A third consecutive season opened without a home field, as the new Idaho Stadium was not quite finished and there was no suitable venue available on the
Palouse. After the wooden
Neale Stadium (
1937) was condemned in August
1969, the Vandals played their limited schedule of Palouse home games at the wooden
Rogers Field at
WSU in nearby
Pullman in 1969 and
1970. The primary (south) grandstand of Rogers burned in and was razed in
1971; in its footprint
Martin Stadium was constructed and opened in The Vandals' season opener was a stunning 14–42 upset loss at
Boise State in the first meeting between the two teams, creating an instant This was actually an Idaho "home game" moved south because the new stadium in Moscow was behind schedule and Boise State had been a junior college program through 1967, moved up to
NAIA in 1968 as an independent, and joined the NCAA "college division" (
Division II) and Big Sky played a home game every season in Boise in the old wooden
Bronco Stadium through
1968; this ended when Boise State joined The
Colorado State game on was played at
Joe Albi Stadium in shut out the CSU Rams to begin their eight-game winning streak; the Rams' star running back was who was selected for multiple
Pro Bowls while with the The new Idaho Stadium opened with a Vandal victory over
Idaho State on The unlit outdoor concrete stadium in Moscow replaced Neale Stadium in the same footprint and continued with a natural the first game played on campus in nearly three years, the last was a win on was installed in
1972, and the facility was enclosed in
1975 to become the multi-purpose
Kibbie Dome. After four consecutive road victories, the Vandals finished the 1971 season at home with a 40–2 victory over
Montana State to wrap up the Big Sky title, and a disappointing non-conference loss to
Utah State in the finale. Boise State finished with a postseason win, but its two losses were in league play and finished second in the Big Sky ==Division I==