1988 Football Team

The 1988 football team finished the season with an overall record of 11-2, winning the Western Athletic Conference with a league record of 8-0 and playing in its second straight Holiday Bowl. With a high-scoring offense led by first-year starter Randy Welniak at quarterback and a ferocious defense, the Cowboys won their first ten games, including the first night game in the history of War Memorial Stadium, a 24-14 victory over Brigham Young University, and a remarkable 48-45 comeback win at Air Force. Ranked as high as 10th in the nation, the Cowboys had eight players named to the All-Conference team, as well as the offensive player of the year (Welniak), the Defensive Player of the Year (DT Pat Rabold), and the Newcomer of the Year (RB Dabby Dawson).  Nine Cowboys earned honorable-mention All-America honors with one (Rabold) being named Second Team All-America. Head Coach Paul Roach was named Western Athletic Conference Coach of the Year for the second straight year. Wyoming’s defensive front four (Dave Edeen, Craig Schlichting, Rabold, and Mitch Donahue) accounted for 48 quarterback sacks on the year.

 

PHOTO ID – Front row, left to right:  Tony Kapushion, Gaston Gosar, Tom Kilpatrick, Dave Edeen, Mike Schenbeck, Shawn Wehrer, Rich Miller, Randy Welniak, Grant Salisbury, John Brasee, Brad Quiring.  Second row:  Trent Greener, Freddie Dussett, Steve McMillon, Eric Coleman, Pat Rabold, John Walsh.  Third row:  P. J. Wells, Mark Timmer, Dabby Dawson, Doug Rigby, Dan Cudworth, Mark Foos, Steve Slay, Craig Schlichting, Steve Addison, Mitch Donahue, Jon Cogdill, Shawn Wiggins, Crandelle Mack.  Fourth row:  Melvin Wells, Carl Bruere, Ted Gilmore, Matt O’Brien, Mitch Rosebrough, Lee Carter, Jim Scifres, Eric Worden, Derrick Spack, Ryan Vowers, Tyrone Fittje, Quentin Skinner, Bobby Fresques.  Fifth row:  Bryan Mooney, Scott Skavdahl, Kevin Schitoskey, Scott Addison, Darren Wehrer, Vic Mazurie, Jay Daffer, Justin Byleveld, Tom Kramer, Sean Fleming, John Gustin, Neron D. Miller.  Sixth row:  David Johnson, Pete Gosar, Willie Wright, Peter Rowe, Mike Eldridge, Matt Fowler, Scott Powers, Steve Roe, Matt Swenson, Kirk Van Roekel, Will Hutcheson, John Wade, Richard Sauls.  Seventh row:  DeWaine Jones, Gordy Wood, Andy Yoesting, Bobby Wright, Ty Muma, Cody Johnson, Tom Corontzos, Jim Pennington, Andy Metcalf, Pat Thomas, Rod Merchant, Kiowa Moore, Tim Taft.  Eighth row:  Damian Spencer, Dorrell Drake, Lance Jackson, Lee Hamilton, Pete Wilkie, Ross Crum, Craig Lockhorn, Steve Palluck, Shawn Dostal, Bob Hanson, Jarrod Thiele, Luke Weith, Joe Benedetti, Derrick Palmer, Brett Maynard.  Ninth row:  Cedric Duncan, Robert Midgett, General Jackson, Chris Mortimer, Matt Sims, Paul Wallace, Daryl Harris, Scott Gibson, Fred Harris, Steve Mann, George Dozier, Steve Bena, Steve Sikic, Vaughn Henderson.  Tenth row:  Glenn Hampton, Joe Irribarren, John Bruley, Chad Denton, Joe Wahlgren, Greg Peters, Andy Pett, Peter Gunn, Gregg Brown, Andre Rudolph, Davion Henson, Brady Jacobsen.

 

Not pictured:  Head Coach Paul Roach, Assistant Coaches Gregg Brandon, Greg Brown, Dave Butterfield, Scott Downing, Larry Korpitz, Joe Tiller, Mark Tommerdahl, Del Wight, and Bill Cockerham; Head equipment manager Michael Aanonsen; Head athletic trainer Bill Lyons; Student athletic trainers Traci Vorn, Dan Dalen, Julie Abbott, Wayne Petsch, Tony Bare, Syd Webb, Amy Garwood, Donna St. Clair, Kenna Tanner, and Todd Nalder; Student equipment managers Mike Corbin, Jeff Gallagher, Greg Gorney, Sherry Hartleip, Mark Rotellini, Rick Mitchelson, and Sam Mirich.

Leslie Paul “Les” Witte

Wyoming’s first nationally-recognized student-athlete, Les Witte dominated the college basketball world in the early 1930s.  A three-time All-American, he led Wyoming to the Helms Foundation national championship in 1934 and thrust Wyoming into the national spotlight.  Playing for his brother, Coach Willard “Dutch” Witte, Les Witte was Wyoming’s first 1,000-point scorer, first basketball All-American, and first consensus All-American in any sport.  He was a four-time, first-team All-Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference honoree, and led UW in scoring each of his four years (rewriting the UW record book in the process). The Cowboys were 82-15 during Witte’s playing career and won four RMAC Eastern Division titles and two outright RMAC championships, finishing second the other two times by a total of three points.  The 1932 RMAC title was Wyoming’s first conference championship in a major sport.  Witte graduated from UW with a degree in Geology and went on to a distinguished career with the U. S. Bureau of Reclamation.

Grant Salisbury

Salisbury was the center for the Cowboy football team during one of its most successful eras.

