UNLV Rebels football
The UNLV Rebels football program is a college football team that represents the Nevada, Las Vegas. The team is a member of the Mountain West Conference, which is a Division I Bowl Subdivision conference of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The program, which began on September 14, 1968, plays its home games at Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada.
History
Early history
In 1967, Nevada Southern University announced that they would field a collegiate football program beginning on September 14, 1968, and announced that the team would be a Division II Independent and that Bill Ireland would be the program's first head coach. The Rebels played their first game of their inaugural season against the St. Mary's Gaels at Cashman Field in Las Vegas. The Rebels won the game, defeating the Gaels 27β20 in front of 8,000 fans. The Rebels remained undefeated until the last game of the season, losing to the Cal Lutheran Kingsmen, 13β17, as the Rebels finished their inaugural campaign 8β1. The following year, the Rebels played their first game against in-state rival Nevada, losing to the Wolf Pack 28β30. UNLV gained revenge, defeating Nevada the following year, 42β30, in the first year that the Fremont Cannon was awarded. On September 25, 1971, the Rebels played their first game against a Division I school, when they played Utah State of the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, ultimately losing 7β27. On October 23, 1971, the Rebels opened their new home, Las Vegas Stadium, against Weber State, losing 17β30. At the end of the 1972 season with a disappointing 1β10 record, Ireland announced he was stepping down, leaving the Rebels with a 26β23β1 record.Ireland was replaced by Ron Meyer before the start of the 1973 season and Meyer led the Rebels back to powerhouse status with an 8β3 record, including their first victory over a major college opponent, thrashing Marshall 31β9. The Rebels continued their strong campaign, breaking the national Division II top-10 and announcing their first All-American, running back Mike Thomas, who ran for the Division II national rushing title with 1,741 and setting nine school records in the process. The Rebels' success continued in 1974 with the only undefeated season in school history, finishing 11β0 and ranking second in the national Division II polls, the highest any Rebels football team has ever placed. The Rebels embarked on their first post-season journey in a national quarterfinal against Alcorn State, defeating the Braves 35β22 in Las Vegas. The Rebels memorable season ended in the national semifinals in the Grantland Rice Bowl, losing to Delaware 11β49. Meyer left the program in 1976 to take the head coaching position at collegiate powerhouse SMU.
The move to Division I
Former Boise State coach Tony Knap took over the Rebels in 1976, after Ron Meyer's departure. Knap was able to continue the Rebels prior success under Meyer, with a 9β3 record, a ranking of 7th in the nation and a berth in the Division II playoffs, ultimately losing to Akron 6β27 in the national quarterfinals. After ten years as a Division II independent, the program made the jump to the Division I level in 1978, independent of any conference affiliation. On September 9, the Rebels played their first game as a Division I school, losing to Washington State 7β34. The Rebels defeated their first major college opponent away from Las Vegas, with a 33β6 victory over Colorado State in Fort Collins. At the end of the season, the Rebels made a trip to Yokohama, Japan, to compete against college football powerhouse Brigham Young, losing 28β24. Even with the hard end to the season, the Rebels still produced a memorable year, going 7β4 in their first campaign at the Division I level. The 1981 season proved to be the last in Knap's tenure at UNLV, as he retired from coaching after a year of accomplishments, including the Rebels' first appearance in the ABC's Regional Game of the Week, a 45β41 upset of 8th-ranked BYU in Provo, Utah, and securing the programs 100th win in El Paso, Texas.The 1982 season was a big year in UNLV football history as the program hired its fourth head coach, Harvey Hyde and the Rebels became affiliated with a college athletic conference when they joined the Pacific Coast Athletic Association. The Rebels' first PCAA game was a 27β29 loss to Pacific on October 2. It took the entire season before the Rebels won their first conference game, a 42β23 victory against Cal State Fullerton on November 27. The Rebels won their first conference championship in 1984 as the Randall Cunningham-led Rebels finished 11β2, including the program's first trip to a bowl game, a 30β13 victory over Toledo in the California Bowl in Fresno, California. Hyde stepped down after the 1985 season and a 5β5β1 record when the NCAA discovered that several players on the 1983 and 1984 Rebels were ineligible. The Rebels were forced to forfeit their entire 1983 and 1984 seasons, including the California Bowl.
