Despite a 31-14 loss to sixth-seeded Penn State in the VRBO Fiesta Bowl on Tuesday night, Boise State coach Spencer Danielson said the No. 3 seed Broncos showed they belonged.

Published a year ago on Jan 2nd 2025, 10:00 pm
By Web Desk

GLENDALE, Ariz. -- For weeks, since his team received the No. 3 seed in the College Football Playoff, Boise State coach Spencer Danielson has heard the gripes about the selection process and that the Broncos didn't earn their spot in the quarterfinals.
In the wake of a 31-14 loss to sixth-seeded Penn State in the VRBO Fiesta Bowl, Danielson said the Broncos showed they belonged.
"A lot of people counted us out and we were a couple plays away from winning," Danielson said. "That's football, though. We could lose to anybody in the country. But I also believe we could beat anybody in the country."
After Boise State fell behind 14-0 in the first quarter, it seemed as if the game had a chance to turn into a rout, but the Broncos cut the deficit to 17-14 early in the third quarter despite limited production from star running back Ashton Jeanty.
"Hopefully everybody just watches the film," Danielson said. "That's been my big message all year: watch the film. Watch the game tonight. They had 387 yards; we had 412. Yes, we didn't execute. We lost the game. That is what it is but watch our team."
Danielson lauded his team's effort to roll off 11 straight wins to close the regular season, culminated by the program's first back-to-back Mountain West Conference championships.
"There's been a lot of teams that have said that they should be in it. I'm curious how they played their bowl games," Danielson said. "To me it's all about putting the ball down, play the game, whatever they set to make the playoff, that's on us as coaches and competitors to go get it done."
Alabama, Miami and South Carolina -- three of the teams that just missed the playoff cut -- all lost their bowl games.
"With the expansion of the College Football Playoff, all you want is to give teams a chance," Danielson said. "Everybody knew how to make the playoffs to start the season. There was no gray area.
"We've been in playoff mentality since September. We knew after we lost on the last-second field goal in Oregon, we can't lose again and we didn't."
With Jeanty bottled up for most of the night -- he was held to a season-low 104 yards -- most of Boise State's production came through the air. Quarterback Maddux Madsen completed 23 of 35 passes for 304 yards, but threw three interceptions. Jeanty also had two fumbles, one of which was lost. Those four turnovers, combined with 13 penalties for 90 yards and a pair of missed field goal attempts, proved to be too costly to overcome.
In the wake of a 31-14 loss to sixth-seeded Penn State in the VRBO Fiesta Bowl, Danielson said the Broncos showed they belonged.
"A lot of people counted us out and we were a couple plays away from winning," Danielson said. "That's football, though. We could lose to anybody in the country. But I also believe we could beat anybody in the country."
After Boise State fell behind 14-0 in the first quarter, it seemed as if the game had a chance to turn into a rout, but the Broncos cut the deficit to 17-14 early in the third quarter despite limited production from star running back Ashton Jeanty.
"Hopefully everybody just watches the film," Danielson said. "That's been my big message all year: watch the film. Watch the game tonight. They had 387 yards; we had 412. Yes, we didn't execute. We lost the game. That is what it is but watch our team."
Danielson lauded his team's effort to roll off 11 straight wins to close the regular season, culminated by the program's first back-to-back Mountain West Conference championships.
"There's been a lot of teams that have said that they should be in it. I'm curious how they played their bowl games," Danielson said. "To me it's all about putting the ball down, play the game, whatever they set to make the playoff, that's on us as coaches and competitors to go get it done."
Alabama, Miami and South Carolina -- three of the teams that just missed the playoff cut -- all lost their bowl games.
"With the expansion of the College Football Playoff, all you want is to give teams a chance," Danielson said. "Everybody knew how to make the playoffs to start the season. There was no gray area.
"We've been in playoff mentality since September. We knew after we lost on the last-second field goal in Oregon, we can't lose again and we didn't."
With Jeanty bottled up for most of the night -- he was held to a season-low 104 yards -- most of Boise State's production came through the air. Quarterback Maddux Madsen completed 23 of 35 passes for 304 yards, but threw three interceptions. Jeanty also had two fumbles, one of which was lost. Those four turnovers, combined with 13 penalties for 90 yards and a pair of missed field goal attempts, proved to be too costly to overcome.

YouTube is putting AI labels where you’ll actually see them
- 15 hours ago

Sony is offering up to 50 percent off some of our favorite PS5 games
- 15 hours ago

Why Trump is investigating E. Jean Carroll
- 4 hours ago

Qualcomm promises $300 Windows laptops with new Snapdragon C
- 15 hours ago

The real lesson of the E. Jean Carroll investigation is Trump’s weakness
- 13 hours ago

Sony’s DualSense controllers are almost 30 percent off
- 15 hours ago

Robinhood will let your AI agent trade stocks and make (or lose) lots of money
- 15 hours ago

SpaceX gets $4 billion contract to build missile-tracking ‘Golden Dome’ satellites
- 15 hours ago
US ready to restart strikes on Iran if no deal, says Pentagon chief
- 2 hours ago

Pope Leo calls for being ‘profoundly human’ in the age of AI
- 6 hours ago
Pakistan's Youth Leader Fahad Shahbaz makes Forbes 30 under 30 Asia
- 3 hours ago
Pakistan’s children on the front line of a climate crisis rewriting childhood
- 3 hours ago
You May Like
Trending









