2001 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers football team

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2001 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers football
ConferenceGateway Football Conference
Ranking
Sports NetworkNo. 12
Record8–4 (5–2 Gateway)
Head coach
Co-offensive coordinatorWillie Taggart (1st season)
Co-offensive coordinatorKeven Lightner (1st season)
Offensive schemeMultiple
Defensive coordinatorDavid Elson (1st season)
Base defense3–4
Home stadiumL. T. Smith Stadium
Seasons
← 2000
2002 →
2001 Gateway Football Conference standings
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
No. 4 Northern Iowa $^   6 1     11 3  
No. 12 Western Kentucky ^   5 2     8 4  
No. 15 Youngstown State   5 2     8 3  
Western Illinois   4 3     5 5  
Southwest Missouri State
  3 4     6 5  
Indiana State   2 5     3 8  
Illinois State   2 5     2 9  
Southern Illinois   1 6     1 10  
  • $ – Conference champion
  • ^ – NCAA Division I-AA playoff participant
Rankings from The Sports Network poll

The 2001 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers football team represented Western Kentucky University in the 2001 NCAA Division I-AA football season and were coached by Jack Harbaugh. This was the school's first season as a member of the Gateway Football Conference, having won the Ohio Valley Conference championship the previous year. The Hilltoppers were the preseason favorites to win the conference but finished tied for 2nd.[1] They qualified for the NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs where they were defeated by eventual runner-up, Furman.[2] The team was originally scheduled to play Wisconsin on September 14, however, due to the September 11 attacks, all college football games were suspended the following weekend, and the game was played on the 29th.[3]

This team included future NFL players Joseph Jefferson, Mel Mitchell, Sherrod Coates, and Brian Claybourn. Mitchell, Eric Dandy, and Chris Price were named to the AP All American team and Jefferson was selected to play in the Blue-Gray Football Classic. The All-Conference team included Coates, Dandy, Jefferson, Mitchell, Price, Patrick Reynolds, Buster Ashley, Claybourn, Peter Martinez, Kyle Moffatt, and Daniel Withrow.[4]

Schedule

DateOpponentRankSiteResultAttendanceSource
August 30at No. 13 Western IllinoisNo. 3L 13–1711,832[5]
September 8
L. T. Smith Stadium
  • Bowling Green, KY
  • W 48–011,000
    September 22
    Southwest Missouri
    No. 8
    • L. T. Smith Stadium
    • Bowling Green, KY
    W 23–79,500
    September 29at Wisconsin*No. 7L 6–2475,662
    October 6Elon*No. 11
    • L. T. Smith Stadium
    • Bowling Green, KY
    W 24–77,700
    October 13at
    Memorial Stadium
  • Terre Haute, IN
  • W 22–93,545
    October 20No. 11 McNeese State*daggerNo. 10
    • L. T. Smith Stadium
    • Bowling Green, KY
    W 21–014,000[6]
    October 27at No. 5 Youngstown StateNo. 10W 24–1416,591
    November 3at Illinois StateNo. 7W 58–146,493[7]
    November 10No. 15 Northern IowaNo. 6
    • L. T. Smith Stadium
    • Bowling Green, KY
    L 23–2410,300
    November 17Southern IllinoisNo. 12
    • L. T. Smith Stadium
    • Bowling Green, KY
    W 36–65,800[8]
    December 1at No. 4 Furman*No. 11L 20–246,143[9]

    References