Wayne Nunnely became the program's fifth head coach on September 20, 1986, and he coached the Rebels to a 17β7 victory over Wisconsin in front of the first sellout crowd in Silver Bowl Stadium history, a then record 32,207 fans. One of Nunnely's key players was Elbert "Ickey" Woods, the first Rebel and PCAA running back to win the national Division I rushing title, as he rushed for 1,658 yards and was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in the 1988 NFL draft.
1994 was another memorable season for the Rebels, as wide receiver Randy Gatewood set two single-game receiving records in a 38β48 loss to Idaho on September 17. The Rebels then stunned the heavily favored Nevada, 32β27 to win a share of the Big West Conference championship, the program's second title. The Rebels then defeated Central Michigan 52β24 in the Las Vegas Bowl on their home field.
In 1996, the Rebels along with [San Jose State San Jose State Spartans|Spartans football|San Jose State] left the Big West Conference and became a member of the heavily expanded Western Athletic Conference. The league announced that it would hold a championship game for the top team in each of the two divisions at the end of each season and that the game would be held at Sam Boyd Stadium in Las Vegas. The Rebels lost their first WAC game, 65β17 to Air Force on September 7. The Rebels finally won their first WAC game in a 44β42 shootout against San Diego State on November 16, in a game in which freshman quarterback John Denton set an NCAA freshman record for passing yards with 503. Although the Rebels finished 1β11, Denton still set ten NCAA freshman records. On October 17, 1998, UNLV played their first overtime game, losing to San Diego State 17β20. In 1999, the Rebels finished with the program's first winless season, but had their first consensus First Team All-American in punter Joe Kristosik, who averaged a nationally best 46.2 yard per punt average.
1999βpresent
In 1999, the Rebels left the WAC with seven other schools to form the Mountain West Conference, and announcing that the program had hired collegiate and professional coach John Robinson as their eighth head coach. The school lost their conference opener on September 25, 14β52, to Utah, and won its first Mountain West victory on October 9, 35β32, over Wyoming. In week two, the team trailed Baylor 24β21 with ten seconds remaining and no timeouts left. Opting to run the ball rather than take a knee, Baylor's offense fumbled, allowing UNLV's Kevin Thomas to recover and return the ball 99 yards for a touchdown and a dramatic 27β24 Rebel victory. In 2000, the Rebels started by upsetting undefeated Air Force 34β13 on September 30, in the first time that ABC came to Las Vegas for a Rebels football game. The Rebels then ended a five-game skid to rival Nevada, defeating the Wolf Pack 34β13 in front of the largest crowd to see a game in the Battle for Nevada. The season went down to the wire as the Rebels had to pull out a 34β32 victory on the road against Hawaii to clinch their third berth in a bowl game. The Rebels were chosen as the Mountain West representative for the Las Vegas Bowl on December 20. The Rebels would continue their undefeated streak in bowl games as they defeated Arkansas 31β14 in front of a Las Vegas Bowl record 29,113 fans. They finished the season 8β5.Before the 2001 season, the Rebels were ranked No. 25 in Sports Illustrated's preseason Top 25 and No. 24 in Football Digest's rankings. Quarterback Jason Thomas was named a candidate for the Heisman Trophy, ranking as high as No. 7. Although the Rebels seemed good on paper, the team did not gel and ended the season a disappointing 4β7. On October 5, 2002, the Rebels defeated rival Nevada 21β17 for Robinson's 200th career coaching victory. Robinson retired after the 2004 season, having led the Rebels to a bowl game and five consecutive victories over rival Nevada.
On December 6, 2004, the Rebels hired Utah assistant coach Mike Sanford as the ninth head coach. In his first three years, Sanford failed to win more than two games and had back-to-back 2β10 seasons, finishing last in the Mountain West all three years. Sanford failed to beat Nevada all five years he coached at UNLV. Still, the program sent former Rebels Eric Wright and Beau Bell to the NFL draft.
The Rebels finished the 2008 season with a 5β7 record after starting the season 3β1. This was the best winβloss record UNLV had since going 6β6 in 2003. It also marked the first time UNLV did not finish last in their division since 2004. Their 23β20 victory over No. 15 Arizona State was the first time the Rebels had beaten a ranked opponent since 2003.
The 2009 season led to Sanford's dismissal as coach. UNLV was picked to finish fifth in the conference, but the team began to fall apart after a surprising loss at Wyoming. That was followed by losses at Nevada, against Brigham Young and Utah, and at Texas Christian and the Air Force Academy β games in which UNLV was outscored 243β81. They rebounded toward the end of the season and finished 5β7.
