1995 All-Western Athletic Conference football team

The 1995 All-Western Athletic Conference football team consists of American football players chosen for their All-Western Athletic Conference ("WAC") teams for the 1995 NCAA Division I-A football season. Five teams dominated the 1995 All-WAC first team as follows:

  • Conference co-champion BYU placed six players on the first team: tight end Chad Lewis, offensive lineman Larry Moore, linebackers Shay Muirbrook and Stan Raass, and defensive lineman John Raass.[1]
  • Conference co-champion Colorado State placed five players on the first team: offensive lineman James Cregg, defensive linemen Sean Moran and Brady Smith, and defensive backs Ray Jackson and Greg Myers.[1]
  • Wyoming finished in sixth place but placed five players on the first team: wide receiver Marcus Harris, offensive lineman Steve Scifres, defensive lineman Joe Cummings, placekicker Cory Wedel, and punter Brian Gragert.[1]
  • Fifth-place San Diego State placed four players on the first team: running back George Jones, wide receiver Will Blackwell, offensive lineman Chris Finch, and defensive back Ricky Parker.[1]
  • Conference co-champion Air Force placed three players on the first team: quarterback Beau Morgan, offensive lineman Bret Cillessen, and linebacker Brian McCray.[1]

Offensive selections

Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

  • Bret Cillessen, Air Force
  • James Cregg, Colorado State
  • Chris Finch, San Diego State
  • Larry Moore, BYU
  • Steve Scifres, Wyoming

Defensive selections

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

  • Michael Comer, Texas-El Paso
  • Brian McCray, Air Force
  • Shay Muirbrook, BYU
  • Stan Raass, BYU

Defensive backs

  • Ray Jackson, Colorado State
  • Harold Lusk, Utah
  • Greg Myers, Colorado State
  • Ricky Parker, San Diego State

Special teams

Placekickers

  • Cory Wedel, Wyoming

Punters

  • Brian Gragert, Wyoming

Return specialist

  • James Dye, BYU

See also

References

  1. "All-WAC Team". Albuquerque Journal. November 29, 1995.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.