FORT COLLINS — Just another day at the office.

Another win for No. 13 Colorado State’s volleyball team, Thursday producing a sweep of San Jose State at Moby Arena, 25-14, 25-22, 25-20. It was the 16th straight for the Rams, the 15th in Mountain West play.

It clinched a share of a seventh straight conference title for the Rams (22-3), the longest current run for a team in Division I.

Afterward, they celebrated like …. well, they didn’t.

“No. Straight to bed,” Alex Reid deadpanned. Then Jasmine Hanna added, “class in the morning.”

The real reason is the team feels like it has unfinished business. Technically, Boise State could win out, the Rams could lose their remaining three and the two would tie. But CSU, with a season sweep of the Broncos, would be the team getting the automatic NCAA Tournament berth.

What they want is to make it clear who the champion is in the Mountain West.

“I think it’s exciting, but we still have a lot of season left,” Reid said. “I think once we finish conference that’s when we can celebrate, but we still have a bunch of games left we have to finish.”

The Rams have a chance to run the table in the conference, something that hasn’t been done since CSU back in 2003. Coach Tom Hilbert understood the lack of emotion, because he’s seen this team build up a tenacity.

“Believe me, I’m sure they’re happy they won this conference championship,” he said. “I think these guys have a feeling they can do some special things this year, and that’s probably why this was sort of a normal match.

“They’d like to run the table, they’d like to have an NCAA run. I think those are possible things.”

This team has definitely grown throughout the year, and of late, Hilbert has been impressed with the maturity they’ve shown. It was on display again against the Spartans, because heading into the night, the Rams expected the middles to have a big night.

Instead, the offense flowed to the pins, and both Hanna and Reid came up with outstanding performances. Hanna led the way with 12 kills on 24 attacks with just one error, hitting .458. Reid countered with 11 kills on 25 swings with two errors, hitting .360.

“I mean, it just shows these guys … I don’t know how to describe them,” Hilbert said of his outside hitters. “Both of these guys are solid and they come up big when we need them to. They’ve both improved as this year’s gone on, and it’s great to see. That is a sign of maturity when one area is not doing well.”

Hilbert said Adrianna Culbert was mad at herself for not having a good night hitting, but she did lead the team with 19 assists, while Crystal Young added 17. Their feeds were finding the outsides in good position — sometimes in the form of a back-row attack from Reid — leading to the strong production.

“I think the setting was locating us balls to the line,” Hanna said. “They weren’t taking line, so I think we got a lot of our swings down there. I think we worked pretty hard getting our feet there, too, to the sets, and making the best of them.”

The Rams were at their best in the opening set, finishing with 19 kills, closing with 46 by the end of the evening. The defense held up, too, with Jaime Colazzi’s 11 digs pacing the way, while Alexandra Poletto notched six block assists in the match. Sanja Cizmic added five, also producing six assists and five kills.

The Rams don’t play again until hitting the road for a match with UNLV on Wednesday. The final home match will be against Fresno State on Nov. 21, when the trophy presentation will take place, leaving a road date with Wyoming for the second leg of the Border War.

By then, the Rams hope they have even more to celebrate.

“I think that’s a big goal for us, because we’ve been playing so well and just each game we improve,” Reid said. “Being able to be undefeated in conference, that’s really something special that a lot of teams don’t get to do.”

A concept the rest of the Mountain West understands considering CSU won’t let go of the conference trophy.

Mike Brohard: 970-635-3633, mbrohard@reporter-herald.com and twitter.com/mbrohard