After the Air Force loss on November 14, the school announced Sanford's last game as coach would be the season finale against San Diego State. Former Montana head coach Bobby Hauck was named as the 10th head coach on December 21, 2009. Former TCU, Alabama and Texas A&M head coach Dennis Franchione was also interviewed for the position.
Before the 2014 Nevada Wolf Pack game, Bobby Hauck announced that he would be stepping down after the 2014 season. On December 10, 2014, the school announced that Tony Sanchez of Bishop Gorman High School would succeed Hauck as the 11th head coach of UNLV.
Sanchez announced his completed staff at UNLV on December 22, 2014, which would feature staff members from Nebraska, Colorado, Oregon State, USC, Houston, Georgia State and Bishop Gorman.
In 2016, a new domed stadium was proposed and approved for Las Vegas that would be the home to the Las Vegas Raiders of the National Football League after the team moved to Las Vegas from Oakland and the Rebels accomplishing UNLV's goal of replacing Sam Boyd Stadium. UNLV had been trying to get Sam Boyd Stadium replaced with a new facility since 2011 but had not found the funding to do so.
On September 2, 2017, the UNLV Rebels lost to the Howard University Bison 40β43 in Sam Boyd Stadium. Howard, a MEAC FCS opponent, was coached by Mike London, and led at quarterback by freshman Caylin Newton, younger brother of NFL star Cam Newton. As of September 2017, due to high off-shore point spread numbers, Howard's victory against UNLV is the biggest point spread upset in college football history.
On November 23, 2019, the UNLV Rebels defeated the San Jose State Spartans in their final home game at Sam Boyd Stadium, 38β35, in front of 17,373 fans in attendance.
On November 25, 2019, Tony Sanchez and UNLV agreed to part ways, taking effect after the team's final regular season game. He was replaced by Oregon offensive coordinator Marcus Arroyo who was announced as the new head coach of the Rebel football program on December 11, 2019.
On October 31, 2020, the Rebels opened their new home, Allegiant Stadium, against Nevada, losing 37β19.
Conference affiliations
- NCAA College Division independent
- NCAA Division II independent
- NCAA Division I-A independent
- Big West Conference
- * Pacific Coast Athletic Association
- * Big West Conference
- Western Athletic Conference
- Mountain West Conference
Conference championships
UNLV has won two conference championships, with one forfeit. Their 1984 Big West Conference title was forfeited due to using ineligible players.| 1984β | Pacific Coast Athletic Conference | Harvey Hyde | 11β2 | 5β2 |
| 1994 | Big West Conference | Jeff Horton | 7β5 | 5β1 |
β Forfeited due to ineligible players.
Bowl games
UNLV has played in seven officially sanctioned bowl games, with six of them being in Division I and one being in Division II. The Rebels have an official bowl record of 3β3 due to the subsequent forfeit of the 1984 California Bowl win due to NCAA sanctions on ineligible players.| December 7, 1974 | Grantland Rice Bowl | Delaware | L 11β49 |
| December 15, 1984 | [1984 California Golden Bears football|California Bowl|California Bowl] | Toledo | W 30β13β |
| December 15, 1994 | Las Vegas Bowl | Central Michigan | W 52β24 |
| December 21, 2000 | Las Vegas Bowl | Arkansas | W 31β14 |
| January 1, 2014 | Heart of Dallas Bowl | North Texas | L 14β36 |
| December 26, 2023 | Guaranteed Rate Bowl | Kansas | L 36β49 |
| December 18, 2024 | LA Bowl | California | W 24β13 |
| December 23, 2025 | Frisco Bowl | Ohio | L 10β17 |
β forfeited
UNLV traveled to Yokohama, Japan, and played in front of 27,500 spectators at Yokohama Stadium in the 1978 Nikkan Yokohama Bowl on December 2, 1978, against the BYU Cougars in a game that is not officially recognized as an NCAA bowl game.
