Wyoming opened the 2013 football season at Nebraska. The expected blowout turned into a shootout. The numbers put up by Wyoming were such that this group of Nebraska defenders lost all right to refer to themselves as true "Blackshirts."
Quarterback Brett Smith threw for 383 of his team's 602 yards. The Cowboys totaled 35 first downs, the most ever allowed by Nebraska. Only one of them required a third-down conversion.
With all of that, Wyoming lost 37-34, and at least one great Cowboy of the past found himself rejecting the idea of a moral victory.
"Before the half, we kind of sat on the ball rather than to keep going for the throat," Marcus Harris said. "To me, that said, 'It's good enough hanging with Nebraska,' instead of, 'We're going to beat these guys.' "
Wyoming went 2-1 in its remaining nonconference games. Then, a 2-0 start in the Mountain West turned into a 3-5 finish, and coach Dave Christensen was fired after five seasons in Laramie.
Harris was recruited out of Brooklyn Center High to Wyoming two decades ago by coach Joe Tiller. By his senior season in 1996, he was catching 109 passes for 1,650 yards and 13 touchdowns. He was the third winner of the Fred Biletnikoff Award — a presentation started in 1994 to honor the nation's top receiver.
Tiller went to Purdue after that season. He brought the spread offense to the Big Ten, with considerable success. Wyoming had three winning seasons immediately after Tiller with Dana Dimel, but in the past 14 years it has had only three.
Craig Bohl will be Wyoming's fourth coach since 2000. It was a shock on Dec. 8 when it became public that Bohl would be leaving North Dakota State to replace Christensen.