2011 Oregon State Beavers football team

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2011 Oregon State Beavers football
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Conference Pac-12 Conference
North Division
2011 record 3–9 (3–6 Pac-12)
Head coach Mike Riley (11th year)
Offensive coordinator Danny Langsdorf (7th year)
Defensive coordinator Mark Banker (9th year)
Home stadium Reser Stadium
(Capacity: 45,674)
Seasons
« 2010 2012 »
2011 Pac-12 football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
North Division
#4 Oregon xy$   8 1         12 2  
#7 Stanford x%   8 1         11 2  
Washington   5 4         7 6  
California   4 5         7 6  
Oregon State   3 6         3 9  
Washington State   2 7         4 8  
South Division
#6 USC *   7 2         10 2  
UCLA xy   5 4         6 8  
Utah   4 5         8 5  
Arizona State   4 5         6 7  
Arizona   2 7         4 8  
Colorado   2 7         3 10  
Championship: Oregon 49, UCLA 31
  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
  • % – BCS at-large representative
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
  • y – Championship game participant
  • * – USC ineligible for championship and post-season due to NCAA sanctions
As of January 10, 2012; Rankings from AP Poll

The 2011 Oregon State Beavers football team represented Oregon State University during the 2011 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team's head coach was Mike Riley, in his ninth straight season and eleventh overall. Home games were played at Reser Stadium in Corvallis, and they are members of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. The Beavers finished the season 3–9, 3–6 in Pac-12 play to finish in fifth place in the North Division.

Schedule

Date Time Opponent Site TV Result Attendance
September 3 1:00 PM Sacramento State* Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR L 28–29 OT  41,581[1]
September 10 9:00 AM at #8 Wisconsin* Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI ESPN L 0–35   80,337[2]
September 24 12:30 PM UCLA Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR FCS Pacific L 19–27   44,352[3]
October 1 7:30 PM at #25 Arizona State Sun Devil StadiumTempe, AZ FCS Pacific L 20–35   57,437[4]
October 8 12:30 PM Arizona Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR FCS Pacific W 37–27   40,403[5]
October 15 1:00 PM BYU* Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR FCS Pacific L 28–38   42,584[6]
October 22 7:30 PM vs. Washington State CenturyLink FieldSeattle, WA FSN W 44–21   49,219[7]
October 29 4:00 PM at Utah Rice-Eccles StadiumSalt Lake City, UT RTNW L 8–27   45,017[8]
November 5 12:30 PM #4 Stanforddagger Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR ABC L 13–38   42,835[9]
November 12 3:30 PM at California AT&T ParkSan Francisco, CA RTNW L 6–23   39,602[10]
November 19 12:30 PM Washington Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR RTNW W 38–21   42,766[11]
November 26 12:30 PM at #9 Oregon Autzen StadiumEugene, OR (Civil War) ABC/ESPN2 L 21–49   59,802[12]
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll. All times are in Pacific Time.

Roster

2011 Oregon State Beavers

Quarterbacks

Running Backs

  • 19 Jovan Stevenson
  • 24 Ryan McCants
  • 28 Terron Ward
  • 34 Jordan Jenkins
  • 35 Malcolm Agnew

Fullbacks

  • 32 Westly Meng
  • 33 Tyler Anderson
  • 36 Dylan Parsons
  • 42 Clayton York

Wide Receivers

Tight Ends

  • 82 Colby Prince
  • 87 Joe Halahuni
  • 88 Tyler Perry
  • 89 Connor Hamlett

Offensive Guards

  • 53 Colin Lyons
  • 61 Michael Lamb
  • 74 Burke Ellis

Offensive Tackles

  • 50 Mike Remmers
  • 72 Darryl Jackson
  • 77 Michael Philip

Offensive Linemen

  • 51 Michael Beaton
  • 62 Geoff Garner
  • 64 Colin Kelly
  • 65 Roman Sapolu
  • 69 Joshua Andrews
  • 70 Grant Johnson
  • 71 Grant Enger
  • 73 David Vieru
  • 75 Derek Nielsen
  • 79 Aaron Magnuson
 

Defensive Tackles

  • 66 Ben Motter
  • 74 Kevin Frahm
  • 79 Joe Lopez
  • 92 Fred Thompson
  • 96 Dominic Glover
  • 97 Mana Tuivailala
  • 98 Castro Masaniai

Defensive Ends

  • 49 Andrew Seumalo
  • 56 Rusty Fernando
  • 76 John Braun
  • 91 Taylor Henry
  • 93 Mana Rosa
  • 94 Devon Krell
  • 95 Scott Crichton
  • 99 Blake Harra

