pac-12 Network showed the game against Stanford.[11] WatchESPN also streamed the games shown on ESPN and ESPN2 as well as two games—the ones against Colorado State and UTSA—broadcast by ESPN3, the game against New Mexico State via New Mexico State's AggieVision network,[12][13] and the game against Utah State via ESPN Regional Television.[14]

KLIV in San Jose served as the flagship station for the San Jose State Spartans Football Radio Network, along with fellow affiliates KION in Salinas and newcomer KFIV in Modesto.[15] Michael Spero returned for his second season[16][17] as play-by-play announcer, with Kevin Richardson at color commentary.

Date Time Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
August 31 7:00 PM at #21 Stanford* Stanford StadiumStanford, CA (Bill Walsh Legacy Game) P12N L 1720   40,577
September 8 5:00 PM UC Davis* Spartan StadiumSan Jose, CA W 4513   7,462
September 15 5:00 PM Colorado State* Spartan Stadium • San Jose, CA ESPN3 W 4020   7,189
September 22 5:00 PM at San Diego State* Qualcomm StadiumSan Diego, CA KUSI W 3834   24,103
September 29 12:30 PM at Navy* Navy–Marine Corps Memorial StadiumAnnapolis, MD CBSSN W 120   32,375
October 13 1:00 PM Utah Statedagger Spartan Stadium • San Jose, CA ESPN+, ESPN3 L 2749   15,168
October 20 11:00 AM at UTSA AlamodomeSan Antonio, TX ESPN3 W 5224   30,862
October 27 1:00 PM Texas State Spartan Stadium • San Jose, CA W 3120   7,093
November 3 2:00 PM at Idaho Kibbie DomeMoscow, ID KTRV W 4213   14,429
November 10 1:30 PM at New Mexico State Aggie Memorial StadiumLas Cruces, NM AggieVision, Altitude, ESPN3 W 477   9,121
November 17 7:30 PM BYU* Spartan Stadium • San Jose, CA ESPN2 W 2014   15,494
November 24 7:30 PM Louisiana Tech Spartan Stadium • San Jose, CA ESPN2 W 5243   12,326
December 27 12:00 PM vs. Bowling Green* #24 RFK StadiumWashington D.C. (Military Bowl) ESPN W 29–20   17,835
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Pacific Time.

[18]

Game notes

@ Stanford

1 2 3 4 Total
Spartans 0 3 14 0 17
#18 Cardinal 14 3 0 3 20
Overall record Last meeting Result
14–50–1 2011 STAN, 57–3

Scoring for Stanford: S. Taylor 1-yard run, J. Nunes' 11-yard pass to D. Terrell, J. Williamson 46-yard and 20-yard field goal. Scoring for San Jose State: Austin Lopez 38-yard field goal, Blake Jurich 3-yard run, and David Fales' 21-yard pass to Noel Grigsby.

UC Davis

1 2 3 4 Total
Aggies 7 0 0 6 13
Spartans 0 14 21 10 45
Overall record Last meeting Result
5–4–2 2010 UCD, 14–13

Colorado State

1 2 3 4 Total
Rams 0 13 0 7 20
Spartans 14 3 7 16 40
Overall record Last meeting Result
2–3 2011 SJSU, 38–31

@ San Diego State

1 2 3 4 Total
Spartans 3 14 0 21 38
Aztecs 0 17 7 10 34
Overall record Last meeting Result
18–15–2 2008 SJSU, 35–10

@ Navy

1 2 3 4 Total
Spartans 3 3 0 6 12
Midshipmen 0 0 0 0 0
Overall record Last meeting Result
1–0 2011 SJSU, 27–24

Utah State

1 2 3 4 Total
Aggies 14 14 14 7 49
Spartans 3 17 7 0 27
Overall record Last meeting Result
20–13–1 2011 USU, 34–33

In San Jose State's homecoming game, San Jose State lost to eventual WAC champion Utah State. Although David Fales completed 38 of 50 passes for 467 yards and three touchdowns, Fales was sacked 13 times with a cumulative loss of 102 yards. Utah State also had a 212-4 advantage in rushing yards.[19]

@ UTSA

1 2 3 4 Total
Spartans 28 10 14 0 52
Roadrunners 0 10 7 7 24
Overall record Last meeting Result
First meeting

Texas State

1 2 3 4 Total
Bobcats 7 13 0 0 20
Spartans 3 14 14 0 31
Overall record Last meeting Result
First meeting

@ Idaho

1 2 3 4 Total
Spartans 0 14 14 14 42
Vandals 7 0 6 0 13
Overall record Last meeting Result
12–10–1 2011 IDA, 32–29

@ New Mexico State

1 2 3 4 Total
Spartans 17 20 10 0 47
Aggies 0 0 0 7 7
Overall record Last meeting Result
16–3 2011 SJSU, 34–24

BYU

1 2 3 4 Total
Cougars 7 0 0 7 14
Spartans 13 7 0 0 20
Overall record Last meeting Result
9–6 2011 BYU, 29–16

Louisiana Tech

1 2 3 4 Total
Bulldogs 6 21 10 6 43
Spartans 10 14 14 14 52
Overall record Last meeting Result
4–7 2011 LATECH, 38–28

Bowling Green–Military Bowl

1 2 3 4 Total
#24 Spartans 7 3 9 10 29
Falcons 3 3 7 7 20
Overall record Last meeting Result
First meeting

Ranking movements

On November 25, San Jose State made the #24 spot in the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) Top 25 rankings. This was San Jose State's first-ever BCS ranking and first national ranking since 1990.[20] The following week, both the AP Poll and Coaches' Poll ranked San Jose State #24. This ranking marked San Jose State's first top-25 AP ranking since 1975.[21] San Jose State also played its first bowl game since the 2006 New Mexico Bowl. On December 27, San Jose State defeated Bowling Green in the 2012 Military Bowl at Washington, D. C. by the score of 29-20. For the first time in school history, San Jose State made it into the final rankings in both the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls, earning a #21 ranking in both.