Playoff appearances
NCAA Division II
The Rebels made two appearances in the NCAA Division II playoffs. They had a combined record of 1β2.| 1974 | Quarterfinals Semifinals | Alcorn State Delaware | W, 35β22 L, 11β49 |
| 1976 | Quarterfinals | Akron | L, 6β27 |
Head coaches
UNLV has had 14 head coaches in 57 years of college football. Four of them have won Conference Coach of the Year awards.| Bill Ireland | 1968β1972 | 5 | 26β23β1 | |||
| Ron Meyer | 1973β1975 | 3 | 27β8β0 | 1-1 | ||
| Tony Knap | 1976β1981 | 6 | 47β20β2 | 0β1 | ||
| Harvey Hyde | 1982β1985 | 4 | 8β19β1 | 0β0 | ||
| Wayne Nunnely | 1986β1989 | 4 | 19β25β0 | |||
| Jim Strong | 1990β1993 | 4 | 17β27β0 | |||
| Jeff Horton | 1994β1998 | 5 | 13β44β0 | 1β0 | ||
| John Robinson | 1999β2004 | 6 | 28β42 | 1β0 | ||
| Mike Sanford | 2005β2009 | 5 | 16β43 | |||
| Bobby Hauck | 2010β2014 | 5 | 15β49 | 0β1 | ||
| Tony Sanchez | 2015β2019 | 5 | 20β40 | |||
| Marcus Arroyo | 2020β2022 | 3 | 7β23 | |||
| Barry Odom | 2023β2024 | 2 | 19β8 | 0β1 | ||
| Dan Mullen | 2025- | 1 | 10-4 |
Rivalries
Nevada
The Battle for NevadaUNR leads the series 28β23 as of the conclusion of the 2025 season.
Hawai'i
Ninth Island ShowdownBeginning in 2017, the annual game between UNLV and Hawai'i, "Ninth Island Showdown" or, "The Battle for the Golden Pineapple" gained a rivalry trophy when the California Hotel and Casino donated the "Golden Pineapple" to the winner of the game. Las Vegas has long been a popular destination for Hawaiians for both pleasure and relocation, so much so that it has been dubbed "the Ninth Island", with the Cal Hotel in particular aggressively marketing itself to Hawaiian tourists. Hawai'i is one of UNLV's two protected Mountain West Conference rivalries when the conference shifted to one division in 2023, meaning they will play every year. The 'Bows lead the all-time series between the two schools 19β16 as of 2025.
San Jose State
The Friendly RivalrySan Jose State leads the series 20-8-1 as of conclusion of the 2025 season. The rivalry stems back to the days when both the San Jose State Spartans and the UNLV Rebels athletics programs were both in the Big West Conference, in the 1980s. In the mid-1990's the Spartans and Rebels were both a part of WAC, Western Athletic Conference, and are division rivals in the Mountain West today. Recently dubbed 'A Friendly Rivalry' by some media in 2022 for the close friendly relationship ex-Rebels Head Coach Marcus Arroyo and Spartans Head Coach Brent Brennan have.
Retired numbers
The Rebels has only retired one single number.College Football Hall of Fame
| John Robinson | 1999-2004 | Head coach | 2009 | |
| Randall Cunningham | 1982-1984 | Punter/QB | 2016 |
John Robinson is mostly known for his 6 Rose Bowl victories and 4 National Championships while at USC. In 1999 Robinson was hired to coach football at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. After a 2β0 start in 1999, the second win coming at Baylor, Robinson's first UNLV team finished only 3β8. The Rebels rebounded to win eight games in 2000, including a 31β14 victory over Arkansas in the Las Vegas Bowl, Robinson's only bowl appearance with the Running Rebels. In 2002, Robinson was chosen as the university's athletic director, but he stepped down from that position a year later to concentrate on the coaching position. In 2003, he was inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame.
Randall Cunningham was a 1983 and 1984 College Football All-America Team selection as a punter. In 1984, his senior year, he led the Rebels to an 11β2 season.
