After Wyoming’s 2024 season was defined by shoulda-woulda-coulda, the Cowboys know a return to Mountain West relevance and the postseason rests in the game’s minutiae.
Wyoming was 2-5 in games decided by 10 points or less a year ago, a reversal from the 6-1 mark the Cowboys posted in the same situation in 2023. Two of those defeats came by four points, one by three and another by two amid a disappointing 3-9 campaign.
So in his second year as head coach, Jay Sawvel is harping on the details.
“I can point to a wide receiver blocking the wrong guy on a reverse against Utah State (in a 27-25 loss last October) that would’ve been a TD,” Sawvel recalled. “He blocked the wrong guy, didn’t block him very hard, and then that guy creates a fumble on the play. We lose points, we lose the ball.
“That’s the perfect example of what we’re talking about when it came to our whole season and not winning close games. … The reality is, if we were a little bit better in a few things situationally a year ago, it would’ve looked a lot different.”
Sawvel took the reins from Craig Bohl last year after Bohl, the longest-tenured coach in program history, led the Cowboys to six bowl games and four bowl victories in 10 seasons.
“We know that there was a standard that wasn’t achieved in this program a year ago,” Sawvel acknowledged.
This fall, the second-year head coach turns the offense over to sophomore quarterback Kaden Anderson to help right the ship. Anderson appeared in nine games last season and started three in November, including a 49-45 shootout win over New Mexico in his first career start.
Sawvel says Anderson’s “continued an upward climb,” while the head coach believes the cast around him and on the other side of the ball is markedly better, too.
“I think we’ve come a long way from where we were last November to where we are now,” Sawvel said. “We didn’t have enough overall depth a year ago. We weren’t very productive at wide receiver.
“Plus, we can be fairly solid up front on defense, and we’ve got more depth at defensive end than we had in the past, and we’ve got depth at linebacker, which we did not have a year ago at all.”
Senior Jaylen Sargent and sophomore Chris Durr Jr., both of whom emerged in the latter half of last year, “are capable of being front-line receivers in the Mountain West,” according to Sawvel.
At tight end, the Cowboys have seniors John Michael Gyllenborg and Evan Svobda, the latter of whom was the Cowboys’ starting QB for much of last season. And in the backfield, Wyoming has options behind a seasoned offensive line, including senior Sam Scott and freshman Samuel Harris in addition to a trio of transfers in junior Terron Kellman, graduate Max White and graduate Damashja Harris.
On the other side of the ball, senior defensive end Tyce Westland, senior nose tackle Ben Florentine, senior linebackers Brayden Johnson and Ethan Stuhlsatz, and sophomore safety Jones Thomas (Poudre High School) are headliners.
“The light has turned on for (Thomas), and he brings a dimension of speed and physicality that is a little different,” Sawvel said.
The coach hopes all of those aforementioned players can help swing the thin margins in close games in favor of the Cowboys this fall. Wyoming opens the season on Thursday at Akron, then hosts Northern Iowa and Utah before traveling to Boulder to play CU in the non-conference finale on Sept. 20.
“The difference in those games (decided by 10 points or less) is we averaged 4.3 points less per game on offense a year ago in those games, and we gave up a point more defensively,” Sawvel said. “… I look at us now, and we’re substantially better in a lot of ways. Now we have to figure out a way to make up those points on one end, and bringing it back down on the other.”
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