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Coach Dykes: American Athletic Conference Weekly Media Availability
Nov. 19, 2018: It's Always Sonny On The Hilltop
SETTING THE SCENE
•    The Mustangs travel north to Tulsa to take on the Golden Hurricane in the final regular season contest with bowl eligibility on the line. Kickoff is slated for 2:30 p.m. on CBS Sports Network.
•   Â
Ben Hicks had a season-high 344 passing yards with two touchdowns in SMU's loss to Memphis. In the last five games, Hicks has 1,557 passing yards and 12 TDs. Hicks holds SMU records for passing yards (8,762), total offense (8,681), TD passes (70), career TDs responsible for (73) and completions (692).
•    Against Memphis,
James Proche surpassed 1,000 receiving yards in 2018. Proche registered 134 yards off 12 receptions with a pair of TDs. It was his fifth career game with multiple touchdowns. He now has 2,541 receiving yards, 1,016 in 2018, placing him seventh on SMU's all-time career list.
•    The Mustangs have played four teams ranked in the top 20 this season ([16/16] TCU, at [19/22] Michigan, at [12/13] UCF, [17/17] Houston). The win over Houston was the first over a ranked opponent since SMU defeated then-No. 11 Houston 38-16 in 2016.Â
THE SERIES
SMU and Tulsa will meet for the 25th time with the Mustangs holding the all-time advantage at 14-10. The Mustangs won the most recent match-up, a 38-34 victory in Dallas last season, but the Golden Hurricane won the previous three contests, including a 43-40 overtime victory in Tulsa in 2016.
ABOUT THE GOLDEN HURRICANE
Tulsa enters Saturday's match-up 2-9 overall and 1-6 in American Athletic Conference play. The lone conference victory came at home Nov. 3 vs. Connecticut. Quarterback Seth Boomer has thrown for 1,127 yards and four touchdowns. Keylon Stokes leads the Golden Hurricane in receiving yards with 435 and two TDs, while Shamari Brooks leads the ground attack with 878 yards and six TDs. Defensively, Cooper Edmiston has 103 tackles, 7.0 for loss, and three interceptions.
THE COACHES
•  Â
Sonny Dykes is in his first season on the Hilltop after serving head coaching stints at Cal (2013-16) and Louisiana Tech (2010-12). Dykes spent 2017 at TCU as an offensive analyst. In his eighth season as a head coach, Dykes holds a career record of 46-52.Â
•   Philip Montgomery is in his fourth season as the head coach at Tulsa. He led the Golden Hurricane to back-to-back bowl appearances in his first two seasons, and is 20-29 at the helm. Montgomery came to Tulsa after seven years at Baylor, most recently serving as the Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks coach.
LAST TIME VS. TULSA
DALLAS -- Ben Hicks threw for 338 yards and two touchdowns, and SMU became bowl eligible for the first time since 2012 with a 38-34 victory over Tulsa on Oct. 27, 2017.
Tulsa went for it on fourth-and-8 from its own 35 with less than three minutes remaining in the game, but
Demerick Gary sacked Luke Skipper and SMU ran out the clock after getting a first down on
Trey Quinn's 13-yard catch.
Quinn, who entered with 15-plus receptions in three straight games, had eight grabs for 101 yards and two touchdowns for SMU (6-2, 3-1 American Athletic Conference).
Courtland Sutton added 136 yards receiving and
James Proche had 123.
Xavier Jones gave SMU its first lead of the game at 35-34 with 13:26 left on a 9-yard run, and the Mustangs created the first turnover of the game seven-plus minutes later on
Rodney Clemons' interception in the end zone.
Skipper, a freshman, made his third start of the season for Tulsa (2-7, 1-4). He was 9-of-23 passing for 212 yards and one touchdown. D'Angelo Brewer rushed for 156 yards and a touchdown on 33 carries.
Tulsa freshman Shamari Brooks, who entered with three straight 100-yard rushing games, broke two tackles on a 4-yard touchdown run in the first quarter but he was injured on the play and did not return.
