The Air Force Falcons are the college football team from the United States Air Force Academy, located just outside of Colorado Springs, Colorado. The team is a mid-major program that competes in NCAA Division I-A and the Mountain West Conference.
Style
Given the physical restrictions that military service puts on cadets, Air Force football has traditionally been based more on speed, willpower and technical execution than on pure size and strength. The Falcons have traditionally run a triple option offense, and have routinely competed favorably against bigger and stronger national opponents. While the wishbone is almost always assumed synonymous with the triple option, Air Force only deployed the formation occasionally under Coaches DeBerry and Hatfield. One mainstay from both of these coaches was the option, and the consistent repetition to near perfection, as witnessed by the wins and the rushing statistics in the past 25 years, regularly placing Air Force in the top ten rushing teams in the nation.
[edit] Falcon Stadium
Falcon home games are played in Falcon Stadium, which sits below the main campus at an elevation of 6621 feet (2018 m) above sea level. Pre-game activities include flyovers by USAF aircraft, including the F-15 and B-2. The highest attendance at a home game was 56,409 spectators in 2002, when the Falcons battled the Notre Dame Fighting Irish.[1]
[edit] History
The Falcons are not only recognized by the lightning bolt on the side of their helmets, but their traditional option attack. Air Force is one of the premier rushing teams in the nation. Since Fisher DeBerry took over as Falcons head coach in 1984, they have ranked among the nation’s top 10 in rushing 19 times in 21 years. The Air Force football team has enjoyed success not only on the field but also in the classroom. In 49 years of Air Force football, there have been 39 Academic All-Americans.[2]
[edit] The 1985 Season
1985 was the most successful season in Air Force football history. Under 2nd year coach Fisher DeBerry, the Fightin’ Falcons came within one win of playing for the national championship. They recorded 10 straight wins, climbed the polls to #2 in the nation, but lost to BYU by 7 points in the penultimate game of the season. Air Force rebounded with a bowl game win over Texas in the Bluebonnet Bowl and finished with a 12-1 record as the #5 ranked team in the nation.
Championships
* WAC Champions: 1985 (tie), 1995 (tie), 1998
* WAC Mountain Division Champions: 1998
* Commander in Chief's Trophy Winners (AF-Army-Navy): 1982, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1989-1992, 1994, 1995, 1997-2002
Since 1980, the Falcons and the Colorado State Rams have competed for the Ram-Falcon Trophy. Air Force currently holds a 16-13 advantage over Colorado State in games that the trophy has been contested in.
Notable individual records
* Chance Harridge: In 2002, Harridge set the NCAA Division I record for most single-season rushing touchdowns by a quarterback, with 22.[dubious – discuss][citation needed] Broken by the University of Florida's Tim Tebow in 2007.
* Beau Morgan: He became the first player in NCAA history to rush and pass for over 1,000 yards in a season twice. He broke the NCAA single season rushing record for a quarterback, along with being only the second player in NCAA history to run and pass for 3,000 yards in a career. [4]
[edit] Falcons in the NFL
* Matthew Farmer
* Bryce Fisher
* Chris Gizzi
* Chad Hennings
* Ernie Jennings
* Dave Lawson
* Ben Miller
* Beau Morgan
* Dan Palmer
* Steve Russ
* Frank Staine-Pyne
* Ted Sundquist
* Joe Wood
[5]
[edit] The Bullard Award: Falcon Football’s Highest Honor
The Bullard Award is voted on by the team based on the criteria that typifies Brian Bullard – unselfishness, 110 percent effort, total team commitment and pride in his role on the team whether he’s a starter or not.[6]
Winners:
* 1984 – Steve Kelly
* 1985 – Pat Malackowski
* 1986 – Pat Evans & Jason Webster
* 1987 – Rip Burgwald
* 1988 – Anthony Roberson
* 1989 – Lance McDowell
* 1990 – Bill Price
* 1991 – Kette Dornbush
* 1992 – Grant Johnson
* 1993 – Will McCombs
* 1994 – Steve Russ
* 1995 – Brandon Wilkerson
* 1996 – Lee Guthrie
* 1997 – Chris Gizzi
* 1998 – Mike Tyler
* 1999 – Charlie Jackson
* 2000 – Mike Gallagher, Matt Dayoc, Nate Beard
* 2001 – Zach Johnson
* 2002 – Tom Heir
* 2003 – Joe Schieffer, Monty Coleman
* 2004 – John Rudzinski
* 2005 – Denny Poland
* 2006 - Gilberto Perez
* 2007 - Drew Fowler, Garrett Rybak
* 2008 - Shea Smith
Current coaching staff
* Head Coach: Troy Calhoun
* Associate Coach/Defensive Coordinator: Tim DeRuyter
* Co-Def. Coor./Recruit. Coor./Secondary: Charlton Warren
* Asst. Head Coach/Co-Def Coor./ILB: Matt Wallerstedt
* Defensive Line: Ron Burton
* Outside Linebackers: Matt Weikert
* Offensive Co-Coordinator/Offensive Line: Clay Hendrix
* Tight Ends/Special Teams: Ben Miller
* Running Backs: Jemal Singleton
* Wide Receivers: Michael Thiessen
* Offensive Co-Coordinator/Quarterbacks: Blane Morgan
* Offensive Assistant: Patrick Covington
* Head JV Coach: Lt. Col. Darryl Sumrall
* JV Assistant: Capt Tony Jones Sampson
* Strength/Conditioning Coach: Matt McGettigan
* Defensive Graduate Assistant: Lt. Luke Yeager
* Offensive Graduate Assistant: Lt. Shea Smith
* Executive Asst./Quality Coach: Steve Senn
source
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_Force_Falcons_football
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