GOLDEN BEARS
MIKE MOHAMED Senior Linebacker
SHANE VEREEN Junior Tailback
2010
STUDENT-ATHLETE HIGH PERFORMANCE CENTER
Construction is underway for the 142,000-square-foot facility that is scheduled to open prior to the 2011 home football season, providing locker rooms, meeting rooms, offices and much more for football and 12 other sports.
The SAHPC will house a state-of-the-art training, applied sports science areas for strength and conditioning, sports medicine, nutrition and academics.
The building is the physical manifestation of Cal's High Performance Initiative, an untraditional approach to excellence that challenges conventional ways of thinking about and delivering high performance in an intercollegiate setting.
MEMORIAL STADIUM RETROFIT AND RENOVATION
Built in 1923, Memorial Stadium has generated scores of unforgettable moments for generations of Golden Bears. At the time of its opening, Robert Gordon Sproul, who became UC president in 1930, said that the stadium “stands in simple dignity, beauty and strength.”
The renovation of the stadium will preserve the historic character of the structure while bringing it up to world-class standards – with respect to student-athlete needs, fan amenities and safety – in keeping with the university’s tradition.
Construction on the $321 million project began in June of 2010 and is expected to be completed in time for the 2012 season opener. After playing in the current configuration of Memorial Stadium one last time of 2010, Cal will play at AT&T Park
Future G
olden Be
ars Lock
er Room
ACADEMIC PROWESS 83 Pac-10 All-Academic selections in Jeff Tedford era BOWL RUN Seven consecutive bowl appearances with 5-2 record during stretch COACHING KUDOS Jeff Tedford, two-time Pac-10 Coach of the Year OUR HOUSE Undefeated at home three of last six years (31-6); 50,000-plus fans for every home game WINNING Jeff Tedford begins the 2010 season tied for Cal’s modern-era record with 67 career victories
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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2010 GOLDEN BEAR FOOTBALL National Honors Candidate
MIKE MOHAMED
THE CAL EXPERIENCE
2010 PLAYERS
The Tedford Factor................................... 4-5 Great Coaching Staff................................... 6 Bowl Experience.......................................... 7 Golden Bears in the NFL........................ 8-11 National Attention................................. 12-13 The University of California................. 14-15 Berkeley and the Bay Area.................. 16-17 California Athletics............................... 18-19 Gameday Spirit..................................... 20-21 Football Tradition................................. 22-23 Memorial Stadium: Past, Present, Future....................... 24-26 Athletic Facilities....................................... 27 Academic Achievement............................ 28 Community Service................................... 29 Notable Alumni.......................................... 30
Player Profiles.................................... 68-106
2010 CAL FOOTBALL Quick Facts................................................ 32 Personnel Summary.................................. 33 Media Information................................. 34-35 Media Outlets............................................. 36 Television/Radio........................................ 37 Rosters.................................................. 38-39 Preseason Two-Deep................................ 40
2010 SEASON OUTLOOK Season Outlook.................................... 42-48
2010 COACHING STAFF Head Coach Jeff Tedford..................... 50-53 Assistant Coaches............................... 54-62 Football Support Staff.......................... 63-66
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2010 OPPONENTS Opponents......................................... 108-109 Big Game History & Records...........110-111 Series History....................................112-114
2009 IN REVIEW Season in Review.....................................116 Honors and Awards..................................117 Statistics........................................... 118-127 Pacific-10 Results & Honors.................. 128 Pacific-10 Statistics.......................... 129-130 Game Summaries............................. 131-137 Golden Bear Team Awards..................... 138 Outgoing Player Bios....................... 139-142
CAL RECORDS Records............................................. 144-162 Yearly Individual Leaders................ 163-166 Yearly Team Statistics...................... 167-169 Longest Plays................................... 170-171 The Last Time.......................................... 172
CAL HISTORY Yearly Records................................. 174-175 All-Time Scores................................ 176-182 Records vs. All Opponents..................... 183 Bowl History...................................... 184-188 Bowl History & Records.................. 189-190 National Honors....................................... 191 Conference/Regional Honors................. 192 Cal in the NFL................................... 193-198 All-Time Letterwinners..................... 199-206 Hall of Famers................................... 207-212
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
THIS IS CAL
The University................................... 214-215 Campus Administration.......................... 216 Director of Athletics................................ 217 Athletic Administration.................... 218-219 Endowment Seat Program...................... 220 Head Coaches.......................................... 221 2009-10 Athletic Highlights.............. 222-223 2009-10 Academic All-Conference......... 224 Traditions................................................. 225 Spirit Groups............................................ 226 Strength and Conditioning..................... 227 Sports Medicine/Athletic Training... 228-229 Student Programs................................... 230 Pacific-10 Conference ............................ 231 Pacific-10 Composite & Bowl Schedules..... 232
EDITORIAL CREDITS
The 2010 California Football Information Guide was produced by the staff of the Cal Media Relations Office under the direction of Associate Media Relations Director Kyle McRae, Assistant Media Relations Director Anton Malko and Assistant Athletic Director/Media Relations Herb Benenson. Composition and design by Publications Director John Dunbar and Publications Coordinator Evan Kerr.
PHOTO CREDITS
Photos by Michael Pimentel, Mike Wondolowski, John Todd, Tom Hauck, Michael J. Burns, Kelley Cox, John Dunbar, Evan Kerr, Cris Benton, Russ Wright, John Guistina, Jim Yudelson, Steve McConnell and Michael Zagaris, among others.
THE CAL EXPERIENCE
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The Tedford Factor
U
nder the direction of the newly anointed dean of Pac-10 head coaches Jeff Tedford, the Golden Bears have become a consistent winner while showing the talent and attitude to battle – and defeat – America’s top programs. Cal has been ranked in the nation’s top 10 at some point in five of the last six seasons. Cal has won the second-most games in the Pac-10 over Tedford’s eight seasons with a 67-35 record, while setting two school records (seven consecutive bowl appearances, four straight bowl victories) and tying another (eight straight winning campaigns). They have also been fantastic at Memorial Stadium with three undefeated home seasons under Tedford after having last accomplished the feat in 1950. Long known as perhaps America’s most picturesque football playground, Memorial Stadium now is home to large crowds, national television audiences, and a blue and gold clad fan base that is turning out in record numbers.
Kyle Boller
Aaron Rodgers
TEDFORD BY THE NUMBERS 1............ Only Cal coach to ever win Pac-10 Coach of the Year honors 2............ Highest national ranking since 1951 3............ Undefeated home seasons 4............ Seasons ranked in final top 25 5............ Seasons ranked in top 10 at one point 5............ School-record road wins in 2004 7............ Consecutive bowl appearances 7............ School-record-tying Big Game wins 8............ Straight winning seasons 10.......... School-record-tying games won in a season twice
1............ Win from becoming Cal’s modern-era leader
22.5...... Points allowed per game
1............ Winning season away from becoming Cal’s all-time
23.......... School-record road wins
leader for most consecutive winning campaigns
32.6...... Points scored per game
1............ Big Game win from becoming Cal’s all-time leader
41.......... School-record Pac-10 wins
2............ Games from becoming Cal’s all-time leader
67.......... Overall wins
3............ Seasons from becoming longest-tenured coach in
83.......... Pac-10 All-Academic selections 38353.. Cal season ticket sales in 2009
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MILESTONES IN REACH
Cal history 8............ Wins from becoming Cal’s all-time leader
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Adimchinobe Echemandu
Joe Igber
Justin Forsett
THE SKILL SET Jeff Tedford’s resume includes six quarterbacks taken in the first round of the NFL Draft, including four chosen in the first six overall picks, as well as 11 1,000-yard rushers in the last 11 seasons.
QUARTERBACKS 2005 2003 2002 2002 1999 1994
RUNNING BACKS
Aaron Rodgers, No. 24 overall (Cal) Kyle Boller, No. 19 overall (Cal) David Carr, No. 1 overall (Fresno State) Joey Harrington, No. 3 overall (Oregon) Akili Smith, No. 3 overall (Oregon) Trent Dilfer, No. 6 overall (Fresno State)
Marshawn Lynch
2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2001 2000 1999
Jahvid Best, 1,580 yards (Cal) Justin Forsett, 1,546 yards (Cal) Marshawn Lynch, 1,356 yards (Cal) Marshawn Lynch, 1,246 yards (Cal) J.J. Arrington, 2,018 yards (Cal) Adimchinobe Echemandu, 1,195 yards (Cal) Joe Igber, 1,130 yards (Cal) Onterrio Smith, 1,058 yards (Oregon) Maurice Morris, 1,049 yards (Oregon) Maurice Morris, 1,106 yards (Oregon) Reuben Droughns, 1,234 yards (Oregon)
BALANCING ACT Jeff Tedford’s reputation as a quarterback guru overshadows the actual broader results. His offenses are some of the most balanced in the country. Take a look at Cal’s offensive totals over the last eight seasons. Rushing Pass Rushing Yds Passing Yds Attempts Attempts Per Game Per Game 2009 471 393 169.5 222.7 2008 435 397 186.2 189.8 2007 441 443 165.7 241.8 2006 427 377 162.4 253.2 2005 483 321 235.3 192.7 2004 509 316 256.8 236.2 2003 542 349 168.3 264.6 2002 392 421 108.0 247.6
Jahvid Best
J.J. Arrington
TURNSTILE TURNAROUND California football fans have been flocking to Strawberry Canyon in record numbers over the past six seasons as the Golden Bears have climbed into the upper echelon of college football. As recently as 2002, California was averaging just 37,000 fans per home game. In four of the last six seasons, Cal has averaged over 60,000 fans, including a school-record 64,318 per contest in 2006. Cal has also sold more than 38,000 season tickets each of the last six years, with a record 41,336 in 2007.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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Great Coaching Staff
Cal head coach Jeff Tedford has built one of the nation’s finest coaching staffs with a group of coaches that develop quality student-athletes both on and off the field.
ANDY LUDWIG
CLANCY PENDERGAST
KEVIN DAFT
Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks Ludwig has 13 seasons of experience as an offensive coordinator at the collegiate level and is in his second season at Cal in 2010. He has coached in 11 bowl games and was finalist for national Offensive Coordinator of the Year in 2008.
Defensive Coordinator Pendergast brings 19 seasons of NFL and collegiate coaching experience to his first season at Cal in 2010, having spent the last six years as an NFL defensive coordinator, including for Arizona’s 2008 Super Bowl squad.
Wide Receivers One of the most prolific passers in UC Davis history and a former NFL quarterback, Daft is in his third season as Cal’s receivers coach and his seventh on the Golden Bears’ football staff in 2010.
JEFF GENYK
RON GOULD
TOSH LUPOI
STEVE MARSHALL
Special Teams Coordinator/ Tight Ends Prior to coming to Cal in 2010, Genyk’s most recent stop during an 18-year collegiate coaching career was a five-year run from 2004-08 as the head coach at Eastern Michigan. His 2006 squad was third nationally in punt return yardage defense.
Associate Head Coach/RBs Gould, in his 14th season at Cal in 2010, is the veteran of the coaching staff. He has coached the rushing leader in the Pac-10 three times in the last six years and is a candidate for National Assistant Coach of the Year in 2010.
Defensive Line The Cal grad is in his 11th season with the program as either a player or a coach in 2010. At only 29 years of age, he is considered one of the brightest young coaches in the game. In 2010, he was named the Rivals National Recruiter of the Year.
Offensive Line Marshall has 30 seasons of coaching experience at the NFL and collegiate levels on his resume and is in his second season at Cal in 2010. Mike Tepper earned his first All-Pac-10 honor under Marshall in 2009.
AL SIMMONS
KENWICK THOMPSON
JOHN KRASINSKI
MIKE McHUGH
Defensive Backs A Bay Area product in his second stint at Cal, Simmons has nine seasons of Pac-10 coaching experience and has also worked in the NFL with the San Francisco 49ers. He has been a defensive coordinator at the college level with Cal State Hayward.
Recruiting Coordinator/LBs Thompson is in his fourth season at Cal in 2010 and has helped develop senior Mike Mohamed into one of the nation’s top linebackers. He also has experience as a defensive coordinator, serving in the role from 1996-2000 at Texas Southern.
Strength and Conditioning Krasinski has 19 years of experience at the college level and has trained over 100 players who have gone on to the NFL, including 32 of Cal’s current players in the league. Nine of his Cal pupils have earned strength and conditioning All-America honors.
Director of Football Operations McHugh has 27 years of experience in football at the professional, collegiate and high school levels. He has served as both an administrator and coach during his professional career.
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Bowl Experience
D
uring Jeff Tedford’s tenure in Berkeley, Cal has become a postseason fixture. The Golden Bears have a current school-record string of seven consecutive bowl games. Cal is 5-2 in the postseason under Tedford, including a four-game win streak from 2005-08 that is also a school mark. During the span, Cal played in the Holiday Bowl twice. The Bears have also made appearances in the Armed Forces Bowl, Emerald Bowl, Insight Bowl, Las Vegas Bowl and Poinsettia Bowl, where the Bears were defeated by Utah, 37-27, in their most recent bowl outing. In all Cal has played in 20 bowl games, including eight Rose Bowls, and has posted a 10-9-1 record (8-3 since 1990).
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Golden Bears in the NFL
San Diego Chargers
David Binn
Washington Redskins
Andre Carter
Justin Forsett
Scott Fujita
Nnamdi Asomugha
Kyle Boller
Tony Gonzalez
Desmond Bishop
Brandon Mebane
Cleveland Browns
Atlanta Falcons
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Oakland Raiders
Green Bay Packers
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Seattle Seahawks
Oakland Raiders
Seattle Seahawks
Marshawn Lynch Buffalo Bills
Lorenzo Alexander Washington Redskins
Ryan Longwell Minnesota Vikings
I
n addition to leaving Berkeley with one of the most valuable college diplomas in the country, University of California football players often find themselves heading for the National Football League. In Jeff Tedford’s eight seasons as head coach, 32 Cal players have been selected in the NFL Draft, including a school-record six in 2008. Cal was only the Pac-10 school to have a first-round draft pick in 2010 with both Tyson Alualu and Jahvid Best going in the first round to make Tedford’s total at Cal rise to seven. California’s current 39 active NFL players is second only to USC among Pac-10 schools, as of July 15, 2010, according to ESPN.com. A total of 25 student-athletes from Cal have been first-round picks while 53 have been selected in the first three rounds of the NFL Draft. A complete list of former Cal players in the NFL can be found on pages 193-198.
Aaron Rodgers Green Bay Packers
Jahvid Best Detroit Lions
DeSean Jackson Philadelphia Eagles
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Golden Bears in the NFL
Mike Gibson
Will Ta’ufo’ou
Craig Stevens
Nick Sundberg
Brett Johnson
Matt Giordano
Thomas DeCoud
L.P. Ladouceur
Verran Tucker
Seattle Seahawks
Washington Redskins
Atlanta Falcons
10
Chicago Bears
Philadelphia Eagles
Dallas Cowboys
Tennessee Titans
Atlanta Falcons
Dallas Cowboys
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Zack Follett Detroit Lions
Ryan O’Callaghan Kansas City Chiefs
J.J. Arrington Denver Broncos
Tully Banta-Cain
Lavelle Hawkins
Nick Harris
Daymeion Hughes
Langston Walker
Devin Bishop
Mike Tepper
Syd’Quan Thompson
Tyson Alualu
Cameron Morrah
New England Patriots
Oakland Raiders
Brian De La Puente San Francisco 49ers
Tennessee Titans
Denver Broncos
Jacksonville Jaguars
Detroit Lions
Dallas Cowboys
Seattle Seahawks
San Diego Chargers
Denver Broncos
Alex Mack
Cleveland Browns
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National Attention
S
ince Jeff Tedford’s arrival in 2002, Cal has risen to No. 2 in the Pac-10 in television exposure, a dramatic increase over the years before Tedford. A total of 85 games have been televised in eight seasons under Tedford, and the number of national TV broadcasts has more than doubled in that time. In the last three seasons, 38 of 39 Cal contests have been on TV. All 13 Cal games were televised in 2007 for the first time in the program’s history and the feat was repeated in 2008.
Mike Mohamed Mike Mohamed has racked up the 2010 preseason honors, being named to the Playboy All-America squad with additional All-America selections coming from The Kickoff (second team), National Champs.net, Phil Steele (both third team) and the College Football Insiders (honorable mention). The Pac-10’s leading tackler in 2009 is also on watch lists for The Lott Trophy, the Rotary Lombardi Award and the Bronco Nagurski Trophy.
WILLIAM V. CAMPBELL TROPHY Cal center Alex Mack won the 2008 William V. Campbell Trophy, then known as the Draddy Trophy. The honor is a prestigious award given to the nation’s top football scholar-athlete during a black tie ceremony at New York’s Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Also referred to as the “Academic Heisman,” it is one of college football’s most sought-after honors, recognizing an individual as the absolute best in the country for combined academic success, football performance and community leadership. The award comes with a 24-inch, 25-pound bronze trophy and a $25,000 postgraduate scholarship. Mack, a two-time recipient of the Morris Trophy as the best offensive lineman in the Pac-10, also earned Cal’s Neufeld Scholar-Athlete Award as the Golden Bears’ male senior student-athlete with the highest cumulative GPA.
Alex Mack
RANDY MOSS AWARD Cal’s DeSean Jackson was presented the inaugural Randy Moss Return Man Award for the top kick and punt returner in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of college football in 2006 during a presentation at a luncheon in Houston. As a sophomore, Jackson led the country with an average of 18.2 yards per punt return. He also paced the nation with four punts returned for touchdowns, including a modern-era school-record 95-yarder against Arizona. As a member of the Philadelphia Eagles, Jackson was one of the top rookies in the NFL in 2008, then earned All-Pro honors in 2009.
DeSean Jackson
THE LOTT TROPHY Cal cornerback Daymeion Hughes was recognized as the 2006 winner of The Lott Trophy. Named after Hall of Famer Ronnie Lott, The Lott Trophy is awarded to college football’s Defensive IMPACT Player of the Year. Hughes’ honor was announced at a gala black tie banquet at the Pacific Club in Newport Beach. The trophy is given to a player who exhibits the same characteristics Lott embodied during his distinguished career: Integrity, Maturity, Performance, Academics, Community and Tenacity. Golden Bear linebacker Zack Follett was a quarterfinalist for the award in 2008, Cal cornerback Syd’Quan Thompson (2009) and linebacker Mike Mohamed (2010) have been on the watch list. 12
Ronnie Lott And Daymeion Hughes With The Lott Trophy
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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blossoming football program located in America’s fifth-largest television market means a big stage for the Cal football program. Cal has been featured on television in 38 of its last 39 games over the past three seasons. Last year, the Golden Bears were televised four times on ABC, twice on ESPN, twice on Versus, twice on Comcast SportsNet California and once on Fox Sports Net. Cal’s flagship KGO AM 810 has also been the Bay Area’s top-rated radio station for most of the period since beginning to broadcast Golden Bear games in 1974.
Included within the borders of the Pacific-10 Conference are six of America’s top-25 television markets, some of the largest daily media outlets in the United States and a fan base that continues to grow every season. As Cal strives to extend its school record for consecutive bowl appearances to eight in 2010, media exposure is almost certain to expand in all forms.
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The University of California
T
SIMPLY THE BEST
here is no other way to aptly describe America’s top public university. There is no other way to describe one of the elite academic settings in the world – especially one that also includes one of America’s most successful athletic departments. The University of California blends the best of all worlds. Overlooking the scenic San Francisco Bay and ranked as the nation’s top public university by U.S. News and World Report, the flagship campus of the state of California also features an athletic program that annually finishes among the leaders in the Directors’ Cup standings, which rates the overall success of America’s collegiate athletic departments. Cal attracts what many believe to be the finest applicant pool in the United States featuring a diverse student body population. The University of California is divided into 14 colleges and schools offering 351 degree programs and over 7,000 courses, with 35 of the school’s 36 graduate programs ranked among America’s Top 10. Cal’s 35 programs among the Top 10 is No. 1 among all universities in the country, as is its 32 “distinguished” programs, as rated by the National Research Council. University Library is ranked as the No. 1 public research library in the country by the Association of Research Libraries with 10 million volumes in 32 campus libraries. The current faculty features eight Nobel Laureates, 136 members of the National Academy of Sciences, 30 MacArthur Fellows, 74 Fulbright Scholars, four Pulitzer Prize winners and 363 Guggenheim Fellows, more than any other university in America.
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
AMERICA’S NO. 1 PUBLIC UNIVERSITY BY THE NUMBERS
1
Universities with the highest number of top-10 graduate program 1. CALIFORNIA 2. Stanford 3. Harvard 4. Columbia 5. MIT
TOP PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
CALIFORNIA UCLA Virginia Michigan North Carolina
Source: 2010 U.S. News and World Report
1
Universities with the highest number of “Distinguished Programs” 1. CALIFORNIA 2. Stanford 3. Harvard 4. Princeton 5. MIT
21 15-1 351
3,000
Nobel Laureates 22 current and former faculty members Student-to-Faculty Ratio
Degree Programs
1
In 2009, the Association of Research Libraries ranked Cal’s University Library as the No. 1 public research university library in North America.
Service The University of California is the only school in the country to have produced more than 3,000 volunteers since the inception of the Peace Corps in 1961.
Nobel Laureate Oliver Williamson
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Berkeley and the Bay Area
BERKELEY
B
erkeley is a part of the San Francisco Bay Area major metropolitan area of approximately 7.4 million people. The region is considered one of the most beautiful in the world and includes the major cities of San Francisco and Oakland, as well as Berkeley, home of the world-renowned University of California. Just south are San Jose and the Silicon Valley, home to many of the world’s most famous high-tech companies. The Bay Area also lies within easy driving distance of the high Sierra resorts of Lake Tahoe and Yosemite, the Monterey Peninsula and the world famous Napa wine country. Everyone knows San Francisco, a.k.a. “The City,” from the numerous photographs, movies and television shows that capture its magic and beauty. It is a city built on a series of more than 40 hills, offering panoramic views of every kind. The hub of a nine-county complex and the financial and insurance capital of the world, San Francisco has a resident population of just over 800,000 and is situated on a 46.7-square mile peninsula bounded by water on three sides – to the west by the Pacific Ocean, the north by the Golden Gate strait, and from north to east by the San Francisco Bay. San Francisco has been named the world’s top city twice and the top city in the U.S. in 19 of the last 20 years by Condé Nast Traveler. Cal will play
its home football games at San Francisco’s AT&T Park in 2011 when Memorial Stadium undergoes a renovation. The San Francisco Bay is spanned by two landmarks, the Golden Gate and San Francisco-Oakland Bay bridges, the latter which is currently undergoing a spectacular renovation of the east span, and graced by four islands: Alcatraz, Angel, Yerba Buena and Treasure. The area is easily navigated by car, BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit), bus or ferry, making it easily accessible to all.
SAN FRANCISCO
TOP CITIES IN THE WORLD 1. Sydney, Australia 2. San Francisco, CA 3. Florence, Italy 4. Charleston, SC 5. Ubud, Bali 6T. Cape Town, South Africa 6T. Rome, Italy 8. Vancouver, Canada 9. Bangkok, Thailand 10. Buenos Aires, Argentina Source: Condé Nast Traveler, 2009 Readers’ Choice Awards
Frank Gore San Francisco 49ers
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
OAKLAND
Nnamdi Asomugha Oakland Raiders
L
ocated across the Bay Bridge from San Francisco and a bordering neighbor of Berkeley is Oakland, a city of over 400,000 people, jam-packed with exciting attractions, stimulating arts and an ideal climate. Oakland’s charm exceeds its man-made wonders, as tumbling hills rising east above the city, vast forests, hiking and riding trails, beautiful lakes and numerous parks provide a natural escape for those who prefer nature over an urban environment.
Just a 12-mile drive from San Francisco, Berkeley is situated on 17.7 square miles with a population of just over 100,000 people. A study in contrasts, Berkeley is a small town with a big city character. With its worldrenowned university, global population and rich diversity of cultural arts, Berkeley reflects and affects the rest of the country. Six major pro sports teams – the NFL’s San Francisco 49ers and Oakland Raiders, the NBA’s Golden State Warriors, MLB’s
San Francisco Giants and Oakland Athletics, and the NHL’s San Jose Sharks – as well as NCAA Division I schools Cal, Saint Mary’s, San Francisco, San Jose State, Santa Clara and Stanford all call the Bay Area home. Sources: San Francisco Convention & Visitors Bureau, Oakland Convention & Visitors Bureau, Berkeley Convention and Visitors Bureau, and the California Trade and Commerce Agency.
SIMPLY THE BEST • Money magazine chose San Francisco as “the best place to live” among the 300 biggest U.S. metropolitan areas. • Forbes.com recently ranked San Francisco as America’s “best city for the outdoors” while American College of Sports Medicine called San Francisco “the fittest of America’s most populous cities.” • Readers of Travel + Leisure magazine selected San Francisco as their favorite city in 2009 for its “noteworthy neighborhoods.” • San Francisco is rated the No. 1 city in the U.S. and the No. 2 city in the world by Condé Nast Traveler (October 2009).
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK
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California Athletics
Nathan Adrian Men’s Swimming & Diving 2008 Olympic Gold Medalist
Michael Cavic Men’s Swimming & Diving 2008 Olympic Silver Medalist
Emily Silver Women’s Swimming & Diving 2008 Olympic Silver Medalist
Natalie Coughlin Women’s Swimming & Diving 11-Time 2004 & ’08 Olympic Medalist
Winning is a Cal Tradition! RECENT TEAM NATIONAL CHAMPIONS
2004 MEN’S GOLF
2006 WOMEN’S CREW
2008-09 WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING
2009-10 CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS
Alex Mack Football 2008 William V. Campbell Trophy National Scholar-Athlete of the Year
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Eric Mina Men’s Golf 2010 Pac-10 Individual Champion
Hannah Wilson Women’s Swimming & Diving 2010 Pac-10 Individual Champion 100 Freestyle
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
2009-10 MEN’S BASKETBALL Pac-10 Champions
2009-10 INDIVIDUAL NATIONAL CHAMPIONS
Liv Jensen Women’s Swimming & Diving 2010 National Champion 50 Freestyle
Tom Shields Men’s Swimming & Diving 2010 National Champion 100 Butterfly
Damir Dugonjic Men’s Swimming & Diving 2010 National Champion 100 Breaststroke
Nathan Adrian Men’s Swimming & Diving 2010 National Champion 100 Freestyle
2010 RUGBY
2010 MEN’S CREW VARSITY 8 2002 SOFTBALL
2010 WOMEN’S CREW Pac-10 Champions
Patrick Kowalsky Men’s Track & Field 2010 Pac-10 Individual Champion Shot Put
Deborah Maier Women’s Track & Field 2010 Pac-10 Individual Champion 3000m
Mark Matusak Men’s Track & Field 2010 Pac-10 Individual Champion 3000m
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Gameday Spirit
T
he setting for University of California football games features the best of all worlds. Memorial Stadium rests comfortably in a glorious natural setting, with the Berkeley Hills as a backdrop and a stadium perched above the San Francisco Bay. The foreground is complete with landmark bridges, islands and the city skyline. The background features Strawberry Canyon and is complimented by dazzling gameday colors, a rousing student section, and a marching band all nestled in and surrounded by one of America’s most picturesque gameday settings.
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
GAMEDAY The football team’s March To Victory is the official kickoff of gameday. From the moment the Bears enter Memorial Stadium, the activity increases throughout fall Saturdays. Oski roams the stadium, the Rally Committee mans the flags, the student body, the traditional stunt card section, all in a stadium that has been around since the 1920s.
Hail California!
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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Football Tradition
Walter Gordon Andy Smith Wonder Team 1921 National Champions
H.P. “Brick” Muller
C
alifornia is steeped in tradition over a history that dates back to the 1880s. From its first national championship (1920), conference title (1918) and All-American player (Harold “Brick” Muller, 1921), the California football program has built a long and proud history.
1922 National Champions 1923 National Champions
Arleigh Williams
5 National Championships 10 Bowl Victories
14 Conference Championships 8 Rose Bowl Appearances
Thunder Team 1937 National Champions
Leonard “Stub” Allison
Vic Bottari
Lynn “Pappy” Waldorf
22 22
Carl Van Heuit
Sam Chapman
Jackie Jensen
Les Richter
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN GOLDEN BEARS BEARS 2010 2010 Football Football Information Information Guide Guide CALIFORNIA
Joe Kapp
ROTH’S NO. 12 JERSEY RETIRED
Sherman White
Craig Morton
Joe Roth
The only jersey ever retired by the Cal football program is the No. 12 worn by quarterback Joe Roth, who played for the Bears in 1975 and ’76. Roth, who seemed destined to become one of the greatest passers ever produced by Cal, had his career ended by cancer shortly after the ’76 season, and he passed away on Feb. 19, 1977. His ability on the football field, friendly openness and humble manner, combined with the courage he showed in facing his illness, made him one of the most popular players ever to wear the Blue and Gold. Roth still holds the Cal record for longest pass, an 88-yard hookup with Wesley Walker for a TD against Georgia in 1976. Roth’s No. 12 jersey was retired during a ceremony on Oct. 29, 1977, prior to the USC game, which Cal won, 17-14. Cal still annually hosts a game to honor his legacy.
Steve Bartkowski
Mike White
71 21 6
Chuck Muncie
First Team All-American Honors National Football Foundation Hall of Fame Members Pop Warner Trophy Winners
6 4 7 12
Wesley Walker
Conference Players of the Year Morris Trophy Winners Bowl Berths in last seven years Top 10 Finishers in Heisman Trophy Voting
1982 Big Game The Play
Sean Dawkins Mike Pawlawski Ron Rivera
Russell White
T
he Big Game between California and Stanford began in 1892 and is among the nation’s most storied rivalries, tying for the country’s 10th-longest active consecutively running series. At stake for the winner of the game is The Axe, a coveted trophy that represents a history of competitive matchups that include such memorable moments as “The Play” in 1982. Cal has won seven of the last eight years.
Tony Gonzalez
Nnamdi Asomugha
Aaron Rodgers
J.J. Arrington
DeSean Jackson
Hardy Nickerson
Jahvid Best
CALIFORNIA CALIFORNIA GOLDEN GOLDEN BEARS BEARS 2010 2010 Football Football Information Information Guide Guide
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Memorial Stadium
The Past...
F
or California fans and alumni, there truly is no place like Memorial Stadium. A full 87 football seasons since its opening in 1923, Memorial Stadium remains one of the most breathtaking sites in all of college athletics. The plush wall of pine trees in the Berkeley Hills to the east is contrasted by a panoramic view of the San Francisco Bay and three bridges to the west. Designed by world-renowned architect John Galen Howard, and codesigners G.F. Buckingham and E.E. Carpenter, the stadium is a tribute to their architectural talents, skills that were years ahead of their time. Fans who attend games today still marvel at the beauty of the structure, modeled after the Roman Colosseum, and comment about the easy viewing for spectators from all angles within the stadium. The stadium was completed in time for the 1923 Big Game at a total cost of $1,437,982. It was constructed in sections with expansion joints to withstand earth movement. Included in the initial construction were 12,000 barrels of cement, 1.1 million feet of lumber for concrete forms, 8,000 cubic yards of rock, 4,000 cubic yards of sand, 600 tons of steel, 800,000 feet of premium lumber used for seating, and 2,500 pine trees, which today serve as the backdrop for the stadium. Original plans for the stadium called for a capacity of 60,000, but they were altered in favor of a capacity closer to 80,000. The seating capacity has fluctuated due to renovation and other changes, but in 1947, a crowd of 83,000 watched Cal defeat Navy, 14-7, a feat which may have prompted Cal officials to establish an official capacity for the stadium. In the 1960s, temporary bleachers on the east side were removed and additional wheelchair seating and aluminum bleachers followed in the 1980s. For 2001, the press box was rebuilt, giving the stadium an official capacity of 71,799. Overall, Cal football teams through the years have played before crowds of 70,000 or more on 64 occasions and there have been 21 games that attracted in excess of 80,000 spectators.
There are bigger stadiums, newer stadiums and stadiums with grander reputations. But there is no finer place to watch a college football game than Memorial Stadium on the campus of the University of California at Berkeley. Decatur (IL) Herald & Review September 18, 2005
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
...the Present... MEMORIAL STADIUM FACTS AND FIGURES Overall Record...................................................................... 313-210-16 (.596, 56 winning seasons, 27 losing seasons, 4 tied) 2009 Home Record.............................................................................4-2 Most Consecutive Winning Seasons.....................................12, 1927-38 Most Games, Season..................................................... 10, 1932 (6-2-2) Most Wins, Season...........................................8, 1924 (8-0-1), ’38 (8-0) Most Losses, Season.......................................................... 6, 2001 (0-6) Most Consecutive Wins.........................................................21, 1947-50 Longest Unbeaten Streak.....................................................24, 1947-51 Most Consecutive Losses.......................................................8, 2000-01 Record in Doubleheaders................................................ 15-1 (1932-39) Undefeated Seasons................... 12: 1923 (1-0), ’24 (8-0-1), ’29 (5-0-1), ’35 (7-0), ’37 (6-0-1), ’38 (8-0), ’48 (7-0), ’49 (6-0), ’50 (6-0-1), 2004 (5-0), ’06 (7-0), ’08 (7-0) Winless Seasons...............................................2: 1959 (0-5), 2001 (0-6) Record on Synthetic Turf................................................... 79-42-3 (.649) Record on Grass......................................................... 234-168-13 (.580)
MILESTONE WINS
1st 50th 100th 200th 250th 300th
– – – – – –
Cal 9, Stanford 0, Nov. 24, 1923 Cal 14, St. Mary’s 13, Oct. 7, 1933 Cal 14, Pacific 0, Oct. 14, 1944 Cal 28, USC 14, Nov. 1, 1975 Cal 42, Oregon State 0, Oct. 3, 1992 Cal 42, Louisiana Tech 12, Sept. 15, 2007
LARGEST CROWDS Attend 83,000 83,000 82,070
Opponent Navy Stanford Stanford
Date Sept. 27, 1947 Nov. 22, 1952 Nov. 24, 1928
Result Cal, 14-7 Cal, 26-0 Tie, 13-13
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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...and future...
STUDENT-ATHLETE HIGH PERFORMANCE CENTER
MEMORIAL STADIUM RETROFIT AND RENOVATION
The Student-Athlete High Performance Center, under construction since late 2008, is scheduled to open prior to the 2011 football season and will become a modern new home for approximately 450 student-athletes in football and 12 other sports to use on a daily basis. The 142,000-square-foot facility will house locker rooms, offices and meeting rooms, as well as areas for strength and conditioning, sports medicine, nutrition and academics. The building is the physical manifestation of Cal’s High Performance Initiative, a nontraditional approach to excellence that challenges conventional ways of thinking about and delivering high performance in an intercollegiate setting. In an effort to take Cal to the highest level, the HPI applies worldwide best practices in sport and human performance to all aspects of the athletic department. This commitment creates and sustains high performance across Cal Athletics and maximizes the potential of our student-athletes, coaches and support staff. The High Performance Initiative has three primary objectives – to maximize competitive advantage, to efficiently use available resources and to optimize the student-athlete experience – which will be attained primarily through applying a different mindset to intercollegiate athletics and by delivering world-class advanced support services and facilities, such as the Student-Athlete High Performance Center.
Since it opened in the fall of 1923, California Memorial Stadium has generated scores of unforgettable memories for generations of Golden Bears. From the Wonder Teams of the 1920s to the Pappy Waldorf years mid-century to the current success attained under head coach Jeff Tedford, the venerable facility has treated fans of all ages to many of the greatest games in the history of Cal football. Now, work is underway to retrofit and renovate the historic building, bringing it up to modern standards and creating a facility that will significantly reduce seismic risk and create a more enjoyable environment for the hundreds of thousands of fans who attend games every year – all while maintaining the architecture and character of the celebrated structure. Construction on the $321 million project began in earnest in early June 2010 and is expected to be completed in time for the 2012 season opener. After playing in the current configuration of Memorial Stadium one last time in 2010, the Golden Bears will move to temporary quarters at San Francisco’s AT&T Park in 2011 before returning to campus for the following campaign and providing new generations of Cal fans the opportunity to treasure the venue for years to come.
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Athletic Facilities
S
tudent-athletes at the University of California have the privilege of using quality athletic facilities. Major athletic facilities located on and around the Cal campus are listed below.
Memorial Stadium
HELLMAN TENNIS COMPLEX
BRIONES RESERVOIR
Cal women’s crew uses Briones Reservoir as its dedicated practice site.
EDWARDS STADIUM/ GOLDMAN FIELD
Historic Edwards Stadium/Goldman Field, which opened in 1932, is home to the Cal’s track & field and soccer teams.
EVANS DIAMOND
This natural-grass facility seats over 2,500 and is used by Cal’s baseball team for practices and games.
HAAS PAVILION
Walter A. Haas Jr. Pavilion is the home for Cal’s basketball, volleyball and gymnastics teams. The athletic director, student services, compliance offices and other departments are also located in the pavilion.
Witter Rugby Field
Levine-Fricke Field
Edwards Stadium/Goldman Field
Maxwell Family Field
T. GARY ROGERS BOATHOUSE
California tennis makes its home at the Hellman Tennis Complex, located on the southwest side of campus.
The newly completed and renovated crew boathouse is located on the Oakland Estuary, where Cal men’s rowing practices.
LEVINE-FRICKE FIELD
SPIEKER AQUATICS COMPLEX
Levine-Fricke Field is nestled at the base of Strawberry Canyon and home to Cal softball, winners of the 2002 NCAA title.
MAXWELL FAMILY FIELD
Maxwell Family Field serves as home to the Cal field hockey program.
MEMORIAL STADIUM
Memorial Stadium has been home of the football team since 1923. The daily operations of the football program – including administrative offices, training room, weight room, equipment room and locker rooms – are being hosted at the surge facility located in nearby Strawberry Canyon.
Briones Reservoir
Haas Pavilion
T. Gary Rogers Boathouse
Water polo and swim team practices and competitions are held at Spieker Aquatics Complex. The facility is home to the 200809 NCAA champion women’s swimming and diving squad. Recreational swimming is also scheduled for times when these teams are not hosting events or practicing.
WITTER RUGBY FIELD
Witter Rugby Field is part of Strawberry Canyon. The field is used for rugby, football and lacrosse practice, and lacrosse competition.
Spieker Aquatics Complex
Hellman Tennis Complex
Evans Diamond
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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Academic Achievement ACADEMIC GAME PLAN COMPREHENSIVE PROGRAM FOCUSES ON GOLDEN BEAR ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT
W
hile the California football program has produced a schoolrecord with seven straight bowl appearances and tied another with eight consecutive winning seasons as part of 67 victories overall in the last eight seasons, the mission for Cal football is to EDUCATE and GRADUATE all football student-athletes with a meaningful degree that will support their future successes in whatever field they choose. Cal’s unique “Academic Game Plan” (AGP) is a program established by head coach Jeff Tedford to ensure success in the classroom as well as on the field. AGP, under the direction of Cal’s director of student-athlete development, consists of players meeting regularly with coaches and counselors to review coursework and assignments. Players are given an “Academic Game Planner,” which they are required to keep up to date. The point of AGP is to approach academics just like a game, with a plan. The players would never go into a game situation without studying film, having a plan, practicing and preparation. Tedford and the Cal staff want student-athletes to approach academics the same way. Of the 18 players signed in 2002 in coach Tedford’s first class, 15 (83%) graduated within five years. A total of 20 players over the past 10 years have earned graduate degrees while playing
T
he Athletic Study Center, which is housed within the Division of Undergraduate Education, is the tutorial and academic support program for the approximately 850 student-athletes at Cal. Centrally located in the Cesár Chavéz Student Center, the program provides a spacious and comfortable area for quiet study, individual classrooms for tutorials and a computer lab.
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Athletic Study Center Staff
and 10 of those who earned graduate degrees have gone on to play in the NFL. For the 2005-06 academic year, the Cal football team achieved the highest score possible (1000) in the Academic Progress Rate (APR). In 2009-10, Cal posted a multi-year score of 969, second among Pac-10 schools. In addition, 83 student-athletes on the football team have earned Pac-10 All-Academic honors in the Tedford era.ATHLETIC STUDY CENTER
TUTORIAL PROGRAM
ADVISING PROGRAM
The tutorial program promotes and enhances students’ academic skills and progress by providing individual tutoring, group workshops, study groups, credit courses and intensive special programs. The Athletic Study Center has between 50-60 tutors on staff per semester to guarantee that students receive the best possible support. Tutorial sessions are offered in the evenings to enable student-athletes to receive help after practices when they have more time to devote to studying.
The advising program offers a broad range of services to meet the unique needs of Cal’s student-athletes, which include assistance in understanding and complying with university, college and NCAA requirements, the development of time management skills and the resolution of personal issues unique to studentathletes.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Community Service (Clockwise from top right): Cal football players lend a hand during Come To College Day by teaching kids how to run with the ball, posing for photos and taking their turn on the rowing machine.
I
n addition to pursuing success on the football field and in the classroom, head coach Jeff Tedford puts a high priority on Golden Bear football players being involved in the community. Most recently, one of the team’s primary focuses has been The Sage Mentorship Program, helping Sage carry out its mission of providing youth with a personal connection to mentors through academic and extra-curricular activities in order to foster life skills and personal growth. The team also participates in a variety of community service activities and is always eager to support area youth and let them know the value of education through various reading and recess programs as well as Fan Appreciation Days. The Golden Bears truly enjoy the opportunity to give back to the community.
(above) Cal football players take part in Easter Seals Day festivities; (right) Mentoring has been a focus of the team’s recent community relations efforts; (below) the Golden Bears are never too busy to sign autographs for adoring fans
“The passionate commitment that we have received from these esteemed individuals has been a vital key to our continued growth. Most importantly, the positive influence, which they impart unto the youth of our communities, has been simply amazing and impactful beyond belief.” Michael Okinczyc, President of The Sage Mentorship Program
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Notable Alumni Earl Warren Gregory Peck
Jennifer Granholm
Steven Chu
Shareef Abdur-Rahim – NBA All-Star, 2000 U.S. Olympian Lisa Arce – Pro beach volleyball star Steve Bartkowski – No. 1 overall pick in 1975 NFL Draft Stephen Bechtel – Founder of world’s largest constructional Kevin Johnson engineering firm Zulfikar Ali Bhutto – President and Prime Minister, Pakistan Matt Biondi – Three-time Olympic swimmer, winner of eight gold medals Rose Bird – Chief Justice, California Supreme Court W. Michael Blumenthal – U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Jerry Brown – State Attorney General, Governor of California, Mayor of Oakland Thomas Cech – Chemist, Nobel Prize winner Peter Chernin – Chairman and CEO, Fox Entertainment Group Leroy Chiao – First Chinese-American astronaut Choon Kun Cho – President, Korean Airlines Rachelle Chong – Member, Federal Communications Commission Steven Chu – U.S. Secretary of Energy Beverly Cleary – Author, “Ramona the Pest” Natalie Coughlin – Winner of 11 Olympic medals in swimming Joan Didion – Author, “Play It as It Lays” Brig. Gen. James H. Doolittle – World War II hero, Medal of Honor recipient Adam Duritz – Lead singer, Counting Crows Maria Echaveste – Deputy Chief of Staff, Clinton Administration Joy (Biefeld) Fawcett – Member of three U.S. Olympic soccer teams Don Fisher – Founder and Chairman of the Board, The Gap
Michelle Tafoya
Adam Duritz
John Kenneth Galbraith – Economist Tony Gonzalez – NFL All-Pro tight end Walter A. Gordon – Governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands, U.S. District Court Judge Michele Granger – Olympic gold medalist, softball pitcher Jennifer Granholm – Governor of Michigan Andrew Grove – President and CEO, Intel Corporation Walter Haas Jr. – President, Levi Strauss & Co.; Owner of Oakland Athletics Philip Habib – U.S. Special Envoy to Middle East William Randolph Hearst Jr. – Newspaper publisher Marguerite Higgins – Journalist, Pulitzer Prize winner Susanna Hoffs – Lead singer of “The Bangles” Lance Ito – Superior Court Judge, presided over 1995 O.J. Simpson murder trial Ida Jackson – United Nations observer, founder local chapter of National Council of Negro Women Jackie Jensen – 1958 American League MVP Kevin Johnson – NBA All-Star, Mayor of Sacramento Edgar F. Kaiser – Founder, Kaiser Permanente Jeff Kent – 2000 National League MVP Clark Kerr – Chancellor, UC Berkeley Jason Kidd – NBA All-Star, U.S. Olympian Maxine Hong Kingston – Author, 1997 National Humanities Medal Yuan T. Lee – Chemist, Nobel Prize winner Willard Libby – Physical chemist, discovered Carbon 14, Nobel Prize winner Tung Yen Lin – World-renowned civic engineer Jack London – Author, “The Call of the Wild” Wiley Manuel – First African American Supreme Court of California Justice Jerry Mathers – Actor, “Leave it to Beaver” Brian Maxwell – Founder, PowerBar John A. McCone – Director of CIA, Atomic Energy Commission Terry McMillan – Author, “Waiting To Exhale,” “How Stella Got Her Groove Back” Robert McNamara – U.S. Secretary of Defense Mary T. Meagher – U.S. Olympic swimmer, winner of three gold medals Norman Mineta – U.S. Secretary of Transportation Gordon Moore – Co-founder, Intel Corporation Julia Morgan – Architect Hardy Nickerson – NFL Pro Bowl linebacker Sadako Ogata – U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees
Left to right: Natalie Coughlin, Tony Gonzalez, Margaret Rhea Seddon, Jeff Kent, Alice Waters, Chris Pine
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
William Randolph Hearst
Gregory Peck – Actor, Academy Award winner, “To Kill a Mockingbird” Chris Pine - Actor, “Star Trek” Kenneth Pitzer – Chemist, president, Stanford University Robert Raven – President, American Bar Association Helen Wills Moody Roark – Winner of eight Wimbledon championships Glenn Seaborg – Nuclear physicist, Nobel Prize winner, cofounder of Element 106 Margaret Rhea Seddon – Astronaut Michael Silver – Yahoo! Sports sportswriter William G. Simon – Director, FBI Samuel Smith – President, Washington State University Robert Gordon Sproul – President, University of California Leigh Steinberg – Lawyer, sports agent Michelle Tafoya – Sportscaster, Monday Night Football sideline reporter George Takei - Actor, Mr. Sulu on “Star Trek” Roger Traynor – Chief Justice, Supreme Court of California Eugene Trefethen Jr. – President, Kaiser Industries Rex Walheim – Space Shuttle astronaut Earl Warren – Chief Justice, U.S. Supreme Court Alice Waters – Chef, Helen Wills Moody Roark restaurateur, “Chez Panisse” Jann Wenner – Cofounder, “Rolling Stone” magazine Lionel Wilson – First African American mayor of Oakland Pete Wilson – Governor of California Dean Witter – Founder, Dean Witter Financial Services Steve Wozniak - Cofounder, Apple Computer, Inc. James D. Zellerbach – U.S. Ambassador to Italy
2010 CAL FOOTBALL
SHANE VEREEN Tailback
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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QUICK FACTS UNIVERSITY INFORMATION Location Founded Enrollment Chancellor Athletic Director Colors Conference Nickname Website Mascot
Berkeley, CA 94720 1868 35,843 Dr. Robert J. Birgeneau Sandy Barbour Blue (282) and Gold (123) Pacific-10 Golden Bears CalBears.com Oski
STADIUM INFORMATION 209 Memorial Stadium, Berkeley, CA 94720 510-642-3851 Stadium Memorial Stadium Capacity 71,799 Surface Sportexe Memorial Stadium Press Box 510-642-3098/510-643-8244
MEDIA RELATIONS 349 Haas Pavilion, Berkeley, CA 94720 510-642-5363 Associate Director/Lead Football Contact Kyle McRae Phone: 510-219-9340 Email: mcrae@berkeley.edu Assistant Director/Secondary Football Contact Anton Malko Phone: 510-501-9555 Email: amalko@berkeley.edu Assistant AD/Media Relations/Football Credentials Herb Benenson Phone: 510-334-0791 Email: benenson@berkeley.edu
TEAM INFORMATION 2009 Records (Pac-10 Finish) 8-5, 5-4 Pac-10 (5th-T) 2009 Bowl Poinsettia vs. Utah (L, 27-37) Final Ranking None Bowl Streaks 7 Straight Appearances, 1 Loss Starters Returning/Lost 19/10 Offense: 8/4; Defense: 7/6; Specialists: 4/0 Letterwinners Returning/Lost 52/21 Offense: 25/11; Defense: 23/10; Specialists: 5/0 Offensive System Multiple Defensive System 3-4
2009 RESULTS Date Opponent (TV) Result Sept. 5 Maryland (ESPN2) W, 52-13 Sept. 12 Eastern Washington (CSNCA) W, 59-7 Sept. 19 at Minnesota (ESPN) W, 35-21 Sept. 26 *at Oregon (ABC) L, 3-42 Oct. 3 *USC (ABC) L, 3-30 Oct. 17 *at UCLA (ABC) W, 45-26 Oct. 24 *^Washington State W, 49-17 Oct. 31 *at Arizona State (ABC) W, 23-21 Nov. 7 *Oregon State (AFN/CSNBA/FSN) L, 14-31 Nov. 14 *Arizona (Versus) W, 24-16 Nov. 21 *at Stanford (Versus) W, 34-28 Dec. 5 *at Washington (CSNCA/FSNNW) L, 10-42 Dec. 23 #Utah (ESPN) L, 27-37 Pac-10 Game; ^Homecoming; #Poinsettia Bowl, San Diego, CA (Qualcomm Stadium)
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COACHING STAFF Head Coach Alma Mater Cal Record Overall Record
Jeff Tedford Fresno State, 1983 67-35 (9th Season) 67-35 (9th Season)
Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks Andy Ludwig (2nd Season) Defensive Coordinator Clancy Pendergast (1st Season) Wide Receivers Kevin Daft (7th Season) Special Teams Coordinator/Tight Ends Jeff Genyk (1st Season) Associate Head Coach/Running Backs Ron Gould (14th Season) Defensive Line Tosh Lupoi (5th Season) Offensive Line Steve Marshall (2nd Season) Defensive Backs Al Simmons (6th Season) Recruiting Coordinator/Linebackers Kenwick Thompson (4th Season)
SUPPORT STAFF Director of Football Operations Mike McHugh (8th Season) Strength and Conditioning Coach John Krasinski (9th Season) Director of Player Career Development Mike Andersen (4th Season) Administrative Assistant, Defense Ronnie Bradford (1st Season) Assistant Video Coordinator Ernie Chu (3rd Season) Administrative Assistant, Offense Brendan Ferrigno (4th Season) Video Coordinator Matt Fox (9th Season) Head Equipment Manager Ed Garland (6th Season) Administrative Assistant Denis Hallin (7th Season) Assistant Football Athletic Trainer Matt Havranek (3rd Season) Assistant Director of Student-Athlete Development Chidi Iwuoma (1st Season) Graduate Assistant, Defense Taggart McCurdy (4th Season) Football Athletic Trainer Wes McGaugh (3rd Season) Recruiting Assistant Andrew McGraw (11th Season) Equipment Manager Dave Moosman (10th Season) Recruiting Assistant Kevin Parker (9th Season) Director of Student-Athlete Development Keiko Price (1st Season) Administrative Assistant, Offense Akili Smith (1st Season) Football Operations Bud Turner (41st Season) Assistant Equipment Manager Randy Venters (3rd Season)
2010 SCHEDULE Date Opponent (TV) Time Sept. 4 UC Davis (CSNCA) 1:00 p.m. Sept. 11 Colorado (FSN) 12:30 p.m. Sept. 17 at Nevada (ESPN2) 7:00 p.m. Sept. 25 at Arizona (TBA) TBA Oct. 9 *^UCLA (TBA) TBA Oct. 16 *at USC (FSN) 12:30 p.m. Oct. 23 *Arizona State (TBA) TBA Oct. 30 *at Oregon State (TBA) TBA Nov. 6 *at Washington State (TBA) TBA Nov. 13 *Oregon (TBA) TBA Nov. 20 *Stanford (FSN) 12:30 p.m. Nov. 27 *Washington (TBA) TBA *Pac-10 Game; ^Homecoming
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Note Teams have not played since 1939 (Cal 8-0) Cal won Kapp's debut in last meeting (1982) Cal has won 12 straight; first game at Nevada Cal defeated nationally-ranked Wildcats in 2009 Cal has won five straight in Berkeley USC has won six straight since Cal win in 2003 Cal has won six of seven to take series lead OSU has won four of last five overall, but Cal has won two of last three in Corvallis Cal has won five in a row Cal has won last three in Berkeley, including rainfest in most recent meeting in 2008 Cal is 7-1 in Big Game under Jeff Tedford Last game in current Memorial Stadium
PERSONNEL SUMMARY STARTERS RETURNING (19) OFFENSE (8)
Name Justin Cheadle Chris Guarnero Marvin Jones Anthony Miller Kevin Riley Jeremy Ross Mitchell Schwartz Matt Summers-Gavin
Pos OL OL WR TE QB WR OL OL
Notes Started all 13 games at RG, team's Most Improved OL in 2009 Started all 13 games at C, All-Pac-10 honorable mention in 2009 Led Cal in all key receiving categories in 2009 (44-659-6) 2009 honorable mention All-Pac-10; 26 receptions, 357 yards 15-8 career record as starter; 2,850 passing yards in 2009 Third on team with 860 all-purpose yards in 2009 26 starts in last two years; 2009 honorable mention All-Pac-10 Team was 7-1 in games he started in 2009
Name Sean Cattouse Derrick Hill Josh Hill D.J. Holt Cameron Jordan Mychal Kendricks Mike Mohamed
Pos S NG DB LB DE LB LB
Notes 2009 honorable mention All-Pac-10; started last six games 37 career games played (18 starts) Most experienced corner; 2 INT, 1 FF, 1 FR in 2009 37 tackles in 2009 with Cal 7-1 in his eight starts National honors candidate; 2-time honorable mention All-Pac-10 Second on team with 71 tackles in 2009 2010 national honors candidate and preseason All-American; first-team All-Pac-10 and led league in tackles in 2009 with 112
Name Bryan Anger Vincenzo D'Amato Matt Rios Giorgio Tavecchio
Pos P PK LS PK
Notes 2010 national honors candidate and preseason All-American; first- team All-Pac-10 in 2009 Shared PK duties in 2009; 7-12 FG, 31-31 PAT, 47 long at Oregon Primary long snapper in 2009 Shared duties in 2009; 8-12 FG, 14-14 PAT, 51 long at ASU
LOST (10)
OFFENSE (4)
TB Jahvid Best, FB Brian Holley, OL Mike Tepper, WR Verran Tucker
DEFENSE (6) DL Tyson Alualu, LB Devin Bishop, DB Marcus Ezeff, DB Brett Johnson, DB Syd’Quan Thompson, LB Eddie Young
SPECIALISTS (0)
DEFENSE (7)
SPECIALISTS (4)
LETTERWINNERS RETURNING (52) OFFENSE (25)
WR Michael Calvin, OL Justin Cheadle, TB Covaughn DeBoskie-Johnson, OL Donovan Edwards, OL Richard Fisher, OL Dominic Galas, TE Garry Graffort, OL Chris Guarnero, WR Marvin Jones, FB Will Kapp, TE Spencer Ladner, WR Alex Lagemann, QB Brock Mansion, TE Anthony Miller, QB Kevin Riley, WR Jeremy Ross, OL Mitchell Schwartz, OL Bryan Schwenke, TB Isi Sofele, TE Jarrett Sparks, FB Eric Stevens, OL Matt Summers-Gavin, QB Beau Sweeney, FB John Tyndall, TB Shane Vereen
DEFENSE (22) DB Mark Anthony, LB Keith Browner, DB D.J. Campbell, DB Sean Cattouse, DB Chris Conte, DL Michael Costanzo, DL Trevor Guyton, DB Darian Hagan, DL Derrick Hill, DB Josh Hill, LB D.J. Holt, LB J.P. Hurrell, DL Cameron Jordan, LB Mychal Kendricks, LB Jerome Meadows, LB Mike Mohamed, LB C.J. Moncrease, DB Bryant Nnabuife, DL Ernest Owusu, DL Kendrick Payne, LB Jarred Price, DL Aaron Tipoti
SPECIALISTS (5) P Bryan Anger, PK Vincenzo D'Amato, LS Matt Rios, PK/P David Seawright, PK Giorgio Tavecchio
LOST (21)
OFFENSE (11) TB Jahvid Best, WR Nyan Boateng, OL Mark Boskovich, TE Skylar Curran, FB Brian Holley, OL Justin Prueitt, WR Charles Satchell, TE Tad Smith, OL Chet Teofilo, OL Mike Tepper, WR Verran Tucker
DEFENSE (10) DL Tyson Alualu, DB Charles Amadi, LB Devin Bishop, DB Jesse Brooks, DB Marcus Ezeff, DB Brett Johnson, LB Charles Johnson, LB Chris Little, DB Syd’Quan Thompson, LB Eddie Young
SPECIALISTS (0)
RETURNING REDSHIRTS (19) OFFENSE (8) WR Jackson Bouza, OL Mark Brazinski, QB Allan Bridgford, FB Nico Dumont, WR Spencer Hagan, OL Ed Johnston, OL Charles Siddoway, TB Dasarte Yarnway
DEFENSE (9) LB Dan Camporeale, DL Austin Clark, DL Deandre Coleman, LB Ryan Davis, LB Steven Fanua, DL Keni Kaufusi, DB Alex Logan, DB Vachel Samuels, DB Steve Williams
SPECIALISTS (2) LS Brandon Madueno, LS/LB Clark Porter
RETURNING SQUAD (12) OFFENSE (10) TE Solomona Aigamaua, WR Ian Albrecht, WR Ross Bostock, OL Sam DeMartinis, TE Savai'i Eselu, OL Justin Gates, TB Langston Jackson, OL Tyler Rigsbee, WR Quinn Tedford, QB Ryan Wertenberger
DEFENSE (2) DB Tyré Ellison, LB Robert Mullins
SPECIALISTS (0)
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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MEDIA INFORMATION WELCOME TO CAL FOOTBALL The 2010 University of California Information Guide is produced to provide information on the Golden Bears for anyone interested in finding out more about the program. Media covering Cal football should review this section in detail to learn more about Cal’s policies and services. Additional media information can be found online at CalBears.com/media. Please contact a member of the Cal Athletics Media Relations staff if you have any questions or concerns.
CAL MEDIA RELATIONS FOOTBALL CONTACTS KYLE McRAE
Associate Media Relations Director Lead Football Contact Phone: (510) 219-9340 Email: mcrae@berkeley.edu
ANTON MALKO
Assistant Media Relations Director Secondary Football Contact Phone: (510) 501-9555 Email: amalko@berkeley.edu
HERB BENENSON
Assistant AD for Media Relations Gameday Credentials & Parking Phone: (510) 334-0791 Email: benenson@berkeley.edu
MEDIA PARKING Parking at Cal is always at a premium and visitors are encouraged to use public transportation. The Downtown Berkeley BART station is located two blocks west of campus, in close proximity to Haas Pavilion, Edwards Stadium/Goldman Field, the Hellman Tennis Courts and Spieker Aquatics Complex. Hourly guest parking is available in both the MLK Student Union and RSF garages along Bancroft Way adjacent to Haas Pavilion. For media covering Cal football during the week (non-gamedays), a limited number of spaces are available in the East Rim Lot next to Memorial Stadium. Contact a Media Relations staff member to obtain a permit. Football gameday parking is located in the Underhill Garage. Entrances are off either Channing Way or Haste Street, just west of College Avenue. The lot is about three blocks from Memorial Stadium. Media can either take the short walk to the media gate (Gate 6) or use a media-only shuttle that begins running two hours before game time. A media shuttle is also available postgame from Memorial Stadium to the Underhill Garage. Parking passes cannot be left at will call on gamedays and must be picked up or mailed in advance. Television crews should order parking passes for their crews by sending in the Special Event Parking Arrangements form found on the university’s website (berkeley.edu) in advance. Request the Underhill Garage for football games and the MLK Student Union Garage for Haas Pavilion events. Note that the campus parking office does not accept credit cards – only cash or check.
INTERVIEWING JEFF TEDFORD The best time to reach head coach Jeff Tedford is Monday-Wednesday from 12:00 – 1 p.m. Please give at least 24 hours of notice for all interview requests. Contact Kyle McRae at (510) 219-9340 or mcrae@berkeley.edu to make arrangements. Coach Tedford is also normally available each day to media at the conclusion of practice on the field. Prior arrangements are requested.
MEDIA WILL CALL The Media Will Call booth is located at Gate 6 on the south side of Memorial Stadium. It will open six hours before kickoff and remains open through the conclusion of the first quarter. Identification is required to pick up credentials or tickets. Parking passes cannot be left at will call.
MEMORIAL STADIUM DIRECTIONS Memorial Stadium is located along Piedmont Avenue on campus in Berkeley. From San Francisco Airport, take Highway 101 north to Interstate 80 and cross the Bay Bridge. Once over the bay, take Highway 24 toward Walnut Creek. Exit at Claremont Avenue and turn left. Turn left onto College Avenue (third light). Turn right onto Channing Way, then left onto Prospect Street, which will lead to the south end of the stadium. From Oakland Airport, take Interstate 880 north, then Highway 24 east toward Walnut Creek and follow directions above. More detailed information can be found on the campus map at visitors.berkeley.edu.
PHOTO REQUESTS CREDENTIAL REQUESTS Please direct all requests/questions for media, photo and parking credentials for 2010 Cal football home games to Herb Benenson (benenson@ berkeley.edu, 510-642-0515) through Football Media Relations at 349 Haas Pavilion, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720. All requests for season credentials should be submitted by Friday, Aug. 13. Only media who cover the Bears on a regular basis will be considered for season credentials. A lost season credential will result in that member of the media being moved to the single-game list. All single-game requests should be made in writing at least one week prior to the game for which the credential is requested. No credential requests will be considered after 5 p.m. Thursday of game week. Requests for media covering a visiting team should be made through the opposing school’s Sports Information Director. Credentials will be held in the Media Will Call booth located near Gate 6 at Memorial Stadium the day of the game unless other arrangements are made.
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Request photos through the Cal Athletics Media Relations office. Fans can also purchase images of all 27 teams by visiting goldenbearsports.com.
PHOTOGRAPHERS Field photographers must wear a photo vest at all times, in addition to a photo credential. Photo credentials must be picked up on the day of the game at Media Will Call (Gate 6). Photo vests can be picked up on the west side of the playing field near Section EE. NCAA rules limit shooting to outside the restraining line enclosing the playing field and outside the 25-yard lines (the team area).
PHOTOGRAPHER WORK AREA A photographer work area has been established at field level in Tunnel F of Memorial Stadium (west side at approximately the 20-yard line on the north end of the field). Wireless internet, pregame meals, game programs, flip cards and other relevant media materials are all available in the photographer work area.
PLAYER/COACH INTERVIEWS
PRACTICE MEDIA COVERAGE
All player and coach interviews, either in person, by phone or via email, must be coordinated through Kyle McRae in the Cal Athletics Media Relations Office (510-219-9340, mcrae@ berkeley.edu), preferably with a 24-hour advance notice. During the season, brief interviews can be conducted on the field immediately after practice on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Only coaches are also available for interviews following Thursday's workout, while players and coaches are also available following each game (see details below). Players are generally unavailable for interviews on Sundays, Thursdays and Fridays, while coaches are generally unavailable for interviews on Fridays. Requests for interviews outside normal interview times may be made via special arrangement.
Cal is scheduled to practice Monday-Friday during the 2010 football season. Unless otherwise notified, practices are open to the media for only the first 20 and last 10 minutes of each session Monday-Thursday, with Friday's walkthru typically closed to all media other than broadcast televsion. Only limited portions of Cal’s practices (usually parts of the first 20 minutes). All camera personnel should contact a member of the Cal Athletics Media Relations office in advance and prior to beginning to film. The only media allowed on the field during practice are media personnel with video or still cameras under the direction and supervision of a member of media relations.
POSTGAME INTERVIEWS Cal postgame interviews are conducted in the Travers Club Room, with access on the mezzanine level of Memorial Stadium near Section AA. Following a 10-minute cooling off period, head coach Jeff Tedford will answer questions first, followed by requested players. The visiting team locker room is located at the south end of the stadium, next to stairway 18 (sections J-JJ). Formal visiting team head coach and player interviews will be conducted in the tunnel area below the locker room adjacent to the field and will be coordinated through the visiting team's media relations staff.
POSTGAME MEDIA WORK AREA Media may work in the press box following games, but are encouraged to use the Travers Club Room (behind Section AA) for filing purposes. The Club Room is an enclosed area with desk space and telephones. Final statistical game books, as well as postgame notes, quotes and other relevant media materials will be available in the Travers Club Room.
PROFESSIONAL SCOUTS Professional teams wanting to scout games in Memorial Stadium may purchase game tickets through the Cal Athletics Media Relations Office.
TELEPHONE LINES Telephone lines at Cal Athletics events must be ordered online at rts.berkeley.edu/sports. Make sure to designate the venue and location of your line, as well as inform a member of the Cal Athletics Media Relations Office staff. The campus telecommunications office requires orders to be placed at least six days in advance.
TUESDAY PRESS CONFERENCES Each Tuesday during the football season, Cal head coach Jeff Tedford will be available to the media during a weekly press conference. More details will be available at a later date regarding the location and time of the press conference.
VIDEO FEEDS Video highlights of Cal football games are available throughout the season via the Pacific-10 Conference satellite feed. For more information, contact the Pac-10 office at (925) 932-4411.
VISITING RADIO PHONE LINES One MB line and one ISDN line, along with two dry lines in the visitor’s locker room, are available for complimentary use by visiting radio.
WIRELESS ACCESS Contact a member of the Cal Media Relations office on gameday to obtain a username and password. A local wireless network is also available in the photo tunnel at field level.
CAL ATHLETICS MEDIA RELATIONS STAFF
SCOTT BALL Assistant Media Relations Director
HERB BENENSON Assistant AD for Media Relations
ANTON MALKO Assistant Media Relations Director
DEAN CAPARAZ Assistant Media Relations Director
KYLE McRAE Associate Media Relations Director
MELISSA DUDEK Assistant Media Relations Director
TIM MIGUEL Assistant Media Relations Director
JOHN DUNBAR Senior Publications Director
EVAN KERR Publications Coordinator
ANNA OLESON-WHEELER JEREMY WU Assistant Media Assistant Media Relations Director Relations Director
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
35
MEDIA OUTLETS PRINT/INTERNET Associated Press, San Francisco Web: ap.org Beat: Josh Dubow Phone: (415) 495-1708 Email: jdubow@ap.org
ESPN.com, Pac-10 Blog (Internet) Web: myespn.go.com/blogs/pac10 Writer: Ted Miller Phone: (206) 920-9339 Email: roswell.miller@cox.net
Bay Area News Group Contra Costa Times/ Oakland Tribune Web: cctimes.com, insidebayarea.com Deputy Sports Editor: Mike Lefkow Phone: (925) 943-8149 Email: mlefkow@cctimes.com Beat: Jonathan Okanes Phone: (925) 260-2697 Email: jokanes@yahoo.com
Examiner.com (Internet) Web: examiner.com Beat: Jake Curtis Phone: 415-298-6849 Email: jakecurtis53@gmail.com
Bay Area News Group San Jose Mercury News Web: mercurynews.com Exec. Sports Editor: Bud Geracie Phone: (408) 920-5830 Email: bgeracie@mercurynews.com College Sports Writer: Jon Wilner Phone: (408) 674-4722 Email: jwilner@mercurynews.com Bear Insider (Internet) Web: bearinsider.com Publisher: Chris Avery Phone: (510) 339-7399 Email: cavery@bearinsider.com Writer: Michael Duca Phone: (510) 384-2758 Email: mduca@bearinsider.com Writer: Jim McGill Phone: (925) 297-7132 Email: jmcgill@bearinsider.com Writer: Ted Lee Phone: (925) 917-1524 Email: tlee@bearinsider.com Bear Territory (Internet) Affiliated with Rivals/Yahoo! Web: bearterritory.net Publisher: Ryan Gorcey Phone: 805-217-2043 Email: rgorcey@gmail.com CalSportsDigest (Internet) Affiliated with Scout/FoxSports Web: calsportsdigest.com Publisher: Mario Gomez Beat: Ken Clampett Email: CalSportsDigest@gmail.com Daily Cal (Student) Web: dailycal.org Phone: (510) 548-8300 ext. 425 Sports Editor: Gabriel Baumgaertner Email: gabrielbaum@dailycal.org Beat: Jack Wang Email: jackwang88@dailycal.org
36
Marin Independent Journal Web: marinij.com Sports Editor: Dave Allen Email: dallen@marinij.com Phone: (415) 382-7298 Modesto Bee Web: modbee.com Sports Editor: Mike Dunbar Phone: (209) 578-2300 Email: sports@modbee.com Napa Valley Register Web: napavalleyregister.com Exec. Sports Editor: Marty James Phone: (707) 256-2223 Email: mjames@napanews.com Sacramento Bee Web: sacbee.com/sports Sports Editor: Bill Bradley Phone: (916) 321-1224 Email: bbradley@sacbee.com San Francisco Chronicle Web: sfgate.com Sports Editor: Al Saracevic Phone: (415) 777-7201 Email: asaracevic@sfchronicle.com Beat: John Crumpacker Phone: 510-676-9102 Email: jcrumpacker@sfchronicle.com San Francisco Examiner Web: sfexaminer.com Sports Editor: Dylan Kruse Phone: (415) 359-2637 Email: dkruse@sfexaminer.com Columnist: Glenn Dickey Phone: (510) 593-3287 Email: glenndickey@hotmail.com Columnist: Art Spander Phone: (510) 643-4496 Email: typoes@aol.com The Press Democrat Web: pressdemocrat.com Dep. Sports Editor: Bill Pinella Phone: (707) 526-8500 Email: bill.pinella@pressdemocrat.com The Record Web: recordnet.com Sports Editor: Bob Highfill Phone: (209) 546-8282 Email: bhighfill@recordnet.com
TELEVISION Comcast SportsNet Bay Area/California Web: csnbayarea.com Phone: (415) 296-8900 or (415) 615-4799 Sports Anchor: Damon Andrews Email: dandrews@comcastsportsnet.com Sports Anchor: Mindi Bach Email: mbach@comcastsportsnet.com Sports Anchor: Dave Benz Email: dbenz@comcastsportsnet.com Sports Anchor: Greg Papa Email: gpapa@comcastsportsnet.com KGO-TV (ABC, Channel 7) Web: abc7news.com Sports Anchor: Larry Beil Phone: (415) 954-7505 Email: larry.beil@abc.com Sports Anchor: Mike Shumann Phone: (415) 954-7508 Email: mikeshumann@abc.com KNTV-TV (NBC, Channel 11) Web: nbcbayarea.com Sports Director: Raj Mathai Phone: (408) 432-4765 Email: raj.mathai@nbc.com Sports Anchor: Laura Behnke Phone: (408) 432-4730 Email: laura.behnke@nbcuni.com Sports Anchor: Laurence Scott Phone: (408) 432-4473 Email: laurence.scott@nbcuni.com KPIX-TV (CBS, Channel 5) Web: cbs5.com Sports Director: Dennis O’Donnell Phone: (415) 760-0178 Email: djodonnell@kpix.cbs.com Sports Anchor: Kim Coyle Phone: (415) 760-0916 Email: kcoyle@kpix.cbs.com KRON-TV (Ind., Channel 4) Web: kron.com Sports Director: Gary Radnich Phone: (415) 561-8984 Email: jason@kron4.com Sports Anchor: Vernon Glenn Phone: (415) 561-8993 Email: vern@kron.com KTVU-TV (FOX, Channel 2) Web: ktvu.com Sports Director: Mark Ibanez Phone: (510) 874-0252 Email: mark.ibanez@ktvu.com Sports Anchor: Joe Fonzi Phone: (510) 874-0523 Email: joe.fonzi@ktvu.com Sports Editor: Fred Inglis Phone: (510) 874-0252 Email: fred.inglis@ktvu.com
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
RADIO KGO Radio (810 AM) – Flagship Web: kgo.com Sports Anchor: Rich Walcoff Phone: (415) 847-2000 Email: richwalcoff@gmail.com Sports Anchor: Kevin Radich Phone: (415) 954-8142 Email: Kevin.Radich@sitcomm.com KALX Radio (90.7 FM) – Student Web: kalx.berkeley.edu Phone: (510) 642-1111 KCBS Radio (740 AM) Web: kcbs.com Phone: (415) 765-4062/4113 Sports Anchor: Hal Ramey Email: ramey@kcbs.com Sports Anchor: Steve Bitker Email: bitker@kcbs.com Sports Anchor: Dave Lewis Email: dlewsports@comcast.net Sports Anchor: Joe Salvatore Email: radiojo@yahoo.com Sports Anchor: Anthony Passarelli Email: apassare@cisco.com KNBR Radio (680 AM/1050 AM) Web: knbr.com Phone, KNBR 680: (415) 995-6808 Phone, KNBR 1050: (415) 864-1050 Host: Ralph Barbieri Email: razorandmrt@knbr.com Host: Rod Brooks Email: fitzandbrooks@knbr.com Host: Damon Bruce Email: damonbruceshow@knbr1050.com Host: Bob Fitzgerald Email: fitzandbrooks@knbr.com Host: Paul McCaffrey Email: murphandmac@knbr.com Host: Brian Murphy Email: murphandmac@knbr.com Host: Gary Radnich Email: gary@knbr.com Host: F.P. Santangelo Email: sportsphone68@knbr.com Host: Tom Tolbert Email: razorandmrt@knbr.com Host: Mychael Urban Email: urban@knbr.com
BROADCAST ISP Sports/Cal Radio Network Web: ispsports.com Phone: (510) 643-4825 Play-by-Play: Joe Starkey Phone: (415) 298-4078 Email: starkeyjk@yahoo.com Play-by-Play: Troy Taylor Phone: (916) 208-6328 Email: troytaylor@fcusd.k12.ca.us Sideline Reporter: Todd McKim Phone: (707) 239-2445 Email: tmckim@ispsports.com
TELEVISION/RADIO THE FLAGSHIP STATION The University of California and San Francisco’s KGO AM 810 continue to enjoy the longest running broadcast relationship in the Bay Area. Entering its 37th season as the home of Cal football in 2010, KGO, the 50,000-watt, ABCowned radio station, serves as the flagship of the Cal ISP Radio Network. KGO has been carrying California football since the 1974 season. In 2010, the University of California and KGO reached an agreement for a three-year contract that will keep the Bears on 810 AM through at least the 2012 campaign. The marriage of KGO and Cal football is the longest standing radio association in the Pacific-10 Conference and one of the longest in all of college athletics.
IN THE BOOTH Joe Starkey, the legendary voice of the Bears, is in his 36th season with the Cal football broadcast team in 2010. Cal's play-by-play man is perhaps best known for his legendary call of “The Play.” The famous five-lateral kickoff return for a touchdown against Joe Starkey Stanford in 1982 is part of college football lore with Starkey’s emotional “the band is on the field” part of gridiron vernacular. Starkey has had an array of NFL and NHL positions during his career, including a 20-year stint with the San Francisco 49ers he fulfilled in conjunction with his Cal duties from 1979-2008. He is joined in the booth by former Cal quarterback Troy Taylor, now in his sixth season as the Golden Bears' color analyst. Taylor, who played at Cal from 1986-89, still holds school records for career passing yards (8,126) and total offense (8,236), completing Troy Taylor 58 percent of his passes with 51 career touchdown tosses. He was a member of the Cal coaching staff from 1996-99, working with the Bears’ receivers, tight ends and quarterbacks. Also in his sixth season on the broadcast team is sideline reporter Todd McKim, who also serves as host of the weekly Cal Sports Report television show, and new for 2010 the weekly Cal coaches radio show. Before joining Cal, McKim was a long-time Todd McKim media member as a television anchor and sports director in Eugene, and was the 2000 Oregon broadcaster of the year.
PRE AND POST
CSN CALIFORNIA
Each broadcast begins with a pre-game show that begins 60 minutes prior to kickoff (30 minutes earlier than in 2009). The postgame show will include reaction from the Bears’ locker room followed by Postgame at the Paragon with Lee Grosscup and Kate Scott, which is broadcast from the Paragon Restaurant located inside the Claremont Hotel Club & Spa.
The University of California, Cal ISP Sports Network and Comcast Sports Net California are in the first year of a new three-year agreement in 2010-11 that makes CSN California the local home of Cal Athletics. The weekly Cal Sports Report and a minimum live event will air annually on CSN California.
RADIO AFFILIATES The Cal ISP Radio Network blankets most of the state of California with affiliates from San Diego to Sacramento, leaving very few areas of the state out of range of network. The lineup of networks include... KGO................810 AM................. San Francisco KCBQ............ 1170 AM........................San Diego KESP...............970 AM...........................Modesto KGIL..............1260 AM.....................Los Angeles XPRZ.............1210 AM........................San Diego KTKZ.............1380 AM..................... Sacramento
XM SATELLITE RADIO Fans can tune in to Cal football games on XM Satellite Radio, a corporate partner of the Pacific-10 Conference. Visit CalBears.com for detailed broadcast information.
CAL SPORTS REPORT The Cal Sports Report is a weekly television show aired on Comcast SportsNet California. Host Todd McKim will produce feature stories on Cal student-athletes and coaches, take a look at upcoming events, recap the previous week’s action and introduce California fans to other stories and events unique to Cal. Each new edition of the show will air originally on Wednesdays and be repeated several times each week throughout the football and basketball seasons. Visit CalBears.com for detailed broadcast information.
CAL COACHES RADIO SHOW
Todd McKim interviews Shane Vereen after Cal's Big Game win at Stanford in 2009.
