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Boise State has won seven of the last eight WAC titles, including five straight from 2002-06. It has two Fiesta Bowl victories in the last four years, including that wildly entertaining upset over Oklahoma in 2007 that included a hook-and-lateral, Statue of Liberty play and a postgame marriage proposal.
"The table was set pretty good," Petersen said of the program he inherited in 2006 after five years as the Broncos offensive coordinator under Dan Hawkins.
"One of the things this program struggles with a little bit is the expectations," Petersen added. "Because if you look around, we're still behind the eight ball compared to a lot of these other programs that are doing things that we're doing. We're not even in the same ballpark."
Indeed, Boise State's accomplishments this last decade are all the more impressive when you look at its resources.
It is not a typical football factory. Its budget for the entire athletic department is $32 million, with Petersen making $1.2 million. Alabama's athletic department budget was $82 million in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2009, according to the U.S. Department of Education. Tide coach Nick Saban makes $4.7 million alone.
Bronco Stadium may as well be the Not So Big House, seating less than 34,000.
"I have a saying I repeat often here: Boise State is a great university with a great football team attached to it," Kustra said, "not a great football program that happens to have a university attached to it."
And while the caliber of players that Boise State can recruit is improving, the roster is still decidedly blue-collar, filled with guys who were either snubbed or downright ignored by the power conferences. Winterswyk, on the preseason watch list for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy given to the country's top defensive player, was a walk-on. Austin Pettis, who hauled in the game-winning catch against Virginia Tech, took one recruiting trip, to Boise State.
And yet, the Broncos just keep winning.
"We've just got to keep that same thing, having that Bronco mentality, that chip on your shoulder," Pettis said. "Just going with that mentality that everyone still is against you even though we're starting to get recognition now."
There's another side to Boise State's success that adds a little more pressure to win -- name recognition. Student applications rose 9.1 percent the year after the 2007 Fiesta Bowl. Licensed merchandise generated almost $750,000 in royalties last year, money that helps fund scholarships. A football fan in Salt Lake City donated a big chunk of money for the new business school.
The Broncos have helped give Idaho national recognition, too.
"We don't have anything else to export. We have natural beauty," Custer said. "It's fun to have this unexpected thing to export, this great football program."
And this season could be the biggest yet.
The Broncos survived what is expected to be their biggest test by beating then-No. 10 Virginia Tech at Washington's FedEx Field. They play Oregon State on Sept. 25, but the game is at Bronco Stadium, where Boise State is 63-2 since 2000. Fresno State and Nevada look to be Boise State's toughest WAC foes, but the Fresno State game is in Boise and the Broncos have won 10 straight against the Wolf Pack.
Get through the regular season undefeated again, and Boise State could find itself back in Glendale, Ariz., this time playing for the national title.
"Are we good for college football? I think so," Pettis said. "You don't always want those big powerhouses winning every single year. It's just like in professional sports, when the Patriots are winning a bunch of years or the Lakers or the Celtics are winning a bunch. You want to see some underdogs come through sometimes."
[Associated Press;
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