Idaho's Emmerson Cortez-Menjivar, Michael Graves step up to lead wide receivers group

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Apr. 17—MOSCOW, Idaho — Based on its two spring scrimmages, the calling card of Idaho's offense this season might be Emmerson Cortez-Menjivar deep.

In the first scrimmage quarterback Jack Wagner launched a 60-yard bomb to Cortez-Menjivar that he took to the 10-yard line. Wagner said he saw the safety come off Cortez-Menjivar, and he let it fly.

A week, later, with Nick Josifek running the first series, Cortez-Menjivar was the target again, this time on the first play. It went for 20 yards, and "same thing. I was left one-on-one," Cortez-Menjivar says.

The 6-1, 192-pound redshirt sophomore played in 14 games last year and grabbed 14 passes for 200 yards and four touchdowns. His role is expanding.

Last season, Cortez-Menjivar "was one of the run-off guys," a decoy used to lure defensive backs and open other targets.

"Now I am working my butt off to fill the role as the top wide receiver," he says.

He is joined as the top of Idaho's depth chart this spring by several players, including sophomore Tony Harste and redshirt senior Michael Graves. A year ago, Graves, 6-3, 212, was considered to be Idaho's go-to guy early on. However, he suffered a back injury in the opening game against Oregon that required surgery and cost him the rest of the year.

"It has really felt good working back into it after my surgery," he says. Before the game against the Ducks, Vandals' receivers were anticipating a breakout season, according to Graves. Idaho still finished 10-4 overall, 6-2 in the Big Sky Conference and reached the quarter-finals of the Football Championship Subdivision playoffs. Wide receivers Jordan Dwyer and Mark Hamper stepped up to become Idaho's top wideouts. But both have moved on, Dwyer to Texas Christian University after making 78 receptions for 1,192 yards and 12 touchdowns last season, and Hamper to Wisconsin for a brief stop before reentering the transfer portal. Hamper made 49 catches for 961 yards and six touchdowns in his year as a starter for Idaho in 2024.

Those two fulfilled the standard of elite pass catching set in 2023 by All-America Hayden Hatten, now with the British Columbia Lions of the Canadian Football League. and Jermaine Jackson, who made the NFL New Orleans Saints roster last season, first on the practice squad, before being activated Oct. 17.

Cortez-Menjivar and Graves have inherited the mantle.

"They set an example in the receiver room," Cortez-Menjivar says of Hatten and Jackson.

"They had an unstoppable mindset. Any ball in the air, they were going to go get it."

Now, with Hatten, Jackson, Dwyer and Hamper as examples, "I have got to do better in everything," Cortez-Menjivar says. That includes being a more vocal leader, he acknowledges.

The Vandals were rocked by the abrupt departure of coach Jason Eck to New Mexico after last season. But "while everybody was brokenhearted over the whole Eck thing," the team has regrouped under new coach Thomas Ford and his staff, according to Cortez-Menjivar.

Graves agrees. "I am really loving this staff," he says. Like the former coaches, "they want to keep everyone happy."

The Vandals receivers are bolstered by the fact their former receivers coach, Matt Linehan, is now Idaho's offensive coordinator. The continuity is important, says Graves, and he has an ongoing good-natured banter with Linehan about getting him the ball.

While Cortez-Menjivar had the better season last year, Graves says he is looking to resume a role as the Vandals' influential veteran. Before he got hurt, "last year, I was the oldest guy," he says. After his injury "J.D. and Mark took over the role.

"This year, I'm the head chop."

Apparently, this involves being free with advice to Cortez-Menjivar. In practice Thursday, Linehan made a point that on a red zone pass play, wideout routes need not be run at maximum speed off the line of scrimmage but should let the play develop. In the manner or an older player talking to a younger one, Graves — who alternates with Cortez-Menjivar at split end and in the slot — said "I need him to be on the ball. He wants to be shot out of a cannon."

While Idaho's defense has mostly dominated this spring, the offense, of late, is showing what it is capable of. For Graves, who spent a couple of years at junior college getting his academics in order before getting a chance with the Vandals, the opportunity for him, Cortez-Menjivar and others to extend the legacy of Hatten, Jackson, Dwyer and Hamper is something to relish in his senior year.

"It has been a long journey," he says. "But love the Vandals."

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