A new Cal coaches radio show will take to the air every Monday from September through March. The one-hour program will air Mondays from 6:00 – 7:00 p.m. on KNEW (910 AM), beginning August 30 and continuing through the Monday following the end of men's basketball season. Todd McKim will host the show live from a location to be determined in Berkeley. Head coach Jeff Tedford will be interviewed live regularly throughout the football season, while men's basketball coach Mike Montgomery and women's hoops coach Joanne Boyle will be interviewed during their seasons. Additional guests will include other Cal coaches and student-athletes, as well as regular appearances by Director of Athletics Sandy Barbour.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
37
ALPHABETICAL ROSTER NO 58 94 90 32 85 21 19 2 45 35 60 81 82 68 16 24 47 11 7 93 6 11 61 57 4 91 5 17 55 78 16 22 33 71 30 2 53 31 99 42 73 33 65 52 70 89 54 92 26 87 76 23 7 3 34 25 59 1 97 22
38
NAME POS HT Chris Adcock OL 6-3 Ted Agu DL 6-2 Solomona Aigamaua TE 6-3 David Aknin FB 6-0 Ian Albrecht WR 6-0 Keenan Allen WR/DB 6-3 Bryan Anger P 6-4 Marc Anthony DB 6-0 Jed Barnett PK/P 6-2 Mitchel Bartolo TB 5-8 Tom Berry OL 6-5 Ross Bostock WR 6-2 Jackson Bouza WR 6-0 Mark Brazinski OL 6-2 Allan Bridgford QB 6-3 Trajuan Briggs TB 5-11 Keith Browner LB 6-6 Michael Calvin WR 6-2 D.J. Campbell DB 6-0 Dan Camporeale LB 6-3 Tevin Carter WR 6-3 Sean Cattouse DB 6-2 Justin Cheadle OL 6-2 Austin Clark DL 6-0 Kaelin Clay WR 5-9 Deandre Coleman DL 6-6 Michael Coley DB 6-2 Chris Conte DB 6-3 Michael Costanzo DL 6-2 Alejandro Crosthwaite OL 6-3 Vincenzo D’Amato PK 6-1 Ryan Davis LB 6-4 Covaughn DeBoskie-Johnson TB 5-11 Sam DeMartinis OL 6-5 Nico Dumont FB 6-0 Coleman Edmond WR 6-1 Donovan Edwards OL 6-3 Tyré Ellison DB 6-2 Savai’i Eselu TE 6-3 Steven Fanua LB 6-1 Richard Fisher OL 6-2 Nick Forbes LB 6-1 Dominic Galas OL 6-1 Justin Gates OL 6-3 Geoffrey Gibson OL 6-4 Garry Graffort TE 6-3 Chris Guarnero OL 6-2 Trevor Guyton DL 6-3 Darian Hagan DB 6-0 Spencer Hagan WR 6-4 Derrick Hill DL 6-2 Josh Hill DB 5-11 Austin Hinder QB 6-4 D.J. Holt LB 6-1 J.P. Hurrell LB 6-0 Langston Jackson TB 6-1 Ed Johnston OL 6-2 Marvin Jones WR 6-2 Cameron Jordan DL 6-4 Will Kapp FB 5-10
WT 290 242 245 235 204 195 207 196 212 180 290 190 192 280 201 215 250 204 206 238 190 216 290 280 175 306 207 212 278 280 201 250 207 285 225 208 280 192 242 216 275 225 280 285 325 242 270 285 178 203 308 195 185 250 220 238 275 200 283 227
YR FR FR JR JR JR FR JR SO FR FR JR SO RFR RFR RFR FR SR JR JR RFR FR JR JR RFR FR RFR FR SR SR FR SO JR SO JR RFR JR SR SO JR RFR SR FR SO JR FR SR SR JR SR RFR SR SO FR JR SO SO RFR JR SR JR
EXP HS HS SQ JC SQ HS 2V 1V HS HS JC SQ RS RS RS HS 2V 2V 2V RS HS 2V 2V RS HS RS HS 3V 2V HS 1V RS 1V SQ RS JC 2V SQ SQ RS 2V HS 1V SQ HS 1V 2V 2V 3V RS 3V 1V HS 2V 1V SQ RS 2V 3V 2V
HOMETOWN (LAST SCHOOLS) Rowlett, TX (Dallas Christian HS) Bakersfield, CA (Frontier HS) Honolulu, HI (St. Louis HS) San Carlos, CA (College of San Mateo/Carlmont HS) Sonoma, CA (Sonoma HS) Greensboro, NC (Northern Guilford HS) Camarillo, CA (Camarillo HS) Chandler, AZ (Chandler HS) Camas, WA (Union HS/Mountain View HS) San Diego, CA (Westview HS) Escondido, CA (Palomar CC/Murrieta Valley HS) Sebastopol, CA (Analy HS) Lafayette, CA (De La Salle HS) Basking Ridge, NJ (Immaculata HS) Mission Viejo, CA (Mission Viejo HS) Pacoima, CA (Birmingham HS) Los Angeles, CA (Dorsey HS) San Lorenzo, CA (San Lorenzo HS) North Las Vegas, NV (Cheyenne HS) Lafayette, CA (Acalanes HS) Los Angeles, CA (Santee HS) Chicago, IL (Hubbard HS) Bakersfield, CA (Bakersfield HS) Tampa, FL (Plant HS) Long Beach, CA (Poly HS) Seattle, WA (Garfield HS) Hyattsville, MD (DeMatha Catholic HS) Los Angeles, CA (Loyola HS) Danville, CA (Monte Vista HS) Rosarito Beach, Mexico (Cathedral Catholic HS) Lake Forest, CA (El Toro HS) Los Angeles, CA (Cerritos College/Artesia HS) Chandler, AZ (Hamilton HS) Sun Valley, CA (Notre Dame HS) Novato, CA (Marin Catholic HS) Kingston, NY (Pierce College/Kingston HS) Richmond, CA (Diablo Valley College/Pinole Valley HS) San Francisco, CA (Burton HS) Waipahu, HI (Moanalua HS) Milpitas, CA (Milpitas HS) Ben Lomond, CA (Scotts Valley HS) Frederick, MD (Governor Thomas Johnson HS) Modesto, CA (Central Catholic HS) Reno, NV (Galena HS) Las Vegas, NV (Bishop Gorman HS) Concord, CA (Ygnacio Valley HS) Westminster, CO (Mullen HS) Woodinville, WA (Redmond HS) Los Angeles, CA (Crenshaw HS) Sacramento, CA (Captial Christian HS) Oakland, CA (McClymonds HS) Houston, TX (Klein Forest HS) Steamboat Springs, CO (Steamboat Springs HS) Santa Clarita, CA (Crespi Carmelite HS) San Mateo, CA (Junipero Serra HS) Simi Valley, CA (Simi Valley HS) Fairfield, CA (Armijo HS) Fontana, CA (Etiwanda HS) Chandler, AZ (Chandler HS) Los Gatos, CA (Los Gatos HS)
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
NUMERICAL ROSTER NO NAME
POS
1 Marvin Jones
WR
1 Steve Williams
DB
2 Marc Anthony
DB
2 Coleman Edmond
WR
3 D.J. Holt
3 Jeremy Ross
WR
4 Kaelin Clay
WR
5 Michael Coley
DB
5 Alex Lagemann
WR
6 Alex Logan
DB
6 Tevin Carter
WR
7 D.J. Campbell
DB
7 Austin Hinder
QB
8 C.J. Moncrease
DB
8 Terrance Montgomery
WR
LB
9 Beau Sweeney
QB
10 Brock Mansion
QB
11 Michael Calvin
WR
11 Sean Cattouse
DB
13 Jarred Price
LB
13 Kevin Riley
QB
14 Lucas King
LB
14 Ryan Wertenberger
QB
15 Bryant Nnabuife
DB
16 Allan Bridgford
QB
16 Vincenzo D’Amato
PK
17 Chris Conte
DB
17 Quinn Tedford
WR
18 Mike Mohamed
LB
19 Bryan Anger
P
19 Jarrett Sparks
TE
20 Isaac Lapite
DB
20 Isi Sofele 21 Keenan Allen
TB WR/DB
22 Ryan Davis
LB
22 Will Kapp
FB
23 Josh Hill
DB
23 Dasarte Yarnway
TB
24 Trajuan Briggs
TB
24 Vachel Samuels
DB
25 Langston Jackson
TB
26 Darian Hagan
DB
28 Tyler York
DB
29 Adrian Lee
DB
30 Nico Dumont
FB
30 Mychal Kendricks
LB
31 Tyré Ellison
DB
31 John Tyndall
FB
32 David Aknin
FB
33 Covaughn DeBoskie-Johnson TB 33 Nick Forbes
LB
34 J.P. Hurrell
LB
34 Shane Vereen
TB
35 Mitchel Bartolo
TB
37 Robert Mullins 39 Clark Porter 40 Giorgio Tavecchio
LB LS/LB PK
NO 56 30 99 14 51 88 45 5 20 29 6 86 10 41 80 18 8 8 37 15 95 96 39 13 77 13 50 3 24 72 57 46 76 20 19 48 75 9 40 17 40 72 31 34 84 14 44 1 23 28
NAME POS HT WT YR EXP HOMETOWN (LAST SCHOOLS) Keni Kaufusi DL 6-2 280 RFR RS Salt Lake City, UT (Cottonwood HS) Mychal Kendricks LB 6-0 241 JR 2V Fresno, CA (Hoover HS) Gabe King DL 6-5 265 FR HS Burlington, NC (South Eugene HS/Aiken HS) Lucas King LB 6-4 227 FR HS Berkeley, CA (Berkeley HS) Kameron Krebs LB 6-1 225 SO TR Sunset Beach, HI (Oregon State/Mission Viejo HS/Kahuku HS) Kaulin Krebs WR 6-1 191 SO TR Sunset Beach, HI (Oregon State/Kahuku HS) Spencer Ladner TE 6-7 245 SO 1V Kansas City, MO (Pembroke Hill HS) Alex Lagemann WR 6-2 210 JR 1V Saratoga, CA (Saratoga HS) Isaac Lapite DB 5-10 190 FR HS Eugene, OR (Sheldon HS/South Eugene HS) Adrian Lee DB 6-0 190 FR HS Dallas, TX (Skyline HS) Alex Logan DB 6-2 200 RFR RS Denver, CO (Mullen HS) Brandon Madueno LS 6-2 227 RFR RS West Covina, CA (Damien HS) Brock Mansion QB 6-5 232 JR 2V Dallas, TX (Episcopal School of Dallas) Jerome Meadows LB 6-3 228 SR 1V Spartanburg, SC (San Jose CC/Broome HS) Anthony Miller TE 6-3 261 JR 2V San Jose, CA (Archbishop Mitty HS) Mike Mohamed LB 6-3 245 SR 3V Brawley, CA (Brawley HS) C.J. Moncrease DB 6-2 212 JR 1V Richmond, CA (Laney College/El Cerrito HS) Terrance Montgomery WR 5-11 180 FR HS Los Angeles, CA (West Adams Prep) Robert Mullins LB 6-1 225 SO SQ Los Angeles, CA (Dorsey HS) Bryant Nnabuife DB 6-1 191 SR 2V Houston, TX (Blinn College/Elkins HS) Ernest Owusu DL 6-4 267 JR 2V Nashville, TN (The Hun School of Princeton/Father Ryan HS) Kendrick Payne DL 6-2 299 SO 1V Houston, TX (Klein Forest HS) Clark Porter LS/LB 6-3 230 JR RS Pacific Palisades, CA (Harvard-Westlake School) Jarred Price LB 5-11 213 SR 1V Dallas, TX (Blinn College/Madison HS) Tyler Rigsbee OL 6-4 275 SO SQ Chico, CA (Pleasant Valley HS) Kevin Riley QB 6-2 224 SR 3V Portland, OR (Beaverton HS) Matt Rios LS 6-1 230 SO 1V Phoenix, AZ (North Canyon HS) Jeremy Ross WR 5-11 213 SR 2V Sacramento, CA (Laguna Creek HS) Vachel Samuels DB 6-0 188 RFR RS Compton, CA (Lynwood HS) Mitchell Schwartz OL 6-5 310 JR 2V Pacific Palisades, CA (Palisades Charter HS) Brian Schwenke OL 6-2 285 SO 1V Oceanside, CA (Oceanside HS) David Seawright PK/P 6-3 215 JR 2V San Diego, CA (Rancho Bernardo HS) Charles Siddoway OL 6-4 290 RFR RS Eugene, OR (Sheldon HS) Isi Sofele TB 5-7 186 SO 1V Salt Lake City, UT (Cottonwood HS) Jarrett Sparks TE 6-2 230 SO 1V Merced, CA (Merced HS) Eric Stevens FB 6-0 235 SO 1V San Pedro, CA (Peninsula HS) Matt Summers-Gavin OL 6-3 280 SO 1V San Francisco, CA (St. Ignatius HS) Beau Sweeney QB 6-2 217 SO 1V Fresno, CA (Clovis West HS) Giorgio Tavecchio PK 5-8 173 JR 2V Moraga, CA (Campolindo HS) Quinn Tedford WR 6-0 172 SO SQ Danville, CA (Monte Vista HS) Aaron Tipoti DL 6-2 299 SO 1V Honolulu, HI (Word of Life Academy) Bill Tyndall OL 6-5 285 SO JC Pacific Grove, CA (Monterey Peninsula CC/Pacific Grove HS) John Tyndall FB 6-3 230 JR 2V Pacific Grove, CA (Pacific Grove HS) Shane Vereen TB 5-10 204 JR 2V Valencia, CA (Valencia HS) Jacob Wark TE 6-5 240 FR HS Portland, OR (Jesuit HS) Ryan Wertenberger QB 6-2 222 SO SQ Mission Viejo, CA (Laguna Hills HS) David Wilkerson LB 6-3 235 FR HS Danville, CA (Monte Vista HS) Steve Williams DB 5-10 174 RFR RS Dallas, TX (Skyline HS) Dasarte Yarnway TB 6-0 223 RFR RS San Francisco, CA (Sacred Heart Cathedral HS) Tyler York DB 5-11 196 FR HS Reno, NV (McQueen HS)
COACHING STAFF HEAD COACH: Jeff Tedford, 9th Season (Fresno State, 1983) DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR: Clancy Pendergast, 1st Season (Arizona, 1990) OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR: Andy Ludwig, 2nd Season (Portland State, 1988) SPECIAL TEAMS COORDINATOR/TIGHT ENDS: Jeff Genyk, 1st Season (Bowling Green State, 1982) WIDE RECEIVERS: Kevin Daft, 7th Season (UC Davis, 1999) ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH/RUNNING BACKS: Ron Gould, 14th Season (Oregon, 1988) DEFENSIVE LINE: Tosh Lupoi, 5th Season (Cal, 2005) OFFENSIVE LINE: Steve Marshall, 2nd Season (Louisville, 1979) DEFENSIVE BACKS: Al Simmons, 6th Season (Cal State Hayward, 1987) RECRUITING COORDINATOR/LINEBACKERS: Kenwick Thompson, 4th Season (Harding, 1991)
NO NAME
POS
40 Aaron Tipoti
DL
41 Jerome Meadows
LB
42 Steven Fanua
LB
44 David Wilkerson 45 Jed Barnett
LB PK/P
45 Spencer Ladner
TE
46 David Seawright
PK/P
47 Keith Browner
LB
48 Eric Stevens
FB
50 Matt Rios
LS
51 Kameron Krebs
LB
52 Justin Gates
OL
53 Donovan Edwards
OL
54 Chris Guarnero
OL
55 Michael Costanzo
DL
56 Keni Kaufusi
DL
57 Austin Clark
DL
57 Brian Schwenke
OL
58 Chris Adcock
OL
59 Ed Johnston
OL
60 Tom Berry
OL
61 Justin Cheadle
OL
65 Dominic Galas
OL
68 Mark Brazinski
OL
70 Geoffrey Gibson
OL
71 Sam DeMartinis
OL
72 Mitchell Schwartz
OL
72 Bill Tyndall
OL
73 Richard Fisher
OL
75 Matt Summers-Gavin
OL
76 Derrick Hill
DL
76 Charles Siddoway
OL
77 Tyler Rigsbee
OL
78 Alejandro Crosthwaite
OL
80 Anthony Miller
TE
81 Ross Bostock
WR
82 Jackson Bouza
WR
84 Jacob Wark
TE
85 Ian Albrecht
WR
86 Brandon Madueno
LS
87 Spencer Hagan
WR
88 Kaulin Krebs
WR
89 Garry Graffort
TE
90 Solomona Aigamaua
TE
91 Deandre Coleman
DL
92 Trevor Guyton
DL
93 Dan Camporeale
LB
94 Ted Agu
DL
95 Ernest Owusu
DL
96 Kendrick Payne
DL
97 Cameron Jordan
DL
99 Savai’i Eselu
TE
99 Gabe King
DL
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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PRESEASON TWO-DEEP OFFENSE WR LT LG C
1 Marvin Jones (6-2, 200, Jr.) 11 Michael Calvin (6-2, 204, Jr.)
DEFENSE
54 Chris Guarnero (6-2, 270, Sr.) 65 Dominic Galas (6-1, 280, So.)
DE NG DE OLB
61 Justin Cheadle (6-2, 290, Jr.) 73 Richard Fisher (6-2, 275, Sr.)
ILB
3 D.J. Holt (6-1, 250, Jr.) 30 Mychal Kendricks (6-0, 241, Jr.) 18 Mike Mohamed (6-3, 245, Sr.) 42 Steven Fanua (6-1, 216, RFr.)
75 Matt Summers-Gavin (6-3, 280, So.) 53 Donovan Edwards (6-3, 280, Sr.) 57 Brian Schwenke (6-2, 285, So.) 65 Dominic Galas (6-1, 280, So.)
92 Trevor Guyton (6-3, 280, Jr.) 91 Deandre Coleman (6-6, 306, RFr.) 76 Derrick Hill (6-2, 308, Sr.) 96 Kendrick Payne (6-2, 299, So.) 97 Cameron Jordan (6-4, 283, Sr.) 95 Ernest Owusu (6-4, 267, Jr.) 30 Mychal Kendricks (6-0, 241, Jr.) 41 Jerome Meadows (6-3, 228, Sr.)
RG RT TE
72 Mitchell Schwartz (6-5, 310, Jr.) 71 Sam DeMartinis (6-5, 285, Jr.)
ILB
80 Anthony Miller (6-3, 261, Jr.) 45 Spencer Ladner (6-7, 245, So.)
OLB 47 Keith Browner (6-6, 250, Sr.) 13 Jarred Price (5-11, 213, Sr.)
WR
5 Alex Lagemann (6-2, 210, Jr.) 3 Jeremy Ross (5-11, 213, Sr.)
QB
13 Kevin Riley (6-2, 224, Sr.) 9 Beau Sweeney (6-2, 217, So.)
FB
22 Will Kapp (5-10, 227, Jr.) 48 Eric Stevens (6-0, 235, So.)
TB
34 Shane Vereen (5-10, 204, Jr.) 33 Covaughn DeBoskie-Johnson (5-11, 207, So.)
CB S
26 Darian Hagan (6-0, 178, Sr.) 23 Josh Hill (5-11, 195, So.)
S CB
17 Chris Conte (6-3, 212, Sr.) 8 C.J. Moncrease (6-2, 212, Jr.)
11 Sean Cattouse (6-2, 216, Jr.) 7 D.J. Campbell (6-0, 206, Jr.)
15 Bryant Nnabuife (6-1, 191, Sr.) 2 Marc Anthony (6-0, 196, So.)
SPECIALISTS P
19 Bryan Anger (6-4, 207, Jr.)
PK 40 Giorgio Tavecchio (5-8, 173, Jr.) - OR - 16 Vincenzo D’Amato (6-1, 201, So.) KO 40 Giorgio Tavecchio (5-8, 173, Jr.) - OR - 16 Vincenzo D’Amato (6-1, 201, So.) LS 50 Matt Rios (6-1, 230, So.) HLD 10 Brock Mansion (6-5, 232, Jr.)
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE NO 90 45 81 82 68 24 93 11 61 4 17 55 16 33 71 30 31 99 42 65 89 54 92 34 56 88 5 20 86 10 15 95 24 57 20 9 40 40 34 14 23
NAME PRONUNCIATION PLAYERS SOLOMONA AIGAMAUA..................... .....SAU-ih-mona eye-ING-ah-MOE-ah Mitchel BARTOLO........... bar-TOW-low Ross BOSTOCK................bah-STOCK Jackson BOUZA..................BOOZE-uh Mark BRAZINKSI..............bruh-ZIN-ski TRAJUAN Briggs..................tray-JUAN Dan CAMPOREALE......CAMPO-rel-ee Sean CATTOUSE................ cah-TOOS Justin CHEADLE..................CHEE-dull KAELIN Clay.......................... KAY-lynn Chris CONTE......................... CON-tee Michael COSTANZO....... cuh-STAN-zo VINCENZO D'AMATO.......................... ................ vin-CHEN-zo duh-MAHT-oh COVAUGHN DeBOSKIE-Johnson....... .....................COE-von duh-BOSS-key Sam DeMARTINIS.....DEE-mar-teen-is NICO DUMONT................... DOO-mont TYRÉ Ellison............................ tie-REE Savai'i ESELU...................................... ......................sah-VAH-ee ih-SELL-ew Steven FANUA..................fuh-NOO-uh Dominic GALAS........................ gal-US Garry GRAFFORT.............. GRAPH-ort Chris GUARNERO..........guar-NERR-o Trevor GUYTON......................GUY-ton J.P. HURRELL.........................HUH-rell KENI KAUFUSI..... kenny ka-FOO-see KAULIN Krebs............................... colin Alex LAGEMANN.......... LAH-gah-minn Isaac LAPITE......................LA-pee-tay Brandon MADUENO......muh-DWAYNE-o Brock MANSION...................MAN-shin Bryant NNABUIFE........... nuh-BOO-fee Ernest OWUSU............... oh-WOO-sue VACHEL Samuels..................VAH-chel Brian SCHWENKE...........SHWANK-ee ISI SOFELE............. EE-see so-fell-AY BEAU Sweeney................................ bo Giorgio TAVECCHIO............................ ..................................... tuh-VECK-ee-o Aaron TIPOTI......................tee-PO-tee Shane VEREEN.................. vuh-REEN Ryan WERTENGERGER..................... .................................. WERE-tin-berger DASARTE Yarnway..........duh-SAR-tay COACHES Jeff GENYK............................ jenn-ICK Tosh LUPOI.............................loo-POY
2010 SEASON OUTLOOK
Preseason All-American Mike Mohamed has racked up the honors prior to the 2010 campaign.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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SEASON OUTLOOK
W
hen Cal takes the field for the first time in 2010, the Golden Bears will do so as one of the most accomplished Pac-10 teams of the last eight years. Cal's 67 victories (an average of 8.4 wins per season) are the second-most by a Pac-10 team during that period. The Bears have a current school-record-tying string of eight consecutive winning seasons, making head coach Jeff Tedford one of only eight FBS coaches with an active run of at least that length. Cal has also won five bowl games, made seven bowl appearances and won seven Big Games over Stanford during Tedford’s tenure – all at least equaling school records for a Cal coach. The goal for Cal is to turn all the success of the last eight years into a Rose Bowl trip by winning the Pac-10 title in a competitive conference that fielded seven bowl teams a year ago. “Our goal is to win a Pac-10 title,” said Tedford, in his ninth season at Cal and the longest-tenured among Pac-10 head coaches. The 2010 Bears have 19 players returning that started at least five games a year ago with three of those – Bryan Anger (Jr., P), Anthony Miller (Jr., TE) and Mike Mohamed (Sr., LB) – earning 2010 preseason AllAmerican honors. The trio is joined by 10 teammates – Sean Cattouse (Jr., DB), Chris Guarnero (Sr., OL), Derrick Hill (Sr., DL), Marvin Jones (Jr., WR), Cameron Jordan (Sr., DL), Mychal Kendricks (Jr., LB), Jeremy Ross (Sr., WR/RET), Mitchell Schwartz (Jr., OL), Matt SummersGavin (So., OL) and Shane Vereen (Jr., TB) – that have notched preseason All-Pac-10 honors. Add in an experienced senior quarterback in Kevin Riley that has won 15 of his 23 career starts and the pieces look to be in place for Cal to once again be a strong competitor for the conference crown in 2010. “We have a strong group of core players that have experience and talent,” said Tedford. “I’m excited to get the 2010 season started.” Another reason to be optimistic for both 2010 and beyond is the recruiting class the Bears signed last February that ranked as high as No. 11 nationally by Rivals. “We feel like we addressed a lot of our needs,” said Tedford. “The class has a good balance of offense and defense, size, athleticism and speed. We’re looking forward to several members of this
42
group coming in and competing to make contributions right away.” Players on the 2010 roster will have the opportunity to play for one of the top coaching staffs in the nation, a group that has combined for 130 seasons of coaching experience at the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision level and added another 23 campaigns in the NFL. “We have a fantastic group of coaches who will educate the young men in our program both in football and life,” said Tedford. “We have always had a tremendous coaching staff that cares about our players on and off the field.” Defensive coordinator Clancy Pendergast and special teams coordinator/tight ends coach Jeff Genyk are the two newest members of the staff that also includes second-year offensive coordinator Andy Ludwig, who had Cal’s offense ranked in the top half of the Pac-10 in nearly every offensive
category in 2009. Kevin Daft (wide receivers), Ron Gould (associate head coach/running backs), Tosh Lupoi (defensive line), Steve Marshall (offensive line), Al Simmons (defensive backs) and Kenwick Thompson (recruiting coordinator/linebackers) also return to the full-time coaching staff from last year. Pendergast has been an NFL defensive coordinator the past six seasons and was in that role for the Arizona Cardinals when the team reached Super Bowl XLIII following the 2008 season. “Clancy has been a defensive coordinator on football’s biggest stage and has already been a tremendous asset to our football program before he has even coached a game at Cal,” said Tedford. “He did a tremendous job this past spring installing our defense. Our players adapted quickly to the aggressive schemes he and his defensive staff
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
will work with them to employ.” Tedford is also excited to add the services of the versatile Genyk, a former head coach at Eastern Michigan who has a resume that encompasses 18 seasons as a collegiate coach. “Jeff is a well-rounded coach that has proven he has all the qualities we are looking for in members of our coaching staff,” said Tedford. “I am excited to see what our special teams unit will do this season. Our guys made vast improvements under his leadership in the spring.” Cal will be faced with the challenge of replacing 10 starters from last year’s club, including first-round NFL Draft picks in defensive lineman Tyson Alualu (Jacksonville Jaguars, 10th overall) and tailback Jahvid Best (Detroit Lions, 30th overall). Alualu, along with defensive back Syd’Quan Thompson (Denver Broncos) and offensive lineman Mike Tepper (Dallas Cowboys) were first-team All-Pac-10 players in 2009. Best began last year’s campaign as a legitimate Heisman Trophy candidate and still earned second-team AllPac-10 honors despite missing the final four games of the season due to injury. The 2010 campaign marks Cal’s final season in the current configuration of Memorial Stadium, which has already begun undergoing renovations that will move the Bears’ 2011 home schedule to AT&T Park in San Francisco before Cal returns to Berkeley in 2012. Cal has seven games on its 2010 home slate beginning with a seasonopening visit from UC Davis on Sept. 4 for a game that will be televised by Comcast SportsNet California. Other home opponents include Colorado (Sept. 11, Fox Sports Net), UCLA (Oct. 9) and Arizona State (Oct. 23), before the Bears conclude the 2010 regular season with three consecutive Pac-10 home contests against Oregon (Nov. 13), Stanford (Nov. 20, Fox Sports Net) and Washington (Nov. 27). The Bears’ first 2010 road game will be at Nevada on Sept. 17 for a nationally-televised Friday night ESPN2 tilt. Cal will also play at Arizona to start its Pac-10 slate on Sept. 25, as well as at USC (Oct. 16, Fox Sports Net), Oregon State (Nov. 30) and Washington State (Nov. 6). Additional television broadcast dates are expected to be announced at a later date. The following is a position-by-position look at the Bears heading into the 2010 campaign.
games (2, 9th) and 250-yard passing games (6, 10th), and on the verge of moving into the school's top 10 on several other lists. Sweeney moved into the team’s No. 2 quarterback role in 2009 after opening the season in the third spot on the depth chart. He appeared in his first three collegiate games, completing 5-of-9 passes for 45 yards Mansion, who doubles as the team’s holder, threw only one incomplete pass in 2009 after seeing spot duty the previous season when he was 3-of-6 for 26 yards in late-game situations. Kevin Riley
RUNNING BACK (12) TAILBACK (7)
5 Mitchell Bartolo (5-8, 180, FR, HS) 3 24 Trajuan Briggs (5-11, 215, FR, HS) 33 Covaughn DeBoskie-Johnson (5-11, 207, SO, 1V) 25 Langston Jackson (6-1, 238, SO, 1V) 20 Isi Sofele (5-7, 186, SO, 1V) 34 Shane Vereen (5-10, 204, JR, 2V) 23 Dasarte Yarnway (6-0, 223, RFR, RS)
OFFENSE Cal returns eight starters on offense, including four linemen, from a group that ranked in the upper half of the Pac-10 in nearly every statistical category a year ago under veteran offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Andy Ludwig in his first year at Cal. The Bears were as high as tied for second in the league with a school record for fewest turnovers (17), as well third in rushing offense (169.5 ypg) and first downs (264), fourth in total offense (392.2 ypg) and scoring offense (29.1 ppg), and fifth in pass offense (222.7) and third-down conversions (36.2%). In addition to the four offensive linemen, the Bears return a quarterback in senior Kevin Riley who has a 15-8 record in 23 career starts and threw for 2,850 yards a year ago, as well as their top rusher and receiver in juniors Shane Vereen (952 yards, 12 TD) and Marvin Jones (43 receptions, 651 yards, 6 TD). “We have an experienced group of offensive players both on the line and at the skill positions that we are counting on to perform at a high-level this season,” said Tedford.
FULLBACK (5)
Beau Sweeney yards to rank fourth on the Bears’ all-time single-season list. He completed 209-of-382 passes with 18 touchdowns to tie for 10th on the school's single-season list, while being picked off eight times. Riley is the Pac10’s active career leader in wins (15) and touchdown passes (37), while equaling the 28 games played by Washington’s Jake Locker and ranking second to Locker’s 28 starts. Riley is already among Cal’s all-time leaders in touchdown passes (8th), 300-yard passing
2 David Aknin (6-0, 235, JR, JC) 3 30 Nico Dumont (6-0, 225, RFR, RS) 22 Will Kapp (5-10, 227, JR, 2V) 48 Eric Stevens (6-0, 235, SO, 1V) 31 John Tyndall (6-3, 230, JR, 2V) Cal has employed a two-tailback rotation in recent years and it has worked well. Over the last seven seasons that the Bears have had at least two rushers with more than 600 yards, the list looks like a who’s who of all-time greats with tailbacks that include J.J. Arrington, Jahvid Best, Adimchinobe Echemandu, Justin Forsett, Marshawn Lynch and Shane Vereen. The last two seasons it has been Best and Vereen.
QUARTERBACK (6)
6 Allan Bridgford (6-3, 201, RFR, RS) 1 7 Austin Hinder (6-4, 185, FR, HS) 10 Brock Mansion (6-5, 232, JR, 2V) 13 Kevin Riley (6-2, 224, SR, 3V) 9 Beau Sweeney (6-2, 217, SO, 1V) 14 Ryan Wertenberger (6-2, 222, SO, SQ) There will be competition for the starting quarterback role once again just as the Bears have had for the last couple of seasons. “We will have competition for the starting quarterback job in 2010,” confirmed Tedford. “Kevin Riley has a bit of an edge at the start of training camp because of the amount of game experience he has, but we have other quarterbacks that will challenge him for the starting spot. It’s a good situation to know that we have more than one player capable of doing the job.” Riley started all 13 games in 2009 and quietly posted impressive totals, passing for 2,850
Shane Vereen
Will Kapp
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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2010 OUTLOOK (continued) With Best having moved on to the National Football League when he was selected in the first round of the 2010 NFL Draft last April, Vereen is now the team’s top running back. He returns for a third season in 2010 after compiling combined totals of 1,667 rushing yards and 16 touchdowns on the ground over the last two years while serving primarily as the second option behind Best. When an injury forced Best to miss the final four games of 2009, Vereen stepped in and responded with three 100-yard efforts while totaling 566 rushing yards and six touchdowns on the ground over the period, including his memorable Big Game performance in a win at Stanford when he rushed 42 times for 193 yards and three touchdowns. “Shane Vereen is one of the top running backs in the nation,” said Tedford. “But, it’s also important to emphasize the importance of having depth in the backfield, and we have several players that will compete for the spot of our second featured back to spell Shane. We have had a lot of success employing the two-tailback system in the past and plan to continue to do so.” Although no one has separated himself from a strong group as the frontrunner to join Vereen, there is no shortage of candidates and the competition to become his running partner will be stiff. Covaughn DeBoskie-Johnson’s 211 rushing yards were third on the team behind Vereen (952) and Best (867) last season, and he heads into training camp competing along with several others, including Trajuan Briggs, Isi Sofele and Dasarte Yarnway to become Vereen’s running mate in 2010. There will be competition to replace Brian Holley as the starting fullback to fulfill a position that primarily acts as a lead blocker for the tailback. Will Kapp, Eric Stevens and John Tyndall all have game experience at the position. “Our fullback plays a key role on our team, primarily in terms of blocking,” said Tedford. “We feel we have several candidates that can fill the role.”
Jeremy Ross
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Alex Lagemann and Michael Calvin are the only other returning wide receivers with collegiate catches. “We are excited about the emergence of Marvin Jones,” said Tedford. “We also feel like we have a couple of other solid veterans to play alongside him, but there are several newcomers that we expect will complete to play immediately.” The team’s five incoming freshman newcomers include five-star recruit Keenan Allen, who scored an amazing 53 touchdowns as a high school senior, as well as Tevin Carter, Kaelin Clay, Coleman Edmond and Terrance Montgomery.
TIGHT END (7)
Marvin Jones
WIDE RECEIVER (15)
5 Ian Albrecht (6-0, 204, JR, SQ) 8 21 Keenan Allen (6-3, 195, FR, HS) 81 Ross Bostock (6-2, 190, SO, SQ) 82 Jackson Bouza (6-0, 192, RFR, RS) 11 Michael Calvin (6-2, 204, JR, 2V) 6 Tevin Carter (6-3, 190, FR, HS) 4 Kaelin Clay (5-9, 175, FR, HS) 2 Coleman Edmond (6-1, 208, JR, JC) 87 Spencer Hagan (6-4, 203, RFR, RS) 1 Marvin Jones (6-2, 200, JR, 2V) 88 Kaulin Krebs (6-1, 191, SO, TR) 5 Alex Lagemann (6-2, 210, JR, 1V) 8 Terrance Montgomery (5-11, 180, FR, HS) 3 Jeremy Ross (5-11, 213, SR, 2V) 17 Quinn Tedford (6-0, 172, SO, SQ) Marvin Jones has established himself as the Bears’ top receiver after a solid season in 2009 when he led the Bears with 43 receptions for 651 yards and six touchdowns, but even Jones is not a household name in college football as all of his numbers fell short of the list of Pac-10 leaders in 2009. Most of the team’s 214 completions and 2,895 passing yards that ranked fifth in the Pac-10 a year ago were spread out among six different pass catchers that had more than 20 receptions and 200 receiving yards each. Jeremy Ross is the only other returning wide receiver among the group of six that reached the totals, as did returning tight end Anthony Miller and returning tailback Shane Vereen. Ross caught 22 balls for 344 yards and one score.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
0 Solomona Aigamaua (6-3, 245, JR, SQ) 9 99 Savai’i Eselu (6-3, 242, JR, SQ) 89 Garry Graffort (6-3, 242, SR, 1V) 45 Spencer Ladner (6-7, 245, SO, 1V) 80 Anthony Miller (6-3, 261, JR, 2V) 19 Jarrett Sparks (6-2, 230, SO, 1V) 84 Jacob Wark (6-5, 240, FR, HS) Anthony Miller took control of the starting tight end job in 2009 and is looking for an even bigger breakout year this season. Boasting a prototypical NFL physique, Miller has begun to catch the nation’s eye as evidenced by the 2010 preseason honorable mention All-American honor he received from College Football Insiders and the first-team AllPac-10 selections bestowed upon him by Lindy’s and Sporting News. After catching only one pass for two yards as a true freshman in 2008 – albeit an important game-winning score in the waning moments of a 24-17 Emerald Bowl victory over Miami – Miller erupted in 2009 with 26 receptions for 357 yards to rank third on the team in both categories despite missing a pair of games due to injury. “Anthony Miller had an excellent season last year and a lot more people should learn a whole lot more about him in 2010 if he plays the way we expect him to,” said Tedford.
Anthony Miller
Spencer Ladner Spencer Ladner and Jarrett Sparks also have game experience at the position with Ladner having played in seven games last season and Sparks participating in all 13 games, contributing three catches for 45 yards.
OFFENSIVE LINE (19)
8 Chris Adcock (6-3, 290, FR, HS) 5 60 Tom Berry (6-5, 290, JR, JC) 68 Mark Brazinski (6-2, 280, RFR, RS) 61 Justin Cheadle (6-2, 290, JR, 2V) 78 Alejandro Crosthwaite (6-3, 280, FR, HS) 71 Sam DeMartinis (6-5, 285, JR, SQ) 53 Donovan Edwards (6-3, 280, SR, 2V) 73 Richard Fisher (6-2, 275, SR, 2V) 65 Dominic Galas (6-1, 280, SO, 1V) 52 Justin Gates (6-3, 285, JR, SQ) 70 Geoffrey Gibson (6-4, 325, FR, HS) 54 Chris Guarnero (6-2, 270, SR, 2V) 59 Ed Johnston (6-2, 275, RFR, RS) 77 Tyler Rigsbee (6-4, 275, SO, SQ) 72 Mitchell Schwartz (6-5, 310, JR, 2V) 57 Brian Schwenke (6-2, 285, SO, 1V) 76 Charles Siddoway (6-4, 290, RFR, RS) 75 Matt Summers-Gavin (6-3, 280, SO, 1V) 72 Bill Tyndall (6-5, 285, SO, JC) The Bears have four returning starters coming back in 2010 that combined to fill 47 of 65 possible starting offensive line assignments last year. Justin Cheadle (right guard), Chris Guarnero (center) and Mitchell Schwartz (right tackle) each started all 13 games at their respective positions, while Matt Summers-Gavin made eight starts at left guard, with the Bears winning seven of those contests. The names in the starting lineup are expected to be familiar this season but their positions could change as the Bears try to fill a void created by the departure of 2009 starting left tackle and first-team All-Pac-10 selection Mike Tepper, who signed an undrafted free agent contract with the Dallas Cowboys. Summers-Gavin put in the most time at the key left tackle spot last spring but Schwartz, who has started all 26 games possible over the past two
Justin Cheadle seasons and captured the team’s Most Valuable Offensive Lineman award last year over Tepper, can also play the position and started the team’s final 10 games there in 2008. Guarnero is expected to return to his role as the club’s starting center but also has the flexibility to play guard, while Dominic Galas and Donovan Edwards are both capable snappers. Brian Schwenke, one of three players to see action as a true freshman in 2009, should also see plenty of action.
Mitchell Schwartz
Matt Summers-Gavin Richard Fisher and Sam DeMartinis are expected to be a major part of the team's plans as well. “We have a lot of talent, experience and versatility on the offensive line,” said Tedford. “One of the primary factors in having success at this position is forming a group of people that can play together as a cohesive unit, and we feel that we have established that.”
Chris Guarnero
Donovan Edwards
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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2010 OUTLOOK (continued) DEFENSE Cal plans to remain a 3-4 team in 2010 but with a decidedly different look under first-year defensive coordinator Clancy Pendergast, who will work with his defense to employ an aggressive approach designed to put tremendous pressure on opposing offenses. Pendergast has spent the last six seasons as a defensive coordinator in the NFL and two years ago called the shots for an Arizona Cardinals defense that’s stellar play helped the club to its first Super Bowl appearance. “Fans will see an aggressive Cal defense that puts a lot of pressure on opponents in 2010,” said Tedford. “Our players will have ample opportunities to show their athleticism and talent in the schemes that we will employ.” Pendergast’s charge is to revive a Bears defensive unit that had posted some of the Pac10’s best defensive numbers for several seasons, including second in points allowed during the first seven years of head coach Jeff Tedford’s tenure, before sliding in most categories in 2009 when the team’s scoring defense (25.5 ppg) and total defense (378.8 ypg) were seventh, and its pass defense ninth (266.8 ypg). Pendergast will have a preseason All-American to lead the unit back to prominence in 2010 in firstteam All-Pac-10 selection Mike Mohamed, who led the conference with 112 tackles a year ago.
Cameron Jordan
DEFENSIVE LINE (12)
LINEBACKER (16)
4 Ted Agu (6-2, 242, FR, HS) 9 57 Austin Clark (6-0, 280, RFR, RS) 91 Deandre Coleman (6-6, 306, RFR, RS) 55 Michael Costanzo (6-2, 278, SR, 2V) 92 Trevor Guyton (6-3, 285, SO, 1V) 76 Derrick Hill (6-2, 308, SR, 3V) 97 Cameron Jordan (6-4, 283, SR, 3V) 56 Keni Kaufusi (6-2, 280, RFR, RS) 99 Gabe King (6-5, 265, FR, HS) 95 Ernest Owusu (6-4, 267, JR, 2V) 96 Kendrick Payne (6-2, 299, SO, 1V) 40 Aaron Tipoti (6-2, 299, SO, 1V) The defensive line was a strength of the 2009 team and is expected to be once again, despite the loss of first-team All-Pac-10 choice Tyson Alualu to the NFL. Alualu had been the team’s top defensive lineman for the past three seasons and his departure creates an opportunity for Cameron Jordan to fill the void and showcase his exceptional athleticism and talents in his final collegiate season. Sporting News called Jordan “The Next Big Thing” for Cal in their preview of the 2010 Bears, while Lindy’s named him the Pac-10 No. 8 NFL talent. Jordan has been strong playing on the opposite end of the line from Alualu for the past three years, earning honorable mention All-Pac-10 honors for each of the past two seasons and playing in 38 of 39 possible games with 20 starts, but in 2010 he is expected to take over the leadership of the team’s defensive line. Jordan leads all active Cal players with career totals of 21.5 tackles for loss and 11.0 sacks, to go along with 113 tackles including a career-high 48 in 2009 when he also posted a career-best 6.0 sacks. His numbers in 2008 were comparable when over 12 games played and seven starts he had 47 tackles, a career-high 11.0 tackles for loss and 4.0 sacks.
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“Although we lost Tyson Alualu to the NFL, we still have excellent talent and tremendous experience on the defensive line,” said Tedford. “Cameron Jordan has an opportunity to emerge as one of the best defensive players in the conference, and we have several other defensive ends and nose guards looking to accompany him and make up a solid unit.” Derrick Hill, Kendrick Payne and Aaron Tipoti all have experience as the team’s starting nose guard to line up next to Jordan, as all three were effective while split starting duties in 2009. Hill is the veteran, playing in 37 games with 18 starts and recording 76 tackles over the past four seasons that includes three games as a true freshman in 2006 before his redshirt season was cut short by an injury. Hill played in 10 games and started eight last year, posting 18 tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss and 2.0 sacks. Tipoti started four games in 2009 and contributed 21 tackles and 0.5 tackles for loss, while Payne started twice and registered 13 tackles, 4.0 tackles for loss, 1.0 sack, one fumble recovery and one pass breakup. Both Tipoti and Payne played in 12 of 13 contests. Trevor Guyton, Deandre Coleman and Ernest Owusu have game experience at defensive end and will compete for playing time along with Keni Kaufusi and newcomer Gabe King. Kaufusi was Cal's Scout Team Player of the Year on defense in 2009, while King has been ranked as high as the nation’s No. 5 incoming defensive end by Rivals.
Derrick Hill
Trevor Guyton
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
7 Keith Browner (6-6, 250, SR, 2V) 4 93 Dan Camporeale (6-3, 238, RFR, RS) 22 Ryan Davis (6-4, 250, JR, RS) 42 Steven Fanua (6-1, 216, RFR, RS) 33 Nick Forbes (6-1, 225, FR, HS) 3 D.J. Holt (6-1, 250, JR, 2V) 34 J.P. Hurrell (6-0, 220, SO, 1V) 30 Mychal Kendricks (6-0, 241, JR, 2V) 14 Lucas King (6-4, 227, FR, HS) 51 Kameron Krebs (6-1, 225, SO, TR) 41 Jerome Meadows (6-3, 228, SR, 1V) 18 Mike Mohamed (6-3, 245, SR, 3V) 37 Robert Mullins (6-1, 225, SO, SQ) 39 Clark Porter (6-3, 230, JR, RS) 13 Jarred Price (5-11, 213, SR, 1V) 44 David Wilkerson (6-3, 235, FR, HS) Mike Mohamed has been recognized as one of the top linebackers in the nation prior to the 2010 season as evidenced by the multitude of preseason All-American teams he has been named to and the number of high-profile award watch lists he is on. But other than the presence of Cal’s active career leading tackler in the starting unit, one of the most interest training camp battles for playing time could be at linebacker. The Bears also have a pair of part-time starters back from a year ago in D.J. Holt (37 tackles) and Mychal Kendricks (71 tackles), who ranked a distant second to Mohamed’s Pac-10 leading 112 tackles in 2009. Both players have previous experience starting on both the inside and outside. Keith Browner and Jarred Price are expected to see action at outside linebacker as well. “We have traditionally had outstanding play from our linebackers and we expect 2010 to be no different,” said Tedford. “Mike Mohamed is one of
Mike Mohamed
Mychal Kendricks
Sean Cattouse
the nation’s best at his position and a tremendous leader. His experience and that of a couple of other veterans should help bring along a strong group of young players that should have the opportunity to contribute right away in their collegiate careers.”
D.J. Holt
DEFENSIVE BACK (17)
1 Keenan Allen (6-3, 195, FR, HS) 2 2 Marc Anthony (6-0, 196, SO, 1V) 7 D.J. Campbell (6-0, 206, JR, 2V) 11 Sean Cattouse (6-2, 216, JR, 2V) 5 Michael Coley (6-2, 207, FR, HS) 17 Chris Conte (6-3, 212, SR, 3V) 31 Tyré Ellison (6-2, 192, SO, SQ) 26 Darian Hagan (6-0, 178, SR, 3V) 23 Josh Hill (5-11, 195, SO, 1V) 20 Isaac Lapite (5-10, 190, FR, HS) 29 Adrian Lee (6-0, 190, FR, HS) 6 Alex Logan (6-2, 200, RFR, RS) 8 C.J. Moncrease (6-2, 212, JR, 1V) 15 Bryant Nnabuife (6-1, 191, SR, 2V) 24 Vachel Samuels (6-0, 188, RFR, RS) 1 Steve Williams (5-10, 174, RFR, RS) 28 Tyler York (5-11, 196, FR, HS)
Kendrick Payne
There will be familiar faces missing from the Cal secondary in 2010. Gone is cornerback Syd’Quan Thompson. Gone are safeties Brett Johnson and Marcus Ezeff. Gone are the 99 games of starting experience the trio combined for during their Cal careers, including 68 in the past two seasons. Thompson was drafted in the seventh round of the 2010 NFL Draft by the Denver Broncos after a Cal career that included a pair of first-team All-Pac-10 selections, as well as school records in games played and started (52), and pass breakups (36). Despite the departure of the trio, there will also be familiar faces returning to the Cal secondary. Sean Cattouse started the team’s final six contests at safety last year, replacing Ezeff as the starter for the final five regular-season games and Johnson at the Poinsettia Bowl. Cattouse is a first-team 2010 preseason All-Pac-10 choice according to both Lindy’s and Sporting News after earning honorable mention All-Pac-10 recognition following a 2009 campaign in which he totaled 37
Darian Hagan
Bryant Nnabuife
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2010 OUTLOOK (continued) tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss, an interception and three pass breakups. The other safety is expected to be Chris Conte, who began his career by earning Freshman AllAmerica honors in his first year on the Cal campus in 2007 but has been shuffled back-and-forth between safety and cornerback primarily in a reserve role since. Josh Hill (5), Darian Hagan (4) and Bryant Nnabuife (4) split time as the starting cornerback opposite Thompson in 2009 and are expected to battle for two starting jobs this season. Hagan started all 13 games opposite Thompson in 2008 and the first three in 2009, before Hill replaced him for five of the next six contests. Nnabuife took over the job for the final four contests. Marc Anthony is another player expected to compete for a starting cornerback position. D.J. Campbell and C.J. Moncrease are expected to challenge Cattouse and Conte for playing time at safety. Five-star incoming freshman Keenan Allen is also expected to contribute to the defensive backfield in nickel packages in addition to his role as a wide receiver. “We have a number of players in our defensive backfield that had the first chance to get their feet wet at the collegiate level last season,” said Tedford. “The experience they gained a year ago will help them become better and more productive players in 2010 and beyond. We’re excited to see who will emerge from this group.”
Chris Conte
SPECIALIST (9) PUNTER (3)
9 Bryan Anger (6-4, 207, JR, 2V) 1 45 Jed Barnett (6-2, 212, FR, HS) 46 David Seawright (6-3, 215, JR, 2V)
KICKER (4)
5 Jed Barnett (6-2, 212, FR, HS) 4 16 Vincenzo D’Amato (6-1, 201, SO, 1V) 46 David Seawright (6-3, 215, JR, 2V) 40 Giorgio Tavecchio (5-8, 173, JR, 2V)
LONG SNAP (3)
6 Brandon Madueno (6-2, 227, RFR, RS) 8 39 Clark Porter (6-3, 230, JR, RS) 50 Matt Rios (6-1, 230, SO, 1V)
HOLDER (1)
10 Brock Mansion (6-5, 232, JR, 2V) Bryan Anger
Vincenzo D’Amato
Giorgio Tavecchio
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
All of Cal’s primary specialists return in 2010, led by preseason All-American punter Bryan Anger. Last year, Anger earned honorable mention All-American and first-team All-Pac-10 honors after a second-team selection by the league the previous campaign. Anger has averaged 42.3 yards per punt over his first two collegiate seasons and posted four of the longest 12 punts in school history, including a 76-yarder in the 2008 Big Game vs. Stanford that is the fourth-longest in school history as well as a 75-yard effort in the same contest that is tied for fifth. He has been on the watch list for the Ray Guy Award in each of his first two collegiate campaigns, and in addition to being a unanimous choice by the major preseason publications as a first-team All-Pac-10 punter in 2010, has also been named the nation’s No. 4 draft-eligible punter prior to the season by Phil Steele. “Bryan Anger is one of the best punters in the nation,” said Tedford. “He has done an outstanding job for us the last two seasons and we have every reason to believe that will continue.” Vincenzo D’Amato (52 points, 7-12 FG, 31-31 PAT) and Giorgio Tavecchio (38 points, 8-12 FG, 14-14 PAT) are expected to compete once again for specific roles in the team’s kicking game after sharing those duties in 2009. “We feel that our kickers will continue to improve in 2010 and regardless of what role each plays they will do a good job,” said Tedford. Long snapper Matt Rios and holder Brock Mansion are also both back. The individual components of the team’s return game have not yet been determined but top candidates based upon their performances in 2009 include Jeremy Ross (14 kick returns, 276 yards; 9 punt returns, 192 yards, 1 TD) and Isi Sofele (12 kick returns, 248 yards). Shane Vereen led the team in kick returns (24) and kick return yardage (551) a year ago, and even returned a pair of punts for 10 yards, but it is unlikely he will be used frequently in either role in 2010 due to his increased load as a running back. “We have players in skilled positions that can handle the return the game, and we'll incorporate them into those roles during training camp,” said Tedford.
2010 COACHING STAFF
JEFF TEDFORD Head Coach
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HEAD COACH JEFF TEDFORD JEFF TEDFORD
THE TEDFORD FILE Birthdate................................... Nov. 2, 1961 Hometown.................................Downey, CA High School.................................Warren HS College............................... Fresno State ’83 Bachelor’s in Physical Education Junior College.....................Cerritos College Family........................................ wife, Donna sons, Taylor and Quinn
COACHING AT CAL • Has posted a 67-35 (.657) record in eight seasons as head coach to equal Pappy Waldorf for the most wins in the school’s modern era and the third-most victories all time. • Has led the Golden Bears to eight straight winning seasons and seven consecutive bowl games. • Is 5-2 in bowl games and the only Cal coach with more than two bowl victories. • Is 7-1 in the Big Game after inheriting a seven-game losing streak in the series, and has equaled Pappy Waldorf’s school record for Big Game victories. • Has 13 wins over ranked teams in his first eight seasons, compared to Cal's three in the eight campaigns prior to his arrival. • Has had Cal among the nation’s top 25 in each of the last six years and reached the top 10 in five of the last six campaigns. • 88 percent of his seniors (144 of 163 student-athletes) have earned their college degrees and/or gone on to NFL careers.
PLAYING EXPERIENCE • Honorable mention All-American at Fresno State, where he left as the school’s all-time record holder in passing yards (4,872) and touchdown passes (35). • Set single-season school marks in 1982 for passing yards (2,993) and TD passes (24). • Accumulated a 54 percent completion rate in six seasons in the CFL.
BOWLS (13) 2009 Poinsettia.............................. California 2008 Emerald................................ California 2007 Armed Forces....................... California 2006 Holiday................................. California 2005 Las Vegas............................. California 2004 Holiday................................. California 2003 Insight................................... California 2001 Fiesta....................................... Oregon 2000 Holiday.................................... Oregon 1999 Sun.......................................... Oregon 1998 Aloha....................................... Oregon 1993 Aloha...............................Fresno State 1992 Freedom..........................Fresno State *Season in which bowl was played
COACHING HONORS 2006 Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Finalist 2004 Pac-10 Coach of the Year 2002 Pac-10 Coach of the Year
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Head Coach • 9th Season at Cal
J
eff Tedford has established Cal as one of the elite football programs in the Pac-10 and lifted the Golden Bears into the national discussion on a consistent basis during his tenure as the school’s head coach. The Bears have won the second-most games of any Pac-10 school other during his first eight seasons on the job, have finished among the nation’s top 25 in four of the last six seasons and been ranked in the nation’s top 10 at some point in five of the last six campaigns. Cal also has a current school-record run of seven straight bowl appearances and is 5-2 in the postseason under Tedford, making him the first Cal mentor with more than two bowl victories. He is one of only eight current Football Bowl Subdivision coaches to have a current string of at least eight consecutive winning seasons, with only six accomplishing the feat at the same school. In addition, Tedford is tied for Cal’s modern-era record for victories with a 67-35 (.657) all-time mark at the school. He will begin the 2010 season tied with the legendary Pappy Waldorf (67-32-4, 1947-56) as Cal’s modern-era victory leader and is also tied for third with Waldorf on the all-time win list behind Andy Smith (74-16-7, 1916-25)
“This is a dream come true … I am here to provide leadership, to create an environment for these athletes, both athletically and academically, that they can flourish in … our team will be disciplined, our team will play hard, our team will play fast, they will have a lot of fun, but they will do it with class … it will be something that you can always be proud of as Cal boosters, alumni and supporters. I have a goal and a vision that the University of California, through hard work and dedication, can get to where we are competing for the Pac-10 championship and at a national level. I am going to put together a staff that is going to care for the young men both on and off the field, that are great teachers, interested in their academics, interested in these kids in how they grow up, and that we can make an impression on their character that will last further than just the University of California … again, I want to let you all know just how excited I am to be here, and how much of a great opportunity I believe that this is, that we can get this turned around and headed in the right direction.” – Jeff Tedford opening statement introductory press conference December 12, 2001
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
and James Schaeffer (73-16-8, 1909-15), with the majority of Schaeffer’s victories coming when Cal played rugby rather than football. Only two other head football coaches in Cal history have coached 100 games, with Waldorf (103) and Stub Allison (102, 1935-44) the others. Tedford has already set the school record with 23 road wins and is also an impressive 41-27 (.603) against Pac-10 teams, finishing lower than fifth only once. To top it off, he is 7-1 in the Big Game, equaling Waldorf’s school record of seven wins against Stanford. All of this at the head of a program that won just one game in 2001, the year prior to his arrival. The Cal football renaissance rates as one of the most impressive turnarounds in college football history. Not only have Tedford’s teams got it done on the field, they’ve also got it done in the classroom. His players have been recognized as Pac-10 AllAcademic honorees 83 times since his arrival. Of the 163 seniors who have played for Tedford in his first eight seasons, 144 (88%) have earned their college degrees and/or gone on to NFL careers. Tedford’s success with the Cal program has resulted in local devotion and national attention. Cal drew an average of 59,472 fans in 2009. The Bears played in front of a sellout home crowd of 71,799 vs. USC on Oct. 3, 2009, and have played in front of at least 50,000 fans at Memorial Stadium for 37 games in a row. In 2006, the Bears
88% percent of the seniors to play for Tedford have earned their degrees and/or gone on to NFL careers.
set school records for average fans per home game (64,318) and overall spectators (450,223). The following year in 2007, Cal set a record with 41,366 season-ticket holders. Nationally, the Golden Bears have also had multiple Heisman Trophy candidates under Tedford’s tutelage, with J.J. Arrington (2004), Marshawn Lynch (2006), DeSean Jackson (2007) and Jahvid Best (2009) among top candidates at some point in the season, and Arrington finishing eighth in the final voting.
Other national recognition has come the Bears way in recent years. Alex Mack was the winner of the 2008 Draddy Award (often referred to as the Academic Heisman and now known as the William V. Campbell Trophy). In 2006, the Bears had a pair of players collect prestigious national awards. Jackson was the recipient of the inaugural Randy Moss Award as the top return man in the country, while Daymeion Hughes earned the Lott Trophy given to a defensive player to equally recognize his athletic performance and personal character.
Despite his success and notoriety, Tedford remains devoted to being a mentor. “Football is more than a game,” he said. “I think it teaches so many values for young people as they move on into life – teamwork, sacrifice, dedication, hard work – all those things are very valuable to their futures. I’m going to be a person that they can trust and talk to while they’re here. But I really hope that when they leave, they understand that they can come back and ask me for anything and count on me in any situation.” His legendary work ethic, exemplified by the wellused air mattress in his office, shows the coach’s drive, which is not geared towards individual success. His true goals are success as a team and success for his student-athletes. “Jeff is the hardest worker I have ever encountered in this business,” said Cal Director of Athletics Sandy Barbour. “He is not going to be outworked, because he believes he owes that to his student-athletes.” That relentless drive developed in Tedford as a young football player at Warren High School. After a solid prep career, the undersized quarterback went on to a standout two-year stint at Cerritos College and a record-setting two-year stay at Fresno State. During his days as a Bulldog, he established several school passing records, including career marks for passing yardage (4,872) and touchdown passes (35), while earning honorable mention All-America notice in 1982 when he set single-season Fresno State standards for passing yardage (2,993) and TD passes (24).
JEFF TEDFORD’S COACHING CHRONOLOGY School Year Position Record California 2009 Head Coach 8-5 California 2008 Head Coach 9-4 California 2007 Head Coach 7-6 California 2006 Head Coach 10-3 California 2005 Head Coach 8-4 California 2004 Head Coach 10-2 California 2003 Head Coach 8-6 California 2002 Head Coach 7-5 Oregon 2001 Offensive Coordinator 11-1 Oregon 2000 Offensive Coordinator 10-2 Oregon 1999 Offensive Coordinator 9-3 Oregon 1998 Offensive Coordinator 8-4 Fresno State 1997 Offensive Coordinator 6-6 Fresno State 1996 Offensive Coordinator 4-7 Fresno State 1995 Offensive Coordinator 5-7 Fresno State 1994 Offensive Coordinator 5-7-1 Fresno State 1993 Offensive Coordinator 8-4 Fresno State 1992 Quarterbacks Coach 9-4 Calgary (CFL) 1991 Offensive Assistant 11-7 Calgary (CFL) 1990 Offensive Assistant 11-6-1 Calgary (CFL) 1989 Offensive Assistant 10-8
Highlights Poinsettia Bowl participant Emerald Bowl champions Armed Forces Bowl champions Pac-10 co-champions Holiday Bowl champions Las Vegas Bowl champions Holiday Bowl participant Pac-10 Coach of the Year Ranked No. 9 nationally Insight Bowl champions Pac-10 Coach of the Year Pac-10 champions Ranked No. 2 nationally Fiesta Bowl champions Pac-10 co-champions Ranked No. 7 nationally Holiday Bowl champions Sun Bowl champions Aloha Bowl participant
WAC tri-champions No. 3 scoring offense nationally Aloha Bowl participant WAC tri-champions No. 1 scoring offense nationally Freedom Bowl champions Grey Cup runner-up Western Division champions
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CAL ACCOMPLISHMENTS UNDER JEFF TEDFORD 2002 • Named Pac-10 Coach of the Year as voted by conference coaches, becoming the third Cal coach to receive the honor since the award’s inception in 1975. • Enjoyed a six-win increase from the previous season, tying for the biggest one-year turnaround in the nation and the second-largest about-face in school history (the 1947 club went 9-1 after a 2-7 season in 1946). • Beat three nationally ranked teams (Michigan State, Washington and Arizona State) in the same season for the first time in 52 years. • Scored three road victories over nationally ranked opponents in the same season for the first time in school history. • Halted a 12-year victory drought in Sun Devil Stadium, mowing down Arizona State, 55-38. • Set a modern day school record by scoring 427 points (broken in 2003) with a 35.6-point scoring average that tied for 10th-best in the nation. • Defeated Washington to snap a 19-game losing streak to the Huskies. • Capped the season by registering Cal’s first Big Game win over Stanford in eight years, a 30-7 throttling of the Cardinal.
2003 • Established first back-to-back winning seasons at Cal in 12 years. • Set single-season school marks for total offense (6,061) and first downs (321), as well as a modern-era record for scoring (457). • Led the Pac-10 in rushing for the first time in 45 years with 2,356 yards and a 168.3 per game average. • Posted first bowl win at Cal in 10 years, defeating Virginia Tech by a score of 52-49 in the Insight Bowl. • Set single-game school bowl records for most points (52), total yards (530), passing yards (394), completion percentage (77.1, later broken), TDs (7) and rushing TDs (5, later tied).
• Beat a team ranked as high as No. 3 nationally for the first time in 52 years with a 34-31 victory in three overtimes over No. 3 USC at Memorial Stadium. • Defeated Washington in Berkeley for the first time in 28 years, with a 54-7 win the widest margin of victory by a Cal team in a conference game in 81 years, setting Cal’s singlegame record for total offense with 729 yards in the contest.
2004 • Named Pac-10 Coach of the Year for the second time, something no other Cal football head coach has ever done. • Reached Cal’s highest national ranking (No. 4) in 52 years. • Posted school’s best regular-season record (101) since 1950’s club was 9-0-1 in the regular season. • First perfect home record (5-0) in 55 years seasons since the 1949 team was 6-0 at Memorial Stadium. • Most road wins (5) in school history. • Earned first back-to-back bowl trips since 1990 and ‘91. • Set single-season school record for total offense (492.4 ypg), ranking No. 1 in the Pac10. • Broke single-season school mark for yards per offensive play (7.0), almost one yard better than old standard of 6.1 in 2003. • Led Pac-10 in rushing (256.8 ypg) for second straight year, which were the first two times since 1958. • Allowed fewest points by Cal defense since 1968, ranking eighth nationally at 16.0 ppg. • Recorded first back-to-back defensive shutouts in 36 years (38-0 at Arizona, 27-0 vs. Arizona State).
2005 • Finished No. 25 in the AP and the coaches’ poll, marking the first time Cal had appeared in final polls in consecutive seasons since doing it five years in a row from 1947-51. • Finished the season ranked ninth nationally with 235.3 rushing yards per game to mark the Bears’ second straight season as a top-10 rushing team (sixth in 2004). • Won fourth straight Big Game for the first time since the 1936-39 campaigns. • Won again at Stanford, marking Cal’s first two-game win streak at Stanford since winning six straight on The Farm from 1937-51.
2006 • Guided Cal to 10 wins, just the seventh time in school history the Bears have posted 10 victories. • Recorded a fourth straight season with at least eight victories. • Named a finalist for the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award, which honors the
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coach who best exemplifies responsibility and excellence on and off the field of play. • Led Cal to its fifth straight Big Game win for the first time since the club won five in a row from 1919-23. • Led Bears to a perfect home record (7-0) for the second time in three years. • Beat Washington for the fifth straight time after having previously dropped 19 straight in the series.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
2007 • Led Bears to a top-10 inseason ranking for the fourth straight campaign. • Six players selected in the 2008 NFL Draft – a school-record for the seven-round draft. • Tailback Justin Forsett rushed for 1,546 yards – the third-most in school history. • Opened the year with a thrilling 45-31 victory over No. 15 Tennessee on national television. • Also defeated No. 11 Oregon on the road with the ESPN Gameday crew in attendance. • Directed Bears to a No. 2 ranking in the nation – their highest ranking since 1951. • All 13 of Cal’s games were televised – the first time in program history that every contest was broadcast.
2008 • Set a record with a fourth consecutive bowl victory. • Reached a bowl for the sixth consecutive year. • Posted a winning record for the seventh straight year. • Posted a 7-0 home record to mark the third time in five seasons Cal had been unbeaten at home. • Finished No. 25 in coaches’ poll to mark fourth top-25 finish in five years. • Tailback Jahvid Best rushed for 1,580 yards – the second most in school history – to extend the school record of consecutive years with a 1,000-yard rusher to seven. • Produced Draddy Trophy (now known as the William V. Campbell Trophy) winner Alex Mack.
2009 • Recorded eighth consecutive winning season to equal a school record (1918-25), while also extending school-record string of bowl appearances to seven. • Equaled Cal’s modern-era record for victories (67) and the school’s record for Big Game wins (7) with a victory at Stanford on Nov. 21 in his 100th game as head coach. • Became one of only three Cal football coaches to reach the 100-game mark and now has coached in 102 games at Cal, only one behind all-time leader Pappy Waldorf’s 103 contests on the sidelines. • Led Bears to back-to-back wins in consecutive weeks over nationally-ranked teams for the first time since 1950, beating Arizona at home and winning at Stanford.
“Jeff is the hardest worker I have ever encountered in this business. He is not going to be outworked, because he believes he owes that to his student-athletes.” - Cal Director of Athletics Sandy Barbour After receiving a bachelor’s degree in physical education from Fresno State in 1983, Tedford played pro football in the Canadian Football League for six seasons with Hamilton, Calgary, Saskatchewan and Winnipeg. He completed 54 percent of his passes during his career, appearing in the league’s championship game (Grey Cup) with Hamilton in 1984. Tedford has used his own signal-calling experience to build a reputation as a quarterbacks guru. During his 18-year collegiate coaching career at California (2002-present), Oregon (1998-2001) and Fresno State (1992-97), Tedford has been integral in the development of six quarterbacks that became first-round picks in the NFL Draft, including Trent Dilfer, Akili Smith, Joey Harrington, David Carr, Kyle Boller and Aaron Rodgers. In 2004, Rodgers, an under-the-radar junior college transfer like Tedford, ranked No. 8 nationally in pass efficiency, completing 66.1 percent of his passes for 2,566 yards and 24 touchdowns with only eight interceptions. He put up similar numbers the previous season when he completed 61.6 percent of his passes for 2,903 yards and 19 touchdowns with only five interceptions. In addition to his success with quarterbacks, Tedford’s teams have featured balanced attacks and become notorious for their ferocity on the ground. In his first eight years at Cal, Tedford’s running backs have posted 1,000-yard rushing seasons eight times, including a string of seven consecutive years with a 1,000-yard rusher from 2002-08. In 2004, Arrington broke Chuck Muncie’s single-season school record with 2,018 yards, which ranked No. 1 in the NCAA. In 2007, Justin Forsett’s 1,546 rushing yards were briefly the second-best in Cal history, but Best’s four-game flourish (814 yards) at the end of 2008 gave him 1,580 for the year to move past Forsett. Lynch had back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons in 2005 and 2006, while Adimchinobe Echemandu (1,195 yards in 2003) and Joe Igber (1,075 yards in 2002) have also reached the mark under Tedford. While offense has been Tedford’s forte, California’s defense has toughened considerably during his reign as well, allowing an average of just 22.5 points per game during his eight seasons, secondbest in the Pac-10 over that period. In 2004, Cal ranked eighth nationally in scoring defense, allowing just 16.0 points per game, while in 2005 the Golden Bears led the Pac-10 in scoring defense, allowing only 21.2 points per game. In 2008, Cal led the Pac-10 in the two key categories of red zone defense (68.2%) and takeaways (34). In 2009, the Bears were second in the conference in rush defense (112.0 ypg). Tedford’s combination of precision passing and relentless rushing, as well as his pairing of potent offense and relentless defense, has led to eight straight winning seasons. The Bears posted a school-record-tying 10 wins for the sixth and seventh times in school history in 2004 and 2006. Prior to his arrival in Berkeley, Tedford was a highly-regarded offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Oregon, serving in that role for four seasons, including the 2001 campaign when the Ducks earned a No. 2 final national ranking.
Jeff Tedford with his wife, Donna, and sons, Taylor (left) and Quinn. Tedford played an integral role in the rise of the Oregon program during his tenure in Eugene – a period in which the Ducks posted the Pac-10’s best record (38-10) while finishing progressively better each year (8-4 in ’98, 9-3 in ’99, 10-2 in ’00 and 11-1 in ’01). During his first season as offensive coordinator in 1998, the Ducks set school records in passing yards, total offense and points scored. Tedford’s passing acumen was clearly evident in the rapid development of Smith, who earned Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year accolades in finishing second in the nation in pass efficiency and later being chosen third overall in the 1999 NFL Draft by Cincinnati.
“
Along with the expectations, which we embrace, it's really important to always stay hungry. I don't think we've attained our full potential yet. It's something we always strive to do. We never want to be satisfied with where we've been. We always want to look forward to where we're going.
”
Cal head coach Jeff Tedford
Duck quarterbacks A.J. Feeley and Harrington combined to pass for 3,131 yards and 24 TDs on the Sun Bowl champion team that ranked 13th nationally in scoring in 1999, while the 2000 club tied for the Pac-10 crown and defeated Texas in the Holiday Bowl. Tedford’s last Oregon squad finished No. 2 in the nation and showcased one of the nation’s premier quarterbacks in Harrington, who won Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year honors and finished fourth in Heisman balloting. In 1992 as the quarterbacks coach at Fresno State, Tedford began honing the skills of Dilfer, who quarterbacked Baltimore to a victory in Super Bowl XXXV. Under Tedford’s guidance, the Bulldogs’ quarterback earned first-team All-WAC honors for an offense that led the nation in scoring (44.2
points per game), ranked second nationally in total offense (541.9 yards per game) and beat USC in the Freedom Bowl. A season later, Tedford became the Bulldogs’ offensive coordinator, and Fresno State ranked third nationally in scoring and total offense while earning an Aloha Bowl invitation. Dilfer ranked first nationally in passing efficiency (173.1 rating) and won the WAC Offensive Player of the Year award. He was later chosen by Tampa Bay with the sixth overall selection of the 1994 NFL Draft. “I believe Jeff’s one of the finest minds in all of football,” said Dilfer, who currently serves as a football analyst for ESPN after a 14-year playing career in the NFL from 1994-2007. “He’s certainly the finest coach I’ve ever been around. He’s a great leader and great teacher. He has very high expectations for himself and the people around him. And he will work tirelessly to meet those expectations. Jeff taught me more about toughness and the game of football than any coach I’ve ever played for, and I’ve had some awfully good coaches.” Tedford’s coaching career began as a volunteer assistant at Fresno State in 1987, as he spent two years there before joining Calgary of the CFL in 1989 for three seasons, including the 1991 team that advanced to the Grey Cup title game. Despite his success as a coach and mentor, Tedford still follows a basic philosophy. “We try to focus on one game at a time and try to reach our full potential,” he said emphatically. And he still values each and every member of his football team. “Whether it is the guys who are suited up, the guys who are going to play 50-60 plays or the guys who aren’t going to play at all, I want them all to understand that they are very important to the success of the program,” he said. “Their contributions are invaluable.” Tedford’s hard work and dedication not only inspire his players, it has also made him a role model to the young men in the Cal program. “Coach Tedford wasn’t just a coach, I think of him as more like a father figure,” said All-Pac-10 linebacker and current Green Bay Packer Desmond Bishop. “He taught us lessons about life. He taught us to have integrity, to have character. He prepared us to be men.”
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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ASSISTANT COACHES COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • In his 14th season as an offensive coordinator and his second with California in 2010, after previous stops at Cal Poly (1997), Fresno State (1998-2001), Oregon (2002-04) and Utah (2005-08). • Broke a school record for fewest turnovers in a season (17) and had California ranked in the top half of the Pac-10 in the several key offensive categories in his first season with the Golden Bears in 2009 – fewest turnovers (2nd-T), rushing offense (3rd), first downs (3rd), total offense (4th), scoring offense (4th), pass offense (5th) and third-down conversions (5th). • Listed by Rivals as the nation's No. 4 offensive coach during a 2009 preseason poll. • Led Utah to a 36.9 points per game scoring average in 2009 to pace the Mountain West Conference and rank 15th nationally as the Utes ended the season 13-0 with a No. 2 final national ranking and a Sugar Bowl win over Alabama. • Finalist for the 2008 FootballScoop Offensive Coordinator of the Year award. • His 2005 Utah team also put up exceptional numbers, leading the Mountain West Conference in total offense and ranking 12th nationally with an average of 473.0 yards per game.
ANDY LUDWIG Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks 2nd Season at Cal
THE LUDWIG FILE Birthdate..................................May 14, 1964 Hometown...................................Ogden, UT High School............................Bonneville HS College.............................Portland State ’88 Bachelor’s in Exercise Science Family...............................................wife, Jill son, Joe; daughter, Delaney
COACHING HISTORY 2009-Present.................................. California Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks 2005-08..................................................Utah Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks 2002-04............................................. Oregon Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks 1998-2001.................................Fresno State Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks 1997................................................. Cal Poly Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks 1995-96....................................... Boise State Quarterbacks 1993-94........................................ Augustana Offensive Coordinator/QBs/Receivers 1992.......................................................Utah Graduate Assistant, Defense 1989-91....................................... Idaho State Quarterbacks/Receivers 1987-88...................................Portland State Receivers
BOWL GAMES (11) 2009 Poinsettia.............................. California 2008 Sugar.............................................Utah 2007 Poinsettia......................................Utah 2006 Armed Forced................................Utah 2005 Emerald.........................................Utah 2003 Sun........................................... Oregon 2002 Seattle...................................... Oregon 2001 Silicon Valley Classic........Fresno State 2000 Silicon Valley Classic........Fresno State 1999 Las Vegas........................Fresno State 1992 Copper..........................................Utah *Season in which bowl was played
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• Had never previously coached on the same staff as Jeff Tedford prior to 2009 but had a strong link to Cal's head coach, having replaced him as the offensive coordinator at both Fresno State and Oregon. • Has developed successful quarterbacks Ali Abrew (Cal Poly), David Carr (Fresno State), Kellen Clemens (Oregon), Brian Johnson (Utah), Brett Ratliff (Utah) and Billy Volek (Fresno State). • Has produced seven 1,000-yard rushers over the last 12 seasons. • Finalist for the 2001 Frank Broyles Award, which is given to the nation’s top assistant coach, while at Fresno State, when his Bulldogs finished fourth in the nation in both scoring and total offense with a balanced attack that featured the NCAA's first-ever team with a 4,000-yard passer, two 1,000-yard receivers and a 1,000-yard rusher in a single season.
PROMINENT PUPILS • Ali Abrew (Cal Poly) – Led the NCAA in pass efficiency in 1997 as the Mustangs ranked seventh in the country in total offense and posted a 10-1 overall record. • David Carr (Fresno State) – Led the nation in passing yards (4,839) and touchdown throws (46), was a Heisman Trophy finalist, won the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm and Sammy Baugh awards and was the WAC MVP in 2001; No. 1 overall pick of the Houston Texans in the 2002 NFL Draft. • Kellen Clemens (Oregon) – Had the best sophomore season ever by an Oregon quarterback in 2003 (2,390 yards, 16 TDs); finished his collegiate career with 7,555 passing yards before he was taken by his current employer the New York Jets in the second round of the 2006 NFL Draft. • Brian Johnson (Utah) – Led Utah to a 13-0 record and a No. 2 final national ranking in 2008, while earning Most Outstanding Player honors in a Sugar Bowl win over Alabama, as well as the Mountain West Conference MVP; named the 2007 Poinsettia Bowl MVP. • Brett Ratliff (Utah) – Led Utah to back-to-back victories in the 2005 Emerald Bowl and 2006 Armed Forces Bowl; has been on NFL rosters with the New York Jets and currently the Cleveland Browns. • Billy Volek (Fresno State) – Threeyear starter who racked up 6,532 career yards and capped his collegiate career with a WAC MVP season in 1999; undrafted in 2000 but signed as a free agent with Tennessee and has been in the NFL since with Tennessee (200006) and San Diego (2006-present).
ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS A PLAYER • Spent two seasons as a wide receiver at Snow College in Utah (1982-83) before earning a pair of letters at Portland State (1985-86). Andy Ludwig with his wife, Jill, son, Joe, and daughter,
Delaney.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • In his 20th season of coaching at either the professional or collegiate level in 2010, including the last six campaigns as an NFL defensive coordinator with Kansas City (2009) and Arizona (2004-08). • Served as the defensive coordinator for a 2008 Arizona Cardinals team that reached Super Bowl XLIII after capturing the NFC title. • During Arizona's Super Bowl run following the 2008 regular season, the Cardinals led all NFL teams by forcing 13 turnovers in the playoffs as the defense played a key role in post-season victories over Atlanta, Carolina and Philadelphia by holding the three highly-regarded offenses to an average of 20.7 points per game. • The signature component of his NFL defenses was the ability to force turnovers, with the 2008 Arizona squad leading the league with 17 fumble recoveries and ranking tied for fifth with 30 takeaways, while his five Arizona teams from 2004-08 combined to rank eighth in the NFL over the time period by forcing 148 turnovers (77 interceptions, 71 fumbles).
CLANCY PENDERGAST Defensive Coordinator 1st Season at Cal
THE PENDERGAST FILE Birthdate........................November 29, 1967 Hometown.................................Tolleson, AZ. High School.............................. Glendale HS College....................................... Arizona ’90 Bachelor’s in Agriculture Family................................................. Single
COACHING HISTORY 2010-Present.................................. California Defensive Coordinator 2009................................ Kansas City Chiefs Defensive Coordinator/Secondary 2004-08............................. Arizona Cardinals Defensive Coordinator 2003................................. Cleveland Browns Linebackers 1996-2002............................Dallas Cowboys Defensive Backs (2001-02) Defensive Nickel Package (2000) Defensive Asst./Quality Control (1996-99) 1995.......................................Houston Oilers Defensive Assistant/Quality Control 1993-94......................................... Oklahoma Graduate Assistant/Tight Ends 1992.......................................................USC Defensive Assistant 1991....................................Mississippi State Graduate Assistant
SUPER BOWLS (1) 2008 (Super Bowl XLIII).................... Arizona
NFL PLAYOFF GAMES (8) 2008................................. Arizona (4 games) 1999..................................... Dallas (1 game) 1998..................................... Dallas (1 game) 1996................................... Dallas (2 games)
BOWL GAMES (4) 1994 Copper................................. Oklahoma 1993 John Hancock...................... Oklahoma 1992 Freedom........................................USC 1991 Liberty........................Mississippi State *Season in which bowl was played
• Arizona's defense set a modern-day NFL record under his direction on November 11, 2007, when the Cardinals held the Detroit Lions to -18 rushing yards during a season in which Arizona set singleseason club records for most interception returns for touchdowns (6) and interception return yards (551). • Both Arizona and Kansas City made tremendous improvements in his first year as defensive coordinator for both franchises, with the Chiefs turnaround highlighted by more than doubling their sack total from 10.0 to 22.0 in their first season under Pendergast in 2009 and the Cardinals moving to 12th in both total defense and scoring defense after having been 26th and 32nd in those two categories the year before Pendergast arrived. • A seven-year member of a Dallas Cowboys' coaching staff that won two NFC East titles (1996, '98) and made three NFC Playoff appearances (1996, '98, '99). • On collegiate football staffs that reached bowl games during his each of his four seasons in the college ranks at Mississippi State (1991), USC (1992) and Oklahoma (1993-94), before taking his first NFL job in Houston in 1995.
PROMINENT PUPILS • Bertrand Berry (Arizona) – Posted the lone Pro Bowl season of his 12-year NFL career under Pendergast in 2004; recording career highs of 49 tackles, 14.5 sacks and four passes defended. • Brandon Carr (Kansas City) – Cornerback ranked tied for 10th in the NFL in passes defended with 16 and added 62 tackles as a second-year player in 2009. • Karlos Dansby (Arizona) – Has been one of the NFL's most productive linebackers since entering the league as a member of the NFL's all-rookie team during Pendergast's first season with Arizona in 2004. • Darnell Dockett (Arizona) – Defensive lineman came to Arizona the same season as Pendergast in 2004 and earned his first Pro Bowl selection by 2007 when he recorded career highs of 58 tackles and 9.0 sacks. • Brandon Flowers (Kansas City) – Cornerback ranked fifth in the NFL in passes defended with 19 and added 65 tackles as a second-year player in 2009. • Tambia Hali (Kansas City) – Defensive end recorded career highs of 65 tackles and 8.5 sacks during his lone season under Pendergast to earn a spot on the USA Today's All-Joe team. • Adrian Wilson (Arizona) – Firstteam All-Pro safety in 2006 and second-team in 2008, while also selected for the Pro Bowl both seasons; set a single-season NFL record in 2005 for most sacks by a defensive back (8.0).
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ASSISTANT COACHES (continued) COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • In his third season as Cal's wide receivers coach in 2010 after one previous campaign working with the quarterbacks, and three prior to that with the Cal offensive line as a graduate assistant, assisting with game-planning, opponent scouting and individual player development. • Has been instrumental in the development of Marvin Jones, who blossomed into the Golden Bears' top wide receiver as a sophomore in 2009 with career highs of 43 receptions, 651 receiving yards and six touchdown catches. • Helped the team's signal-callers throw for over 3,000 yards for just the sixth time in program history during his one season as the quarterbacks coach in 2007.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS A PLAYER • Selected in the fifth round of the 1999 NFL Draft by Tennessee and was a quarterback for the Titans during their run to Super Bowl XXXIV during the 1999 campaign. • Also a member of the San Diego Chargers (2000), Atlanta Falcons (2000) and San Francisco 49ers (2001) before rejoining the Titans in 2002. • Led the Scottish Claymores to the NFL Europe World Bowl in 2000 and played for the Amsterdam Admirals in 2002, where he set an NFL Europe record by throwing for 30 career touchdown passes. • Spent two seasons in the Arena Football League, with the San Jose SaberCats in 2003 and the Indiana Firebirds in 2004. • One of the most prolific passers in the history of UC Davis, setting five NCAA Division II records and still ranking third in passing yards (7,601) and second in touchdown passes (68) at the school.
KEVIN DAFT Wide Receivers 7th Season at Cal
• A two-time All-American who led the Aggies to the Division II semifinals. • Also a finalist for the Harlon Hill Trophy and played in both the Hula Bowl and the Blue-Gray All-Star game. • Inducted into the UC Davis Athletic Hall of Fame in June 2005.
THE DAFT FILE Birthdate........................November 19, 1975 Hometown.................................... Tustin, CA High School.................................Foothill HS College.................................... UC Davis ’99 Bachelor’s in Biology Graduate School..................... California ’07 Master’s in Education Family...........................................wife, Kesa daughters, Talia and Caroline
COACHING HISTORY 2004-Present................................. California Wide Receivers (2008-Present) Quarterbacks (2007) Graduate Assistant, O-Line (2004-06) 2003.............................................. UC Davis Volunteer Assistant, Quarterbacks
BOWL GAMES (6) 2009 Poinsettia.............................. California 2008 Emerald................................ California 2007 Armed Forces....................... California 2006 Holiday................................. California 2005 Las Vegas............................. California 2004 Holiday................................. California *Season in which bowl was played
Kevin Daft with his wife, Kesa, and daughters, Talia and Caroline.
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COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • In his first season at Cal in 2010 after 18 previous seasons in the collegiate coaching profession, most recently with a five-year stint as the head coach at Eastern Michigan from 2004-08. • Coached Eastern Michigan to its best conference finish in seven years in 2004 with a third-place showing in the West Division of the Mid-American Athletic Conference. • His 2006 team at Eastern Michigan ranked third nationally in punt return yardage defense, while his 2007 squad was 15th in the country. • Eastern Michigan had three All-Americans and also set three NCAA passing records during his tenure. • Showed his versatility while at Northwestern from 1992-2003, coaching the running backs (19992003), safeties (1998) and outside linebackers (1997) during the final seven seasons of his 12-year stint at the school; also served as a graduate assistant for defense (1992-93), director of football operations (1994-96) and recruiting coordinator (1999-2003). • Won three Big Ten titles and participated in four bowls while at Northwestern, serving on staffs that led the Wildcats to bowl games to conclude seasons in 1995 (Rose), 1996 (Florida Citrus), 2000 (Alamo) and 2003 (Motor City).
PROFESSIONAL ACCOMPLISHMENTS • Spent the 2009 college football season as a television color analyst for ESPN Regional Television coverage of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
PROMINENT PUPILS
JEFF GENYK Special Teams Coordinator/Tight Ends 1st Season at Cal
THE GENYK FILE Birthdate............................. August 22, 1960 Hometown...............................Ann Arbor, MI High School....................................Milan HS College...................Bowling Green State ‘82 Bachelor’s in Business Administration Graduate School........Western Michigan ‘89 Master’s in Business Administration Northwestern, ‘94 Master’s in Education and Social Policy Family............................................ wife, Lisa one daughter; one son Pronunciation................................. jenn-ICK
COACHING HISTORY 2010-Present................................. California Special Teams Coordinator/Tight Ends 2004-08.............................Eastern Michigan Head Coach 1992-2003............................... Northwestern Recruiting Coordinator/RBs (1999-2003) Safeties (1998) Outside Linebackers (1997) Director of Football Operations (1994-96) Graduate Assistant, Defense (1992-93) 1991.......Grand Rapids Community College Quarterbacks/Tight Ends
• Damien Anderson (Northwestern) – Fifth in 2000 Heisman voting and second nationally in rushing yardage during an All-American season in which he rushed for 2,063 yards and 23 TD's (both school records); played in the NFL with Arizona (2002-05) and the CFL for Edmonton (2007-08). • Pat Fitzgerald (Northwestern) – First two-time winner of both the Bronko Nagurski Award and the Chuck Bednarik Award given annually to the nation's best defensive player; spent one season with the NFL's Dallas Cowboys before beginning his coaching career and is currently the head coach at Northwestern. • Napolean Harris (Northwestern) – First-round 2002 NFL Draft pick (23rd overall) by Oakland; on NFL rosters with Oakland (2002-04, '09), Minnesota (2005-06, '08) and Kansas City (2007-08). • Noah Herron (Northwestern) – Has been on NFL rosters in Pittsburgh (2005), Green Bay (2005-07), Tampa Bay (2008), New York Jets (2009) and Cleveland (2009) after earning Big Ten Conference Back of the Year honors at Northwestern. • Jason Jones (Eastern Michigan) – Second-round 2008 NFL Draft pick (54th overall) by Tennessee who has played in 20 games over his first two seasons with the Titans. • T.J. Lang (Eastern Michigan) – Started three games with Green Bay in his first NFL season in 2009, after starting all 36 games possible over his final three collegiate campaigns. • Aaron Wellock (Eastern Michigan) – Runner up in 2004 for Lou Groza Award annually given to the nation's top kicker; finished his collegiate career as Eastern Michigan's leader in all kicking categories. • Jason Wright (Northwestern) – Has been on NFL rosters in San Francisco (2004), Atlanta (200405), Cleveland (2005-08) and Arizona (2009-present), after finishing his collegiate career as Northwestern's fourth-leading rusher (2,625 yards).
ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS A PLAYER • A quarterback and punter at Bowling Green State from 1978-81 after an All-State career as a signal-caller at Milan High School.