Ranking movements
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking. ██ Decrease in ranking.
NR = Not ranked. RV = Received votes. ( ) = First place votes.
Week
Poll Pre 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Final 
AP NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR RV RV RV 24 21 
Coaches' NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR NR RV RV 24 21 
BCS Not released NR NR NR NR NR NR 25 24 Not released

After the season

Awards

Conference

Travis Johnson earned the WAC Defensive Player of the Year award. With 16 honorees, San Jose State led all WAC teams in 2012 for All-WAC honors. Named to the All-WAC first team were Noel Grigsby, Ryan Otten, Nicholas Kaspar, David Quessenberry, Travis Johnson, Travis Raciti, Vince Buhagiar, Keith Smith, and Bené Benwikere. Named to the All-WAC second team were Chandler Jones, David Fales, De'Leon Eskridge, Anthony Larceval, David Tuitupou, Austin Lopez, and Tyler Ervin.[22]

National

Travis Johnson was invited to the East-West Shrine Game and was named to the Academic All-America second team.[23][24] Johnson, Ryan Otten, and David Quessenberry all got Senior Bowl invitations.[25]

NFL Draft

See also: 2013 NFL Draft

In the 2013 NFL Draft, David Quessenberry was selected in the sixth round and 176th overall by the Houston Texans.

Conference change

On July 1, 2013, San Jose State officially became a member of the Mountain West Conference (MWC). San Jose State football followed fellow WAC school Utah State to the MWC and reunited with Hawaii in football only and Boise State, Fresno State, Nevada, and several other fellow former WAC schools in football and many other sports.[26] The WAC stopped sponsoring football after the 2012 season.

References

General:

Specific:

  1. Katz, Andy (May 2, 2012). "Sources: Utah St., SJSU joining MWC". ESPN. Retrieved December 14, 2012.
  2. Durkin, Jimmy (December 11, 2012). "San Jose State coach Mike MacIntyre leaves for Colorado job". San Jose Mercury News. Archived from the original on December 14, 2012.
  3. "Kent Baer Named Interim Head Football Coach". San Jose State Spartans. December 11, 2012. Retrieved December 14, 2012.
  4. Durkin, Jimmy (December 5, 2012). "Mike MacIntyre says he's received contact about coaching openings". San Jose Mercury News. Archived from the original on December 14, 2012.
  5. 1 2 3 4 San Jose State University 2012 Football Media Guide, p. 28.
  6. San Jose State 2012 Football Military Bowl Postseason Guide, p. 19.
  7. San Jose State University 2012 Football Military Bowl Postseason Guide, pp. 16-17.
  8. "Six Home Football Games In 2012". San Jose State Spartans. March 5, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
  9. Durkin, Jimmy (November 4, 2012). "San Jose State beats Idaho 42-13". San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
  10. Durkin, Jimmy (October 21, 2012). "San Jose State Spartans win 52-24". San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
  11. "Opener At Stanford Now Aug. 31; On Pac-12 TV". San Jose State Spartans. June 15, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
  12. "Spartans Can Go 8-2 At New Mexico State". San Jose State Spartans. November 9, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
  13. "AggieVision schedule set for fall season". Las Cruces Sun-News. August 22, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
  14. "WAC-ESPN Package Includes SJSU-CSU & SJSU-USU". San Jose State Spartans. June 7, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
  15. "KFIV (1360 AM, Modesto) Joins Radio Network". San Jose State Spartans. August 31, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
  16. http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/93021/michael-spero-tapped-to-call-san-jose-state-footba
  17. http://www.sjsuspartans.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/082712aaa.html
  18. "Football - Schedule/Results - SJSUSpartans.com". Official Web Site of San Jose State Athletics. Retrieved March 29, 2012.
  19. "Utah State runs all over SJSU in 49-27 romp". Comcast SportsNet Bay Area. Retrieved December 13, 2012.
  20. Durkin, Jimmy (November 25, 2012). "San Jose State ranked No. 25 in BCS". San Jose Mercury News. Archived from the original on December 14, 2012.
  21. Durkin, Jimmy (December 2, 2012). "San Jose State ranked No. 24 in BCS and both national polls". San Jose Mercury News. Archived from the original on December 14, 2012.
  22. "16 Football Players Receive All-WAC Honors". San Jose State Spartans. December 3, 2012. Retrieved June 1, 2014.
  23. "Travis Johnson In The East-West Shrine Game". San Jose State Spartans. January 15, 2013. Retrieved June 1, 2014.
  24. "Travis Johnson Capital One Academic All-America". San Jose State Spartans. December 6, 2012. Retrieved June 1, 2014.
  25. "Travis Johnson In The Senior Bowl". San Jose State Spartans. January 23, 2013. Retrieved June 1, 2014.
  26. "San Jose State Joins The Mountain West Conference". San Jose State Spartans. July 1, 2013. Retrieved June 1, 2014.

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