Boise State’s offense might look a little different this fall, and the biggest clue is sitting right in the personnel groupings.
Last season, the Broncos leaned hard into heavy sets. They ran multi-tight end looks on 41% of plays and had at least one tight end on the field on more than 99% of snaps.
That approach was built around Matt Lauter and Matt Wagner, with Luke Vorhees and Austin Terry also combining for more than 200 offensive snaps. Add in a wide receiver room thinned by Ben Ford’s injury, and Boise State became one of the nation’s most frequent users of heavy packages.
That formula may not carry over in 2026.
Lauter and Vorhees are gone, and the roster now looks deeper at both wide receiver and running back. At tight end, Wagner appears set to be the mainstay, but the second spot is less certain.
Terry has the most experience in the room, with 335 snaps over the last three seasons, though nothing says he’s locked into a major role. The other names in the mix - Kaden Anderson, Carter Kuchenbuch and true freshman Keawe Browne - have flashed in camp, but the overall depth chart at the position may not match what Boise State had a year ago.
The other side of the equation points toward more 11 or 21 personnel.
At receiver, the Broncos have more bodies to work with. Ben Ford, Cameron Bates and Rasean Jones are the current favorites for starting jobs, while Darren Morris, Akeem Wright and Quinton Brown give the room more usable depth. There’s also a group of younger players who could force their way into the picture, including Terrious Favors, AJ Jones and Qumonte Williams Jr.
Running back may be even more crowded. Sire Gaines and Dylan Riley are established pieces, but Kansas transfer Harry Stewart turned in a strong spring and could be too good to keep off the field.
Pitt transfer Juelz Goff, who missed most of spring with an injury, also brings the kind of tape from last season at Pitt that suggests he’ll play. With four backs in the mix, Boise State may have to find more ways to get them all on the field.
That’s why this question matters for Nate Potter. Does he want to keep the Broncos in heavy sets and build the offense around that structure, or does he adjust to the talent on hand and lean into different personnel packages?
There’s no single right answer. Plenty of coaches have succeeded both ways.
The only real unknown is which direction Potter wants to take.
The spring game offered one hint, with a heavier dose of 11 personnel than last season. Whether that carries into the fall remains to be seen. Either way, Boise State looks like it has enough talent to put together another conference-winning offense.
In Other News...
Spencer Danielson Just Turned Boise States Oregon Rematch Personal
Spencer Danielson is already treating Boise States trip to Autzen Stadium on Sept. 5 like more than just another early-season test. The Broncos coach pointed back to last years close loss to Oregon as he looked ahead to the rematch, and the tone was clear: this one has stayed with him, and it has given Boise State a chance to measure itself against one of the sports standard-bearers on a big stage.
The challenge is obvious before the teams even line up. Oregons defense brings real pressure up front, with Matayo Uiagalelei and Teitum Tuioti headlining a group that can make life difficult for an offense trying to settle in on the road. For Boise State, the matchup is as much about handling that first wave as it is about the scoreboard, because a strong start could keep the Broncos in position to turn a painful memory into something much better this time around. [Read more 🡒]