BOWL GAMES (4) 2003 Motor City....................... Northwestern 2000 Alamo............................. Northwestern 1996 Florida Citrus.................. Northwestern 1995 Rose............................... Northwestern *Season in which bowl was played
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ASSISTANT COACHES (continued) COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • Has had a Cal running back lead the Pac-10 in rushing three times in the last seven years. • Known for a two-tailback system, with his top two tailbacks combining for at least 1,750 rushing yards in each of the past seven seasons, most recently with the 2009 duo of Shane Vereen (952 yards) and Jahvid Best (867 yards). • Best was Cal's most recent 1,000-yard rusher when he galloped for 1,580 yards in 2008 to lead the Pac-10 and rank second on the school's all-time single-season list. Marshawn Lynch (2006) and J.J. Arrington (2004) also led the league in rushing under Gould. • Seven of his backs in the last six years have gone on to the NFL, most recently with the first-round selection (30th overall) of Best by the Detroit Lions in the 2010 NFL Draft. • Coached Arrington to a single-season school record 2,018 rushing yards during a consensus AllAmerican campaign and an eighth-place finish in 2004 Heisman Trophy voting. • Had three consecutive first-team All-Pac-10 running backs in Best (2008), Justin Forsett (1,546 yards in 2007, third-best all-time single-season at Cal) and Lynch (2006 Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year). • Cal ranked ninth in the country in rushing offense in 2005 after leading the Pac-10 in 2003 and ’04, while also pacing the Pac-10 in rushing touchdowns with 28 in 2003. • Coached at Boise State for four seasons with the 1994 Broncos finishing as the NCAA Division I-AA runner up and ranked among the nation’s top five in pass efficiency defense and scoring defense. • Helped Portland State to the 1992 NCAA Division II semifinals as an assistant coach.
RON GOULD Associate Head Coach/ Running Backs 14th Season at Cal
THE GOULD FILE
• A candidate for the 2010 American Football Coaches Association Assistant Coach of the Year Award. • Has served NFL internships with the Atlanta Falcons, Arizona Cardinals, Green Bay Packers, Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco 49ers and St. Louis Rams.
PROMINENT PUPILS • J.J. Arrington (California) – Led nation with a school-record 2,018 yards and was eighth in 2004 Heisman Trophy voting; second round pick by the Arizona Cardinals in the 2005 NFL Draft who spent the last four seasons in the NFL with the club.
Birthdate................................ Sept. 15, 1965 Hometown.................................. Tucson, AZ High School............................Santa Rita HS College........................................Oregon ’88 Bachelor’s in Criminology Family........................................ wife, Teresa sons, Tevin and Trae
• Jahvid Best (California) – Finished his career tied for third all-time at Cal in rushing touchdowns (29) and seventh in rushing yardage (2,668); led the Pac-10 in rushing in 2008 with 1,580 yards.
COACHING HISTORY
• Justin Forsett (California) – First team All-Pac-10 choice in 2007 who is now a featured back for the Seattle Seahawks, ranking second on the club in rushing in 2009.
1997-Present................................. California Associate Head Coach/RBs (2008-Present) Running Backs (1997-Present) 1993-96...................................... Boise State Defensive Backs 1992.......................................Portland State Defensive Backs 1990-91............................................ Oregon Graduate Assistant
BOWL GAMES (8) 2009 Poinsettia.............................. California 2008 Emerald................................ California 2007 Armed Forces....................... California 2006 Holiday................................. California 2005 Las Vegas............................. California 2004 Holiday................................. California 2003 Insight................................... California 1990 Freedom.................................. Oregon *Season in which bowl was played
• Adimchinobe Echemandu (California) – First team All-Pac-10 running back in 2003 who played five seasons in the NFL with the Cleveland Browns (2004), Minnesota Vikings (2005), Oakland Raiders (2006-07) and Houston Texans (2008). • Rashid Gayle (Boise State) – All-American defensive back; went on to play in the NFL and Canadian Football League.
• Joe Igber (California) – Set Big Game record with 226 rushing yards in 2002; No. 4 all-time rusher at Cal with 3,124 yards; played in the Hula Bowl. • Marshawn Lynch (California) – 2006 Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year; MVP of back-to-back bowl wins; No. 2 all-time rusher at Cal; selected No. 12 overall by the Buffalo Bills in 2007 NFL Draft. • Chris Manderino (California) – Four-year starter at fullback who was in the NFL for three seasons with the Cincinnati Bengals (2006-07) and Kansas City Chiefs (2008). • Tarik Smith (California) – Four-year letterwinner who spent two NFL seasons with the Dallas Cowboys.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS A PLAYER • Standout defensive back at Scottsdale Community College (1984-85) before earning a scholarship from Wichita State. Went on to become a starter for Oregon in 1987 after WSU dropped its program. • Signed with the Los Angeles Rams in 1988. Ron Gould with his wife, Teresa, and his sons, Trae (left) and Tevin.
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COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • Named the Rivals Recruiter of the Year in 2010 after helping to ink a signing class that was ranked as No. 11 nationally by Rivals and boasted the seventh-highest number of stars per signee (3.58). • Became the youngest full-time head coach in Cal history when he moved into that role in 2008 and is in third season as Cal's defensive line coach in 2010 after working for two campaigns as a graduate assistant with the program. • In his 11th season as a member of the Golden Bear football family as a player or coach. • Has been praised as an energetic teacher on the sidelines and willing to get into the mix with his young pupils to demonstrate technique and details. • Joined the Cal coaching staff after playing on the Golden Bears’ defensive line from 2001-05, and learning from former Cal defensive line coaches Ken Delgado and Bill Dutton. • Product of De La Salle High School, one of the most successful programs in the history of prep football, earning All-State honors and winning a national championship. • Father, John, played collegiately at Brigham Young and later was a part-time assistant coach at Cal.
PROMINENT PUPILS • Tyson Alualu (California) – Became the ninth-highest Cal player ever selected in the NFL Draft when he was chosen 10th overall by the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2010 after leading all of the team's defensive linemen in tackles each season from 2007-09; earned first-team All-Pac-10 honors for the first time in 2009 after recording a career-high 65 tackles, and pacing the squad with 11.5 tackles for loss and 7.5 sacks.
TOSH LUPOI Defensive Line 5th Season at Cal
THE LUPOI FILE Birthdate.................................. July 22, 1981 Hometown............................... Hayward, CA High School..........................De La Salle HS College.................................... California ’05 Bachelor’s in American Studies Graduate School..................... California ’07 Master’s in Education Family................................................. Single Pronunciation..................................loo-POY
ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS A PLAYER • Led the Bears' defensive line in tackles in 2003 while playing alongside three future NFL players. • After being granted a sixth year of eligibility in 2005, his final season was once again marred by injuries as he saw limited action in eight games. • Wrapped up his career with 40 games played, 68 tackles and 5.0 sacks. • Earned Pac-10 All-Academic recognition. • Recipient of team's Ken Cotton Award as the squad's Most Courageous Player in 2003, as he played the final four games of the campaign with a broken right thumb.
COACHING HISTORY 2006-Present................................. California Defensive Line (2008-Present) Graduate Assistant (2006-07)
BOWL GAMES (4) 2009 Poinsettia.............................. California 2008 Emerald................................ California 2007 Armed Forces....................... California 2006 Holiday................................. California *Season in which bowl was played
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ASSISTANT COACHES (continued) COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • In his second campaign at Cal in 2010 and has 30 years of NFL and collegiate coaching experience, having spent his last six seasons of coaching in the professional ranks prior to joining Cal in 2009 after spending his previous 23 years at the collegiate level. • Will coach a unit that has four of five starters returning in 2010. • Coached a 2009 offensive line that helped the Bears rank third in the Pac-10 in rushing offense. • Had an excellent stint with the Cleveland Browns from 2008-09, paving the way for back-to-back 1,000-yard rushing seasons from Jamal Lewis and coaching a 2007 offensive line that tied for the third-fewest sacks allowed. • Coached at Colorado when the 2001 team won the Big 12 title and captured a spot in the Fiesta Bowl.
STEVE MARSHALL Offensive Line 2nd Season at Cal
• Had outstanding success in back-to-back seasons in 1997 and 1998 during stints at Texas A&M (Big 12 Championship Game, Cotton Bowl) and North Carolina (Las Vegas Bowl). • Coached a 1995 Tennessee team that led the Southeast Conference in rushing, finished 11-1, ranked No. 2 overall in the nation and defeated Ohio State in the Florida Citrus Bowl.
THE MARSHALL FILE
PROMINENT PUPILS
Birthdate......................................June 20, 1956 Hometown......................................Hartford, CT High School................................... Rockville HS College..........................................Louisville ’79
• Chad Clifton (Tennessee) – Has played the last 10 seasons with Green Bay, earning a Pro Bowl nod in 2007; second-team collegiate All-American as a senior. • Kris Farris (UCLA) – Won the 1998 Outland Trophy and played briefly in the NFL.
Bachelors’ in Physical Education and History Family wife, Karin
• Andre Gurode (Colorado) – Earned 2007 NFL All-Pro honors and is a four-time Pro Bowl selection (2006, '07, '08, '09) as a member of the Dallas Cowboys; All-American as a senior at Colorado.
COACHING HISTORY
• Marwan Hage (Colorado) – Has excelled in the Canadian Football League, earning CFLPA All-Star team nods in each of the last three years (2007, '08, '09) as a member of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats; two-time All-Big 12 selection.
2009-Present................................. California Offensive Line 2007-08........................... Cleveland Browns Offensive Line 2002-05...............................Houston Texans Offensive Line (2004-05) Assistant Offensive Line (2002-03) 2000-01..........................................Colorado Offensive Line 1998-99................................. North Carolina Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line 1997........................................... Texas A&M Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line 1996.................................................... UCLA Offensive Line 1993-95....................................... Tennessee Run Game Coordinator/O-Line (1994-95) Offensive Line (1993) 1987-92.................................... Virginia Tech Offensive Coordinator/O-Line (1988-92) Offensive Line (1987) 1985-86....................................Murray State Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line 1984...............................................Louisville Offensive Line/Tight Ends 1982-83...........................................Marshall Offensive Line/Kicking Game 1980-81....................................... Tennessee Assistant Offensive Line 1979..................................... Plymouth State Offensive Line
BOWL GAMES (8) 2009 Poinsettia.................................. California 2001 Fiesta.........................................Colorado 1998 Las Vegas......................... North Carolina 1998 Cotton..................................... Texas A&M 1995 Florida Citrus........................... Tennessee 1994 Florida Citrus........................... Tennessee 1993 Gator....................................... Tennessee 1981 Garden State........................... Tennessee
• Seth McKinney (Cleveland Browns/Texas A&M) – Has played eight NFL seasons with Miami (2002-06), Cleveland (2007-08) and Buffalo (2009); was only the fifth center in the history of college football to start every game in his career. • Steve McKinney (Texas A&M/ Houston Texans) – Spent 11 seasons in the NFL with Indianapolis (1998-2001), Houston (2002-07) and Seattle (2008) after a collegiate career that included first-team AllBig 12 honors. • Jim Pyne (Virginia Tech) – Earned consensus collegiate All-American honors and was a finalist for both the Lombardi and Outland trophies before going on to a seven-year NFL career. • Eric Steinbach (Cleveland Browns) – Has been in the NFL for the past seven seasons with Cincinnati (2003-06) and Cleveland (2007-09), and was named an alternate for the 2008 Pro Bowl; Big 12 Offensive Lineman of the Year in 2002 while at Iowa. • Joe Thomas (Cleveland Browns) – Two-time All-Pro selection, earning first-team honors in 2009 after a second-team pick in 2008; taken third overall in the 2007 NFL Draft.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS A PLAYER • Spent his collegiate playing career at Louisville as a tight end and guard from 1976-79.
*Season in which bowl was played
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COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • Has served two stints on the Golden Bear staff with his current tenure in its third season in 2010 and being preceded by three years as Cal’s cornerbacks coach from 1998-2000. • Coached a pair of players in his 2009 defensive back unit that are now with NFL teams in Syd’Quan Thompson (Denver Broncos) and Brett Johnson (Philadelphia Eagles). • Coached a 2008 defensive backs group that accounted for 17 of the team's 24 interceptions, which was the third-highest total in school history and the most in 60 years since the 1948 squad recorded 30. • Helped Arizona State to a share of the Pac-10 crown in 2007 as part of a defensive coaching staff that had its group ranked third in the league in both scoring and pass defense. • Was key in the transformation of one-time tailback Deltha O’Neal into an All-American defensive back during his first stint at Cal as O’Neal was the first cornerback selected in the 2000 NFL Draft. • In 2003 with the San Francisco 49ers, the defense recorded 36 takeaways, its most since 1997. • Coached All-American cornerback Dennis Weathersby at Oregon State in 2002, when the Beavers led the Pac-10 in pass defense. • Helped San Francisco State place second in the Northern California Athletic Conference in total defense, pass defense, turnovers created and scoring defense in 1994.
AL SIMMONS Defensive Backs 6th Season at Cal
• Has participated in the NFL's Minority Fellowship Coaching program with the Oakland Raiders (1993), Arizona Cardinals (1996), San Diego Chargers (1999) and Dallas Cowboys (2000).
THE SIMMONS FILE
PROMINENT PUPILS
Birthdate..........................December 6, 1962 Hometown................................ Oakland, CA High School............................... Oakland HS College......................Cal State Hayward ’87 Bachelor’s in Business Administration Graduate School.......Cal State Hayward ’91 Master’s in Physical Education Family................................................. Single
• Chidi Iwuoma (California) – Cornerback signed as a free agent by Detroit; spent seven seasons in the NFL with Detroit (2001-02), Pittsburgh (2002-06), New England (2006), St. Louis (2006) and Tennessee (2007).
COACHING HISTORY 2008-Present................................. California Defensive Backs 2006-07...................................Arizona State Co-Special Teams Coord./DB’s (2007) Defensive Backs (2006) 2005..................................... San Jose State Cornerbacks 2003-04....................... San Francisco 49ers Defensive Backs (2004) Cornerbacks (2003) 2001-02................................... Oregon State Defensive Backs 1998-2000..................................... California Cornerbacks 1997........................................... Idaho State Defensive Coordinator 1995-96................................. Montana State Defensive Backs 1994............................. San Francisco State Defensive Coordinator/Defensive Backs 1986-93.......................... Cal State Hayward Defensive Coordinator (1988-93) Linebackers/Defensive Backs (1986-87)
BOWL GAMES (5) 2009 Poinsettia.............................. California 2008 Emerald................................ California 2007 Holiday...........................Arizona State 2006 Hawaii.............................Arizona State 2002 Insight............................. Oregon State *Season in which bowl was played
• Was the defensive coordinator at Cal State Hatyward for his final six seasons at the school from 1988-93, with his 1992 defense finishing first in the Northern California Athletic Conference in scoring defense and second in total defense.
• Deltha O'Neal (California) – All-American cornerback selected in the first round of the 2000 NFL Draft by the Denver Broncos and recorded 34 career interceptions in nine years in the league with Denver (2000-03), Cincinnati (2004-07) and New England (2008). • Syd’Quan Thompson (California) – A two-time All-Pac-10 cornerback that set all-time Cal records by starting all 52 games possible in his collegiate career and totaling 36 pass breakups; led the squad with four interceptions that he returned for 128 yards and one touchdown, while also tying for the team lead and school record with 18 passes defended in 2008. • Justin Tryon (Arizona State) – Cornerback who spent his 2008 rookie season in the NFL with the Washington Redskins after being selected by the club in the fourth round of the 2008 NFL Draft; earned second team All-Pac-10 in 2007. • Dennis Weathersby (Oregon State) – All-American cornerback for the Beavers; played one season in the NFL in 2003 with the Cincinnati Bengals.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS A PLAYER • A two-time first-team All-Northern California Conference selection as a strong safety at Cal State Hayward, where he played in 1983 and 1984.
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ASSISTANT COACHES (continued) COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • Has helped develop 2010 preseason All-American and national honors candidate Mike Mohamed into one of the nation's top linebackers. • Coached the team's top three tacklers in 2009 (Anthony Felder, Zack Follett and Mike Mohamed), with Follett also among the Pac-10 and nation's elite with 23.0 tackles for loss (No. 1 Pac-10, No. 3 NCAA) and 10.5 sacks (No. 4 Pac-10, No. 17-T NCAA). • Coached the defensive tackles during a nine-win season at San Jose State in 2006, helping the Spartans advance to the New Mexico Bowl, where they defeated host New Mexico, with the Spartans ranking third in the Western Athletic Conference in both scoring defense and total defense in 2006. • After joining the San Jose State staff in 2001 as its linebackers coach, Thompson added recruiting coordinator duties from 2002-04. •
Spent seven years at Texas Southern, including the last five (1996-2000) as the assistant head coach and defensive coordinator.
PROMINENT PUPILS • Anthony Felder (California) – Led Cal with 93 tackles in 2008 after recording 101 in 2007 to rank third on the club, earning honorable mention All-Pac-10 honors both seasons. • Zack Follett (California) – Cal's leader in sacks during each of his last three seasons, a two-time All-Pac-10 choice, semifinalist for the 2008 Chuck Bednarik Award given to the country's best defensive player, and the 2008 Emerald Bowl Defensive MVP; taken by the Detroit Lions in the seventh round of the 2009 NFL Draft.
KENWICK THOMPSON Recruiting Coordinator/Linebackers 4th Season at Cal
THE THOMPSON FILE
• Mike Mohamed (California) – Led the Pac-10 in tackles with 112 in 2009 and was named a firstteam all-conference selection, while also picking up first-team Pac-10 All-Academic honors for the second straight year
ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS A PLAYER • A two-time all-conference selection and his league’s Defensive Player of the Year in 1990 at Harding, when he also served as a team captain. • Recorded 30 career quarterback sacks, leading the Bison in sacks in each of his last two seasons.
Birthdate.................................. July 23, 1969 Hometown.................................Houston, TX High School.................................. Nimitz HS College....................................... Harding ’91 ........... Bachelor’s in Marketing and Sales Family....................................... wife, Monica ...........................sons, Jaxson and Jacob
COACHING HISTORY 2007-Present................................. California Recruiting Coordinator/Linebackers 2001-06................................ San Jose State Defensive Tackles (2006) Strength and Conditioning (2005) Co-Recruiting Coordinator/Defensive Line/ Co-Special Teams (2004) Recruiting Coord./Linebackers (2002-03) Linebackers (2001) 1994-2000........................... Texas Southern Asst. Head Coach/Def. Coord. (1996-2000) Recruiting Coord./Defensive Line (1995) Running Backs (1994) 1991-92............................................Harding Graduate Assistant 1990...Italian American Football Association Assistant Coach
BOWL GAMES (4) 2009 Poinsettia.............................. California 2008 Emerald................................ California 2007 Armed Forces....................... California 2006 New Mexico................. San Jose State *Season in which bowl was played Kenwick Thompson with his wife, Monica, and sons, Jaxson and Jacob.
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FOOTBALL SUPPORT STAFF PROFESSIONAL ACCOMPLISHMENTS • Has 27 years of experience in football at the professional, collegiate and high school levels. • Oversees the day-to-day operations of the Cal football program. • Included in his responsibilities with Cal are the coordination of team travel, the building and maintenance of the program’s budget and the organization of training camp. • Organizes the team’s community relations efforts, which include student-athlete visits to childrens’ hospitals, reading to elementary students, and various food and clothing drives. • Assistant director of the Cal football summer camps. • Served as team liaison for Cal's appearances in the 2003 Insight Bowl, 2004 Holiday Bowl, 2005 Las Vegas Bowl, 2006 Holiday Bowl, 2007 Armed Forces Bowl, 2008 Emerald Bowl and 2009 Poinsettia Bowl. • Also worked with Jeff Tedford at Oregon when the Cal head coach was the Ducks' offensive coordinator and McHugh was director of football operations.
MIKE McHUGH Director of Football Operations 8th Season at Cal
THE McHUGH FILE Birthdate........................December 12, 1957 Hometown............................. Boyertown, PA High School........................... Boyertown HS College............................. Findlay (Ohio) ’83 Bachelor’s in Health and Phys. Ed. Graduate School.........Eastern Michigan ’93 Master’s in Physical Education Family......................................... dog, Buddy
• Was the Oregon team liaison for the 1999 Sun Bowl and 2000 Holiday Bowl while also being involved in the recruiting efforts of the Ducks. • In his two seasons with the Detroit Lions worked on the staff of Marty Mornhinweg, whom he worked with at Missouri.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS A PLAYER • Played tight end and wide receiver from 1979-81 at the University of Findlay (Ohio). • A member of the 1979 NAIA national championship team. • Also a member of the track & field team at Findlay. • A two-year receiver at Potomac State College of West Virginia in Keyser, West Virginia (1976-77).
COACHING HISTORY 2003-Present................................. California Director of Football Operations 2001-02.................................... Detroit Lions Offensive Assistant Coach 1999-2000........................................ Oregon Director of Football Operations 1993-98........................................... Missouri Director of Football Operations 1992..................................Eastern Michigan Defensive Line Assistant Coach 1991..................................Eastern Michigan Recruiting Coordinator 1989-90.............................Eastern Michigan Offensive Line Assistant Coach 1985-88............ Northmor HS (Galion, Ohio) Head Coach 1984................. Northmor HS (Galion, Ohio) Assistant Coach 1983........Liberty-Benton HS (Findlay, Ohio) Assistant Coach
BOWL GAMES (11) 2009 Poinsettia.............................. California 2008 Emerald................................ California 2007 Armed Forces....................... California 2006 Holiday................................. California 2005 Las Vegas............................. California 2004 Holiday................................. California 2003 Insight . ................................ California 2000 Holiday.................................... Oregon 1999 Sun.......................................... Oregon 1998 Insight..................................... Missouri 1997 Holiday................................... Missouri *Season in which bowl was played
Mike McHugh and his dog, Buddy.
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FOOTBALL SUPPORT STAFF (continued) COACHING ACCOMPLISHMENTS • Has 19 years of experience in the strength and conditioning field at the major college level. • Oversees all of the strength and conditioning for Cal football. • Responsible for the year-round training of athletes for speed and power development as well as injury prevention, and is also involved with dynamic warm-up and stretching for all events, including in-season practices and out-of-season workouts. • Named a Master Strength and Conditioning Coach by the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Coaches association (CSCCa) in May of 2007 – the highest honor given in the strength and conditioning coaching profession. • Heavily involved in the design and development of the new Student-Athlete High Performance Center currently being constructed at Cal. • Has trained over 100 players who have gone on to the National Football League, including 29 of Cal’s current players in the NFL. • Nine Cal football players have earned Strength and Conditioning All-American honors under his tutelage. • Worked with Cal head coach Jeff Tedford at Oregon when Tedford was the Ducks' offensive coordinator. • Played football for one year at Rocky Mountain College in Billings, Montana, before transferring to Montana State, where he was a member of the school’s power-lifting team. • Had a brief career as a professional strong man.
JOHN KRASINSKI Strength and Conditioning Coach 9th Season at Cal
THE KRASINSKI FILE Birthdate..................................May 17, 1967 Hometown................................. Colstrip, MT High School................................ Colstrip HS College............................ Montana State ’90 Bachelor’s in Sports Medicine Graduate School.........................Oregon ’98 Master’s in Exercise Physiology Family..................................... wife, Summer sons, Johnhenry and Lincoln
COACHING HISTORY 2002-Present................................. California Strength and Conditioning Coach 2000-02............................. Northern Arizona Strength and Conditioning Coach 1996-2000........................................ Oregon Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach 1993-96................................ Colorado State Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach 1991-92............................................Rutgers Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach
BOWL GAMES (12) 2009 Poinsettia.............................. California 2008 Emerald................................ California 2007 Armed Forces....................... California 2006 Holiday................................. California 2005 Las Vegas............................. California 2004 Holiday................................. California 2003 Insight . ................................ California 1999 Sun.......................................... Oregon 1998 Aloha....................................... Oregon 1997 Las Vegas................................ Oregon 1995 Holiday........................ Colorado State 1994 Holiday........................ Colorado State. *Season in which bowl was played
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John Krasinski with his wife, Summer, and sons, Lincoln (left) and Johnhenry.
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MIKE ANDERSEN DIRECTOR OF PLAYER CAREER DEVELOPMENT Mike Andersen is in his fourth season as Director of Player Career Development at Cal in 2010. Andersen oversees life skills coaching as well as the summer and career job placement programs. Prior to joining Cal, Andersen spent over 30 years in the mining industry with Utah International and its successor companies. Andersen and his wife, Marilyn, are both graduates of Cal as are their three children, Kirsten, Eric and Hilary.
RONNIE BRADFORD ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT, DEFENSE Ronnie Bradford is in his first season with Cal in 2010 as an administrative assistant for the defensive staff. Bradford was a defensive assistant with the Kansas City Chiefs in 2009 under Cal defensive coordinator Clancy Pendergast after six previous seasons with the Denver Broncos from 2003-08, where he served in a variety of capacities both on defense and special teams. Bradford played for 10 seasons in the NFL, with Denver (1993-95), Arizona (1996), Atlanta (1997-2001) and Minnesota (2002). He was also a two-year starter and four-year letterwinner in college at Colorado.
ERNIE CHU ASSISTANT VIDEO COORDINATOR Ernie Chu is in his third season as Cal’s assistant video coordinator in 2010. He assists with video evaluation of practices and games while also working to produce recruiting, motivational and instructional videos. A native of nearby Albany and a graduate of Albany High School, Chu previously worked for three years in the UC Davis football video office from 2005-07, including the final two seasons as the head video coordinator. Chu is a 2007 graduate of UC Davis, earning a pair of bachelor’s degrees in Biological Sciences and Economics. He will begin the MBA program at UC Davis in the fall of 2010.
BRENDAN FERRIGNO ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT, OFFENSE Brendan Ferrigno is in his fourth season as an administrative assistant for the offense with the Cal football program in 2010. Ferrigno played four seasons at wide receiver for Portland State, including two as a starter. As a senior in 2006, he compiled a team-high 545 re-
ceiving yards, including a 42-yard touchdown catch against Cal at Memorial Stadium. He tallied 410 yards on 27 receptions in his junior campaign, including four touchdown grabs. Ferrigno picked up Big Sky Conference honorable mention honors three times in his career. He earned his bachelor’s degree in Communications from Portland State in March of 2007.
MATT FOX VIDEO COORDINATOR Matt Fox is in his ninth season as the video coordinator for Cal football in 2010. He assists the football program with its video evaluation from practices and games, in addition to coordinating video projects for recruiting, motivational and instructional tapes, and other electronic needs within the department. After serving as a student assistant in the video office at Oregon from 1999-2000, Fox spent the 2001 season as the assistant video coordinator at TCU. He joined the Cal staff in his current role in March 2002. Fox earned a business administration degree from Oregon in 2001. He and his wife, Tove, married in July of 2009 and reside in Oakland.
ED GARLAND HEAD EQUIPMENT MANAGER Ed Garland is in his sixth season as head equipment manager at Cal in 2010 after serving for 16 years as an assistant equipment manager at Oregon. Garland oversees all equipment operations for Cal, focusing on the football program and the ordering and maintenance of all team gear. Prior to joining the collegiate ranks at Oregon, Garland was an assistant equipment manager for the Portland Breakers of the USFL in 1985. The Vale, Ore., native earned his bachelor’s degree in political science from Oregon in 1987. After graduation, he worked in retail management in Chicago before returning to Eugene. Ed and his wife, Beth, are the parents of one daughter, Bryn Marie.
DENIS HALLIN ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Denis Hallin is in his seventh season with the Cal football program in 2010 after working in the athletic business office from 2000-04. Hallin provides administrative support and is a key player in the behind the scenes
operation of the program. In addition to his duties as the team’s administrative assistant, he also assists with football operations and advance travel for away games. A 2000 graduate of UC Santa Barbara with a bachelor’s degree in Sociology, the Oakland native now resides with his wife, Keri, in Alameda.
MATT HAVRANEK ASSISTANT FOOTBALL ATHLETIC TRAINER Matt Havranek is in his third season as Cal’s assistant football athletic trainer in 2010. His responsibilities at Cal include supervision of the graduate intern and undergraduate sports medicine intern programs, as well as the long-term rehabilitation of Cal student-athletes. He has previous athletic training experience with the San Francisco 49ers, Arizona Rattlers and Physiotherapy Associates. Havranek earned a bachelor’s degree from Marist College in 2005 and a master’s in Sports Health Care from A.T. Still University in 2007. He is a certified athletic trainer with the National Athletic Trainers Association and resides in Berkeley.
CHIDI IWUOMA ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF STUDENT-ATHLETE DEVELOPMENT Chidi Iwuoma returns to the Cal football program in 2010 for his first season as the assistant director of student-athlete development. He is responsible for assisting in the academic performance of Cal football players. After receiving his bachelor’s degree in social welfare from Cal in 2001, Iwuoma embarked on an eight-year playing career in the NFL from 200108. During the period, he was a member of NFL rosters in Detroit, New England, Pittsburgh, St. Louis and Tennessee, with the Steelers winning Super Bowl XL following the 2005 season with him as a member of the squad. During the 2009-10 academic year, Iwuoma served in Cal Athletic Study Center assisting student-athletes with a wide range of academic topics at the same Berkeley campus where he was a standout defensive back for the Golden Bears as a four-year letterwinner from 1997-2000.
TAGGART McCURDY GRADUATE ASSISTANT, DEFENSE Former Golden Bear Taggart McCurdy is in his fourth season at Cal in 2010 and his third as a graduate assistant on defense after serving one season as an administrative assistant for the defensive coaches. McCurdy, who played
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FOOTBALL SUPPORT STAFF (continued) in all 26 games for Cal in 2003 and 2004, began his professional career on the Berkeley campus in 2005 by working in the Athletic Study Center for two years. McCurdy also served as the linebackers and co-special teams coordinator at Diablo Valley College in 2006.
WES McGAUGH FOOTBALL ATHLETIC TRAINER Wes McGaugh is in his third season as the football athletic trainer at Cal in 2010. McGaugh oversees the injury prevention, evaluation and management for the Cal football program, as well as player injury rehab. He previously spent three campaigns as an assistant trainer with the San Francisco 49ers from 2005-07. McGaugh earned a bachelor’s degree in Exercise and Sports Science from Howard Payne University in 2002, and was honored as the school's Outstanding Young Graduate of the Year in 2009. He added a master’s in Sports Health Care from the Arizona School of Health Sciences in 2004. McGaugh is a certified member of the National Athletic Trainers Association (NATA). He and his wife, Patty, reside in Santa Clara.
ANDREW McGRAW RECRUITING ASSISTANT Andrew McGraw is in his 11th season as Cal’s primary recruiting assistant in 2010. McGraw has helped the Golden Bears sign several highly-ranked recruiting classes during his tenure at Cal, including a 2010 incoming group that ranks as high as No. 11 in the nation according to Rivals. In addition, he serves as Cal’s high school football camp director. He started his tenure at Cal in 1996 as a recruiting assistant before working as a defensive assistant the following two seasons and then moving back into his current role. McGraw received his bachelor’s degree in Geography from Cal in 1995. He and his wife, Stephanie, reside in Oakland with their son, Zach, and daughter, Ella.
DAVE MOOSMAN EQUIPMENT MANAGER Dave Moosman is in his 10th season as an equipment manager at Cal. A certified equipment manager through the American Equipment Managers Association, Moosman spent six years as a Cal equipment staff game day volunteer prior to joining the staff. Moosman has two grown children, Lucas and Lindsay.
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KEVIN PARKER
AKILI SMITH
RECRUITING ASSISTANT
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT, OFFENSE
Kevin Parker is in his ninth season as a recruiting assistant at Cal, working on all aspects of on-campus recruiting. He is also one of the team’s leaders in giving back to the community, regularly speaking in the community and arranging outreach events for Cal players. He received two prestigious honors for his efforts during the 2009 season, being selected as the team’s recipient of the Everett Merriman Award for his commitment to community service, as well as being presented with the Wishes-Come-True Inspirational Award at a banquet in San Diego the day before the Poinsettia Bowl Parker played tailback and wide receiver at Oregon. He was twice named the Ducks’ Most Inspirational Player and spent the 2001 season with the Detroit Fury of the Arena Football League. Parker earned his Bachelor’s in Sociology from Oregon in 1999. The Oakland native lives in Richmond with his wife, Melissa, his three sons, Kevin II, Kevion and Jayden, and stepson, Larry White.
KEIKO PRICE DIRECTOR OF STUDENTATHLETE DEVELOPMENT Keiko Price is in her first season as the director of student-athlete development for the Cal football program in 2010. In that position, she is responsible for the academic performance of Cal football players. Price previously served as an academic advisor in the Athletic Study Center at Cal from 2002-07, before taking positions as the academic advising coordinator for Black Student Programs at St. Mary’s College (2007) and the assistant academic director for studentathletes at Stanford (2007-10). During her first stint at Cal, Price was an academic advisor for nine teams including football, and served as a liaison between student-athletes, coaches, professors and university departments. Price was an NCAA, Pac-10 and Sears Directors’ Cup Postgraduate scholarship recipient after a standout collegiate career as a student-athlete at UCLA, where she earned 22 All-American honors. She graduated cum laude from UCLA in 2001, earning her bachelor’s degree in African American Studies, and attended graduate school at Cal, where she earned a master’s degree in education. She is currently pursuing a doctorate degree in education from the University of San Francisco.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Akili Smith is in his first season as an administrative assistant on offense at Cal in 2010. Smith, who has spent the past two seasons as the quarterbacks coach at Grossmont College in San Diego, was selected by Cincinnati as the third overall pick in the first round of the 1999 NFL Draft and played four seasons with the Bengals (1999-2002). He attended training camp with the Packers (2003) and Buccaneers (2005). Smith played his collegiate football at Oregon from 1997-98 when Cal head coach Jeff Tedford was the Ducks’ offensive coordinator. He was the Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year as a senior, setting Oregon’s single-season passing record with 3,763 yards and also throwing for 32 touchdowns.
BUD TURNER FOOTBALL OPERATIONS A longtime member of the Cal football program and one its most recognizable faces, Bud Turner is in his 41st season as part of Cal football in 2010. Since beginning his tenure in 1970, Turner has worked with every area of football operations, most closely with the equipment and training staff, and now serves in security and operations. Turner, who oversees field security at practice and on game days, holds a lifetime honorable Big C and is a member of the Sons of California. Affectionately known as “Dog,” Turner and his wife, Joan, live in Walnut Creek. They have three children – Kim, Kurt and Kristi – and seven grandchildren.
RANDY VENTERS ASSISTANT EQUIPMENT MANAGER Randy Venters is in his third season on the Cal equipment staff in 2010. Venters came to Cal from Nevada, were he was responsible the daily equipment operations for football for two season. He previously served as Area Coordinator of Equipment at Illinois State for five years and was also the head equipment manager for the Chicago Rush of the Arena Football League. Venters earned a bachelor’s degree in Physical Education from McKendree University. He resides in El Cerrito.
2010 PLAYERS
CAMERON JORDAN Defensive Line
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2010 PLAYER PROFILES Chris ADCOCK
58
#
Solomona AIGAMAUA (SAUL-ih-mona)
(eye-ING-ah-MOE-ah)
90
#
OL, 6-3, 290............................................................Rowlett, TX
TE, 6-3, 245.......................... Honolulu, HI
FR-HS........................................................Dallas Christian HS
JR-SQ................................... St. Louis HS
HIGH SCHOOL: A four-year varsity letterwinner who started each of 49 games possible as a prep, helping his squad to a 43-6 overall record during the four-year span … team was voted Region II champions (Division I) during his senior campaign and earned a spot in the state semifinals after winning the state title in junior season with a perfect 14-0 mark … also a member of a state finalist during his 2007 sophomore campaign and a playoff squad when he was a freshman in 2006 … team was District champs in each of his final three years … the first freshman to ever start on the offensive line at his high school … earned All-American honors by the National Private School Athletic Association, named to the Dave Campbell Texas Football State Super Team and was the honorable mention MVP for all of Texas private school football as a senior, while ranking among the top 15 offensive linemen and top 80 players overall in Texas … team captain as a senior … also played on the defense line as a senior, collecting 54 tackles, 14.0 tackles for loss, 6.0 sacks, five forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries … earned Division II first-team All-State in each of his final two seasons and first-team All-District in each of his final three campaigns … the only sophomore on the All-District team the first time he received the honor and was also honorable mention All-State … earned All-Region honors by the National Private School Athletic Association as a junior … earned academic All-State honors as both a junior and senior … tabbed a four-star recruit by ESPN, who recognized him as the No. 8 guard in the nation, the No. 33 player overall in Texas and the No. 214 player in the nation … ranks nationally as Scout’s No. 8 center and ESPN’s No. 9 offensive guard … a PrepStar all-region choice who is rated the No. 119 player overall in Texas by the organization … also participated in track and field, taking sixth in the state meet in the shot put as a junior to help his squad win their first state title … class valedictorian.
CAL CAREER: Has been working out the tight ends since the spring of 2010 after having been with the linebackers for his first three seasons in the program from 2007-09 … has played in one career game when he made a pair of unassisted tackles and 0.5 tackle for loss (-1 yards) coming off the bench against Eastern Washington in 2009.
PERSONAL: Full name is Christopher Fulton Adcock … born November 3, 1991 … parents are Jeff and Christina Adcock … father played offensive line at UC Davis from 1979-83 … served as high school’s council historian during the 2009-10 school year … has been on mission trips to Africa and New Orleans … major is undeclared.
YEAR 2009
Ted AGU
(uh-GOO)
94
2008: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2007: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Rated as the No. 16 player in Hawaii by Scout and Rivals … selected first-team All-State at defensive end by the Honolulu Advertiser and Honolulu Star-Bulletin … All-Interscholastic League of Honolulu honoree … helped lead squad to an 11-1 record (7-0 in league play) in his 2006 senior season with the lone loss coming in the state championship game … also a basketball standout for the Crusaders. PERSONAL: Full name is Solomona Andrew Aigamaua … born October 14, 1989 … parents are Benjamin and Elisapeta Aigamaua … two siblings are older brother, Benjamin, and younger sister, Fuarosa … attended same high school as former Cal teammate and current Jacksonville Jaguar player Tyson Alualu … known as Mona by his teammates … major is undeclared but considering Sociology.
AIGAMAUA’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 1-0
UA-A-TOT 0-2-2
FR-HS......................................................................Frontier HS HIGH SCHOOL: Earned All-Southwest Yosemite League honors in each of his final two prep seasons, leading the league with 12.0 sacks as a senior after posting 8.0 in his junior campaign ... also had 62 tackles in his final prep campaign when he added an All-Area selection for a squad that was the Division III Central Section runner up and finished with an 11-2 overall record ... posted the biggest games of his senior season against Ridgeview when he recorded 3.0 sacks to earn Defensive Player of the Game honors and vs. Exeter with 12 tackles ... also played basketball and participated in track and field ... an honor roll student all four years of high school who was also named the most academic player on his basketball squad during both his sophomore and junior campaigns. PERSONAL: Full name is Ted Obinna Agu … born May 8, 1992 … major is undeclared but considering Integrative Biology.
TFL 0.5-1
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0
FF FR 0 0
AIGAMAUA’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 2 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 0.5 (Eastern Washington, 2009)
#
DL, 6-2, 242......................................................Bakersfield, CA
68
2009: Saw action in one game off the bench against Eastern Washington, recording his first career stats with two unassisted tackles and 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard).
David AKNIN
35
#
FB, 6-0, 235...................................................... San Carlos, CA JR-JC.................................. San Mateo College/Carlmont HS JUNIOR COLLEGE: A first-team All-NorCal Conference running back as a sophomore in 2009, rushing for 1,052 yards and 17 touchdowns, with an average of 5.7 yards per carry to lead his squad to the Northern California junior college title. HIGH SCHOOL: A two-way player at running back and linebacker who was named the Most Valuable Player in San Mateo County as a senior in 2007 when he rushed for 1,985 yards and 27 touchdowns, while recording 22.0 sacks on defense … named All-Peninsula-Lake League at both running back and linebacker in each of his final two campaigns, while adding all-conference honors at running back as a 2005 sophomore. PERSONAL: Full name is David Patrick Aknin … born February 3, 1989 … parents are Jacques and Nancy Aknin … major is undeclared but considering Political Economy.
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Ian ALBRECHT
19
#
WR, 6-0, 204.........................Sonoma, CA
P, 6-4, 207...........................Camarillo, CA
JR-SQ.................................... Sonoma HS
JR-2V...................................Camarillo HS
CAL CAREER: Has been a member of the team for the last three seasons from 2007-09 but has not seen any game action. 2009: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2008: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2007: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: A first-team All-Empire selection as a senior when he was a team captain and team MVP ... also earned honorable mention All-Metro honors and was a candidate for Athlete of the Year in Sonoma County during his senior campaign when he set single-season school records for receptions (58) and receiving yards (1,070), while also establishing a single-game mark with 225 receiving yards in one contest ... earned All-Empire League honors as a junior when he had 21 catches for 635 yards and seven touchdown receptions in just seven games of action ... also a standout golfer, earning All-Empire League honors for four years and being named the Empire League Player of the Year as a senior with a nine-hole average of 36.6. PERSONAL: Full name is Ian Timothy Albrecht ... born October 26, 1988 ... parents are Dennis and Lynne Albrecht ... major is Legal Studies.
Keenan ALLEN
21
#
WR/DB, 6-3, 195.............................................Greensboro, NC FR-HS..................................................... Northern Guilford HS 2010: A two-way player who is expected to compete for playing time as a true freshman and see action both as a wide receiver and a defensive back … has garnered several preseason honors prior to the start of his Cal career, including being named the nation top freshman defensive back by Lindy’s … also listed by Lindy’s as the nation’s No. 3 overall incoming freshman in the Pac-10 as well as No. 5 nationally … Athlon and Phil Steele both have him as Cal’s top freshman, with Athlon also picking him as the No. 2 incoming freshman in the nation listed as an “athlete”, while ranking No. 8 in the Pac-10 among all players and No. 26 nationally … Steele also has him as the No. 3 freshman defensive back in the country. HIGH SCHOOL: A five-star recruit according to ESPN, Rivals and Scout … ranked No. 5 in the country on the Rivals250 list, while checking in as both the nation’s top safety and best overall player from North Carolina … the country’s No. 5 “athlete” and No. 33 player overall according to ESPN … listed as the nation’s No. 70 player overall by Sporting News … played in U.S. Army All-American Bowl, returning one punt for 33 yards as well as one kickoff also for 33 yards … named to the Parade All-American squad … listed as the No. 8 player overall by MaxPreps, which also showered him with first-team All-American honors … had a huge season statistically as a senior with 145 tackles and eight interceptions on defense to go along with an astounding 53 offensive touchdowns to help his school win its first 3A Mid-State Conference championship in and finish with a 12-2 overall record … picked off nine passes to go along with 15 pass breakups, 64 tackles and three forced fumbles to earn All-State honors defensively as a junior, while adding 42 receptions for 880 yards and 14 touchdown catches as well as 644 rushing yards and 12 TDs on the ground on only 39 carries on the offensive side of the ball … half-brother of quarterback Zach Maynard, who is transferring from Buffalo to Cal and will be eligible to play for the Bears in 2011 … called “the type of athlete who should make a major impact as a true freshman” by Tom Lemming, while ESPN says “this guy is a really good football player.” PERSONAL: Full name is Keenan Alexander Allen … born April 27, 1992 … parents are stepfather Scott Lang and mother Doris Maynard … major is undeclared.
Bryan ANGER
NATIONAL HONORS CANDIDATE
CAL CAREER: Has posted a 42.3 average on 140 punts in 26 games, recording 30 punts of 50 or more yards, pinning opponents inside their 20-yard line on 50 occasions and forcing opponents to make fair catches 41 times … has posted four of the 12 longest punts in school history … has averaged 40.0 yards per punt or more and had at least one punt of 50 or more yards in a game 16 times, while averaging 50.0 yards per punt or more on three occasions … has a career-long punt of 76 yards at Stanford in 2008 that ranks fourth all-time at Cal, while adding a 75-yarder in the same contest that is tied for fifth … has been on the watch list for the Ray Guy Award given annually to the nation’s top punters in each of the last two seasons in 2008 and 2009 … has been selected the Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week twice, earning the honor once both in 2008 and 2009. 2010: A national honors candidate who has earned several preseason honors, including a third-team All-American selection (Phil Steele) and honorable mention All-American recognition (College Football Insiders, NationalChamps. net), as well as a unanimous first-team All-Pac-10 choice by the four major preseason magazines (Athlon, Lindy’s, Phil Steele, Sporting News) … also a preseason favorite for the College Football Performance Awards Punter Trophy … selected as the nation’s No. 4 draft-eligible punter by Phil Steele, while Lindy’s lists him as the nation’s No. 5 punter. 2009: An honorable mention All-American choice according to College Football Insiders and a first-team All-Pac-10 selection, both for the first time in his career … finished the season with a 41.5 yards per punt average to rank fourth in the Pac-10 on 69 punts, including 14 of 50+ yards and 24 that pinned opponents inside their 20-yard line ... forced opponents into 24 fair catches … twice a College Football Performance Awards Punter Performer of the Week after games at UCLA and Arizona State, and once the Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week following his outing against the Bruins, when he averaged 50.0 yards on seven punts, including a season-long 72-yarder … averaged a career-high 53.0 yards per punt vs. the Sun Devils and pinned ASU inside its 20-yard line on three occasions … pinned opponents inside their 20-yard line at least once in 12 of 13 contests … averaged 40.0 yards or more in eight of 13 contests … had at least one punt of 50 or more yards seven times … booted his second-longest punt of the year with a 60-yarder at Minnesota … punted a career-high-tying eight times against Oregon State for the second consecutive season, averaging 42.4 yards per punt … recipient of team’s J. Scott Duncan Award as MVP on special teams ... a first-team preseason All-American selection by Athlon, while earning second-team mention from NationalChamps.net, Phil Steele and Sporting News … added first-team preseason All-Pac-10 honors according to Athlon, Lindy’s, Phil Steele and Sporting News … ranked as the No. 2 punter in the nation in the preseason by Phil Steele, while Lindy’s had him at No. 3 … on the watch list for the Ray Guy Award and the Collegiate Football Performance Awards Punter of the Year. 2008: Established himself as one of the top punters in the country as a freshman ... named a first-team Freshman All-American by College Football News, Rivals and Sporting News Today ... also a second-team All-Pac-10 choice ... the only freshman in the country as well as the only Pac-10 player to be named a semifinalist for the Ray Guy Award ... won the Bob Simmons Award given to Cal’s Most Valuable Freshman … ranked third in the Pac-10 and 18th nationally with a 43.1 yards per punt average that ranks fifth on Cal’s all-time list … averaged 40.0 or more yards per punt in eight of 13 contests ... chosen the Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week after booming a punt 72 yards, averaging 47.4 yards on seven punts and placing three kicks inside the 20-yard line vs. Arizona State ... set a school single-game record when he averaged a Pac-10 season-high 60.2 yards per punt on four tries vs. Stanford, including two of the longest punts in school history – a 76-yarder on his first boot (No. 4) that was a new Big Game record and a 75-yarder on his second (No. 5-T) that along with the 72-yarder vs. Arizona State were the three longest in the Pac-10 in 2008 ... had a big day at Arizona, averaging 48.4 yards per punt on seven attempts … punted a career-high-tying eight times (40.8 avg) at Oregon State … 26 of 71 punts pinned opponents inside
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their own 20-yard line … had 16 punts of at least 50 yards, with at least one punt of 50 or more yards in nine of 13 contests ... forced opponents into 17 fair catches ... recorded one unassisted tackle at Arizona … had a punt blocked in his first collegiate game vs. Michigan State.
Jed BARNETT
45
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2007: Redshirted … did not play.
PK, 6-2, 212............................................................Camas, WA
HIGH SCHOOL: USA Today and EA Sports first-team All-American ... listed as the No. 2 kicker in the country by Rivals and No. 5 according to Scout ... selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... a PrepStar All-West Region choice ... garnered CalHiSports first-team All-State honors ... averaged 41.8 yards per punt with 11 being downed inside the 20-yard line as a senior ... also caught 42 passes for 678 yards as a receiver ... selected as his school’s Scholar-Athlete of the Year.
FR-HS.........................................Union HS/Mountain View HS
PERSONAL: Full name is Bryan Corey Anger … born October 6, 1988 … parents are Mike and Jean Anger ... brother, Michael Jr., played football at San Diego and soccer at UC Irvine … brother, Matt, attended Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, and sister, Sara, is attending Cal State University Channel Islands ... major is undeclared but considering Integrative Biology.
ANGER’S CAREER PUNTING STATISTICS
YEAR G-GS NO YDS AVG 2008 13-0 71 3063 43.1 2009 13-0 69 2861 41.5 Totals 26-0 140 5924 42.3 *Other Stats: Anger had one unassisted tackle in 2008.
LG 76 72 76
BLK 1 0 1
ANGER’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Punts: 8 (twice, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Punting Yards: 350 (at UCLA, 2009) Punting Average: 60.2 (vs. Stanford, 2008) Long Punt: 76 (vs. Stanford, 2008) 50+ Yard Punts: 4 (twice, last at Arizona State, 2009) Inside 20-Yardline Punts: 3 (nine times, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Blocked Punts: 1 (vs. Michigan State, 2008)
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#
Marc ANTHONY
DB, 6-0, 196......................... Chandler, AZ SO-1V...................................Chandler HS CAL CAREER: Has played in eight games off the bench during his first two seasons with the program in 2008 and 2009. 2009: Played in eight games … did not record any statistics other than participation. 2008: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Listed as a four-star recruit by Rivals while Scout tabbed him as a three-star prospect … Rivals also listed him as the No. 14 cornerback prospect in the country and the fourth-best overall prospect in Arizona … Scout rated him at No. 40 among the nation’s cornerbacks … selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep … first-team All-State selection as a senior when he posted 77 tackles, 1.0 sack and four interceptions … played in the Offense-Defense All-American Bowl … named second-team All-Region and honorable mention All-State as a junior after tallying 58 tackles with five interceptions.
HIGH SCHOOL: An All-State punter as a senior in 2009 when he had a huge season, averaging over 50 yards per punt, recording 56 touchbacks … earned All-Region and first-team All-3A Greater St. Helens League in each of his final two campaigns … added three team MVP honors for special teams … made 18-of-24 field goal attempts during his prep career … squad was back-to-back 3-A Greater St. Helens League titles in each of his final two seasons … posted the nation’s longest punt of the season at 63 yards (all in the air) to win the Ray Guy Longest Punt in the Nation honors during as a junior … also played three seasons of prep soccer and was a second-team All-GSHL choice as a junior in 2008 … participated in the javelin during his senior campaign … also a winner of many awards off the field, being named first-team All-GSHL Academics in each of his final three seasons, while adding a school leadership award and a Senior Class Council spot in his final year of high school … also a member of the Interact Community Service Club and the Senior Associated Student Body. PERSONAL: Full name is Jedidiah William Barnett … born December 18, 1991 … parents are Norman and Eve Barnett … one of five siblings … major is undeclared but considering Business.
Mitchel BARTOLO (bar-TOW-low)
TB, 5-8, 180....................................................... San Diego, CA FR-HS...................................................................Westview HS 2010: Enrolled at Cal in January of 2010 and took part in spring workouts with the Golden Bears. HIGH SCHOOL: An All-Valley League selection as a senior when he rushed for 761 yards and eight touchdowns on 130 carries, while adding 33 receptions for 381 yards … picked up first-team San Diego Union Tribune All-Academic League honors in both his junior and senior campaigns ... carried 118 times for 605 yards and five touchdowns as a junior, with 20 receptions for 221 yards and two scores … team advanced to the section playoffs during each of his final two varsity campaigns, reaching the semifinals during a 9-3 season as a senior in 2008 that was the best in school history … was Player of the Month for both the North County Times and Prep Sports Live during his junior and senior campaigns … also on the school’s track and field squad, earning first-team All-Academic League recognition from the San Diego Union Tribune in both of his final two campaigns … earned his school’s Outstanding Wolverine Award in 2008-09, as well as a National Honor Society and honor roll member who graduated with a 4.1 GPA. PERSONAL: Full name is Mitchel Joseph Bartolo ... born November 23, 1991 ... parents are Robert Bartolo and Bernadette Harris ... major is undeclared but considering Integrative Biology.
PERSONAL: Full name is Marc Phillip Anthony ... born November 14, 1989 ... parents are Gary Janson and Loretta Evans-Janson … major is undeclared but considering African American Studies.
ANTHONY’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2009
70
G-GS 8-0
UA-A-TOT 0-0-0
TFL 0.0
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0
35
#
FF FR 0 0
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Tom BERRY
Jackson BOUZA (BOOZE-uh)
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OL, 6-5, 290..........................................................Murrieta, CA
WR, 6-0, 192....................... Lafayette, CA
JR-JC.................................... Palomar CC/Murrieta Valley HS
RFR-RS............................De La Salle HS
JUNIOR COLLEGE: Earned first-team Region III All-California honors on offense as a sophomore in 2009, and was also a unanimous first-team selection at guard to the Southern California Football Association's National Division Southern Conference ... led team to a spot in the state semifinals as a sophomore ... earned his team's academic award in 2009 after posting a 4.0 combined GPA in his two years on campus ... won his school's National Football Foundation Academic Award as a sophomore. HIGH SCHOOL: Earned first-team All-Southwestern League honors during both of his final prep campaigns ... squad captured Southwestern League title during his junior campaign. PERSONAL: Full name is Thomas Robert Berry ... born March 29, 1989 ... parents are Tom and Cindy Berry ... major is Economics.
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Ross BOSTOCK (bah-STOCK)
WR, 6-2, 190....................Sebastopol, CA SO-SQ....................................... Analy HS CAL CAREER: Has appeared in two games over the last two seasons during his two seasons with the program from 2008-09.
2009: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Tallied a team-high 39 receptions for 712 yards and six touchdown catches as a senior for a squad that finished with a 12-2 record, won the East Bay Athletic League and North Coast Section titles, and finished as the state runner-up while being ranked No. 19 nationally ... racked up the recognition in his final prep campaign, earning an All-EBAL selection, his team’s Players Award and a spot in the Contra Costa-Alameda All-Star Classic ... was also named an honorable mention Athlete of the Week by the San Francisco Chronicle on Nov. 5, 2008, the same week the award was won by Cal teammate Dasarte Yarnway of Sacred Heart Cathedral ... started for a MaxPreps national championship team and California state winners as a junior in 2007. PERSONAL: Full name is Jackson Jacob Bouza ... born November 5, 1990 ... parents are Matt and Marianne Bouza ... father, Matt, was a three-year letterwinner on the Cal football squad from 1978-80, and went on to play nine seasons in the NFL with the San Francisco 49ers (1981), Baltimore Colts (1982-83) and Indianapolis Colts (1984-89) … major is undeclared but considering Political Economies of Industrial Societies.
Mark BRAZINSKI (bruh-ZIN-ski)
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2009: Appeared in the team’s first two games vs. Maryland and Eastern Washington but did not play after those two contests … did not record any stats other than participation.
OL, 6-2, 280................Basking Ridge, NJ
2008: Redshirted … did not play.
2009: Redshirted ... did not play ... selected as the team’s Freshman Lifter of the Year ... named as the nation’s No. 35 incoming freshman offensive lineman by Phil Steele prior to the campaign.
HIGH SCHOOL: Recorded 61 catches for a single-season school record 1,179 receiving yards (117.9 ypg) and nine touchdown receptions as a senior ... opened his 2007 senior campaign with four straight 100-yard receiving games, including a 199-yard outburst (seven catches) against Burton High School in the second week of the year ... numerous honors in his final prep season included first-team All-Sonoma County League, All-Redwood Empire Offense, honorable mention All-Metro, Analy High School Athlete of the Year and team MVP recognition ... also tallied 27 tackles, an interception and a fumble recovery as a senior to land second-team All-SCL recognition on the defensive side of the ball. PERSONAL: Full name is Ross Edward Bostock ... born April 2, 1990 ... parents are Ed and Stephanie Bostock ... major is undeclared but considering Sociology.
BOSTOCK’S CAREER CAL RECEIVING STATISTICS
YEAR 2009
G-GS 2-0
NO 0
YDS 0
AVG 0.0
TD 0
LONG 0
RFR-RS........................... Immaculata HS
HIGH SCHOOL: A four-star recruit and the No. 2 center in the country according to Scout ... also a four-star recruit by Rivals and rated as the media outlet’s No. 6 center in the country and No. 10 overall player in New Jersey ... competed at the 2009 Under Armour All-America High School Football Game following his senior season ... listed as a PrepStar and SuperPrep All-American ... named firstteam All-Area and All-Skyland Conference in his senior campaign in 2008 ... also played defense and had 18 tackles and 1.0 sacks as a senior to lead his team to the state finals and a 10-2 record ... gave up no sacks and had 85 pancake blocks as a junior en route to claiming first-team All-Area and third-team All-State honors as his team was 11-1 and reached the third round of the playoffs before losing its first game of the year. PERSONAL: Full name is Mark Daniel Brazinski ... born May 6, 1991 ... parents are Joseph and Mary Anne Brazinski ... has two brothers that have played college football, with Brian wrapping up his college career at Penn in 2007 and Paul currently playing at Bucknell ... states the fact that Cal has produced recent successful centers such as Alex Mack and Marvin Philip, who have gone on to NFL careers, helped make his decision to attend Cal ... major is Media Studies and also plans to apply to business school, intending to major in both.
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Allan BRIDGFORD
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QB, 6-3, 201................ Mission Viejo, CA
LB, 6-6, 250...................Los Angeles, CA
RFR-RS........................ Mission Viejo HS
SR-2V......................................Dorsey HS
2010: Missed all of 2010 spring practice after undergoing surgery on his right shoulder in January. 2009: Redshirted ... did not play ... named as the nation’s No. 15 incoming freshman quarterback by Phil Steele. HIGH SCHOOL: A four-star recruit by Rivals and Scout from one of the top high school football programs in the country ... Rivals rated him No. 7 on its “pro-style” quarterbacks list for 2009 ... also rated as the nation’s No. 19 quarterback and No. 79 overall player by ESPN, while Tom Lemming checked him in at No. 55 overall and CBS College Sports had him at No. 62 ... played in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl ... selected for the Under Armour All-America High School Football Game and the Orange County North/South Prep All-Star Football Game ... winner of the 2009 Glenn Davis Award at the U.S. Army All-American Bowl, which exemplifies the Army’s high standards of excellence in community service, education and athletics ... participated in the Elite 11 quarterback camp ... rated fifth among the nation’s most accurate throwers by Rivals ... earned several accolades during his senior year, including 2008 South Coast League Co-Offensive MVP and team MVP honors, as well as All-SCL recognition when he led his team to the section playoffs ... completed 61.3 percent of his passes during his senior year (184-of-300), amassing single-season school records and nationally-leading totals of 3,058 passing yards (254.8 ypg) and 38 touchdowns throws with his 184 pass completions also a single-season mark ... threw for 2,508 yards and 22 scores on 177-of-288 passing as a junior when he was the SCL MVP, and also earned team MVP and first-team All-SCL honors ... left Mission Viejo as its all-time leader in passing yards (7,208), passes attempted (661), passes completed (430) and passing touchdowns (77) after leading his team to the playoffs in each of his three seasons as the starting signal-caller, as well as the SCL title as a sophomore in 2006 ... his 29 career 100-yard passing games were also a school record ... set several additional single-game school records, including most passing yards (453), passes attempted (44), passes completed (30) and the highest percentage of passes completed (100.0%, 11-11). PERSONAL: Full name is Allan Linley Bridgford III ... born March 6, 1991 ... parents are Richard and Susan Bridgford ... oldest of five children ... has been involved with the Pediatric Cancer Research Foundation for most of his life after a close family friend was stricken with cancer at a young age ... has volunteered at Second Harvest Food Bank ... major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
Trajuan BRIGGS (tray-JUAN)
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TB, 5-11, 215........................ Pacoima, CA FR-HS............................. Birmingham HS 2010: Enrolled early at Cal for the 2010 spring semester and practiced with the team during 2010 spring football workouts. HIGH SCHOOL: Ranked as the nation’s No. 14 tailback/slotback according to Tom Lemming, the No. 35 running back by Rivals and the No. 78 running back with ESPN … checked in as the No. 55 prospect on the Rivals list of all players from the state of California … a PrepStar all-region choice … a member of the SuperPrep All-Far West squad … ran for 1,513 yards and 21 touchdowns on 173 carries as a junior to earn All-City honors in Los Angeles but missed nearly his entire senior campaign with an ankle injury … “a quality running back prospect with good measurables” according to ESPN.
CAL CAREER: Has played in 27 games with one start, recording 13 tackles (five unassisted, eight assisted) with 2.0 tackles for loss (-10 yards), 1.0 sack (-9 yards), a fumble recovery and two pass breakups … wore number 57 for his first three seasons in the program before switching to his current number 47 beginning in 2009 … has played both linebacker and defensive end during his Cal career. 2009: Played in all 13 contests, including the first start of his career at outside linebacker in the regular-season finale at Washington ... contributed five tackles and 0.5 tackles for loss (no yards) … had a season-high two tackles against Eastern Washington, and one each in contests vs. Maryland and Oregon State, as well as at Stanford when he also recorded his half tackle for loss. 2008: Played in all 13 games primarily on special teams and as a backup defensive end, compiling eight tackles (three unassisted, five assisted) with 1.5 tackles for loss (-10 yards), 1.0 sack (-9 yards), a fumble recovery and two pass breakups … most extensive action came against Colorado State when he had a career-high four tackles, including a nine-yard sack … recorded his fumble recovery at Maryland … his tackle at Washington State was also a half tackle for loss … pass breakups came in games vs. Michigan State and Arizona State. 2007: Made his college debut in the Louisiana Tech game but did not record any statistics other than participation. 2006: Redshirted due to shoulder surgery … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: PrepStar All-America selection ... also a member of the SuperPrep All-Far West team ... ranked No. 22 among defensive ends in the country and was the No. 78 prospect at his position in California according to Rivals ... named by Scout as the No. 45 defensive end in America ... in the final Rivals regional ranking, he checked in at No. 61 overall ... played on an 11-3 team and City of Los Angeles semifinalist as a senior ... credited with 21.0 sacks, eight fumble recoveries and six forced fumbles over the last two seasons of his prep career ... recorded 12.0 sacks as a senior ... a member of the National Honor Society and Dean’s List ... invited to the CaliFlorida Bowl. PERSONAL: Full name is Keith Browner … born April 7, 1988 … parents are Keith Sr. and Charisse Browner ... father was a standout at USC and played in the NFL with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Los Angeles Raiders, San Francisco 49ers and San Diego Chargers ... other Browner football standouts include Joey, Ross, Jim and Willard … Joey played at USC before embarking on a 10-year NFL career with Minnesota and Tampa Bay … Ross, Jim and Willard all played collegiately at Notre Dame, with Ross also playing 10 seasons in the NFL for Cincinnati and Green Bay, while Jim spent two years with Cincinnati … one of five siblings … major is American Studies.
BROWNER’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 1-0 13-0 13-1 27-1
UA-A-TOT 0-0-0 3-5-8 2-3-5 5-8-13
TFL 0.0-0 1.5-10 0.5-0 2.0-10
SACK INT PBU 0-0.0 0 0 1.0-9 0 2 0.0-0 0 0 1.0-9 0 2
BROWNER’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 4 (vs. Colorado State, 2008) Tackles For Loss: 1.0 (vs. Colorado State, 2008) Sacks: 1.0 (vs. Colorado State, 2008) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (at Maryland, 2008) Pass Breakups: 1 (twice, last vs. Arizona State, 2008)
PERSONAL: Full name is Trajuan Dewitt Briggs … born May 6, 1992 … mother is Nikywa Prevosts … major is undeclared but considering Mass Communications.
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Keith BROWNER
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FF FR 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
11
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Michael CALVIN
WR, 6-2, 204................. San Lorenzo, CA
DB, 6-0, 206............North Las Vegas, NV
JR-2V..............................San Lorenzo HS
JR-2V..................................Cheyenne HS
CAL CAREER: Has played in 14 games with one start, making nine receptions for 112 yards … wore number 84 for his first three seasons with the program before changing to number 11 for the 2010 season.
CAL CAREER: Has played in 23 games all off the bench primarily as a special teams player and reserve safety … has contributed 18 tackles (13 unassisted, five assisted) and two fumble recoveries.
2009: Played in 10 games, including his first career start vs. Arizona, with one reception for nine yards coming against Washington State. 2008: Played in four of the first five games off the bench with at least one catch in each contest before suffering a season-ending knee injury in practice … made eight catches for 103 yards … posted his best game at Maryland with five catches for 69 yards, including a career-long 23-yard reception … added one reception each at Washington State (12 yards), and vs. Arizona State (18 yards) and Colorado State (four yards). 2007: Redshirted … did not play … earned Scout Team Player of the Year honors for offense. HIGH SCHOOL: A SuperPrep All-America choice and All-Far West team selection ... rated No. 25 among the nation’s wide receivers by Scout ... Rivals ranked him No. 58 in the nation among wide receivers and No. 66 overall in California ... listed on the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s “Best in the West” team ... earned a No. 2 ranking on the 2007 Contra Costa Times’ “Cream of the Crop” list ... a PrepStar All-West Region choice ... averaged 146 yards of total offense per game while leading his team in receiving, scoring and kicking as a senior ... tallied 39 receptions for 789 yards and nine touchdowns as a senior in 2006, while also recording five interceptions on defense ... had 27 receptions for 665 yards and 13 touchdowns as a junior when he earned All-Area and second-team All-Hayward Area Athletic League honors on both sides of the ball (wide receiver and safety) ... had his best game with four touchdowns and 112 receiving yards against San Jose Mission, while also kicking a pair of extra points, snagging an interception and recording 10 tackles. PERSONAL: Full name is Michael Gregory Calvin ... born June 7, 1989 … parents are Ricky Robertson and Nancy Lauridsen … major is undeclared but considering Sociology. YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
CALVIN’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS G-GS 4-0 10-1 14-1
7
#
D.J. CAMPBELL
NO 8 1 9
YDS 103 9 112
AVG 12.9 9.0 12.4
TD 0 0 0
CALVIN’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Receptions: 5 (at Maryland, 2008) Receiving Yards: 69 (at Maryland, 2008) Long Reception: 23 (at Maryland, 2008)
LONG 23 9 23
2009: Played in 12 of 13 games off the bench, recording 14 tackles and recovering two fumbles to rank tied for seventh in Pac-10 with an average of 0.17 fumbles recovered per game … recorded a career-best three tackles in the Big Game at Stanford, while picking up two in each of the first three contests vs. Maryland, vs. Eastern Washington and at Minnesota, and again vs. Washington State … added a single tackle at UCLA, at Washington and vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl … fumble recoveries came against Maryland and at Oregon with both coming on opponent kick returns, leading to a touchdown vs. the Terrapins and a field goal against the Ducks. 2008: Played in 11 games off the bench and recorded four tackles … had a season-high two tackles at Arizona, as well as one each vs. Colorado State and Washington. 2007: Redshirted … did not play … earned Scout Team Player of the Year honors for defense. HIGH SCHOOL: Selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... a PrepStar All-West Region choice ... Rivals listed him as the No. 3 prospect in Nevada and No. 58 among all players classified as “athletes” in the nation ... a two-time first-team All-State selection as well as a two-time All-Sunset Northwest League pick ... collected a team-best 61 tackles, eight interceptions (four returned for touchdowns), two forced fumbles and three fumble recoveries as a senior cornerback ... also recorded 10 rushing touchdowns, 751 yards passing and three interceptions as a junior. PERSONAL: Full name is Darion Lamar Campbell Jr. … born July 24, 1989 … parents are Delaney and Valencia Meyer … major is Social Welfare.
CAMPBELL’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 11-0 12-0 23-0
UA-A-TOT 4-0-4 9-5-14 13-5-18
TFL 0.0-0 0.0-0 0.0-0
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0-0 0 0.0-0 0-0 0 0.0-0 0-0 0
FF FR 0 0 0 2 0 2
CAMPBELL’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 3 (at Stanford, 2009) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (twice, last at Oregon, 2009)
Dan CAMPOREALE (CAMPO-rel-ee)
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LB, 6-3, 238........................ Lafayette, CA RFR-RS............................... Acalanes HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: ESPN ranked him the No. 10 inside linebacker in California and No. 73 at his position nationally ... earned an All-Diablo Foothill Athletic League player in his junior and senior seasons at both linebacker and center ... was also named to the All-Metro team as a linebacker by the San Francisco Chronicle as a senior, when he recorded 109 tackles and 6.0 sacks ... added second-team All-DFAL honors in baseball as a utility player during his senior campaign when he hit .368 and drove in a team-high 18 runs. PERSONAL: Full name is Daniel William Camporeale ... born October 9, 1991 ... parents are Ken and Diane Camporeale ... father played quarterback at Cabrillo College ... major is undeclared but considering Political Economies of Industrial Societies.
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Tevin CARTER
WR, 6-3, 190..................................................Los Angeles, CA FR-HS....................................................................... Santee HS 2010: Listed at No. 48 nationally among freshman wide receivers prior to the season by Phil Steele. HIGH SCHOOL: A four-star selection of both Rivals and Scout … checked in at No. 130 on the Rivals250 list, as well as No. 17 on the media outlet’s national list of wide receivers and No. 20 for all California players … ranked as Scout’s No. 60 wide receiver nationally and No. 56 for all California players … ESPN had him No. 66 nationally at wide receiver … a member of the SuperPrep All-Far West team … totaled 42 receptions for 1,117 yards and eight touchdown catches as a senior, while also contributing 84 tackles, two interceptions and four forced fumbles defensively to earn All-City honors in Los Angeles on both sides of the ball … among players receiving votes as a wide receiver for the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s Best in the West team in his senior campaign … had a solid junior season on offense with 28 receptions for 833 yards and 11 TDs, while excelling defensively with 119 tackles, five fumble recoveries and four forced fumbles to earn Southern League Defensive Player of the Year and first-team All-City honors … placed third in the state in the 200 and fourth in the 100-meter dash as a junior after winning the Los Angeles City title in the 200 and finishing second in the 100 … has a best of 10.61 in the 100 meters and 21.21 in the 200, which was the second-fastest time in California in 2009 … did not compete in track and field as a senior in 2010 in order to focus on football … called “one of the fastest players in California” by Scout.
his interceptions halted opponents’ scoring drives deep in Cal territory … his first pick came at the Cal six-yard line with the Bears up 24-14 in the fourth quarter vs. Arizona State ... also stopped a UCLA drive at the Cal three-yard line, returning the interception nine yards ... his final pick came in Cal’s own end zone vs. Oregon. 2007: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Rated the No. 12 prospect in Illinois and the No. 50 safety in the country by Rivals ... selected to the All-Midwest team by SuperPrep ... earned All-Chicago Public Illini-Prairie State, All-City and All-State honors as a senior when he totaled 36 tackles with four interceptions and two blocked kicks ... threw for 1,257 yards while rushing for 800 from the quarterback position in his final prep season ... helped his team to the state semifinals as a junior in 2005 and the Chicago City title during his 2006 senior campaign ... the first Jeff Tedford recruit from the state of Illinois ... the only top-30 prospect of his class in Illinois to venture out of the Midwest to the West Coast. PERSONAL: Full name is Sean M. Cattouse … born October 4, 1988 ... parents are Michael and Sally Cattouse ... major is Social Welfare.
CATTOUSE’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 11-2 13-6 24-8
UA-A-TOT 8-5-13 28-9-37 36-14-50
TFL 0.5-1 2.0-2 2.5-3
(cah-TOOS)
11
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CATTOUSE’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Justin CHEADLE (CHEE-dull)
JR-2V................................Bakersfield HS
JR-2V.................................... Hubbard HS
2010: A first-team preseason All-Pac-10 choice according to both Lindy’s and Sporting News, while checking on third-team preseason squads of Athlon and Phil Steele … listed by Phil Steele as the nation’s No. 20 draft-eligible strong safety and as one of Cal’s “Players to Watch” by Lindy’s … missed the majority of 2010 spring ball when he broke his thumb during the team’s fourth of 15 practices but is expected to be fully recovered for the 2010 season. 2009: An All-Pac-10 honorable mention selection … earned the Stub Allison Award given to Cal’s Most Inspirational Player ... played in all 13 games and started the final six contests, recording 37 tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss (-2 yards) one interception and three pass breakups … had identical career-hightying totals of eight tackles and 1.0 tackle for loss for a minus-one yard loss vs. both Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl and against Oregon State … also had an interception vs. Oregon State … had four tackles both at Stanford and at Washington … posted a career-high two pass breakups at Arizona State … had at least one tackle in each of his last 12 games after not making a tackle in the season-opener vs. Maryland. 2008: Played in 11 games with two starts, tying for second on the team with three interceptions that he returned for 24 yards and 13 tackles … averaged 0 .27 picks per game to rank No. 10 in the Pac-10 … added five pass breakups for an average of 0.45 per game to rank No. 14 in the Pac10 … had a half tackle for loss (-1 yard) … made his first career start for an injured Brett Johnson in the Big Game vs. Stanford and came through with a season-high five tackles ... also started vs. Miami, Fla. in the Emerald Bowl, finishing with three stops and the half tackle for loss (-1 yard) ... all three of
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OL, 6-2, 290.....................Bakersfield, CA
DB, 6-2, 216............................Chicago, IL
CAL CAREER: Has played in 24 games with eight starts, recording 50 tackles (36 unassisted, 14 assisted), 2.5 tackles for loss (-3 yards), four interceptions that he has returned for 24 yards and eight pass breakups.
FF FR 0 0 0 0 0 0
Tackles: 8 (twice, last Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 1.0 (twice, last Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Interceptions: 1 (four times, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Pass Breakups: 2 (at Arizona State, 2009)
PERSONAL: Full name is Tevin D. Carter … September 13, 1992 … mother is Rosalind Wright … major is undeclared.
Sean CATTOUSE
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 3-24 5 0.0-0 1-0 3 0.0-0 4-24 8
CAL CAREER: Has played in 22 games with 14 starts during his three seasons with the program from 2007-09. 2009: Started all 13 games at right guard ... recipient of team’s Bob Tessier Award as the Most Improved Offensive Lineman. 2008: Appeared in nine games, including his first career start when he filled in for an injured Noris Malele at right guard vs. Oregon ... also saw extensive action at USC. 2007: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Rated as the top offensive guard in Central California and No. 13 overall in the nation by Scout ... selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... the No. 42 overall recruit in the state of California according to Rivals ... listed on the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s “Best in the West” team ... PrepStar All-West Region choice ... third-team All-State, two-time All-Area first-team and three-time All-Southeast Yosemite League honoree ... helped his squad to the CIF Central section title his junior year ... also nationally rated as a defensive tackle by Rivals ... earned All-Area and All-SYL distinctions in basketball during his sophomore and junior seasons ... earned numerous academic achievements, including the Project BEST Academic Merit Scholar award and the Most Outstanding AVID Student award ... a member of the National Honor Society and ranked in the top five percent of his class. PERSONAL: Full name is Justin DeWayne Cheadle … born March 11, 1989 … parents are DeWayne and Patricia Cheadle … had one uncle, John Tarver, who played four seasons in the NFL with the New England Patriots and Philadelphia Eagles after a college career at Colorado … two other uncles, Bernard and Roger Tarver, played college football for USC and Washington, respectively … major is American Studies.
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Austin CLARK
DL, 6-0, 280............................. Tampa, FL RFR-RS...................................... Plant HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Had a strong senior campaign for a state championship squad that finished with a 14-1 overall record after losing its season-opener ... earned first-team All-Western Conference National Division honors while recording 104 tackles and 12.0 sacks with at least one sack in 10 different contests ... added a pair of fumble recoveries and two passes defended in his final prep campaign ... totaled 115 tackles with 7.0 sacks and an interception as a junior, when his squad posted an 11-2 final record with the losses coming in the seasonopener and a playoff game to end the campaign with an 11-game win streak sandwiched in the middle. PERSONAL: Full name is Austin Larue Clark ... born August 3, 1990 ... parents are Alan and Charlotte Clark ... sister, Adrienne, is an assistant softball coach at Columbia and played college softball at Hofstra, where she recorded a string of consecutive innings pitched without allowing a run that were the second most in NCAA history … major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
4
#
Kaelin CLAY (KAY-lynn)
WR, 5-9, 175.................................................. Long Beach, CA FR-HS............................................................................Poly HS HIGH SCHOOL: Ranked as the No. 53 wide receiver nationally by Rivals and the media outlet’s No. 79 player overall in California … began his SuperPrep All-American and All-Moore League senior season as a wide receiver before moving to the backfield for the final four games … rushed for 1,048 and posted another 524 receiving to combine for 1,572 rushing and receiving yards as a senior, while scoring 15 touchdowns (eight receiving, seven rushing) and adding 13 punt returns for 206 yards … caught 20 passes for 502 yards and six TDs in his junior campaign on a squad that won the Southern Section title … finished third in the state in 100-meter dash (10.44) and fourth in the 200 (21.07) as a senior in 2010 with career-best times in both … track and field squad won Moore League titles in each his four seasons, while he was a four-time winner (100 meters, 200 meters, 4x100 meter relay, 4x400 meter relay) at the league track and field meet in each of his final two seasons, as well as the winner in both the 100 and 200-meter dash for each of his final three campaigns … “appears to be set to follow in the great tradition of wide receivers coming from the Poly program” according to Tom Lemming. PERSONAL: Full name is Kaelin Jesse Clay … born January 3, 1992 … parents are Rodney Clay and Joi King … major is undeclared.
Deandre COLEMAN
91
#
DL, 6-6, 306............................Seattle, WA RFR-RS..................................Garfield HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play … named the nation’s No. 24 incoming freshman defensive lineman by Phil Steele. HIGH SCHOOL: Tabbed the top player in the Northwest by the Tacoma News-Tribune and the only player from the state of Washington to play in the prestigious U.S. Army All-American Bowl ... earned 2009 Parade Magazine All-America and first-team All-State honors as a senior, when he recorded 46 tackles to go along with 2.0 sacks and a fumble recovery ... recorded 45
tackles and two forced fumbles as a 2007 junior ... labeled a four-star recruit by Rivals and a three-star prospect according to Scout ... Rivals also tabbed him as the top player in the state of Washington for the 2009 class and the No. 11 defensive tackle prospect in the nation ... chosen a CBS College Sports Super Prospect and a PrepStar Dream Team player ... a SuperPrep All-Region selection and the No. 2 player overall from Washington ... listed as the nation’s No. 80 overall prospect by ESPN and the organization’s No. 14 defensive tackle nationally ... Tom Lemming rated him No. 19 among the nation’s defensive tackles ... another in a line of defensive players from Washington to sign with Cal recently, including current teammate Trevor Guyton and recent Golden Bear linebacker Anthony Felder ... also played on the offensive line as a prep. PERSONAL: Full name is Deandre Lamar Coleman ... born January 27, 1991 ... parents are Randy Washington and Deborah V. Coleman ... major is undeclared but considering Sociology.
5
#
Michael COLEY
DB, 6-2, 207......................................................Hyattsville, MD FR-HS..................................................... DeMatha Catholic HS HIGH SCHOOL: Checked in on the country’s list of top safeties at No. 45 (ESPN), No. 69 (Scout) and No. 70 (Rivals) … ranked as the No. 16 player in the state of Maryland by Rivals … selected second-team All-State by ESPN and All-Region according to SuperPrep as a senior when he led his squad to an 11-1 overall mark, recording 65 tackles and 20 passes defended to go along with a pair of forced fumbles and a fumble recovery … recorded 68 tackles as a junior when team won a league title for the fifth straight season … a three-year prep starter who led his school to a 31-5 overall record from 2007-09 … “an exceptional athlete with a great combination of quickness, speed, football skills and intelligence,” according to ESPN. PERSONAL: Full name is Michael T. Coley … born August 27, 1992 … parents are Jermaine and Pamela Lowe … major is undeclared.
Chris CONTE (CON-tee)
17
#
DB, 6-3, 212...................Los Angeles, CA SR-3V.......................................Loyola HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 38 games with five starts and compiled career totals of 85 tackles (54 unassisted, 31 assisted), 2.0 tackles for loss (-8 yards), one interception, eight pass breakups, a fumble recovery and one kick return that he brought back 14 yards. 2009: Played in all 13 games with one start, when he was in for the opening defensive snap vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl … finished the season with 25 tackles and one pass breakup… had his most productive statistical game of the season vs. Washington State when he recorded five tackles … also had four tackles and his lone pass breakup of the campaign in the previous contest at UCLA, while picking up three stops at Arizona State and vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl when he also had the first kick return of his career for 14 yards … named the nation’s No. 45 cornerback in the preseason by Phil Steele. 2008: A reserve cornerback who played in 12 games with one start coming at USC … played primarily in passing situations, finishing the season with 28 tackles, 1.0 tackle for loss (-5 yards), one interception and seven pass breakups to rank No. 18 in the Pac-10 with an average of 0.58 per game ... best performance came vs. Colorado State, when he finished with a seasonhigh eight tackles and had a career-high-tying two pass breakups ... also had five stops both vs. Stanford and in the Emerald Bowl against Miami, Fla., where he also equaled a career-best with a pair of pass breakups … recorded a five-yard tackle for loss among his three tackles at Oregon State ... picked off a Rudy Carpenter pass vs. Arizona State ... had a single pass breakup in three consecutive contests vs. UCLA, vs. Oregon and at USC … broke a thumb vs. Stanford and missed the regular-season finale vs. Washington.
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2007: Played in all 13 games with three starts, recording 32 tackles, 1.0 tackle for loss (-3 yards) and a fumble recovery … earned honorable mention Freshman All-America honors from Sporting News and Scout ... recorded a career-high 10 tackles in his starting debut vs. Washington State … recorded five tackles and recovered a fumble the following contest vs. USC … added four tackles against Louisiana Tech and three at Colorado State … recorded the most tackles by a true freshman at Cal since Donnie McCleskey had 45 in 2002. HIGH SCHOOL: Listed at No. 21 among the best safeties in the nation by Rivals and No. 64 according to Scout ... Rivals also placed him as the No. 35 overall player in California ... selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... recorded 58 tackles with four interceptions as a senior, while catching 43 passes for 614 yards and five touchdowns on offense ... had 38 tackles and a pair of interceptions from his safety spot for a CIF Division I championship team during his 2005 junior campaign. PERSONAL: Full name is Christopher Michael Conte … born February 23, 1989 … parents are Mark and Anne Conte … major is undeclared but considering American Studies. YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
CONTE’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 13-3 12-1 13-1 38-5
UA-A-TOT 20-12-32 15-13-28 19-6-25 54-31-85
TFL 1.0-3 1.0-5 0.0-0 2.0-8
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0 0.0-0 1-0 7 0.0-0 0 1 0.0-0 1-0 8
FF FR 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
CONTE’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 13-3 12-1 13-1 38-5
NO 0 0 1 1
YDS 0 0 14 14
AVG 0.0 0.0 14.0 14.0
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 0 0 0
CONTE’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
(cuh-STAN-zo)
COSTANZO’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 3-0 7-0 12-0 22-0
UA-A-TOT 1-0-1 1-1-2 2-2-4 4-3-7
TFL 0.0-0 0.0-0 1.0-2 1.0-2
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0 0.0-0 0 0 0.0-0 0 0 0.0-0 0 0
FF FR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
COSTANZO’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
78
Alejandro CROSTHWAITE #
55
#
DL, 6-2, 278.......................... Danville, CA SR-2V.............................. Monte Vista HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 22 games all off the bench primarily as a backup defensive lineman with seven tackles (four unassisted, three assisted) and 1.0 tackle for loss (-2 yards) … has changed his uniform number to 55 for his 2010 senior season after being number 77 in each of his first four campaigns with the program. 2010: Missed a portion of the 2010 spring practice sessions after suffering an appendicitis. 2009: Played in all 12 games regular-season games off the bench, contributing four tackles and 1.0 tackle for loss (-2 yards), but did not play in the team’s Poinsettia Bowl contest vs. Utah … had single stops in home games vs. Maryland, Eastern Washington and Washington State, as well as at Washington in the regular-season finale … record his tackle for loss in the season-opener against Maryland. 2008: Had a pair of tackles in seven games played off the bench … stops came against Colorado State and Washington. 2007: Saw action in three games (at Colorado State, vs. Louisiana Tech and at Washington), notching his first career tackle in the Washington contest. 2006: Redshirted after suffering a knee injury in preseason camp … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: A high school All-America selection by PrepStar … rated
76
PERSONAL: Full name is Michael Richard Costanzo … born April 28, 1988 … parents are Rich and Cindy Costanzo … father was an offensive lineman at Nebraska and for the Dallas Cowboys ... also known as “DJ BIG RED” for his role a sidekick for Cal wide receiver and rapper Alex “LOGGY” Lagemann … has spent time producing his own music and pursuing a career as a music producer while also considering an audio engineering degree … major is American Studies.
