Coming off a 3–8 year in 1993, Boise State finished the 1994 regular season at 10–1 and 6–1 in conference to win their sixth Big Sky title, their first since the national championship season of 1980. The only blemish was a one-point loss at Idaho State in mid-October.[4] A convincing 38–14 win over top-ranked Montana in early November put the Broncos into the top ten.[6][7] To complete the regular season, #6 BSU hosted third-ranked rivalIdaho,[17] and won for the first time since 1981, breaking a twelve-game winning streak for the Vandals.[10] Both teams entered the game at 9–1 (and 5–1 in conference); they switched rankings for the next poll.[18]
Unranked at the start of the season,[19] Boise State finished third in the final poll, released prior to the playoffs.[18]
I-AA playoffs
Three Big Sky teams made the 16-team field for the I-AA playoffs: Boise State (10–1), Idaho (9–2), and Montana (9–2). Idaho lost a first round road game, and Montana won two home games before falling on the road to defending champion Youngstown State in the semifinals, foiling an all-Big Sky final. Conference MVP quarterback Dave Dickenson did not play due to an ankle injury,[20][21] and the Griz lost 28–9.[22] The Penguins had defeated Idaho on the same field in the semifinals the previous season.[23] The Broncos hosted and won three close games, against North Texas,[11]Appalachian State,[12] and #2 Marshall to raise their overall record to 13–1.[13]
Prior to hosting their third straight playoff game at home (following the home game against Idaho), Allen promised to ride his horse down Boise's Broadway Avenue if the Marshall game had an attendance over 20,000. Allen fulfilled his promise two days after the game and rode westbound on University Drive, from Bronco Stadium at Broadway to the Student Union.[24]
In the I-AA finals five days later at Huntington, West Virginia, they were defeated by the defending champions, Jim Tressel's top-ranked Youngstown State, 28–14.[14][15] The 15 games are the most Boise State ever played in one season, and finished at 13–2.
The 1994 season is known by BSU fans as The Magic Carpet Ride, as the Broncos won all ten home games on the blue AstroTurf of Bronco Stadium. This was Boise State's last Big Sky title in football and final appearance in the I-AA playoffs; BSU moved up to Division I-A and the Big West Conference in 1996.
Allen's cancer
Bothered by shoulder pain for about a month, Allen had outpatient surgery in Boise for a biopsy three days prior to the 1994 championship game, and was diagnosed two days after the game with rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare form of muscle cancer.[25][26]
The tumor in his upper right arm was removed in March and Allen underwent extensive chemotherapy and a stem-cell transplant in July at the Fred Hutchinson Center in Seattle.[27] He returned to coach the Broncos in 1995 while going through treatment, and the cancer was declared in remission in December 1995, but the doctors warned of likely recurrence.
^Sahlberg, Bert (December 12, 1993). "Penguins put UI on ice". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. p. 1B.
^"Pokey Allen on horseback". Boise State University. (Albertsons Library digital collections). December 12, 1994. Archived from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved December 14, 2016.
^"BSU's Allen has cancer". Moscow-Pullman Daily News. Idaho-Washington. Associated Press. December 21, 1994. p. 1B.
^"Allen has tumor". Youngstown Vindicator. Ohio. December 21, 1994. p. C1.