Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1996 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football team


1996 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football
Big Sky Conference
No. 6
9–3 (6–1 Big Sky)
Steve Axman (7th season)
Bill Busch (1st season)
Walkup Skydome

The 1996 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football team was an American football team that represented Northern Arizona University (NAU) as a member of the Big Sky Conference (Big Sky) during the 1996 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The team compiled a 9–3 record and was No. 6 in the NCAA Division I-AA playoff participant rankings. Running back Archie Amerson won the Walter Payton Award as the most outstanding offensive player in NCAA Division I-AA football.

DateOpponentRankSiteResultAttendanceSource
August 31Western New Mexico*No. 20Walkup SkydomeFlagstaff, AZW 75–0
September 7at New Mexico*No. 16University StadiumAlbuquerque, NML 33–4924,892
September 14Southern Utah*No. 16Walkup SkydomeFlagstaff, AZ (rivalry)W 43–138,021
September 21at Portland StateNo. 16Civic StadiumPortland, ORW 38–2410,137
September 28Cal State NorthridgeNo. 13Walkup SkydomeFlagstaff, AZW 32–149,028
October 5No. 18 Weber StateNo. 12Walkup SkydomeFlagstaff, AZW 59–4513,877
October 12at Montana StateNo. 10Sales StadiumBozeman, MTW 49–1812,967
October 19Sacramento StateNo. 7Walkup SkydomeFlagstaff, AZW 51–3214,471
October 26at No. 2 MontanaNo. 6Washington–Grizzly StadiumMissoula, MTL 32–4818,847
November 2Idaho StateNo. 8Walkup SkydomeFlagstaff, AZW 50–38 OT9,689
November 9at No. 20 Eastern WashingtonNo. 6Woodward FieldCheney, WAW 13–103,915
November 30No. 13 Furman*No. 6Walkup SkydomeFlagstaff, AZ (NCAA Division I-AA First Round)L 31–428,700
*Non-conference gameHomecomingRankings from The Sports Network Poll released prior to the game

In their seventh year under head coach Steve Axman, the Lumberjacks compiled a 9–3 record (6–1 against conference opponents), outscored opponents by a total of 506 to 333, and finished second out of nine teams in the Big Sky. The team played its home games at the J. Lawrence Walkup Skydome, commonly known as the Walkup Skydome, in Flagstaff, Arizona.

During the regular season, the team lost only two games, one against Division I-A New Mexico (33–49) and the other to No. 2 Montana (32–48).

The Lumberjacks were invited to play in the 1996 NCAA Division I-AA playoffs. In the program's first ever Division I-AA playoff game, they lost to Furman by a 42–31 score before a crowd of 8,700 at the Walkup Skydome.

The team was led on offense by running back Archie Amerson. He rushed for 2,079 yards and 25 rushing touchdowns (both NAU records) and received the Walter Payton Award as the most outstanding offensive player in NCAA Division I-AA football. He had six 200-yard rushing games during the 1996 season, and his single-game totals of 289 yards against Portland State and 281 yards against Weber State rank among the top 10 rushing games in NAU history. His seven rushing touchdowns against Weber State established a Division I-AA record.

Quarterback Travis Brown also had a record-breaking season with 3,398 passing yards (then a school record) and also set NAU single-game records with 474 passing yards against Montana and seven passing touchdowns against Sacramento State.

Ricky Pearsall also set a Division I-AA record with 216 punt return yards against Western New Mexico.

The 1996 team also set the school's single-season scoring record with 63 touchdowns. Its 75-0 win over Western New Mexico was the largest point total and largest margin of victory in school history.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1996 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football team — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report