Tackles: 1 (seven times, last at Washington, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 1.0 (vs. Maryland, 2009)
Tackles: 10 (vs. Washington State, 2007) Tackles For Loss: 1.0 (at Oregon State, 2008) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (vs. USC, 2007) Interceptions: 1 (vs. Arizona State, 2008) Pass Breakups: 2 (twice, last Emerald Bowl vs. Miami, 2008)
Michael COSTANZO
No. 17 nationally among defensive tackle prospects and the No. 30 player overall in California by Rivals ... rated No. 18 nationally at defensive tackle according to Scout … All-Region selection by SuperPrep, which listed him as the No. 30 overall prospect for the states of California, Nevada and Hawaii … two-time member of the San Francisco Chronicle All-Metro team and listed on the Rivals 250 list ... a first-team selection on the prestigious CalHiSports All-State squad, rated No. 4 on the Contra Costa Times “Cream of the Crop” squad, Long Beach Press-Telegram “Best in the West” honorable mention selection as a senior in 2005 … three-time All-East Bay Athletic League pick and the conference MVP in his senior campaign ... honored by multiple media outlets as both an offensive and defensive lineman … ended his prep career with 175 tackles and 26.0 sacks ... had 33.0 tackles behind the line of scrimmage over his last two high school campaigns … preseason high school All-American by Sports Illustrated prior to his senior campaign when he played on an 11-1 squad that reached the sectional semifinals ... also participated in track and field for two years.
OL, 6-3, 280.......................................Rosarito Beach, Mexico FR-HS................................................... Cathedral Catholic HS 2010: Named by Phil Steele as the nation’s No. 30 offensive lineman prior to the season. HIGH SCHOOL: A four-star recruit by ESPN, Scout, Tom Lemming and Rivals … selected as the No. 6 offensive tackle and No. 85 overall player in the nation according to Max Emfinger … invited to play in the Max Emfinger All-American Bowl, the Offensive-Defensive All-American Bowl and the Aloha Prep All-American Bowl … checked in as the nation’s No. 11 offensive guard by ESPN, as well as the No. 19 and No. 20 offensive tackle according to Tom Lemming and Scout, respectively … listed at No. 99 on the PrepStar Dream Team … checked in on the Rivals250 list of the nation’s top overall players at No. 209, while Scout has him at No. 221 nationally … ranks No. 26 among the country’s top offensive linemen and the No. 30 overall player in California according to Rivals … a member of the SuperPrep All-America 290 squad as the No. 38 offensive lineman in the country … No. 19 on Tom Lemming’s list of the nation’s top offensive tackles, while he checks in at No. 20 on Scout’s list … ranks as the No. 34 player overall in California/Nevada/ Hawaii by SuperPrep … led his team to Division II state title with a 15-0 mark as a junior … squad captured section and Eastern League titles in each of his last three seasons while winning 34 of its final 35 games with Crosthwaite on the squad … named a first-team Medium Schools All-American, a third-team All-American and a Division II All-State choice by MaxPreps as a senior, while adding his school’s Lineman of the Year selection … also named first-team All-State for his class by MaxPreps as a junior … earned all-San Diego Section, All-City, All-Eastern League and All-Area recognition in each of his final two prep seasons … also played basketball and track and field during his freshman season, averaging 16.0 points per game and his team’s “Best Rebounder” award on the hardwood as his squad reached the playoffs … “a very good offensive lineman that has a lot of tools and a nasty attitude in finishing blocks,” according to ESPN.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
PERSONAL: Full name is Alejandro Crosthwaite … born October 25, 1991 … parents are Alejandro and Mildred Crosthwaite … has worked during the summer helping his father’s business build high-rise buildings … grew up in Mexico and played primarily soccer until moving to the United States in the sixth grade … major is undeclared but considering Business Administration.
Vincenzo D’AMATO (vin-CHEN-zo)
(duh-MAHT-oh)
16
#
PK, 6-1, 201....................Lake Forest, CA SO-1V......................................El Toro HS 2009: Shared placekicking duties (extra points, field goals and kickoffs) for much of the season with Giorgio Tavecchio … played in 10 of 13 games, seeing action in all of the team’s contests other than home games vs. Washington State, Oregon State and Arizona ... ranked third on the team in scoring with 52 points, connecting on 7-of-12 field goals (58.3%) and all 31 of his extra-point tries, tying for first in the Pac-10 in the latter as one of five conference kickers that reached the minimum number of attempts with a 1.000 percentage … was eighth in the Pac-10 scoring for kickers with an average of 5.2 points per game and ninth in field goals per game (0.70) … booted a career-long 47-yard field goal at Oregon … made both of his field goal attempts in the Big Game at Stanford, connecting on a 21-yarder for Cal’s first points late in the opening quarter to start a rally from a 14-0 deficit and its last points with 2:42 remaining in the contest for the final 34-28 margin … his 2-for-2 field goal game at Stanford was one of 28 times a Pac-10 kicker was perfect on field goals in a game in 2009 on at least two attempts … in addition to his career-long make at Oregon, also had single field goals in contests vs. Maryland (31 yards), Eastern Washington (19 yards) and USC (29 yards), as well as at Washington (29 yards) … had the most PAT’s both made and attempted in the Pac-10 in 2009 by going 8-for-8 against Eastern Washington and also tied for the second-most PAT’s made and attempted in a game in the Pac-10 with three others, including teammate Giorgio Tavecchio, by going 7-for-7 in the season-opener against Maryland … was also perfect in PAT attempts at Minnesota (5-5), at UCLA (3-3), at Stanford (4-4), at Washington (1-1) and vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl (3-3) … had his top scoring game against Eastern Washington when he tallied 11 points on a 19-yard field goal and eight extra points … also had double-digit scoring efforts with 10 points both vs. Maryland (1 FG, 7-7 PAT) and at Stanford (2 FG, 4-4 PAT) … the only Cal player to score in back-to-back games at Oregon and vs. USC, with one field goal in each contest … made his only field goal attempt from inside 20 yards, while going 4-of-5 from 20-29 yards, 1-of-2 from 30-39 yards and 1-of-4 from 40-49 yards … did not have a field goal or extra point attempt blocked … had one touchback and averaged 59.7 yards per kickoff on 11 attempts. HIGH SCHOOL: Booted 13 field goals (including five from 40 yards or more) and 30 extra points while putting 94 percent of his kickoffs into the end zone as a senior ... had a season-long field goal of 48 yards during his senior campaign ... earned first-team All-County honors, Special Teams MVP of the Sea View League and All-State recognition from CalHiSports and MaxPreps as a senior ... made 17 field goals and all 33 of his PATs as a junior. PERSONAL: Full name is Vincenzo D’Amato … born March 28, 1991 … parents are Antonio and Veronica D’Amato … major is undeclared but considering Business Administration.
D’AMATO’S CAREER KICKING STATISTICS
YEAR G-GS FG-FGA PCT 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 LG BLK PAT PTS 2009 10-0 7-12 58.3 1-1 4-5 1-2 1-4 0-0 47 0 31-31 52
D’AMATO’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Field Goals Made: 2 (at Stanford, 2009) Field Goals Attempted: 2 (five times, last at Stanford, 2009) Field Goal Percentage (with most field goals made if tie): 100.0, 2-2 (at Stanford, 2009) Long Field Goal: 47 (at Oregon, 2009) PAT’s Made: 8 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) PAT’s Attempted: 8 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) PAT Percentage (with most PAT’s made if tie): 100.0, 8-8 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Kickoffs: 3 (twice, last at UCLA, 2009) Kickoff Yards: 184 (at UCLA, 2009) Kickoff Average: 65.5, 2-131 (at Oregon, 2009) Points: 11 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009)
Ryan DAVIS
22
#
LB, 6-4, 250...................Los Angeles, CA JR-RS......... Cerritos College/Artesia HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play ... named the nation’s No. 33 incoming junior college player by Phil Steele prior to the season. JUNIOR COLLEGE: Listed as a three-star junior college prospect by Rivals and ranked No. 98 among junior college players across the nation by the organization, while SuperPrep listed him at No. 48 nationally ... played in 11 games in 2008, recording 39 tackles, 16.0 tackles for loss and 11.0 sacks to go along with three forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries ... the only player to earn unanimous first-team All-National Division Central Conference honors in 2008 ... also started all nine games as a 2007 freshman, finishing with 11 tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss, 1.0 sack and five quarterback hurries. HIGH SCHOOL: Earned All-Suburban League honors as a junior ... recorded 6.0 sacks in a game vs. Mayfair High School ... also a member of Artesia’s track and field team. PERSONAL: Full name is Ryan Terryl Davis ... born December 27, 1986 ... parents are Terryl Davis and Rosalind Robinson ... major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
Covaughn DeBOSKIE-JOHNSON (COE-von)
33
#
(duh-BOSS-key)
TB, 5-11, 207....................... Chandler, AZ SO-1V...................................Hamilton HS CAL CAREER: Wore number 28 during his first two years with the program in 2008 and 2009 but has changed his number to 33 prior to the 2010 campaign. 2009: Played in nine games off the bench and was third on the team with 211 rushing yards on 31 carries for a 6.8 per carry average that was second among the team’s running backs, while adding one touchdown on the ground …rushed for 10 or more yards on 29.0% of his runs with his nine double-digit rushes ranking third on the team … also returned one kick for 14 yards in the regular-season finale at Washington … had his biggest game of the season in the team’s second contest of the campaign, rushing for 92 yards on 11 carries (both careerhighs), while also picking up both his first career rushing touchdown on a one-yard run with 0:20 to go in the game and the longest run of his career with a 30-yard jaunt earlier on the same drive during a 59-7 Cal win … was also productive in the team’s season-opening 52-13 win over Maryland, rushing for 54 yards on nine carries … picked up 41 yards on six carries with a long run of 26 yards in a 49-17 triumph over Washington State … also had a run of 14 yards at Stanford (2 rushes, 17 yards total) and one of 12 yards in his only attempt vs. Arizona.
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2008: Redshirted … did not play … took full part in 2008 spring drills after graduating early from high school and enrolling at Cal in January of 2008. HIGH SCHOOL: A SuperPrep All-America and All-Far West team choice ... listed as the No. 27 all-purpose running back in the nation by Rivals as well as the No. 12 prospect in Arizona for all players by the organization ... rated as the No. 28 running back nationally and a four-star recruit by Scout ... rushed for 821 yards and 13 touchdowns while adding 362 yards and five touchdown receptions as a senior, when he led his team to a 12-1 record, with the only loss a defeat in the state semifinals ... on a 13-1 club as a junior in 2006, when he compiled 1,304 yards and 22 touchdowns on the ground as well as 434 receiving yards and two touchdown catches ... chosen as a Class 5A honorable mention selection by the Arizona Republic ... one of four national finalists for the 2008 EAS Speed and Strength Award ... also a finalist as a senior for the prestigious Watkins Award, a national honor recognizing success in athletics and academics among young African American males. PERSONAL: Full name is Covaughn DeBoskie-Johnson … born December 18, 1989 ... parents are Tim Johnson and Wakena DeBoskie … major is undeclared but considering Interdisciplinary Studies.
YEAR 2009
YEAR 2009 Totals
DEBOSKIE-JOHNSON’S CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS
G-GS 9-0
NO 31
YDS 211
AVG 6.8
DEBOSKIE-JOHNSON’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
G-GS 9-0 9-0
NO 1 1
YDS 14 14
AVG 14.0 14.0
TD 1
LONG 30
TD 0 0
LONG 14 14
DEBOKSIE-JOHNSON’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Rushes: 11 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Rushing Yards: 92 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Rushing TDs: 1 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Long Rush: 30 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Kick Returns: 1 (at Washington, 2009) Kick Return Yards: 14 (at Washington, 2009) Long Kick Return: 14 (at Washington, 2009) Points: 6 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009)
Sam DEMARTINIS (DEE-mar-teen-is)
Nico DUMONT (DOO-mont)
FB, 6-0, 225............................Novato, CA RFR-RS...................... Marin Catholic HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Named a first-team All-State player by CalHiSports as a defensive back during his senior campaign ... ran for 327 yards and four touchdowns in a game vs. Justin-Siena during his junior year. PERSONAL: Full name is Nico Patrick Dumont ... born October 15, 1990 ... parents are Tony and Patty Dumont ... major is undeclared.
2
#
Coleman EDMOND
WR, 6-1, 208........................................................Kingston, NY JR-JC..........................................Pierce College/Kingston HS 2010: Cal’s lone junior college signee in the 2010 class of newcomers. JUNIOR COLLEGE: Led all Southern California junior college players with 1,584 all-purpose yards in 2009 to earn Offensive Player of the Year honors for the Southern California Football Association’s American Division of the Pacific Conference … played a major role in Pierce College winning its first conference title since 1985 in his lone season with the Brahmas … posted 37 receptions for 718 yards and caught 11 touchdown passes, while adding other totals of 533 kickoff return yards, 307 punt return yards and 26 rushing yards. HIGH SCHOOL: Participated in baseball and football. PERSONAL: Full name is Coleman B. Edmond … born June 28, 1988 … parents are Earl and Sylvia Edmond … major is undeclared.
Donovan EDWARDS
71
#
SR-2V...................Diablo Valley College/ ....................................... Pinole Valley HS
JR-SQ.............................. Notre Dame HS CAL CAREER: Has been a member of the team for three seasons from 2007-09 but has not seen any game action. 2009: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2008: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2007: Redshirted ... did not play ... earned team Scout Team Player of the Year honors on offense. HIGH SCHOOL: Ranked as the No. 7 offensive tackle in the country by Scout and No. 43 according to Rivals, who also listed him as the No. 65 overall player in California ... SuperPrep All-America and All-Far West team selection ... honorable mention Long Beach Press-Telegram “Best in the West” choice ... PrepStar All-West Region honoree ... All-State first-team selection and one of four juniors named first-team 2005 All-CIF after helping his squad to a 13-1 record in 2005 ... two-time Mission League Lineman of the Year ... garnered CalHiSports first-team All-State honors ... during his four years of high school, the Knights posted a 50-4 record ... also a two-time All-Mission League selection in track and field. PERSONAL: Full name is Samuel Domenic DeMartinis ... born March 26, 1989 ... parents are Jack and Madeline DeMartinis ... father was on the 1975 UCLA team that played in the Rose Bowl ... older brother, Tony, played both defensive end and tight end during five collegiate seasons at San Diego State (2005-09) ... major is Legal Studies.
53
#
OL, 6-3, 280...................... Richmond, CA
OL, 6-5, 285...................... Sun Valley, CA
78
30
#
CAL CAREER: Has played in 22 games with six starts at right tackle … signed by the Golden Bears late in the summer of 2008 and joined the team for preseason camp prior to that season. 2009: Played in all 13 games off the bench, primarily on special teams and as a backup offensive lineman. 2008: Started the last six games of the season at right tackle after a seasonending injury to Chet Teofilo and played in a total of nine contests … had two pancake blocks and two knockdowns against Oregon, and two knockdowns in the Big Game vs. Stanford. JUNIOR COLLEGE: Did not allow a sack during his one season at Diablo Valley College as a freshman in 2007. HIGH SCHOOL: Played on a pair of Alameda Contra Costa League champions in his last two years ... the teams combined for a 14-0 league record during those two seasons with his 2006 senior squad going 11-1 overall and the 2005 club posting a 9-2 record. PERSONAL: Full name is Donovan Alston Edwards … born June 15, 1989 … parents are Dennis Edwards and Felicia Dixon … attended the same high school (Pinole Valley) as former Cal safety Thomas DeCoud ... major is Legal Studies.
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Tyré ELLISON (tie-REE)
42
#
LB, 6-1, 216...........................Milpitas, CA
SO-SQ..................................... Burton HS
RFR-RS..................................Milpitas HS
CAL CAREER: Has been a member of the team for the last two seasons from 2008-09 but has not seen any game action.
2009: Redshirted ... did not play ... selected as the team’s Scout Team Player of the Year on defense ... named the nation’s No. 41 freshman linebacker prior to the season by Phil Steele.
2008: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Named first-team All-Academic Athletic Association as a senior, when he tallied 75 tackles (10.7 per game) and four interceptions that he returned for 133 yards from his safety position, while contributing 30 catches for 621 yards and seven touchdown receptions offensively ... led his squad in rushing, receiving, tackles and interceptions to go with four touchdowns as a junior to earn team MVP honors ... two-time All-City selection ... received California’s 2007 CIF Spirit of Sport Award given to student-athletes who serve as positive role models ... also lettered in basketball and track and field, earning team MVP honors in the latter. PERSONAL: Full name is Tyré Charles Ellison ... born July 8, 1990 ... parents are Ronald Ellison Sr. and Delores Beasley-Ellison ... major is Social Welfare.
99
#
Savai’i ESELU
(sah-VAH-ee) (ih-SELL-ew)
TE, 6-3, 242...........................Waipahu, HI JR-SQ..................................Moanalua HS CAL CAREER: Has played in one game during his three seasons with the program from 2007-09, recording no stats other than participation. 2009: Made his collegiate debut against Eastern Washington in his only action of the season, but did not record any stats other than participation. 2008: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2007: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Rated the No. 4 prospect in the state of Hawaii and the No. 24 tight end in the country by Rivals ... listed as the No. 35 tight end in the nation by Scout ... selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... PrepStar All-West Region choice ... earned All-State honors twice, including a first-team selection as a senior ... three-year varsity captain and a threetime All-Oahu White League honoree ... registered 15 catches for 502 yards and two touchdowns as a senior and 45 receptions for 1,285 yards over his career ... also played defense, totaling 25.0 tackles for loss and 12.0 sacks as a prep ... earned academic honor roll recognition in every quarter. PERSONAL: Full name is Savai’i Micah-Obrien Eselu … born July 11, 1989 … parents are Raymond and Tammy Eselu … lists playing the ukulele among his hobbies … major is Sociology.
ESELU’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS G-GS 1-0
(fuh-NOO-uh)
DB, 6-2, 192............... San Francisco, CA
2009: A member of the team but did not see any game action … named one of Cal’s two Scout Team Players of the Year for special teams.
YEAR 2009
Steven FANUA
NO 0
YDS 0
AVG 0.0
TD 0
LONG 0
HIGH SCHOOL: Tabbed a three-star recruit by Rivals and Scout ... ranked as the nation’s No. 24 inside linebacker and No. 77 overall player by ESPN, while checking in at No. 123 nationally on Tom Lemming’s list ... earned All-Region accolades from SuperPrep and PrepStar ... Rivals listed him as the No. 41 prospect among the nation’s outside linebackers ... earned a four-star rating from Tom Lemming’s recruiting service and was listed as his No. 8 outside linebacker prospect nationally ... a three-time All-Central Coast Section and All-De Anza League choice ... also earned De Anza League Defensive Player of the Year honors twice in his sophomore and junior campaigns before being named MVP of the entire league as a senior ... posted 124 tackles with 3.0 sacks and two blocked kicks as a senior for a 9-2 squad that captured a share of the De Anza League title before being knocked out in the first round of the playoffs ... named the San Francisco 49ers High School Player of the Week on October 16, 2008, after recording 15 tackles and 3.0 sacks in a 42-35 win over Los Gatos ... finished with 173 stops as a junior, including seven games of at least 13 tackles, and a total of 12.0 sacks ... also participated in track and field. PERSONAL: Full name is Steven Tyler Fanua ... born November 5, 1991 ... parents are Sam and Doreen Fanua ... major is undeclared but considering Business Administration.
Richard FISHER
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OL, 6-2, 275.................. Ben Lomond, CA SR-2V............................Scotts Valley HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 13 games off the bench over the last two seasons of his four-year Cal career from 2006-09. 2009: Played in four contests off the bench primarily as a reserve offensive lineman and on special teams, seeing action vs. Eastern Washington and then again in three consecutive games vs. Washington State, at Arizona State and vs. Oregon State … rotated in with the first unit during the games at Arizona State and vs. Oregon State. 2008: Played in eight games off the bench primarily as a reserve offensive lineman and on special teams, serving as a primary backup to first-team All-America center and Rimington Trophy finalist Alex Mack … had worked his way into the offensive line rotation at left guard during 2008 spring ball before moving to center for the season. 2007: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2006: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Selected his school’s Scholar-Athlete of the Year as a senior ... garnered his team’s Offensive Lineman of the Year honors three times ... National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete ... high school squad was Central Coast Section semifinalist during his 2005 senior campaign ... tallied 112 tackles, scored one touchdown and had four interceptions in 2005 ... graduated among the top 10 of his class ... earned an International Baccalaureate Diploma ... played in the Santa Cruz County All-Star Game. PERSONAL: Full name is Richard Jenner Fisher ... born September 19, 1987 … parents are Eric and Brett Fisher ... grandparents, Richard Beauvais and Aubrey Degnan, both attended Cal ... great grandfather, George Degnan, was a letterwinner on the 1931 Cal football team ... has been a vegetarian since he was a toddler … major is Civil Engineering.
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Nick FORBES
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Justin GATES
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LB, 6-1, 225........................................................ Frederick, MD
OL, 6-3, 285............................... Reno, NV
FR-HS.................................... Governor Thomas Johnson HS
JR-SQ...................................... Galena HS
HIGH SCHOOL: A four-star recruit by ESPN and Rivals, as well as a PrepStar and SuperPrep All-American … played in the 2010 U.S. Army All-American Bowl and the Maryland Crab Bowl … pegged by Rivals as the nation’s No. 2 inside linebacker while SuperPrep checked him in at No. 5, and Scout had him at No. 11 among middle linebackers … the No. 73 overall player in the country overall according to Sporting News, while checking in at No. 104 on the Rivals250 list … top-ranked player overall in Maryland and the DC/ Maryland/Delaware/West Virginia area by Rivals and SuperPrep, respectively … earned All-State honors as a senior when he recorded 114 tackles, 15.0 tackles for loss, three interceptions and three forced fumbles, while adding 1,519 yards and 16 TDs rushing on the offensive side of the ball … posted 96 tackles, 6.0 tackles for loss, 4.0 sacks and two interceptions on defense as a junior when he was named second-team All-State, Frederick News-Post Area Defensive Player of the Year, the Gazette League Co-Defensive Player of the Year, first-team all-conference honors, Washington Post All-Metro honorable mention recognition, and team Player of the Year honors on defense, while picking up 1,176 rushing yards and 15 TDs on the ground to earn first-team all-league honors offensively … was selected to the preseason top 50 of the Washington Post prior to his junior campaign … also had 1,052 rushing yards and 10 TDs on 115 carries, as well as 121 tackles, 15.0 tackles for loss, 3.0 sacks, two interceptions, two forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries as a sophomore when he earned team Defensive Player of the Year, All-County and second-team all-conference honors as a linebacker, and honorable mention all-league recognition for his performance as a running back … led his squad to the 4A Regional semifinals and was also a team captain in each of his final three prep seasons … also participated in basketball and track and field, leading his team to the Maryland 4A state title in 2009 in the latter …a Maryland 4A discus champ during both his sophomore and senior seasons in 2008, while also adding an AAU national discus title and a shot put runner up performance … has best marks of 167’ in the discus and 53’ in the shot put ... “sideline to sideline one of the most athletic looking linebackers in the country,” according to Scout. PERSONAL: Full name is Nickolas Forbes … born January 15, 1992 … mother is Carol Forbes … major is undeclared but considering Mechanical Engineering.
Dominic GALAS (gal-US)
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OL, 6-1, 280......................... Modesto, CA SO-1V.......................Central Catholic HS 2010: Missed a significant portion of spring football due to injury.
CAL CAREER: Has been a member of the team for the last three seasons from 2007-09 but has not seen any game action. 2009: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2008: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2007: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: An All-State selection on defense as a senior by both Scout and Rivals after recording 88 tackles with 10.5 sacks, 62 quarterback hurries and seven forced fumbles ... led his squad to a second-place state finish in 2006 ... also named to the Nevada Appeal All-Sierra, All-Northern Nevada Regional and All-Northern Sierra League teams ... tallied 79 tackles with 7.0 sacks, 49 quarterback hurries and six forced fumbles as a junior, helping his squad to its first appearance in the Nevada state playoffs. PERSONAL: Full name is Justin Paul Gates ... born July 8, 1988 ... parents are Paul and Carol Gates ... lists paintball, camping and scuba diving as hobbies ... major is Political Science.
Geoffrey GIBSON
OL, 6-4, 325...................................................... Las Vegas, NV FR-HS........................................................ Bishop Gorman HS HIGH SCHOOL: Ranked as the No. 4 overall player in the state of Nevada and No. 35 nationally among offensive guards according to Rivals, while ESPN had him as the nation’s No. 36 offensive guard … checked in as the No. 5 overall player in Nevada and No. 87 among offensive tackles nationally according to Scout … an All-Region SuperPrep choice, while ranking as the No. 121 player overall according to the organization in California/Nevada/ Hawaii … helped lead his squad to a 4A state title and a 15-0 overall record as a senior … allowed only one sack in his prep career and graded out at 90% in his blocking assignments … a four-year prep starter with his team winning two 4A state titles and posting a 41-2 record over his final three campaigns … participated in the Lions Club All-Star High School Football Game following his senior campaign … also played basketball during his first three seasons as a prep. PERSONAL: Full name is Geoffrey Lamar Gibson … born October 11, 1991 … father is the late Jeffrey Gibson … mother is Danielle Toney … anything else personal… major is undeclared but considering Engineering or Business and Finance.
2009: Played in all 13 games off the bench as a backup offensive lineman and on special teams. 2008: Redshirted … did not play … won the team’s Freshman Lifter of the Year honor. HIGH SCHOOL: Selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... rated as the No. 6 center in the nation by ESPN ... listed No. 43 among all prospects in California as well as the No. 9 center in the country according to Rivals, while Scout ranked him No. 12 among centers nationally ... CalHiSports first-team All-State selection as a senior, helping his squad average over 10.0 yards per rush and outscore its opponents, 663-211, while winning a the Sac-Joaquin Section title with an 11-2-1 overall record ... named the MVP of the Nike Training Camp at Stanford in 2007. PERSONAL: Full name is Dominic Constantine Galas … born January 11, 1990 ... parents are Tim and Patty Galas ... father played football for Cal from 1979-82 and was a three-year letterwinner on the offensive line … attended same high school as former Golden Bear linebacker Justin Moye … major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
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Garry GRAFFORT (GRAPH-ort)
TE, 6-3, 242......................... Concord, CA SR-1V.........................Ygnacio Valley HS CAL CAREER: Has played in eight games off the bench but not recorded any stats other than participation. 2010: Missed most of 2010 spring practice due to injury. 2009: Played in four games off the bench, getting into home contests vs. Maryland, Eastern Washington, Washington State and Arizona … did not record any stats other than participation. 2008: Played in two games off the bench, seeing action both at Washington State and vs. Washington … did not record any stats other than participation. 2007: Saw action in two games off the bench, making his collegiate debut at Colorado State game and also playing vs. Washington State … did not record any stats other than participation.
HIGH SCHOOL: The first player from Colorado to sign with the Bears under head coach Jeff Tedford ... considered one of the top players in the state (No. 3) as well one of the top guard prospects in the country (No. 19) by Rivals ... also a member of the Rivals 250 list for all positions and a four-star recruit by the organization ... a SuperPrep and PrepStar All-America choice ... Scout listed him among America’s top 100 linemen ... SuperPrep ranked him the No. 32 offensive lineman in the country, while Rivals had him as high as No. 17 in the final regional rankings ... played on state champion and state runner-up teams in his junior and senior seasons, respectively ... helped lead his team to a combined 24-4 record over his final two campaigns ... earned All-State and All-5A Centennial Conference honors as well as a selection to the AllState game as a senior ... had twice previously earned All-5A Centennial Conference recognition ... academic All-State honorable mention. PERSONAL: Full name is Chris Noel Tompek-Guarnero ... born December 18, 1987 ... parents are Gary Guarnero and Trudy Tompek-Guarnero ... major is American Studies.
(GUY-ton)
DL, 6-3, 285................... Woodinville, WA
2006: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Selected to the Contra Costa Times "Cream of the Crop" in 2005 when he was also first-team All-Bay Valley Athletic League and his team's Defensive Player of the Year as his high school team was the NCA 2A Champion during that campaign ... tallied 11 sacks during his junior season to lead the BVAL ... two-year captain for his football squad ... four-year participant in basketball and a one-year letterman in baseball ... Golden Warrior nominee in 2006. PERSONAL: Full name is Gary Morgan Graffort ... born May 28, 1988 ... parents are Garry and Cindy Graffort ... goal is to work for the government ... lists hobbies as camping, four-wheeling and fishing … major is Political Science.
GRAFFORT’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS
YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 2-0 2-0 4-0 8-0
NO 0 0 0 0
YDS 0 0 0 0
Chris GUARNERO (guar-NERR-o)
AVG 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 0 0 0
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OL, 6-2, 270.................. Westminster, CO SR-2V.......................................Mullen HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 17 games with 16 starts, including a current stretch of 13 in a row, during his first four campaigns with the team from 2006-09. 2010: Selected as a fourth-team preseason AllPac-10 choice and the nation’s No. 33 draft-eligible center according to Phil Steele. 2009: An All-Pac-10 honorable mention choice and Pac-10 All-Academic honorable mention selection, as well as a Phil Steele 2009 Postseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team Offense pick ... started all 13 games at center after replacing first-team All-American Alex Mack as the team’s starting center, moving back to the position after spending most of the 2008 campaign at guard … named the nation’s No. 39 draft-eligible center by Phil Steele. 2008: Started the first three games at left guard (vs. Michigan State, at Washington State, at Maryland) before a toe injury sidelined him for the rest of the season … registered 2.5 pancake blocks and three knockdowns. 2007: Made his collegiate debut vs. Louisiana Tech … was listed as Cal’s backup center for every contest.
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Trevor GUYTON
JR-2V...................................Redmond HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 18 games all off the bench, combining to contribute totals of 16 tackles (five unassisted, 11 assisted), 4.0 tackles for loss (-13 yards), 1.0 sack (-8 yards) and one forced fumble. 2009: Played in 11 games all off the bench, primarily as a backup defensive lineman … delivered 13 tackles, 4.0 tackles for loss (-13 yards), 1.0 sack (-8 yards) and one fumble recovery … posted a career-high-tying four tackles both vs. Eastern Washington and Washington State, adding 1.0 tackle for loss (-3 yards) against the Cougars … had his first career sack for an eight-yard loss at UCLA, also forcing a fumble on the play that teammate D.J. Holt recovered … recorded a career-high 2.0 tackles for loss at Oregon (-2 yards). 2008: Played in the final seven games as a true freshman and contributed three tackles with two stops in the Big Game vs. Stanford and the other in the regular season finale vs. Washington. HIGH SCHOOL: A SuperPrep All-America choice as a senior ... listed as a four-star recruit and the No. 18 defensive tackle in the country according to Scout ... also rated No. 43 among the nation’s defensive tackles and the seventh-best prospect overall in the state of Washington by Rivals ... had 70 tackles, 14.0 tackles for loss, 6.0 sacks, four forced fumbles and four fumble recoveries as a senior in 2007 ... selected to play in the Offense-Defense All-American Bowl after his senior campaign ... finished his junior season with 80 tackles, 4.0 sacks, three forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries ... earned All-State, All-Area and All-KingCo Conference honors as a senior. PERSONAL: Full name is Trevor Graves Guyton ... born January 9, 1990 ... parents are Odell and Karen Guyton … youngest of four siblings, including sisters, Kiley and Dana, and brother, Jeff ... born and raised in Philadelphia ... major is undeclared but considering African American Studies.
GUYTON’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 7-0 11-0 18-0
UA-A-TOT 2-1-3 3-10-13 5-11-16
TFL 0-0.0 4.0-13 4.0-13
SACK INT PBU 0-0.0 0 0 1.0-8 0 0 1.0-8 0 0
FF FR 0 0 1 0 1 0
GUYTON’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 4 (twice, last vs. Washington State, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 2.0 (at Oregon, 2009) Sacks: 1.0 (at UCLA, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (at UCLA, 2009)
2006: Redshirted … did not play … shared Scout Team Player of the Year honors for the offense.
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Darian HAGAN
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DB, 6-0, 178...................Los Angeles, CA SR-3V.................................Crenshaw HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 27 games with 17 starts, collecting 86 tackles (61 unassisted, 25 assisted), 5.5 tackles for loss (-8 yards), three interceptions that he has returned for 12 yards, a forced fumble, a fumble recovery and 20 pass breakups on defense, while also adding three kick returns for 68 yards … Cal’s active career leader in pass breakups. 2009: Played in 10 games and started four, including the first three contests of the year vs. Maryland, vs. Eastern Washington and at Minnesota, and then once again against Washington State … did not play in back-to-back games at Arizona State and vs. Oregon State, or in the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah … recorded 30 tackles, 3.0 tackles for loss (-4 yards) and five pass breakups … had his most productive statistical stretch during back-to-back games at UCLA (five tackles, career-high-tying three pass breakups) and vs. Washington State (season-high six tackles, 1.0 tackle for loss for minus-1 yard, one pass breakup) … also had five tackles in regular-season finale at Washington … added three tackles in contests vs. Maryland, at Minnesota and vs. USC, adding a pass breakup against the Golden Gophers … selected third-team preseason All-Pac-10 by Athlon and Phil Steele, as well as the nation’s No. 54 cornerback by the latter. 2008: Started all 13 games and developed into one of the better cornerbacks in the Pac-10 ... tied the school record along with teammate Syd’Quan Thompson for passes defended in a season as both players finished the 2008 campaign with 18 … both he and Thompson recorded a per-game average of 1.39 passes defended to ranked tied for third in the Pac-10 and tied for fifth in the NCAA, with Hagan’s total including three interceptions that he returned for 12 yards (0.23 per game, No. 14-T Pac-10) and 15 pass breakups ... recorded 56 tackles (38 unassisted, 18 assisted) to rank eighth on the team, while adding 2.5 tackles for loss (-4 yards), a fumble recovery and a forced fumble on defense … picked off a Pac-10-tying single-game high two passes and returned them for 12 yards in the regular-season finale vs. Washington ... broke up a career-high-tying three passes three different times, first in the season-opener vs. Michigan State and then in back-to-back contest against UCLA and Oregon ... had at least one pass breakup in seven consecutive contests beginning with the fourth game of the season vs. Colorado and concluding when he recorded two at Oregon State in the 10th contest of the campaign … his fumble recovery came against Arizona State on the Sun Devils’ first drive of the game (third play from scrimmage) at the ASU 41-yard line to set up a Cal touchdown and give the Golden Bears an early 10-0 first quarter lead ... finished with career-high-tying totals of eight tackles and 1.0 tackles for loss (-1 yard), while adding a pass breakup against the Sun Devils … matched the eight tackles vs. Miami, Fla. in the Emerald Bowl ... also had seven stops against Colorado State and six vs. both Michigan State and Oregon, adding his first career interception, a career-high-tying 1.0 tackle for loss (-2 yards) and a pass breakup vs. Colorado State … forced his first career fumble at Maryland … returned three kicks for 68 yards that came in back-to-back games vs. Colorado State (1-24) and Arizona State (2-44). 2007: Played in four games on special teams and as a backup cornerback … did not record any statistics other than participation. 2006: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: All-America selection at defensive back by SuperPrep and PrepStar ... ranked No. 83 among all high school players in the country by SuperPrep as well as No. 14 in California and No. 16 nationally at his position ... rated the No. 5 cornerback nationally by both Rivals and Scout ... ended his prep career with a state-record 25 interceptions ... led Crenshaw to its first city championship as a senior in 2005 with a late touchdown reception (85 yards) and a game-clinching interception ... first-team All-State, All-City and All-Coliseum League selection on both offense and defense as a senior, recording 55 tackles, averaging 21.0 yards per catch on 30 receptions for 630 receiving yards and blocking four punts ... also named the Los Angeles Defensive Player of the Year and was an All-Area choice of the Los Angeles Times in his final prep season ... selected to play in the CaliFlorida Bowl as a senior and was a Long Beach Press-Telegram “Best in the West” honorable mention pick ... led the state with 13 interceptions and recorded 70 tackles as
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a junior when he was honored as a first-team All-State underclassman, while adding All-Region, All-County, All-Area and All-Coliseum League recognition ... had seven picks as a sophomore. PERSONAL: Full name is Darian L. Hagan … born November 5, 1988 ... mother is Pier Bruce ... brother is Jerome “Lil Bo” Bruce ... major is undeclared but considering American Studies. YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
HAGAN’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 4-0 13-13 10-4 27-17
UA-A-TOT 0-0-0 38-18-56 23-7-30 61-25-86
TFL 0.0-0 2.5-4 3.0-4 5.5-8
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0 0.0-0 3-12 15 0.0-0 0 5 0.0-0 3-12 20
FF FR 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1
HAGAN’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 4-0 13-13 10-4 27-17
NO 0 3 0 3
YDS 0 68 0 68
AVG 0.0 22.7 0.0 22.7
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 28 0 28
HAGAN’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 8 (twice, last Emerald Bowl vs. Miami, 2008) Tackles For Loss: 1.0 (five times, last vs. Washington State, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (at Maryland, 2008) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (vs. Arizona State, 2008) Interceptions: 2 (vs. Washington, 2008) Pass Breakups: 3 (four times, last at UCLA, 2009) Kick Returns: 2 (vs. Arizona State, 2008) Kick Return Yards: 44 (vs. Arizona State, 2008) Long Kick Return: 28 (vs. Arizona State, 2008)
Spencer HAGAN
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WR, 6-4, 203.................. Sacramento, CA RFR-RS...................Capital Christian HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play ... named one of Cal’s two Scout Team Players of the Year on special teams. HIGH SCHOOL: Ranked as the No. 2 receiver in Northern California by ESPN ... finished with career varsity totals of 145 receptions and 2,629 receiving yards, both all-time school records ... caught 54 passes for 1,018 yards and 13 touchdowns in his senior campaign after catching 52 balls for 928 yards and eight TDs as a junior, and making 39 receptions for 683 yards and six scores in his sophomore season ... earned first-team All-State honors as a 2008 senior by both Rivals and MaxPreps, while also being named secondteam All-City by the Sacramento Bee ... selected to play in the Holiday Bowl Classic All-Star Game following his senior season ... earned All-Golden Empire League and All-City recognition as well as All-Academic honors in both his junior and senior campaigns while leading his squad to back-toback playoff appearances and the section title game in 2007 ... a National Gatorade Scholar-Athlete award winner as a 2007 junior. PERSONAL: Full name is Spencer Allan James Hagan ... born February 19, 1991 ... parents are Scott and Karen Hagan ... the youngest of four siblings, including brother Kramer, a quarterback at Azusa Pacific ... major is undeclared but considering Economics.
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Derrick HILL
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DL, 6-2, 308..........................Oakland, CA SR-3V............................McClymonds HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 37 games with 18 starts, recording 76 tackles (21 unassisted, 55 assisted), 9.0 tackles for loss (-26 yards) and 3.5 sacks (-18 yards) to go along with two pass breakups and one interception that he returned for three yards.
DERRICK HILL’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 5 (three times, last vs. USC, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 2.0 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Sacks: 2.0 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Interceptions: 1 (at Colorado State, 2007) Pass Breakups: 1 (twice, last vs. Colorado State, 2008) Quarterback Hurries: 1 (vs. Louisiana Tech, 2007)
2010: Selected by Phil Steele as a third-team preseason All-Pac-10 choice and named his No. 45 draft-eligible defensive tackle prior to the season. 2009: Started eight of the 10 games he played in, including the first seven and the Poinsettia Bowl against Utah … missed three consecutive contests due to injury at Arizona State, vs. Oregon State and vs. Arizona … finished with 18 tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss (-11 yards) and 2.0 sacks (-8 yards) … recipient of the team’s Schelssinger Coaches Award for outstanding athletic ability, academic success and community service ... named as the nation’s No. 45 draft-eligible defensive tackle by Phil Steele prior to the season … had a career-high-tying five tackles on a pair of occasions vs. Eastern Washington and USC, while picking up four tackles and both of his careerhigh 2.0 sacks (-8 yards) against Washington State … also had 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard) both at Oregon and UCLA, as well as 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard) vs. Eastern Washington. 2008: Earned starts at nose tackle in nine of Cal’s 13 games, ending the season with 29 tackles, 2.5 tackles for loss (-4 yards), 0.5 sacks (-1 yard) and one pass breakup ... had a season-high-tying four stops at Maryland and vs. Arizona State ... garnered a half-sack for a loss of one yard at Arizona ... had 1.5 tackles for loss among his three tackles vs. Miami, Fla. in the Emerald Bowl, while adding 0.5 tackles for loss at UCLA. 2007: Overcame a preseason knee injury to earn a spot on Cal’s two-deep, responding with 24 tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss (-11 yards), 1.0 sacks (-9 yards), an interception that he returned three yards, a quarterback hurry and a pass breakup in 11 games and one start … selected as an honorable mention Freshman All-American by Scout ... earned his first career start in the Armed Forces Bowl against Air Force, essentially playing nose tackle in a 3-4 alignment and registering a career-high-tying five tackles … had two tackles and corralled a key interception in the first quarter against Colorado State when the Rams had third-and-goal on the Cal two-yard line … recorded three tackles, 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard), a quarterback hurry and a pass breakup that was nearly interception against Louisiana Tech … logged his first career sack (-9 yards) against Arizona. 2006: Played in three games and recorded five tackles with three vs. Portland State and two at Tennessee, before a knee injury forced him to redshirt the season. HIGH SCHOOL: One of the most decorated players in the 2006 recruiting class ... consensus prep All-American ... considered one of the top-50 players in the country by Rivals, who also listed him as the nation’s No. 8 defensive tackle, and the No. 8 overall prospect in California and No. 13 in the West ... listed on the prestigious ESPN 150 ... selected to PrepStar’s Dream Team, which is that service’s highest honor ... Scout listed him at No. 9 nationally among defensive line prospects ... honored as the top player on the Contra Costa Times’ “Cream of the Crop” squad in 2006 when he was also first-team All-State, a first-team selection of the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s “Best in the West” team and the Oakland Tribune’s East Bay Defensive Player of the Year ... a three-time All-City choice ... participated in the U.S. Army AllAmerican Bowl and gave his verbal commitment to Cal on national television ... chosen for the CaliFlorida Bowl ... senior numbers included 105 tackles, 45.0 tackles for loss and 15.5 sacks as he led his team to an 11-1 mark. PERSONAL: Full name is Derrick Hill Jr. … born July 16, 1988 ... parents are Derrick Hill and Tamara Purifoy-Hill … major is African American Studies.
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Josh HILL
DB, 5-11, 195........................ Houston, TX SO-1V............................. Klein Forest HS 2009: Made a strong contribution as a redshirt freshman, playing in 11 games and making five starts at a cornerback position … contributed 34 tackles (30 unassisted, four assisted), two interceptions that he returned for 14 yards, three pass breakups, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery … started three consecutive games at Oregon, vs. USC and at UCLA, and after coming off the bench for one game vs. Washington State, was back as a starter in back-to-back contests at Arizona State and vs. Oregon State … did not play in the team’s regular-season finale at Washington or the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah … recorded his first career interception at Minnesota to thwart a fourthquarter Golden Gopher drive that ended with the pickoff in Cal territory after the Golden Bears had taken a 35-21 lead … second interception came vs. Arizona, when he returned the pick 14 yards after stopping the first Wildcat drive of the second half with Cal trailing 10-9 … forced fumble came in the second quarter at Arizona State with Cal leading 14-0 when he knocked a ball free that fellow defensive back Brett Johnson picked up at the Cal twoyard line to stop an ASU scoring threat … recorded his first career fumble recovery at Oregon and returned it two yards before giving the ball back to the Ducks with a fumble of his own … also had four tackles and a pass breakup at Oregon in his first career start … posted a career-high eight tackles at UCLA … had five stops both vs. USC when he added a career-high two pass breakups and at Arizona State. 2008: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: A first-team All-5A Region II District 13 selection after tallying 45 tackles, five interceptions, two forced fumbles and 17 passes defended as a senior ... twice helped his squad to back-to-back 9-3 seasons and the second round of the playoffs as both a junior and a senior. PERSONAL: Full name is Joshua Andrew Hill ... born November 2, 1989 ... parents are Greg and Denise Hill ... older brother, Micah Hill, played two seasons of cornerback at Division II Midwestern State in Texas and was a second-team All-American as a senior in 2009, after playing two years at Cisco Junior College ... from the same high school as fellow Cal football player and classmate Kendrick Payne … major is undeclared but considering Social Welfare.
JOSH HILL’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2009
G-GS 11-5
UA-A-TOT 30-4-34
TFL 0.0-0
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 2-14 3
FF FR 1 1
JOSH HILL’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 8 (at UCLA, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (at Arizona State, 2009) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (at Oregon, 2009) Interceptions: 1 (twice, last vs. Arizona, 2009) Pass Breakups: 2 (vs. USC, 2009)
DERRICK HILL’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2006 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 3-0 11-1 13-9 10-8 37-18
UA-A-TOT 1-4-5 10-14-24 4-25-29 6-12-18 21-55-76
TFL 0.0-0 2.0-11 2.5-4 4.5-11 9.0-26
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0 1.0-9 1-3 1 0.5-1 0 1 2.0-8 0 0 3.5-18 1-3 2
FF FR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
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Austin HINDER
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QB, 6-4, 185....................................... Steamboat Springs, CO FR-HS.................................................. Steamboat Springs HS HIGH SCHOOL: A five-star Tom Lemming recruit that the analyst also ranked No. 5 among “pro-style” quarterbacks nationally and the No. 38 player overall … received four stars from ESPN … PrepStar listed him as the No. 10 quarterback in the nation and the No. 39 overall player, as well as the No. 13 overall player in the Midlands … also rated among the top quarterbacks in the nation by ESPN (No. 16), Rivals (No. 23) and Scout (No. 34) … listed by Sporting News as the nation’s No. 87 overall player … Scout had him as the No. 4 player overall in Colorado, while Rivals listed him No. 6 … earned national recognition after his senior season by playing in the U.S. Army AllAmerican Bowl and being named a MaxPreps Small School All-American … honored as a senior with a 2009 Gatorade Colorado Player of the Year selection, as well as MaxPreps Class 3A Player of the Year and Denver Post Offensive Player of the Year awards … completed 170-of-286 passes (59.4%) for 2,205 yards and 25 touchdowns with only six interceptions as a senior, when he also rushed for 889 yards and 14 TDs to lead his team to a 13-1 overall record and the state championship game … was 93-of-185 for 1,288 yards and 15 TDs through the air as a junior, while running for 594 yards and seven scores … also threw for 15 TDs as a sophomore … grandson of legendary Cal Athletics Hall of Famer and long-time NFL and collegiate coach Jim Hanifan, who served as head coach of the St. Louis Rams (1980-85) and interim head coach of the Atlanta Falcons (1989) among his many coaching jobs before retiring from coaching in 2003. PERSONAL: Full name is Austin Hanifan Hinder … born September 27, 1991 … parents are Bill and Kathy Hinder … major is undeclared.
HIGH SCHOOL: SuperPrep All-America choice, who also selected him to the All-Far West team ... the nation’s No. 21 prospect at linebacker and No. 43 overall player in California according to Rivals ... listed on the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s “Best in the West” team and named Los Angeles Daily News Defensive Player of the Year as a senior ... named MVP of his Senior All-Star Game with 4.0 sacks and a fumble return for a touchdown ... also the 2006 Serra League Defensive Player of the Year as a senior, when he tallied 73 tackles and 14.0 sacks ... rushed for 250 yards on 26 carries with six touchdowns offensive as a senior, while catching 47 passes for 840 yards and nine touchdowns ... the Southern Section Division X Defensive Player of the Year as a junior when he led his squad to the CIF Division X title with an 11-3 record ... four-year varsity starter. PERSONAL: Full name is Donnell Lamont Holt … parents are Shawn and Monica Bridges … born December 1, 1988 … cousin Troy Lewis played cornerback at Wyoming, completing his career in 2007 … major is American Studies. YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
HOLT’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 12-0 13-8 25-8
UA-A-TOT 9-5-14 20-17-37 29-22-51
TFL 1.0-1 3.5-4 4.5-5
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0 0.0-0 0 3 0.0-0 0 3
HOLT’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 7 (twice, last vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 2.0 (vs. Oregon State, 2009) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (at UCLA, 2009) Pass Breakups: 2 (vs. Maryland, 2009)
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J.P. HURRELL (HUH-rell)
D.J. HOLT
3
#
LB, 6-1, 250.................. Santa Clarita, CA JR-2V.......................Crespi Carmelite HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 25 games with eight starts, recording 51 tackles (29 unassisted, 22 assisted), 4.5 tackles for loss (-5 yards), three pass breakups and one fumble recovery. 2009: Started eight of 13 games and contributed 37 tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss (-4 yards), three pass breakups and a fumble recovery which he returned for 16 yards … team was 7-1 during his eight starts with the only game he started that Cal lost being vs. Oregon State … was in on the first play for the first three games of the season vs. Maryland, vs. Eastern Washington and at Minnesota, then again for four straight contests at UCLA, vs. Washington State, at Arizona State and vs. Oregon State, and once more at Stanford … recorded a career-high-tying seven tackles twice vs. Oregon State (also career-high 2.0 tackles for loss for minus-1 yard) and vs. Eastern Washington (also 0.5 tackles for loss for minus-2 yards) … added six tackles and two pass breakups in the season-opener vs. Maryland … had four stops on three separate occasions at Minnesota, vs. Washington State (also 0.5 tackles for loss for minus-1 yard) and at Arizona State … fumble recovery that he returned 16 yards came in the first quarter at UCLA and set the ball up on the Bruins’ 43-yard line, where quarterback Kevin Riley would connect with wide receiver Marvin Jones on the next play for a 43-yard touchdown pass and a 14-0 Cal lead … had only one tackle (also 0.5 tackles for loss) over the team’s final four contests. 2008: A reserve linebacker who played in 12 of 13 games off the bench with 14 tackles and 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard) … missed only the Michigan State season-opener ... recorded a season-high four tackles in his collegiate debut at Washington State and two tackles in four other games at Maryland, vs. Oregon, at USC and vs. Washington ... registered his 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard) at Maryland.
LB, 6-0, 220...................... San Mateo, CA SO-1V.........................Junipero Serra HS 2009: Played in all 13 games off the bench and was one of the squad’s top special teams players … also played backup linebacker … had a careerhigh-tying two tackles both vs. Eastern Washington (also his lone 0.5 tackle for loss for minus-1 yard) and at Stanford … had single tackles in six other contests vs. USC, vs. Washington State, vs. Oregon State, vs. Arizona, at Washington and in the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah … had at least one tackle in each of his last five games … enrolled at Cal for the 2009 spring semester and took part in spring drills. HIGH SCHOOL: Selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep as a senior in 2007 ... rated No. 47 among the country’s best linebackers and No. 83 overall in California by Rivals ... graded as a three-star prospect and the No. 27 linebacker in the country by Scout ... registered 50 tackles, 3.0 sacks and two forced fumbles as a senior, while adding 291 yards rushing and two touchdowns on 48 carries … posted 80 tackles and 3.0 sacks during his 2006 junior campaign, when the squad was 9-3 and reached the semifinals of the Central Coast Section playoffs ... selected as the Western Catholic Athletic League Linebacker of the Year, as well as second-team All-CCS and first-team All-WCAL as a senior. PERSONAL: Full name is John Patrick Robert Hurrell … born August 3, 1990 … parents are Findlay and Helena Hurrell … major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
HURRELL’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2009
G-GS 13-0
UA-A-TOT 4-6-10
TFL 0.5-1
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0
HURRELL’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 2 (twice, last at Stanford, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 0.5 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009)
2007: Redshirted … did not play … earned Scout Team Player of the Year honors for defense.
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FF FR 0 0 0 1 0 1
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
FF FR 0 0
25
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Langston JACKSON
Marvin JONES
1
#
TB, 6-1, 238..................... Simi Valley, CA
WR, 6-2, 200......................... Fontana, CA
SO-SQ.............................. Simi Valley HS
JR-2V................................... Etiwanda HS
CAL CAREER: Has been a member of the team for the last two seasons from 2008-09 but has not seen any game action.
CAL CAREER: Has 44 catches for 659 receiving yards and six touchdown receptions in 18 games and 13 starts.
2009: A member of the team but did not see any game action.
2010: Selected by Athlon and Phil Steele as a third-team preseason All-Pac-10 choice, while being named as the No. 64 draft-eligible wide receiver by the latter … also selected as a “Sleeper to Watch for College Fantasy Football” for Athlon and one of Cal’s “Players to Watch” by Lindy’s.
2008: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: A four-year varsity starter who twice earned team MVP honors ... rated No. 89 among the nation’s top running backs ... also a twotime All-Marmonte League selection as well as an All-County honoree as a senior when he rushed 230 times for 1,225 yards and 16 touchdowns after a 988-yard campaign with 10 TDs as a junior ... caught a combined 32 passes for 287 yards in his final two seasons ... also served as his team’s punter, averaging 33.7 yards per punt as a senior. PERSONAL: Full name is Langston Reynard Jackson ... born May 14, 1990 … parents are Reginald and Lyle Jackson … has a twin brother, Lorne, who is a point guard for Pepperdine ... major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
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Ed JOHNSTON
OL, 6-2, 275.......................... Fairfield, CA RFR-RS....................................Armijo HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Played both offensively and defensively as a prep ... earned Monticello Empire League Co-Offensive Lineman of the Year honors, as well as All-City and All-Region Offensive Lineman of the Year recognition as a 2008 senior ... also a first-team All-MEL, All-City and All-Region choice on the defensive line as a senior in 2008, finishing with a team-high 95 tackles, 5.0 sacks, two forced fumbles and one fumble recovery ... National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete ... earned first-team All-MEL, All-City and All-Region defensive lineman honors as a junior in 2007 as well, finishing with a team-high 70 tackles as well as 2.0 sacks, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery ... picked up honorable mention All-MEL honors as an offensive lineman during his sophomore campaign ... also threw both the shot put and discus in track and field. PERSONAL: Full name is Edward James Johnston ... born November 25, 1990 ... parents are Curt and Debbie Johnston ... the third of four siblings ... major is undeclared but considering Art Practice.
2009: Started all 13 games and finished with 43 catches, 651 receiving yards and six touchdown catches, all leading the team and ranking among the Pac10 leaders in both receiving yards per game (12th, 50.08) and receptions per game (14th-T, 3.31) … had at least one reception in all 13 games and finished the season with four consecutive contests of at least four receptions, totaling 20 catches and 261 receiving yards in his last four contests … recorded the first two-touchdown reception game of his career at UCLA, including a 43-yarder that is the longest catch of his career, among his four receptions for 89 yards to help Cal get its first win in Los Angeles under head coach Jeff Tedford … made his first collegiate TD catch in the season-opener vs. Maryland, while also adding single scoring grabs vs. Washington State, at Arizona State and at Stanford ... posted career-highs of six receptions and 107 receiving yards at Washington to end the regular season … had five receptions for 65 yards vs. Arizona and five catches for 44 yards vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl … picked up an unassisted tackle vs. Oregon State. 2008: Appeared in five games off the bench and had one catch for eight yards in the third game of the season at Maryland … suffered a knee injury in practice during Cal’s first bye week between the third and fourth games of the year and did not play again until Dec. 6 vs. Washington. HIGH SCHOOL: An All-America and All-Far West choice of SuperPrep ... ranked as a four-star recruit and the No. 23 wide receiver prospect in the country according to Scout ... was also listed as the No. 23 wide receiver nationally and the No. 22 overall prospect in California by Rivals ... CalHiSports second-team All-State selection ... produced a solid senior season, leading his team to a share of the Baseline League regular-season championship ... hauled in 81 receptions for a league-high 1,040 yards and 10 touchdowns ... added 71 tackles with four interceptions as a defensive back ... played in the Offense-Defense All-American Bowl ... caught 63 passes for 1,309 yards and 12 touchdowns in his junior campaign, earning first-team All-State honors ... also had 62 tackles and three interceptions on the defensive side of the ball as a junior. PERSONAL: Full name is Marvin Lewis Jones, Jr. … born March 12, 1990 ... parents are Marvin Jones Sr. and Pamela Harper ... father wrestled at Cal State Bakersfield … major is undeclared but considering African American Studies.
JONES’ CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS
YEAR G-GS NO YDS AVG TD 2008 5-0 1 8 8.0 0 2009 13-13 43 651 15.1 6 Totals 18-13 44 659 15.0 6 *Other Stats: Jones recorded one unassisted tackle in 2009.
LONG 8 43 43
JONES’ CAREER GAME HIGHS
Receptions: 6 (at Washington, 2009) Receiving Yards: 107 (at Washington, 2009) Receiving TDs: 2 (at UCLA, 2009) Long Reception: 43TD (at UCLA, 2009) Points: 12 (at UCLA, 2009)
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Cameron JORDAN
97
#
DL, 6-4, 283......................... Chandler, AZ SR-3V...................................Chandler HS
NATIONAL HONORS CANDIDATE
CAL CAREER: Has played in 38 of 39 possible games in his career and made 20 starts in the last three seasons, including two consecutive honorable mention All-Pac-10 campaigns in 2008 and 2009 … has 113 career tackles (55 unassisted, 58 assisted), while leading all active players with 21.5 tackles for loss (-75 yards) and 11.0 sacks (-57 yards) … has added one interception that he returned for three yards, one pass breakup, one forced fumble and four fumble recoveries that he has returned for 20 yards, one of which he returned 13 yards for a touchdown at Arizona State as a true freshman in 2007 … also has two kick returns for four yards. 2010: A national honors candidate … selected by Athlon, Lindy’s and Phil Steele as a second-team preseason All-Pac-10 choice, with Lindy’s also naming him the Pac-10’s No. 8 NFL talent and Phil Steele selecting him as the nation’s No. 16 draft-eligible defensive end prior to the season … called Cal’s “The Next Big Thing” by Sporting News and listed as one of Cal’s “Players to Watch” according to Lindy’s. 2009: An All-Pac-10 honorable mention selection for the second consecutive season, starting all 13 games and ranking second among the team’s defensive linemen behind 2010 first-round NFL draft pick Tyson Alualu with a career-high 48 tackles, as well as second overall also behind Alualu with 9.5 tackles for loss (-41 yards) and a career-high 6.0 sacks (-35 yards) … among the Pac-10’s per-game leaders in sacks (No. 10-T, 0.46) and tackles for loss (No. 15-T, 0.73) … added one fumble recovery, five quarterback hurries and one pass breakup … recipient of the team’s Bob Tessier Award as the Most Improved Defensive Lineman ... recorded a season-high seven tackles, 1.5 tackles for loss (-7 yards) and 0.5 sacks (-5 yards) vs. Arizona … had a huge game against Washington State with a career-high of 2.5 sacks and a season-high 2.5 tackles for loss (-17 yards) among his six tackles, while also adding a career-high three quarterback hurries … had five-tackle games vs. Maryland, at Oregon and vs. Oregon State with 1.0 tackle for loss in each of the three, while also adding a sack for minus three yards and a fumble recovery against the Terrapins in the season-opener and the first pass breakup of his career against the Beavers … had 1.0 sack at UCLA (-7 yards) and vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl (-3 yards) … had 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard) among his four tackles at Stanford … had single quarterback hurries vs. Eastern Washington and USC … selected third-team preseason All-Pac-10 by Athlon and fourth-team by Phil Steele, as well as the nation’s No. 53 defensive end by the latter. 2008: An honorable mention All-Pac-10 selection who played in 12 games, taking over a starting defensive end job in the fifth contest of the season and starting the final seven regular season games before coming off the bench in the team’s Emerald Bowl victory over Miami, Fla. … completed the campaign with 47 tackles, a career-high 11.0 tackles for loss (-29 yards), 4.0 sacks (-17 yards), one interception that he returned three yards, one forced fumble and two fumble recoveries that he returned seven yards … ranked among the Pac-10 per-game leaders in fumble recoveries (No. 6-T, 0.17), tackles for loss (No. 12-T, 0.92) and sacks (No. 19-T, 0.33) … co-led the squad in fumble recoveries along with Mike Mohamed … co-led the team’s defensive linemen along with Tyson Alualu and ranked tied for second overall on the club in tackles for loss, as well as second among defensive linemen behind Alualu and third overall in sacks … earned Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week notice for his October 4 performance at Arizona State, making his first start and finishing with eight tackles, a career-high 3.0 tackles for loss (-8 yards), a season-high 2.0 sacks (-7 yards) and a forced fumble ... had a career-best 10 tackles with 2.5 tackles for loss (-12 yards) and 1.0 sack (-7 yards) vs. Oregon ... picked up a sack for minus three yards among his six stops at USC ... snared his lone collegiate interception and returned it three yards vs. Colorado State ... recovered a fumble vs. Stanford at the Cal 10-yard line, which prompted the Bears to go on a 90-yard scoring drive for a touchdown and a 10-0 lead ... played a key role in the Emerald Bowl win over Miami, Fla., returning a fumble seven yards to the Hurricanes’ two-yard line with 3:28 remaining in the contest to set up the game-winning touchdown and also recording 2.0 tackles for loss (-2 yards) among his three tackles …
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recorded five tackles and 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard) at Oregon State … had 1.0 tackle for loss (-2 yards) and a quarterback hurry in the season-opener at Washington State … posted a quarterback hurry in the regular-season finale vs. Washington … had 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard) among his four tackles vs. UCLA. 2007: Played in all 13 games all off the bench during his true freshman season and recorded 18 tackles, 1.0 tackle for loss (-5 yards), 1.0 sack (-5 yards), three quarterback hurries and one fumble recovery that he returned 13 yards for his first career touchdown at Arizona State … tallied half-sacks at Arizona State (-3 yards) and Colorado State (-2 yards) … notched a season-best four takedowns in Cal’s road victory over Oregon, while adding three at Colorado State ... earned the team’s Bob Tessier Award as its Most Improved Defensive Lineman. HIGH SCHOOL: Rated the No. 5 prospect in the state of Arizona and selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... listed as the No. 8 recruit in Arizona and the No. 37 defensive end nationally by Rivals ... a PrepStar All-West Region choice ... ranked No. 54 nationally among defensive ends by Scout ... named the top defensive lineman at the Nike Training Camp in Los Angeles ... earned All-State honors his senior year after registering 85 tackles, 17.5 sacks, 37 quarterback while leading his squad to an impressive 11-2 record. PERSONAL: Full name is Cameron Tyler Jordan … born July 10, 1989 … parents are Steve and Anita Jordan … father played college football at Brown, then for 13 years as an NFL tight end with the Minnesota Vikings and was selected to the Pro Bowl six times, compiling career totals of 498 receptions for 6,307 receiving yards and 28 touchdown catches, with his best statistical seasons coming in 1985 when he caught a career-high 68 balls for 795 yards and in 1986 when he caught 58 passes for a career-high 859 yards as well as a career-best six TD receptions … major is undeclared but considering Legal Studies.
JORDAN’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR G-GS UA-A-TOT TFL SACK INT PBU FF FR 2007 13-0 7-11-18 1.0-5 1.0-5 0 0 0 1 2008 12-7 26-21-47 11.0-29 4.0-17 1-3 0 1 2 2009 13-13 22-26-48 9.5-41 6.0-35 0 1 0 1 Totals 38-20 55-58-113 21.5-75 11.0-57 1-3 1 1 4 *Other Stats: Jordan’s fumble recovery in 2007 was returned for a 13yard touchdown.
JORDAN’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 13-0 12-7 13-13 38-20
NO 2 0 0 2
YDS 4 0 0 4
AVG 2.0 0.0 0.0 2.0
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 4 0 0 4
JORDAN’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 10 (vs. Oregon, 2008) Tackles For Loss: 3.0 (vs. Arizona State, 2008) Sacks: 2.5 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (vs. Arizona State, 2008) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (four times, last vs. Maryland, 2009) Interceptions: 1 (vs. Colorado State, 2008) Pass Breakups: 1 (vs. Oregon State, 2009) Quarterback Hurries: 3 (vs. Washington State, 2009)
Will KAPP
22
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FB, 5-10, 227.................... Los Gatos, CA JR-2V..................................Los Gatos HS
the 2009 campaign.
CAL CAREER: Has played in 15 contests all off the bench primarily on special teams and also as a backup fullback … has one reception for two yards, as well as four tackles (three unassisted, one assisted) … wore No. 36 for his first two seasons at Cal before changing to his current No. 22 prior to
2009: Played in all 13 games off the bench primarily on special teams but also as a backup fullback … made one reception for two yards and recorded
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
four tackles … had his first collegiate reception for a two-yard gain vs. Washington State … recorded single tackles vs. Maryland, at UCLA, vs. Oregon State and vs. Arizona. 2008: Played in two contests off the bench vs. Michigan State and Washington … did not record any stats other than participation. 2007: Redshirted … did not play … earned Special Teams Scout Team Player of the Year honors.
Mychal KENDRICKS
30
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LB, 6-0, 241............................ Fresno, CA JR-2V.......................................Hoover HS
HIGH SCHOOL: A three-time first-team All-De Anza League selection playing on both sides of the ball ... tallied 244 tackles with 10.0 sacks and 10 interceptions over his career on defense ... on the other side of the ball rushed for 2,257 yards and 36 touchdowns ... De Anza League Senior of the Year and also first-team All-Metro, All-Peninsula and All-Central Coast Section in 2006 ... tabbed as his school’s Senior Scholar-Athlete of the Year while he was also team captain, team MVP and his squad’s Most Inspirational Player ... collected All-Metro and All-Peninsula honors in his 2005 junior campaign ... selected as the top defensive back in the De Anza League as a sophomore in 2004 ... captained the school’s basketball team as a senior.
CAL CAREER: Has played in all 26 games possible over the last two seasons from 2008-09 with six starts, recording 86 tackles (46 unassisted, 40 assisted), 7.0 tackles for loss (-16 yards), 2.0 sacks (-11 yards), one interception he returned 68 yards for touchdown in fourth quarter to seal the win at UCLA in 2009 and two fumble recoveries, one of which he returned 45 yards against Eastern Washington in 2009 … also credited with a 26-yard return on a punt he blocked vs. Colorado State in 2008 that teammate Bryant Nnabuife picked up and ran another 30 yards for a score.
PERSONAL: Full name is William Lorenzo Kapp … born October 20, 1988 … parents are Joe and Jennifer Kapp … father is a Cal football legend and former Golden Bear head coach who as a quarterback led the Bears to their last Rose Bowl appearance in 1959 and was also the coach behind “The Play” – Cal’s thrilling, five-lateral finish that lifted the Bears to a dramatic victory over Stanford in 1982 … major is American Studies.
2010: Selected by Phil Steele as a third-team preseason All-Pac-10 choice and the nation’s No. 47 draft-eligible outside linebacker.
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
KAPP’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS G-GS 2-0 13-0 15-0
NO 0 1 1
YDS 0 2 2
AVG 0.0 2.0 2.0
TD 0 0 0
KAPP’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS UA-A-TOT TFL SACK 2-0 0-0-0 0.0-0 0.0-0 13-0 3-1-0 0.0-0 0.0-0 16-0 3-1-0 0.0-0 0.0-0
INT PBU 0 0 0 0 0 0
FF 0 0 0
LONG 0 2 2 FR 0 0 0
KAPP’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Receptions: 1 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Receiving Yards: 2 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Long Reception: 2 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Tackles: 1 (four times, last vs. Arizona, 2009)
Keni KAUFUSI (kenny)
(ka-FOO-see)
56
#
DL, 6-2, 280.................Salt Lake City, UT RFR-RS.......................... Cottonwood HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play ... named Cal’s Scout Team Player of the Year on defense. HIGH SCHOOL: A three-star recruit by Scout ... a Salt Lake Tribune first-team All-State selection as a junior in 2007 when he collected 57 tackles, 21.0 tackles for loss and 10.0 sacks for a 10-2 squad, leading his team to a share of the 4A Region 6 regular-season title ... has a brother, John Martinez, also from Cottonwood High School, who will be a redshirt freshman offensive guard at USC in 2010 ... played football in high school with Cal teammate Isi Sofele. PERSONAL: Full name is Shea Jah Montarras Kaufusi ... born December 25, 1989 ... parents are Steve and Lori Martinez, and Sinia Kaufusi ... has 4.8 speed in the 40-yard dash ... has a great uncle and aunt (Petelo and Eveline Kaufusi) that produced six Division I college football players in Rich and Steve Kaufusi (BYU), and Doug, Henry, Jason and Jeff Kaufusi (Utah) with Steve now the defensive line coach at BYU ... major is undeclared.
2009: Second on team in tackles with 71 to rank tied for 33rd in the Pac-10 with an average of 5.5 per game, while sharing the club lead in fumble recoveries with two ... added 6.0 tackles for loss (-6 yards), 1.0 sack (-1 yard), one interception that he returned 68 yards for a touchdown vs. UCLA, three pass breakups, one forced fumble and two fumble recoveries, including one that he returned 45 yards vs. Eastern Washington … also recorded a career-high and Pac-10 season-high-tying 15 tackles vs. Eastern Washington ... sealed the victory with first career interception at UCLA that he returned 68 yards for a touchdown in the fourth quarter … posted 27 tackles in the team’s first two games, picking up a game-high 12 and 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard) in the season-opener against Maryland before his 15 to go with 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard) and the 45-yard interception return against Eastern Washington … had a pair of eight-tackle contests at Oregon and vs. Arizona, adding 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard) and a fumble recovery against the Ducks and a pass breakup against the Wildcats … had seven tackles vs. USC and in the Poinsettia Bowl against Utah, when he added a career-high 3.0 tackles for loss (-3 yards), and a career-high-tying 1.0 sack (-1 yard) and one pass breakup … had a forced fumble and his other pass breakup at Minnesota … a midseason fourth-team All-American and midseason first-team All-Pac-10 choice by Phil Steele. 2008: Had a promising rookie campaign when he played in all 13 games off the bench on special teams and as a reserve linebacker ... recorded 15 tackles, 1.0 tackle for loss (-10 yards), 1.0 sack (-10 yards) and a blocked kick backing up a talented group of linebackers that included three seniors ... finished with a season-high four tackles, including a 10-yard sack, at Washington State ... had a pair of stops three times in home games vs. Michigan State, Colorado State and Stanford ... his blocked punt came vs. Colorado State when he was credited for a 26-yard return before teammate Bryant Nnabuife picked it up and returned it another 30 yards for a score to gave Cal its first points in a 42-7 victory. HIGH SCHOOL: A three-star recruit by Rivals that was also listed as the No. 45 outside linebacker in the nation ... Scout ranked him as a three-star recruit and the nation’s No. 28 weak side linebacker ... selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... CalHiSports third-team All-State selection ... as a senior, led his club with 175 tackles and 4.0 sacks, while also registering a team-best 742 rushing yards on 103 carries and six touchdowns as well as 1,035 all-purpose yards ... named the MVP for linebackers at the Palo Alto Nike Camp. PERSONAL: Full name is Marvin Mychal-Christopher Kendricks … born September 28, 1990 ... parents are Yvonne Thagon and Marvin Kendricks … father played college football at UCLA and led the Bruins in rushing twice in 1970 and 1971 … major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
KENDRICKS’ CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR G-GS UA-A-TOT TFL SACK INT PBU FF FR 2008 13-0 8-7-15 1.0-10 1.0-10 0 0 0 0 2009 13-6 38-33-71 6.0-6 1.0-1 1-68 3 1 2 Totals 26-6 46-40-86 7.0-16 2.0-11 1-68 3 1 2 *Other Stats: Kendricks interception return in 2009 was for a 68-yard touchdown; Kendricks brought back one of his two 2009 fumble recoveries 45 yards; Kendricks blocked a punt in 2008 in which he was credited with a 26-yard blocked kick return.
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KENDRICKS’ CAREER PUNT RETURN STATISTICS
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 13-0 13-6 26-6
NO 1 0 1
YDS 26 0 26
AVG 26.0 0.0 26.0
TD 0 0 0
LONG 26 0 26
Kameron KREBS
LB, 6-1, 225..................Sunset Beach, HI SO-TR.................................Oregon State/ .................. Mission Viejo HS/Kahuku HS
KENDRICKS’ CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 15 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 3.0 (Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Sacks: 1.0 (twice, last Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (at Minnesota, 2009) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (twice, last at Oregon, 2009) Interceptions: 1 (at UCLA, 2009) Long Interception Return: 68TD (at UCLA, 2009) Pass Breakups: 1 (three times, last Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Blocked Kicks: 1 (vs. Colorado State, 2008) Punt Returns: 1 (vs. Colorado State, 2008) Long Punt Return: 28 (vs. Colorado State, 2008) Points: 6 (at UCLA, 2009)
Gabe KING
99
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DL, 6-5, 265.......................................................Burlington, NC FR-HS.......................................... South Eugene HS/Aiken HS 2010: Listed as the Pac-10’s No. 11 recruit by Lindy’s, as well as the organization’s No. 16 defensive end recruit nationally … the No. 24 overall Pac-10 recruit according to Athlon and the country’s No. 26 freshman defensive lineman pick of Phil Steele. HIGH SCHOOL: A four-star recruit by ESPN, Rivals and Scout … ranked among the nation’s top defensive ends according to Rivals (No. 5), ESPN (No. 19) and Scout (No. 35) … checked in at No. 30 on the Rivals250 list of the nation’s top players and No. 58 according to Sporting News … Rivals also had him as the No. 2 player overall from Oregon … on the 2010 U.S. Army All-American Bowl but did not play … played only one game of the 2009 regular season at South Eugene High School due to a knee injury … according to Rivals “he has the frame that can play strong side defensive end or defensive tackle at the next level … his build is similar to Reggie White.” PERSONAL: Full name is Gabriel Porter King … born June 6, 1991 … parents are Leon and Patricia Hughes, and David and Juanita King … brother, Antonio King, played college football at Kent State … major is undeclared.
Lucas KING
14
#
LB, 6-4, 227......................... Berkeley, CA FR-HS................................... Berkeley HS 2010: Enrolled at Cal in January of 2010 and took part in spring drills. HIGH SCHOOL: Had a big senior season as a linebacker, earning a spot on the Contra Costa Times' "Cream of the Crop" top-20 list, as well as San Francisco Chronicle All-East Bay, All-Metro and first-team All-Alameda Contra Costa League honors, ... recorded 115 tackles, 12.5 sacks and a pair of interceptions in his final prep campaign when he was also his squad's Defensive MVP and a team captain ... earned honorable mention All-ACCAL honors as a junior when he played safety ... led his squad to ACCAL titles in both his final two campaigns ... started his prep career as a quarterback in his first two seasons.
2010: Transferred to Cal from Oregon State in January of 2010 and participated in spring practices with the Golden Bears. OREGON STATE: Spent two seasons from 2008-09 with the football program before transferring to Cal. HIGH SCHOOL: Spent his first two high school campaigns at Kahuku High School, where along with his brother and current Cal teammate, Kaulin, he helped lead his squad to the 2005 state title in Hawaii as a sophomore ... went to Mission Viejo High School as a junior in 2006 and led his team with 114 tackles, while earning first-team All-South Coast League honors while playing safety and outside linebacker … participated in only the final two games of the season as a 2007 senior after recovering from an injury suffered during the summer prior to his final prep campaign … also a member of the surf team at Kahuku. PERSONAL: Full name is Kameron Cooper Krebs ... born February 2, 1989 ... parents are Ken and Kathy Krebs ... one of seven siblings that all have a first name that starts with a “K” like their parents, including older brother, Kaulin, who transferred to Cal along with Kameron in the spring of 2010 from Oregon State … an excellent musician who plays in a rock band … major is undeclared but considering Business Administration.
Kaulin KREBS (colin)
88
#
WR, 6-1, 191.................Sunset Beach, HI SO-TR............. Oregon State/Kahuku HS 2010: Transferred to Cal from Oregon State in January of 2010 but was limited in spring practices with the Golden Bears due to injury. OREGON STATE: Spent two seasons with the football program but did not see any game action, redshirting as a true freshman in 2008 and then missing the 2009 season with a torn ACL. HIGH SCHOOL: A first-team All-State and All-OIA League quarterback in Hawaii who threw for 1,100 yards and 15 touchdowns as a senior and set numerous state records, including single-season passer efficiency and the longest pass with a 73-yard completion … led his team to the Division I state title as a senior in 2005 along with younger brother and current Cal teammate, Kameron … squad won a pair of Division I OIA titles in his final two prep campaigns … MVP of the 2005 Kingdom Bowl that took place on the island of Tonga between Hawaii and the mainland … also played two seasons of basketball, with his team the state runners up and league champions during his senior campaign for the school’s best showing ever … also a member of the school’s surf team. PERSONAL: Full name is Kaulin W. Krebs ... born September 11, 1987 ... parents are Ken and Kathy Krebs … one of seven siblings that all have a first name that starts with a “K” like their parents, including brother younger brother, Kameron, who transferred to Cal along with Kaulin in the spring of 2010 from Oregon State ... has been a surf instructor on the North Shore in Hawaii … spent two years on a mission … major is undeclared but considering Business Administration.
PERSONAL: Full name is Lucas Brewster King ... born January 31, 1991 ... parents are Tom and Holly King ... has been going to Cal games since he was about five years old and says his favorite Cal game was the 2003 triple-overtime win over USC ... major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
88
51
#
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
45
#
Spencer LADNER
TE, 6-7, 245...................Kansas City, MO SO-1V.......................... Pembroke Hill HS 2009: Appeared in seven games off the bench primarily on special teams and as a backup tight end … did not record any statistics other than participation … made his collegiate debut in the season-opener vs. Maryland and also got into contests against Washington State, vs. Oregon State, vs. Arizona, at Stanford, at Washington and in the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah … played in each of the team’s last five games. 2008: Redshirted … did not play … named the team’s Co-Scout Player of the Year on offense. HIGH SCHOOL: A SuperPrep All-America and All-Midlands choice … earned a four-star rating from Scout and was listed No. 15 among tight end prospects nationally … Rivals tabbed him as a four-star recruit and its No. 4 prospect in the state of Missouri as well as its No. 16 tight end in the country … posted 28 receptions for 279 yards and three scores in his senior year … hauled in 31 receptions for 575 yards and seven touchdowns as a junior, when he earned All-Freelance League, All-Area and All-Metro honors ... also lettered in basketball and lacrosse. PERSONAL: Full name is Spencer Alan Ladner ... born October 16, 1989 ... parents are Dale and Amy Ladner ... father played collegiate basketball at Kansas … older brother, Ben, played football at Stanford … major is undeclared but considering Sociology. YEAR 2009
LADNER’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS G-GS 7-0
NO 0
YDS 0
AVG 0.0
Alex LAGEMANN (LAH-gah-minn)
TD 0
LONG 0
5
#
WR, 6-2, 210........................Saratoga, CA JR-1V....................................Saratoga HS 2009: Made his collegiate debut by playing in 11 games, including his first career start vs. Oregon State … tallied 12 receptions for 150 yards with 11 of the catches and 127 of the yards coming over the final six games of the campaign … had three catches in a pair of games at Arizona State (careerhigh 38 yards) and at Stanford in the Big Game (31 yards) … made his first career reception in the season-opener against Maryland for a career-long 23-yard gain ... also had a pair of receptions in back-to-back home games vs. Oregon State (23 yards) and Arizona (24 yards), as well as one for 11 yards vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl … a first-team Pac-10 All-Academic choice. 2008: A member of the team but did not see any game action ... won multiple Scout Team Player of the Week honors. 2007: Redshirted with a foot injury … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Rated as the No. 49 receiver in the nation by Scout ... the No. 70 ranked player in California overall and the No. 68 wide receiver in the nation by Rivals ... selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep, secondteam All-State by both NorCalPreps and the San Francisco Chronicle, was chosen All-West Region by PrepStar, first-team All-Central Coast Section and MVP of the El Camino League as a senior, when he scored 16 touchdowns in 10 games – 11 receiving, two on punt returns, two on kick returns and one rushing ... posted 36 catches for 727 yards and rushed 11 times for 115 yards in his final prep campaign while adding averages of 25.3 yards per punt return (11-278) and 29.5 yards per kick return (16-472) as a senior ... had 43 catches for 736 yards and eight touchdowns as a junior in 2005 to earn a first-team All-Central Coast Section selection, Most Valuable Receiver honors of the El Camino League and All-State underclass recognition.
PERSONAL: Full name is Alexander Robert Lagemann … born July 28, 1989 … parents are Roy and Luci Lagemann … performs as an artist who produces rap music under the name “LOGGY” along with disc jockey and teammate Michael Costanzo (a.k.a., DJ BIG RED) … the two were interviewed and performed the song “Here I Come” on the CSN Bay Area’s Chronicle Live television show in May of 2010 … brother, Augie, finished his collegiate football career as an offensive guard on the Pomona College football team in 2009 ... major is Media Studies.
LAGEMANN’S CAREER CAL RECEIVING STATISTICS
YEAR 2009
G-GS 11-1
NO 12
YDS 150
AVG 12.5
TD 0
LONG 23
LAGEMANN’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Receptions: 3 (twice, last at Stanford, 2009) Receiving Yards: 38 (at Arizona State, 2009) Long Reception: 23 (vs. Maryland, 2009)
Isaac LAPITE (LA-pee-tay)
20
#
DB, 5-10, 190.........................................................Eugene, OR FR-HS......................................Sheldon HS/South Eugene HS HIGH SCHOOL: Played his first three prep seasons at South Eugene High School, before transferring to Sheldon High School for his final campaign ... returned from an injury that kept him out the first half of his senior season to help led his squad to a state title ... knocked down a pass in the end zone as time ran out to preserve a victory in the state championship game ... had an injury filled junior year but still managed to pick up his team's defensive MVP award ... earned All-Southwestern League honors as a sophomore ... also played running back ... a member of the varsity basketball squad during his sophomore campaign ... an honor roll student for all four years ... graduated with an international baccalaureate. PERSONAL: Full name is Isaac Oladisun Lapite … born April 23, 1992 … parents are Olapipo Thejuana Lapite … anything else personal … a prince in the Yoruba tribe in Nigeria, the native land of his father ... cousin of former Cleveland Cavaliers basketball player Luther Rackley ... major is undeclared but considered Business Administration.
