2004 New Hampshire Wildcats football team

The 2004 New Hampshire Wildcats football team was an American football team that represented the University of New Hampshire as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. In its sixth year under head coach Sean McDonnell, the team compiled a 10–3 record (6–2 against conference opponents), finished fourth out of twelve teams in the Atlantic 10 Conference, and lost to Montana in the quarterfinal of the NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship playoffs.[1]

2004 New Hampshire Wildcats football
ConferenceAtlantic 10 Conference
Ranking
Sports NetworkNo. 6
2004 record10–3 (6–2 A-10)
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorChip Kelly (6th season)
Home stadiumCowell Stadium
2004 Atlantic 10 Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
No. 1 James Madison $^  7 1   13 2  
No. 3 William & Mary $^  7 1   11 3  
No. 7 Delaware $^  7 1   9 4  
No. 6 New Hampshire ^  7 2   11 3  
Northeastern  4 4   5 6  
Villanova  4 5   6 5  
Maine  4 5   6 6  
UMass  4 5   6 6  
Hofstra  3 5   5 6  
Rhode Island  2 6   4 7  
Richmond  2 6   3 8  
Towson  0 8   3 8  
  • + Conference co-champions
  • ^ NCAA Division I-AA playoff participant
Rankings from The Sports Network poll

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 2at Delaware*W 24–2122,727
September 11at Rutgers*W 35–2431,615
September 18William & MaryL 7–9
September 25at Dartmouth*W 45–244,925 [2]
October 2at VillanovaW 51–407,119
October 16UMass
L 21–387,630
October 23Hofstra
  • Cowell Stadium
  • Durham, NH
W 33–27
October 30at NortheasternBrookline, MAW 27–23
November 6at Rhode IslandW 27–3
November 13Towson
  • Cowell Stadium
  • Durham, NH
W 62–24
November 20at MaineW 50–36
November 27at Georgia Southern*W 27–23
December 4at Montana
L 17–47
  • *Non-conference game

References

  1. "2017 New Hampshire Media Guide". University of New Hampshire. 2017. p. 67. Retrieved September 20, 2021.
  2. Chamberlain, Tony (September 26, 2004). "Wildcats Bowl Over Dartmouth -- Again". Boston Sunday Globe. Boston, Mass. p. C18 via Newspapers.com.
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