An honorable mention All-America in 1988, he was a two-time all-conference selection and was a major part of two championship teams.  He anchored an offensive line equally skilled in run and pass-blocking.  His head coach Paul Roach said of him at the time “he’s the main spoke, the heart of our offensive line.  Grant has developed into one of the best centers in college football, and he’s one of the finest guys I’ve coached”.  His offensive line coach, Joe Tiller, said “Grant is tough and he’s smart.  I don’t know that he’s smarter than he is tough or tougher than he is smart, but that combination makes him a fine football player and a heck of a guy.”

Erin Kirby

An extremely talented two-sport athlete, Erin Kirby earned honors and set records in both Volleyball and Track at UW.  As a middle blocker in Volleyball, she earned all-Mountain West Conference honors four times, and was named Player of the Week four times during her career.  She holds the UW career records for blocks and sets-played and is second in hitting percentage.  She had a single-season record-setting 225 blocks in 2013, leading the Mountain West Conference and second in the nation.  She also earned Academic All-Conference honors four times and was one of thirty NCAA Division I women student-athlete candidates for the Senior Class Award in college volleyball.  In Track, she was the Mountain West 400 meter hurdles champion as a freshman.  Over her career, she earned all-Conference honors in the Indoor 4×400 relay, the Outdoor 400 meter hurdles (twice), the Indoor 400 meter hurdles, and the Outdoor 4×400 meter relay (twice).  She holds nine top-ten marks in the UW record books.  Following graduation, she played one year of professional volleyball in Sweden.

Mary Johnson

Mary Johnson served as the administrative assistant in the men’s basketball office at Wyoming for over 27 years.  She was the person who kept the office running and was always there for the players and coaches alike when they needed a sympathetic voice.  Mary was a constant over the years, a familiar face spanning the tenures of six different head coaches, countless assistant coaches and student-athletes.  Former UW Coach Larry Shyatt said that Mary “provided advice, insight, and support”.  Many former Cowboy players from over the years shared their feelings about Mary.  Fennis Dembo said that Mary “was the sweet and controlled voice in the basketball office when all seemed upside-down after a tough loss”.  To Bill Garnett, Mary “was the calming, helpful, caring person for all of us”.  To Gregg Sawyer, Mary was “the Mom away from home for many of us and the glue that held the program together”.  Reggie Slater recalled Mary’s “calming, steady voice . . . her empathy and wisdom”.

Wayne Jensen

Competing for four years for the University of Wyoming in both Cross Country and Track, Jensen lettered eight times.  As a freshman, he took second in the mile and fourth in the three-mile at the Western Athletic Conference championships and set four new UW records.  His sophomore year, he again finished second in the mile at the WAC Championships and was on UW’s record-breaking mile relay team.  In 1970, Jensen was the WAC champion in the outdoor mile.  He was the WAC champion in the indoor mile in 1971, breaking the conference record in the process. As a junior, Jensen was featured in Sports Illustrated’s Faces in the Crowd section for holding the mile record in three states (Wyoming, Colorado, and Utah).  He finished his career at Wyoming holding five records.  His records and times are even more remarkable because he ran on cinder tracks. After graduating from UW, he had a long and distinguished career as a chemical engineer.

Walter Goffigan

A bruising running back/fullback, Goffigan earned All-Western Athletic Conference honors in 1981, 1982, and 1983.  A two-time Honorable Mention All American, he led the team in rushing yards in both 1982 and 1983, averaging 4.8 and 5.0 yards per carry, respectively.  He scored 26 total touchdowns for the Cowboys, still the fifth-best total all-time.  A four-year starter and a team captain in 1983, he led the Cowboys in scoring that year with 62 points (ten touchdowns and a two-point conversion). Goffigan broke the all-time rushing record held by Jerry Hill with 2167 yards. He signed a free-agent contract with the Dallas Cowboys in 1984 before embarking on a long career as a college athletics academic advisor, mentoring countless young student-athletes over the years.

Tom Wilkinson

Known as the “Greybull Rifle”, Wilkinson started at quarterback for three years and led the Cowboys in passing and total offense all three years. He established new highs for season and career passing yards, completions, and touchdowns. A team captain in 1965, he led the Pokes to a national ranking as high as 12th in the nation at one point. He earned all-Western Athletic Conference honors each year, while leading the Cowboys to an 18-10-2 record during his career. He also played shortstop and pitched for the Cowboy baseball team, lettering three years. After his time at Wyoming, he enjoyed a long career in the Canadian Football League and was inducted into the CFL Hall of Fame in 1987.

Mike Schenbeck

Schenbeck was a hard-hitting linebacker and three-year starter for the Cowboy Football team. He earned All-Western Athletic Conference honors and honorable mention All America honors in 1988. A popular teammate on and off the field, Schenbeck was a defensive leader on two Western Athletic Conference championship teams (1987-88) and played in two bowl games. Blessed with outstanding speed, he had a knack for the big play and a nose for the football. As a junior, Schenbeck was credited with 106 tackles, one interception, five pass breakups, four tackles for loss, two forced fumbles, and one fumble recovery. His senior year, he recorded 83 tackles, one interception, 12 pass breakups, two sacks, three tackles for loss, and two fumble recoveries.

Kevin Mannon

A seven-time All-American, Mannon competed in the weight throw, the shot put, the hammer throw, and the discus on both the Cowboys’ Indoor and Outdoor Track & Field teams. In 1998, Mannon was the first athlete from Wyoming to earn All-America honors in the discus. He was also a two-time Western Athletic Conference champion in the shot put and weight throw as well as the 1999 discus champion. His marks still rank among the Cowboys’ top five all-time in weight throw, discus, shot put, and hammer throw. In 1999, Mannon established an American collegiate record in the weight throw which stood for five years.