Adrian LEE
29
#
DB, 6-0, 190..............................................................Dallas, TX FR-HS.......................................................................Skyline HS HIGH SCHOOL: Among the nation’s top cornerbacks listed by both Rivals (No. 84) and Scout (No. 152) … checked in at No. 129 on Scout’s tally of the top overall players in Texas … recorded 21 passes defended as a senior, while adding 39 tackles and one interception to earn All-9-5A honors … led his squad to a 12-1 overall record and the third round of the playoffs during his senior season … spent his junior campaign as a running back before switching to the defensive side of the ball for his final prep campaign … has run the 40-yard dash in 4.31 … prep teammate of current Cal defensive back Steve Williams. PERSONAL: Full name is Adrian LaDonte Lee … born March 4, 1992 … parents are Andre Lee and Pearlie Lindsey … one of eight siblings … major is undeclared but considering Business Management.
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6
#
Alex LOGAN
10
#
Brock MANSION (MAN-shin)
DB, 6-2, 200............................Denver, CO
QB, 6-5, 232.............................Dallas, TX
RFR-RS....................................Mullen HS
JR-2V........... Episcopal School of Dallas
2009: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Tabbed a three-star recruit by Rivals and Scout ... rated by Rivals as the No. 4 overall prospect from Colorado and the No. 29 safety prospect in the nation ... ESPN rated him the No. 17 safety in the nation, while SuperPrep had him as the country’s No. 34 defensive back ... earned All-America nods from PrepStar and SuperPrep ... garnered first-team All-State and All-5A Centennial League honors as a senior, when he led his 11-2 team to the Colorado 5A state title in 2008 and sealed the state championship game with a late interception ... had 109 tackles, an interception and eight pass breakups as a junior, when his squad won the 5A Centennial League title and reached the state semifinals … attended the same high school as Cal teammate senior offensive lineman Chris Guarnero. PERSONAL: Full name is Alexander Quinn-Malik Logan ... born March 9, 1991 ... parents are Alvin Logan Sr. and Dana Logan-Walker ... timed at 4.53 in the 40-yard dash ... major is undeclared but considering Interdisciplinary Studies.
Brandon MADUENO (muh-DWAYNE-oh)
86
#
LS, 6-2, 227...................West Covina, CA RFR-RS.................................. Damien HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Earned varsity letters in each of his final two seasons as a long snapper and defensive lineman … also played a year of varsity baseball. PERSONAL: Full name is Brandon Lawrence Madueno ... born September 22, 1991 ... parents are Lawrence and Diane Madueno …nephew of Cal’s all-time tackles leader David Ortega, who is now the Cal Athletics compliance director ... major is undeclared but considering Operational Research and Management Science.
CAL CAREER: Has appeared in five games as a quarterback, completing 3-of-7 passes for 26 yards … career passer efficiency rating is 74.1 … has rushed for 13 yards on three carries and had a one-yard rushing touchdown in the fourth quarter at Washington State in 2008 … also the team’s holder for field goal and extra-point attempts. 2009: Played in three of the first four games off the bench as a quarterback vs. Maryland, vs. Eastern Washington and at Oregon, but did not take a snap over the final nine contests … threw an incompletion in his only pass attempt in the season-opener vs. Maryland. 2008: Appeared in two games at Washington State and vs. Washington, combining to complete 3-of-6 passes for 26 yards … had a passer efficiency rating of 86.4 … also rushed for 13 yards on three carries and had a one-yard rushing touchdown in the fourth quarter at Washington State … was 2-of-4 for 16 yards in the air vs. Washington, while totaling 1-of-2 completions for 10 yards (career-long pass) at Washington State. 2007: Redshirted … did not play … earned the team’s Freshman Lifter of the Year Award. HIGH SCHOOL: A PrepStar All-America selection ... Rivals rated Mansion No. 11 in its “pro-style” quarterback class ... selected to the All-Southwest team by SuperPrep ... attended the Elite 11 quarterback camp in 2006 ... threw for 2,200 yards and 26 touchdowns, adding 989 yards and nine touchdowns on the ground in his final campaign as a senior in 2006 to lead his team to a third-place state finish … was one of eight underclassmen to earn All-State honor as a junior in 2005 when he threw for 1,986 yards, 28 touchdowns and only six interceptions. PERSONAL: Full name is Hans Brock Mansion … born December 19, 1987 … parents are Hans and Kim Mansion … father was a tight end at Texas Tech … three uncles played college football at Texas, Nebraska and Texas Tech, respectively … major is undeclared but considering American Studies. Year 2008 2009 Totals YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
MANSION’S CAREER PASSING STATISTICS G-GS EFFIC 2-0 86.4 3-0 0.0 5-0 74.1
C-A-I 3-6-0 0-1-0 3-7-0
PCT 50.0 0.0 42.9
YDS 26 0 26
TD LONG AVG/G 0 10 13.0 0 0 0.0 0 10 5.2
MANSION’S CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS G-GS 2-0 3-0 5-0
NO 3 0 3
YDS 13 0 13
AVG 4.3 0.0 4.3
MANSION’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Pass Completions: 2 (vs. Washington, 2008) Pass Attempts: 4 (vs. Washington, 2008) Passing Yards: 16 (vs. Washington, 2008) Long Pass: 10 (at Washington State, 2008) Rushes: 2 (vs. Washington, 2008) Rushing Yards: 12 (vs. Washington, 2008) Rushing TDs: 1 (at Washington State, 2008) Long Rush: 7 (vs. Washington, 2008) Points: 6 (at Washington State, 2008)
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
TD 1 0 1
LONG 7 0 7
41
#
Jerome MEADOWS
LB, 6-3, 228...................Spartanburg, SC
TE, 6-3, 261........................ San Jose, CA
SR-1V..............San Jose CC/Broome HS
JR-2V......................Archbishop Mitty HS
CAL CAREER: Wore No. 55 in his first season at Cal in 2009 but has changed to No. 41 for his 2010 senior campaign. 2009: Played in 10 games off the bench primarily on special teams but also as a reserve linebacker, missing only three consecutive contests in the first half of the year at Minnesota, vs. Oregon and vs. USC … recorded four tackles (two unassisted, two assisted) and 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard) … had a career-high three tackles and his half tackle for loss (-1 yard) in the season opener vs. Maryland … picked up his other tackle in the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah … named as the nation’s No. 49 incoming junior college player prior to the season by Phil Steele. JUNIOR COLLEGE: Earned a three-star rating from Rivals and Scout … named as the nation’s No. 75 junior college player by SuperPrep … posted 105 tackles, 15.5 sacks, three interceptions including one that he returned 59 yards for a touchdown, and four forced fumbles as a 2008 sophomore at nearby San Jose City College ... served as president of the Black Student Union. HIGH SCHOOL: Helped lead his team to the South Carolina state title as a junior and the Region AA championship in his senior campaign ... squad won 19 straight games during his junior and senior seasons, capturing its final seven contests as a junior and first 12 in his senior season before losing in the second round of the playoffs. PERSONAL: Full name is Jerome Michael Meadows … born September 14, 1988 … parents are Clifford Jr. and Wendy Meadows … father is former United States Air Force sergeant … spent much of his childhood growing up at the Lakenheath Air Force Base near Suffolk, England … originally signed to attend Wingate before eventually landing at San Jose City College and Cal … major is undeclared but considering Sociology.
MEADOWS’ CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2009
G-GS 10-0
80
#
Anthony MILLER
UA-A-TOT 2-2-4
TFL 0.5-1
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0
MEADOWS’ CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 3 (vs. Maryland, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 0.5 (vs. Maryland, 2009)
FF FR 0 0
NATIONAL HONORS CANDIDATE
CAL CAREER: Has played in 21 games with starts … has totaled 27 receptions for 359 yards and one touchdown catch, which came on his first career pass reception in 2008 and was the winning score late in the fourth quarter of a 24-17 Emerald Bowl victory over Miami, Fla. 2010: Earned honorable mention preseason All-American honors from College Football Insider, as well as first-team All-Pac-10 selections by Lindy’s and Sporting News, as well as second-team by Phil Steele and third-team according to Athlon … listed by Phil Steele as the nation’s No. 13 drafteligible tight end. 2009: An All-Pac-10 honorable mention selection ... tallied 26 receptions for 357 yards to rank third on the team in both categories … was No. 24 in the Pac-10 in per-game receiving yards (32.45) ... played in 11 contests with 10 starts, missing back-to-back contests vs. Oregon State and Arizona due to injury … recorded at least one catch in each of the last 10 games he played in after being shutout in the season-opener against Maryland … had the longest catch of his career when he hauled in a 32-yarder vs. Eastern Washington … made a career-high five catches for 55 yards vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl … posted four receptions and a career-high 70 receiving yards against USC … had three catches on three occasions at Stanford (53 yards), vs. Eastern Washington (48 yards) and at Arizona State (47 yards). 2008: Saw action in 10 games all off the bench as a true freshman, primarily as a backup tight end and on special teams ... his one catch came on Cal’s last offensive play of the year – a two-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Nate Longshore with 2:41 left in the contest to provide the game-winning score in the Bears’ 24-17 Emerald Bowl win over Miami, Fla. HIGH SCHOOL: Rated the No. 18 tight end prospect in the country by Rivals and No. 53 according to Scout ... earned three-star rankings from both Rivals and Scout ... selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... CalHiSports third-team All-State selection and first-team All-West Catholic League choice as a junior as well as a San Jose Mercury News All-WCL choice ... posted 12 receptions for 106 yards and one touchdown for a run-dominated offense during his junior season while contributing 69 tackles, 10.0 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks on the defensive side of the ball ... had 18 catches for 310 yards and five scores his senior year. PERSONAL: Full name is Anthony Joseph Miller ... born January 22, 1990 ... parents are Antonio and Farida Miller ... has two sisters, Tiffany and Briana … major is undeclared but considering Sociology. YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
MILLER’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS G-GS 10-0 11-10 21-10
NO 1 26 27
YDS 2 357 359
AVG 2.0 13.7 13.3
TD 1 0 1
LONG 2 32 32
MILLER’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Receptions: 5 (vs. Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Receiving Yards: 70 (vs. USC, 2009) Receiving TDs: 1 (vs. Emerald Bowl vs. Miami, Fla., 2008) Long Reception: 32 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Points: 6 (vs. Emerald Bowl vs. Miami, Fla., 2008)
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Mike MOHAMED
18
#
LB, 6-3, 245.......................... Brawley, CA SR-3V.................................... Brawley HS
NATIONAL HONORS CANDIDATE
CAL CAREER: One of the team’s most experienced players having played in all 39 games possible over the last three seasons with 16 starts … became a full-time starter in 2009 and earned first-team AllPac-10 honors after garnering an honorable mention all-conference selection in 2008 … Cal’s active career leader with 245 tackles (150 unassisted, 95 assisted) to rank only six outside of the school’s all-time top 10 … also Cal’s active career leader in interceptions with six picks that he has returned for 36 yards and one touchdown … has added other career totals of 15.0 tackles for loss (-58 yards), 5.0 sacks (-37 yards), eight pass breakups, two forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries that he has returned for three yards … has also brought back two kicks for 10 yards … has been honored on the Pac-10 All-Academic team three times, earning first-team recognition in each of the last two campaigns … has been named Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week three times, twice as a junior in 2009 after once during his 2008 sophomore season. 2010: A national honors candidate who has earned several preseason honors, including being named to the Playboy All-America squad … also a second-team All-American selection by The Kickoff, a third-team choice of both NationalChamps.net and Phil Steele, and an honorable mention pick by College Football Insiders … has added first-team All-Pac-10 preseason selections from Athlon, Lindy’s and Phil Steele … on watch lists for the 2010 Rotary Lombardi Award, The Lott Trophy and the Bronko Nagurski Trophy … a preseason favorite for the College Football Performance Awards Linebacker Trophy … named the nation’s No. 4 draft-eligible inside linebacker by Phil Steele as well as the country’s No. 5 inside linebacker by Lindy’s … selected as a “Key Golden Bear” by Athlon and one of Cal’s “Players to Watch” according to Lindy’s … featured in a story by the Pacific Club Impact Foundation, sponsors of The Lott Trophy, on the organization’s website. 2009: A first-team All-Pac-10 and postseason Phil Steele All-Pac-10 firstteam selection on defense ... winner of the team’s Andy Smith Award as the Cal player with the most Big “C” time … was named the Bear Backers MVP on the defensive side of the ball as voted by his teammates … captured the Berkeley Breakfast Club Award as the team’s outstanding defensive player in the Big Game ... also had a big year in the classroom, earning District 8 All-Academic first-team honors from CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine for the first time and Pac-10 All-Academic first-team honors for the second year in a row … started all 13 games, recording a Pac-10 and team-high 112 tackles that were 41 more than teammate Mychal Kendricks’ second-place 71 total and 16 more than the 96 posted by USC’s Taylor Mays that ranked second in the Pac-10 … also ranked 43rd nationally with an average of 8.62 stops per game … added 8.0 tackles for loss (-35 yards), 2.0 sacks (-21 yards), a team-high three interceptions that he returned for six yards and that ranked tied for 12th per game in the Pac-10 with an average of 0.23, one forced fumble, three pass breakups and three quarterback hurries (second on club) … had 10 or more tackles five times, nine or more tackles on eight occasions and five or more 12 times … named Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week twice, picking up the honor after recording a season-high-tying 12 tackles at Arizona State and following a performance at Stanford in which he recorded 10 tackles, 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard) and the game-clinching interception that he returned six yards from the Cal three-yard line as the Cardinal was driving for the lead late in fourth quarter … also earned honorable mention recognition for Linebacker Performer of the Week honors after his performance against Stanford … picked up a season-high-tying 12 tackles vs. USC and against Washington State, also recording 1.0 tackle for loss (-4 yards) and a career-high two quarterback hurries against the Cougars … had a huge game in the season-opener vs. Maryland with 10 tackles, a career-high 2.0 tackles for loss (-8 yards) and 1.0 sacks (-7 yards) … had a devastating sack for minus-14 yards and a forced fumble on the same play that Kendricks returned 45 yards to the Eastern Washington five-yard line in the second game of the season, while adding a pass breakup against the Eagles … his trio of nine-tackle games came at Oregon, at UCLA and vs. Arizona, with one pass breakup against both the Ducks and the Wildcats … had seven tackles,
92
a career-high two of his three interceptions (zero return yards) on the season and 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard) at Minnesota, with both of his interceptions coming in the fourth quarter and the Bears protecting the lead in an eventual 35-21 victory … recorded seven tackles in a pair of other games vs. Oregon State and in the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, adding 1.5 tackles for loss (-5 yards) and one quarterback hurry vs. the Beavers and 1.0 tackle for loss (-2 yards) against the Utes… led or co-led the Bears in tackles in seven of the team’s last 10 contests … a second-team midseason All-Pac-10 choice according to Phil Steele … selected first-team preseason All-Pac-10 by Phil Steele and Sporting News, as well as second-team by Athlon … named as the nation’s No. 44 inside linebacker in the preseason by Phil Steele. 2008: An honorable mention All-Pac-10 choice that tied for second on the team with 87 tackles and tied for 12th in the Pac-10 in tackles with an average of 6.69 stops per game, despite starting just two contests but playing in all 13 ... added 6.0 tackles for loss (-22 yards), 3.0 sacks (-16 yards), three interceptions that he returned for 30 yards and one touchdown with the average of 0.23 picks per contest tying for 14th in the Pac-10, two pass breakups, a forced fumble and two fumble recoveries that he returned for three yards … named the Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week after Cal’s win over UCLA, finishing with nine solo stops, a career-high-tying 2.0 tackles for loss (-8 yards), 1.0 sack (-7 yards) and an interception he returned 19 yards for his lone college touchdown ... followed up the performance vs. UCLA by recording a career-best 14 tackles in the next game vs. Oregon ... had his second pick of the year vs. Stanford (10-yard return) and his third in the Emerald Bowl victory over Miami, Fla. (1-yard return) when he also recorded seven tackles and a quarterback hurry against the Hurricanes … had a huge game in the regular-season finale against Washington, recording both of his two career fumble recoveries that he returned for three yards, one forced fumble, 1.0 sack (-6 yards), 1.0 tackle for loss (-6 yards) and one quarterback hurry, to go along with four tackles ... recorded nine tackles vs. Colorado State (also a quarterback hurry) … recorded seven tackles and 1.5 tackles for loss for minus-four yards both at Washington State and at USC, adding a sack for a three-yard loss against the Trojans … had eight tackles at Arizona … batted down a career-high two passes at Oregon State ... given the J. Scott Duncan Award for Cal’s Most Valuable Special Teams Player ... earned first-team Pac-10 All-Academic honors. 2007: Made an impact as a redshirt freshman for Cal’s talented linebacker corps, playing in all 13 games off the bench and on special teams … recorded 46 tackles, 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard), three pass breakups and one quarterback hurry primarily as a weakside linebacker … tallied 24 tackles in the last five games ... earned his first career start at Oregon, recording a season-high-tying eight tackles in the Bears’ victory ... had eight more takedowns and 1.0 tackle for loss (-1 yard) in the Big Game at Stanford ... collected five tackles against Washington State and in the Armed Forces Bowl victory over Air Force, adding a pass breakup against the Cougars … recorded a quarterback hurry and a pass breakup vs. Arizona, as well as a pass breakup against Louisiana Tech … an honorable mention Pac-10 All-Academic selection. 2006: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Named the Imperial Valley Defensive Player of the Year as a senior after accumulating 62 tackles, 14.0 tackles for loss, 5.0 sacks and six blocked punts ... named team MVP and was also a first-team All-Imperial Valley League selection and a second-team medium schools All-State choice by CalHiSports ... member of the San Diego Hall of Champions defensive team ... selected to the San Diego Union Tribune All-Academic team ... led his squad to the CIF section championship game and semifinals during each of his last two years. PERSONAL: Full name is Michael Patrick Mohamed … born March 11, 1988 … parents are Mike and Molly Mohamed ... cousins Marty and Kyle Mohamed are sibling linebackers at Cal Poly … hobbies include music, movies and snowboarding ... major is Business Administration.
MOHAMED’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR G-GS UA-A-TOT TFL SACK INT PBU FF FR 2007 13-1 30-16-46 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 3 0 0 2008 13-2 51-36-87 6.0-22 3.0-16 3-30 2 1 2 2009 13-13 69-43-112 8.0-35 2.0-21 3-6 3 1 0 Totals 39-16 150-95-245 15.0-58 5.0-37 6-36 8 2 2 Other Stats: Mohamed returned one of his 2008 interceptions 19 yards for a touchdown.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
MOHAMED’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
YEAR 2009 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 13-1 13-2 13-13 39-16
NO 0 2 0 2
YDS 0 10 0 10
AVG 0.0 5.0 0.0 5.0
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 6 0 6
PERSONAL: Full name is Terrance Taray Montgomery Jr. … born August 28, 1992 … parents are Demond Whitfield and Shauntees Williams … major is undeclared but considering Media Studies.
MOHAMED’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
LB, 6-1, 225...................Los Angeles, CA
Tackles: 14 (vs. Oregon, 2008) Tackles For Loss: 2.0 (twice, last vs. Maryland, 2009) Sacks: 1.0 (five times, last vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (twice, last vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Fumble Recoveries: 2 (vs. Washington, 2008) Interceptions: 2 (at Minnesota, 2009) Pass Breakups: 2 (at Oregon State, 2008) Quarterback Hurries: 2 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Kick Returns: 1 (twice, last at Oregon State, 2008) Kick Return Yards: 6 (at Oregon State, 2008) Long Kick Return: 6 (at Oregon State, 2008) Points: 6 (vs. UCLA, 2008)
SO-SQ.....................................Dorsey HS CAL CAREER: A member of the team for the last two seasons from 2008-09, playing in three games off the bench and recording five tackles (two unassisted, three assisted) … originally signed with Cal in 2007, but enrolled in January of 2008 after completing his recovery from an injury suffered in high school. 2009: A member of the team but did not see any game action due to injury.
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C.J. MONCREASE
37
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Robert MULLINS
DB, 6-2, 212...................... Richmond, CA JR-1V..........Laney College/El Cerrito HS 2009: Played in 12 games primarily as on special teams … also a backup safety … recorded six tackles (five unassisted, one assisted) and one forced fumble when he knocked a ball loose that was recovered by teammate D.J. Campbell on the opening kickoff at Oregon, setting up an eventual 47-yard field goal by Vincenzo D’Amato and giving the Bears an early 3-0 lead … had a career-high three tackles vs. Eastern Washington, as well as one each in games at Oregon, vs. USC and vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl.
2008: Redshirted due to injury ... played in the first three games off the bench and recorded five tackles … had four stops at Washington State and added one at Maryland. HIGH SCHOOL: Rivals listed him as the No. 47 overall prospect in California and No. 32 nationally for outside linebackers ... a PrepStar All-West Region choice ... did not play as a senior due to injury, but set a single-season school record with 165 tackles as a junior, adding 5.0 sacks and a pair of interceptions including one that he returned for a touchdown. PERSONAL: Full name is Robert Lee Mullins III ... born January 7, 1989 ... parents are Robert and Cheryl Mullins ... played in high school with current Golden Bear teammate Keith Browner ... major is undeclared but considering Sociology. YEAR 2008
MULLINS’ CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 3-0
UA-A-TOT 2-3-5
TFL 0.0-0
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0
MULLINS’ CAREER GAME HIGHS
JUNIOR COLLEGE: Recorded 35 tackles, three interceptions that he returned for 88 yards and one fumble recovery as a redshirt freshman in 2008 … did not play as a true freshman in 2007 after suffering a broken leg.
Tackles: 4 (at Washington State, 2008)
HIGH SCHOOL: Earned first-team All-Alameda Contra Costa Athletic League honors and led his team to the North Coast Section title game as a senior.
Bryant NNABUIFE
PERSONAL: Full name is Christopher Justin Moncrease … born July 5, 1989 … mother is Demetrice Moncrease … major is undeclared but considering African American Studies.
MONCREASE’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2009
G-GS 12-0
UA-A-TOT 5-1-6
TFL 0.0-0
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0
FF FR 1 0
MONCREASE’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 3 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (at Oregon, 2009)
8
Terrance MONTGOMERY #
WR, 5-11, 180.................................................Los Angeles, CA FR-HS...........................................................West Adams Prep HIGH SCHOOL: Ranked as the nation’s No. 61 wide receiver by ESPN … earned first-team All-Los Angeles honors as a senior when he hauled in 42 receptions for 700 yards and 12 touchdowns, while adding a pair of scores on five kickoff returns for 246 yards to lead his squad to an 11-2 overall mark and a second consecutive Southern League title … recorded 34 catches for 738 yards and nine scores as a junior, while adding 12 kickoff returns for 304 yards … the first West Adams Prep player to receive a scholarship from a Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) squad … according to ESPN, “possesses terrific lateral agility and balance in the open field.”
FF FR 0 0
(nuh-BOO-fee)
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DB, 6-1, 191.......................... Houston, TX SR-2V................Blinn College/Elkins HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 20 games with four starts, contributing career totals of 35 tackles (28 unassisted, seven assisted), 2.0 tackles for loss (-5 yards) and two pass breakups … also has a pair of touchdowns off punts that teammates blocked and he brought back a combined 35 yards for scores. 2009: Played in 10 games, starting the team’s last four contests at a cornerback position opposite four-year starter Syd’Quan Thompson … recorded 30 tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss (-5 yards) and one pass breakup … all of his stats other than two tackles came over the team’s final five contests … equaled a career-best seven tackles both in his first career start vs. Arizona and in the regular-season finale at Washington when he also had a careerhigh 1.5 tackles for loss (-3 yards) … recorded five tackles both vs. Oregon State and in the Poinsettia Bowl against Utah when he also picked up his 0.5 tackles for loss (-2 yards) … added four tackles and his pass breakup at Stanford and two tackles at UCLA. 2008: Saw most of his action as a member of Cal’s special teams, playing in 10 games ... the only player in the Pac-10 to return two blocked punts for touchdowns, both coming after teammates blocked punts ... picked up a punt that Brett Johnson blocked and ran it back five yards for a score against Michigan State for the Bears’ first points of the campaign in the first quarter of the season-opener … second touchdown came in the fourth game of the campaign when he picked up a punt blocked by Mychal Kendricks and
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brought it back 30 yards into the end zone to give the Bears an early 7-0 lead in the first quarter vs. Colorado State ... had a season-high three tackles in the regular season finale vs. Washington … recorded two tackles and a pass breakup at Washington State. JUNIOR COLLEGE: Played one season at Blinn College, recording 38 tackles, 1.0 sack and two interceptions as a freshman in 2007. HIGH SCHOOL: Tallied 45 tackles, three interceptions, two forced fumbles as a junior before playing receiver as a senior. PERSONAL: Full name is Bryant Nnabuife … born December 29, 1988 ... father is Emmanuel Nnabuife … the younger brother of Alvin Nnabuife, who played collegiately at SMU and had brief NFL stints with the Oakland Raiders and Green Bay Packers in 2006, and the Cologne Centurions of NFL Europe in 2007 … major is American Studies.
NNABUIFE’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 10-0 10-4 20-4
UA-A-TOT 2-3-5 26-4-30 28-7-35
TFL 0.0-0 2.0-5 2.0-5
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 1 0.0-0 0 1 0.0-0 0 2
FF FR 0 0 0 0 0 0
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
OWUSU’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 5-0 12-0 17-0
UA-A-TOT 2-3-5 6-1-7 8-4-12
G-GS 10-0 10-4 20-4
NO 0 0 0
YDS 35 0 35
AVG 0.0 0.0 0.0
TD 2 0 2
Tackles: 7 (twice, last at Washington, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 1.5 (at Washington, 2009) Pass Breakups: 1 (twice, last at Stanford, 2009) Punt Return Yards: 30 (vs. Colorado State, 2008) Punt Return TD’s: 1 (twice, last vs. Colorado State) Points: 6 (twice, last vs. Colorado State, 2008)
Ernest OWUSU
(oh-WOO-sue)
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DL, 6-4, 267.........................Nashville, TN JR-2V.......The Hun School of Princeton/ ........................................ Father Ryan HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 17 games all off the bench, contributing 12 tackles (eight unassisted, four assisted), 4.0 tackles for loss (-21 yards), 2.0 sacks (-15 yards) and a pass breakup. 2009: Played in 12 games off the bench primarily as a reserve defensive lineman, and finished the season with seven tackles, 3.0 tackles for loss (-18 yards), 2.0 sacks (-15 yards) and one pass breakup … recorded all of his sacks and tackles for loss in the season-opener vs. Maryland, with the 3.0 tackles for loss tying for the most by a Cal player in 2009 while both were career highs … also had a season-high three tackles and his first career pass breakup vs. the Terrapins … added two tackles in the second game of the season vs. Eastern Washington and then one each at UCLA and at Washington in the regular-season finale ... second-team Pac-10 All-Academic selection. 2008: Played in five games, recording five tackles and 1.0 tackle for loss (-3 yards) … had a career-high four stops in his collegiate debut against Colorado State … his other stop was a tackle for loss (-3 yards) in the regular-season finale vs. Washington. 2007: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Took a prep year in 2006 at The Hun School of Princeton after his 2005 senior season at Father Ryan High School in Nashville, Tennessee ... listed as a three-star prospect by Rivals, which also ranked him the No. 24 prospect on its Prep School top-50 listing ... had 60 tackles and 12.0 sacks in 2005 as a senior at Father Ryan and posted nearly identical numbers in 2006 at The Hun School of Princeton with 62 tackles, 13.0 sacks and an interception.
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Kendrick PAYNE
DL, 6-2, 299.......................... Houston, TX SO-1V............................. Klein Forest HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 14 games with two starts, recording 13 tackles (eight unassisted, five assisted), 4.0 tackles for loss (-9 yards), 1.0 sack (-5 yards), one fumble recovery and one pass breakup. 2009: Played in 12 games, including the first two starts of his career in the team’s final two contests … accounted for all of his career stats other than two games participated in by recording 13 tackles, 4.0 tackles for loss (-9 yards), 1.0 sack (-6 yards), one fumble recovery and one pass breakup … had the biggest game of his career in the team’s final contest of the season vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl, collecting career-bests of three tackles, 2.0 tackles for loss (-6 yards) and his first career sack for a five-yard loss … had two tackles on four other occasions vs. Eastern Washington, vs. Washington State (0.5 tackle for loss, -1 yard), at Arizona State (1.0 tackle for loss, -1 yard) and at Stanford (0.5 tackles for loss, -1 yard) … fumble recovery came at Minnesota when he recovered a ball that had been knocked out by teammate Mychal Kendricks to stop a third-quarter Minnesota drive at the Cal 19-yard line, preserving a 21-14 lead for the Golden Bears … recorded his first career pass breakup in the season opener vs. Maryland. 2008: Redshirted … played in the first two games of the season but did not record any stats other than participation … enrolled in January of 2008 after graduating early from high school and took part in 2008 spring drills. HIGH SCHOOL: After missing much of his junior campaign with a hip pointer, returned in his senior season to put up 44 tackles, 13.0 tackles for loss, 7.0 sacks and four quarterback hurries to earn Co-Defensive District MVP honors ... registered a game-winning sack against rival Aldine High School ... helped team to a 9-2 record before a loss in the second round of the state playoffs. PERSONAL: Full name is Kendrick Bernard Payne ... born June 14, 1990 ... parents are Kenneth Payne and Angela Williams ... uncle, Harvey Williams, played college football at LSU and for eight seasons in the NFL with the Kansas City Chiefs, and both the Los Angeles and Oakland Raiders ... from the same high school as Cal football classmate Josh Hill … major is undeclared but considering Social Welfare. YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
PAYNE’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 2-0 12-2 14-2
UA-A-TOT 0-0-0 8-5-13 8-5-13
TFL 0-0 4.0-9 4.0-9
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0 1.0-5 0 1 1.0-5 0 1
PAYNE’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 3 (Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 2.0 (Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Sacks: 1.0 (Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (at Minnesota, 2009) Pass Breakups: 1 (vs. Maryland, 2009)
PERSONAL: Full name is Ernest John Yaw Owusu Jr. … born May 26, 1988 … parents are Ernest and Margaret Owusu … major is undeclared but considering Political Economies of Industrial Societies.
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FF FR 0 0 0 0 0 0
OWUSU’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
LONG 30 0 30
NNABUIFE’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0 2.0-15 0 1 2.0-15 0 1
Tackles: 4 (vs. Colorado State, 2008) Tackles For Loss: 3.0 (vs. Maryland, 2009) Sacks: 2.0 (vs. Maryland, 2009) Pass Breakups: 1 (vs. Maryland, 2009)
NNABUIFE’S CAREER PUNT RETURN STATISTICS
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
TFL 1.0-3 3.0-18 4.0-21
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
FF FR 0 0 0 1 0 1
Clark PORTER
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LS/LB, 6-3, 230.....Pacific Palisades, CA JR-RS.............Harvard-Westlake School 2009: Redshirted ... did not play … joined the club as a walk-on in the fall of 2009. 2008: A student at Cal but not a member of the football program. 2007: A student at Cal but not a member of the football program … played club volleyball. HIGH SCHOOL: Earned Serra League Defensive MVP and Northwest Division All-Section honors while also serving as a team captain during his 2006 senior season when his team reached the semifinals of the Northwest Division section playoffs … added team MVP honors as a junior in 2005 and was the Defensive MVP of his junior varsity squad as a 2004 sophomore … also played three seasons of prep volleyball, earning All-Serra League honors as a senior in 2007 with his squad advancing to the Division I quarterfinals, as well as being named his team’s Most Improved Player as a sophomore and the junior varsity MVP during his freshman year … played one season of basketball and was team MVP as a freshman. PERSONAL: Full name is Clark Willard Porter ... born March 14, 1989 ... parents are Clark and Kathryn Porter ... father played on the AVP Beach Volleyball Tour as well as professionally in Italy, while Clark has worked as a beach volleyball counselor … has played AAU volleyball and earned All-Tournament honors playing for an under-18 club team that was a Junior Olympic runner up … major is undeclared but considering Integrative Biology.
Jarred PRICE
PRICE’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 2 (vs. Maryland, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 1.0 (three times, last vs. USC) Sacks: 1.0 (twice, last vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Quarterback Hurries: 1 (vs. Maryland, 2009)
Tyler RIGSBEE
77
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OL, 6-4, 275.............................. Chico, CA SO-SQ....................... Pleasant Valley HS 2009: A member of the team but did not see any game action. 2008: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: A SuperPrep All-America and All-Far West team choice ... a four-star recruit by Scout and Rivals ... Scout graded him at No. 21 among the nation’s offensive tackles, while Rivals listed him as the No. 29 offensive tackle prospect in the country and at No. 40 among all prospects in California ... helped pave the way for a prep rushing attack that registered 2,428 yards on the ground during his senior campaign. PERSONAL: Full name is Tyler Michael Rigsbee ... born March 24, 1990 ... parents are Craig and Karla Rigsbee ... father and uncle played football at Utah State ... father is the Director of Athletics and former football head coach at Butte College and a former head football coach, as well as the current offensive line coach at Pleasant Valley High School ... major is Political Science.
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LB, 5-11, 213............................ Dallas, TX SR-1V............Blinn College/Madison HS 2009: Played in all 12 regular-season games off the bench primarily as a pass-rush specialist and on special teams but did not play vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl … posted six tackles (five unassisted, one assisted), 3.5 tackles for loss (-17 yards), 2.5 sacks (-15 yards) and one quarterback hurry … had a season-high two tackles, including a nine-yard sack for a nine-yard loss and a quarterback hurry in his Cal debut vs. Maryland in the season-opener … came back in the second game of the campaign vs. Eastern Washington with another sack for five yards … his stop vs. USC was also a tackle for loss for two yards, while he was credited with a half-sack for a yard loss vs. Arizona … his other tackle came at Arizona State ... named as the nation’s No. 12 incoming junior college player prior to the season by Phil Steele. JUNIOR COLLEGE: Tabbed as a four-star junior college prospect by Rivals and Scout … earned first-team NJCAA All-America honors and selected as the Southwest Junior College Football Conference Defensive Player of the Year in 2008 after recording 27.5 tackles for loss, 18.5 sacks and four forced fumbles … posted 12.0 sacks as a freshman in 2007 … listed as the No. 22 overall player on the Rivals Junior College Top 100, while SuperPrep placed him at No. 35 among junior college prospects. HIGH SCHOOL: Set a school record with 24.0 sacks as a senior in 2006 while leading his squad to a 10-1 overall mark, a 3A Region II District 11 regular-season title and the second round of the state playoffs ... also made it to the second round of the 2005 state playoffs and finished 10-2 overall after winning the 3A Region District 10 race. PERSONAL: Full name is Jarred Duane Price … born September 22, 1988 … parents are Reginald Price and Patty Carter … has a time of 4.5 in the 40-yard dash and possesses a 38-inch vertical jump … major is American Studies. YEAR 2009
PRICE’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 12-0
UA-A-TOT 5-1-6
TFL 3.5-17
SACK INT PBU 2.5-15 0 0
FF FR 0 0
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Kevin RILEY
13
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QB, 6-2, 224........................ Portland, OR SR-3V.................................Beaverton HS CAL CAREER: Has completed 357-of-659 passes (54.2%) for 4,773 yards with 37 touchdown passes and 15 interceptions in 28 games played and 23 starts … has a 15-8 record in his 23 starts … the Pac-10’s active career leader in touchdown passes and tied with Washington’s Jake Locker for the most games played by an active Pac-10 quarterback while ranking second to Locker’s 28 starts … ranks among Cal’s all-time leaders in several categories, including touchdown passes (8th), 300-yard passing games (2, 9th-T), 250yard passing games (6, 10th) … his career passer efficiency rating of 129.0 would rank seventh on the school’s all-time list but players are not eligible for the list until they conclude their careers … on the verge of breaking into the school’s all-time top 10 in a couple of other categories, beginning the 2010 season needing only 92 yards of total offense and 268 passing yards to move past Justin Vedder in both categories … also has 123 rushing attempts for one yard and four TDs on the ground, as well as one reception for six yards and one unassisted tackle … had a string of 118 consecutive passes without an interception that began in 2008 and lasted four games into 2009. 2010: Named a “Key Golden Bear” by Athlon, one of Cal’s “Players to Watch” by Lindy’s and the nation’s No. 19 draft-eligible quarterback by Phil Steele. 2009: Had a solid season, starting all 13 games and completing 209-of-382 passes (54.7%) for 2,850 yards with 18 touchdown throws and eight interceptions (all career-highs) … his 2,850 yards of passing and 2,901 yards of total offense both ranked as the fourth-highest single-season totals in school history, while his 18 TD passes are tied for 10th on the school’s single-season list as well as fourth in the Pac-10 for 2009 … also among the Pac-10’s per-game leaders in passing yards (219.2, 4th) and total offense (223.2, 6th) … had a passer efficiency rating of 128.7 to rank sixth in the Pac-10 … rushed for a career-high 51 yards and one touchdown on 82 attempts … had dramatically different numbers in the team’s victories compared to the squad’s losses … completed 129-of-209 passes (61.7%) for 1,899 yards, with 15 touchdowns and four interceptions for a passer efficiency rating of 157.90 and an average of 237.4 passing yards per game in eight wins … was 80-of-173 (46.2%) for 951 yards with three touchdowns and four interceptions for a passer efficiency rating of 93.5 and an average of 190.2 passing yards per game in five losses … recipient of the team’s Most Valuable Offensive Back honor on offense and voted by teammates as the Cort Majors Captains Award winner on the offensive side of the ball ... threw for at least one touchdown pass in each of the last eight games and 10 of 13 overall … named the first Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week of the season and was a College Football Performance Awards Quarterback of the Week honorable mention selection after throwing for a career-high four-touchdowns and completing 17-of-26 passes for 298 yards in the season-opener vs. Maryland … had solid performances in the team’s second and third games of the season vs. Eastern Washington (13-20-0-148-1) and at Minnesota (16-25-0-252-0) as Cal improved to 3-0 and moved up to a No. 6 national ranking … had his longest run of the season vs. Eastern Washington for 18 yards and also kicked off the scoring in a 59-7 win over the Eagles with a one-yard touchdown run in the first quarter … engineered a pair of fourth-quarter touchdown drives (8 plays, 72 yards; 8 plays, 44 yards) in the Minnesota game for 14 points to turn a game that was tied 21-21 after three quarters into a 35-21 Cal win … threw for three touchdowns in back-to-back wins at UCLA (14-23-0-205-3) and vs. Washington State (12-18-1-229-3) after subpar performances in two previous losses at Oregon (12-31-0-123-0) and vs. USC (15-40-1-199-0) … connected on TD passes on his first three attempts to start the Washington State game to become the first Cal player to ever accomplish the feat and also had a season-long 61-yard pass to Jeremy Ross … rushed for a season-high 33 yards on six attempts, including a 17-yard run, during the UCLA contest and also threw a downfield block during Jahvid Best’s 93-yard TD run … threw for a season-high 351 yards that were the second-highest total of his career on 27-of-44 passing during a 23-21 win at Arizona State, marching the Golden Bears down the field by going 5-of-6 for 85 yards on an 11-play, 74-yard drive to set up Giorgio Tavecchio’s game-winning 24-yard field goal with 0:21 remaining … was 19-of-34 for 200 yards with one TD pass and one interception against Oregon State … solid in Cal’s first wins in back-to-
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back weeks over nationally-ranked teams since 1950 during victories over Arizona (13-22-2-181-1) and at Stanford (17-31-1-235-1) … threw for over 200 yards in back-to-back losses in the regular-season finale at Washington (14-32-0-215-1) and vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl (20-36-2-214-1) … ran a string of consecutive passes without being intercepted up to 118 dating back to the final two games of the 2008 season and through the first four games of 2009 before he was intercepted for the first time in 2009 in the fifth contest of the season vs. USC … recorded his first career tackle (unassisted) after throwing an interception vs. Washington State … listed among the “possibilities” for Heisman Trophy winners by Phil Steele in his college football preview … on the watch list for the Davey O’Brien Quarterback Award … selected third-team preseason All-Pac-10 by Athlon and fourth-team by Phil Steele … named as the nation’s No. 22 draft-eligible quarterback prior to the season by Phil Steele. 2008: Threw for 1,360 yards and 14 touchdowns on 112-of-221 (50.7) with only six interceptions to lead the team in all categories other than completion percentage while sharing the starting job with Nate Longshore … had a 117.85 passer efficiency rating that was second to Longshore’s 125.78 … took the offense’s first snap in nine of the team’s 13 games and played in 11 contests overall … started the team’s first four games (vs. Michigan State, at Washington State, at Maryland, vs. Colorado State) and then two in a row at home vs. UCLA and Oregon to start the second half of the season, as well as three straight (at Oregon State, vs. Stanford, vs. Washington) to end the regular season … saw relief duty both at Arizona and at USC while not playing either vs. Arizona State or in the Emerald Bowl against Miami, Fla. … compiled a 7-2 record as a starter … lost 56 yards on the ground, scoring once on 30 attempts … signature game came in a 35-27 loss at Maryland when he completed 33-of-58 passes for 423 yards with three touchdowns and one interception, setting a single-game school record with the 58 pass attempts and having the 423 yards passing rank as the fourth-most in a game in Cal history and the most in the Pac-10 in 2008, with both totals career-highs as were the 33 pass completions while the three touchdown passes tied a season-best … his 58 passing attempts and 65 total offensive plays in the Maryland contest were also the most in the Pac-10 in 2008 … opened the 2008 campaign as the starter against Michigan State and completed 17-of-24 passes for 202 yards and two touchdowns … threw for one score and rushed for another on a career-long 27-yard run at Washington State, rushing two times for a career-high 45 yards ... completed 11-of-22 passes for 153 yards and two TDs against UCLA, including a 53-yard flea flicker for a score to Nyan Boateng … equaled his season high with three touchdown tosses in the Big Game vs. Stanford and finished an efficient 7-of-11 for 101 yards that including a season-long 59-yard touchdown toss to tailback Shane Vereen, while also being credited with a pass reception for six yards when he caught his own batted throw ... had a 3.5-1 ratio for touchdowns to interceptions (14 TD, 4 INT) in the nine games he started … had at least one touchdown pass in eight of the nine games he started, with the only exception a 48-7 blowout victory over Washington in the regular-season finale. 2007: Completed 36-of-56 passes (64.3%) for 563 yards with five touchdown passes and only one interception in four games and one start for a stellar 174.63 passer efficiency rating ... entered the Armed Forces Bowl vs. Air Force early in the second quarter with a 21-0 deficit and directed the Golden Bears to a 42-36 victory, finishing 16-of-19 for 269 yards and throwing three TD passes without an interception to earn the game’s MVP honors … earned his first career start against Oregon State, filling in for injured starter Nate Longshore, and completed 20-of-34 passes for a season-high 294 yards and two TDs with one interception against the highly-rated OSU defense, while also rushing for a score … with the Bears pinned deep on their own six-yard line and 1:27 left in the game, engineered an 84-yard drive to the Beavers’ 10-yard line, including a fourth and 17 completion to Lavelle Hawkins and a 37-yard pass to Robert Jordan, before time ran out with the then No. 2-ranked Bears missing an opportunity to move into the nation’s top-ranked spot after previous No. 1 LSU had been upset by Kentucky earlier in the day … had completed a career-long 64-yard touchdown pass to Lavelle Hawkins on the previous drive with 2:31 remaining on the clock to pull Cal within 31-28 … made his collegiate debut coming off the bench against Louisiana Tech, going 0-for-3 and rushing twice for minus-seven yards. 2006: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Named the 2005 Gatorade Player of the Year in Oregon and also considered the state’s top player as a senior by Rivals and SuperPrep ... a long list of awards and honors included All-America status from PrepStar and SuperPrep ... ranked as the No. 6 “pro-style” quarterback prospect in the country by Rivals and No. 18 in that category according to Scout ... the Rivals postseason Top 100 list had him at No. 51 overall in the country ... ranked as
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
the No. 3 prospect at the prestigious EA Sports Elite 11 Quarterback Camp ... second-team All-State selection ... Long Beach Press-Telegram “Best in the West” honorable mention ... named as the Portland Metro Area Player of the Year after passing for 2,580 yards with only six interceptions on 239 attempts ... threw for 55 touchdowns and had just 12 picks over the final two years of his prep career as his team was a combined 19-5 and made a state semifinal appearance during his junior campaign ... Tacoma News Tribune Northwest Blue Chip selection ... two-time team captain and once selected team MVP as a prep ... vice president of his high school class as both a junior and senior. PERSONAL: Full name is Kevin Mcdevitt Riley ... born January 27, 1987 ... parents are Faustin and Rhonda Riley ... father was hired as the head football coach at Sunset High School in April of 2010 after having served as the head coach (1991-2002) and offensive coordinator (2003-09) at Beaverton High School for the previous 19 campaigns ... was the offensive coordinator when Kevin played at Beaverton ... major is American Studies. Year 2007 2008 2009 Totals YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
RILEY’S CAREER PASSING STATISTICS
G-GS EFFIC C-A-I PCT YDS TD LONG AVG/G 4-1 174.6 36-56-1 64.3 563 5 64 140.8 11-9 117.8 112-221-6 50.7 1360 14 59 123.6 13-13 128.7 209-382-8 54.7 2850 18 61 219.2 28-23 129.0 357-659-15 54.2 4773 37 64 170.5
RILEY’S CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS G-GS 4-1 11-9 13-13 28-23
NO 11 30 82 123
YDS 6 -56 51 1
AVG 0.5 -1.9 0.6 0.0
TD 2 1 1 4
LONG 11 27 18 27
YEAR G-GS NO YDS AVG 2007 4-1 0 0 0.0 2008 11-9 1 6 6.0 2009 13-13 0 0 0.0 Totals 28-23 1 6 6.0 *Other Stats: Riley had one unassisted tackle in 2009.
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 6 0 6
RILEY’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS
RILEY’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Pass Completions: 33 (at Maryland, 2008) Pass Attempts: 58 (at Maryland, 2008) Passing Yards: 423 (at Maryland, 2008) Passing TDs: 4 (vs. Maryland, 2009) Long Pass: 64TD (vs. Oregon State, 2007) Rushes: 10 (at Washington, 2009) Rushing Yards: 45 (at Washington State, 2008) Rushing TDs: 1 (four times, last vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Long Rush: 27TD (at Washington State, 2008) Receptions: 1 (vs. Stanford, 2008) Receiving Yards: 6 (vs. Stanford, 2008) Long Reception: 6 (vs. Stanford, 2008) Points: 6 (four times, last vs. Eastern Washington, 2009)
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MATT RIOS
LS, 6-1, 230.......................... Phoenix, AZ SO-1V.......................... North Canyon HS 2009: Took over as the team’s starting long snapper and played in all 13 games with no errant snaps … did not record any statistics other than participation. 2008: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Rated as the No. 2 long snapper in the nation at a Chris Rubio long snapping combine ... earned Class 5A second-team All-State honors from the Arizona Republic ... considered to be one of the nation’s best prep long snappers ... registered 116 tackles and 7.0 sacks as a linebacker while adding two blocked kicks (one punt, one field goal) during his 2007 senior campaign ... recorded 86 tackles and 3.0 sacks as a junior ... attended the same high school as former Cal long snapper Nick
Sundberg, who played all 51 games possible at the position for four seasons from 2005-08 before Rios took over the position in 2009. PERSONAL: Full name is Matthew John Rios ... born January 9, 1990 ... parents are Johnny Rios and Shannon Oughton … major is undeclared but considering Public Health.
JEREMY ROSS
3
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WR, 5-11, 213................ Sacramento, CA SR-2V.......................... Laguna Creek HS CAL CAREER: Ranks second among active Cal players behind tailback Shane Vereen with 1,469 allpurpose yards (110 rushing, 554 receiving, 192 punt return, 613 kick return) ... has played in 33 games with 12 starts, recording 39 catches for 554 yards and three touchdowns … has also contributed 31 kick returns for 613 yards, nine punt returns for 192 yards and a score, and 16 rushes for 110 yards … added a 30-yard touchdown completion to Nyan Boateng in his only career passing attempt in 2008 … a tremendous athlete who has registered top all-time marks in multiple strength and conditioning activities among Cal receivers, including the power clean (341 pounds), bench press (350 pounds, tied for the school’s top mark), squat (500 pounds) and vertical jump (37.5 inches). 2010: Selected as a second-team preseason All-Pac-10 punt returner by Phil Steele and a third-team choice of Athlon … Phil Steele also listed him as the nation’s No. 5 draft-eligible punt returner … a preseason favorite for the College Football Performance Awards Punt Returner Trophy. 2009: Third on team with 860 all-purpose yards (48 rushing, 344 receiving, 192 punt return, 276 kick return) and 18th in the Pac-10 with an average of 66.15 all-purpose yards per game … fourth on the squad with 344 receiving yards, as well as tied for fifth with 22 receptions for an average of 15.6 yards per catch that ranked second … added one touchdown catch in the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah … ranked second on the club with 14 kick returns for 276 yards, including a career-long 54-yarder against Washington State … added team-leading totals of nine punt returns for 192 yards, including a 76-yard TD scurry against Washington State that was the third-longest in the Pac-10 and the only Cal punt return for a touchdown in 2009 … had six rushes for 48 yards … registered at least one catch in 12 of his 13 games, including each of his final 11 … posted the most productive game of his career against Washington State when he exploded for a career-high 228 all-purpose yards (second-most by a Cal player in 2009 behind Shane Vereen’s 230 at UCLA) with 61 receiving yards (one catch), 75 kick return yards (two returns) and 92 punt return yards (three returns), picking up 181 of his all-purpose yards on three plays with a 76-yard TD punt return, a 61-yard catch and a 54-yard kick return … the punt return and catch were both the longest by a Cal player in 2009, while the kick return was the second-longest behind tailback Isi Sofele’s 65-yard return in the regular-season finale at Washington … named a Punt Returner Performer of the Week by the College Football Performance Awards for his effort against Washington State … had a career-best 73 receiving yards on a career-high-tying three receptions at Minnesota, including two key fourth-quarter catches of 35 and 31 yards from quarterback Kevin Riley on an eight-play, 72-yard drive midway through the fourth quarter that broke a 21-21 tie and put Cal in front to stay … tied his career-high with three receptions on four different occasions, including three consecutive games at Minnesota, at Oregon (eight yards) and vs. USC (28 yards), and then at Arizona State when he totaled 67 receiving yards including a 56-yard grab that set up Cal’s first touchdown in an eventual 2321 win … added two rushes for a season-high 24 yards with a long rush of 24 yards against USC … had a 46-yard punt return in his only punt return against Arizona … recorded career-bests of five kick returns and 110 kick return yards (fifth-most by a Cal player in 2009) in the Big Game at Stanford. 2008: Finished with 609 all-purpose yards (62 rushing, 210 receiving, 337 kick return) and also completed a 30-yard touchdown to a wide-open Nyan Boateng in the second quarter of the Oregon State game, after taking a lateral from quarterback Kevin Riley … played in all 13 games and started five at wide receiver, including the season-opener vs. Michigan State and then four of the last five contests … registered 17 catches for 210 yards and two touchdowns … also had a team-high 17 kick returns for 337 yards than
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ranked second on the squad for a 19.8 average that was 10th in the Pac-10 among eligible punt returns … posted a season-long 47-yard kick return against UCLA … despite playing wide receiver, was Cal’s fourth-leading rusher with 10 carries for 62 yards and had a career-best 41-yard gain in the Big Game vs. Stanford to spark a third-quarter touchdown drive … caught a career-high-tying three balls on three occasions at Arizona (season-high 56 receiving yards), vs. UCLA (44 yards) and at Oregon State (30 yards), with season-long-tying receptions of 29 yards vs. both the Wildcats and the Bruins … led the Bears in all-purpose yards for four consecutive games, notching a season-high 141 at Arizona, 123 vs. UCLA, 119 vs. Oregon and 61 at USC … had his most productive game returning kicks at Arizona when he brought four back for a season-high 85 yards, while also returning four for 81 yards vs. Oregon … credited with one unassisted tackle during the team’s 24-17 Emerald Bowl win over Miami, Fla. 2007: Saw action in seven games all off the bench primarily on special teams … did not record any stats other than participation. 2006: Redshirted … did not play … shared Scout Team Player of the Year honors for offense. HIGH SCHOOL: A threat in both the running and receiving games ... an All-Regional pick by PrepStar, a third-team All-State selection and the Delta League MVP as a senior when he ran for 964 yards on 99 carries and also caught 45 passes that covered 718 yards ... ran the 100 and 200-meter dash in track and field ... played in the Optimist Game in Sacramento. PERSONAL: Full name is Jeremy Spencer Ross … born March 16, 1988 … parents are Jordan and Tangerine Ross ... clocked the fastest 40-yard dash time (4.39) at the Stanford Nike Combine in May of 2005, which was also the fastest time by a California prep receiver that year … featured in an entertaining “Cal Cribs” video on CalBears.com … major is Social Welfare. YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
ROSS’ CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS G-GS 7-0 13-5 13-7 33-12
NO 0 17 22 39
YDS 0 210 344 554
AVG 0.0 12.4 15.6 14.2
TD 0 2 1 3
LONG 0 29 61 61
G-GS 7-0 13-5 13-7 33-12
NO 0 10 6 16
YDS 0 62 48 110
AVG 0.0 6.2 8.0 6.9
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 41 24 41
G-GS 7-0 13-5 13-7 33-12
NO 0 0 9 9
YDS 0 0 192 192
AVG 0.0 0.0 21.3 21.3
TD 0 0 1 1
LONG 0 0 76 76
G-GS 7-0 13-5 13-7 33-12
NO 0 17 14 31
YDS 0 337 276 613
AVG 0.0 19.8 19.7 19.8
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 47 54 54
ROSS’ CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS
ROSS’ CAREER PUNT RETURN STATISTICS
ROSS’ CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
ROSS’ CAREER PASSING STATISTICS
ROSS’ CAREER GAME HIGHS
Receptions: 3 (six times, last at Arizona State, 2009) Receiving Yards: 73 (at Minnesota, 2009) Receiving TDs: 1 (three times, last Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Long Reception: 61 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Rushes: 2 (four times, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Rushing Yards: 43 (at Stanford, 2008) Long Rush: 41 (at Stanford, 2008) Kick Returns: 5 (at Stanford, 2009) Kick Return Yards: 110 (at Stanford, 2009) Long Kick Return: 54 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Punt Returns: 3 (twice, last at Arizona State, 2009) Punt Return Yards: 92 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Punt Return TDs: 1 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Long Punt Return: 76TD (vs. Washington State, 2009) Pass Completions: 1 (at Oregon State, 2008) Pass Attempts: 1 (at Oregon State, 2008) Passing Yards: 30 (at Oregon State, 2009) Long Pass: 30TD (at Oregon State, 2009) Passing TDs: 1 (at Oregon State, 2009) Points: 6 (four times, last Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009)
Vachel SAMUELS (VAH-chel)
DB, 6-0, 188........................ Compton, CA RFR-RS............................... Lynwood HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Earned three-star ratings from Rivals and Scout ... tabbed an All-Region selection by both PrepStar and SuperPrep as a junior ... Rivals pegged him fourth nationally in its “most physical” cornerback rankings and as the No. 37 player in the country at his position, as well as the No. 42 overall player in California ... named the No. 52 player overall in California/Hawaii/Nevada by SuperPrep ... selected preseason All-Southern Section as a senior but suffered a season-ending leg injury in the fourth game of the year for a team that finished 8-3-1 overall and reached the second round of the playoffs ... was an All-San Gabriel Valley League choice as a junior after collecting 60 tackles, 2.0 sacks and two forced fumbles ... also saw action as a running back, scoring three touchdowns as a senior before his season-ending injury ... carried the ball 18 times for 171 yards and a touchdown as a junior after rushing 21 times for 112 yards and a TD in his sophomore campaign. PERSONAL: Full name is Vachel Samuels Jr. ... born July 4, 1990 ... father is Vachel Samuels Sr. ... has been timed at 4.44 in the 40-yard dash ... major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
Year G-GS EFFIC C-A-I PCT YDS TD LONG AVG/G 2007 7-0 0.0 0-0-0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 2008 13-5 682.0 1-1-0 100.0 30 1 30 2.3 2009 13-7 0.0 0-0-0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 Totals 33-12 682.0 1-1-0 100.0 30 1 30 0.9 *Other Stats: Ross had one unassisted tackle in 2008.
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Mitchell SCHWARTZ
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Brian SCHWENKE (SHWANK-EE)
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OL, 6-5, 310...........Pacific Palisades, CA
OL, 6-2, 285......................Oceanside, CA
JR-2V.....................Palisades Charter HS
SO-1V................................Oceanside HS
NATIONAL HONORS CANDIDATE
CAL CAREER: Has started all 26 games possible over the last two seasons at either right tackle (16) or left tackle (10) … could play either left or right tackle in 2010 … has been named honorable mention Pac-10 All-Academic in each of the last two campaigns in 2008 and 2009. 2010: A national honors candidate … selected as a second-team preseason All-Pac-10 choice by Athlon, Lindy’s and Phil Steele, while Steele also listed him as the nation’s No. 63 draft-eligible tackle. 2009: Started all 13 games at right tackle … an All-Pac-10 and conference All-Academic honorable mention selection ... a Phil Steele preseason, midseason and postseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team Offense choice ... recipient of team’s Brick Muller Award as Cal’s Most Valuable Offensive Lineman … selected second-team preseason All-Pac-10 by Lindy’s, as well as thirdteam by Athlon. 2008: Started all 13 games at an offensive tackle spot … began the year as the starter at right tackle for three games before making a permanent switch to the left side in game four vs. Colorado State and starting the remaining 10 games at that position … named a second-team Freshman All-American by College Football News … had two pancake blocks, two knockdowns and a cut block against Michigan State … had four knockdowns vs. Stanford ... honored with the Bob Tessier Award as the Most improved Cal Offensive Lineman … earned honorable mention Pac-10 All-Academic honors. 2007: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Rated as the No. 27 offensive guard in the country and came in at No. 50 among all prospects in the state of California by Rivals ... earned CIF Los Angeles City Offensive Lineman of the Year, Western League Lineman of the Year and PrepStar All-West Region honors his senior season ... was a two-time All-State “underclassman” pick ... earned All-Western League and All-City honors his junior season ... named to the Principal’s Honor Roll and the Dean’s List. PERSONAL: Full name is Mitchell Bryan Schwartz … born June 8, 1989 … son of Lee Schwartz and Olivia Goodkin … older brother, Geoff, completed his career as an offensive tackle for Oregon in 2007 and is currently in the NFL with Carolina after being drafted by the Panthers in the seventh round of the 2008 NFL Draft … Geoff saw his first NFL action with Carolina in 2009, playing in all 16 regular-season games with three starts … major is undeclared but considering Psychology.
2009: Played in 12 games off the bench primarily on special teams and as a reserve offensive lineman … did not record any stats other than participation … one of only three true freshmen to play in 2009 along with kicker Vincenzo D’Amato and tailback Isi Sofele. HIGH SCHOOL: Received a three-star rating by Scout and Rivals … tabbed as the No. 44 offensive guard in the country and the No. 60 player overall in California by Rivals … ranked as the nation’s No. 9 offensive player by ESPN and the No. 82 player overall in California/Hawaii/Nevada according to SuperPrep … named first-team All-State, All-Area, All-County, All-San Diego Section and All-Valley League as a senior … added All-Region accolades from both PrepStar and SuperPrep during his senior campaign for a team that finished with a 12-0-1 record and won a regular season Valley League title as well as a section crown before falling in the third round of the playoffs … also played defensive as a senior, contributing 17 tackles ... selected firstteam All-Valley League, second-team All-County and second-team All-State as a junior, when his squad finished 12-1 overall and won the state title … blocked for 1,800-yard rusher Armani Taylor in his junior campaign … earned MVP honors at the Palo Alto Nike Camp in May of 2008. PERSONAL: Full name is Brian Max Schwenke Jr. … born March 22, 1981 … parents are Brian and Amy Schwenke, and Robert and Darlene Scozzari … major is undeclared but considering Political Science.
David SEAWRIGHT
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PK, 6-3, 215...................... San Diego, CA JR-2V..................... Rancho Bernardo HS CAL CAREER: Has appeared in eight games, making all 26 of his extra-point attempts and going 5-for-7 on field goal tries with a long of 37 yards … has averaged 60.25 yards per kickoff on 20 attempts … has scored 41 career points. 2010: Expected to be the team’s emergency punter behind All-American candidate Bryan Anger after working out in that role during 2010 spring practices. 2009: Played in three games, handling four kickoffs for 226 yards (56.5 avg) … kicked off twice in the season opener vs. Maryland for 130 yards and a 65.0 average … also had a 55-yard kickoff out-bounds vs. Eastern Washington and a 41-yard squib kick vs. Washington State. 2008: Won the job as the team’s starting placekicker prior to the start of the season … ranked fourth on the team in scoring with 41 points … made all 26 of his extra point attempts and was 5-for-7 on field goal tries through the first five games before suffering an injury in practice prior to the sixth game that ended his campaign … was 5-for-6 from inside 30 yards or closer … career-long field goal of 37 yards came at Washington State, where he also made all nine of his PATs for a career high, and tying for the most PAT makes and attempts in a game in the Pac-10 in 2008 … set or equaled all of his career-bests other than field goals made and field goals attempted during the contest at Washington State, adding 12 points, seven kickoffs, 452 kickoff yards and a 64.6 kickoff average … made a pair of field goals in three attempts at Maryland (both career highs), as well as one each vs. Michigan State, at Washington State and vs. Arizona State … had his other field goal try blocked vs. Colorado State … kicked the ball off 16 times for 976 yards and a 61.2 average. HIGH SCHOOL: Considered one of the most recognized special team athletes in the San Diego area ... a CalHiSports second-team All-State selection as a senior when he also earned first-team All-Palomar League and Kicker of the Year honors ... added a North County Times first-team All-Region selection
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during his senior year and was selected to play in the Navy Marine Corps All-Star Classic ... led the San Diego area in punting and knocked in three field goals over 50 yards as a senior while over 90 percent of his kickoffs went for touchbacks ... named his school’s Scholar-Athlete of the Year. PERSONAL: Full name is David Robert Seawright … born February 1, 1990 ... parents are Bob and Ginny Seawright … spent the summer of 2009 as an intern with ABC Channel 7 in San Francisco and is a writer for the Daily Cal student newspaper ... major is Media Studies.
SEAWRIGHT’S CAREER KICKING STATISTICS
YEAR G-GS FG-FGA 2008 5-0 5-7 2009 3-0 0-0 Totals 8-0 5-7
PCT 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 LG BLK PAT PTS 71.4 0-0 4-5 1-1 0-1 0-0 37 1 26-26 41 0.0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0 71.4 0-0 4-5 1-1 0-1 0-0 37 1 26-26 41
SEAWRIGHT’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Field Goals Made: 2 (at Maryland, 2008) Field Goals Attempted: 3 (at Maryland, 2008) Field Goal Percentage (with most field goals made if tie): 100.0, 1-1 (three times, last vs. Arizona State, 2008) Long Field Goal: 37 (at Washington State, 2008) PAT’s Made: 9 (at Washington State, 2008) PAT’s Attempted: 9 (at Washington State, 2008) PAT Percentage (with most PAT’s made if tie): 100.0, 9-9 (at Washington State, 2008) Kickoffs: 7 (at Washington State, 2008) Kickoff Yards: 452 (at Washington State, 2008) Kickoff Average: 64.6, 7-452 (at Washington State, 2008) Points: 12 (at Washington State, 2008)
Charles SIDDOWAY
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OL, 6-4, 290...........................Eugene, OR RFR-RS................................. Sheldon HS 2009: Redshirted ... did not play ... named as the nation’s No. 45 freshman offensive lineman in the preseason by Phil Steele. HIGH SCHOOL: An All-Region choice of both PrepStar and SuperPrep ... listed as a three-star prospect by Rivals, Scout and Tom Lemming ... rated as the No. 6 player overall in the Northwest by the Tacoma NewsTribune ... Rivals dubbed him the top prospect in Oregon and No. 43 at his position nationally, while SuperPrep named him the No. 5 recruit in the state and the No. 22 offensive lineman in the country ... Scout placed him at No. 30 in the nation among offensive tackles ... named first-team All-Sky-Em League as a senior ... earned second-team All-SEL honors on defense as a junior as well as honorable mention recognition offensively on a league and state championship team that finished with a 13-1 overall record ... named honorable mention all-conference on defense in his sophomore campaign. PERSONAL: Full name is Charles Edward Siddoway ... born April 3, 1991 ... mother is Terri Siddoway ... major is undeclared but considering Public Health.
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Isi SOFELE (EE-see) (so-fell-AY)
TB, 5-7, 186.................Salt Lake City, UT SO-1V............................. Cottonwood HS 2009: Played in all 13 games with two starts coming when he was in for the first offensive play both in the regular-season finale at Washington and the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah … was one of only three true freshmen along with kicker Vincenzo D’Amato and offensive lineman Brian Schwenke that played in 2009 … contributed 12 rushes for 82 yards and one touchdown on the ground, three receptions for 26 receiving yards and 12 kick returns for 248 yards and a 20.7 average after moving into the role as the team’s primary kick returner for its final two contests against Washington (6-127) and in the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah (6-121), tying Shane Vereen for both team’s single-game kick returns and kick return yardage … had his most productive offensive game against Eastern Washington when he rushed twice for a career-high 26 yards and scored his lone touchdown of the campaign on a 22-yard run that was also his longest career rush … added two rushes for 16 yards, including a 17-yard scamper, and caught one ball for 10 yards vs. Washington State … had a pair of carries for 13 yards at Oregon … had both a rush for eight yards and the longest reception of his career at Stanford when he caught a ball for 13 yards … rushed once for eight yards in his collegiate debut in the season-opener vs. Maryland … also was one of the team’s top defensive players on special teams with nine tackles to lead special teams units … had four of his tackles at UCLA, as well as one each vs. Maryland, at Arizona State, vs. Arizona, at Stanford and at Washington … moved to tailback early in the season after spending most of training camp as a wide receiver. HIGH SCHOOL: Earned a three-star ranking by Rivals and Scout ... a PrepStar and SuperPrep All-Region selection ... Rivals also rated him at No. 34 among all-purpose backs nationally and the No. 8 overall prospect in Utah ... checked in at No. 72 nationally for running backs on the Scout list ... gained 1,920 yards on the ground and rushed for 30 touchdowns to go along with 16 receptions for 256 receiving yards and four TDs his senior season to lead his squad to a 4A Region 6 title and a 13-1 final record ... earned first-team All-State and All-4A Region 6 honors for each of his final two campaigns ... ran for 1,436 yards and 18 scores as a junior to help squad win a share of the conference crown and post a 10-2 overall record. PERSONAL: Full name is Isileli Manoa Sofele … born November 6, 1990 … parents are HuiHui and Langi Sofele … major is undeclared but considering Sociology. YEAR 2009 YEAR 2009
SOFELE’S CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS G-GS 13-2
NO 12
YDS 82
AVG 6.8
TD 1
SOFELE’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS G-GS 13-2
NO 3
YDS 26
AVG 8.7
TD 0
LONG 13
SOFELE’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
YEAR 2009 YEAR 2009
G-GS 13-2
NO 12
YDS 248
AVG 20.7
TD 0
LONG 65
SOFELE’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 13-2
UA-A-TOT 8-1-9
TFL 0.0-0
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0
SOFELE’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Rushes: 2 (four times, last at Washington, 2009) Rushing Yards: 36 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Rushing TDs: 1 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Long Rush: 22TD (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Receptions: 1 (three times, last at Stanford, 2009) Receiving Yards: 13 (at Stanford, 2009) Long Reception: 13 (at Stanford, 2009) Kick Returns: 6 (twice, last Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Kick Return Yards: 127 (at Washington, 2009) Long Kick Return: 65 (at Washington, 2009) Tackles: 4 (at UCLA, 2009) Points: 6 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009)
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FF FR 0 0
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Jarrett SPARKS
TE, 6-2, 230........................... Merced, CA SO-1V......................................Merced HS 2009: Played in all 13 games off the bench primarily as a backup tight end and on special teams, contributing three catches for 45 yards … made his first collegiate catch for 17 yards vs. Eastern Washington … also had one catch for seven yards at Oregon, before grabbing a career-long 21-yard reception vs. Oregon State. 2008: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: A four-star prospect by Rivals and its No. 41 wide receiver recruit in the country, as well as its No. 37 overall prospect in California … earned a three-star rating from Scout and was listed as its No. 68 overall prospect in California … selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep … CalHiSports first-team All-State selection … posted 42 receptions for 934 yards and 14 touchdowns his senior season, and also compiled 121 yards and a score on the ground, leading his team with 96 points and racking up 1,231 all-purpose yards as squad posted an 11-1 mark … finished his 2006 junior season with 862 receiving yards and eight touchdowns to earn AllDistrict and All-Area honors. PERSONAL: Full name is Jarrett Michael Sparks ... born May 13, 1990 ... parents are John Sparks and Rosalind Denson … major is undeclared but considering African American Studies. YEAR 2009
SPARKS’ CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS G-GS 13-0
NO 3
YDS 45
AVG 15.0
TD 0
LONG 21
SPARKS’ CAREER GAME HIGHS
Receptions: 1 (three times, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Receiving Yards: 21 (vs. Oregon State, 2009) Long Reception: 21 (vs. Oregon State, 2009)
Eric STEVENS
STEVENS’ CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
YEAR 2009
G-GS 12-0
NO 1
YDS 11
AVG 11.0
TD 0
LONG 11
STEVENS’ CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2009
G-GS 12-0
UA-A-TOT 5-1-6
TFL 0.0-0
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0
FF FR 0 0
STEVENS’ CAREER GAME HIGHS
Kick Returns: 1 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Kick Return Yards: 11 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Long Kick Return: 11 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Tackles: 2 (twice, last vs. Washington State, 2009)
Matt SUMMERS-GAVIN
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OL, 6-3, 280............... San Francisco, CA SO-1V...............................St. Ignatius HS 2010: Selected as a preseason All-Pac-10 secondteam member by Phil Steele, while also ranking as his No. 34 draft-eligible guard … spent much of spring practice working out at left tackle and could play there in 2010. 2009: Named a second team postseason Freshman All-American by Rivals while earning a third-team postseason nod from Phil Steele … started at left guard in each of the eight games he played in, with Cal posting a 7-1 record in those contests … missed contests vs. USC, at Arizona State, vs. Oregon State, at Washington and the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah due to injury ... received the team’s Bob Simmons Award as the Most Valuable Freshman on offense … earned second-team Pac-10 All-Academic recognition. 2008: Redshirted … did not play. 2007: Originally signed with Cal in 2007, but an injury suffered during the summer of 2007 delayed his enrollment until January of 2008.
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FB, 6-0, 235...................... San Pedro, CA SO-1V................................. Peninsula HS 2009: Played in 12 games off the bench primarily on special teams and also as a backup fullback … all of his stats came on special teams with one kick return for 11 yards and six tackles (five unassisted, one assisted) … 11-yard kick return came vs. Washington State … had a career-high-tying two tackles in back-to-back victories at UCLA and vs. Washington State, while recording one each in the team’s final two contests of the season at Washington and vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl.
HIGH SCHOOL: Earned a spot in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl as a senior … a SuperPrep All-America choice … Top 100 prospect nationally according to PrepStar and an All-Far West team member of SuperPrep … rated as the No. 17 offensive guard in the nation according to Scout … listed on the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s “Best in the West” team … garnered CalHiSports first-team All-State honors … rated as the No. 11 offensive tackle in the country and the No. 20 player overall in California by Rivals … named the West Coast Athletic League Offensive Lineman of the Year as a senior … two-time All-WCAL first-team pick … earned first-team accolades from the San Francisco Chronicle, San Jose Mercury News and NorCalPreps … helped his club’s offense average nearly 300 yards per game as a senior in 2006 on its way to a 9-2-1 overall record and the school’s first WCAL regular season title since 1967. PERSONAL: Full name is Matthew James Summers-Gavin … born November 26, 1988 … parents are Robert Gavin and Sally Summers … major is Political Science.
2008: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Selected first-team All-Bay League and to the Daily Breeze All-Area squad as a senior when he recorded 110 tackles and 7.0 tackles for loss, while also averaging 30 yards per catch on 14 receptions (three touchdowns) for a total of 420 receiving yards ... added All-Bay League honors in wrestling. PERSONAL: Full name is Eric James Stevens ... born October 1, 1989 ... parents are Mark Stevens and Helene Mink ... the younger brother of former Cal tight end Craig Stevens, who currently plays in the NFL with Tennessee and has played in 28 games with the Titans over the past two seasons (2008-09) after being selected in the third round of the 2008 NFL Draft by the organization … major is undeclared but considering Legal Studies.
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Beau SWEENEY (Bo)
PK, 5-8, 173........................... Moraga, CA JR-2V.............................. Campolindo HS
HIGH SCHOOL: Rivals listed him as its No. 13 “pro-style” quarterback prospect in the country and a three-star recruit … rated the No. 32 quarterback prospect in the country by ESPN and No. 39 according to Scout … selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep … as a senior, threw for 1,168 yards and 15 touchdowns while rushing for 1,063 yards and 12 scores … earned first-team All-City and first-team All-Tri-River League honors during his junior season when he totaled nearly 1,300 yards passing and 15 touchdowns while adding 565 yards and four touchdowns on the ground … led his squad to consecutive Division I championship games in his final two prep campaigns … played in the Offense-Defense All-American Bowl after his senior year. PERSONAL: Full name is Beau Kevin Sweeney … born February 15, 1990 ... parents are Kevin and Karen Sweeney ... his father was a record-breaking quarterback at Fresno State and played for two seasons with Dallas in the NFL after being selected by the Cowboys in the seventh round of the 1987 NFL Draft … grandfather, Jim Sweeney, was a longtime head football coach at Montana State (1963-67), Washington State (1968-75) and Fresno State (1976-77, 1980-96) ... major is undeclared but considering American Studies.
YEAR 2009
SWEENEY’S CAREER PASSING STATISTICS C-A-I 5-9-0
PCT 55.6
YDS 45
TD LONG AVG/G 0 17 15.0
SWEENEY’S CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS G-GS 3-0
NO 2
YDS -7
AVG -3.5
TD 0
SWEENEY’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Pass Completions: 3 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Pass Attempts: 3 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Passing Yards: 21 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Long Pass: 17 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Rushes: 2 (at Oregon, 2009) Rushing Yards: -7 (at Oregon, 2009) Long Rush: 5 (at Oregon, 2009)
102
40
#
SO-1V..............................Clovis West HS
2008: Redshirted … did not play … named Cal’s Co-Scout Team Player of the Year on offense along with Spencer Ladner.
G-GS EFFIC 3-0 97.6
(tuh-VECK-ee-o)
QB, 6-2, 217........................... Fresno, CA
2009: Moved into the team’s No. 2 quarterback role for the second half of the season after beginning the year in the No. 3 spot behind starter Kevin Riley and Brock Mansion … played in his first three collegiate games all off the bench and completed 5-of-9 passes for 45 yards … finished the season with a passer efficiency rating of 97.56 … also rushed two times for minusseven yards … had his biggest game against Washington State when he was 3-of-3 for 21 yards (all career highs) … also got into games vs. Eastern Washington (1-1-0-17-0) and at Oregon (1-5-0-7-0), with the 17-yard completion against the Cougars a career-long … ran twice for minus-seven yards vs. Oregon but did have a career-long five-yard gain, in addition to being sacked for a 12-yard loss.
Year 2009
Giorgio TAVECCHIO
LONG 5
CAL CAREER: Has shared kickoff and placekicking duties with either Vincenzo D’Amato or David Seawright during each of the last two seasons in 2008 and 2009, and is expected to battle D’Amato for both starting jobs again in 2010 … has played in 21 games and scored 90 career points, making 17-of-25 (68%) field goal attempts and all 39 of his extra-point tries but has had one blocked that was credited to the team … has kicked off 110 times for 6,316 kickoff yards (57.4 avg) with three touchbacks. 2009: Played in 11 games and scored 38 points, hitting 8-for-12 field goals and all 14 of his extra-point attempts but did have one blocked that was credited to the team …ranked eighth in the Pac-10 with his 0.73 field goals made per game average as well as ninth in scoring among conference kickers with an average of 3.5 points per contest … led the squad with 58 kickoffs for 3,372 yards (58.1 avg), kicking off at least twice in each of the 11 games he played in … did not play in back-to-back losses at Oregon and vs. USC … had a couple of huge games in wins over the Arizona schools, attempting a career-high-tying five field goals in each contest … hit a game-winning 24-yarder for the deciding points with 0:21 seconds left in a 23-21 win at Arizona State, after booting a career-long 51-yarder in the third quarter that was the longest since Tom Schneider’s 55-yarder at the 2006 Big Game … made 4-of-5 field goals to set career highs for field goals made and points (12) vs. Arizona, with one of the makes covering 46 yards and another 22 to give Cal an 18-16 lead with 4:46 to go, while also recording both of his career tackles in the 24-16 victory … named the Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week for the first time in his career for becoming the first Cal player to make four field goals in game when he did it against Arizona since Schneider did it against Stanford the same day he made his 55-yarder ... made his other field goal with a 24-yarder in the third quarter at UCLA …all 14 of his extra points came in four consecutive games at UCLA (3-3), vs. Washington State (7-7), at Arizona State (2-2) and vs. Oregon State (2-2), with D’Amato handling those duties for the team’s other nine contests … posted career highs of nine kickoffs and 552 kickoff yards vs. Eastern Washington, while his 64.6 yard per kick average at UCLA was a career-best that also included one of his two touchbacks, with the other coming at Arizona State … his season-bests of four field goals made, five field goals attempted, seven PAT’s made, seven PAT’s attempted and a 100.0 PAT percentage on 7-of-7 were all one shy of season-bests in the Pac-10 … selected second-team Pac-10 All-Academic. 2008: Joined the team three days before the Michigan State season-opener and became an impact player for the Bears when he handled kickoff duties against the Spartans in his first collegiate game ... assumed full-time placekicker responsibilities for an injured David Seawright prior to the Arizona contest on October 18 and stayed in the role for the remainder of the season … second on the team in scoring with 52 points, finishing the campaign 9-of-13 on field goal attempts and a perfect 25-of-25 on extra-point tries … ranked sixth in the Pac-10 in field goals made per game (0.90), as well as 15th in the conference in scoring per contest (5.2 ppg) … made 2-of-3 field goal tries in his debut as the team’s placekicker vs. Arizona, including a season-long-tying 42-yarder ... also made a 42-yard field goal the following game vs. UCLA and converted both of his PAT’s … made his only field goal attempt at USC (35 yards) and vs. Stanford (28 yards), as well as one-oftwo tries vs. Oregon (33 yards), vs. Washington (23 yards) and vs. Miami in the Emerald Bowl (23 yards) … converted a season-high five PAT’s vs. UCLA in addition to his season-high-tying two field goals for a season-high 11 points … handled the majority of the squad’s kickoffs with a team-high 52 tries for 2,944 yards (56.6 avg) and one touchback in the regular-season finale against Washington … kicked off eight times for 504 yards and a 63.0 average vs. UCLA, all season-highs. HIGH SCHOOL: A dual-sport athlete who spent three years playing both football and soccer ... scored 50 points as a senior on the gridiron, connecting on six field goals and 32 extra points ... earned first-team All-Diablo Foothill Athletic League honors on the pitch as a midfielder his senior season and helped guide his squad to the NCA 2A soccer crown ... a two-time honor roll student ... also a member of Diablo Futbol Club ... led his squad to the State Cup semifinals for three years in a row as well as the California State Cup championship game in May 2008 ... had originally planned to play Division I soccer at UC Davis.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
PERSONAL: Full name is Giorgio Tavecchio … born July 16, 1990 in Milan, Italy ... parents are Renato and Gabriella Tavecchio ... has lived in Milan, Rome, Shelton, Conn. and Falls Church, Va. ... major is undeclared but considering Political Economies of Industrial Societies.
TAVECCHIO’S CAREER KICKING STATISTICS
YEAR G-GS FG-FGA PCT 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 LG BLK PAT PTS 2008 10-0 9-13 69.2 0-0 4-4 2-4 3-4 0-1 42 0 25-25 52 2009 11-0 8-12 66.7 0-0 5-5 0-2 2-4 1-1 51 1 14-14 38 Totals 21-0 17-25 68.0 0-0 9-9 2-6 5-8 1-2 51 1 39-39 90 *Other Stats: Tavecchio had two unassisted tackles in 2009.
TAVECCHIO’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Field Goals Made: 4 (vs. Arizona, 2009) Field Goals Attempted: 5 (twice, last vs. Arizona, 2009) Field Goal Percentage (with most field goals made if tie): 100.0, 2-2 (vs. UCLA, 2008) Long Field Goal: 51 (at Arizona State, 2009) PAT’s Made: 7 (vs. Washington State, 2009) PAT’s Attempted: 7 (vs. Washington State, 2009) PAT Percentage (with most PAT’s made if tie): 100.0, 7-7 (vs. Washington State, 2009) Kickoffs: 9 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Kickoff Yards: 552 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Kickoff Average: 64.6, 5-323 (at UCLA, 2009) Points: 12 (vs. Arizona, 2009)
17
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Quinn TEDFORD
WR, 6-0, 172......................... Danville, CA SO-SQ............................. Monte Vista HS 2009: Made his collegiate debut against Eastern Washington in his lone action of the season … recorded no stats other than participation. 2008: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: Wrapped up his prep career in 2007 with a squad that finished 8-4 overall after his club was 7-4 the previous season. PERSONAL: Full name is Quinn B. Tedford … born May 18, 1989 … parents are Jeff and Donna Tedford … father is the Cal football head coach … brother, Taylor, is also a Cal student and former member of the Golden Bears football program ... major is Sociology.
Aaron TIPOTI (tee-PO-tee)
40
#
DL, 6-2, 299.......................... Honolulu, HI SO-1V.................. Word of Life Academy 2009: Played in 12 games with four starts that came in consecutive contests during the second half of the season at Arizona State, vs. Oregon State, vs. Arizona and at Stanford … the only game he did not play in was the third contest of the campaign at Minnesota … registered 21 tackles (1 unassisted, 20 assisted) and 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard) ... received the team’s Bob Simmons Award as the Most Valuable Freshman on defense … had career-high-tying totals of four tackles in back-to-back games off the bench at Oregon and vs. USC … added three tackles vs. both Eastern Washington and Arizona … had two tackles and 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard) in the season-opener vs. Maryland and two tackles at Arizona State, while collecting single tackles vs. Washington State, vs. Oregon State and vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl. 2008: Redshirted … did not play … named Cal’s Co-Scout Player of the Year on defense.