QUICK HITS
•
James Proche was named to the American Athletic Conference Weekly honor roll Nov. 19 after registering 134 receiving yards and two TDs against Memphis. Proche is fifth nationally and ranks first in the conference with 11 receiving TDs in 2018.
• Defensive tackle
Jake Hall is third nationally, second in The American, with three fumble recoveries.
•
J.R. Griffin was named an Academic All-America District 7 selection by the College Sports Information Directors of America. Griffin has played all 11 games for the Mustangs this season and has a 3.72 GPA majoring in sport management.
• As a team, the Mustangs rank 14th in the NCAA (2nd AAC) in turnover margin (0.73). SMU has only lost the turnover battle twice in 11 games this season and has had at least one takeaway in all but one contest.
BIG BEN
Ben Hicks had a season-high 344 passing yards with two touchdowns in SMU's loss to Memphis. In the last five games, Hicks has 1,557 passing yards and 12 TDs. Hicks holds SMU records for passing yards (8,762), total offense (8,681), TD passes (70), career TDs responsible for (73) and completions (692). He also leads SMU with 11 300+ yard games in his career.Â
Hicks led the Mustangs to a 45-31 win over then-No. 17 Houston in week 10 and earned AAC Offensive Player of the Week honors and an ESPN Helmet Sticker. Hicks registered 318 yards and four TDs. His four TDs tied a career high and gave him six career games of at least four TD passes. He went on to throw for 276 yards and TD in the week 11 win over UConn.
He opened 2018 with a pair of touchdowns at North Texas, and went on to set the SMU career TD record with a 50-yard TD pass to
James Proche at No. 19/22 Michigan in week three.
Hicks went 3-for-3 for 16 yards and threw the game-winning touchdown in overtime against Navy in week four.
In the win at Tulane, Hicks threw for 291 yards and three TDs en route to AAC weekly honors. The next week against Cincinnati, he turned in a season-high, 328-yard performance with two TDs.
Hicks sits ninth among FBS active leaders in career passing TDs and 11th for career passing yards. He leads active AAC quarterbacks in yards and completions, while his TDs are second.
Hicks is one of 30 candidates on the Manning Award Watch List, and is also a member of the Earl Campbell Tyler Rose Award Watch List and was named a Player to Watch by the Touchdown Club of Columbus.Â
C'MON Â KE'MON
Ke'mon Freeman posted his second straight multi-TD game with three scores in the win at UConn on Nov. 10. He rushed for 116 yards on 17 carries, giving him his third career 100+-yard game, and was named to the AAC Weekly Honor Roll.
Against then-No. 17 Houston, he registered 107 yards off 20 carries and a pair of TDs to lead SMU's run game. It was his second career 100-yard game and second career two TD game.Â
Freeman led the Mustangs with 11 rushing touchdowns (4th AAC) in 2017, including multiple TDs in three games (at TCU, Arkansas State, Tulane). Starting with the TCU game on Sept. 16, 2017, Freeman posted a stretch of six straight games with a rushing TD, the longest for a Mustang since Reggie Dupard's streak of 13 straight (last 6 1984, first 7 1985).
Freeman has 1,477 career yards on 345 carries and 20 rushing TDs. Â Â
X GON' GIVE IT TO YA
Preseason Maxwell and Doak Walker Award candidate
Xavier Jones led the Mustangs with 1,075 yards on 182 carries and posted nine rushing touchdowns (10th AAC) in 2017. He also added 14 receptions for 84 yards.
In SMU's win over UConn on Nov. 10, Jones registered 133 yards off 11 carries. He also added a pair of rushing TDs for his sixth career multi-rushing TD game. The 52-yard score was the longest of his career, and longest rush overall this season. Â
Jones has six career games of 100+ yards rushing, 22 career rushing TDs and 2,160 yards off 418 carries.
In addition to the Maxwell and Doak Walker Watch List selections, Jones is a member of the Earl Campbell Tyler Rose Award Watch List and earned preseason accolades from Dave Campbell's Texas Football and Athlon Sports.