National and Conference Awards
National
HERO Sports G5 Special Teams Player of the Year| G5 Special Teams Player of the Yearr | Ricky White III | 2024 | WR / PR/ KR |
College Football Network Freshman Specialist of the Year
| Freshman Specialist of the Year | Caden Chittenden | 2024 | K |
Conference
Pacific Coast Athletic Association| Coach of the Year | Harvey Hyde | 1984 | Coach | |
| Offensive Player of the Year | Randall Cunningham | 1983 | Punter/QB | |
| Offensive Player of the Year | Randall Cunningham | 1984 | Punter/QB | |
| Offensive Player of the Year | Ickey Woods | 1987 | RB | |
| Co-Defenesive Player of the Year | Aaron Moog | 1984 | DE |
Big West Conference
| Co-Coach of the Year | Jeff Horton | 1994 | Coach |
Western Athletic Conference
| Freshman of the Year | Jon Denton | 1996 | QB | |
| Freshman of the Year | James Sunia | 1998 | MLB |
Mountain West Conference
| Co-Coach of the Year | John Robinson | 2000 | Coach | |
| Coach of the Year | Barry Odom | 2023 | Coach | |
| Freshman of the Year | Dominique Dorsey | 2001 | RB | |
| Freshman of the Year | Ryan Wolfe | 2006 | WR | |
| Freshman of the Year | Devonte Boyd | 2014 | WR | |
| Freshman of the Year | Armani Rogers | 2017 | QB | |
| Freshman of the Year | Kyle Williams | 2020 | WR | |
| Freshman of the Year | Cameron Friel | 2021 | QB | |
| Freshman of the Year | Jayden Maiava | 2023 | QB | |
| Defensive Player of the Year | Kevin Thomas | 2001 | CB | |
| Defensive Player of the Year | Jamaal Brimmer | 2002 | S | |
| Defensive Player of the Year | Jamaal Brimmer | 2003 | S | |
| Defensive Player of the Year | Beau Bell | 2007 | LB | |
| Defensive Player of the Year | Jackson Woodard | 2024 | LB | |
| Special Teams Player of the Year | Jose Pizano | 2023 | K | |
| Special Teams Player of the Year | Ricky White III | 2024 | KR/ PR |
Mountain West Conference 25th Anniversary Team
| Ryan Wolfe | 2006 - 2010 | WR | |
| Kevin Thomas | 1999 - 2002 | CB | |
| Jamaal Brimmer | 2001 - 2004 | S |
All-Americans
UNLV has had 2- Consensus 1st Team All-American, 10- 1st Team, 9- 2nd Team, 5- 3rd Team, 1- 4th Team, 3- Honorable Mention, 1- Academic All-American and 6- Freshman All-American, in program history as of the end of the 2024 season.| Mike Thomas | 1973 | RB | 1st | |
| Mike Thomas | 1974 | RB | 1st | |
| Joe Ingersoll | 1974 | DL | 1st | |
| Joe Ingersoll | 1975 | DL | 2nd | |
| Jim Sandusky | 1981 | WR | AP 2nd | |
| Randall Cunningham | 1983 | Punter | 1st | |
| Randall Cunningham | 1984 | Punter | 2nd | |
| Randall Cunningham | 1984 | QB | Honorable Mention | |
| Joe Kristosik | 1998 | Punter | Consensus 1st | |
| Brian Parvin | 1992 | Punter | 2nd | |
| Brad Faunce | 1993 | Punter | 2nd/3rd | |
| James Sunia | 1998 | MLB | Freshman 1st | |
| Ray Cheetany | 2000 | Punter | 1st | |
| Kevin Thomas | 2000 | CB | 2nd | |
| Kevin Thomas | 2001 | CB | 3rd/ 4th | |
| Jamaal Brimmer | 2003 | S | 1st | |
| Jamaal Brimmer | 2004 | S | 2nd/ 3rd | |
| Ryan Wolfe | 2006 | WR | Freshman 2nd | |
| Matt Murphy | 2007 | OL | Freshman 2nd | |
| Devonte Boyd | 2014 | WR | Freshman 1st | |
| Kyle Williams | 2020 | WR | Freshman 1st | |
| Charles Williams | 2021 | RB | 2nd Academic | |
| Rex Goossen | 2022 | LS | 2nd | |
| Austin Ajiake | 2022 | LB | Honorable Mention | |
| Daniel Gutierrez | 2022 | K | Honorable Mention | |
| Ricky White III | 2023 | WR | AP 3rd | |
| Caden Chittenden | 2024 | K | CFN Freshman 1st | |
| Ricky White III | 2024 | WR | PS 3rd Team, HERO Sports G5 1st | |
| Jackson Woodard | 2024 | LB | PS 2nd Team, HERO Sports G5 1st | |
| Jalen Catalon | 2024 | DB | PS HM, HERO Sports G5 1st | |
| Tiger Shanks | 2024 | OL | PS HM | |
| Jacob De Jesus | 2024 | RS | HERO Sports G5 3rd |
Individual school records
Source:Rushing records
- Most rushing attempts, career: 769, Tim Cornett
- Most rushing attempts, season: 274, Mike Thomas
- Shortest route to 100 yards, 4 attempts Shaquille Murray-Lawrence vs. Minnesota Gophers