Linebackers

  • 5 Cameron Collins
  • 13 Reuben Robinson
  • 36 Josh Parish
  • 39 Donnell Welch
  • 40 Michael Doctor
  • 41 Feti Unga
  • 43 Tony Wilson
  • 45 Michael Bibbee
  • 46 Shiloah Te'o
  • 47 Josh Williams
  • 51 Charlie Gilmur
  • 55 Shaydon Akuna
 

Cornerbacks

Safeties

  • 3 Anthony Watkins
  • 10 Lance Mitchell
  • 12 Dax Dilbeck
  • 15 Levi Levasa
  • 25 Ryan Murphy
  • 26 Josh LaGrone
  • 29 Will Storey
  • 30 Zeke Sanders

Long Snappers

  • 52 Troy Whalen
  • 57 Marcus Perry
  • 58 Michael Morovick

Place Kickers

  • 18 Max Johnson
  • 27 Trevor Romaine

Punters

  • 7 Johnny Hekker
  • 48 Keith Kostol

Game notes

Sacramento State

1 2 3 4 OT Total
Hornets 0 14 7 0 8 29
Beavers 0 3 3 15 7 28

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The Sacramento State Hornets defeated Oregon State in overtime on September 3, 29–28. The Hornets had second possession in overtime, and after quarterback Jeff Fleming made a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Brandyn Reed to pull within one point, the Hornets attempted a two-point conversion for the win. Fleming and Reed connected again for the two-point conversion and the 1-point victory. During Oregon State's possession in overtime, running back Malcolm Agnew put the Beavers ahead by 7 with a 17-yard touchdown run. For the game, Agnew ran for 223 yards and three touchdowns on 33 carries to lead the Beavers. After the Beavers trailed 14–3 at halftime, quarterback Ryan Katz was replaced by redshirt freshman Sean Mannion. Mannion finished the day with eight completion on 12 attempts and 143 yards, while Katz managed 11 completions on 22 attempts and 87 yards. James Rodgers did not play for the Beavers due to a lingering knee injury.[13]

Wisconsin

1 2 3 4 Total
Beavers 0 0 0 0 0
#8 Badgers 7 14 7 7 35

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American football line up for a play in a full stadium.
State on defense in the first half.

UCLA

1 2 3 4 Total
Bruins 7 14 0 6 27
Beavers 3 7 9 0 19

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UCLA leads the series 40–15–4 that began in 1930 and played in Los Angeles, Corvallis, Portland and Tokyo (1980 Mirage Bowl). The Bruins won last year 17–14 on Kai Forbath's 51-yard field goal on the last play of the game.

Wide receiver James Rodgers made his return to the lineup for the Beavers after being out almost a year with a knee injury suffered against Arizona the previous season.[14]

Arizona State

1 2 3 4 Total
Beavers 6 7 7 0 20
#25 Sun Devils 0 21 7 7 35

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Arizona

1 2 3 4 Total
Wildcats 0 6 14 7 27
Beavers 0 27 3 7 37

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BYU

1 2 3 4 Total
Cougars 7 7 10 14 38
Beavers 0 14 7 7 28

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Washington State

1 2 3 4 Total
Beavers 7 17 7 13 44
Cougars 0 14 0 7 21

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Utah

1 2 3 4 Total
Beavers 0 0 0 8 8
Utes 3 21 0 3 27

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Stanford

1 2 3 4 Total
#4 Cardinal 0 17 14 7 38
Beavers 0 7 6 0 13

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California

1 2 3 4 Total
Beavers 3 3 0 0 6
Golden Bears 7 7 6 3 23

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Washington

1 2 3 4 Total
Huskies 7 7 0 7 21
Beavers 14 3 0 21 38

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Oregon

1 2 3 4 Total
Beavers 0 7 0 14 21
#9 Ducks 7 21 7 14 49

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Player death

Fred Thompson, a true freshman defensive end, died in the early evening of December 7, 2011 in Corvallis. According to OSU officials, Thompson was playing basketball at the Dixon Recreation Center on the OSU campus when he collapsed. He was transported to Good Samaritan Hospital in Corvallis where he was pronounced dead. Thompson was from Richmond, California. He was 19 years old.[15][16]

Interesting Facts

  • The team finished with their worst record since 1996.[17]

References

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  14. "Beavers Come Up Short Against UCLA." OSUBeavers.com. Retrieved December 1, 2011.
  15. http://www.osubeavers.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/120811aaa.html
  16. http://aol.sportingnews.com/ncaa-football/story/2011-12-08/oregon-state-football-player-fred-thompson-dies?icid=maing-grid7%7Cmain5%7Cdl3%7Csec3_lnk2%7C118466
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