HIGH SCHOOL: Selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep … a threestar prospect according to Scout and Rivals … Rivals also listed him as the No. 7 recruit from the state of Hawaii … first-team All-State choice by the Honolulu Star-Bulletin and Honolulu Advertiser … also played basketball and threw the shot put and discus as a prep. PERSONAL: Full name is Aaron Fetutasi Tipoti ... born January 4, 1990 ... parents are Nofo and Sisavaii Tipoti ... father played college football at Hawai’i … major is undeclared but considering American Studies. YEAR 2009
TIPOTI’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS G-GS 12-4
UA-A-TOT 1-20-21
TFL 0.5-1
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0
FF FR 0 0
TIPOTI’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Tackles: 4 (twice, last vs. USC, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 0.5 (vs. Maryland, 2009)
Bill TYNDALL
72
#
OL, 6-5, 285................................................. Pacific Grove, CA SO-JC................... Monterey Peninsula CC/Pacific Grove HS JUNIOR COLLEGE: Earned first-team All-Coast Conference honors as a guard in his lone campaign ... picked up his school's top academic honor for athletes. HIGH SCHOOL: Selected All-County and first-team All-Mission Trail League in each of his final two prep campaigns ... also a second-team All-State selection as a junior when his squad advanced to the Small School Central Coast Section championship game and finished with an 11-2 record ... played tackle during high school. PERSONAL: Full name is William Collin Tyndall … born March 23, 1991 … parents are Lawrence and Cathleen Tyndall … brother, John, is a Cal football teammate ... has a large collection of fish in a home aquarium … major is undeclared but considering Anthropology.
John TYNDALL
31
#
FB, 6-3, 230................. Pacific Grove, CA JR-2V............................ Pacific Grove HS CAL CAREER: Has played in 14 games all off the bench primarily on special teams and also as a backup fullback … has contributed eight tackles (six unassisted, two assisted) as well as one kick return for five yards on special teams, and two rushes for two yards offensively. 2009: Played in first three games of campaign but did not participate over the final 10 contests … contributed one rush for three yards in the season-opener vs. Maryland and one kick return for five yards against Eastern Washington. 2008: Played in 11 games primarily on special teams … contributed eight tackles with a career-high-tying pair of stops both at Washington State and in the Big Game vs. Stanford … also picked up single tackles in his collegiate debut vs. Michigan State, at Arizona, vs. Oregon and at Oregon State … rushed once for a loss of one yard in the regular-season finale vs. Washington. 2007: Redshirted … did not play … earned Scout Team Player of the Year honors for special teams. HIGH SCHOOL: Selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep after he led his squad to a Mission Trail League title with a perfect 6-0 conference mark and an overall record of 10-3 ... rated as the No. 29 linebacker nationally and the No. 99 overall player in California according to Rivals ... named the Monterey Herald Offensive Player of the Year as a senior after rushing for over 1,500 yards with a county-best 28 touchdowns on the ground ... recorded eight 100-yard rushing games, including a single-game high of 183 yards ... added 165 tackles with 13.0 sacks on defense as a senior ... a first-team All-
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
103
State selection during his junior campaign, leading his team to a perfect 10-0 regular-season record before falling in the first round of the state playoffs ... averaged over 14 tackles per game and was the Herald’s Defensive Player of the Year as a junior ... rushed for 140 yards and five touchdowns on only 14 carries in a game during his junior year against Harbor High School ... also had 91 tackles, 3.0 sacks and a forced fumble on defense as a junior. PERSONAL: Full name is John Lawrence Tyndall … born July 7, 1989 … parents are Larry and Cathy Tyndall … brother, Bill, is a Cal teammate ... major is Interdisciplinary Studies. YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
TYNDALL’S CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS G-GS 11-0 3-0 14-0
NO 1 1 2
YDS -1 3 2
AVG -1.0 3.0 1.0
TD 0 0 0
LONG -1 3 3
G-GS 11-0 3-0 14-0
NO 0 1 1
YDS 0 5 5
AVG 0.0 5.0 5.0
TD 0 0 0
LONG 0 5 5
TYNDALL’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
TYNDALL’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 11-0 3-0 14-0
UA-A-TOT 6-2-8 0-0-0 6-2-8
TFL 0.0-0 0.0-0 0.0-0
SACK INT PBU 0.0-0 0 0 0.0-0 0 0 0.0-0 0 0
FF FR 0 0 0 0 0 0
TYNDALL’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Rushes: 1 (twice, last vs. Maryland, 2009) Rushing Yards: 3 (vs. Maryland, 2009) Long Rush: 3 (vs. Maryland, 2009) Kick Returns: 1 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Kick Return Yards: 5 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Long Kick Return: 5 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Tackles: 2 (twice, last vs. Stanford, 2008)
Shane VEREEN (vuh-REEN)
34
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TB, 5-10, 204........................Valencia, CA JR-2V.....................................Valencia HS
NATIONAL HONORS CANDIDATE
CAL CAREER: A vital component of Cal’s backfield and kick return units over the past two seasons, playing in all 26 games possible and making seven starts … has posted 1,667 career rushing yards and scored 16 touchdowns on the ground in 325 carries for an average of 5.1 yards per rush … has totaled 2,693 career all-purpose yards, adding 465 receiving yards and three TDs on 52 catches, 551 kick return yards on 24 returns and 10 punt return yards on two attempts to his rushing totals … has also thrown two passes, both incomplete … ranks tied for 10th all-time at Cal in rushing TDs and has an opportunity to move onto the school’s all-time top-10 lists at Cal in rushing and all-purpose yardage as he heads into 2010 short of the respective lists by 589 rushing yards and 614 all-purpose yards, respectively … has five career 100-yard games and is also just one shy of the school’s top-10 list in that category, going for over 150 yards in three of those contests … has caught at least one pass in each of the 26 games he has played in … has 100 or more all-purpose yards 14 times, including a pair of 200-plus yard all-purpose contests. 2010: A national honors candidate who is listed as a “Heisman possibility” by Phil Steele, who also has selected him as a second-team preseason AllPac-10 choice along with Athlon and Lindy’s … in addition, Athlon has him tabbed as the nation’s No. 3 Fantasy Football running back and selected him No. 7 in a Fantasy Football mock draft … ranks as Lindy’s No. 18 running back nationally, as well as Steele’s No. 23 draft-eligible running back … a preseason favorite for the College Football Performance Awards Running Back Trophy … listed as a “Key Golden Bear” by Athlon and one of Cal’s “Players to Watch” according to Lindy’s.
104
2009: Earned honorable mention All-Pac-10 recognition despite spending most of the season as a backup to Heisman Trophy candidate Jahvid Best … set career highs with 952 yards rushing and 183 carries to lead the Bears in both categories … also voted by teammates as Cal’s offensive Bear Backers Co-MVP along with Best ... scored 12 touchdowns on the ground to equal Best for the team lead and 14 overall to rank second overall behind Best's 16 scores ... played in all 13 games with four starts, including three of the last four contests (vs. Arizona, at Stanford, Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah) after Best suffered a season-ending injury vs. Oregon State, with his only non-start coming at Washington when he was not on the field for the first offensive play … totaled 566 rushing yards on 108 carries and six rushing touchdowns over the final four games, averaging 141.5 yards per game and 5.2 yards per carry … also officially the starter at Minnesota in the third game of the campaign when he was on the field for the first offensive snap ... among Pac-10 pergame leaders in rushing yards (No. 6, 73.23), all-purpose running (No. 6-T, 135.15), scoring (No.10-T, 6.46) and total offense (No. 15, 73.23), while his average of 22.96 yards per kick return was sixth in the league … added 25 receptions for 244 yards and two TDs, ranking tied for third on the team in touchdown catches, fourth in receptions and fifth in receiving yards … rushed for more than 150 yards three times – at UCLA (154), vs. Arizona (159) and at Stanford (193) – setting career highs each time … rushed a career-high and Pac-10 season-high 42 times that also tied for the second-most rushes in a game nationally in the 34-28 victory at Stanford in the Big Game … received the team’s Berkeley Breakfast Club Award as the offense’s outstanding player in the Big Game and was also the Walter Camp Football Foundation BCS National Offensive Player of the Week, an AT&T All-America Player of the Week nominee and a Muscle Milk California Student-Athlete of the Week selection after his 193-yard game at Stanford … scored a career-high-tying three rushing TDs both vs. Eastern Washington and at Stanford … among his 30 carries at Arizona was a season-long 61-yard touchdown run that sealed a 24-16 victory with 1:21 to go in the fourth quarter … picked up his 154 yards at UCLA on only 17 carries (9.4 ypc) and had a 42-yard TD run that kicked off the game’s scoring on the first drive of the contest … also had the most single-game all-purpose running yards by a Cal player in 2009 vs. the Bruins, adding 46 on kick returns, 20 receiving and 10 on punt returns for a career-high total of 230 … had a strong contest in the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, rushing for 122 yards on 20 carries with two scores, while adding a season-high-tying three receptions for 20 yards … was just eight yards shy of finishing the season with four consecutive 100-yard games, just missing the mark with 92 yards on 16 carries against Washington, including a 50-yarder that was the fourth-longest rush of his career and his second longest of the season … also had a solid game against Washington State, rushing for 66 yards and a touchdown on 14 carries, while adding a touchdown grab on a 21-yard pass from quarterback Kevin Riley … had a season-tying three receptions in four different games vs. Maryland (46 yards), vs. Oregon State (six yards), at Washington (25 yards) and in the Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah (20 yards) … had both one rushing and one receiving TD against Maryland and Washington State … had the biggest kick-return game of his career against USC, when he recorded career highs and tied Isi Sofele for Cal’s single-game team-highs for both kick returns (6) and kick return yards (127) … also had 114 kick return yards on three returns at Oregon, including a career-best 44-yarder … caught at least one pass in all 13 games and recorded 10 contests with over 100 all-purpose yards … earned Muscle Milk California Student-Athlete of the Week a total of three times, winning the honor for his performances at UCLA and vs. Arizona in addition to Stanford ... earned honorable mention Running Back Performer of the Week honors from the College Football Performance Awards twice after his games at UCLA and vs. Stanford … selected third-team midseason All-Pac-10 and fourth-team preseason All-Pac-10 by Phil Steele … named as the nation’s No. 61 drafteligible running back by Phil Steele heading into the campaign. 2008: Had a strong season, playing in all 13 games and making three starts at tailback … amassed 715 yards on the ground as the primary backup to Jahvid Best to rank second on the club in rushing yardage, as well as No. 10 in the Pac-10 with an average of 55.0 rushing yards per contest … averaged 5.0 yards per rush on 142 carries (also second to Best) and scored four touchdowns on the ground as well as five total with one receiving ... tied for second on the team with 27 catches for 221 receiving yards … finished with 936 all-purpose yards to rank second on the team behind Best and No. 18 in the Pac-10 with a per game average of 72.0 … his per-game total offense average of 55.0 was 19th in the Pac-10 ... posted his first 100-yard rushing effort in his collegiate debut and a starting role vs. Michigan State in the season-opener, going for 101 yards on nine carries including a game-clinching 81-yard TD run in the fourth quarter … also caught four balls for 16 yards and attempted a pass that was incomplete vs. the Spartans … had another
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
pair of 75-plus yard games over his next three contests, running for 80 yards on nine carries including a 39-yard touchdown run at Washington State and 75 yards on 12 attempts vs. Colorado State … made another start for an injured Best vs. Arizona State and responded with 93 yards on a seasonhigh 27 carries, plus another 51 yards on a career-high five receptions for a season-high 144 all-purpose yards … nearly posted another 100-yard game the next time he subbed for Best as a starter, totaling 99 rushing yards on 14 carries vs. UCLA, and peeling off a 56-yard run that was the third-longest of his career and second-longest of his season … churned out 61 rushing yards and a touchdown on 21 carries in a backup role during a victory over Oregon, including a crucial two-yard touchdown with 8:57 left in the game that made the final score, 26-16, adding four receptions for 25 yards … had 56 yards on 12 carries in the Big Game vs. Stanford and also hauled in a career-long 59 yard reception that resulted in his first receiving TD, with the 59 receiving yards also a career single-game best … contributed 49 yards on 10 carries and a touchdown against Washington and 36 on eight rushes in the Emerald Bowl vs. Miami, Fla. 2007: Redshirted … did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: A SuperPrep and PrepStar All-America choice ... Scout listed him as the No. 23 running back in the country ... rated No. 5 at running back in the nation and No. 21 overall in the state of California by Rivals ... selected to the All-Far West team by SuperPrep ... honorable mention Long Beach Press-Telegram “Best in the West” choice ... collected CalHiSports third-team All-State honors ... the most highly recruited player in the history of Valencia football ... combined for over 6,000 rushing and receiving yards with 89 touchdowns during an impressive three-year varsity career ... tallied 982 rushing yards and 20 touchdowns as a senior, while also catching 28 passes for 455 yards and six scores, and returning 13 kicks for 243 yards ... rushed for 1,638 yards on 169 carries with 28 touchdowns as a junior, while tallying 52 receptions for 898 yards and seven more touchdowns through the air, and defensively contributing 43 tackles and three interceptions ... had 1,399 rushing yards and 28 TDs on 205 carries and 55 catches for 727 yards and four TDs as a sophomore, and even completed his only pass attempt for a 39-yard scoring strike ... doubled as one of the Southland’s top sprinters, recording the fastest 100-meter dash time of any junior in Southern California during the 2006 track and field season. PERSONAL: Full name is Shane Patrick-Henry Vereen … born March 2, 1989 … parents are Henry Vereen and Venita Taylor-Vereen ... has also been a member of Cal’s track and field team but not during the 2009-10 season … spent the summer of 2010 as an intern with Comcast SportsNet Bay Area … major is Media Studies. YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
VEREEN’S CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS G-GS 13-3 13-4 26-7
NO 142 183 325
YDS 715 952 1667
AVG 5.0 5.2 5.1
TD 4 12 16
LONG 81 61 81
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 13-3 13-4 26-7
NO 27 25 52
YDS 221 244 465
AVG 8.2 9.8 8.9
TD 1 2 3
LONG 59 21 59
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 13-3 13-4 26-7
NO 0 2 2
YDS 0 10 10
AVG 0.0 5.0 5.0
TD 0 0 0
LONG 0 7 7
YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 13-3 13-4 26-7
NO 0 24 24
YDS 0 551 551
AVG 0.0 23.0 23.0
TD 0 0 0
LONG 0 44 44
VEREEN’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS
Jacob WARK
84
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TE, 6-5, 240.......................................................... Portland, OR FR-HS.........................................................................Jesuit HS HIGH SCHOOL: Ranked as the nation’s No. 38 tight end by Scout, No. 40 according to Rivals and No. 41 by ESPN … listed by Rivals as the No. 6 overall player from Oregon, while Scout had him at No. 8 … recorded 32 catches for 421 yards and three touchdowns as a 2009 senior to lead his squad to a 12-2 overall record, an appearance in the state title game and a second straight Metro League title … played primarily on defense for most of his prep career and earned first-team All-State honors as a senior defensive end, but also blossomed as a tight end in his final two seasons and picked up second-team All-State honors at the position in his final prep campaign … added an OSAA (Oregon School Activities Association) Award of Excellence for Exemplary Display of Sportsmanship, Ethics & Integrity as a senior … earned second-team All-State honors as a junior on offense as well as honorable mention on defense when his squad was a state semifinalist … picked up first-team All-Metro League recognition on both offense and defense as a junior … a three-year varsity starter on the gridiron … also a three-year starter in baseball and a first-team All-Metro selection as a first baseman … selected by the Atlanta Braves in the 2010 Major League Baseball Draft. PERSONAL: Full name is Daniel Jacob Wark … born February 7, 1992 … parents are Craig and Pam Wark … has two sisters, Alisha and Megan … major is undeclared.
Ryan WERTENBERGER (WERE-tin-berger)
14
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VEREEN’S CAREER PUNT RETURN STATISTICS
QB, 6-2, 222................ Mission Viejo, CA
VEREEN’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
2009: A member of the team but did not see any game action … named Scout Team Player of the Year for offense.
Year 2008 2009 Totals
VEREEN’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
Rushes: 42 (at Stanford, 2009) Rushing Yards: 193 (at Stanford, 2009) Rushing TDs: 3 (twice, last at Stanford, 2009) Long Rush: 81TD (vs. Michigan State, 2008) Receptions: 5 (vs. Arizona State, 2008) Receiving Yards: 59 (vs. Stanford, 2008) Receiving TDs: 1 (three times, last vs. Washington State, 2009) Long Reception: 59TD (vs. Stanford, 2008) Kick Returns: 6 (vs. USC, 2009) Kick Return Yards: 127 (vs. USC, 2009) Long Kick Return: 44 (at Oregon, 2009) Punt Returns: 2 (at UCLA, 2009) Punt Return Yards: 10 (at UCLA, 2009) Long Punt Return: 7 (at UCLA, 2009) Pass Attempts: 1 (twice, last at Arizona State, 2009) Points: 18 (twice, last at Stanford, 2009)
VEREEN’S CAREER PASSING STATISTICS G-GS EFFIC 13-3 0.0 13-4 0.0 26-7 0.0
C-A-I 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-2-0
PCT 0.0 0.0 0.0
YDS 0 0 0
TD LONG AVG/G 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0
SO-SQ............................Laguna Hills HS
2008: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: A two-time All-Pacific Coast League selection that helped his team to three straight conference championships ... threw for 1,928 yards and 22 touchdowns as a junior, including a long TD toss of 99 yards ... led his squad to the PCL title and was the No. 9 passer in Orange County ... also an All-PCL selection in baseball. PERSONAL: Full name is Ryan Thomas Wertenberger ... born January 22, 1990 ... parents are Tom and Dee Wertenberger ... major is undeclared but considering Economics.
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David WILKERSON
44
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Dasarte YARNWAY (duh-SAR-tay)
23
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LB, 6-3, 235........................................................... Danville, CA
TB, 6-0, 223............... San Francisco, CA
FR-HS............................................................... Monte Vista HS
RFR-RS....... Sacred Heart Cathedral HS
HIGH SCHOOL: A four-star recruit by Scout and Rivals … a PrepStar AllAmerican … ranked as the nation’s No. 6 inside linebacker by Rivals, the No. 7 middle linebacker according to Scout and the No. 17 inside linebacker by Tom Lemming … on the national Scout list of top players at No. 216 and the Rivals250 list at No. 230 … listed by Rivals as the No. 32 player overall in California and checked in with SuperPrep at No. 44 overall in California/Hawaii/ Nevada … recorded 145 tackles, 6.0 sacks, seven forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries as a 2009 senior, and was among players receiving votes for the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s “Best in the West” team … the No. 4 player overall in the combined San Mateo and East Bay areas according to the Bay Area Newspaper Group in their annual “Cream of the Crop” listing … played in the 2010 Offense-Defense All-American Bowl … had 95 tackles in his junior campaign when he earned All-State underclassman honors and led his squad to the section semifinals before falling to national power De La Salle ... according to Lemming he “combines athleticism, instincts and competitiveness to make plays all over the field.” PERSONAL: Full name is David R. Wilkerson … born March 8, 1991 … parents are Dave and Karyn Wilkerson … major is undeclared.
Steve WILLIAMS
1
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DB, 5-10, 174............................ Dallas, TX RFR-RS...................................Skyline HS
2009: Redshirted ... did not play. HIGH SCHOOL: A SuperPrep All-America choice ... tabbed a four-star prospect by Rivals and Scout, and the top-ranked recruit from the Central Coast Section ... rushed for 4,898 yards over his final three prep seasons ... named the San Francisco Player of the Year by the San Francisco Chronicle and was also a first-team All-West Catholic Athletic League pick as a senior ... finished his 2008 senior campaign with 2,180 rushing yards and 24 touchdowns on the ground, leading his squad to its first playoff appearance in 40 years and first CCS title ever and earning second-team All-State recognition from MaxPreps and thirdteam honors from CalHiSports as a senior ... rushed for 1,410 yards and 19 touchdowns as a junior after a 1,308-yard campaign with 16 rushing TDs in his sophomore season ... listed at No. 22 by Rivals among the top running back prospects in the country, while checking in at No. 26 on the Top 100 list of California players ... also a member of the Rivals Top 250 national list ... in his final game as a senior, rushed for 230 yards and two touchdowns on 23 carries, pushing his squad past rival Sacred Heart Prep ... claimed All-State underclass honors as a sophomore. PERSONAL: Full name is Lonbaye Dasarte Yarnway Jr. ... born June 12, 1991 ... parents are the late Lonbaye Sr. and Tinniziee Yarnway ... major is undeclared but considering Interdisciplinary Studies.
Tyler YORK
2009: Redshirted ... did not play ... named the nation’s No. 37 freshman defensive back prior to the season by Phil Steele. HIGH SCHOOL: A SuperPrep and PrepStar AllAmerican ... Scout, Rivals and Tom Lemming all tabbed him as a four-star recruit ... on the Rivals Top 250 list as well as the Texas Top 100 postseason chart ... chosen as the No. 7 cornerback in the country by ESPN, while Rivals listed him at No. 23 nationally ... rated as the No. 28 overall recruit in Texas by SuperPrep ... a second-team Class 5A All-State selection as a senior, when his team finished 12-2 overall ... noted by Rivals as one of the 10 best players on the White Team from the Under Armour All-America High School Football Game ... recorded 53 tackles, two interceptions and 10 pass breakups as a junior to earn second-team All-State and first-team All-District honors for a squad that recorded a 12-2 mark and won the 5A Region II District 11 title. PERSONAL: Full name is Steven Dwain Williams ... born March 7, 1991 ... parents are Issa and Chandra Smith ... major is undeclared but considering Sociology.
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DB, 5-11, 196............................. Reno, NV FR-HS.................................. McQueen HS 2010: Enrolled at Cal in January of 2010 and took part in spring drills. HIGH SCHOOL: Named first-team All-Decade in the state of Nevada for the period spanning the first 10 years of the 2000’s … selected as the Gatorade Nevada Player of the Year as a senior in 2008 when he rushed for 1,932 yards and 33 touchdowns on offense, while contributing 67 tackles and 6.0 sacks defensively to lead his team to state, regional and Northern 4A League titles … played in the Sertoma Classic All-Star Football Game in Reno following his senior campaign … earned first-team All-State, All-Region and All-Northern 4 A League honors, and was also named the Player of the Year by the Reno Gazette-Journal in each of his final two prep campaigns … recorded 1,246 rushing yards and 18 TD’s during his junior campaign on offense as his team while adding 88 tackles and 8.0 sacks on the other side of the ball, as his team captured regional and conference crowns … also played three seasons of high school baseball and one year of varsity hoops, picking up first-team all-league honors on the diamond … member of the National Honor Society as well as the All-State academic team, compiling a 4.4 GPA … has also won national amateur titles in both wrestling and Motocross … active in the Christian group Athletes in Action and was also a member of his school’s Christian Club. PERSONAL: Full name is Tyler Scott York ... born September 26, 1990 ... parents are Mike and Kim York ... major is undeclared but considering Media Studies.
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
2010 OPPONENTS
Kevin Riley has a 15-8 career record in 23 all-time starts.
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OPPONENTS Game 1
Game 3
Game 5
UC DAVIS AGGIES
NEVADA WOLF PACK
UCLA BRUINS
Location: Davis, CA Enrollment: 31,426 Colors: Yale Blue and Gold Conference: Great West Stadium: Aggie Stadium (10,847) Surface: Artifical (Sportexe) Press Box Phone: (530) 752-9367 Chancellor: Dr. Linda Katehi Athletic Director: Greg Warzecka Head Coach: Bob Biggs Career Record (Seasons): 130-66-1 (17) UC Davis Record (Seasons): 130-66-1 (17) 2009 Records: 6-5 (3-1 Great West) 2009 Bowl: None Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 51 (23/24/4) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 20 (10/9/1) Lead Football SID: Mike Robles Phone: (530) 752-3680 E-mail: merobles@ucdavis.edu Website: ucdavisaggies.com Series: Cal leads, 8-0 Last Meeting: at Cal 32, UC Davis 14 (9/30/39) Last UC Davis Win: None Current Win Streak: Cal (8)
Location: Reno, NV Enrollment: 17,000 Colors: Navy Blue and Silver Conference: WAC Stadium: Mackay Stadium (29,993) Surface: FieldTurf Press Box Phone: (775) 784-6545 President: Dr. Milton Glick Athletic Director: Cary Groth Head Coach: Chris Ault Career Record (Seasons): 206-96-1 (25) Nevada Record (Seasons): 206-96-1 (25) 2009 Records: 8-5 (7-1 WAC) 2009 Bowl: Hawaii vs. SMU (L 10-45) Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 36 (18/26/2) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 17 (8/9/2) Lead Football SID: Chad Hartley Phone: (775) 682-6982 E-mail: hartleyc@unr.edu Website: nevadawolfpack.com Series: Cal leads, 22-1-1 Last Meeting: at Cal 33, Nevada 15 (9/21/96) Last Meeting at Nevada: None Last Nevada Win: Nevada 6, at Cal 2 (11/7/1903) Current Win/Unbeaten Streaks: Cal (12/24) *Series information does not include rugby
Location: Los Angeles, CA Enrollment: 38,500 Colors: Blue and Gold Conference: Pacific-10 Stadium: Rose Bowl Surface: Natural Grass Press Box Phone: (626) 397-4210 President: Gene Block Athletic Director: Daniel Guerrero Head Coach: Rick Neuheisel Career Record (Seasons): 77-44 (10) UCLA Record (Seasons): 11-14 (2) 2009 Records: 7-6 (3-6 Pac-10) 2009 Bowl: EagleBank vs. Temple (W, 30-21) Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 42 (17/21/4) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 15 (7/5/3) Lead Football SID: Marc Dellins Phone: (310) 206-6831 E-mail: mdellins@athletics.ucla.edu Website: uclabruins.com Series: UCLA leads, 49-30-1 Last Meeting: Cal 45, at UCLA 26 (10/17/09) Last Meeting at Cal: Cal 41, UCLA 20 (10/25/08) Last UCLA Win: at UCLA 30, Cal 21 (10/20/07) Current Win Streak: Cal (2)
Sept. 4, 2010 (1:00 p.m. PT) Memorial Stadium Berkeley, CA TV: CSN California
Game 2
COLORADO BUFFALOES
Sept. 11, 2010 (12:30 p.m. PT) Memorial Stadium Berkeley, CA TV: Fox Sports Net Location: Boulder, CO Enrollment: 30,128 Colors: Silver, Gold and Black Conference: Big 12 Stadium: Folsom Field (53,613) Surface: Natural Grass Press Box Phone: (303) 492-5626, x3209 Chancellor: Dr. Phil DiStefano Athletic Director: Mike Bohn Head Coach: Dan Hawkins Career Record (Seasons): 69-44 (9) Colorado Record (Seasons): 16-33 (4) 2009 Records: 3-9 (2-6 Big 12 North Division) 2009 Bowl: None Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 54 (27/26/1) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 16 (8/7/1) Lead Football SID: David Platti Phone: (303) 492-5626 E-mail: david.plati@colorado.edu Website: cubuffs.com Series: Tied, 2-2 Last Meeting: Cal 31, at Colorado 17 (9/11/82) Last Meeting at Cal: Cal 10, Colorado 0 (9/28/68) Last Cal Win: at Cal 10, Colorado 0 (9/28/68) Current Win Streak: Cal (1)
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Sept. 17, 2010 (7:00 p.m. PT) Mackay Stadium Reno, NV TV: ESPN2
Game 4
ARIZONA WILDCATS Sept. 25, 2010 (TBA) Arizona Stadium Tucson, AZ TV: TBA
Location: Tucson, AZ Enrollment: 38,000 Colors: Cardinal and Navy Conference: Pacific-10 Stadium: Arizona Stadium (57,400) Surface: Natural Grass Press Box Phone: (520) 621-2801 President: Dr. Robert Shelton Athletic Director: Greg Byrne Head Coach: Mike Stoops Career Record (Seasons): 33-39 (6) Career Record (Seasons): 33-39 (6) 2009 Records: 8-5 (6-3 Pac-10) 2009 Bowl: Holiday vs. Nebraska (L, 0-33) Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 42 (22/17/3) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 17 (10/4/3) Lead Football SID: Tom Duddleston Phone: (520) 621-4263 E-mail: tduddles@arizona.edu Website: arizonaathletics.com Series: Cal leads, 14-13-2 Last Meeting: at Cal 24, Arizona 16 (11/14/09) Last Meeting at Arizona: Arizona 42, Cal 27 (10/18/08) Current Win Streak: Cal (1)
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Oct. 9, 2010 (TBA) Memorial Stadium Berkeley, CA TV: TBA
Game 6
USC TROJANS
Oct. 16, 2010 (12:30 p.m. PT) L.A. Memorial Coliseum Los Angeles, CA TV: Fox Sports Net Location: Los Angeles, CA Enrollment: 33,000 Colors: Cardinal and Gold Conference: Pacific-10 Stadium: L.A. Memorial Coliseum (93,607) Surface: Natural Grass Press Box Phone: (213) 741-1341 President: C.L. Max Nikias Athletic Director: Pat Haden Head Coach: Lane Kiffin Career Record (Seasons): 7-6 (1) USC Record (Seasons): First Season 2009 Records: 9-4 (5-4 Pac-10) 2009 Bowl: Emerald vs. Boston College (W, 24-13) Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 53 (25/25/3) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 12 (6/5/1) Lead Football SID: Tim Tessalone Phone: (213) 740-8480 E-mail: tessalon@usc.edu Website: usctrojans.com Series: USC leads, 62-30-5 Last Meeting: USC 30, at Cal 3 Last Meeting at USC: USC 17, Cal 3 (11/8/08) Last Cal Win: at Cal 34, USC 31, 3ot (9/27/03) Current Win Streak: USC (6)
Game 7
Game 9
Game 11
ARIZONA ST. SUN DEVILS
WASHINGTON ST. COUGARS
STANFORD CARDINAL
Location: Tempe, AZ Enrollment: 67,082 Colors: Maroon and Gold Conference: Pacific-10 Stadium: Sun Devil Stadium (71,706) Surface: Natural Grass Press Box Phone: (480) 965-6207 President: Dr. Michael Crow Athletic Director: Lisa Love Head Coach: Dennis Erickson Career Record (Seasons): 165-82-1 (21) Arizona State Record (Seasons): 19-17 (3) 2009 Records: 4-8 (2-7 Pac-10) 2009 Bowl: None Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 51 (23/24/3) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 16 (7/5/3) Lead Football SID: Mark Brand Phone: (480) 965-6592 E-mail: mark.brand@asu.edu Website: thesundevils.com Series: Cal leads, 15-14 Last Meeting: Cal 23, at ASU 21 (10/31/09) Last Meeting at Cal: Cal 24, ASU 14 (10/4/08) Last ASU Win: at ASU 31, Cal 20 (10/27/07) Current Win Streak: Cal (2)
Location: Pullman, WA Enrollment: 25,135 Colors: Crimson and Gray Conference: Pacific-10 Stadium: Martin Stadium (35,117) Surface: Field Turf Press Box Phone: (509) 335-2684 President: Elson S. Floyd Athletic Director: Bill Moos Head Coach: Paul Wulff Career Record (Seasons): 56-62 (10) WSU Record (Seasons): 3-22 (2) 2009 Records: 1-11 (0-9 Pac-10) 2009 Bowl: None Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 50 (24/23/3) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 18 (8/8/2) Lead Football SID: Bill Stevens Phone: (916) 761-7005 E-mail: wsstevens@wsu.edu Website: wsucougars.com Series: Cal leads, 41-25-5 Last Meeting: at Cal 49, WSU 17 (10/24/09) Last Meeting at WSU: Cal 66, WSU 3 (9/6/08) Last WSU Win: WSU 48, at Cal 38 (9/28/02) Current Win Streak: Cal (5)
Location: Stanford, CA Enrollment: 15,319 Colors: Cardinal and White Conference: Pacific-10 Stadium: Stanford Stadium (50,000) Surface: Natural Grass Press Box Phone: (650) 723-4418 President: John Hennessy Athletic Director: Bob Bowlsby Head Coach: Jim Harbaugh Career Record (Seasons): 46-26 (6) Stanford Record: 17-20 (3) 2009 Records: 8-5 (6-3 Pac-10) 2009 Bowl: Sun vs. Oklahoma (L, 27-31) Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 43 (20/19/4) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 17 (7/10/0) Lead Football SID: Jim Young Phone: (650) 721-1989 E-mail: jfyoung@stanford.edu Website: gostanford.com Series: Stanford leads, 55-46-11 Last Meeting: Cal 34, at Stanford 28 (11/21/09) Last Meeting at Cal: Cal 37, Stanford 16 (11/22/08) Last Stanford Win: at Stanford 20, Cal 13 (12/1/07) Current Win Streak: Cal (2) *Series information does not include rugby
Oct. 23, 2010 (TBA) Memorial Stadium Berkeley, CA TV: TBA
Game 8
OREGON ST. BEAVERS Oct. 30, 2010 (TBA) Reser Stadium Corvallis, OR TV: TBA
Location: Corvallis, OR Enrollment: 20,200 Colors: Orange and Black Conference: Pacific-10 Stadium: Reser Stadium (45,674) Surface: FieldTurf Press Box Phone: (541) 737-2410 President: Dr. Edward Ray Athletic Director: Bob De Carolis Head Coach: Mike Riley Career Record (Seasons): 64-47 (9) OSU Record (Seasons): 64-47 (9) 2009 Records: 8-5 (6-3 Pac-10) 2009 Bowl: Las Vegas vs. BYU (L, 20-44) Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 58 (29/27/2) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 19 (9/8/2) Lead Football SID: Steve Fenk Phone: (541) 737-7470 E-mail: steve.fenk@oregonstate.edu Website: osubeavers.com Series: Cal leads, 33-29 Last Meeting: OSU 31, at Cal 14 (11/7/09) Last Meeting at OSU: OSU 34, Cal 21 (11/15/08) Last Cal Win: Cal 41, at OSU 13 (9/30/06) Current Win Streak: Oregon State (3)
Nov. 6, 2010 (TBA) Martin Stadium Pullman, WA TV: TBA
Game 10
OREGON DUCKS Nov. 13, 2010 (TBA) Memorial Stadium Berkeley, CA TV: TBA
Location: Eugene, OR Enrollment: 22,900 Colors: Green and Yellow Conference: Pacific-10 Stadium: Autzen Stadium (54,000) Surface: FieldTurf Press Box Phone: (541) 346-7074 President: Richard Lariviere Athletic Director: Rob Mullens Head Coach: Chip Kelly Career Record (Seasons): 10-3 (1) Oregon Record (Seasons): 10-3 (1) 2009 Records: 10-3 (8-1 Pac-10) 2009 Bowl: Rose vs. Ohio State (L, 17-26) Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 46 (19/24/3) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 19 (9/8/2) Lead Football SID: Dave Williford Phone: (541) 346-2251 E-mail: diw@uoregon.edu Website: goducks.com Series: Cal leads, 39-31-2 Last Meeting: at Oregon 42, Cal 3 (9/26/09) Last Meeting at Cal: Cal 26, Oregon 16 (11/1/08) Current Win Streak: Oregon (1)
Nov. 20, 2010 (12:30 p.m. PT) Memorial Stadium Berkeley, CA TV: Fox Sports Net
Game 12
WASHINGTON HUSKIES Nov. 27, 2010 (TBA) Memorial Stadium Berkeley, CA TV: TBA
Location: Seattle, WA Enrollment: 42,933 Colors: Purple and Gold Conference: Pacific-10 Stadium: Husky Stadium (72,500) Surface: FieldTurf Press Box Phone: (206) 543-2230 President: Dr. Mark Emmert Athletic Director: Scott Woodward Head Coach: Steve Sarkisian Career Record (Seasons): 5-7 (1) Washington Record (Seasons): 5-7 (1) 2009 Records: 5-7 (4-5 Pac-10) 2009 Bowl: None Lettermen Returning (O/D/ST): 50 (23/25/2) Starters Returning (O/D/ST): 18 (10/6/2) Lead Football SID: Jeff Bechthold Phone: (206) 685-7910 E-mail: bechtold@uw.edu Website: gohuskies.com Series: Washington leads, 47-38-4 Last Meeting: at Washington 42, Cal 10 (12/5/09) Last Meeting at Cal: Cal 48, Washington 7 (12/6/08) Current Win Streak: Washington (1)
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BIG GAME HISTORY & RECORDS
O
BIG GAME HISTORY
n Nov. 20, 2010, California and Stanford will play the 113th Big Game to continue one of the greatest rivalries in college football. The series, which dates back to 1892 is tied for the 10th-longest running series between Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) teams and has featured some of the most memorable finishes in the history of the sport. Cal enters this year’s match-up at Memorial Stadium trailing the all-time series, 55-46-11, but has won seven of the last eight contests between the teams since Jeff Tedford became the Golden Bear head coach in 2002. Tedford has equaled Pappy Waldorf for the most Big Game victories by a Cal coach with his current total of seven. The Cal-Stanford series has been a remarkably close rivalry, with the Big Game having been determined by a touchdown or less 51 times. The status of the rivalry as one of the truly great sporting spectacles across the country was undoubtedly established in the very first game, when Stanford upset Cal, 14-10, on March 19, 1892, in a contest played on a field at the corner of Haight and Stanyan streets in San Francisco. Stanford
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manager Herbert C. Hoover, later to become the 31st president of the United States, and his Cal counterpart counted the gate receipts and reported a then-staggering sum of $30,000. The game continued to grow in popularity with capacity crowds becoming the norm. In 1923, Cal opened Memorial Stadium with a 9-0 win to cap an undefeated season. Stanford and Cal also opened Stanford Stadium in 1921 with the Bears winning, 42-7, en route to the Rose Bowl. Cal achieved great success in the series under Waldorf, who retired with a 7-1-2 record vs. Stanford from 1947-56. The 1949 game was highlighted by Jim Monachino’s 84-yard run – still the longest rush by a Cal player in Big Game history Five Big Games have been won on the final play, starting with the 1972 meeting in Berkeley. Cal faced fourth down from the Stanford sevenyardline with three seconds to go. But Vince Ferragamo completed a touchdown pass to a diving Steve Sweeney, giving the Bears a 24-21 win. Two years later, Stanford’s Mike Langford booted a 50-yard field goal as time expired to lift the Cardinal to a 22-20 decision over the Bears.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
In 1982, Cal won on a five-lateral, 57-yard kickoff return that will forever be remembered as “The Play.” Trailing 20-19, the Bears received Stanford’s kick with just four seconds left. Cal proceeded to travel the length of the field and march through the Stanford Band to produce an improbable 25-20 victory. The Cardinal prevailed in 1990 by scoring nine points in the final 12 seconds. John Hopkins connected on a 37-yard field goal as time ran out for a 27-25 win. Finally, in 2000, Cal and Stanford played the first overtime game in the history of the series, with the Cardinal emerging 36-30 winners. For the 100th renewal of the series, the teams donned uniforms representative of the ones they wore more than a half-century earlier. On the night prior to the Nov. 21, 1997 contest, a gala event dubbed the “Big Auction” raised more than $1 million in scholarship funds for each school. In last year's Big Game at Stanford, Cal was a 34-28 winner as Mike Mohamed intercepted an Andrew Luck pass at the Cal three-yard line in the waning moments to secure the victory.
BIG GAME RECORDS RUSHING Cal: 390, Nov. 19, 1949 Stanford: 322, Nov. 19, 1984 Both Teams: 565, Nov. 24, 1956 (Cal 181, Stanford 284) Cal Individual: 226, Joe Igber, Nov. 23, 2002 (26 attempts) Stanford Individual: 209, Lou Valli, Nov. 24, 1956 Cal Longest Rush: 84, Jim Monachino, Nov. 19, 1949 Stanford Longest Rush: 94, Casey Moore, Nov. 20, 1999
PASSING Cal: 377, Nov. 18, 1989 Stanford: 401, Nov. 21, 1959 Cal Individual: 377, Troy Taylor, Nov. 18, 1989 Stanford Individual: 401, Dick Norman, Nov. 21, 1959 Cal Individual: 80, Jackie Jensen to Paul Keckley, Nov. 22, 1947 Stanford Individual: 82, Brian Johnson to Walter Batson, Nov. 21, 1987
RECEIVING Cal Individual (Yards): 245, Geoff McArthur, Nov. 22, 2003 (16 receptions) Stanford Individual (Yards): 141, Ken Margerum, Nov. 18, 1978 (7 receptions) Cal Individual (Receptions): 16, Geoff McArthur, Nov. 22, 2003 Stanford Individual (Receptions): 12, Chris Burford, Nov. 21, 1959
TOTAL OFFENSE Cal: 560, Nov. 20, 1993 Stanford: 563, Nov. 22, 1969 Both Teams: 1,027, Nov. 22, 1969 (Stanford 563, Cal 464) Cal Individual: 414, Aaron Rodgers, Nov. 22, 2003 Stanford Individual: 409, Jim Plunkett, Nov. 22, 1969
SCORING Cal: 48, Nov. 22, 1975 (48-15) Stanford: 42, Nov. 23, 1996 (42-21) Cal Individual: 24, Chuck Muncie, Nov. 22, 1975; 24, Lindsey Chapman, Nov. 20, 1993 Stanford Individual: 24, Toby Gerhart, Nov. 21, 2009
MISCELLANEOUS Longest Cal Punt: 76, Bryan Anger, Nov. 22, 2008 Longest Stanford Punt: 75, Dave Lewis, Nov. 21, 1964; 75, Stan Anderson, Nov. 19, 1932 Longest Cal Field Goal: 55, Tom Schneider, Dec. 2, 2006 Longest Stanford Field Goal: 50, Mike Langford, Nov. 23, 1974 Longest Cal Kickoff Return: 100, Deltha O’Neal, Nov. 20, 1999 Longest Stanford Kickoff Return: 95, Kevin Scott, Nov, 19, 1988 Longest Cal Punt Return: 105, Bobby Sherman, Nov. 8, 1902 Longest Stanford Punt Return: 76, Glyn Milburn, Nov. 21, 1992 Longest Cal Interception Return: 75, Steve Bancroft, Nov. 24, 1928 Longest Stanford Interception Return: 71, Gordy Riegel, Nov. 18, 1972
THE AXE The Stanford Axe, the trophy awarded to the winner of the Big Game every year, actually made its debut on the eve of a baseball game between the rival universities on April 13, 1899. On that afternoon at a pre-game rally, a group of Stanford students introduced the instrument to decapitate a straw man adorned in California blue and gold, much to the delight of the Indian faithful who chanted “Give ‘em the axe” while the proceedings continued. The next day, Stanford rooters taunted their Cal counterparts by cutting pieces of blue and gold ribbon with the Axe and by using it to chop at a designated piece of wood whenever the Indians made a good play. Cal rallied for an upset over Stanford and the Golden Bear fans were so overcome with emotion that a group of Cal men wrestled The Axe away from the Stanford students and smuggled it across the bay via ferry. The Axe was placed in a safe at a Berkeley bank, to be removed once a year for the Axe Rally. By 1933, both sides decided that the Axe would make an ideal Big Game trophy. It was mounted on a plaque that lists the scores of each game since 1933.
THE LAST TIME SCORING
PASSING
Cal scored 40 points: 41, Nov. 20, 2004 (41-6) Stanford scored 40 points: 42, Nov. 23, 1996 (42-21) Both teams scored 60 combined points: 62, Cal (34-28), Nov. 21, 2009 Cal shutout Stanford: Nov. 22, 1952 (26-0) Stanford shutout Cal: Nov. 20, 1971 (14-0)
Cal passed for 300 yards: 359, Nov. 22, 2003 Stanford passed for 300 yards: 312, Nov. 22, 2008 Both teams 600 yards passing: 611, Nov. 20, 1993 (Stanford 346, Cal 265) Cal player passed for 300 yards: 359, Aaron Rodgers, Nov. 22, 2003 Stanford player passed for 300 yards: 306, Tavita Pritchard, Nov. 22, 2008 Cal player completed a pass of 50 yards: 59, Kevin Riley to Shane Vereen, Nov. 22, 2008 Stanford player completed a pass of 50 yards: 51, T.C. Ostrander to Evan Moore, Dec. 2, 2006 Cal player completed a pass of 75 yards: 80, Jackie Jensen to Paul Keckley, Nov. 22, 1947 Stanford player completed a pass of 75 yards: 75, Randy Fasani to Luke Powell, Nov. 18, 2000
RUSHING Cal rushed for 200 yards: 242, Nov. 21, 2009 Stanford rushed for 200 yards: 220, Nov. 23, 1996 Cal rushed for 300 yards: 307, Nov. 20, 2004 Stanford rushed for 300 yards: 322, Nov. 17, 1984 Both teams rushed for 500 combined yards: 565, Nov. 24, 1956 (Stanford 284, Cal 281) Cal player rushed for 100 yards: 193, Shane Vereen, Nov. 21, 2009 Stanford player rushed for 100 yards: 136, Toby Gerhart, Nov. 21, 2009 Cal player had a rush of 50 yards: 60, Jahvid Best, Nov. 22, 2008 Stanford player had a rush of 50 yards: 61, Toby Gerhart, Nov. 21, 2009
RECEIVING Cal player caught 10 passes: 16, Geoff McArthur, Nov. 22, 2003 Stanford player caught 10 passes: 10, Gene Washington, Nov. 18, 1967 Cal player caught passes for 100 yards: 127, DeSean Jackson, Dec. 2, 2006 Stanford player caught passes for 100 yards: 101, Luke Powell, Nov. 18, 2000 Cal player caught passes for 150 yards: 245, Geoff McArthur, Nov. 22, 2003 Stanford player caught passes for 150 yards: Never
TOTAL OFFENSE Cal had 400 yards: 477, Nov. 21, 2009 Stanford had 400 yards: 435, Nov. 22, 2008 Cal had 500 yards: 533, Nov. 22, 2003 Stanford had 500 yards: 538, Nov. 18, 1978 Both teams had 800 combined yards: 822, Nov. 21, 2009 (Cal 477, Stanford 345) Both teams had 900 combined yards: 917, Nov. 18, 1995 (Cal 464, Stanford 453) Cal player had 300 yards: 414, Aaron Rodgers, Nov. 22, 2003 Stanford player had 300 yards: 327, Steve Stenstrom, Nov. 20, 1993
MISCELLANEOUS Cal player punted the ball 60 yards: 76, Bryan Anger, Nov. 22, 2008 Stanford player punted the ball 60 yards: 60, Ken Naber, Nov. 17, 1979 Cal player kicked a 50-yard field goal: 55, Tom Schneider, Dec. 2, 2006 Stanford player kicked a 50-yard field goal: 50, Mike Langford, Nov. 23, 1974
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SERIES HISTORY vs. 2010 OPPONENTS ARIZONA Cal leads series, 14-13-2 10/14/78 W 33-20 9/15/79 W 10-7 9/27/80 L 24-31 9/19/81 W 14-13 10/1/83 T 33-33 9/8/84 L 13-23 9/21/85 L 17-13 10/25/86 L 16-33 10/10/87 T 23-23 10/29/88 W 10-7 11/4/89 W 29-28 9/29/90 W 30-25 9/21/91 W 23-21 10/24/92 L 17-24 11/13/93 W 24-20 11/5/94 L 6-13 9/30/95 L 15-20 11/2/96 W 56-55 (4ot) 11/15/97 L 38-41 (2ot) 11/14/98 L 23-27 11/3/01 L 24-38 11/16/02 L 41-52 10/25/03 W 42-14 10/23/04 W 38-0 10/1/05 W 28-0 11/11/06 L 20-24 9/22/07 W 45-27 10/18/08 L 27-42 11/14/09 W 24-16
A A H A H A H A H A H A A H H A A H A H H H H A H A H A H
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 743 Points for UA – 700 Most Points, Cal – 56 (1996) Most Points, UA – 55 (1996) Largest Margin, Cal – 38 (2004) Largest Margin, UA – 17 (1986) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 4 (1988-91) Longest Win Streak, UA – 4 (1997-2002) Current Win Streak – Cal, 1 (2009)
ARIZONA STATE Cal leads series, 15-14-0 9/25/76 W 31-22 10/14/78 L 21-35 9/8/79 W 17-9 11/8/80 L 6-34 10/17/81 L 17-45 9/25/82 L 0-15 11/5/83 W 26-24 10/6/84 W 19-14 11/2/85 L 8-30 11/8/86 L 0-49 11/14/87 W 38-20 10/13/90 W 31-24 11/16/91 W 25-6 11/14/92 L 12-28 11/6/93 L 0-41 9/24/94 W 25-21 11/11/95 L 29-38 11/9/96 L 7-35 11/8/97 L 21-28 11/7/98 L 22-55 9/25/99 W+ 24-23 10/7/00 L 10-30 11/9/02 W 55-38 11/1/03 W 51-23 10/30/04 W 27-0 9/23/06 W 49-21
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A A A A A H H A H A H A H A A H H A H A H A A A H H
10/27/07 L 10/4/08 W 10/31/09 W + forfeited by Cal
20-31 24-14 23-21
A H A
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 803 Points for ASU – 609 Most Points, Cal – 55 (2002) Most Points, ASU – 55 (1998) Largest Margin, Cal – 28 (2003, '06) Largest Margin, ASU – 33 (1998) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 4 (2002-06) Longest Win Streak, ASU – 4 (199598) Current Win Streak – Cal, 2 (2008-09)
COLORADO Series tied, 2-2 9/28/68 W 9/9/72 L 9/13/75 L 9/11/82 W
10-0 10-20 27-34 31-17
H A A A
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 78 Points for CU – 71 Most Points, Cal – 31 (1982) Most Points, CU – 34 (1975) Largest Margin, Cal – 14 (1982) Largest Margin, CU – 10 (1972) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 1 (1968, 1982) Longest Win Streak, CU – 2 (1972-75) Current Win Streak – Cal, 1 (1982)
NEVADA *Cal leads series, 22-2-1 11/15/99 W 24-0 11/14/00 W 34-0 10/30/01 W 12-0 11/1/02 W 29-0 11/7/03 L 2-6 11/5/04 W 16-0 11/4/05 W 16-0 *11/3/06 L 0-3 *10/19/07 W 25-0 *11/7/08 W 11-0 *11/6/09 W 24-8 *11/5/10 W 62-0 *10/7/11 W 29-0 *10/5/12 W 34-0 *11/28/14 W 38-3 11/20/15 W 81-6 10/16/20 W 79-7 10/8/21 W 51-6 11/18/22 W 61-13 11/3/23 T 0-0 11/15/24 W 27-0 10/3/25 W 54-0 11/13/26 W 20-6 10/1/27 W 54-0 11/17/28 W 60-0 11/15/30 W 8-0 10/31/31 W 25-6 10/29/32 W 38-0 9/30/33 W 34-0 9/29/34 W 33-0 10/27/45 W 19-6
H H H H H H H H H H H H A H H A H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H
9/21/96 W 33-15 *Rugby, not in official records
H
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 810 Points for NEV – 71 Most Points, Cal – 81 (1915) Most Points, NEV – 15 (1996) Largest Margin, Cal – 75 (1915) Largest Margin, NEV – 4 (1903) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 12 (1924-96) Longest Unbeaten Streak, Cal – 19 (1904-96) Longest Win Streak, NEV – 1 (1903) Current Win Streak – Cal – 12 (1924-96)
OREGON Cal leads series, 39-31-2 11/18/99 W 12-0 11/17/00 L 0-2 11/22/04 W 12-0 10/12/05 T 0-0 10/21/16 L 14-39 11/17/17 L 0-21 11/23/18 W 6-0 10/22/21 W 39-0 10/24/25 W 28-0 10/30/26 L 13-21 10/15/27 W 16-0 11/3/28 W 13-0 11/12/35 W 6-0 11/14/36 W 28-0 11/13/37 W 26-0 11/12/38 W 20-0 10/14/39 L 0-6 11/16/40 W 14-6 10/18/41 L 7-19 10/31/42 W 20-7 11/17/45 L 13-20 10/5/46 L 13-14 11/12/49 W 41-14 9/30/50 W 28-7 11/17/51 W 28-26 10/11/52 W 41-7 11/14/53 T 0-0 10/9/54 L 27-33 10/15/55 L 0-21 11/3/56 L 6-28 10/26/ L 6-24 10/25/58 W 23-6 11/7/59 L 18-20 10/22/60 L 0-20 11/13/65 W 24-0 9/16/67 W 21-13 11/16/68 W 36-8 9/12/70 L 24-31 11/13/71 W 17-10 11/4/72 W 31-12 10/13/73 L 10-41 10/12/74 W 40-10 10/11/7 W 34-7 10/9/76 W 27-10 11/12/77 W 48-16 10/7/78 W 21-18 10/6/79 W+ 19-14 10/11/80 W 31-6 10/16/82 W 10-7 10/8/83 L 17-24 9/22/84 L 14-21 10/19/85 L 24-27 11/1/86 L 9-27 10/31/87 W 20-6
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
H H H H H A1 H H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H H H A2 H H H H A2 H A2 H H A2 H A1 H A1 H A2 H H A2 A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H H A1 H A1 H A1
9/9/89 L 19-35 11/10/90 W 28-3 10/12/91 W 45-7 11/7/92 L 17-37 10/2/93 W 42-41 10/15/94 L 7-23 10/14/95 L 30-52 11/16/96 L 23-40 11/13/99 L 19-24 11/11/00 L 17-25 10/13/01 L 7-48 11/8/03 L 17-21 11/6/04 W 28-27 11/5/05 L 20-27 (ot) 10/7/06 W 45-24 9/29/07 W 31-24 11/1/08 W 26-16 9/26/09 L 3-42 + forfeited to Cal A1 – Eugene; A2 – Portland
A1 H H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 1,417 Points for ORE – 1,187 Most Points, Cal – 48 (1977) Most Points, ORE – 52 (1995) Largest Margin, Cal – 39 (1921) Largest Margin, ORE – 41 (2001) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 6 (1927-38) Longest Win Streak, ORE – 7 (1994-2003) Current Win Streak – ORE, 1 (2009)
OREGON STATE Cal leads series, 33-29-0 10/28/05 W 10-0 10/27/17 W 14-3 11/1/19 W 21-14 10/30/20 W 17-7 10/20/23 W 26-0 10/16/26 L 7-27 10/10/36 W 7-0 10/2/37 W 24-6 10/29/38 W 13-7 11/18/39 L 0-21 11/2/40 L 13-19 11/15/41 L 0-6 10/3/42 L 8-13 11/16/46 L 7-28 10/16/48 W 42-0 10/1/49 W 41-0 10/21/50 W 27-0 10/27/51 W 35-14 9/26/53 W 26-0 11/13/54 W 46-7 11/12/55 L 14-16 10/13/56 L 13-21 11/9/57 L 19-21 11/1/58 L 8-14 10/24/59 L 20-24 10/29/60 W 14-6 11/8/69 L 3-35 11/7/70 L 10-16 10/9/71 W 30-27 11/11/72 L 23-26 10/20/73 W 24-14 10/19/74 W 17-14 10/18/75 W 51-24 10/16/76 L 9-10 10/15/77 W 41-17 10/13/79 W 45-0 10/18/80 W 27-6 10/31/81 W 45-3
H H H A1 H H A2 H H A1 H H A1 H H A2 H H A2 H H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A2 H A1 H A1 H H H H
10/30/82 W 28-14 10/15/83 W 45-19 10/13/84 L 6-9 9/14/85 L 20-23 10/11/86 L 12-14 9/17/88 L 16-17 10/28/89 L 24-25 11/9/91 W 27-14 10/3/92 W 42-0 10/21/95 W 13-12 9/28/96 W 48-42 (3ot) 11/1/97 W 33-14 10/31/98 W 20-19 11/6/99 L 7-17 11/4/00 L 32-38 10/27/01 L 10-19 10/26/02 L 13-24 10/4/03 L 21-35 10/2/04 W 49-7 10/15/05 L 20-23 9/30/06 W 41-13 10/13/07 L 28-31 11/15/08 L 21-34 11/7/09 L 14-31 A1 – Corvallis; A2 – Portland
A1 H A1 A2 H A1 H A1 H A1 H H A1 A1 H A1 A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 1,377 Points for OSU – 1,140 Most Points, Cal – 51 (1975) Most Points, OSU – 38 (2000) Largest Margin, Cal – 45 (1979) Largest Margin, OSU – 32 (1969) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 6 (1948-54, 1977-83, 1991-98) Longest Win Streak, OSU – 5 (193946, 1955-59, 1984-89, 1999-2003) Current Win Streak – OSU, 3 (2007-09)
STANFORD *Stanford leads series, 55-46-11 3/19/92 L 10-14 12/17/92 T 10-10 11/30/93 T 6-6 11/29/94 L 0-6 11/28/95 T 6-6 11/26/96 L 0-20 11/25/97 L 0-28 11/24/98 W 22-0 11/30/99 W 30-0 11/29/00 L 0-5 11/9/01 W 2-0 11/8/02 W 16-0 11/14/03 T 6-6 11/12/04 L 0-18 11/11/05 L 5-12 *11/10/06 L 3-6 *11/9/07 L 11-21 *11/14/08 L 3-12 *11/13/09 W 19-13 *11/12/10 W 25-6 *11/11/11 W 21-3 *11/9/12 T 3-3 *11/8/13 L 8-13 *11/14/14 L 8-26 +11/30/18 W 67-0 11/22/19 W 14-10 11/20/20 W 38-0 11/19/21 W 42-7 11/25/22 W 28-0 11/24/23 W 9-0 11/22/24 T 20-20 11/21/25 L 14-27 11/20/26 L 6-41 11/19/27 L 6-13 11/24/28 T 13-13 11/23/29 L 6-21 11/22/30 L 0-41
A2 A2 A2 A2 A2 A2 A2 A2 A2 A2 A2 A2 A2 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H H A1 H A1 A1 H H A1 H A1 H A1 H
11/21/31 W 6-0 A1 11/19/32 T 0-0 H 11/25/33 L 3-7 A1 11/24/34 L 7-9 H 11/23/35 L 0-13 A1 11/21/36 W 20-0 H 11/20/37 W 13-0 A1 11/19/38 W 6-0 H 11/25/39 W 32-14 A1 11/30/40 L 7-13 H 11/29/41 W 16-0 A1 11/21/42 L 7-26 H 11/23/46 L 6-25 H 11/22/47 W 21-18 A1 11/20/48 W 7-6 H 11/19/49 W 33-14 A1 11/25/50 T 7-7 H 11/24/51 W 20-7 A1 11/22/52 W 26-0 H 11/21/53 T 21-21 A1 11/20/54 W 28-20 H 11/19/55 L 0-19 A1 11/24/56 W 20-18 H 11/23/57 L 12-14 A1 11/22/58 W 16-15 H 11/21/59 W 20-17 A1 11/19/60 W 21-10 H 11/25/61 L 7-20 A1 11/24/62 L 13-30 H 11/30/63 L 17-28 A1 11/21/64 L 3-21 H 11/20/65 L 7-9 A1 11/29/66 L 7-13 H 11/18/67 W 26-3 A1 11/23/68 L 0-20 H 11/22/69 L 28-29 A1 11/21/70 W 22-14 H 11/20/71 L 0-14 A1 11/18/72 W 24-21 H 11/24/73 L 17-26 A1 11/23/74 L 20-22 H 11/22/75 W 48-15 A1 11/20/76 L 24-27 H 11/19/77 L 3-21 A1 11/18/78 L 10-30 H 11/17/79 W 21-14 A1 11/22/80 W 28-23 H 11/21/81 L 21-42 A1 11/20/82 W 25-20 H 11/19/83 W 27-18 A1 11/17/84 L 10-27 H 11/23/85 L 22-24 A1 11/22/86 W 17-11 H 11/21/87 L 7-31 A1 11/19/88 T 19-19 H 11/18/89 L 14-24 A1 11/17/90 L 25-27 H 11/23/91 L 21-38 A1 11/21/92 L 21-41 H 11/20/93 W 46-17 A1 11/19/94 W 24-23 H 11/18/95 L 24-29 A1 11/23/96 L 21-42 H 11/22/97 L 20-21 A1 11/21/98 L 3-10 H 11/20/99 L 13-31 A1 11/18/00 L 30-36 (ot) H 11/17/01 L 28-35 A1 11/23/02 W 30-7 H 11/22/03 W 28-16 A1 11/20/04 W 41-6 H 11/19/05 W 27-3 A1 12/2/06 W 26-17 H 12/1/07 L 13-20 A1 11/22/08 W 37-16 H 11/21/09 W 34-28 A1 A1 – Stanford; A2 – San Francisco *Rugby, not in official records +SATC game, not in official records
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 1,851 Points for STAN – 1,799 Most Points, Cal – 48 (1975) Most Points, STAN – 42 (1996) Largest Margin, Cal – 35 (1921, 2004) Largest Margin, STAN – 41 (1930) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 5 (1919-23, 2002-06) Longest Win Streak, STAN – 7 (19952001) Current Win Streak – Cal, 2 (2008-09)
UC DAVIS Cal leads series, 8-0 9/17/32 W 20-6 9/30/33 W 39-0 9/29/34 W 54-0 9/28/35 W 47-0 9/26/36 W 39-0 10/16/37 W 14-0 10/8/38 W 48-0 9/30/39 W 38-14
H H H H H H H H
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 299 Points for UCD – 20 Most Points, Cal – 54 (1934) Most Points, UCD – 14 (1939) Largest Margin, Cal – 54 (1934) Largest Margin, UCD – None Longest Win Streak, Cal – 8 (1932-39) Longest Win Streak, UCD – None Current Win Streak – Cal, 8 (1932-39)
UCLA UCLA leads series, 49-30-1 11/4/33 T 0-0 10/20/34 W 3-0 11/2/35 W 14-2 10/17/36 L 6-17 10/30/37 W 27-14 10/15/38 W 20-7 11/4/39 L 7-20 10/19/40 W 9-7 11/1/41 W 27-7 10/17/42 L 0-21 10/16/43 W 13-0 11/13/43 W 13-6 9/30/44 W 6-0 11/11/44 L 0-7 9/29/45 L 0-13 11/24/45 W 6-0 10/19/46 L 6-13 11/1/47 W 6-0 11/6/48 W 28-13 10/29/49 W 35-21 11/11/50 W 35-0 11/3/51 L 7-21 11/1/52 L 7-28 10/31/53 L 7-20 10/30/54 L 6-27 10/29/55 L 0-47 10/20/56 L 20-34 11/2/57 L 14-16 11/8/58 W 20-17 10/17/59 L 12-19 11/5/60 L 0-28 11/4/61 L 15-35 11/3/62 L 16-26 11/2/63 W 25-0 10/31/64 L 21-25 10/23/65 L 3-56
A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H H A1 A1 H H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1
10/22/66 L 15-28 10/14/67 L 14-37 10/19/68 W 39-15 10/18/69 L 0-32 10/17/70 L 21-24 10/23/71 W 31-24 10/21/72 L 13-49 10/27/73 L 21-61 10/26/74 L 3-28 10/25/75 L 14-28 10/23/76 L 19-35 10/22/77 L+ 19-21 10/21/78 L 0-45 10/20/79 L 27-28 10/25/80 L 9-32 10/24/81 L 6-34 10/23/82 L 31-47 10/22/83 L 16-20 10/20/84 L 14-17 10/26/85 L 7-34 10/18/86 L 10-36 10/24/87 L 18-42 10/15/88 L 21-38 9/30/89 L 6-24 10/20/90 W 38-31 10/5/91 W 27-24 10/31/92 W 48-12 9/4/93 W 27-25 10/8/94 W 26-7 10/28/95 L 16-33 10/26/96 L 29-38 10/25/97 L 17-35 10/24/98 L 16-28 10/16/99 W* 17-0 10/14/00 W 46-38 (3ot) 10/20/01 L 17-56 10/19/02 W 17-12 10/18/03 L 20-23 (ot) 10/16/04 W 45-28 10/8/05 L 40-47 11/4/06 W 38-24 10/20/07 L 21-30 10/25/08 W 41-20 10/17/09 W 45-26 +Forfeited by UCLA *Forfeited by Cal A1 – Los Angeles; A2 – Pasadena
H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2 H A2
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 1,399 Points for UCLA – 1,883 Most Points, Cal – 48 (1992) Most Points, UCLA – 61 (1973) Largest Margin, Cal – 36 (1992) Largest Margin, UCLA – 53 (1965) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 5 (1990-94) Longest Win Streak, UCLA – 18 (1972-89) Current Win Streak – Cal 2 (2008-09)
USC USC leads series, 62-30-5 *11/28/12 W 18-0 *11/27/13 T 3-3 10/23/15 L 10-28 11/25/15 W 23-21 11/4/16 W 27-0 11/29/17 T 0-0 12/14/18 W 33-7 11/8/19 W 14-13 11/5/21 W 38-7 10/28/22 W 12-0 11/10/23 W 13-7 11/1/24 W 7-0 10/23/26 L 0-27 10/29/27 L 0-13 10/20/28 T 0-0
A1 A1 H A1 A1 A1 A1 A1 H A2 A1 H H A1 H
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
113
SERIES HISTORY vs. 2010 OPPONENTS (continued) 11/2/29 11/8/30 10/24/31 11/5/32 10/28/33 11/10/34 10/26/35 11/7/36 10/23/37 10/15/38 10/28/39 11/9/40 10/25/41 11/7/42 10/2/43 10/30/43 10/7/44 11/18/44 9/29/45 11/14/45 11/9/46 10/25/47 10/30/48 10/15/49 10/14/50 10/20/51 11/1/52 10/24/53 10/23/54 10/22/55 11/10/56 10/19/57 10/18/58 10/31/59 10/15/60 10/21/61 10/20/62 10/26/63 10/24/64 11/6/65 11/5/66 11/4/67 11/9/68 11/1/69 10/31/70 10/30/71 10/14/72 11/3/73 11/2/74 11/1/75 10/30/76 10/29/77 10/28/78 10/27/79 11/1/80 11/7/81 11/6/82 10/29/83 10/27/84 11/9/85 11/15/86 9/26/87 11/5/88 10/14/89 11/3/90 11/2/91 10/17/92 10/30/93 10/22/94 10/7/95 10/5/96 9/27/97 10/10/98 10/30/99 10/28/00
114
W L L L L W W W W L L W W L L L T L L L L L W W W L L L L L L W W L L L L L L L L L L L W L L L T W L W L L L L L L L W L L L L T W L L L L W L W W+ W
15-7 0-74 0-6 7-27 3-6 7-2 21-7 13-7 20-6 7-13 0-26 20-7 14-0 7-21 0-7 0-13 6-6 0-32 2-13 0-14 0-14 14-39 13-7 16-10 13-7 14-21 0-10 20-32 27-29 6-33 7-20 12-0 14-12 7-14 10-27 14-28 6-32 6-36 21-26 0-35 9-35 12-31 17-35 9-14 13-10 0-28 14-42 14-50 15-15 28-14 6-20 17-14 17-42 14-24 7-60 3-21 0-42 9-19 7-31 14-6 3-28 14-31 3-35 15-31 31-31 52-30 24-27 14-42 0-61 16-26 22-15 17-27 32-31 17-7 28-16
A1 A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 A1 H H A1 A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1
11/10/01 L 14-55 H 10/12/02 L 28-30 A1 9/27/03 W 34-31 (3ot) H 10/9/04 L 17-23 A1 11/12/05^ L 10-35 H 11/18/06 L 9-23 A 11/10/07 L 17-24 H 11/8/08 L 3-17 A 10/3/09 L 3-30 H *Rugby, not in official records +Forfeited by Cal; ^vacated by USC A1 – Los Angeles; A2 – Pasadena
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 1,248 Points for USC – 2,071 Most Points, Cal – 52 (1991) Most Points, USC – 74 (1930) Largest Margin, Cal – 31 (1921) Largest Margin, USC – 74 (1930) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 6 (1918-24) Longest Win Streak, USC – 11 (1959-69) Current Win Streak – USC, 6 (2004-09)
WASHINGTON Washington leads series, 47-38-4 11/24/04 T 6-6 11/6/15 L 0-72 11/13/15 L 7-13 11/18/16 L 3-13 11/30/16 L 7-14 11/3/17 W 27-0 11/27/19 L 0-7 11/12/21 W 72-3 11/11/22 W 45-7 11/17/23 W 9-0 11/8/24 T 7-7 11/14/25 L 0-7 11/6/26 L 7-13 11/12/27 L 0-6 11/10/28 W 6-0 11/16/29 W 7-0 11/25/30 L 0-13 11/7/31 W 13-0 10/22/32 W 7-6 11/11/33 W 33-0 10/27/34 L 7-13 11/9/35 W 14-0 10/24/36 L 0-13 11/6/37 T 0-0 10/22/38 W 14-7 11/11/39 L 6-13 10/26/40 L 6-7 11/8/41 L 6-13 10/24/42 W 19-6 10/28/44 L 7-33 10/6/45 W 27-14 10/26/46 L 6-20 11/8/47 W 13-7 10/23/48 W 21-0 10/22/49 W 21-7 11/4/50 W 14-7 11/10/51 W 37-28 11/8/52 L 7-22 11/7/53 W 53-25 11/6/54 W 27-6 11/5/55 W 20-6 10/27/56 W 16-7 11/16/57 L 27-35 11/15/58 W 12-7 11/14/59 L 0-20 11/12/60 L 7-27 10/14/61 W 21-14
A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H
11/10/62 11/9/63 11/7/64 10/16/65 10/15/66 10/28/67 11/2/68 11/11/69 10/10/70 11/6/71 10/28/72 10/6/73 11/9/74 11/8/75 11/6/76 11/5/77 11/3/79 10/10/81 10/9/82 11/3/84 10/12/85 10/4/86 11/12/88 10/21/89 10/27/90 10/19/91 10/10/92 10/9/93 11/12/94 10/11/97 10/17/98 10/23/99 10/21/00 9/29/01 10/5/02 11/15/03 11/13/04 9/10/05 10/21/06 11/17/07 12/6/08 12/5/09
L L L W W L T W W L L W W W W L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L W W W W W L W L
0-27 26-39 16-21 16-12 24-20 6-23 7-7 44-13 31-28 7-30 21-35 54-49 52-26 27-24 7-0 31-50 24-28 26-27 7-50 14-44 12-28 18-50 27-28 16-29 7-46 17-24 16-35 23-24 19-31 3-30 13-21 27-31 24-36 28-31 34-27 54-7 42-12 56-17 31-24 (ot) 23-37 48-7 10-42
A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A H H H A A H A A H A H A H A H A H A H A H A A H A H A
SERIES NOTES
Points for Cal – 1,652 Points for UW – 1,714 Most Points, Cal – 72 (1921) Most Points, UW – 72 (1915) Largest Margin, Cal – 69 (1921) Largest Margin, UW – 72 (1915) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 5 (1947-51, 2002-06) Longest Win Streak, UW – 19 (19772001) Current Win Streak – UW, 1 (2009)
WASHINGTON STATE Cal leads series, 41-25-5 10/25/19 L 0-14 11/6/20 W 49-0 10/29/21 W 14-0 11/4/22 W 61-0 10/27/23 W 9-0 10/25/24 W 20-7 11/7/25 W 35-7 10/13/28 W 13-3 10/12/29 W 14-0 10/4/30 L 0-16 10/17/31 W 13-7 10/15/32 L 2-7 10/21/33 T 6-6 10/31/36 L 13-14
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
H H A1 H A1 H H H H H A3 H A1 H
10/9/37 W 27-0 10/1/38 W 27-3 10/21/39 W 13-7 10/12/40 L 6-9 10/4/41 L 6-13 11/3/45 T 7-7 11/2/46 W 47-14 10/18/47 W 21-6 11/13/48 W 44-14 11/5/49 W 33-14 10/13/51 W 42-35 11/15/52 W 28-13 10/16/54 W 17-7 10/8/55 T 20-20 11/17/56 L 13-14 9/28/57 L 7-13 10/4/58 W 34-14 9/19/59 W 20-6 10/8/60 T 21-21 9/17/66 W 21-6 10/25/69 W 17-0 10/24/70 W 45-0 10/16/71 W 24-23 9/16/72 W 37-23 11/17/73 L 28-31 11/16/74 W 37-33 9/27/75 W 33-21 11/13/76 W 23-22 10/8/77 L 10-17 11/11/78 W 22-14 11/10/79 W 45-13 11/15/80 L 17-31 11/14/81 L 0-19 11/13/82 W 34-14 11/12/83 L 6-16 11/10/84 L 7-33 9/7/85 L 19-20 9/20/86 W 31-21 11/28/87* T 17-17 10/8/88 L 13-44 11/11/89 W 38-26 9/22/90 L 31-41 10/16/93 L 7-34 10/29/94 L 23-26 11/4/95 W 27-11 10/19/96 L 18-21 10/18/97 L 37-63 9/26/98 W 24-14 10/2/99 L 7-31 9/30/00 L 17-21 9/22/01 L 20-51 9/28/02 L 38-48 10/22/05 W 42-38 10/14/06 W 21-3 11/3/07 W 20-17 9/6/08 W 66-3 10/24/09 W 49-17 *Coca-Cola Bowl A1- Pullman; A2 – Spokane; A3 – Portland; A4 – Tokyo, Japan
SERIES NOTES
H A1 H H A1 H H H H H A1 H H H H A1 H A2 H A2 A2 H A2 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A1 H A2 H A1 H A1 H A4 A1 H A1 A1 H H A1 A1 H A1 H A1 H H A1 H A1 H
Points for Cal – 1,653 Points for WSU – 1,194 Most Points, Cal – 66 (2008) Most Points, WSU – 63 (1997) Largest Margin, Cal – 63 (2008) Largest Margin, WSU – 31 (1988, 2001) Longest Win Streak, Cal – 8 (1920-29) Longest Win Streak, WSU – 4 (19992002) Current Win Streak – Cal 5 (2005-09)
2009 IN REVIEW Tyson Alualu earned first-team All-Pac-10 honors in 2009 and was selected 10th overall by Jacksonville in the first round of the 2010 NFL Draft.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
115
SEASON IN REVIEW
C
al equaled a school record with its eighth Stadium, where the Bears had won their most yards and also had a career-high seven receptions straight winning season and extended recent visit in 2007 but had previously dropped for 61 yards and a score. another school mark by making its seventh Cal put its three-game win streak on the line seven in a row to the Ducks dating back to 1989. consecutive bowl appearances in 2009 during a The game started well for Cal when C.J. Mon- against Oregon State the following week at Memoseason that included many highlights and a few crease forced a fumble on the opening kickoff that rial Stadium. The Beavers jumped out to a 14-0 disappointments. was recovered by D.J. Campbell at the Oregon lead before the Bears mustered a 15-play, 81-yard Before the season even started, Cal was widely 22-yardline. But the writing was on the wall im- drive that ended with Best leaping high into the viewed by experts to be the Pac-10 team with the mediately as Cal lost eight yards on its first three air and into the end zone to cut the score to 14-7. best chance at ending USC's seven-year run on But the play also ended Best's collegiate career plays and had to settle for a career-long 47-yard top of the league standings. The Golden Bears field goal from Vince D'Amato. The day was all and provided for the one of the most frightenwere picked to finish second in most preseason ing moments in Cal football history as Best laid Oregon's after that as the Ducks won 42-3, with Pac-10 polls and were ranked as high as No. 12 Jeremiah Masoli (21-25-0-253-3) connecting on motionless on the ground as emergency personnationally. nel attended to him. He was later transported to three touchdown passes to Ed Dickson (11-148, Cal started the season strong with three consecHighland Hospital in Oakland, where he stayed 3 TD) and LaMichael James rushing 21 times for utive victories to move up to No. 6 in the country. the night before being released the next day. Best 118 yards and a touchdown. An inspired Bears squad avenged a surprisng would recover from the injuries he sustained in the The next game on the schedule was USC's visit 2008 loss at Maryland by blasting the Terps, 52-13, fall and be drafted in the first round of the 2010 to Memorial Stadium, but a game that had billed in the season-opener at home. Heisman Trophy as a Pac-10 showdown well before the season NFL Draft by the Detroit Lions but would never play candidate Jahvid Best set the tone early when he started was now more of a game of survival. Both again at Cal. Oregon State would go on to win the ran for a 73-yard touchdown on game, 31-14. the only play of Cal's second drive Cal would still manage to put of the game then scored again back-to-back wins together over on a two-yard run only two plays nationally-ranked teams Arilater after Cal had recovered a zona and Stanford in the next two Maryland fumble on the ensuing games, something the Bears had kickoff. Kevin Riley threw for four not done in consecutive weeks touchdowns, completing 17-ofsince 1950. 26 passes for 298 yards. Best Vereen was the star on both finished with 137 yards rushing nights. on only 10 carries. Cal had 6.0 He ran for 159 yards on 30 carsacks led by a career-high two ries at Arizona (both career highs from Ernest Owusu. that smash the following week at Eastern Washington was no Stanford) and also scored the Mike Tepper Syd’Quan Thompson Shane Vereen match for the Bears when Cal game-clinching touchdown on a hosted the Eagles in their next 61-yard run with 1:21 remaining, contest. Grant Washington scored on a four-yard teams came into the contest with a Pac-10 loss after Giorgio Tavecchio had put the Bears ahead, pass from Matt Nichols with 6:30 to go in the first (USC had been upset by Washington in its confer- 18-16, on a 22-yard field goal with 4:46 to go. quarter to tie the score and briefly give the visitors His signature game came against the Cardinal ence opener two weeks earlier) and the Trojans hope for a stunning upset. But Cal was relentless would hand the Bears a second with a convincing when he again established career highs with 193 after that, scoring the final 52 points as Best led yards rushing on 42 carries, tied for the second30-3 victory. the way with 144 yards rushing and a TD on 17 most by an FBS player in 2009. He also equaled Cal would rebound to win five of its next six carries, while Shane Vereen scored three times games to get back to 8-3 overall and 5-3 in the a career-high three rushing touchdowns but the on the ground. Mike Mohamed's jarring hit on conference standings. most dramatic moment of the game came when Nichols at midfield was one of the most memorable The run started with a 45-26 win at UCLA to give Mohamed intercepted a pass by Stanford quarterdefensive plays of the year, causing a fumble that head coach Jeff Tedford his first win in Los Angeles back Andrew Luck on the Bears' own three-yard Mychal Kendricks returned 45 yards to the Eagles' line with 1:36 remaining to save a 34-28 Cal win. after seven previous tries. Vereen (17-154, TD) five-yard line to set up Best's rushing touchdown. The Bears were riding high but their last two and Best (18-102, TD) both had 100-yard games Kendricks finished with a career-high 15 stops. games would be disappointments with a 42-10 with Vereen's a career-high that he would break The Bears then traveled to Minnesota for their later in the season and Best picking up 93 of his defeat at Washington in the regular-season finale first road game of the season, hoping to change and a 37-27 loss to Utah at the Poinsettia Bowl. yards on the third-longest run in Cal history. Best their luck after a 1-4 record in true road games the The performance by opposing quarterbacks also had a 51-yard TD catch, while Marvin Jones previous season. Best had one of his most amazhad the first two-TD reception game of his career Jake Locker of Washington (19-23-0-248-3) and ing games ever, tying a school record with five and Riley threw for three scores. Jordan Wynn of Utah (26-36-1-338-3) were the rushing touchdowns (career-high 26 carries, 131 A 49-17 home victory over Washington State most damaging factors in both defeats. Vereen did yards) on a nationally-televised ESPN broadcast was next as Riley became the first Cal quarter- manage two more strong games, rushing for 92 and playing in front a sold-out crowd of 50,805 at yards on 16 carries at Washington and a bowl-high back to ever throw touchdowns on each of his the recently-opened TCF Bank Stadium. His effort first three passes in a game, while Jeremy Ross 122 yards and two scores on 20 carries vs. Utah. would catapult him into the top spot on many HeisSyd'Quan Thompson became the school's all-time totaled a career-high 228 all-purpose yards and man lists and a photo of him leaping into the end leader in pass breakups (36) during the game and Best rushed for 159 yards and two scores on 13 zone landed him in Sports Illustrated. The game also completed his career by starting all 52 games carries. Ross had 191 of his all-purpose yards was tied 21-21 in the fourth quarter until a pair of on three players, returning a punt 76 yards for a possible to set a school record. two-yard TD runs by Best, the first set up by two The team's 2009 accolades were numerous touchdown, catching a 61-yard pass and bringing long passes from Kevin Riley to Jeremy Ross, both on and off the field, incuding first-team Allthe opening kickoff back 54 yards. provided the winning 35-21 margin. Cal's third straight victory was a nailbiting 23-21 Pac-10 selections for Tyson Alualu, Bryan Anger, The 3-0 start moved the Bears up to the No. 6 Mohamed, Mike Tepper and Thompson. For a full win at Arizona State. Giorgio Tavecchio's 24-yard ranking in the country and arguably made them field goal with 21 seconds remaining provided the list of 2009 accolades see page 107. the favorite to claim the Pac-10 crown at that Cal's team statistical highlights included an ofwinning margin to cap an 11-play, 74-yard drive. point in the season, but the next two games on fense that committed only 17 turnovers, the least Riley finished 27-of-44 for a season-high 357 yards the schedule were daunting. and two scores, and was 5-of-6 for 85 yards on the ever by a Cal team, and a rushing defense that Cal's season-opener was at Oregon's Autzen game-winning drive. Best rushed 18 times for 63 ranked second in the Pac-10.