SEE BALL, GET BALL
Reggie Roberson, Jr., posted his fourth career 100+-yard receiving game (116) against Memphis on Nov. 16. In five of the past six games, Roberson has 99+ yards. At UConn, Roberson registered his fourth straight game with a touchdown catch.Â
In nine games this season, the sophomore is second on the team with 764 receiving yards and six TDs. His receiving yards per game are (84.9) are fourth in The American, while he ranks fifth in receptions per game (5.4), sixth in yards and seveneth in TD receptions.
Roberson was named the AAC Special Teams Player of the Week on Sept. 24 after posting a 98-yard kickoff return for a TD in the win over Navy. He had two returns for 124 yards and 167 all-purpose yards. In the game against Cincinnati, Roberson registered seven catches for 147 yards and two TDs en route to honor roll accolades.
BIG GAME JAMES
Biletnikoff Watch List member
James Proche's 11 receiving touchdowns rank fifth nationally and are the most in The American, while his 7.5 receptions/game are sixth nationally, first in the AAC, and his 1,016 receiving yards are third in the AAC. He has eight career 100+ yard games, after registering 134 against Memphis, and is fifth all-time at SMU with 23 career receiving touchdowns (2nd AAC active, T8th FBS active). Proche has 2,541 career receiving yards (7th at SMU), and 15 games with 100+ all-purpose yards (8 in 2018).
Proche opened 2018 with a pair of catches for 77 yards, including a 59-yard touchdown at UNT, and led Mustang receivers with six catches for 50 yards against No. 16 TCU. In the win over Navy, Proche posted 64 yards and a TD off nine receptions. He had three receptions for 69 yards and a TD against HBU.
Proche had a massive day against No. 19/22 Michigan in Ann Arbor, posting a career-high 11 receptions for 166 yards and two TDs. He also added 23 KOR yards and 16 PR yards for 214 all-purpose yards.Â
Against No. 12/13 UCF, Proche added 100 yards off 12 catches and two TDs to go with a career-high 229 all-purpose yards. Â Â
Proche caught the winning TD in SMU's victory over Tulane on Oct. 20, giving him his fifth straight contest with a reception TD. He finished the outing with six catches for 93 yards.  Â
In the upset of Houston on Nov. 3, Proche added nine catches for 90 yards and a TD (110 all-purpose). Proche had a 101-yard outing at UConn.
GO WEST, YOUNG MAN
Paul Hornung Watch List member
Braeden West became the ninth Mustang to post 4,000 career all-purpose yards, reaching the mark after notching 84 at UCF on Oct. 6. He also cracked the top 10 in rushing yards.
He showed his versatility in week one versus North Texas with a rushing and receiving touchdown. His 71-yard TD catch is the longest by an SMU running back since a 57-yard reception by Derron Brown in 2003. He finished the outing with 112 all-purpose yards.
Against No. 16 TCU, West had a 51-yard touchdown run, giving him his second 50+ yard touchdown of the season. He went on to post 185 all-purpose yards and 145 rushing yards off 26 carries in the win over Navy in week four, and had two touchdowns in the win over HBU.
West has seven 100+ yards rushing games and is one of only eight FBS players to post both a 50+ yard rushing and receiving TD this season. West is seventh on SMU's all-time all-purpose yards list (4,293) and his rushing yards (2,466) are 10th for a Mustang.
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BACK AT IT
Jordan Wyatt ranks atop SMU's all-time lists with five defensive return touchdowns and four career interception return touchdowns. He finished 2017 with 288 career interception return yards, also the most for a Mustang, and became just the sixth player in FBS history to record an interception return and fumble recovery for touchdowns in the same game 2017 week one against Stephen F. Austin.
Wyatt registered his first takeaway of 2018 against Cincinnati, an interception on the Mustangs' 3-yard line.
Among national active leaders, Wyatt tops the list for career interception return TDs (4), career defensive return TDs (5) and career interception return yards (289). He is tied for fourth in active career fumbles forced (8). His 11 career interceptions place him tied for eighth on SMU's all-time list (T-5 active nationally).Â
Wyatt is a member of the Wuerffel Trophy Watch List, as well as a nominee for the AFCA Good Works Team and Senior CLASS Award. He has also picked up preseason accolades from College Football News, Athlon Sports and Dave Campbell's Texas Football.