- Most rushing attempts, game: 37, Ickey Woods vs. Long Beach State and vs. Pacific
- Most rushing yards, career: 4,201, Charles Williams
- Most rushing yards, season: 1,741, Mike Thomas
- Most rushing yards, game: 314, Mike Thomas vs. Santa Clara
- Most rushing touchdowns, career: 40, Lexington Thomas
- Most rushing touchdowns, season: 20, Mike Thomas
- Most rushing touchdowns, game: 4, 5 times, most recently by Jai'Den Thomas vs. UTEP
- Longest run from scrimmage:, Dalton Sneed
- Most games with at least 100 rushing yards, career: 18, Lexington Thomas
- Most games with at least 100 rushing yards, season: 9, Ickey Woods and Mike Thomas
- Most games with at least 200 rushing yards, career: 5, Mike Thomas
- Most games with at least 200 rushing yards, season: 3, Ickey Woods and Mike Thomas
Passing records
- Most passing attempts, career: 1,029, Randall Cunningham
- Most passing attempts, season: 506, Jon Denton
- Most passing attempts, game: 61, Jon Denton
- Most passing completions, career: 596, Randall Cunningham
- Most passing completions, season: 277, Jon Denton
- Most passing completions, game: 35, Nick Sherry
- Most passing yards, career: 8,020, Randall Cunningham
- Most passing yards, season: 3,778, Sam King
- Most passing yards, game: 503, Jon Denton
- Most passing touchdowns, career: 59, Randall Cunningham
- Most passing touchdowns, season: 25, Jon Denton
- Most passing touchdowns, game: 5, 4 times, most recently by Caleb Herring
- Longest pass completion:, Armani Rogers to Devonte Boyd
- Most games with at least 200 passing yards, career: 24, Randall Cunningham
- Most games with at least 200 passing yards, season: 11, Sam King
- Most games with at least 300 passing yards, career: 9, Jon Denton
- Most games with at least 300 passing yards, season: 6, Sam King
Receiving records
- Most receptions, career: 187, Ryan Wolfe
- Most receptions, season: 88, Ricky White III, Ryan Wolfe and Randy Gatewood
- Most receptions, game: 23, Randy Gatewood
- Most receiving yards, career: 3,495, Ryan Wolfe
- Most receiving yards, season: 1,483, Ricky White III
- Most receiving yards, game: 363, Randy Gatewood
- Most touchdown receptions, career: 26, Phillip Payne
- Most touchdown receptions, season: 14, Devante Davis
- Most touchdown receptions, game: 4, Tyleek Collins, Devante Davis, Henry Bailey and Nathaniel Hawkins
- Most games with at least 100 receiving yards, career: 14, Devonte Boyd
- Most games with at least 100 receiving yards, season: 8, Jim Sandusky
Rebels in the pros
- Isaako Aaitui β Nose tackle
- Waymon Alridge β Canadian Football League player
- Shaquille Murray-Lawrence -Canadian Football League
- Johan Asiata β Offensive lineman
- Glenn Carano β Quarterback
- Hunkie Cooper β Wide receiver/defensive back, an Arena Football League Hall of Famer.
- Randall Cunningham β Quarterback
- Randy Gatewood β Wide receiver
- Joe Hawley β Center
- Rocky Hinds β Quarterback
- Robert Jackson β cornerback Cleveland Browns
- Carlton Johnson β Arena Football League player
- Suge Knight β Defensive end, better known as co-founder and CEO of Death Row Records
- Admiral Dewey Larry β USFL and CFL player
- George J. Maloof, Jr. β cornerback, better known as a casino mogul
- Kenny Mayne β Quarterback, better known as an ESPN SportsCenter anchor
- Rodney Mazion β American football and baseball player
- Keenan McCardell β Wide receiver
- Torry McTyer β cornerback Cincinnati Bengals
- Adam Seward β Linebacker
- Tiger Shanks β Canadian Football League player
- Bob Stockham β Arena Football League player
- Frank Summers β Fullback
- Ricky White III β Wide receiver
- Doc Wise β Arena Football League player
- Ickey Woods β Running back
- Eric Wright β Cornerback
Future non-conference opponents
Announced schedules as of January 15, 2026.| Memphis | at USC | Houston | at Memphis | James Madison | at UCLA | Miami (OH) | Sam Houston |
| at North Texas | Akron | at Washington | UTSA | at Iowa State | |||
| at Akron | Arizona State | ||||||
| California | at James Madison |