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HONORS & AWARDS • DL Tyson Alualu – All-Pac-10 First-Team, Brick Muller Award (Team Most Valuable Offensive Lineman), Cort Majors Captains Award – Defense (voted on by team), Joe Roth Award (Player best exemplifying courage, attitude and sportsmanship), Midseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Phil Steele), Preseason All-American Honorable Mention (NationalChamps.net), Preseason All-Pac-10 First-Team (Athlon, Sporting News), Preseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Lindy’s, Phil Steele), Rotary Lombardi Award Watch List, Team Lifter of the Year – Senior • P Bryan Anger – All-Pac-10 First-Team, Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week (10/17), College Football Performance Awards Punter of the Year Watch List, J. Scott Duncan Award (Team Most Valuable Special Teams Player), Preseason All-American First-Team (Athlon), Preseason All-American SecondTeam (NationalChamps.net, Phil Steele), Preseason All-Pac-10 First-Team (Athlon, Lindy's, Phil Steele, Sporting News), Punter Performer of the Week (10/17, College Football Performance Awards), Punter Performer of the Week (10/31, College Football Performance Awards), Ray Guy Award Watch List • TB Jahvid Best – All-America Player of the Week Nominee (AT&T, 9/19), AllPac-10 Second-Team, Bear Backers Team MVP Award – Offense (voted on by team), College Football Performance Awards Overall Performer of the Year Watch List, College Football Performance Awards Running Back of the Year Watch List, Doak Walker Award Watch List, Heisman Watch (Athlon Preseason No. 4, Lindy’s Preseason No. 4, The Big Lead Preseason No. 4, Phil Steele Preseason No. 6, NationalChamps.net Preseason No. 9, Sports Network (Second-Tier Preseason Favorites), Maxwell Award Semifinalist, Maxwell Award Watch List, Midseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Phil Steele), Muscle Milk California Student-Athlete of the Week (9/19), Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week (9/19), Preseason All-American First-Team (Athlon, CBSSports, ESPN, Lindy’s, Playboy), Preseason All-American Second-Team (Phil Steele, Sporting News), Preseason All-American Third-Team (NationalChamps.net), Preseason All-Pac-10 First Team (Athlon, Lindy’s, Phil Steele, Sporting News), Preseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team Kick Returner (Athlon), Preseason AllPac-10 Third-Team Kick Returner (Phil Steele), Running Back Performer of the Week (College Football Performance Awards, 9/5, 9/19, 10/24), Running Back Performer of the Week First Honorable Mention (College Football Performance Awards, 9/12, 10/17), Walter Camp Award Watch List • LB Devin Bishop – Ken Cotton Award (Team Most Courageous Player – Defense) • Kyle Boas – Student Manager of the Year • WR Nyan Boateng – Preseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team (Phil Steele) • OL Mark Boskovich – District 8 All-Academic First-Team (CoSIDA/ESPN the Magazine), Pac-10 All-Academic First-Team, Preseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team (Phil Steele) • OL Mark Brazinski – Team Lifter of the Year – Freshman • DB Sean Cattouse – All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention, Stub Allison Award (Team Most Inspirational Player) • OL Justin Cheadle – Bob Tessier Award (Team Most Improved Offensive Lineman) • TE Skylar Curran – Pac-10 All-Academic Honorable Mention, Team Most Improved Player • DB Tyré Ellison – Scout Team Player of the Year – Special Teams • OL T.J. Emery – Scout Team Player of the Year – Offense • DB Marcus Ezeff – Preseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Phil Steele) • LB Steven Fanua – Scout Team Player of the Year – Defense • OL Chris Guarnero – All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention, Pac-10 All-Academic Honorable Mention • DB Darian Hagan – Preseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team (Athlon, Phil Steele) • WR Spencer Hagan – Scout Team Player of the Year – Special Teams • DL Derrick Hill – Team Schlessinger Coaches Award • FB Brian Holley – Dink Artal Award (Player Best exemplifying Cal Spirit) • DL Keni Kaufusi – Scout Team Player of the Year – Defense • LB Mychal Kendricks – Midseason All-American Fourth-Team Defense (Phil Steele), Midseason All-Pac-10 First-Team (Phil Steele) • WR Alex Lagemann – Pac-10 All-Academic First-Team • DL Cameron Jordan – All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention, Bob Tessier Award (Team Most Improved Defensive Lineman), Preseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team (Athlon), Preseason All-Pac-10 Fourth-Team (Phil Steele)
• OL Alex Mack – All-Decade Team (Sporting News)* • TE Anthony Miller – All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention • LB Mike Mohamed – All-Pac-10 First-Team, Andy Smith Award (Team Player with the most Big "C" time), Bear Backers Team MVP Award – Defense (voted on by team), Berkeley Breakfast Club Award (Team Outstanding Player in Big Game – Defense), District 8 All-Academic First-Team (CoSIDA/ESPN the Magazine), Linebacker Performer of the Week Honorable Mention (College Football Performance Awards, 11/21), Midseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Phil Steele), Pac-10 All-Academic, Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Week (10/31, 11/21), Preseason All-Pac-10 First-Team (Phil Steele, Sporting News), Preseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Athlon) • DL Ernest Owusu – Pac-10 All-Academic Second-Team • Kevin Parker – Everett Merriman Award (Demonstrating commitment to community service) • QB Kevin Riley – Cort Majors Captains Award – Offense (voted on by team), Davey O’Brien Quarterback Award Watch List, Heisman Watch (Phil Steele Preseason Possibilities), Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week (9/5), Team Most Valuable Back – Offense, Preseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team (Athlon), Preseason All-Pac-10 Fourth-Team (Phil Steele), Quarterback Performer of the Week Honorable Mention (College Football Performance Awards, 9/5) • WR/RET Jeremy Ross – Punt Returner Performer of the Week (College Football Performance Awards, 10/24) • OL Mitchell Schwartz – All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention, Brick Muller Award (Team Most Valuable Offensive Lineman), Midseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team (Phil Steele), Pac-10 All-Academic Honorable Mention, Preseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Lindy’s), Preseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team (Athlon, Phil Steele) • OL Matt Summers-Gavin – Bob Simmons Award (Team Most Valuable Freshman – Offense), Freshman All-America Third-Team (Phil Steele), Pac-10 All-Academic Second-Team • PK Giorgio Tavecchio – Pac-10 All-Academic Second-Team, Pac-10 Special Teams Player of the Week (11/14) • Head Coach Jeff Tedford – Liberty Mutual National Coach of the Year Candidate • OL Mike Tepper – All-Pac-10 First-Team, Ken Cotton Award (Team Most Courageous Player – Offense), Midseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Phil Steele), Preseason All-Pac-10 First-Team (Lindy’s, Sporting News), Preseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Athlon, Phil Steele) • DB Syd’Quan Thompson – Academic Momentum Award (National Consortium for Academics and Sports), All-Pac-10 First-Team, Bronco Nagurski Watch List, Chuck Bednarik Watch List, Defensive Back Performer of the Week Honorable Mention (College Football Performance Awards, 11/7), Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award Watch List, Ken Harvey Award (Team honor for player showing special academic commitment and improvement), Midseason All-Pac-10 Second-Team (Phil Steele), Preseason All-American First-Team (Athlon, CBSSports, Lindy’s, National Champs.net), Preseason All-American Second-Team (Sporting News), Preseason All-American Third-Team (Phil Steele), Preseason All-Pac-10 First-Team (Athlon, Lindy’s, Phil Steele, Sporting News), Preseason All-Pac-10 First-Team Punt Returner (Athlon, Phil Steele), Team Most Valuable Back – Defense, The Lott Trophy Watch List • DL Aaron Tipoti – Bob Simmons Award (Team Most Valuable Freshman – Defense) • Garine Tomassian – Student Athletic Trainer of the Year • WR Verran Tucker – Preseason All-Pac-10 Fourth-Team (Phil Steele) • TB Shane Vereen – All-America Player of the Week Nominee (AT&T, 11/21), All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention, Bear Backers Team MVP Award – Offense (voted on by team), Midseason All-Pac-10 Third-Team (Phil Steele), BCS National Offensive Player of the Week (Walter Camp Football Foundation, 11/21), Berkeley Breakfast Club Award (Team Outstanding Player in Big Game – Offense), Muscle Milk California Student-Athlete of the Week (10/17, 11/14, 11/21), Preseason All-Pac-10 Fourth-Team (Phil Steele), Running Back Performer of the Week Honorable Mention (College Football Performance Awards, 10/17, 11/21) • QB Ryan Wertenberger – Scout Team Player of the Year – Offense • LB Eddie Young – Dink Artal Award (Player Best exemplifying Cal Spirit) *OL Alex Mack played four seasons at Cal from 2005-08
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STATISTICS 2009 FINAL RESULTS Date Opponent W/L Score Overall Pac-10 Time Attend Sep 5 MARYLAND W 52-13 1-0-0 0-0-0 3:10 62367 Sep 12 EASTERN WASH. W 59-7 2-0-0 0-0-0 3:01 58083 Sep 19 at Minnesota W 35-21 3-0-0 0-0-0 3:18 50805 *Sep 26 at Oregon L 3-42 3-1-0 0-1-0 3:24 58975 *Oct 3 USC L 3-30 3-2-0 0-2-0 3:08 71799 *Oct 17 at UCLA W 45-26 4-2-0 1-2-0 3:24 67317 *Oct 24 WASHINGTON STATE W 49-17 5-2-0 2-2-0 3:11 54738 *Oct 31 at Arizona State W 23-21 6-2-0 3-2-0 3:22 43659 *Nov 7 OREGON STATE L 14-31 6-3-0 3-3-0 3:16 56496 *Nov 14 ARIZONA W 24-16 7-3-0 4-3-0 3:08 53347 *Nov 21 at Stanford W 34-28 8-3-0 5-3-0 3:14 50510 *Dec 5 at Washington L 10-42 8-4-0 5-4-0 2:58 62334 ^Dec 23 vs Utah L 27-37 8-5-0 5-4-0 3:18 32665 *Pac-10 Game; ^Poinsettia Bowl, San Diego, CA
OVERALL TEAM STATISTICS TEAM STATISTICS...............................................CAL..........................OPP SCORING............................................................... 378........................... 331 Points Per Game................................................. 29.1.......................... 25.5 FIRST DOWNS...................................................... 264........................... 245 Rushing................................................................ 106............................. 78 Passing................................................................. 136........................... 147 Penalty................................................................... 21............................. 20 RUSHING YARDAGE........................................... 2203......................... 1456 Yards gained rushing.......................................... 2553......................... 1769 Yards lost rushing................................................. 350........................... 313 Rushing Attempts................................................. 471........................... 436 Average Per Rush................................................. 4.7............................ 3.3 Average Per Game............................................ 169.5.........................112.0 TDs Rushing........................................................... 27............................. 18 PASSING YARDAGE........................................... 2895......................... 3469 Comp-Att-Int...............................................214-393-8............... 289-454-11 Average Per Pass.................................................. 7.4............................ 7.6 Average Per Catch.............................................. 13.5.......................... 12.0 Average Per Game............................................ 222.7........................ 266.8 TDs Passing........................................................... 18............................. 20 TOTAL OFFENSE................................................ 5098......................... 4925 Total Plays............................................................ 864........................... 890 Average Per Play................................................... 5.9............................ 5.5 Average Per Game............................................ 392.2........................ 378.8 KICK RETURNS: #-Yards............................... 56-1152.................... 67-1440 PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards................................20-247...................... 21-221 INT RETURNS: #-Yards.................................... 11-159.......................... 8-56 KICK RETURN AVERAGE.................................... 20.6.......................... 21.5 PUNT RETURN AVERAGE................................... 12.4.......................... 10.5 INT RETURN AVERAGE....................................... 14.5............................ 7.0 FUMBLES-LOST...................................................22-9........................ 19-10 PENALTIES-Yards.............................................68-642...................... 84-733 Average Per Game.............................................. 49.4.......................... 56.4 PUNTS-Yards..................................................70-2913.................... 70-2763 Average Per Punt................................................ 41.6.......................... 39.5 Net punt average................................................. 37.3.......................... 35.1 TIME OF POSSESSION/Game......................... 29:10....................... 30:50 3RD-DOWN Conversions.................................. 64/177...................... 68/188 3rd-Down Pct.......................................................36%.......................... 36% 4TH-DOWN Conversions...................................... 4/10.......................... 9/25 4th-Down Pct.......................................................40%.......................... 36% SACKS BY-Yards..............................................31-195...................... 31-176 MISC YARDS............................................................. 0............................... 0 TOUCHDOWNS SCORED....................................... 48............................. 40 FIELD GOALS-ATTEMPTS.................................15-24........................ 17-21 ON-SIDE KICKS......................................................0-2............................ 0-0 RED-ZONE SCORES............................... (35-43) 81%..............(39-45) 87% RED-ZONE TOUCHDOWNS................... (24-43) 56%..............(25-45) 56% PAT-ATTEMPTS....................................... (45-46) 98%............(38-38) 100% ATTENDANCE................................................. 356830..................... 333600 Games/Avg Per Game.................................. 6/59472.................... 6/55600 Neutral Site Games........................................................................ 1/32665
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Jahvid Best
Tyson Alualu
SCORE BY QUARTERS California Opponents
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
1st 117 68
2nd 92 145
3rd 75 64
4th 94 54
Total 378 331
OVERALL INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING GP Vereen, Shane 13 Best, Jahvid 9 DeBoskie-Johnson, C. 9 Sofele, Isi 13 Riley, Kevin 13 Ross, Jeremy 13 Holley, Brian 13 Geurts, Peter 1 Tyndall, John 3 Sweeney, Beau 3 TEAM 9 Total 13 Opponents 13 PASSING Riley, Kevin Sweeney, Beau Vereen, Shane Mansion, Brock Total Opponents RECEIVING Jones, Marvin Tucker, Verran Miller, Anthony Vereen, Shane Ross, Jeremy Best, Jahvid Boateng, Nyan Lagemann, Alex Curran, Skylar Holley, Brian Sparks, Jarrett Sofele, Isi Calvin, Michael Kapp, Will Total Opponents
Marvin Jones
Att 183 141 31 12 82 6 3 1 1 2 9 471 436
Gain Loss Net Avg TD Long Avg/G 1000 48 952 5.2 12 61 73.2 930 63 867 6.1 12 93 96.3 226 15 211 6.8 1 30 23.4 87 5 82 6.8 1 22 6.3 242 191 51 0.6 1 18 3.9 48 0 48 8.0 0 24 3.7 8 0 8 2.7 0 5 0.6 4 0 4 4.0 0 4 4.0 3 0 3 3.0 0 3 1.0 5 12 -7 -3.5 0 5 -2.3 0 16 -16 -1.8 0 0 -1.8 2553 350 2203 4.7 27 93 169.5 1769 313 1456 3.3 18 74 112.0
G Effic Cmp-Att-Int 13 128.74 209-382-8 3 97.56 5-9-0 13 0.00 0-1-0 3 0.00 0-1-0 13 127.37 214-393-8 13 137.53 289-454-11 G 13 13 11 13 13 9 11 11 13 13 13 13 10 13 13 13
No. 43 29 26 25 22 22 13 12 8 6 3 3 1 1 214 289
Yds 651 453 357 244 344 213 191 150 130 80 45 26 9 2 2895 3469
Pct 54.7 55.6 0.0 0.0 54.5 63.7 Avg 15.1 15.6 13.7 9.8 15.6 9.7 14.7 12.5 16.2 13.3 15.0 8.7 9.0 2.0 13.5 12.0
Yds 2850 45 0 0 2895 3469
TD Lng Avg/G 18 61 219.2 0 17 15.0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 18 61 222.7 20 80 266.8
TD Long Avg/G 6 43 50.1 1 59 34.8 0 32 32.5 2 21 18.8 1 61 26.5 4 51 23.7 2 39 17.4 0 23 13.6 2 32 10.0 0 22 6.2 0 21 3.5 0 13 2.0 0 9 0.9 0 2 0.2 18 61 222.7 20 80 266.8
Shane Vereen PUNT RETURNS Ross, Jeremy Thompson, Syd’Quan Vereen, Shane TEAM Total Opponents
No. 9 8 2 1 20 21
Yds 192 45 10 0 247 221
Avg 21.3 5.6 5.0 0.0 12.4 10.5
TD 1 0 0 0 1 1
Long 76 12 7 0 76 66
INTERCEPTIONS Mohamed, Mike Young, Eddie Hill, Josh Thompson, Syd’Quan Johnson, Brett Cattouse, Sean Kendricks, Mychal Total Opponents
No. 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 11 8
Yds 6 31 14 38 2 0 68 159 56
Avg 2.0 15.5 7.0 38.0 2.0 0.0 68.0 14.5 7.0
TD 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 1
Long 6 31 14 38 2 0 68 68 27
KICK RETURNS Vereen, Shane Ross, Jeremy Sofele, Isi DeBoskie-Johnson, C. Best, Jahvid Conte, Chris Bishop, Devin Tyndall, John Stevens, Eric Total Opponents
No. 24 14 12 1 1 1 1 1 1 56 67
Yds 551 276 248 14 18 14 15 5 11 1152 1440
Avg 23.0 19.7 20.7 14.0 18.0 14.0 15.0 5.0 11.0 20.6 21.5
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Long 44 54 65 14 18 14 15 5 11 65 61
FUMBLE RETURNS Kendricks, Mychal Holt, D.J. Hill, Josh Total Opponents
No. 1 1 1 3 1
Yds 45 16 2 63 8
Avg 45.0 16.0 2.0 21.0 8.0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
Long 45 16 2 45 8
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|------- PATs -------| SCORING TD FGs Kick Rush Rcv Pass DXP Saf Points Best, Jahvid 16 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 96 Vereen, Shane 14 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 84 D’Amato, Vince 0 7-12 31-31 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 52 Tavecchio, Giorgio 0 8-12 14-14 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 38 Jones, Marvin 6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 36 Boateng, Nyan 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 Ross, Jeremy 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 Curran, Skylar 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 Riley, Kevin 1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 0-1 0 0 6 Tucker, Verran 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Young, Eddie 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 DeBoskie-Johnson, C. 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Sofele, Isi 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Kendricks, Mychal 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 TEAM 0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 0 Total 48 15-24 45-46 0-1 0 0-1 0 0 378 Opponents 40 17-21 38-38 0-0 1 1-2 0 0 331 TOTAL OFFENSE Riley, Kevin Vereen, Shane Best, Jahvid DeBoskie-Johnson, C. Sofele, Isi Ross, Jeremy Sweeney, Beau Holley, Brian Geurts, Peter Tyndall, John TEAM Total Opponents
G 13 13 9 9 13 13 3 13 1 3 9 13 13
Plays 464 184 141 31 12 6 11 3 1 1 9 864 890
Rush 51 952 867 211 82 48 -7 8 4 3 -16 2203 1456
Pass 2850 0 0 0 0 0 45 0 0 0 0 2895 3469
Total Avg/G 2901 223.2 952 73.2 867 96.3 211 23.4 82 6.3 48 3.7 38 12.7 8 0.6 4 4.0 3 1.0 -16 -1.8 5098 392.2 4925 378.8
FIELD GOALS FGM-FGA Pct 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 Lg Blk D’Amato, Vince 7-12 58.3 1-1 4-5 1-2 1-4 0-0 47 0 Tavecchio, Giorgio 8-12 66.7 0-0 5-5 0-2 2-4 1-1 51 1 FG SEQUENCE..............................California.......................OPPONENTS Maryland.................................................... (31)................................(26),(42) Eastern Washington............................. (19),29......................................... 40 Minnesota.................................................... 47............................................ Oregon................................................. (47),43................................(30),(42) USC...................................................... 38,(29)........................ (28),(25),(23) UCLA......................................................... (24).................(24),(39),(46),(35) Washington State........................................ 47.................................. (24),49 Arizona State.................... 34,(25),(51),39,(24)............................................ Oregon State.................................................. -.................................. (24),50 Arizona...........................(46),(22),(46),47,(22)....................................... (36) Stanford..............................................(21),(28)......................................... 45 Washington........................................... 42,(29)............................................ Utah................................................................ -........................ (28),(29),(25) Numbers in (parentheses) indicate field goal was made.
Giorgio Tavecchio
120
Bryan Anger PUNTING Anger, Bryan Theimer, Ryan Total Opponents
No. Yds 69 2861 1 52 70 2913 70 2763
KICKOFFS No. Yds Tavecchio, Giorgio 58 3372 D’Amato, Vince 11 657 Seawright, David 4 226 Total 73 4255 Opponents 69 4285
Avg Long 41.5 72 52.0 52 41.6 72 39.5 59
TB 4 0 4 3
Avg 58.1 59.7 56.5 58.3 62.1
OB Retn Net YdLn 1 0 1 2 1440 37.7 32 1 1152 42.2 27
TB 2 1 0 3 11
FC 24 0 24 29
I20 Blkd 24 0 1 0 25 0 23 0
ALL PURPOSE G Rush Rec PR KOR IR Tot Vereen, Shane 13 952 244 10 551 0 1757 Best, Jahvid 9 867 213 0 18 0 1098 Ross, Jeremy 13 48 344 192 276 0 860 Jones, Marvin 13 0 651 0 0 0 651 Tucker, Verran 13 0 453 0 0 0 453 Miller, Anthony 11 0 357 0 0 0 357 Sofele, Isi 13 82 26 0 248 0 356 DeBoskie-Johnson, C. 9 211 0 0 14 0 225 Boateng, Nyan 11 0 191 0 0 0 191 Lagemann, Alex 11 0 150 0 0 0 150 Curran, Skylar 13 0 130 0 0 0 130 Holley, Brian 13 8 80 0 0 0 88 Thompson, Syd’Quan 13 0 0 45 0 38 83 Kendricks, Mychal 13 0 0 0 0 68 68 Riley, Kevin 13 51 0 0 0 0 51 Sparks, Jarrett 13 0 45 0 0 0 45 Young, Eddie 13 0 0 0 0 31 31 Bishop, Devin 13 0 0 0 15 0 15 Conte, Chris 13 0 0 0 14 0 14 Hill, Josh 11 0 0 0 0 14 14 Stevens, Eric 12 0 0 0 11 0 11 Calvin, Michael 10 0 9 0 0 0 9 Tyndall, John 3 3 0 0 5 0 8 Mohamed, Mike 13 0 0 0 0 6 6 Geurts, Peter 1 4 0 0 0 0 4 Kapp, Will 13 0 2 0 0 0 2 Johnson, Brett 13 0 0 0 0 2 2 Sweeney, Beau 3 -7 0 0 0 0 -7 TEAM 9 -16 0 0 0 0 -16 Total 13 2203 2895 247 1152 159 6656 Opponents 13 1456 3469 221 1440 56 6642
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Avg/G 135.2 122.0 66.2 50.1 34.8 32.5 27.4 25.0 17.4 13.6 10.0 6.8 6.4 5.2 3.9 3.5 2.4 1.2 1.1 1.3 0.9 0.9 2.7 0.5 4.0 0.2 0.2 -2.3 -1.8 512.0 510.9
DEFENSIVE LEADERS 18 Mohamed, Mike 30 Kendricks, Mychal 44 Alualu, Tyson 10 Bishop, Devin 9 Young, Eddie 25 Johnson, Brett 5 Thompson, Syd’Quan 97 Jordan, Cameron 11 Cattouse, Sean 3 Holt, D.J. 23 Hill, Josh 26 Hagan, Darian 15 Nnabuife, Bryant 29 Ezeff, Marcus 17 Conte, Chris 40 Tipoti, Aaron 76 Hill, Derrick 7 Campbell, D.J. 96 Payne, Kendrick 92 Guyton, Trevor 4 Little, Chris 43 Johnson, Charles 34 Hurrell, J.P. 20 Sofele, Isi 95 Owusu, Ernest 8 Moncrease, Chris 48 Stevens, Eric 13 Price, Jarred 47 Browner, Keith 22 Kapp, Will 27 Amadi, Charles 55 Meadows, Jerome 77 Costanzo, Michael 20 Brooks, Jesse 40 Tavecchio, Giorgio 90 Aigamaua, Solomona 1 Jones, Marvin 13 Riley, Kevin 4 Best, Jahvid Total Opponents
Mike Mohamed
GP-GS 13-13 13-6 13-13 13-9 13-13 13-12 13-13 13-13 13-6 13-8 11-5 10-4 10-4 10-8 13-1 12-4 10-8 12-0 12-2 11-0 11-0 12-0 13-0 13-2 12-0 12-0 12-0 12-0 13-1 13-0 8-0 10-0 12-0 4-0 11-0 1-0 13-13 13-13 9-8 13-0 13-0
|---------Tackles--------| Solo Ast Total 69 43 112 38 33 71 30 35 65 31 25 56 31 25 56 36 16 52 35 14 49 22 26 48 28 9 37 20 17 37 30 4 34 23 7 30 26 4 30 18 10 28 19 6 25 1 20 21 6 12 18 9 5 14 8 5 13 3 10 13 7 3 10 2 8 10 4 6 10 8 1 9 6 1 7 5 1 6 5 1 6 5 1 6 2 3 5 3 1 4 4 . 4 2 2 4 2 2 4 . 3 3 2 . 2 . 2 2 1 . 1 1 . 1 . 1 1 542 362 904 498 358 856
|--------Sacks---------| TFL/Yds No-Yards 8.0-35 2.0-21 6.0-6 1.0-1 11.5-48 7.5-43 4.5-28 2.5-22 6.5-27 2.0-13 0.5-1 . 4.0-6 . 9.5-41 6.0-35 2.0-2 . 3.5-4 . . . 3.0-4 . 2.0-5 . . . . . 0.5-1 . 4.5-11 2.0-8 . . 4.0-9 1.0-5 4.0-13 1.0-8 1.0-5 1.0-5 0.5-4 0.5-4 0.5-1 . . . 3.0-18 2.0-15 . . . . 3.5-17 2.5-15 0.5-0 . . . . . 0.5-1 . 1.0-2 . . . . . 0.5-1 . . . . . . . 85-290 31-195 86.0-323 31-176
|-------Pass Def-------| |----Fumbles----| Int-Yds BrUp QBH Rcv-Yds FF 3-6 3 3 . 1 1-68 3 . 2-45 1 . 3 1 . 2 . 1 . . . 2-31 2 1 1-0 2 1-2 5 . 1-0 1 1-38 10 . . . . 1 5 1-0 . 1-0 3 . . . . 3 . 1-16 . 2-14 3 . 1-2 1 . 5 . . . . 1 . . . . 1 . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-0 . . 1 . 1-0 . . . . . 1 . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-159 47 11 10-63 11 8-56 48 10 9-8 11
Blkd Kick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Saf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Mychal Kendricks
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TEAM COMPARISON Game Score Maryland Cal E. Washington Cal Minnesota Cal Oregon Cal USC Cal UCLA Cal WSU Cal Arizona State Cal Oregon State Cal Arizona Cal Stanford Cal Washington Cal Utah Cal
13 52 7 59 21 35 42 3 30 3 26 45 17 49 21 23 31 14 16 24 28 34 42 10 37 27
1st Dns Tot Ru-Pa-Pe 18 25 13 27 14 18 26 15 20 17 17 17 20 28 15 23 23 14 18 18 16 31 25 14 20 17
7-10-1 10-14-1 3-8-2 16-10-1 2-11-1 8-10-0 12-13-1 6-6-3 8-12-0 5-10-2 3-11-3 11-5-1 3-15-2 14-11-2 4-9-2 2-18-3 6-15-2 2-10-2 4-11-3 8-8-2 9-7-0 14-14-3 11-12-2 4-10-0 6-13-1 6-10-1
Rushing No-Yds-TD 44-139-1 36-246-3 28-14-0 46-342-7 21-37-0 44-163-5 52-236-2 32-77-0 42-174-2 25-86-0 26-137-2 41-289-2 28-55-0 39-309-3 26-82-1 30-57-0 39-94-2 24-39-1 28-73-1 40-176-1 28-188-4 57-242-3 39-177-3 29-81-0 35-51-0 28-96-2
Passing Tot. Off. C-A-I Yds TD Pl-Yds 17-30-0 17-27-0 28-37-0 14-21-0 22-34-3 16-25-0 25-32-0 13-36-0 20-35-1 15-40-1 21-42-1 14-23-0 29-43-0 15-21-1 17-30-2 27-45-0 29-39-1 19-34-1 25-41-1 13-22-2 10-30-1 17-31-1 20-24-0 14-32-0 26-37-1 20-36-2
176 298 221 165 233 252 288 130 283 199 311 205 385 250 247 351 342 200 201 181 157 235 286 214 338 214
0 4 1 1 3 0 3 0 0 0 0 3 2 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 0 1 3 1 3 1
Punts Fum. Pen. 3rd Time of No-Avg F/L No-Yds Downs Poss
74-315 63-544 65-235 67-507 55-270 69-415 84-524 68-207 77-457 65-285 68-448 64-494 71-440 60-559 56-329 75-408 78-436 58-239 69-274 62-357 58-345 88-477 63-463 61-296 72-389 64-310
6-35.5 4-45.8 6-35.3 2-47.0 7-42.1 6-41.7 4-26.2 7-35.0 3-40.0 7-38.9 6-45.2 7-50.0 7-42.9 4-39.2 7-47.1 5-53.0 4-40.2 8-42.4 6-36.0 4-42-8 4-42.2 4-28.8 5-34.6 5-44.2 5-39.6 7-35.9
2/2 0/0 1/1 2/0 1/1 3/1 4/3 3/2 1/0 2/1 1/1 1/0 0/0 0/0 2/1 4/2 2/0 1/0 1/1 1/0 2/0 1/0 2/0 3/2 0/0 1/1
7-60 4-25 9-51 4-40 3-34 4-45 5-60 5-45 5-55 3-25 7-60 7-79 13-114 7-60 11-123 12-115 6-36 5-32 8-65 6-75 3-30 2-23 2-10 5-45 5-35 4-33
4-of-17 8-of-14 6-of-16 5-of-9 4-of-12 7-of-15 7-of-15 3-of-15 6-of-15 5-of-16 5-of-16 6-of-16 6-of-17 3-of-8 4-of-12 5-of-16 11-of-18 4-of-13 3-of-13 2-of-10 6-of-12 11-of-19 2-of-10 2-of-12 4-of-15 3-of-14
RED ZONE STATISTICS Times Times In RZ Scored California 43 35 35 of 43 (81.4%) Opponents 46 40 40 of 46 (87.0%)
Total Pts TDs 201 24 219
25
Rush TDs 18
Pass TDs 6
13
12
FGs ---------- Failed to score inside RZ ---------Made FGA Downs Int Fumb Half Game 11 2 3 3 0 0 0 15
1
3
1
TURNOVER STATISTICS California Opponents
Cameron Jordan
122
Total TO’s 16 21
INT 8 11
Fumb 8 10
Points Scored Off Turnovers Total TD FG 60 6 6 51 6 2
Brett Johnson
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0
0
32:59 27:01 32:20 27:40 26:34 33:36 32:51 27:09 36:46 23:14 27:44 32:16 32:04 27:56 25:18 34:42 36:05 23:55 28:13 31:47 20:54 39:06 33:40 26:20 35:19 24:41
RUSHING Att-Yds-TD Maryland E. Washington Minnesota Oregon USC UCLA Washington State Arizona State Oregon State Arizona Stanford Washington Utah
#4 Best 10-137-2 17-144-1 26-131-5 16-55-0 14-47-0 18-102-1 13-159-2 18-63-0 9-29-1 INJ INJ INJ INJ
#34 Vereen 10-48-1 12-45-3 8-27-0 6-28-0 3-7-0 17-154-1 13-66-1 1-2-0 5-9-0 30-159-1 42-193-3 16-92-0 20-122-2
Rec-Yds-TD Maryland E. Washington Minnesota Oregon USC UCLA Washington State Arizona State Oregon State Arizona Stanford Washington Utah
#1 Jones 3-74-1 3-29-0 1-1-0 1-14-0 3-53-0 4-89-2 3-48-1 4-58-1 1-24-0 5-65-0 4-45-1 6-107-0 5-44-0
#8 Boateng 2-44-1 1-4-0 2-30-0 INJ INJ 2-14-0 0-0-0 1-12-0 2-27-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-35-1 1-25-0
#28 DeBoskie 9-54-0 11-92-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 6-41-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-12-0 2-17-0 1-(-5)-0 1-0-0
#20 Sofele 1-8-0 2-36-1 1-2-0 2-13-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-16-0 1-(-3) 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-8-0 2-2 0-0-0
#13 Riley 3-(-13)-0 4-25-1 6-1-0 6-(-12)-0 6-8-0 6-33-0 3-26-0 8-(-9) 6-(-9)-0 8-7-0 9-28-0 10-(-8)-0 7-(-26)-0
#33 Holley 1-5-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-3-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
#84 Calvin 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-9-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
#5 Lagemann 1-23-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 3-38-0 2-23-0 2-24-0 3-31-0 0-0-0 1-11-0
#19 Sparks 0-0-0 1-17-0 0-0-0 1-7-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-21-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
#33 Holley 1-11-0 2-32-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-7-0 1-8-0 1-22-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
#3 Ross 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-7-0 0-0-0 2-24-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-5-0 2-12-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
RECEIVING (WRS) #3 Ross 1-24-0 0-0-0 3-73-0 3-8-0 3-28-0 1-5-0 1-61-0 3-67-0 2-26-0 1-(-3)-0 1-14-0 1-12-0 2-29-1
#86 Tucker 3-50-0 0-0-0 3-78-0 3-71-0 1-14-0 0-0-0 1-4-0 3-26-0 6-74-1 3-58-0 3-48-0 0-0-0 3-30-0
RECEIVING (OTHER) Rec-Yds-TD Maryland E. Washington Minnesota Oregon USC UCLA Washington State Arizona State Oregon State Arizona Stanford Washington Utah
#4 Best 2-23-0 2-19-1 3-17-0 2-14-0 2-5-0 2-51-1 1-27-1 7-61-1 1-(-4)-0 INJ INJ INJ INJ
Cmp-Att-Yds-Int, TD Maryland E. Washington Minnesota Oregon USC UCLA Washington State Arizona State Oregon State Arizona Stanford Washington Utah
#13 Riley 17-26-298-0, 4 13-20-148-0, 1 16-25-252-0, 0 12-31-123-0, 0 15-40-199-1, 0 14-23-205-0, 3 12-18-229-1, 3 27-44-351-0, 2 19-34-200-1, 1 13-22-181-2, 1 17-31-235-1, 1 14-32-215-0, 1 20-36-214-2, 1
#34 Vereen 3-46-1 1-6-0 2-17-0 1-6-0 1-21-0 2-20-0 2-37-1 2-20-0 3-6-0 1-10-0 1-10-0 3-25-0 3-20-0
#20 Sofele 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-10-0 0-0-0 1-3-0 0-0-0 1-13-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
PASSING
#10 Mansion 0-1-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0
#80 Miller 0-0-0 3-48-0 1-25-0 2-10-0 4-70-0 2-19-0 2-26-0 3-47-0 INJ INJ 3-53-0 1-4-0 5-55-0
#83 Curran 1-3-1 1-10-0 1-11-0 0-0-0 1-8-0 0-0-0 1-18-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-27-1 1-21-0 1-32-0 0-0-0
PUNTING #9 Sweeney 0-0-0-0, 0 1-1-17-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 1-5-7-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 3-3-21-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0 0-0-0-0, 0
No-Avg, In 20, In 10, TB Maryland E. Washington Minnesota Oregon USC UCLA Washington State Arizona State Oregon State Arizona Stanford Washington Utah
#19 Anger 3-43.7, 2, 1, 0 2-47.0, 1, 0, 1 6-41-7, 2, 1, 0 7-25.0, 2, 1, 2 7-38.9, 3, 0, 0 7-50.0, 1, 0, 0 4-39.2, 0, 0, 0 5-53.0, 3, 2, 0 8-42.4, 3, 1, 1 4-42.8, 2, 1, 0 3-38.0, 1, 0, 0 5-44.2, 2, 1, 0 7-37.5, 2, 0, 0
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DEFENSIVE LINEMEN Solo-Ast, Big Plays #44 Alualu Maryland 0-3, 0.5 QS, FF, PBU E. Washington 1-4 Minnesota 4-2, 2 QS Oregon 5-3, 2 TFL USC 1-3, QS, PBU UCLA 0-1 Washington State 2-3, 0.5 QS, PBU Arizona State 0-0 Oregon State 5-4 Arizona 2-5, QS, 2 TFL, FF Stanford 1-3, 0.5 TFL Washington 6-2, 1.5 QS Utah 3-2, 1.5 TFL
#76 Hill #97 Jordan #95 Owusu #77 Costanzo #92 Guyton #40 Tipoti #96 Payne 0-1 1-4, QS, FR 3-0, 2 QS, 3 TFL 1-0, TFL 0-0 0-2, 0.5 TFL 0-0, PBU 05, 0.5 TFL 0-0 1-1 1-0 0-4 0-3 1-1 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 DNP 0-0, FR 1-0, TFL 3-2, 1 TFL 0-0 0-0 2-0, 2 TFL, QS 1-3 0-0 1-4 1-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-4 0-0 2-0, TFL 2-0, QS 1-0 0-0 1-0, QS, FF 0-0 0-0 2-2, 2 QS 2-4, 2.5 QS 0-0 0-1 0-4, TFL 0-1 0-2, 0.5 TFL 0-0 1-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-2 2-0, TFL 0-0 2-3, 1.5 TFL 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 2-5, 0.5 QS, 1.5 TFL 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-3 1-0 0-0 1-3, 0.5 TFL 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1, 0.5 TFL 0-0 2-0 1-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 4-0, QS 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-1 3-0, 2.0 TFL, QS
LINEBACKERS Solo-Ast, Big Plays #9 Young Maryland 0-2 E. Washington 3-2, SK, 1.5 TFL Minnesota 2-0, TFL Oregon 4-1 USC 2-6, TFL, FF UCLA 2-1, QS, PBU Washington State 2-1 Arizona State 1-2, INT Oregon State 2-3, 1.5 TFL Arizona 2-2, FR, PBU Stanford 0-3 Washington 4-2, 0.5 TFL, FF Utah 7-0, INT
#18 Mohamed 6-4, QS, 2 TFL 2-1, QS, FF, PBU 7-0, TFL, 2 INT 3-6, PBU 7-5 7-2 5-7, TFL 11-1 4-3, 1.5 TFL 4-5, PBU 6-4, 0.5 TFL, INT 2-3 5-2, TFL
#10 Bishop 2-4, 0.5 QS 1-2, 0.5 TFL 1-1, QS 5-3, TFL 1-1 2-1 3-3 1-0 3-3, 0.5 TFL 3-3, QS 3-2, PBU 4-1 2-1
#3 Holt #30 Kendricks #13 Price #43 Johnson 4-2, 2 PBU 8-4, TFL 2-0, 1 QS 0-3 1-6, 0.5 TFL 5-10, TFL, FR 1-0, QS 0-3 3-1 3-1, FF, PBU 0-0 1-0 0-0 7-2, TFL, FR 0-0 0-0 1-0 2-5 1-0, TFL 0-0 1-1, FR, PBU 1-0, INT 0-0 0-0 3-1, 0.5 TFL 1-0 1-0 0-0 4-0 0-1 1-0 0-0 3-4, 2 TFL 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-7, PBU 0-1, 0.5 QS 0-0 0-1, 0.5 TFL 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 3-1 0-0 1-2, 0.5 QS 0-0 7-0, 3.0 TFL, QS, PBU 0-0 0-0
DEFENSIVE BACKS Solo-Ast, Big Plays #29 Ezeff Maryland 2-1 E. Washington 0-0 Minnesota 1-4 Oregon 2-0 USC 9-3 UCLA 0-0, PBU Washington State 3-1 Arizona State 0-0 Oregon State 1-1 Arizona 0-0 Stanford 0-0 Washington 0-0 Utah 0-0 Solo-Ast, Big Plays #17 Conte Maryland 2-0 E. Washington 0-2 Minnesota 0-1 Oregon 0-0 USC 0-0 UCLA 4-0, PBU Washington State 4-1 Arizona State 2-1 Oregon State 0-0 Arizona 2-0 Stanford 1-1 Washington 1-0 Utah 3-0
124
#5 Thompson #26 Hagan #25 Johnson #7 Campell #20 Brooks 0-2, 2 PBU 2-1 6-1 3-1, 0.5 TFL, FF, FR 0-1 3-0 1-1 3-1 1-1 0-2 6-2, TFL, PBU 3-0, PBU 0-2 2-0 0-0 5-2, PBU 2-0, TFL 5-3, FF 0-0, FR 0-0 4-1, PBU 2-1, TFL 1-2, INT 0-0 0-0 1-1 4-1, 3 PBU 2-1 1-0 0-0 2-0 5-1, TFL, PBU 3-1, PBU 1-1 0-0 3-0, INT, PBU 0-0 2-2, FR, PBU 0-0 0-0 4-4, 3 TFL, PBU 0-0 3-2, 0.5 TFL, PBU 0-0 0-0 5-0 0-0 2-0, 2 PBU 0-0 0-0 1-1, PBU 1-0 2-1 1-2 0-0 1-0 3-2 5-0 1-0 0-0 1-1, 2 PBU 0-0 2-0 1-0 0-0 #23 Hill 2-0 1-0 0-0, INT 4-0, FR, PBU 3-2, 2 PBU 7-1 3-0 5-0, FF 3-1 2-0, INT 0-0 0-0 0-0
#15 Nnabuife #11 Cattouse 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-2 2-0 1-2 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-1, 2 PBU 5-0 7-1, TFL, INT 5-2 1-1 4-0, PBU 2-2 6-1, 1.5 TFL 4-0 4-1, 0.5 TFL 8-0, TFL, PBU
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
#4 Little 2-0 2-2, QS 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 2-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1
GAME-BY-GAME OFFENSIVE STARTERS Opponent Maryland E. Washington Minnesota Oregon USC UCLA Washington State Arizona State Oregon State Arizona Stanford Washington Utah
QB TB Riley Best Riley Best Riley Vereen Riley Best Riley Best Riley Best Riley Best Riley Best Riley Best Riley Vereen Riley Vereen Riley Curran-TE Riley Vereen
WR Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones
WR TE FB Ross Miller Holley Tucker Miller Holley Tucker Ross-WR Holley Tucker Miller Holley Tucker Miller Ross-WR Ross Miller Holley Ross Miller Curran-TE Ross Miller Holley Ross Tucker-WR Lagemann-WR Calvin Curran Holley Tucker Miller Holley Sofele Miller Holley Sofele Miller Holley
Kevin Riley
LT Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper Tepper
LG Summers-Gavin Summers-Gavin Summers-Gavin Summers-Gavin Boskovich Summers-Gavin Summers-Gavin Boskovich Boskovich Summers-Gavin Summers-Gavin Boskovich Boskovich
C Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero Guarnero
RG Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle Cheadle
RT Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz Schwartz
Mike Tepper
GAME-BY-GAME DEFENSIVE STARTERS Opponent Maryland E. Washington Minnesota Oregon USC UCLA Washington State Arizona State Oregon State Arizona Stanford Washington Utah
Eddie Young
DE Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu Alualu
NT D. Hill D. Hill D. Hill D. Hill D. Hill D. Hill D. Hill Tipoti Tipoti Tipoti Tipoti Payne Payne
DE Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan Jordan
OLB Young Young Young Young Young Young Young Young Young Young Young Young Young
ILB Holt Holt Holt Bishop Bishop Bishop Bishop Bishop Bishop Bishop Bishop Bishop Hill (DT)
ILB OLB Kendricks Mohamed Kendricks Mohamed Kendricks Mohamed Mohamed Kendricks Mohamed Kendricks Mohamed Holt Mohamed Holt Mohamed Holt Mohamed Holt Mohamed Kendricks Mohamed Holt Mohamed Browner Mohamed Conte (CB)
CB Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson Thompson
S Ezeff Ezeff Ezeff Ezeff Ezeff Ezeff Ezeff Cattouse Cattouse Cattouse Cattouse Cattouse Cattouse
S Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Ezeff
CB Hagan Hagan Hagan J. Hill J. Hill J. Hill Hagan J. Hill J. Hill Nnabuife Nnabuife Nnabuife Nnabuife
Syd’Quan Thompson
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CALIFORNIA LONG PLAYS (20+ YARDS) RUSHES (24) 93 73 61 61 50 42 40 40 36 36 33 30 30 27 27 26 25 25 24 22 22 21 20
Best at UCLA (TD) Best vs. Maryland (TD) Vereen vs. Arizona (TD) Best vs. Washington State (TD) Vereen at Washington Vereen at UCLA (TD) Vereen at UCLA Best vs. Maryland Vereen vs. Utah (TD) Vereen at Stanford Best at Minnesota (TD) Best vs. Eastern Washington DeBoskie-Johnson vs. Eastern Washington Vereen vs. Utah 27 Best at Minnesota (TD) Best vs. Eastern Washington DeBoskie-Johnson vs. Washington State Best vs. Washington State Best at Minnesota Ross vs. USC Best at UCLA Sofele vs. Eastern Washington (TD) Vereen vs. Utah Best vs. Eastern Washington
PUNT RETURNS (2) 76 Ross vs. Washingotn State (TD) 46 Ross vs. Arizona
KICK RETURNS (28) 65 54 44 39 38 34 32 29 28 26 25 25 25
Sofele at Washington Ross vs. Washington State Vereen at Oregon Vereen vs. Maryland Vereen at Oregon Vereen vs. Eastern Washington Vereen at Oregon Vereen vs. USC Ross at Stanford Vereen at Minnesota Sofele vs. Utah Ross at Stanford Vereen at Arizona State
25 24 24 23 23 22 21 21 21 21 21 20
Vereen vs. USC Ross vs. Oregon State Vereen at Minnesota Vereen at UCLA Vereen at UCLA Sofele vs. Utah Sofele vs. Utah Vereen at Arizona State Vereen vs. USC Vereen vs. USC Vereen vs. Maryland Sofele vs. Utah
61 59 56 51 50 43 42 39 39 38 37 37 35 32 32 31 30 27 27 26 25 25 25 24 24 24 24 23 23 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 20 20 20 20
Riley to Ross vs. Washington State Riley to Tucker at Minnesota Riley to Ross at Arizona State Riley to Best at UCLA (TD) Riley to Tucker at Oregon Riley to Jones at UCLA (TD) Riley to Jones vs. Maryland (TD) Riley to Boateng vs. Maryland (TD) Riley to Tucker vs. Maryland Riley to Jones at Washington Riley to Tucker vs. Oregon State Riley to Jones vs. Washington State (TD) Riley to Ross at Minnesota Riley to Curran at Washington Riley to Miller vs. Eastern Washington Riley to Ross at Minnesota Riley to Miller vs. Utah Riley to Curran vs. Arizona (TD) Riley to Best vs. Washington State (TD) Riley to Jones at Arizona State Riley to Boateng vs. Utah Riley to Tucker vs. Arizona Riley to Miller at Minnesota Riley to Ross vs. Utah (TD) Riley to Jones at UCLA (TD) Riley to Jones vs. Oregon State Riley to Ross vs. Maryland Riley to Miller at Stanford Riley to Lagemann vs. Maryland Riley to Boateng at Washington (TD) Riley to Boateng vs. Oregon State Riley to Holley at Arizona State Riley to Miller at Arizona State Riley to Miller at Arizona State Riley to Jones vs. USC Riley to Miller vs. USC Riley to Best vs. Eastern Washington (TD) Riley to Curran at Stanford Riley to Sparks vs. Oregon State Riley to Vereen vs. Washington State (TD) Riley to Vereen vs. USC Riley to Jones vs. USC Riley to Boateng at Minnesota Riley to Holley vs. Eastern Washington Riley to Jones vs. Arizona Riley to Vereen at UCLA Riley to Miller vs. Washington State Riley to Jones vs. Maryland
PASSES (48)
FUMBLE RETURNS (1) 45 Kendricks vs. Eastern Washington
INTERCEPTION RETURNS (3) Jeremy Ross
126
68 Kendricks at UCLA (TD) 38 Thompson at Arizona State 31 Young vs. Utah (TD)
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
PARTICIPATION No 90 44 27 19 2 50 4 10 8 70 81 20 47 84 7 11 61 17 77 83 16 28 53 99 29 73 65 18 89 54 92 26 76 23 33 3 34 25 43 1 97 22 30 45 5 1 10 55 80 18 8 15 95 96 13 13 50 3 2 72 57 46 20 19 48 75 9 40 7 58 79 35 5 40 86 31 34 9
Name S. Aigamaua Tyson Alualu Charles Amadi Bryan Anger Marc Anthony Kevin Bemoll Jahvid Best Devin Bishop Nyan Boateng Mark Boskovich Ross Bostock Jesse Brooks Keith Browner Michael Calvin D.J. Campbell Sean Cattouse Justin Cheadle Chris Conte M. Costanzo Skylar Curran Vince D’Amato C. DeBoskie D. Edwards Savai’i Eselu Marcus Ezeff Richard Fisher Dominic Galas Peter Geurts Garry Graffort Chris Guarnero Trevor Guyton Darian Hagan Derrick Hill Josh Hill Brian Holley D.J. Holt J.P. Hurrell Brett Johnson C. Johnson Marvin Jones Cameron Jordan Will Kapp M. Kendricks Spencer Ladner Alex Lagemann Chris Little Brock Mansion Jerome Meadows Anthony Miller Mike Mohamed C. Moncrease B. Nnabuife Ernest Owusu Kendrick Payne Jarred Price Kevin Riley Matt Rios Jeremy Ross C. Satchell M. Schwartz Brian Schwenke D. Seawright Isi Sofele Jarrett Sparks Eric Stevens M Summers-Gavin Beau Sweeney G. Tavecchio Quinn Tedford Chet Teofilo Mike Tepper Ryan Theimer S. Thompson Aaron Tipoti Verran Tucker John Tyndall Shane Vereen Eddie Young
GP/GS 1/- 13/13 8/- 13/- 8/- 1/- 9/8 13/9 10/- 12/4 2/- 4/- 12/1 9/1 12/1 13/6 13/13 13/1 12/- 13/3 11/- 9/- 13/- 1/- 10/8 5/- 13/- 1/- 4/- 13/13 11/- 10/4 10/8 11/5 13/10 13/8 13/- 13/12 12/- 13/13 13/13 13/- 13/6 7/- 10/1 11/- 7/- 10/- 11/10 13/13 11/- 10/4 12/- 12/2 12/- 13/13 13/- 13/7 12/- 13/13 12/- 3/- 13/2 13/- 12/- 8/8 3/- 11/- 1/- 4/- 13/13 1/- 13/13 12/4 13/6 3/- 13/4 13/13
MD ... START XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX ... START XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX START START XXX START START XXX START XXX START START XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX START XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START ... XXX ... ... START XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX START
EWU XXX START XXX XXX XXX ... START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX ... XXX START XXX START START XXX START START XXX START XXX START START XXX START ... XXX XXX XXX XXX START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX START ... START XXX START XXX XXX START
MINN ... START XXX XXX XXX ... XXX XXX XXX ... ... XXX XXX ... XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX ... START ... XXX ... ... START XXX START START XXX START START XXX START XXX START START XXX START ... ... XXX ... ... XXX START ... ... XXX XXX XXX START XXX START XXX START ... ... XXX XXX XXX START ... XXX ... ... START ... START ... START XXX START START
ORE ... START XXX XXX ... ... START START ... XXX ... ... XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX ... XXX ... START ... XXX ... ... START XXX XXX START START START XXX XXX START XXX START START XXX START ... XXX XXX XXX ... START START XXX ... XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX START XXX ... XXX XXX XXX START XXX ... ... XXX START ... START XXX START ... XXX START
USC ... START XXX XXX ... ... START START ... START ... ... XXX XXX ... XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX ... XXX ... START ... XXX ... ... START XXX XXX START START XXX XXX XXX START XXX START START XXX START ... ... XXX XXX ... START START XXX ... XXX ... XXX START XXX START XXX START XXX ... XXX XXX XXX ... ... ... ... ... START ... START XXX START ... XXX START
UCLA ... START ... XXX XXX ... START START XXX XXX ... ... ... XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX ... XXX ... START ... XXX ... ... START XXX XXX START START START START XXX START XXX START START XXX XXX ... ... ... XXX XXX START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX START XXX START XXX ... XXX XXX XXX START ... XXX ... ... START ... START XXX XXX ... XXX START
WSU ... START ... XXX XXX ... START START ... XXX ... ... XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX START ... XXX XXX ... START XXX XXX ... XXX START XXX START START XXX XXX START XXX START ... START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX START XXX START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX ... ... START ... START XXX XXX ... XXX START
ASU ... START XXX XXX ... ... START START XXX START ... ... XXX XXX XXX START START XXX XXX XXX XXX ... XXX ... XXX XXX XXX ... ... START XXX ... ... START START START XXX START XXX START START XXX XXX ... XXX XXX ... XXX START START ... XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX START XXX START XXX ... XXX XXX XXX ... ... XXX ... XXX START ... START START XXX ... XXX START
OSU ... START ... XXX XXX ... START START XXX XXX ... XXX XXX ... START START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX ... XXX XXX XXX ... ... START XXX ... ... START XXX START XXX START XXX START START XXX XXX XXX START ... XXX XXX ... START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX START XXX START ... START XXX ... XXX XXX XXX ... ... XXX ... ... START ... START START START ... XXX START
ARIZ ... START ... XXX ... ... ... START XXX XXX ... ... XXX START XXX START START XXX XXX START ... XXX XXX ... ... ... XXX ... XXX START ... XXX ... XXX START XXX XXX START XXX START START XXX START XXX XXX XXX ... XXX ... START XXX START XXX XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX START XXX ... XXX XXX XXX START ... XXX ... XXX START ... START START XXX ... START START
STAN ... START ... XXX XXX ... ... START XXX XXX ... ... XXX XXX XXX START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX ... ... ... XXX ... ... START ... XXX XXX XXX START START XXX START XXX START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX ... XXX START START XXX START ... XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX START XXX ... XXX XXX ... START ... XXX ... ... START ... START START START ... START START
WASH ... START XXX XXX ... ... ... START XXX START ... ... START ... XXX START START XXX XXX START XXX XXX XXX ... ... ... XXX ... ... START XXX XXX XXX ... START XXX XXX START XXX START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX ... XXX START START XXX START XXX START XXX START XXX XXX XXX START XXX ... START XXX XXX ... ... XXX ... ... START ... START XXX XXX ... XXX START
UTAH ... START XXX XXX XXX ... ... XXX XXX START ... ... XXX ... XXX START START START ... XXX XXX XXX XXX ... START ... XXX ... ... START XXX ... START ... START XXX XXX XXX XXX START START XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX ... XXX START START XXX START XXX START ... START XXX XXX XXX START XXX ... START XXX XXX ... ... XXX ... ... START ... START XXX XXX ... START START
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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PACIFIC-10 RESULTS & HONORS 2009 PAC-10 STANDINGS 1. Oregon 2. Arizona Oregon State Stanford 5. USC California 7. Washington 8. UCLA 9. Arizona State 10. Washington State
Conference W L Pct 8 1 .889 6 3 .667 6 3 .667 6 3 .667 5 4 .556 5 4 .556 4 5 .444 3 6 .333 2 7 .222 0 9 .000
Points Pts Opp 375 304 286 228 314 225 .330 235 212 200 205 253 218 229 181 217 163 216 80 357
W 10 8 8 8 9 8 5 7 4 1
Overall L 3 5 5 5 4 5 7 6 8 11
Points Pts Opp 469 309 356 311 409 325 461 345 344 258 378 331 313 320 295 276 268 253 144 462
Pct .769 .615 .615 .615 .692 .615 .417 .538 .333 .083
Streak Lost 1 Lost 1 Lost 2 Lost 1 Won 1 Lost 2 Won 1 Won 1 Lost 6 Lost 8
2009 ALL-PAC-10 FOOTBALL TEAM FIRST TEAM OFFENSE
FIRST TEAM SPECIALISTS
QB.............................................................Sean Canfield, Sr., Oregon State RB.......................................................................Toby Gerhart, Sr., Stanford RB......................................................Jacquizz Rodgers, So., Oregon State WR...........................................................James Rodgers, Jr., Oregon State WR....................................................................... Damian Williams, Jr., USC TE............................................................................Ed Dickson, Sr., Oregon OL......................................................................Chris Marinelli, Sr., Stanford OL.....................................................................Mike Tepper, Sr., California OL.................................................................................. Jeff Byers, Sr., USC OL...........................................................................Charles Brown, Sr., USC OL.................................................................. Gregg Peat, Sr., Oregon State
PK..............................................................................Kai Forbaith, Jr., UCLA P.....................................................................Bryan Anger, So., California KOR....................................................................Chris Owusu, So., Stanford PR....................................................................... Damian Williams, Jr., USC ST.........................................................Suaesi Tuimaunei, Jr., Oregon State
SECOND TEAM OFFENSE QB................................................................... Jeremiah Masoli, Jr., Oregon RB.................................................................... Jahvid Best, Jr., California RB................................................................. LaMichael James, Fr., Oregon WR.............................................................Chris McGaha, Sr., Arizona State WR........................................................Jeremaine Kearse, So., Washington TE.............................................................................. Jim Dray, Sr., Stanford OL........................................................................... Colin Baxter, Jr., Arizona OL....................................................................... Chase Beeler, Jr., Stanford OL......................................................... Kenny Alfred, Sr., Washington State OL.......................................................................... Adam Grant, Gr., Arizona OL.............................................................Shawn Lauvao, Sr., Arizona State
FIRST TEAM DEFENSE DL................................................................................Brian Price, Jr., UCLA DL.............................................................. Stephen Paea, Jr., Oregon State DL...................................................................Tyson Alualu, Sr., California LB...........................................................Keaston Kristick, Sr., Oregon State LB............................................................... Mike Mohamed, Sr., California LB.......................................................................... Reggie Carter, Sr., UCLA DB.........................................................................Rahim Moore, So., UCLA DB.................................................... Syd'Quan Thompson, Sr., California DB.............................................................................. Taylor Mays, Sr., USC DB......................................................................Alterraun Verner, Sr., UCLA
SECOND TEAM SPECIALISTS PK................................................................. Justin Kahut, Jr., Oregon State P.................................................................................. Jeff Locke, Fr., UCLA KOR.....................................................................Terrence Austin, Sr., UCLA PR.............................................................. Kyle Williams, Sr., Arizona State ST............................................................................ Garrett Green, Sr., USC ST – Special teams player (not a kicker or returner)
HONORABLE MENTION CALIFORNIA: S Sean Cattouse, So.; C Chris Guarnero, Jr., DE Cameron Jordan, Jr.; TE Anthony Miller, So.; OT Mitchell Schwartz, So.; TB Shane Vereen, So.
COACH OF THE YEAR Chip Kelly, Oregon
OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR Toby Gerhart, RB, Sr., Stanford
PAT TILLMAN DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR Brian Price, DT, Jr., UCLA
SECOND TEAM DEFENSE DL...................................................... Daniel Te'o-Nesheim, Sr., Washington DL.......................................................................... Everson Griffen, Jr., USC DL.......................................................................... Will Tukuafu, Sr., Oregon DL.......................................................................... Earl Mitchell, Sr., Arizona LB................................................................. Donald Butler, Sr., Washington LB.........................................................................Xavier Kelley, Gr., Arizona LB....................................................................Casey Matthews, Jr., Oregon DB......................................................................... Cam Nelson, Sr., Arizona DB.............................................................................Josh Pinkard, Sr., USC DB........................................................................Trevin Wade, So., Arizona DB.......................................................................... Kevin Thomas, Sr., USC
128
OFFENSIVE FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR LaMichael James, RB, Oregon
DEFENSIVE FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR Vontaze Burfict, MLB, Arizona State
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
PACIFIC-10 STATISTICS 2009 TEAM STATISTICS Team 1. Oregon 2. Stanford 3. Oregon State 4. California 5. Arizona 6. USC 7. Washington 8. Arizona State 9. UCLA 10. Washington State eam T 1. USC 2. Arizona State 3. UCLA 4. Oregon 5. Arizona 6. Oregon State 7. California 8. Stanford 9. Washington 10. Washington State Team 1. Stanford 2. Oregon 3. Oregon State 4. California 5. USC 6. Arizona 7. Washington 8. UCLA 9. Arizona State 10. Washington State Team 1. Arizona State 2. Arizona 3. UCLA 4. Oregon 5. USC 6. Oregon State 7. California 8. Washington 9. Stanford 10. Washington State Team 1. Oregon 2. Stanford 3. California 4. USC 5. Arizona 6. Oregon State 7. Washington 8. Arizona State 9. UCLA 10. Washington State Team 1. Arizona State 2. California 3. Oregon State 4. Arizona 5. USC 6. Oregon 7. Stanford 8. UCLA 9. Washington 10. Washington State
SCORING OFFENSE
G 13 13 13 13 13 13 12 12 13 12
TD 60 59 49 48 44 44 37 34 28 18
FG XPT 16 55 16 53 22 45 15 45 17 39 12 42 18 35 11 29 28 24 7 15
2XP DXP 3 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 3 0 0 0
Saf Points Avg/G 0 469 36.1 0 461 35.5 1 409 31.5 0 378 29.1 1 356 27.4 0 344 26.5 0 313 26.1 0 268 22.3 2 286 22.0 0 144 12.0
Team 1. Oregon State 2. Washington 3. Arizona 4. UCLA 5. California 6. USC 7. Arizona State 8. Stanford 9. Oregon 10. Washington State
G 13 13 13 13 13 13 12 13 13 12
Saf Points Avg/G 1 258 19.8 0 253 21.1 1 276 21.2 1 309 23.8 0 311 23.9 1 325 25.0 0 331 25.5 0 345 26.5 0 320 26.7 1 462 38.5
Team 1. Arizona State 2. UCLA 3. Arizona 4. Oregon 5. USC 6. Oregon State 7. Washington 8. Stanford 9. California 10. Washington State
G 12 13 13 13 13 13 12 13 13 12
Pass Plays Yards Avg/P TD Avg/G 2722 849 5559 6.5 53 427.6 2344 885 5356 6.1 54 412.0 3520 918 5338 5.8 49 410.6 2895 864 5098 5.9 45 392.2 2890 817 5058 6.2 40 389.1 2927 914 4999 5.5 39 384.5 2838 786 4506 5.7 34 375.5 2896 857 4386 5.1 22 337.4 2582 800 4013 5.0 31 334.4 2115 726 2963 4.1 16 246.9
Team 1. Oregon State 2. Stanford 3. Washington 4. USC 5. Oregon 6. California 7. Arizona 8. UCLA 9. Arizona State 10. Washington State
G 13 13 12 13 13 13 13 13 12 12
SCORING DEFENSE
G 13 12 13 13 13 13 13 13 12 12
TD 31 29 34 35 37 44 40 44 36 60
FG XPT 15 25 17 28 13 31 22 29 18 31 5 38 17 38 13 42 22 34 14 54
2XP DXP 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 2 0
TOTAL OFFENSE G Rush 13 2837 13 3012 13 1818 13 2203 13 2168 13 2072 12 1668 13 1490 12 1431 12 848
TOTAL DEFENSE G Rush 12 1303 13 1566 13 1856 13 1673 13 1666 13 1487 13 1456 12 1786 13 1793 12 2837
Pass Plays Yards Avg/P TD Avg/G 2268 750 3751 4.8 25 297.6 2620 826 4186 5.1 35 322.0 2486 836 4342 5.2 30 334.0 2699 953 4372 4.6 33 336.3 2760 919 4426 4.8 30 340.5 3056 838 4543 5.4 42 349.5 3469 890 4925 5.5 38 378.8 2888 758 4674 6.2 33 389.5 3442 879 5235 6.0 42 402.7 3307 865 6144 7.1 56 512.0
RUSHING OFFENSE G 13 13 13 13 13 13 12 12 13 12
Att 547 536 471 438 430 440 390 382 421 354
Yards 3012 2837 2203 2168 2072 1818 1668 1431 1490 848
Avg./A Long 5.5 60 5.3 61 4.7 93 4.9 63 4.8 94 4.1 61 4.3 56 3.7 75 3.5 74 2.4 37
RUSHING DEFENSE G 12 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 12 12
Att 384 436 392 405 456 497 424 469 395 477
Yards 1303 1456 1487 1566 1666 1673 1793 1856 1786 2837
Avg./A Long 3.4 67 3.3 74 3.8 52 3.9 61 3.7 48 3.4 41 4.2 61 4.0 93 4.5 75 5.9 68
PASS OFFENSE Comp-Att-Int 319-478-7 231-396-11 301-484-12 244-436-12 214-393-8 228-379-15 225-418-12 174-313-6 197-338-7 195-372-16
Pct. Yards Avg./A TD Avg/G 66.7 3520 7.4 23 270.8 58.3 2838 7.2 21 236.5 62.2 2927 6.0 20 225.2 56.0 2896 6.6 10 222.8 54.5 2895 7.4 18 222.7 60.2 2890 7.6 16 222.3 53.8 2582 6.2 17 215.2 55.6 2722 8.7 14 209.4 58.3 2344 6.9 16 180.3 52.4 2115 5.7 11 176.2
PASS DEFENSE Comp-Att-Int 194-366-15 215-367-20 239-421-12 254-456-14 241-463-11 264-446-8 228-363-8 286-455-8 289-454-11 259-388-10
Pct. Yards Avg./A TD Avg/G 53.0 2268 6.2 13 189.0 58.6 2486 6.8 16 191.2 56.8 2620 6.2 19 201.5 55.7 2699 5.9 18 207.6 52.1 2760 6.0 12 212.3 59.2 3056 6.9 23 235.1 62.8 2888 8.0 16 240.7 62.9 3442 7.6 23 264.8 63.7 3469 7.6 20 266.8 66.8 3307 8.5 21 275.6
PASS EFFICIENCY Comp-Att-Int 319-478-7 174-313-6 231-396-11 228-379-15 197-338-7 214-393-8 301-484-12 244-436-12 225-418-12 195-372-16
Pct. Yards Avg/G TD 66.7 3520 270.8 23 55.6 2722 209.4 14 58.3 2838 236.5 21 60.2 2890 222.3 16 58.3 2344 180.3 16 54.5 2895 222.7 18 62.2 2927 225.2 20 56.0 2896 222.8 10 53.8 2582 215.2 17 52.4 2115 176.2 11
PASS DEFENSE EFFICIENCY
Team 1. USC 2. Arizona State 3. Oregon 4. Arizona 5. UCLA 6. Oregon State 7. California 8. Stanford 9. Washington 10. Washington State
G 13 12 13 13 13 13 13 13 12 12 G 13 12 13 13 13 13 12 13 13 12
Comp-Att-Int 241-463-11 194-366-15 254-456-14 239-421-12 215-367-20 264-446-8 289-454-11 286-455-8 228-363-8 259-388-10
Pct. Yards Avg/G TD 52.1 2760 212.3 12 53.0 2268 189.0 13 55.7 2699 207.6 18 56.8 2620 201.5 19 58.6 2486 191.2 16 59.2 3056 235.1 23 63.7 3469 266.8 20 62.9 3442 264.8 23 62.8 2888 240.7 16 66.8 3307 275.6 21
INTERCEPTIONS No. 20 15 14 12 11 11 10 8 8 8
Yards 247 228 159 148 159 230 209 152 55 169
TD 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 0 1
Long 68 47 32 79 68 62 67 55 18 56
Effic. 141.5 139.6 130.5 130.2 128.0 127.4 121.7 113.8 113.4 101.3 Effic. 105.9 108.6 112.3 118.2 119.0 130.2 137.5 139.6 139.8 151.1
TD 38 39 27 24 19 26 13 14 12 5
Avg/G 231.7 218.2 169.5 166.8 159.4 139.8 139.0 119.2 114.6 70.7
Team 1. UCLA 2. Arizona State 3. Oregon 4. Arizona 5. California 6. USC 7. Washington State 8. Stanford 9. Oregon State 10. Washington
Avg. 12.4 15.2 11.4 12.3 14.5 20.9 20.9 19.0 6.9 21.1
TD 12 18 19 16 18 15 19 14 17 35
Avg/G 108.6 112.0 114.4 120.5 128.2 128.7 137.9 142.8 148.8 236.4
Gained Lost Team G Fumb Int Total Fumb Int Total Margin Per/G 1. UCLA 13 10 20 30 12 12 24 +6 0.46 2. Oregon State 13 8 8 16 4 7 11 +5 0.38 3. Washington 12 15 8 23 8 11 19 +4 0.33 4. California 13 10 11 21 9 8 17 +4 0.31 5. Oregon 13 11 14 25 16 7 23 +2 0.15 6. USC 13 11 11 22 7 15 22 +0 0.00 Stanford 13 9 8 17 11 6 17 +0 0.00 8. Arizona 13 7 12 19 8 12 20 -1 -0.08 9. Arizona State 12 9 15 24 14 12 26 -2 -0.17 10. Washington State 12 14 10 24 15 16 31 -7 -0.58
TURNOVER MARGIN
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2009 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING
Player, TEAM 1. Toby Gerhart, STAN 2. LaMichael James, ORE 3. Jacquizz Rodgers, OSU 4. Chris Polk, WASH 5. Joe McKnight, USC 6. Shane Vereen, CAL
Cl Sr. Fr. So. Fr. Jr. So.
G 13 13 13 12 12 13
Att Yards 343 1871 230 1546 273 1440 226 1113 164 1014 183 952
Avg 5.5 6.7 5.3 4.9 6.2 5.2
PASSING AVG/GAME
Player, TEAM 1. Sean Canfield, OSU 2. Jake Locker, WASH 3. Matt Barkley, USC 4. Kevin Riley, CAL 5. Andrew Luck, STAN
Cl Sr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Fr.
G 13 12 12 13 12
Comp-Att-Int 303-446-7 230-394-11 211-352-14 209-382-8 162-288-4
PASS EFFICIENCY
Player, TEAM 1. Andrew Luck, STAN 2. Sean Canfield, OSU 3. Matt Barkley, USC 4. Jake Locker, WASH 5. Jeremiah Masoli, ORE 6. Kevin Riley, CAL
Cl Fr. Sr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Jr.
G 12 13 12 12 12 13
Comp-Att-Int 162-288-4 303-446-7 211-352-14 230-394-11 177-305-6 209-382-8
RECEPTIONS/GAME
Player, TEAM 1. James Rodgers, OSU 2. Jacquizz Rodgers, OSU 3. Damian Williams, USC 4. Kyle Williams, ASU 5. Chris McGaha, ASU
Cl Jr. So. Jr. Sr. Sr.
G 13 13 12 11 12
No Yards 91 1034 78 522 70 1010 57 815 56 673
RECEIVE YDS/GAME
Player, TEAM 1. Damian Williams, USC 2. James Rodgers, OSU 3. Kyle Williams, ASU 4. Jermaine Kearse, WASH 5. Ryan Whalen, STAN
Cl Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Jr.
G 12 13 11 12 13
No Yards 70 1010 91 1034 57 815 50 866 57 926
Cl So. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr.
G 11 12 13 13 13
Ret 12 24 13 13 15
Player, TEAM 1. Toby Gerhart, STAN 2. Jacquizz Rodgers, OSU 3. Morgan Flint, ORE 4. Justin Kahut, OSU 5. Kai Forbaith, UCLA 10. Shane Vereen, CAL
Yards 3271 2800 2735 2850 2575
TD 21 21 15 18 13
Avg/G 251.6 233.3 227.9 219.2 214.6
Player, TEAM 1. Toby Gerhart, STAN 2. Jacquizz Rodgers, OSU 3. Jeremiah Masoli, ORE 4. LaMichael James, ORE Shane Vereen, CAL
Yards 2575 3271 2735 2800 2147 2850
TD 13 21 15 21 15 15
Effic 143.5 141.9 131.3 130.1 129.5 128.7
Player, TEAM 1. Justin Kahut, OSU 2. Morgan Flint, ORE 3. Kai Forbaith, UCLA 4. Nate Whitaker, STAN 5. Alex Zendejas, ARIZ 8. Vince D'Amato, CAL 9. Giorgio Tavecchio, CAL
TD 9 1 6 8 4
Lg Yds/G Rec/G 87 79.5 7.0 48 40.2 6.0 75 84.2 5.8 80 74.1 5.2 50 56.1 4.7
TD 6 9 8 8 4
Lg Avg/C Avg/G 75 14.4 84.2 87 11.4 79.5 80 14.3 74.1 50 17.3 72.2 46 16.2 71.2
Yards 210 340 151 137 154
INTERCEPTIONS
Player, TEAM 1. Rahim Moore, UCLA 2. Alterraun Verner, UCLA Trevin Wade, ARIZ 4. Talmadge Jackson III, ORE Will Harris, USC Akeem Ayers, UCLA
Cl So. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. So.
G 13 13 13 13 13 13
Int 10 5 5 4 4 4
Yards 79 158 40 73 62 10
Cl So. Jr. Fr. Sr. Jr. So.
G 13 12 13 13 13 13
Ret. 37 30 40 43 36 24
Yards 1167 762 1001 1036 840 551
FUMBLES FORCED
Player, TEAM 1. Mason Foster, WASH 2. Daniel Te'o-Nesheim, WASH 3. Akeem Ayers, UCLA Stephen Paea, OSU 5. Mike Nixon, ASU Donald Butler, WASH Josh Pinkard, USC
Cl Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr.
G 12 12 13 13 12 12 12
Cl So. So. Fr. Jr. Sr. So.
G 13 13 9 10 10 12
TD 3 1 1 0 0 0
Num 6 5 4 4 3 3 3
FUMBLES RECOVERED
Player, TEAM 1. Eddie Pleasant, ORE Jurrell Casey, USC 3. Nathan Fellner, WASH 4. Chima Nwachukwu, WSU 5. Jerzy Siewierski, UCLA 7. D.J. Campbell, CAL
TD 1 2 0 0 1 TD 0 1 1 1 1 2
KICK RETURNS
Player, TEAM 1. Chris Owusu, STAN 2. Travis Cobb, ARIZ 3. Kenjon Barner, ORE 4. Terrence Austin, UCLA 5. James Rodgers, OSU 6. Shane Vereen
Num 3 3 2 2 2 2
Long 86 66 33 31 59 Long 37 68 38 32 55 5 Long 94 95 100 65 84 44
Avg 17.5 14.2 11.6 10.5 10.3 Int/G 0.77 0.38 0.38 0.31 0.31 0.31 Avg. 31.5 25.4 25.0 24.1 23.3 23.0 Avg/G 0.50 0.42 0.31 0.31 0.25 0.25 0.25 Avg/G 0.23 0.23 0.22 0.20 0.20 0.17
*Listings do not include Field Goals, Field Goal%, PAT Kicking % ... CAL rankings below Field Goals – Giorgio Tavecchio (So., 8th, 11, 8-12, 66.7, 0.73), Vince D'Amato (Fr., 10, 7-12, 58.3, 0.70); PAT Kicking %: Vince D'Amato (Fr., 1st-T, 10, 31-31, 100.0)
130
SCORING
Long Avg/G 61 143.9 60 118.9 61 110.8 41 92.8 54 84.5 61 73.2
PUNT RETURNS
Player, TEAM 1. William Wright, ARIZ 2. Damian Williams, USC 3. James Rodgers, OSU 4. Kenjon Barner, ORE 5. Richard Sherman, STAN
TD 28 14 21 5 8 12
Cl Sr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. So.
TD 28 22 0 0 0 14
FG 0 0 16 22 28 0
XPT 0 0 54 45 24 0
Cl Sr. So. Jr. Fr. So.
G 13 13 12 13 13
Pts 172 132 104 111 108 84
Pat 2 0 0 0 0
Pts Avg/G 172 13.2 132 10.2 78 6.5 84 6.5 84 6.5
TD Run Pass Ret 28 28 0 0 22 21 1 0 13 13 0 0 14 14 0 0 14 12 2 0
SCORING (KICK) Cl Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Fr. So.
G 13 12 13 13 12 10 11
PAT 45-47 54-54 24-25 53-53 38-41 31-31 14-14
FG 22-27 16-19 28-31 16-22 17-22 7-12 8-12
TOTAL OFFENSE Cl Jr. Fr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Jr.
G 12 12 13 12 12 13
Rush 388 354 -160 668 -38 51
Pass 2800 2575 3271 2147 2735 2850
PUNTING
Player, TEAM 1. Trevor Hankins, ASU 2. Jeff Locke, UCLA 3. Reid Forrest, WSU 4. Bryan Anger, CAL 5. Keenyn Crier, ARIZ
Cl Jr. Fr. Jr. So. Jr.
G 12 13 12 13 13
Punts 69 70 86 67 57
ALL-PURPOSE
Player, TEAM 1. James Rodgers, OSU 2. Toby Gerhart, STAN 3. Jacquizz Rodgers, OSU 4. Chris Owusu, STAN 5. Terrence Austin, UCLA 7. Shane Vereen, CAL
Cl Jr. Sr. So. So. Sr. So.
G Rush 13 303 13 1871 13 1440 13 66 13 25 13 952
TACKLES
Player, TEAM 1. Mike Mohamed, CAL 2. Taylor Mays, USC 3. Donald Butler, WASH 4. Alex Hoffman-Ellis, WSU 5. Keaton Kristick, OSU
Cl Jr. Sr. Sr. So. Sr.
Player, TEAM 1. Kenny Rowe, ORE 2. Ricky Elmore, ARIZ 3. Daniel Te'o-Nesheim, WASH 4. Thomas Keiser, STAN Nick Perry, USC 7. Tyson Alualu, CAL 10. Cameron Jordan, CAL
Cl Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Fr. Sr. Jr.
G 13 12 12 11 13
Solo 69 48 72 55 47
SACKS G 13 13 12 13 13 13 13
Solo 10 10 9 7 8 5 5
Rcv 1034 157 522 682 455 244
Cl Jr. Sr. Jr. So. So. Sr.
G 13 12 13 13 13 13
Solo 22 14 13 12 14 8
G 13 13 13 12 13 13
Pts/G 13.2 10.2 8.7 8.5 8.3 6.5
Pts 111 102 108 101 89 52 38
Avg/G 8.5 8.5 8.3 7.8 7.4 5.2 3.5
Total 3188 2929 3111 2815 2697 2901
Yds/G 265.7 244.1 239.3 234.6 224.8 223.2
Long 69 81 65 72 68
Avg 44.2 43.6 43.2 42.3 41.5
PR KR Yards Avg/G 151 840 2328 179.1 0 0 2028 156.0 0 0 1962 150.9 0 1167 1915 147.3 302 1036 1818 139.8 10 551 1757 135.2
Ast 43 48 22 29 48 Ast 3 1 1 2 0 5 2 Ast 3 3 4 6 1 7
PASSES DEFENDED Cl So. So. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr.
Plays 506 349 494 426 397 464 Yards 3049 3054 3718 2834 2363
TACKLES FOR LOSS
Player, TEAM 1. Rahim Moore, UCLA 2. Trevin Wade, ARIZ 3. Devin Ross, ARIZ 4. Josh Pinkard, USC 5. Syd'Quan Thompson, CAL Kevin Thomas, USC
Brup 7 9 12 9 10 11
*Listings include Top 5 players plus all CAL players in Top 10
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
2XP 4 0 2 0 0 0
SCORING (TDS)
Player, TEAM 1. Jake Locker, WASH 2. Andrew Luck, STAN 3. Sean Canfield, OSU 4. Jeremiah Masoli, ORE 5. Matt Barkley, USC 6. Kevin Riley, CAL
Player, TEAM 1. Brian Price, UCLA 2. Donald Butler, WASH 3. Kenny Rowe, ORE Thomas Keiser, STAN 5. Akeem Ayers, UCLA 10. Tyson Alualu, CAL
G 13 13 12 13 13 13
Total Avg/G 112 8.6 96 8.0 94 7.8 84 7.6 95 7.3
Sack 2.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 1.0
Yards 63 62 46 67 58 43 35
Total 11.5 10.5 9.5 8.0 8.0 7.5 6.0
Avg/G 0.88 0.81 0.79 0.62 0.62 0.58 0.46
Yards 96 35 69 84 56 48
Total 23.5 15.5 15.0 15.0 14.5 11.5
Avg/G 1.81 1.29 1.15 1.15 1.12 0.88
Int 10 5 1 2 1 0
Total 17 14 13 11 11 11
Avg/G 1.31 1.08 1.00 0.92 0.85 0.85
GAME SUMMARIES 1-2 at CALIFORNIA 52, MARYLAND 13
at CALIFORNIA 59, E. WASHINGTON 7
BERKELEY – Jahvid Best and his California teammates were wide awake from the start of their rematch against Maryland. Best ran 73 yards for one of his two first-quarter touchdowns and the 12th-ranked Golden Bears avenged an early-season loss to the Terrapins last season with a 52-13 victory to open the 2009 campaign for both clubs. Kevin Riley added a career-high four touchdown passes for the Bears, who jumped on top 45-6 in a drastic turnabout from last year’s meeting won by Maryland 35-27. Best made his own highlight reel in this game, starting with the long touchdown run that opened the scoring. It’s those kinds of runs that have made Best a trendy Heisman contender and the Bears a team to be reckoned with in the Pac-10. Best finished with 137 yards on 10 carries, including a 40-yarder that was sprung by a block from Riley, before ending his night early. Riley completed 17 of 26 passes for 298 yards and the Golden Bears recorded six sacks. Cal constantly pressured Chris Turner and kept the Terps out of the end zone until Da’Rel Scott’s 39-yard run made it 45-13 midway through the third quarter.
BERKELEY – Eastern Washington managed to hang close with No. 10 California for one quarter. Then the bigger, faster, more talented Golden Bears took over and turned the game into the mismatch it was supposed to be. Jahvid Best rushed for 144 yards and scored two touchdowns to make sure California avoided a letdown against Eastern Washington with a 59-7 victory. Best caught a 22-yard touchdown pass from Kevin Riley in the first half and scored on a 1-yard run in the third quarter, turning a 10-point lead into a blowout. Riley also ran for a touchdown and Shane Vereen had three short TD runs as Cal posted its second straight blowout to open the season. The Bears scored the final 52 points after the game was tied at 7 after the first quarter. Cal ran for 342 yards, didn’t turn the ball over for a second straight week and completely overwhelmed the Eagles. Best should be well-rested considering he’s only had to carry the ball 27 times the first two games. That hasn’t limited his production much – he has run for 281 yards and scored four touchdowns. Best’s other highlight came when he beat linebacker J.C. Sheritt and easily got open on the 22-yard touchdown catch that gave the Bears a 24-7 lead.