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TRIBUTE 23
Since 2009, the SMU coaching staff has chosen a deserving student-athlete to wear the number 23 to honor Jerry LeVias.
LeVias was the first African-American to receive an athletic scholarship in the Southwest Conference. While at SMU, LeVias made athletic and academic All-America teams and, in 1966, contributed to the Mustangs' first SWC title in 18 years. He was an All-American in 1968 and was chosen All-SWC in 1966, 1967 and 1968.
Senior
Jordan Wyatt has been awarded the number for 2018.
Players To Wear #23 In Honor of Jerry LeVias
Jordan Wyatt, CBÂ Â Â 2018
Nick Horton, DEÂ Â Â 2016-17
Jeremiah Gaines, TEÂ Â Â 2015
Stephon Sanders, LBÂ Â Â 2012-14
Chris Banjo, DBÂ Â Â 2009-11
WHAT CAN BROWN DOWN FOR SMU?
Freshman quarterback
William Brown got his first collegiate start in the 31-30 overtime win against Navy in week four. Brown went 21-of-29 passing with 150 yards and 2 TDs. In the 63-27 win over HBU, brown completed 12-of-20 passes for 309 yards and two TDs en route to American Athletic Conference Weekly Honor Roll accolades.
He is 53-of-85 passing on the season with 625 passing yards and seven TDs, and is second for most games with multiple passing TDs as a true freshman (3).
STAY ACTIVE
Graduate transfer
CJ Sanders joined the Mustangs after three seasons at Notre Dame and is third among active FBS players in both combined return yards (2,524) and combined kick return TDs (4), while ranking fourth in kickoff return yards (2,217). He is the only active player in the country with three kick return TDs and a punt return TD. Head Coach
Sonny Dykes announced Sanders will redshirt due to injury and return for the 2019 season.
GETTING DEFENSIVE
Junior linebacker
Richard Moore leads the Mustangs with 79 tackles (53 solo) in 2018. Moore and fellow linebacker
Kyran Mitchell have a team-leading 4.5 sacks on the year, while Mitchell leads the team with 14.5 tackles for loss. Eight Mustangs haver registered interceptions in 2018, including
Patrick Nelson and
Kevin Johnson who leads SMU with two each.
Jake Hall has three fumble recoveries this season, which ranks second in the AAC and is third nationally.Â
NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK
SMU welcomed eight graduate transfers, three FBS transfers and six junior college transfers who are eligible for the 2018 season. The grad transfer total is among the highest in the nation. Forty-one student-athletes have played their first game in a Mustang uniform this season. Â
HONORARY CAPTAINS
Head Coach
Sonny Dykes honored former Mustang letterwinners and supporters of the program as honorary captains throughout the 2018 season. The complete list is below.
  Â
Tentative Schedule (subject to change)
Sept. 7 Paul Loyd
Sept. 22 Putt Choate
Sept. 29 Randy Allen
Oct. 27 Kris Briggs, David Richards
Nov. 3 Bobby Leach, Jim Johnston
Nov. 16 Freeman Johns
SMU IN THE CLASSROOM
The 2018 SMU roster features 14 student-athletes who have already earned a degree, giving them the fourth highest total in the country.
Andrew Adams,
Jourdan Blake,
Paka Davis,
Jake Hall,
Ben Hicks,
Larry Hughes,
William Jeanlys,
Nick Natour,
Patrick Nelson,
Chad Pursley,
CJ Sanders,
Cole Sterns,
Noah Westerfield and
Jordan Wyatt have all earned undergraduate degrees. Of those 14, SMU has eight graduate transfers. Twenty-three Mustangs also earned All-AAC academic honors in 2017.
PONY UP-GRADES!
SMU has made significant investments in Ford Stadium improvements since 2011, including an upgraded locker room finished in August 2018, a new team meeting room with stadium-style seating and renovated positional meeting rooms, a new playing surface, lighting system, A/V system, new suites and club seating.
SMU recently broke ground on a 67,000-square-foot Indoor Performance Center, which will include a 4,000-square-foot multi-use Boulevard Club, a 2,000-square-foot recruiting lounge and access to a 1,500-square-foot outdoor patio, and a turf field with access to a training room and fitness/rehab area.
Prior to the 2016 season, Paragon Sports Constructors installed a new synthetic turf playing field at Ford Stadium. The new synthetic turf field is PowerBlade Bolt as manufactured by Shaw Sports Turf. The design for the new field remained the same, featuring the Mustang logo at mid-field with 'SMU' and 'Mustangs' in opposing end zones.
In the summer of 2013, SMU added a new 233-seat Hall of Champions Club and seven new suites in time for SMU's move to the American Athletic Conference. Among the great features of the new Club and suites is their indoor/outdoor design which allows fans to enjoy the comfort of indoor amenities as well as the excitement of sitting out in the bowl and hearing the roar of the crowd and the hard-hitting action on the field.
FAST LAYNEÂ Â
Paul Layne holds an unrivaled Mustang record, having attended every SMU game for the last 40-plus years, even going to Tokyo.
He had to pull a "fast one" more than once to keep his streak alive – like the time his ex-wife remarried. He persuaded her to schedule her wedding on a Friday within driving distance of SMU's game at Nevada the following day. So the night before the Mustangs tangled with the Wolf Pack in Reno, Layne attended the wedding in California's Sonoma Valley, then drove 200 miles to catch the opening kickoff.
Layne even attended a game dressed in a Halloween costume to disguise his case of adult-onset chicken pox. Â Â Â Â Â Â Starting when Layne attended SMU and was a team cheerleader, he's attended 506 straight games. His 500th was SMU's 63-27 victory over HBU on Sept. 29, 2018.
SMU IN THE AP
SMU is one of only 44 schools that have ever been ranked No. 1 by the Associated Press since 1936. The Mustangs have been ranked No. 1 twice. SMU was No. 55 on the AP's Top 100 Programs list released in 2017 and No. 51 on the College Football News Greatest Teams of All Time list in 2018.Â
THE RED CARPET
SMU may need to install a red carpet in the Mustang locker room as SMU has become "the place to be" in Dallas.
Among the celebrities, legends, current and former pros that have attended practice or stopped by the stadium in recent years are: Roger Staubach, Troy Aikman, Terrell Owens, Tim Brown, Michael Irvin and Deion Sanders, as well as former SMU standouts Reggie Dupard, Eric Dickerson, Craig James, Jerry Ball, Russell Carter and Don Meredith.
Former President George W. Bush even visits SMU football practice. Bush has also performed the ceremonial coin toss at games against Navy (2011), Memphis (2012), Texas Tech (2013), Cincinnati (2014), UNT (2015), Memphis (2016) and Navy (2018).
ANNUAL GIVING HITS RECORD HIGH
Donors to SMU Athletics have once again set a new mark for generosity, contributing a record $24.3M to support SMU Athletics and its 424 student-athletes during the last fiscal year. The $24.3M represents a 31% increase in total athletics giving year-over-year and marks the biggest fundraising year for athletics in the history of the university. Included in that total are nearly $6.1 million in Mustang Athletic Fund gifts, which provide critical unrestricted support. That total represents an increase of 20% year-over-year and a jump of over 300% during the past decade. These donations provide the foundation for annual support for each of the 17 sports at SMU.
In addition to these gifts, significant investments from donors have been made in SMU Athletics facilities, including new indoor performance center.
WE DON'T TAILGATE, WE BOULEVARD.
The editors at Southern Living posted a roster of the top 20 Southern schools with the greatest pregame celebrations, and SMU's Boulevard made the list.
From the food and drink to the style and traditions, nobody does tailgating quite like the Mustangs. SMU's beautiful Bishop Boulevard is tailgate central for fun and entertainment.   Along The Boulevard, fans can mingle with family and friends and bring a picnic, fire up a grill or visit Mustang Alley vendors.
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