September 5, 2009 • TV: ESPN2 • Attendance: 62,367
Score by Quarters Maryland California
1 3 14
2 3 17
3 7 14
4 0 7
September 12, 2009 • TV: CSN California • Attendance: 58,083
OT Score – 13 – 52
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 9:54 9:12 4:56 12:28 9:18 3:42 0:25 13:42 9:53 7:29 14:21
Scoring Play V-H CAL – Best 73 yd run (D’Amato kick), 1-73-0:19 0-7 CAL – Best 2 yd run (D’Amato kick), 2-22-0:35 0-14 MD – Ferrara 26 yd field goal, 8-29-4:08 3-14 MD – Ferrara 42 yd field goal, 16-57-5:28 6-14 CAL – D’Amato 31 yd field goal, 9-62-3:03 6-17 CAL – Curran 3 yd pass from Riley (D’Amato kick), 8-49-3:33 6-24 CAL – Boateng 39 yd pass from Riley (D’Amato kick), 5-69-1:04 6-31 CAL – Vereen 11 run (D’Amato kick), 3-54-1:12 6-38 CAL – Jones 42 pass from Riley (D’Amato kick), 4-53-1:21 6-45 MD – Scott 39 yd run (Ferrara kick), 5-68-2:19 13-45 CAL – Vereen 15 yd pass from Riley (D’Amato kick), 5-72-1:47 13-52
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
MD 17 136 167 17-30-0 303 73 4.2 2-2 7-60 6-213 4-253 3-24-0 8-187-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 32:58 4 of 17 2 of 4 1-1 2-14 1-1 2-2
CAL 25 244 298 17-27-0 542 64 8.5 0-0 4-25 4-179 8-483 0-0-0 4-94-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 27:02 8 of 14 0 of 1 5-5 6-45 7-7 1-1
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS MARYLAND Rushing: Scott 13-90 TD, Meggett 9-36, Smith 2-16, Green 5-14, Watson 1-3, Robinson 1-3 Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Turner 17-30-0-167-0 Receiving: Cannon 5-30, Scott 3-31, Galt 3-29, Tyler 2-25, Watson 2-25, Smith 1-29 Tackles: Perez 8, Wujciak 7, Pooler 5, Skinner 5 1 PBU, Wiseman 4 4 PBU, Galt 4 0.5 PBU, Ivey 4 CAL Rushing: Best 10-137 2 TD, DeBoskie-Johnson 9-54, Vereen 10-48 Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 17-26-0-298-4, Mansion 0-1-0-0-0 Receiving: Jones 3-74 TD, Tucker 3-50, Vereen 3-46 TD, Boateng 2-44 TD, Best 2-23, Ross 1-24 Tackles: Kendricks 12 1.0 TFL, Mohamed 9 1.0 SK, 2.0 TFL, Johnson 7, Bishop 7, 0.5 SK, 0.5 TFL
Score by Quarters Eastern Washington California
1 7 7
2 0 17
3 0 14
4 0 21
OT Score – 7 – 59
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 11:02 6:30 12:32 8:42 5:57 12:16 7:45 13:50 9:51 0:20
Scoring Play EW-CAL CAL – Riley 1 yd run (D’Amato kick), 4-35-1:27 0-7 EWU – Williams 4 yd pass from Nchols (Jarrett kick), 11-83-4:30 7-7 CAL – Vereen 1 yd run (D’Amato kick), 10-75-4:21 7-14 CAL – D’Amato 19 yd field goal, 4-3-2:00 7-17 CAL – Best 22 yd pass from Riley (D’Amato kick), 3-38-0:57 7-24 CAL – Best 1 yd run (D’Amato kick), 6-53-2:36 7-31 CAL – Vereen 2 yd run (D’Amato kick), 6-42-2:39 7-38 CAL – Vereen 2 yd run (D’Amato kick), 8-69-2:41 7-45 CAL – Sofele 22 yd run (D’Amato kick), 4-54-1:30 7-52 CAL – DeBoskie-Johnson 1 yd run (D’Amato kick), 9-77-4:14 7-59
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
EWU 13 14 221 28-37-0 235 65 3.6 1-1 9-51 6-212 2-100 3-24-0 8-187-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 32:20 6 of 16 0 of 2 1-2 1-7 1-1 0-1
CAL 27 342 165 14-21-0 507 67 7.6 2-0 4-40 2-94 10-606 0-0-0 4-94-0 3-38-0 1-45-0 0 27:40 5 of 9 0 of 0 7-8 3-15 8-8 1-2
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS EASTERN WASHINGTON Rushing: Beaumonte 9-21, Williams 2-5, Jones 4-2, Hart 2-1, King 1 (-2), Nichols 6 (-3) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Nichols 23-31-0-195-1, Minnerly 3-4-0-7-0, Burgett 2-2-0-19-0 Receiving: Davis 8-71, Overbay 7-62, Brown 4-24, Boyce 2-33, Jones 2-11, Hart 2-7, Edwards 1-5 Tackles: Borden 9 0.5 TFL, Sherritt 7 1.0 TFL, Hatch 7, Johnson 6, Harris 5, Ena 5 0.5 TFL CAL Rushing: Best 17-144 TD, DeBoskie-Johnson 11-92 TD, Vereen 12-45 3 TD, Sofele 2-36 TD, Riley 4-35 TD Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 13-20-0-148-1, Sweeney 1-1-0-17-0 Receiving: Miller 3-48, Jones 3-29, Holley 2-32, Best 2-19 TD, Sparks 1-17, Curran 1-10, Vereen 1-6, Boateng 1-4 Tackles: Kendricks 14 1.0 TFL 1 FR, Holt 7 0.5 TFL, Young 5 1.0 SK 1.5 TFL, D. Hill 5 0.5 TFL
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
131
GAME SUMMARIES 3-4 CALIFORNIA 35, at MINNESOTA 21
at OREGON 42, CALIFORNIA 3
September 19, 2009 • TV: ESPN • Attendance: 50,805
September 26, 2009 • TV: ABC • Attendance: 58,975
MINNEAPOLIS – Cal running back Jahvid Best tied a school record with five rushing TDs and went over the 100yard rushing mark for the seventh straight game. Best rushed for 131 yards and a modern school-record five touchdowns to help the No. 8 Golden Bears vanquish a road curse in a 35-21 victory over scrappy Minnesota. Best scored on runs of 33, 27 and 2 yards in a breathtaking first half, but his most important runs of the game came on a pair of 2-yard sprints to the corner of the end zone to hold off Minnesota and snap a four-game road losing streak. Kevin Riley overcame a shaky start to finish with 252 yards for Cal, which had lost eight of its last nine on the road. Eric Decker caught eight passes for 119 yards and two touchdowns, and threw another TD for the Golden Gophers, who gave Cal everything it could handle in their shiny new stadium. But Adam Weber threw a costly interception late in the game and Best had too much speed for the Gophers, who were in search of their first victory over a top-10 team at home since beating No. 1 Michigan in 1977.
the Bears. Oregon tight end Ed Dickson had 11 catches for a career-best 148 yards, catching all three of Masoli’s scoring passes, and LaMichael James finished with 21 carries for 118 yards and a touchdown on the ground for the Ducks. Cal scored on Vince D’Amato’s 47-yard field goal early after Oregon fumbled on its opening kickoff return.
Score by Quarters California Minnesota
Score by Quarters California Oregon
1 14 0
2 7 14
3 0 7
4 14 0
OT Score – 35 – 21
EUGENE – Jeremiah Masoli answered his doubters by throwing for 253 yards and three touchdowns in Oregon’s 42-3 upset of sixth-ranked California. Masoli went into the game without a scoring pass in 2009, prompting Ducks fans to call for his benching. But he responded by completing 21 of 25 passes for the Ducks, who had 524 yards in total offense to Cal’s 207 yards. Tailback Jahvid Best ran for just 55 yards for the Golden Bears, who totaled only 77 on the ground. Widely considered a top Heisman contender, Best went into the game ranked third in the nation with an average of 137.33 yards on the ground. Quarterback Kevin Riley was 12 of 31 for 123 yards for
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 9:51 7:09 14:52 3:47 0:40 0:29 7:14 2:59
V-H 7-0 14-0 14-7 21-7 21-14 21-21 28-21 35-21
Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 14:00 5:54 14:55 8:20 0:59 9:05 2:06 8:16
CAL Rushing: Best 26-131 5 TD, Vereen 8-27, Ross 1-7, Sofele 1-2, Riley 6-1, TEAM 2-(-5) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 16-25-0-252-0 Receiving: Tucker 3-78, Ross 3-73, Best 3-17, Boateng 2-30, Vereen 2-17, Miller 1-25 Tackles: Thompson 8 1.0 TFL, Mohamed 7 2 INT 1.0 TFL, Alualu 6 2.0 SK 2.0 TFL, Ezeff 5
132
4 0 3
OT Score – 3 – 42
V-H 3-0 3-3 3-11 3-18 3-25 3-32 3-39 3-42
TEAM STATISTICS MINN 14 37 233 22-34-3 270 55 4.9 1-1 3-34 7-295 4-248 2-8-0 4-91-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 26:34 4 of 12 0 of 1 2-2 2-12 3-3 0-0
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS
MINN Rushing: Eskridge 7-21, Carpenter 2-17, Bennett 7-16, Gray 1-2, Weber 4-(-19) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Weber 21-32-3-226-2, Decker 1-2-0-7-1 Receiving: Decker 8-119 2 TD, Green 3-39, Tow-Arnett 3-26, Stoudermire 3-19, Hoese 2-5 Tackles: Triplett 10, Cooper 7 1.0 TFL, Theret 7, Campbell 7 0.5 TFL, Collado 6 1.0 TFL
3 0 14
Scoring Play CAL – D’Amato 47 yd field goal, 4-(-8)-0:56 ORE – Flint 30 yd field goal, 14-49-4:37 ORE – Dickson 26 yd pass from Masoli (Flint pass from Costa), 8-80-2:45 ORE – Alston 1 yd run (Flint kick), 5-58, 1:31 ORE – James 4 yd run (Flint kick), 5-48, 0:56 ORE – Dickson 9 yd pass from Masoli (Flint kick), 12-70-5:19 ORE – Dickson 36 yd pass from Masoli (Flint kick), 12-96-5:46 ORE – Flint 42 yd field goal, 13-45-4:29
TEAM STATISTICS CAL 18 163 252 16-25-0 415 69 6.0 3-1 4-45 6-250 6-326 3-10-0 3-58-0 3-0-0 0-0-0 0 33:26 7 of 15 1 of 1 3-3 3-20 5-5 0-1
2 0 22
SCORING SUMMARY
Scoring Play CAL – Best 33 yd run (D’Amato kick), 9-80-5:09 CAL – Best 2 yd run (D’Amato kick), 3-86-1:05 MINN – Decker 26 yd pass from Weber (Ellestad kick), 7-54-3:54 CAL – Best 27 yd run (D’Amato kick), 10-74-4:36 MINN – Decker 12 yd pass from Weber (Ellestad kick), 2-29-0:31 MINN – Gray 7 yd pass from Decker (Ellestad kick), 7-77-3:42 CAL – Best 2 yd run (D’Amato kick), 8-72-3:45 CAL – Best 2 yd run (D’Amato kick), 8-44-4:02
FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
1 3 3
FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
CAL 15 77 130 13-36-0 207 68 3.0 3-2 5-45 7-245 2-131 1-7-0 4-128-0 0-0-0 1-2-0 0 27:09 3 of 15 0 of 2 0-0 1-6 0-0 1-2
ORE 26 236 288 25-32-0 524 84 6.2 4-3 5-60 4-105 8-537 0-0-0 2-39-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 32:51 7 of 15 2 of 2 5-5 5-28 4-4 2-2
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS CAL Rushing: Best 16-55, Vereen 6-28, Sofele 2-13, Sweeney 2-(-7), Riley 6-(-12) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 12-31-0-123-0, Sweeney 1-5-0-7-0 Receiving: Tucker 3-71, Ross 3-8, Best 2-14, Miller 2-10, Jones 1-14, Sparks 1-7, Vereen 1-6 Tackles: Kendricks 9, 1.0 TFL 1 FR, Mohamed 9 1 PBU, Alualu 8 2.0 TFL, Bishop 8 1.0 TFL, Johnson 8 1 FF ORE Rushing: James 21-118 1 TD, Alston 6-42 1 TD, Barner 9-37, Masoli 8-21, Crenshaw 5-15, Costa 3-3 Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Masoli 21-25-0-253-3, Costa 4-7-0-35-0 Receiving: Dickson 11-148 3 TD, Maehl 6-56, Davis 3-34, Lewis 1-26, Paulson 1-15, Crenshaw 1-9, Tuinei 1-1, Embry 1-(-1) Tackles: Lewis 5 2 PBU, Turner 4 2.0 SK 3.0 TFL, Paysinger 4 1.0 TFL, 1 PBU, Kaddu 4 2.0 TFL, Glasper 4 1.0 TFL, Jackson 4, Matthews 4
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
GAME SUMMARIES 5-6 USC 30, at CALIFORNIA 3
CALIFORNIA 45, at UCLA 26
BERKELEY – Taylor Mays set the tone with an interception on the first drive of the game, Damian Williams returned a punt for a touchdown and the seventh-ranked Trojans beat No. 24 California, 30-3. Joe McKnight ran for 119 yards and scored the only two offensive touchdowns for USC with a 38-yard run on the first Trojan drive and a 4-yard run late in the fourth quarter that emptied the stadium. Jordan Congdon kicked three field goals and the defense did the rest, holding Cal’s Jahvid Best to 47 yards on 14 carries and keeping the Golden Bears scoreless until Vince D’Amato’s 29-yard field goal with 10:45 remaining. With the defense playing this well, the Trojans made it easy freshman quarterback Matt Barkley. Barkley was inconsistent in this game, completing 20 of 35 passes for 283 yards and an interception. He moved the ball down the field with ease but struggled to punch the ball into the end zone. Cal quarterback Kevin Riley struggled to a 15 for 40 performance for 199 yards and an interception. Riley’s interception in the end zone on the opening drive was his first of the year. Six plays later, McKnight dived into the end zone at the end of his long run. Williams’ 66-yard punt return made it 17-0 in the second quarter and the rout was on. Williams caught eight passes for 101 yards.
PASADENA – Jahvid Best made a 93-yard touchdown run and caught a 51-yard scoring pass, and California got back on track after two tough losses with a dynamic first half in a 45-26 victory over UCLA on Saturday. Shane Vereen rushed for 154 yards and a score, and Marvin Jones caught two TD passes from Kevin Riley in the Golden Bears’ first win in nearly a month. The victory was also the first career win in the Los Angeles area for Cal head coach Jeff Tedford, who grew up in nearby Downey, Calif. Riley thew for 205 yards and three scores without an interception, completing 14-of-23 passes. Kevin Prince passed for 311 yards but threw an interception in the final minutes for UCLA. Johnathan Franklin had a 74-yard TD run among his 101 yards rushing and two scores for the Bruins. The Bears went up 35-20 by halftime with a dizzying series of scoring plays. The most impressive play was made by Best, who uncorked the longest TD run of his three seasons with the Bears on a circuitous run through the UCLA defense late in the second quarter. Cutting back behind his blocking near Cal’s goal line and sweetly slipping two tackles, he picked up a downfield block from Riley and rolled to the end zone for the third-longest scoring run in school history. Best finished with 102 rushing yards on 18 attempts and also caught a 51-yard TD pass from Riley that was the longest reception of his career. Cal’s Mychal Kendricks killed UCLA’s faint comeback hopes when he returned an interception 68 yards for his first career score with 5:05 left.
October 3, 2009 • TV: ABC • Attendance: 71,799
Score by Quarters USC California
1 10 0
2 10 0
3 3 0
4 7 3
October 17, 2009 • TV: ABC • Attendance: 67,317
OT Score – 30 – 3
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 9:50 4:43 14:06 4:32 8:35 0:35 5:01
Scoring Play USC – McKnight 38 yd run (Congdon kick), 6-80-2:26 USC – Congdon 28 yd field goal, 8-76-3:22 USC – Williams 66 yd punt return (Congdon kick) USC – Congdon 25 yd field goal, 10-38-3:42 USC – Congdon 23 yd field goal, 14-70-6:20 CAL – D’Amato 29 yd field goal, 6-36-1:35 USC – McKnight 4 yd run (Congdon kick), 10-65-5:37
V-H 7-0 10-0 17-0 20-0 23-0 23-3 30-3
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
USC 20 174 283 20-35-1 457 77 5.9 1-0 5-55 3-120 7-460 1-66-1 2-39-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0 36:46 6 of 15 1 of 3 4-4 3-13 3-3 3-3
CAL 17 86 199 15-40-1 285 65 4.4 2-1 3-25 7-272 2-119 2-1-0 6-127-0 1-2-0 0-0-0 0 23:14 5 of 16 0 of 2 1-3 1-8 0-0 1-2
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS USC Rushing: McKnight 20-121 2 TD, Bradford 12-53, Gable 2-6, McNeal 1-3, Patterson 1-2, Team 3-(-3), Barkley 1-(-6) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Barkley 20-35-1-283-0 Receiving: Williams 8-101, McKnight 3-12, McCoy 2-37, Ayles 2-29, Butler 2-27, Ausberry 2-21, Havili 1-56 Tackles: Mays 10 INT, Horton 7 0.5 TFL, Galippo 5 1.0 SK 1.0 TFL 3 PBU, Morgan 5 1.0 TFL CAL Rushing: Best 14-47, Ross 2-24, Riley 6-8, Vereen 3-7 Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 15-40-1-199-0 Receiving: Miller 4-70, Jones 3-53, Ross 3-28, Best 2-5, Vereen 1-21, Tucker 1-14, Curran 1-8 Tackles: Ezeff 12, Mohamed 12, Young 8 1.0 TFL 1 FF 1 QBH, Kendricks 7
Score by Quarters California UCLA
Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 12:18 4:54 2:52 9:41 9:23 5:05 2:51 0:46 0:00 11:41 6:42 3:05 5:05
1 14 7
2 21 13
3 3 6
4 7 0
OT Score – 45 – 26
SCORING SUMMARY
Scoring Play CAL – Vereen 42 yd run (D’Amato kick), 7-80-2:42 CAL – Jones 43 yd pass from Riley (D’Amato kick), 1-43-0:08 UCLA – Franklin 7 yd run (Forbath kick), 4-39-1:53 CAL – Best 51 yd pass from Riley (D’Amato kick), 6-94-3:04 UCLA – Franklin 74 yd run (Forbaith kick), 1-74-0:13 CAL – Best 93 yd run (Tavecchio kick), 2-91-0:58 UCLA – Forbaith 24 yd field goal, 5-56-2:08 CAL – Jones 24 yd pass from Riley (Tavecchio kick), 7-80-2:05 UCLA – Forbath 39 yd field goal, 7-60-0:46 UCLA – Forbath 46 yd field goal, 8-51-3:14 CAL – Tavecchio 24 yd field goal, 9-68-4:52 UCLA – Forbath 35 yd field goal, 11-50-3:31 CAL – Kendricks 68 yd interception return (Tavecchio kick)
V-H 7-0 14-0 14-7 21-7 21-14 28-14 28-17 35-17 35-20 35-23 38-23 38-26 45-26.
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
CAL 17 289 205 14-23-0 494 64 7.7 1-0 7-79 7-350 8-507 2-10-0 2-46-0 1-68-1 1-16-0 0 32:16 6 of 16 0 of 0 1-1 3-23 6-6 1-1
UCLA 17 137 311 21-42-0 448 68 6.6 1-1 7-60 6-271 6-418 4-43-0 7-200-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 27:44 5 of 16 0 of 1 3-3 1-3 2-2 4-4
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS CAL Rushing: Vereen 17-154 TD, Best 18-102 TD, Riley 6-33 Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 14-23-0-205-3 Receiving: Jones 4-89 2 TD, Best 2-51 TD, Vereen 2-20, Miller 2-19, Boateng 2-14, Holley 1-7, Ross 1-5 Tackles: Mohamed 9, J. Hill 8, Hagan 5 3 PBU, Sofele 4, Conte 4 1 PBU UCLA Rushing: Franklin 11-101 2 TD, Prince 8-21, Thigpen 3-10, Moline 1-3, Presley 2-2, Ramirez 1-0 Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Prince 21-41-1-311-0 Receiving: Paulsen 5-96, Embree 5-89, Rosario 3-57, Austin 2-24, Thigpen 2-10, Knox 1-14, Moya 1-13, Moline 1-6, Presley 1-2 Tackles: Moore 9 1.0 TFL 1 PBU, Kyle Bosworth 7 1.5 TFL 1 PBU, Verner 7, Carter 6 1.0 TFL
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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GAME SUMMARIES 7-8 at CALIFORNIA 49, WASHINGTON STATE 17
CALIFORNIA 23, at ARIZONA STATE 21
BERKELEY – Kevin Riley (12-for-18, 229 yards) threw for touchdowns on his only three passes of the first quarter, Jahvid Best scored three touchdowns and California routed Washington State 49-17. Jeremy Ross scored on a 76-yard punt return, and Best ran for a season-high 159 yards and two scores on 13 carries to help Cal win for the second straight week. Ross returned the opening kickoff 54 yards. Two plays later, Best went in motion and ran past cornerback Brandon Jones to catch a 27-yard TD pass from Riley. Riley added a 37-yard TD pass to Jones on the next possession, the third TD in the past two weeks for that duo, and a 21-yard screen pass to Vereen for a touchdown late in the quarter that made it 28-3. Best also scored on a 61-yard run early in the second quarter to make it 35-3 early in the second quarter. Riley’s 61-yard pass to Ross on the Bears’ first drive of the third quarter set up Best’s third touchdown, a 2-yard run. Vereen added a 7-yard TD run in the fourth quarter for the final score.
TEMPE – Giorgio Tavecchio kicked a 24-yard field goal with 21 seconds left, and California rallied for a 23-21 victory over Arizona State. Tavecchio’s kick capped an 11-play, 74-yard drive that began at Cal’s 19 with 3:16 to go. Tavecchio also connected from 25 and 51 yards.. Quarterback Kevin Riley was 5-of-6 on the game-winning march, and he finished 27-of-44 with 351 passing yards and two touchdowns. Danny Sullivan passed for 244 yards and a touchdown for ASU (4-4, 2-3), but also threw two interceptions. The teams combined for 23 penalties for 238 yards and five turnovers. In the first two quarters, the Golden Bears and Sun Devils combined for four turnovers, five fumbles and 145 penalty yards. Cal jumped ahead 7-0 on an 11-yard pass from Riley to Jahvid Best less than five minutes into the game. The Bears made it 14-0 on a 12-yard strike from Riley to Marvin Jones. But, ASU tied it at 14-14 on a pair of one-play drives in the second quarter. After forcing a fumble by ASU’s Ryan Bass near their own goal line, the Bears gave the ball right back when Riley fumbled at his own 3, and on the next play backup quarterback Samson Szakacsy hit Jovon Williams for a 3-yard TD pass. ASU tied it at 14-14 on its next snap when Sullivan found Kyle Williams for an 80-yard TD.
October 24, 2009 • TV: None • Attendance: 54,738
Score by Quarters Washington State California
1 3 28
2 14 7
3 0 7
4 0 7
OT Score – 17 – 49
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 14:08 9:41 8:04 2:20 1:13 11:14 4:45 0:33 11:07 9:25
Scoring Play CAL – Best 27 yd pass from Riley (Tavecchio kick), 2-29-0:52 CAL – Jones 37 yd pass from Riley (Tavecchio kick), 6-89-2:26 CAL – Ross 76 yd punt return (Tavecchio kick) WSU – Grasu 24 yd field goal, 12-65-5:44 CAL – Vereen 21 yd pass from Riley (Tavecchio kick), 3-60-1:07 CAL – Best 61 yd run (Tavecchio kick), 2-67-0:55 WSU – Forzani 68 yd pass from Tuel (Grasu kick), 1-78-0:13 WSU – Simone 19 yd pass from Tuel (Grasu kick), 8-75-3:06 CAL – Best 2 yd run (Tavecchio kick), 5-89-1:29 CAL – Vereen 7 yd run (Tavecchio kick), 8-77-3:44
V-H 0-7 0-14 0-21 3-21 3-28 3-35 10-35 17-35 17-42 17-49
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
WSU 20 55 385 29-43-0 440 71 6.2 0-0 13-114 7-300 4-192 2-8-0 7-133-0 1-11-0 0-0-0 0 32:04 6 of 17 0 of 2 2-4 0-0 2-2 1-2
CAL 28 309 250 15-21-1 559 60 9.3 0-0 7-60 4-157 8-460 3-92-1 3-86-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 27:56 3 of 8 0 of 0 2-2 5-27 7-7 0-1
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS WSU Rushing: Winston 8-51, Mitz 8-13, Tardy 1-0, Tuel 11-(-9) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Tuel 28-42-0-354-2, Tardy 1-1-0-31-0 Receiving: Solomon 7-81 TD, Simone 6-86, Karstetter 6-66, Forzani 4-116- TD, Tatman 2-20, Winston 2-5, Tardy 1-10, Mitz 1-1 Tackles: Hicks 14, Nwachukwu 10, Ledgerwood 8 1 PBU, Hayward 7 CAL Rushing: Best 13-159 2 TD, Vereen 13-66 TD, DeBoskie-Johnson 6-41, Riley 3-26, Sofele 2-16, Holley 1-3, Team 1-(-2) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 12-18-1-229-3, Sweeney 3-3-0-21-0 Receiving: Jones 3-48 TD, Vereen 2-37, Miller 2-26, Ross 1-61, Best 1-27 TD, Curran 1-18, Sofele 1-10, Calvin 1-9, Holley 1-8, Tucker 1-4, Kapp 1-2 Tackles: Mohamed 12 1.0 TFL 2 QBH, Hagan 6 1.0 TFL 1 PBU, Bishop 6, Jordan 6 2.5 SK 2.5 TFL 3 QBH
134
October 31, 2009 • TV: ABC • Attendance: 43,659
Score by Quarters California Arizona State
1 14 0
2 3 14
3 3 0
4 3 7
OT Score – 23 – 21
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 10:18 4:11 10:21 7:12 1:00 7:11 10:21 0:21
Scoring Play CAL – Best 11 yd pass from Riley (Tavecchio kick), 4-67-0:52 CAL – Jones 12 yd pass from Riley (Tavecchio kick), 8-67-4:23 ASU – Williams, J. 3 yd pass from Szakacsy (Weber kick), 1-3-0:05 ASU – Williams, K. 80 yd pass from Sullivan (Weber kick), 1-80-0:12 CAL – Tavecchio 25 yd field goal, 6-24-0:53 CAL – Tavecchio 51 yd field goal, 7-10-2:58 ASU – Marshall 6 yd run (Weber kick), 7-61-3:44 CAL – Tavecchio 24 yd field goal, 11-74-2:55
V-H 7-0 14-0 14-7 14-14 17-14 20-14 20-21 23-21
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
CAL 23 57 351 27-45-0 408 75 5.4 4-2 12-115 5-265 6-358 3-23-0 4-67-0 2-38-0 0-0-0 0 34:42 5 of 16 0 of 0 4-5 0-0 2-2 3-5
ASU 15 82 247 17-30-2 329 56 5.9 2-1 11-123 7-330 4-245 2-26-0 5-110-0 0-0-0 1-8-0 0 25:18 4 of 12 0 of 1 2-3 3-19 3-3 0-0
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS CAL Rushing: Best 18-63, Ross 1-5, Vereen 1-2, Team 1-(-1), Sofele 1-(-3), Riley 8-(-9) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 27-44-0-351-2 Receiving: Best 7-61 TD, Jones 4-58 TD, Ross 3-67, Miller 3-47, Lagemann 3-38, Tucker 3-26, Vereen 2-20, Holley 1-22, Boateng 1-12 Tackles: Mohamed 12, J. Hill 5 1 FF, Holt 4, Johnson 4 1 FR 1 PBU ASU Rushing: Best 13-159 2 TD, Vereen 13-66 TD, DeBoskie-Johnson 6-41, Riley 3-26, Sofele 2-16, Holley 1-3, Team 1-(-2) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 12-18-1-229-3, Sweeney 3-3-0-21-0 Receiving: Jones 3-48 TD, Vereen 2-37, Miller 2-26, Ross 1-61, Best 1-27 TD, Curran 1-18, Sofele 1-10, Calvin 1-9, Holley 1-8, Tucker 1-4, Kapp 1-2 Tackles: McFoy 8, Burfict 7 1 FR 1 PBU, Nixon 7 2.0 TFL 1 FF 2 PBU, Holman 6, Goethel 6, Guy 5 2.0 SK 2.0 TFL 1 FF 1 FR
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
GAME SUMMARIES 9-10 OREGON STATE 31, at CALIFORNIA 14
at CALIFORNIA 24, ARIZONA 16
BERKELEY – Sean Canfield threw for 342 yards and two touchdowns and ran for a score Saturday night in Oregon State’s 31-14 victory over California, which lost star tailback Jahvid Best after he took a scary fall. Cal couldn’t recover from seeing Best land hard in the end zone after a seven-yard leaping touchdown in the second quarter. His teammates went down on their knees and waited, then moved to the end zone as trainers and doctors took him away on a stretcher. The game was delayed 13 minutes. Some of Oregon State’s players who were on the field at the time huddled together in support. Best was transported to a local emergency room and stayed overnight before being released on Sunday. CT scans and x-rays came back normal. The Golden Bears, who had won three straight to get back in the Top 25 for the first time following a four-week absence, lost their fifth straight at home to the Beavers dating back to the last Cal win over Oregon State at Memorial Stadium in 1997. Canfield completed 29 of 39 passes with nine to Jacquizz Rodgers and six each to James Rodgers and Joe Halahuni. Canfield completed 11 of his first 13 passes, including five straight to start the game. Cal quarterback Kevin Riley, who was helped off the field just before halftime after a hard hit, was 19 of 34 for 200 yards and one touchdown.
BERKELEY – Shane Vereen scored on a 61-yard run after an illegal forward pass on the previous Arizona drive had knocked the Wildcats out of position for a potential game-winning field goal, and the Golden Bears went on to a 24-16 victory over the 18th-ranked Wildcats on Saturday. “Everyone had No. 4 in their heads all game,” Vereen said of Best. “He was riding with us and we needed to pick him up.” Best gave the Bears (7-3, 4-3) an emotional boost with his presence on the sideline and participation in the coin toss as an honorary captain just a week after being carried off this same field on a stretcher following a scary concussion. But it took much more than that to beat the Wildcats (6-3, 4-2). Giorgio Tavecchio kicked four field goals and Shane Vereen rushed for 159 yards on 30 carries (both career highs). “Shane was a workhorse today,” Tedford said. “I’ve said numerous times how fortunate we are to have two quality running backs and two great kids who support one another and are equally capable of big plays at any time.”
November 14, 2009 • TV: Versus • Attendance: 56,496
November 7, 2009 • TV: FSN/CSN Bay Area/AFN • Attendance: 56,496
Score by Quarters Oregon State California
1 7 0
2 14 7
3 3 0
4 7 7
OT Score – 31 – 14
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 3:48 13:46 6:07 1:56 10:29 2:08 1:01
Scoring Play V-H OSU – Canfield 1 yd run (Kahut kick), 6-57-2:50 7-0 OSU – Rodgers, Jac. 15 yd pass from Canfield (Kahut kick), 8-90-3:05 14-0 CAL – Best 7 yd run (Tavecchio kick), 15-81-7:33 14-7 OSU – Bishop 3 yd pass from Canfield (Kahut kick), 11-56-4:06 21-7 OSU – Kahut 24 yd field goal, 4-8-1:47 24-7 OSU – Rodgers, Jac. 24 yd run (Kahut kick), 12-80-6:57 31-7 CAL – Tucker 3 yd pass from Riley (Tavecchio kick), 8-66-0:58 31-14
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
OSU 23 94 342 29-39-1 436 78 5.6 2-0 6-36 4-161 6-361 2-11-0 2-34-0 1-18-0 0-0-0 0 36:05 11 of 18 1 of 1 4-4 2-10 4-4 1-2
CAL 14 39 200 19-34-1 239 58 4.1 1-0 5-32 8-339 2-87 0-0-0 6-103-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0 23:55 4 of 13 0 of 0 2-2 0-0 2-2 0-0
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS OSU Rushing: Rodgers, Jac. 25-67 TD, Rodgers, Jam. 7-31, Canfield 5-0, Team 2-(-4) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Canfield 29-39-1-342-2 Receiving: Rodgers, Jac. 9-30, Halahuni 6-128, Rodgers, Jam. 6-80 TD, Adeniji 5-87, Camp 1-10, McCants 1-4, Bishop 1-3 TD Tackles: Kristick 7 1.0 SK 1.0 TFL, Mitchell 6 INT, Hardin 6 CAL Rushing: Best 9-29 TD, Ross 2-12, Vereen 5-9, Holley 1-0, Team 1-(-2), Riley 6-(-9) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 19-34-1-200-1 Receiving: Tucker 6-74 TD, Vereen 3-6, Boateng 2-27, Ross 2-26, Lagemann 2-23, Jones 1-24, Sparks 1-21, Sofele 1-3, Best 1-(-4) Tackles: Alualu 9, Cattouse 8 1.0 TFL INT, Thompson 8 3.0 TFL, Mohamed 7 1.5 TFL QBH, Holt 7 2.0 TFL
Score by Quarters Arizona California
1 0 3
2 10 6
3 0 6
4 6 9
OT Score – 16 – 24
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 9:12 14:17 3:27 0:22 0:00 8:21 12:26 4:46 1:21
Scoring Play CAL – Tavecchio 46 yd field goal, 11-56-5:48 CAL – Tavecchio 22 yd field goal, 8-27-3:48 ARIZ – Antolin 1 yd run (Zendejas kick), 10-93-4:47 ARIZ – Zendejas 36 yd field goal, 7-37-1:30 CAL – Tavecchio 46 yd field goal, 5-32-0:22 CAL – Curran 27 yd pass from Riley (Riley rush fumbled), 1-27-0:08
V-H 0-3 0-6 7-6 10-6 10-9 10-15 ARIZ – Simmons 8 yd pass from Foles (Foles pass failed), 10-80-4:20 16-15 CAL – Tavecchio 22 yd field goal, 13-72-7:35 16-18 CAL – Vereen 61 yd run, 1-61-0:09 (Tm rush fumbled), 1-61-0:09 16-24
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
ARIZ 18 72 202 25-41-1 274 69 4.0 1-1 8-65 6-216 4-218 1-1-0 6-142-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 0 28:13 3 of 13 0 of 2 3-3 3-11 1-1 1-1
CAL 18 176 181 13-22-2 357 62 5.8 1-0 6-75 4-171 6-358 1-46-0 3-18-0 1-14-0 0-0-0 0 31:47 2 of 10 0 of 0 2-3 3-18 0-1 4-5
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS ARIZ Rushing: Antolin 19-78 TD, Scott 3-15, Wright 1-0, Nwoko 1-(-3), Foles 4-(-17) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Foles 25-41-1-201-1 Receiving: Roberts 4-52, Turner 4-27, Dean 3-32, Antolin 3-14, Simmons 2-34, Criner 2-17, Douglas 2-16, Wright 2-9, Grigsby 1-6, Gronkowski 1-3, Foles 1-(-9) Tackles: Mitchell 9 1.0 SK 2.0 TFL FF QBH, Wade 7, Ross 6 1.0 TFL PBU, Lewis 6 1.0 TFL, Elmore 6 1.0 SK 1.0 TFL CAL Rushing: Vereen 30-159 TD, DeBoskie-Johnson 1-12, Riley 8-7, TEAM 1-(-2) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 13-22-2-181-1 Receiving: Jones 5-65, Tucker 3-58, Lagemann 2-24, Curran 1-27, Vereen 1-10, Ross 1-(-3) Tackles: Mohamed 9 PBU, Kendricks 8 PBU, Nnabuife 7, Jordan 7 1.5 TFL 0.5 SK, Alualu 7 2.0 TFL FF 1.05 SK 1 QBH, Bishop 6 1.0 TFL 1.0 SK, Thompson 5, Young 4 FR PBU
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
135
GAME SUMMARIES 11-12 at WASHINGTON 42, CALIFORNIA 10
CALIFORNIA 34, at STANFORD 28 November 21, 2009 • TV: Versus • Attendance: 50,510
December 5, 2009 • TV: CSN California/FSN Northwest • Attendance: 62,334
STANFORD – Shane Vereen ran for a career-high 193 yards and a career-high-tying three touchdowns on a careerhigh 42 carries and Mike Mohamed intercepted an Andrew Luck pass at the Cal 3-yard line with 1:36 left as California won the 112th Big Game, 34-28. Stanford’s Toby Gerhart rushed for 136 yards and four touchdowns, carrying defenders on a 29-yard reception that set up Stanford at the Cal 13 with less than 2 minutes left. But after throwing an incompletion on first down, Luck was intercepted by Mohamed on second with 1:36 to go, setting off a wild celebration on the Cal sideline. After Kevin Riley took three knees, the Cal students rushed the field and Stanford Stadium as the Golden Bears won the coveted Axe for the seventh time in eight years. The Golden Bears scored touchdowns on four consecutive drives at one point to turn the early 14-0 deficit into a 31-21 lead early in the fourth quarter. Stanford closed the Cal lead to 31-28 on Gerhart’s fourth rushing touchdown of the game on a five-yard run before Cal kicked a field goal to go up 34-28 with 2:42 to go. Stanford drove down the field and was in position to win until Luck’s interception.
SEATTLE – Jake Locker threw for three touchdowns and ran for two more, and the Huskies closed out their redemptive first season under Steve Sarkisian with a 42-10 win over California. Locker started with a 40-yard TD pass to Jermaine Kearse on Washington's first drive, then added touchdown runs of 19 and 2 yards in the second quarter as the Huskies jumped to a 21-3 lead and were never challenged. Locker added TD throws in the third quarter of 21 yards and 13 yards to Devin Aguilar. He completed 19 of 23 passes for 248 yards, while running 14 times for 77 yards. Chris Polk added 94 yards rushing and a touchdown for Washington. Kearse had seven catches for 147 yards and a TD -- all in the first half -- while Aguilar grabbed five passes for 72 yards and two scores. Shane Vereen rushed for 92 yards with most of it coming on a 50-yard dash in the first quarter. Kevin Riley was 14 of 32 for 215 yards with a 22-yard TD pass to Nyan Boateng, but fumbled twice. Marvin Jones posted career highs with six receptions and 107 receiving yards. Tyson Alualu had another standout game defensively for the Bears, making a season-high-tying eight tackles with 1.5 sacks.
Score by Quarters California Stanford
Score by Quarters California Washington
1 3 14
2 7 0
3 14 7
4 10 7
OT Score – 34 – 28
Time 13:24 4:46 0:53 0:45 9:55 3:50 0:12 13:14 7:01 2:42
Scoring Play STAN – Gerhart 61 yd run (Whitaker kick), 3-69-1:36 STAN – Gerhart 2 yd run (Whitaker kick), 5-19-2:09 CAL – D’Amato 21 yd field goal, 10-70-3:47 CAL – Vereen 1 yd run (D’Amato kick), 14-85-5:48 CAL – Vereen 4 yd run (D’Amato kick), 11-92-5:02 CAL – Vereen 3 yd run (D’Amato kick), 10-72-5:02 STAN – Gerhart 1 yd run (Whitaker kick), 8-69-3:32 CAL – Jones 12 yd pass from Riley (D’Amato kick), 6-72-1:49 STAN – Gerhart 5 yd run (Whitaker kick), 6-87-1:45 CAL – D’Amato 28 yd field goal, 5-12-0:46
V-H 0-7 0-14 3-14 10-14 17-14 24-14 24-21 31-21 31-28 34-28
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
CAL 31 242 235 17-31-1 477 88 5.4 1-0 2-23 4-115 7-374 1-6-0 5-110-0 1-6-0 0-0-0 0 39:06 11 of 19 0 of 0 6-7 0-0 4-4 2-2
STAN 16 188 157 10-30-1 345 58 5.9 2-0 3-30 4-169 5-340 0-0-0 7-144-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 20:54 6 of 12 0 of 1 3-4 0-0 4-4 0-1
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS CAL Rushing: Vereen 42-193 3 TD, Riley 9-28, DeBoskie-Johnson 2-17, Sofele 1-8, Team 3-(-4) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 17-31-1-235-1 Receiving: Jones 4-45 TD, Miller 3-53, Tucker 3-48, Lagemann 3-31, Curran 1-21, Ross 1-14, Sofele 1-13, Vereen 1-10 Tackles: Mohamed 10 0.5 TFL 1 INT, Bishop 5 1 PBU, Nnabuife 4 1 PBU, Cattouse 4, Alualu 4 0.5 TFL, Jordan 4 0.5 PBU STAN Rushing: Gerhart 20-136 4 TD, Luck 7-31, Gaffney 1-21 Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Luck 10-30-1-157-0 Receiving: Owusu 2-49, R. Whalen 2-23, Fleener 2-12, Reuland 1-31, Gerhart 1-29, G. Whalen 1-9, Taylor 1-4 Tackles: Howell 15, Skov 12 0.5 TFL, Macaluso 10, Udofia 8, Keiser 7 1.0 TFL, McNally 6, Sherman 6 1 INT 2 PBU
136
2 0 14
3 7 14
4 0 7
OT Score – 10 – 42
SCORING SUMMARY
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
1 3 7
Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 7:45 5:46 10:50 1:12 12:41 10:09 7:41 3:23
Scoring Play WASH – Kearse 40 yd pass from Locker (Folk kick), 3-75-1:34 CAL – D'Amato 29 yd field goal, 6-58-1:51 WASH – Locker 19 yd run (Folk kick), 3-34-1:17 WASH – Locker 2 yd run (Folk kick), 10-81-3:58 WASH – Aguilar 21 yd pass from Locker (Folk kick), 5-65-2:12 CAL – Boateng 22 yd pass from Riley (D'Amato kick), 5-87-2:24 WASH – Aguilar 13 yd pass from Locker (Folk kick), 5-51-2:19 WASH – Polk 10 yd run (Folk kick), 6-41-3:25
V-H 0-7 3-7 3-14 3-21 3-28 10-28 10-35 10-42
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
CAL 14 81 215 14-32-0 296 61 4.9 3-2 5-45 5-221 3-178 1-14-0 7-141-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 26:20 2 of 12 1 of 2 1-2 2-10 1-1 1-2
WASH 25 177 286 20-24-0 463 63 7.3 2-0 2-10 5-173 7-396 2-28-0 3-77-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0 33:40 2 of 10 2 of 3 4-5 5-35 6-6 0-0
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS CAL Rushing: Vereen 16-92, Sofele 2-2, DeBoskie-Johnson 1-(-5), Riley 10-(-8) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 14-32-0-215-1 Receiving: Jones 6-107, Vereen 3-25, Boateng 2-35 TD, Curran 1-32, Ross 1-12, Miller 1-4 Tackles: Alualu 8 1.5 SK 1.5 TFL, Nnabuife 7 1.5 TFL, Young 6 0.5 TFL 1 FF, Johnson 5, Bishop 5, D. Hagan 5, Mohamed 5 WASH Rushing: Polk 22-94 TD, Locker 14-77 2 TD, Griffin 2-3, Shaw 1-3 Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Locker 19-23-0-248-3, Bruns 1-1-0-38-0 Receiving: Kearse 7-147 TD, Aguilar 5-72 2 TD, Middleton 3-42, Johnson 2-16, Polk 2-10, Izbicki 1 (-1) Tackles: Dennison 7 1 FR, Te'o-Nesheim 7 3.0 SK 4.5 TFL 2 FF, Trufant 7 2 PBU, Butler 6 1.0 SK 3.0 TFL, Williams 6 1.0 TFL
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
GAME SUMMARY 13 POINSETTIA BOWL – UTAH 37, CALIFORNIA 27 December 23, 2009 • TV: ESPN • Attendance: 32,665
SAN DIEGO – Jordan Wynn completed 26 of 36 passes for a career-high 338 yards and three touchdowns to rally No. 23 Utah from an early two-touchdown deficit to a 37-27 victory over California in the Poinsettia Bowl. The Utes scored 27 straight points to win their ninth straight bowl game, the longest current streak in the country and tied for the second-longest ever. The Golden Bears, in a bowl game for the school-record seventh straight year, had their four-game postseason winning streak snapped. Utah's defense came up big, too. The Utes sacked Cal's Kevin Riley five times and intercepted him twice, with linebacker Stevenson Sylvester returning a tipped pass 27 yards for a touchdown late in the game. Riley also lost a fumble. Shane Vereen, who scored twice, was the seventh Cal back to gain more than 100 yards in a bowl, finishing with 122 yards on 20 carries. Utah looked overmatched after Cal scored twice in 11 seconds midway through the first quarter. Vereen scored on a 36-yard run and Eddie Young intercepted Wynn on the first play of Utah's next drive and returned it 31 yards for a score. After that it was all Utah. Score by Quarters Utah California
1 7 14
2 17 0
3 3 7
4 10 6
OT Score – 37 – 27
SCORING SUMMARY Qtr 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Time 6:06 5:55 1:35 9:31 4:58 0:43 3:13 0:39 13:05 5:27 1:46
Scoring Play CAL – Vereen 36 yd run (D'Amato kick), 6-54-1:50 CAL – Young 31 yd interception return (D'Amato kick) UU – Moeai 6 yd pass from Wynn (Phillips kick), 8-30-4:20 UU – Phillps 28 yd field goal, 9-66-3:26 UU – Moeai 15 yd pass from Wynn (Phillips kick), 8-56-2:51 UU – Brooks 21 yd pass from Wynn (Phillips kick), 6-72-2:37 UU – Phillips 29 yd field goal, 4-2-0:58 CAL – Vereen 1 yd run (D'Amato kick), 6-77-2:34 UU – Phillips 25 yd field goal, 6-57-2:34 UU – Sylvester 27 yd interception return (Phillips kick) CAL – Ross 24 yd pass from Riley (Riley pass failed)
V-H 0-7 0-14 7-14 10-14 17-14 24-14 27-14 27-21 30-21 37-21 37-27
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS NET YARDS RUSHING NET YARDS PASSING Completions-Attempts-Int TOTAL OFFENSE YARDS Total Offense Plays Average Gain Per Play Fumbles: Number Lost Penalties: Number-Yards PUNTS-YARDS KICKOFFS-YARDS Punt Returns: Number-Yards-TD Kickoff Returns: Number-Yards-TD Interceptions: Number-Yards-TD Fumble Returns: Number-Yards-TD Miscellaneous Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards PAT Kicks Field Goals
UU 20 51 338 26-37-1 389 72 5.4 0-0 5-35 5-198 8-517 3-2-0 4-111-0 2-27-1 0-0-0 0 35:19 4 of 15 1 of 2 5-5 4-24 4-4 3-3
CAL 17 96 214 20-36-2 310 64 4.8 1-1 4-33 7-251 4-242 0-0-0 7-135-0 1-31-1 0-0-0 0 24:41 3 of 14 2 of 2 1-1 3-9 3-3 0-0
INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS UU Rushing: Wide 21-37, Shakerin 7-28, Smithson 1-(-1), Wynn 6-(-12) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Wynn 26-36-1-338-3, Smithson 0-1-0-0-0 Receiving: Brooks 7-76 TD, Reed 6-103, Wide 4-83, Matthews 3-20, Moeai 2-21 2 TD, Smithson 2-18, Key 2-17 Tackles: Sylvester 8 0.5 TFL1 INT 1 PBU, Siliga 6 1.0 TFL 1.0 SK, Misi 6 1.5 TFL 0.5 SK, Burton 4 2.0 TFL 1 PBU, Johnson 4 1 INT 2 PBU CAL Rushing: Vereen 20-132 2 TD, DeBoskie-Johnson 1-0, Riley 7-(-26) Passing (C-A-I-Yds-TD): Riley 20-36-2-214-1 Receiving: Miller 5-55, Jones 5-44, Tucker 3-30, Vereen 3-20, Ross 2-29 TD, Boateng 1-25, Lagemann 1-11 Tackles: Cattouse 8 1.0 TFL 1 PBU, Kendricks 7 3.0 TFL 1 PBU 1.0 SK, Young 7 1 INT, Mohamed 7 1.0 TFL, Nnabuife 5 0.5 TFL, Alualu 5 1.5 TFL, Jordan 4 1.0 TFL 1.0 SK, Payne 3 2.0 TFL, 1.0 SK
GOLDEN BEAR TEAM AWARDS KEN HARVEY AWARD
BOB SIMMONS AWARD
(Player Showing Special Academic Commitment and Improvement) Syd’Quan Thompson
(Most Valuable Freshman) Offense: Matt Summers-Gavin Defense: Aaron Tipoti
STUB ALLISON AWARD
J. SCOTT DUNCAN AWARD
(Most Inspirational Player) Sean Cattouse
DINK ARTAL AWARD (Player Best Exemplifying Cal Spirit) Brian Holley, Eddie Young
KEN COTTON AWARD (Most Courageous Player) Offense: Mike Tepper Defense: Devin Bishop
MOST IMPROVED PLAYER Skylar Curran
LIFTER OF THE YEAR Freshman: Mark Brazinski Senior: Tyson Alualu
SCOUT TEAM PLAYERS OF THE YEAR Offense: T.J. Emery, Ryan Wertenberger Defense: Steven Fanua, Keni Kaufusi Special Teams: Tyré Ellison, Spencer Hagan
SCHLESSINGER COACHES AWARD (Outstanding Athletic Ability, Academic Success and Community Service) Derrick Hill
BOB TESSIER AWARD (Most Improved Linemen) Offense: Justin Cheadle Defense: Cameron Jordan
BRICK MULLER AWARD (Most Valuable Linemen) Offense: Mitchell Schwartz Defense: Tyson Alualu
(Most Valuable Special Teams Player) Bryan Anger
ANDY SMITH AWARD (player with the Most Big "C" Time) Mike Mohamed
BERKELEY BREAKFAST CLUB AWARD (Outstanding Player in the Big Game) Offense: Shane Vereen Defense: Mike Mohamed
MOST VALUABLE BACK Offense: Kevin Riley Defense: Syd’Quan Thompson
JOE ROTH AWARD (Player Best Exemplifying Courage, Attitude and Sportsmanship) Tyson Alualu
EVERETT MERRIMAN AWARD (Demonstrating Commitment to Community Service) Kevin Parker
CORT MAJORS AWARD* (Team Captain) Offense: Kevin Riley Defense: Tyson Alualu
BEAR BACKERS AWARD* (Most Valuable Player) Offense: Jahvid Best, Shane Vereen Defense: Mike Mohamed *Voted on by team
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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FORMER PLAYER CAREER BIOGRAPHIES TYSON ALUALU
44
#
(AH-loo AH-loo)
(JAH-vid)
DL, 6-3, 290............................Honolulu, HI 2006-09...................................St. Louis HS CAL CAREER: Played all 52 games possible with 40 starts from 2006-09, including a run of 39 consecutive starts over his final three campaigns to end his career … finished with 195 tackles (78 unassisted, 117 assisted) to go along with 26.0 tackles for loss (-134 yards), 16.0 sacks (-111 yards), four forced fumbles, four fumble recoveries, an interception that he returned eight yards, six pass breakups, 11 quarterback hurries and a blocked kick … returned the first of his four fumble recoveries four yards for a touchdown vs. Arizona in 2007 … wore number 90 the first season he played at Cal in 2006, before switching to number 44 for his final three campaigns from 2007-09.
ALUALU’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS YEAR G-GS UA-A-TOT TFL SACK INT PBU FF FR 2006 13-1 4-12-16 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 2007 13-13 23-29-52 3.5-20 2.5-17 1-8 1 0 4 2008 13-13 21-41-62 11.0-66 6.0-51 0 2 2 0 2009 13-13 30-35-65 11.5-48 7.5-43 0 3 2 0 Totals 52-40 78-117-195 26.0-134 16.0-111 1-8 6 4 4 *Other Stats: Alualu returned one of his four fumble recoveries four yards for a touchdown vs. Arizona in 2007; Alualu recorded one blocked kick vs. Louisiana Tech in 2007.
ALUALU’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
(BEE-mole)
TB, 5-10, 195............................ Vallejo, CA 2007-09................................... Salesian HS CAL CAREER: Played three seasons at Cal from 2007-09 … a first-team All-Pac-10 choice in 2007 and 2008, and a second-team selection in 2009… played in 31 games with 19 starts … finished his career ranked among Cal’s all-time leaders in 200-yard rushing games (3, No. 1), rushing touchdowns (29, No. 3-T), total touchdowns (35, No. 4), all-purpose running (4,045, No. 5), 100-yard rushing games (13, No. 6), rushing yardage (2,668, No. 7) and scoring (210, No. 9) ... scored 16 touchdowns in both 2008 and 2009, with the number ranking fourth on the school’s single-season list and only one shy of Cal’s modern-era record and two short of the school’s all-time mark … had career rushing averages of 7.3 yards per carry and 86.1 yards per game … added career totals of 844 yards in kick returns on 32 attempts (26.4 ypr) as well as 62 receptions for 533 receiving yards and six touchdown catches ... recorded 50 plays of 20 or more yards (25 rush, 3 receiving, 22 kick return) ... the only Cal player in history with more than one 200-yard rushing outing ... posted seven consecutive games of 100 or more rushing yards that included the final four contests of 2008 and the first three of 2009, totaling 1,228 rushing yards and 17 touchdowns on the ground on 126 carries (9.7 ypr, 175.4 ypg) during the span ... posted 34 career rushes of 20+ yards, to go along with 11 of 60+ yards and four of 80 or more ... missed spring football in both 2008 and 2009 after a hip injury following the 2007 campaign and foot and elbow surgeries after the 2008 season ... missed the final four contests of 2009 after sustaining an injury when he landed hard in the end zone on a seven-yard touchdown run vs. Oregon State …named a Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week four times, picking up the honor on three occasions as a 2008 sophomore and once during his 2009 junior campaign.
BEST’S CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS
Tackles: 10 (vs. Washington, 2008) Tackles For Loss: 2.0 (six times, last vs. Arizona, 2009) Sacks: 2.0 (three times, last at Minnesota, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (four times, last vs. Arizona, 2009) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (four times, last at Stanford, 2007) Interceptions: 1 (at Oregon, 2007) Pass Breakups: 2 (vs. UCLA, 2008) Quarterback Hurries: 2 (three times, last vs. Oregon, 2008) Blocked Kicks: 1 (at Louisiana Tech, 2007)
KEVIN BEMOLL
4
#
JAHVID BEST
YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 10-0 12-11 9-8 31-19
NO 29 194 141 364
YDS 221 1580 867 2668
AVG 7.6 8.1 6.1 7.3
TD 2 15 12 29
BEST’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS
50
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DL, 6-4, 334...................Mission Viejo, CA 2005-09...........................Mission Viejo HS CAL CAREER: Played in three career games from 2005-09, switching to the defensive side of the ball for his final season in 2009 after spending the previous time during his college career as an offensive lineman.
YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 10-0 12-11 9-8 31-19
NO 13 27 22 62
YDS 74 246 213 533
AVG 5.7 9.1 9.7 8.6
TD 1 1 4 6
LONG 16 42 51 51
BEST’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 10-0 12-11 9-8 31-19
NO 15 16 1 32
YDS 405 421 18 844
AVG 27.0 26.3 18.0 26.4
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 54 54 18 54
BEST’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 10-0 12-11 9-8 31-19
UA-A-TOT 8-4-12 2-0-2 0-1-1 10-5-15
TFL 0.0-0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0.0-0
SACK 0.0-0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0.0-0
INT 0 0 0 0
BEST’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Rushes: 26 (at Minnesota, 2009) Rushing Yards: 311 (vs. Washington, 2008) Rushing TDs: 5 (at Minnesota, 2009) Long Rush: 93TD (at UCLA, 2009) Receptions: 7 (at Arizona State, 2009) Receiving Yards: 65 (at Maryland, 2008) Receiving TDs: 1 (five times, last at Arizona State, 2009) Long Reception: 51TD (at UCLA, 2009) Kick Returns: 4 (three times, last at Oregon State, 2008) Kick Return Yards: 135 (at Maryland, 2008) Long Kick Return: 54 (twice, last at Maryland, 2008) Tackles: 2 (five times, last vs. Oregon State, 2007) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (at Oregon, 2007) Points: 30 (at Minnesota, 2009)
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LONG 64 86 93 93
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
PBU FF FR 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
10
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DEVIN BISHOP
G-GS 12-0 13-9 25-9
(BOSS-kah-vich)
LB, 6-1, 239................. San Francisco, CA 2007-09.....San Francisco CC/Will C. Wood HS
OL, 6-4, 304......................... Los Altos, CA 2006-09............................... St. Francis HS
CAL CAREER: Appeared in 25 games with nine starts, making 69 tackles (37 unassisted, 32 assisted) while adding 5.0 tackles for loss (-29 yards), 2.5 sacks (-22 yards) and one pass breakup … also returned two kicks for 30 yards.
CAL CAREER: Played in 37 games with 15 starts … picked up first-team Pac-10 All-Academic recognition in each of his final two seasons.
BISHOP’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
UA-A-TOT 6-7-13 31-25-56 37-32-69
TFL 0.5-1 4.5-28 5.0-29
SACK 0.0-0 2.5-22 2.5-22
INT PBU FF FR 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0
G-GS 12-0 13-9 25-9
NO 1 1 2
YDS 15 15 30
AVG 15.0 15.0 15.0
TD 0 0 0
20
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JESSE BROOKS
DB, 5-11, 197......................... Oakland, CA 2005-09....................... Bishop O’Dowd HS
BISHOP’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
70
#
MARK BOSKOVICH
LONG 15 15 15
CAL CAREER: Played in 25 games all off the bench and primarily on special teams from 2006-09, recording 12 tackles (six unassisted, six assisted).
BISHOP’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Tackles: 8 (at Oregon, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 1.0 (three times, last vs. Arizona, 2009) Sacks: 1.0 (twice, last vs. Arizona, 2009) Pass Breakups: 1 (at Stanford, 2009) Kick Returns: 1 (twice, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Kick Return Yards: 15 (twice, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Long Kick Return: 15 (twice, last vs. Oregon State, 2009)
BROOKS’ CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS YEAR 2006 2007 2008 2009 Totals
8
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NYAN BOATENG (rhymes with Ryan)
WR, 6-2, 211......................... Brooklyn, NY 2007-09........................ Florida/Lincoln HS CAL CAREER: Recorded totals of 42 receptions, 630 receiving yards and seven touchdown catches in 24 games and five starts, averaging 15.0 yards per catch and 26.2 receiving yards per contest … recorded two career tackles (one unassisted, one assisted) … made his Cal debut in 2008 after transferring from Florida in the spring of 2007 … practiced with the team during the spring and fall of 2007, but did not play during the 2007 season due to transfer requirements.
G-GS 4-0 6-0 11-0 4-0 25-0
UA-A-TOT 2-1-3 0-0-0 4-2-6 0-3-3 6-6-12
TFL 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0
SACK 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0
INT PBU FF FR 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0
BROOKS’ CAREER GAME HIGHS Tackles: 2 (three times, last vs. Eastern Washington, 2009)
83
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SKYLAR CURRAN
TE, 6-4, 256........................ Woodland, CA 2007-09........ Butte College/Woodland HS CAL CAREER: Played in 16 games with three starts, making eight catches for 130 yards and two touchdowns.
BOATENG’S CAREER CAL RECEIVING STATISTICS YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 13-5 11-0 24-5
NO 29 13 42
YDS 439 191 630
AVG 15.1 14.7 15.0
TD 5 2 7
LONG 53 39 53
BOATENG’S CAREER CAL RUSHING STATISTICS YEAR G-GS NO YDS AVG TD LONG 2008 13-5 1 0 0.0 0 0 2009 11-0 0 0 0.0 0 0 Totals 24-5 1 0 0.0 0 0 *Other Stats: Boateng had two tackles (one unassisted, one assisted) in 2008.
BOATENG’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Receptions: 4 (three times, last at USC, 2008) Receiving Yards: 67 (vs. UCLA, 2008) Receiving TDs: 1 (seven times, last at Washington, 2009) Long Reception: 53TD (vs. UCLA, 2008) Points: 6 (seven times, last at Washington, 2009)
CURRAN’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 3-0 13-3 16-3
NO 0 8 8
YDS 0 130 130
AVG 0.0 16.2 16.2
TD 0 2 2
LONG 0 32 32
CURRAN’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Receptions: 1 (eight times, last at Washington, 2009) Receiving Yards: 32 (at Washington, 2009) Receiving TDs: 1 (twice, last vs. Arizona, 2009) Long Reception: 32 (at Washington, 2009) Points: 6 (twice, last vs. Arizona, 2009)
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29
#
MARCUS EZEFF (EE-zeff)
DB, 5-11, 219.................... Santa Rosa, CA 2005-09............................ Montgomery HS CAL CAREER: Played in 44 games with 25 starts, including 20 in a row at safety that included all 13 games of his 2008 junior campaign through the first seven games of his 2009 senior season … other career defensive totals included 153 tackles (94 unassisted, 59 assisted), 3.0 tackles for loss (-9 yards), 0.5 sacks (-4 yards), three interceptions that he returned for 78 yards including a 69-yard touchdown against UCLA in 2008, eight pass breakups, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery.
HOLLEY’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Rushes: 1 (three times, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Rushing Yards: 5 (vs. Maryland, 2009) Long Rush: 5 (vs. Maryland, 2009) Receptions: 2 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Receiving Yards: 32 (vs. Eastern Washington, 2009) Long Reception: 22 (at Arizona State, 2009) Kick Returns: 2 (vs. Washington State, 2007) Kick Return Yards: 37 (vs. Washington State, 2007) Long Kick Return: 28 (vs. Washington State, 2007)
EZEFF’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS YEAR G-GS UA-A-TOT TFL SACK INT PBU FF FR 2006 12-0 7-5-12 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0 2007 9-4 33-14-47 2.0-8 0.5-4 0 1 1 0 2008 13-13 36-30-66 1.0-1 0.0-0 3-78 6 0 1 2009 10-8 18-10-28 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0 Totals 44-25 94-59-153 3.0-9 0.5-4 3-78 8 1 1 *Other Stats: Ezeff returned one of his three interceptions 69 yards for a touchdown at UCLA in 2008.
EZEFF’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Tackles: 14 (vs. Arizona, 2007) Tackles For Loss: 1.5 (vs. Tennessee, 2007) Sacks: 0.5 (vs. Louisiana Tech, 2007) Forced Fumbles: 1 (at Oregon, 2007) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (at Arizona, 2008) Interceptions: 2 (vs. UCLA, 2008) Pass Breakups: 2 (twice, last vs. Oregon, 2008) Points: 6 (vs. UCLA, 2008)
33
#
FB, 5-10, 235......................... Pomona, CA 2005-09...................... Diamond Ranch HS CAL CAREER: Moved into the role of starting fullback as a fifth-year senior in 2009 after being a special teams standout and also a backup fullback in his first three seasons of action from 2007-09, after not playing in 2006 and redshirting in 2005 … ended up playing in 37 games and making 11 starts, recording six catches for 80 yards, three rushes for eight yards, three kick returns for 40 yards and two assisted tackles.
HOLLEY’S CAREER RUSHING STATISTICS G-GS 13-1 11-0 13-11 37-11
NO 0 0 3 3
YDS 0 0 8 8
AVG 0.0 0.0 2.7 2.7
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 0 5 5
HOLLEY’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 13-1 11-0 13-10 37-11
NO 0 0 6 6
YDS 0 0 80 80
AVG 0.0 0.0 13.3 13.3
DB, 6-1, 194....................... Las Vegas, NV 2005-09............................ Green Valley HS CAL CAREER: Played in 49 games with 22 starts, contributing 107 tackles (69 unassisted, 38 assisted), 0.5 tackles for loss (-1 yard), three interceptions that he returned for 64 yards, one blocked kick that he was credited with a five-yard return for before teammate Bryant Nnabuife ran it back another five yards for a score in the 2008 season-opener vs. Michigan State, eight pass breakups, two forced fumbles and one fumble recovery … returned one of his three career interceptions 43 yards for a touchdown in a 42-7 victory over Colorado State in 2008.
JOHNSON’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
BRIAN HOLLEY
YEAR 2007 2008 2009 Totals
TD 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 0 22 22
YEAR G-GS UA-A-TOT TFL SACK INT PBU FF FR 2006 11-0 2-2-4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0 2007 13-1 6-2-8 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0 2008 12-9 25-18-43 0.0-0 0.0-0 2-62 3 1 0 2009 13-12 36-16-52 0.5-1 0.0-0 1-2 5 1 1 Totals 49-22 69-38-107 0.5-1 0.0-0 3-64 8 2 1 *Other Stats: Johnson returned one of his three interceptions 43 yards for a touchdown and in the same game recorded a blocked kick against Colorado State in 2008.
JOHNSON’S CAREER PUNT RETURN STATISTICS YEAR 2006 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 11-0 13-1 12-9 13-12 49-22
NO 0 0 1 0 1
YDS 0 0 5 0 5
AVG 0.0 0.0 5.0 0.0 5.0
TD 0 0 0 0 0
LONG 0 0 5 0 5
JOHNSON’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Tackles: 8 (at Oregon, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 0.5 (vs. Oregon State, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (twice, last at Oregon, 2009) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (at Arizona State, 2009) Interceptions: 1 (three times, last vs. USC, 2009) Pass Breakups: 2 (twice, last vs. Arizona, 2009) Blocked Kicks: 1 (vs. Michigan State, 2008) Points: 6 (vs. Colorado State, 2008)
JUSTIN PRUEITT (PROO-it)
HOLLEY’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS YEAR G-GS NO YDS AVG TD 2007 13-1 2 37 18.5 0 2008 11-0 1 3 3.0 0 2009 13-10 0 0 0.0 0 Totals 37-11 3 40 13.3 0 *Other Stats: Holley recorded two assisted tackles in 2007.
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25
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BRETT JOHNSON
LONG 28 3 0 28
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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OL, 6-5, 294...............................Clovis, CA 2006-09................................ Buchanan HS CAL CAREER: Spent four seasons with the Cal football program from 2006-09 but did not see any game action.
44
#
TAD SMITH
(SID-quan)
TE/DL, 6-5, 254........................ Isleton, CA 2005-09.................................St. Mary’s HS CAL CAREER: Was converted from a defensive end to a tight end during the spring of 2008 and spent one season in the position before an injuryfilled 2009 ended his collegiate playing days ... was expected to take over as the team’s full-time starter at tight end in 2009 but broke his scapula in spring practice and then suffered a career-ending knee injury during training camp after having recovered from the broken scapula ... played in a total of 25 games with five starts, playing in 12 contests with two starts on offense and 13 times with three starts on defense ... had three career catches for 23 yards and a touchdown offensively, while contributing 14 tackles (four unassisted, 10 assisted), 2.0 tackles for loss (-7 yards), 0.5 sacks (-3 yards) and a fumble recovery on the defensive side of the ball ... wore No. 92 for his first three seasons with the program when he played defense, before switching to No. 44 when he moved to tight end in 2008.
SMITH’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS YEAR 2007 2008 Totals
G-GS 13-3 12-2 25-5
NO 0 3 3
YDS 0 23 23
AVG 0.0 7.7 7.7
TD 0 1 1
LONG 0 9 9
SMITH’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS YEAR 2007 2008 Totals
G-GS 13-3 12-2 52-40
UA-A-TOT TFL SACK 4-9-13 2.0-7 0.5-3 0-1-1 0.0-0 0.0-0 78-117-195 26.0-134 16.0-111
INT PBU FF FR 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1-8 6 4 4
Receptions: 2 (at Maryland, 2008) Receiving Yards: 17 (at Maryland, 2008) Receiving TDs: 1 (at Maryland, 2008) Long Reception: 9TD (at Maryland, 2008) Tackles: 3 (vs. Louisiana Tech, 2007) Tackles For Loss: 1.5 (vs. Louisiana Tech, 2007) Sacks: 0.5 (vs. Louisiana Tech, 2007) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (at Colorado State, 2007) Quarterback Hurries: 2 (vs. Louisiana Tech, 2007) Points: 6 (at Maryland, 2008)
CHET TEOFILO
(TAY-oh-FEE-low)
CAL CAREER: A two-time first-team All-Pac-10 selection, earning the honor in each of his final two campaigns ... a four-year starter who started all 52 games possible at cornerback over his four-year career from 2006-09 to set a school record for starts … finished his career as Cal’s all-time leader in pass breakups with 36 after recording two in his final contest at the 2009 Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah to move past previous school-record holder Chidi Iwuoma, who recorded 35 from 1997-2000 … other final career totals included 257 tackles (166 unassisted, 91 assisted), 20.0 tackles for loss (-65 yards), 2.0 sacks (-17 yards), seven interceptions that he returned 204 yards, one forced fumble, two fumble recoveries he returned for 18 yards including a 15-yard touchdown vs. Stanford in 2006, 36 punt returns that he brought back for 389 yards, including one that he returned 73 yards for a touchdown vs. Colorado State in 2008, one kick return for 15 yards … posted a total of 608 career all-purpose yards (389 punt return, 15 kick return, 204 interception return) … tabbed by Athlon as a “Key Loss” for the 2010 season.
THOMPSON’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS YEAR 2006 2007 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS UA-A-TOT 13-13 35-25-60 13-13 55-23-78 13-13 41-29-70 13-13 35-14-49 52-52 166-91-257
TFL 2.5-9 6.0-24 7.5-26 4.0-6 20.0-65
SACK 0.0-0 0.0-0 2.0-17 0.0-0 2.0-17
INT PBU FF FR 1-0 2 0 2 1-38 10 1 0 4-128 14 0 0 1-38 10 0 0 7-204 36 1 2
THOMPSON’S CAREER PUNT RETURN STATISTICS G-GS 13-13 13-13 13-13 13-13 52-52
NO 0 0 28 8 36
YDS 0 0 344 45 389
AVG 0.0 0.0 12.3 5.6 10.8
TD 0 0 1 0 1
LONG 0 0 73 12 73
THOMPSON’S CAREER KICK RETURN STATISTICS
58
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OL, 6-3, 329...................... Chula Vista, CA 2004-09.......................................Hilltop HS CAL CAREER: Played in 16 games and made eight starts.
MIKE TEPPER
DB, 5-9, 191.................... Sacramento, CA 2006-09........................................ Grant HS
YEAR 2006 2007 2008 2009 Totals
SMITH’S CAREER GAME HIGHS
5
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SYD’QUAN THOMPSON
YEAR G-GS NO YDS AVG TD LONG 2006 13-13 0 0 0.0 0 0 2007 13-13 0 0 0.0 0 0 2008 13-13 1 15 15.0 0 15 2009 12-12 0 0 0.0 0 0 Totals 25-25 1 15 15.0 0 15 Other Stats: Thompson returned one interception 15 yards for a touchdown vs. Stanford in 2006.
THOMPSON’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Tackles: 12 (vs. Arizona, 2007) Tackles For Loss: 3.0 (twice, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Sacks: 1.0 (twice, last vs. Colorado State, 2008) Forced Fumbles: 1 (vs. Arizona, 2007) Fumble Recoveries: 1, twice, last vs. Stanford, 2006) Interceptions: 2 (at Washington State, 2008) Pass Breakups: (4, vs. Arizona State, 2008) Points: 6 (twice, last vs. Colorado State, 2008)
79
#
OL, 6-7, 319........................... Cypress, CA 2004-09.................................... Pacifica HS CAL CAREER: Played in 39 games with 28 starts … earned first-team All-Pac-10 honors in 2009 when he was granted a sixth year of eligibility after missing the 2008 season with a pectoral injury.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
141
86
#
VERRAN TUCKER (vuh-RAN)
EDDIE YOUNG
WR, 6-1, 204......................... Torrance, CA 2008-09..... El Camino College/Fairfax HS CAL CAREER: Recorded 50 catches for 815 yards and four touchdown in two seasons with the Golden Bears after transferring to Cal from El Camino College … averaged 16.3 yards per catch over 23 contests and 13 starts.
TUCKER’S CAREER RECEIVING STATISTICS YEAR 2008 2009 Totals
G-GS 10-7 13-6 23-13
NO 21 29 50
YDS 362 453 815
AVG 17.2 15.6 16.3
TD 3 1 4
TUCKER’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Receptions: 6 (vs. Oregon State, 2009) Receiving Yards: 78 (at Minnesota, 2009) Receiving TDs: 1 (four times, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Long Reception: 74 (vs. Miami, Fla., 2008)
LONG 74 59 74
LB, 6-0, 239...........................Berkeley, CA 2005-09...................................Berkeley HS CAL CAREER: Played in 40 games with 24 starts … posted career totals included 108 tackles (56 unassisted, 52 assisted), 9.0 tackles for loss (-42 yards), 3.5 sacks (-27 yards), four interceptions that he returned for 82 yards including a 31-yard touchdown in his final collegiate game against Utah in the 2009 Poinsettia Bowl, three pass breakups, four forced fumbles, one fumble recovery.
YOUNG’S CAREER DEFENSIVE STATISTICS YEAR G-GS UA-A-TOT TFL SACK INT PBU FF FR 2006 2-0 0-0-0 0.0-0 0.0-0 1-34 0 0 0 2007 13-0 7-5-12 1.0-11 1.0-11 0-0 1 1 0 2008 12-11 18-22-40 1.5-4 0.5-3 1-17 0 1 0 2009 13-13 31-25-56 6.5-27 2.0-13 2-31 2 2 1 Totals 40-24 56-52-108 9.0-42 3.5-27 4-82 3 4 1 Other Stats: Young returned an interception 31 yards for a touchdown vs. Utah in the Poinsettia Bowl in 2009.
YOUNG’S CAREER GAME HIGHS Tackles: 8 (vs. USC, 2009) Tackles For Loss: 1.5 (twice, last vs. Oregon State, 2009) Sacks: 1.0 (three times, last at UCLA, 2009) Forced Fumbles: 1 (four times, last at Washington, 2009) Fumble Recoveries: 1 (vs. Arizona, 2009) Interceptions: 1 (four times, last Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009) Pass Breakups: 1 (three times, last vs. Arizona, 2009) Quarterback Hurries: 1 (vs. USC, 2009) Points: 6 (Poinsettia Bowl vs. Utah, 2009)
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
CAL RECORDS AARON RODGERS Quarterback Cal Career Pass Efficiency Leader
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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RECORDS NOTE: The following records do not include bowl statistics prior to the 2002 season, per NCAA rules. Active players are not listed among highest career averages | * all-time followed by modern record MOST IMPROVED WIN-LOSS RECORD 9-1
1947 (from 2-7 in 1946)
BIGGEST POINT DEFICIT OVERCOME 30
vs. Oregon, Oct. 2, 1993 (from 0-30 to 42-41)
BIGGEST POINT DEFICIT OVERCOME TO WIN 30
vs. Oregon, Oct. 2, 1993 (from 0-30 to 42-41)
TEAM - SEASON OFFENSE SCORING The 1921 “Wonder Team” went 9-1 and won the Pacific Coast Conference Championship.
TEAM - GENERAL
MOST CONSECUTIVE VICTORIES, HOME
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS
26
13
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITHOUT DEFEAT, ONE SEASON
PCC: 1918, 20-23, 35t, 37-38t, 48t-50, 58 Pac-8: 1975t Pac-10: 2006t
1919-23
MOST CONSECUTIVE CONFERENCE TITLES
(Including Postseason Games) 14 1910* 11 1937
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITHOUT DEFEAT, REGULAR SEASON
4 3
PCC: 1920-23* PCC: 1948t-50
MOST CONSECUTIVE UNDEFEATED SEASONS
5
1920-24
14 10
1910* 1937, 48, 49, 50
MOST LOSSES, SEASON
MOST VICTORIES, SEASON
10
(Including Postseason Games) 14 1914* 10 1937, 38, 48, 49, 91, 2004, 06
MOST CONSECUTIVE LOSSES, REGULAR SEASON
MOST VICTORIES, REGULAR SEASON 14 10
1914* 1948, 49, 2004
MOST CONSECUTIVE VICTORIES, ALL GAMES 18 14
1920-21* 1947-48
10
10
33-33 vs. Arizona, Oct. 1, 1983
SCORELESS TIE GAMES
33
133
22
1947-50
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITHOUT DEFEAT (Including Postseason Games) 50 1920-25* (w-46, t-4) (#3 All-Time NCAA Record) 18 1937-38 (w-17, t-1)
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITHOUT DEFEAT, REGULAR SEASON 48 38
1920-25* (w-45, t-3) 1947-51 (w-37, t-1)
MOST CONSECUTIVE VICTORIES, ONE SEASON (Including Postseason Games) 13 1914* 10 1948, 49
Last time vs. Oregon, Nov. 14, 1953
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES SCORED Sept. 25, 1999-present
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES OPPONENTS SCORED 67
1970-76
MOST SHUTOUT VICTORIES, REGULAR SEASON
8 6
1923* 1937
MOST CONSECUTIVE SHUTOUT VICTORIES, REGULAR SEASON
7 3
1922-23* 1937 (twice), 1938, 1945
MOST SHUTOUT LOSSES, REGULAR SEASON
4
1930*, 39, 43
MOST CONSECUTIVE SHUTOUT LOSSES, REGULAR SEASON
144
2001
HIGHEST SCORING TIE GAME
18
MOST CONSECUTIVE VICTORIES, CONFERENCE
2001
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITHOUT WIN
MOST CONSECUTIVE VICTORIES, REGULAR SEASON 1947-50
2001
2
1906*, 09*, 43, 44
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Points Most: 510 1920* Fewest: 0 1891* 457 2003 78 1944 Points Per Game Most: 60.3 1920* Fewest: 7.6 1900* 36.9 1991 7.8 1944 Consecutive Games, 30 Points Most: 6 Dec. 28, 2006-Sept. 29, 2007 Consecutive Games, 40 Points Most: 5 Sept. 9, 2006-Oct. 7, 2006 Touchdowns Most: 72 1920* Fewest: 12 1940, 44, 60 59 2003, 04 Two-Point Conversions Attempted Most: 28 1959 Fewest: 0 Many Last time in 2009 Two-Point Conversions Made Most: 14 1958 Fewest: 0 Many Last time in 2009
KICK SCORING Points After Touchdown Attempted Most: 72 1920* Fewest: 2 1958 57 2004 Points After Touchdown Most: 67 1920* Fewest: 1 1958 56 2004 Field Goals Attempted Most: 30 2003 Fewest: 0 Many Last time in 1959 Field Goals Most: 22 1983, 88 Fewest: 0 Many Last time in 1959
TOTAL OFFENSE Plays Most: 994 2003 Net Yards Gained Most: 6061 2003 Net Yards Gained Per Game Most: 492.4 2004 Average Gain Per Play Highest: 7.03 2004
Fewest: 435
1946
Fewest: 1140
1944
Fewest: 114.0
1944
Lowest: 2.41
1944
2003
Fewest:
60
1944
2004
Fewest:
36
1944
2003
Fewest:
17
1944
1998 2003
Fewest:
1
1947
Fewest: 344
1964
FIRST DOWNS First Downs Most: 321 By Rushing Most: 146 By Passing Most: 170 By Penalty Most: 27 27
RUSHING OFFENSE Rushing Attempts Most: 656 1958
Net Yards Gained Most: 3081 2004 Average Gain Per Rush Highest: 6.1 2004 Touchdowns Rushing Most: 34 1951
Fewest: 620
1983
Lowest:
1.7
1983
Fewest:
3
1966
PASSING OFFENSE Pass Attempts Most: 452 2003 Fewest: 90 1928* 108 1950 Pass Completions Most: 278 2003 Fewest: 24 1931* 28 1937 Completion Percentage (100 att) Highest: 66.2 1979 Lowest: 24.0 1944 (270-409) (30-125) Passes Had Intercepted Fewest: 6 1961 Most: 32 1972 Percentage of Passes Had Intercepted Lowest: 1.8% 2003 Highest: 17.5% 1946 (8-452) (23-131) Yardage Most: 3705 2003 Fewest: 348 1944 Touchdown Passes Most: 32 1996 Fewest: 3 1958, 59, 60 Consecutive Games Touchdown Pass Thrown 25 2003 (last 5)- 2005 (ninth game)
PUNTING Punts Most: 128 1927* 100 1941 Yards Most: 4557 1927* 3546 1998 Average Per Punt Highest: 44.7 1987
35
1954
Fewest: 1247
1954
Lowest: 33.1
1962
Returns Most: 46 1999 Fewest: 10 1961, 80 Yards Most: 572 1948 Fewest: 58 1960 Average Gain Per Return Highest: 17.3 2006 Lowest: 4.0 1988 Touchdowns Most: 4 1966, 2006 Fewest: 0 Many Last time in 2001
KICK RETURNS Returns Most: 66 2007 Fewest: Yards Most: 1432 2007 Fewest: Average Gain Per Return Highest: 25.7 1963 Lowest: Touchdowns Most: 1 1937, 49, 52, 63, 82, 90, 96, 99, 2002, 07
DEFENSE Points Allowed Fewest: 2 1899* 33 1937 Points Allowed Per Game Fewest: 0.7 1923* 3.3 1937 Touchdowns Allowed Fewest: 1 1900, 23* 5 1937 Field Goals Allowed Fewest: 0 Many Last time in 1956
Most:
431
2001
Most:
39.2
2001
Most:
56
2001
Most:
21
1983
TOTAL DEFENSE Net Yards Allowed Fewest: 1126 1937 Most: 5388 Net Yards Allowed Per Game Fewest: 112.6 1937 Most: 460.3 Average Gain Per Play Allowed Lowest: 3.60 1968 Highest: 6.22
2003 1996 2001
FIRST DOWNS 22 1947, 50, 82, 2004 325
1947
14.8 1947 14.9 1950, 78
First Downs Allowed Fewest: 59 1935* 60 1937 By Rushing Allowed Fewest: 38 1937 By Passing Allowed Fewest: 20 1937 By Penalty Allowed Fewest: 1 1954
Most:
280
2003
Most:
152
1961
Most:
161
2003
Most:
39
2001
RUSHING
FUMBLES Fumbles Most: 41 1950 Fewest: 12 Fumbles Lost Most: 24 1950 Fewest: 6
1998 1997, 98
TURNOVERS Interceptions & Fumbles Lost Fewest: 17 2009 Most: 49 1972 (8 int, 9 fum) (32 int, 17 fum) 18 1964 (9 int, 9 fum) 18 2002 (10 int, 8 fum) 18 2004 (8 int, 10 fum)
PENALTIES
TEAM - SEASON SCORING
Fewest:
PUNT RETURNS
Penalties Most: 127 Yards Most: 1149
The 1937 National Champions, also known as the “Thunder Team”
1999
Fewest:
32
1971
1997
Fewest:
211
1940
Rushes Allowed Fewest: 343 1947 Most: 645 Yards Allowed Fewest: 744 1935* Most: 2824 858 1937 Average Gain Per Rush Allowed Lowest: 2.50 1937 Highest: 5.06 2.51 1968 Touchdowns Rushing Allowed Fewest: 5 1968 Most: 33
1981 1961 1961 1973
PASSING Pass Attempts Allowed Fewest: 112 1927* Most: 469 124 1939, 41 Pass Completions Allowed Fewest: 39 1927* Most: 289 42 1937 Completion Percentage Allowed Lowest: 28.8 1937 Highest: 63.6 (42-146) (289-454)
2003 2009 2009
Yardage Allowed Fewest: 372 1928* Most: 3516 2003 432 1937 Passes Intercepted Most: 30 1948 Fewest: 4 1997 Interception Return Yards Most: 459 1999 Fewest: 10 1997 Interception Return Touchdowns Most: 4 1948 Fewest: 0 Many Last time in 2007 Touchdown Passes Allowed Fewest: 0 1923* Most: 27 2001 2 1948, 50
PUNTING Punts Allowed Most: 143 1932* 108 1941 Yards Allowed Most: 4891 1932* 3415 2003 Average Per Punt Lowest: 32.6 1957
Fewest:
30
1961
Fewest: 998
1961
Highest: 43.6
1999
PUNT RETURNS Returns Allowed Fewest: 14 1975 Most: 51 Yards Allowed Fewest: 54 1991 Most: 648 Average Gain Allowed Per Return Lowest: 3.0 1991 Highest: 17.4 Touchdowns Allowed Most: 2 1965, 79, 92, 94, 98, 2000, 02
1998 1998 1992
KICK RETURNS Returns Allowed Fewest: 19 1981 Most: 67 Yards Allowed Fewest: 307 1966 Most: 1450 Average Yards Allowed Per Return Lowest: 14.2 1958 Highest: 23.9 Touchdowns Allowed Most: 2 1970
2009 2007 1986
TURNOVERS Opponents’ Fumbles Recovered Most: 27 1947 Fewest: 7 2006 Opponents’ Turnovers Most: 53 1947 Fewest: 18 2001 (26 int, 27 fum) (8 int, 10 fum)
OPPONENTS’ PENALTIES Penalties Most: Yards Most:
104
1998
Fewest:
37
1948
957
1998
Fewest: 135
1937
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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RECORDS (continued)
J.J. Arrington
TEAM GAME OFFENSE SCORING Points Most: 127 vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 9, 1920* 86 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Both Teams, Most: 127 California (127) vs. St. Mary’s (0), Oct. 9, 1920* 111 California (56) vs. Arizona (55) Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 110 California (86) vs. Pacific (24) Sept. 7, 1991 Both Teams, Fewest: 0 Many times. Last: Cal (0) vs. Oregon (0), Nov. 14, 1953 Most, Quarter: 48 vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 9, 1920* (2nd) 35 vs. Baylor, Aug. 31, 2002 (1st) Most, Half: 85 vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 9, 1920* (1st) 51 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 (1st) Touchdowns Most: 18 vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 9, 1920 12 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Both Teams, Most: 18 Cal (18) vs. St. Mary’s (0), Oct. 9, 1920* 16 Cal (8) vs. Arizona (8), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 15 Cal (12) vs. Pacific (3), Sept. 7, 1991 Two-Point Conversions Attempted Most: 5 vs. Washington State, Oct. 4, 1958 vs. Utah, Oct. 11, 1958 Both Teams, Most: 7 Cal (5) vs. Washington State (2), Oct. 4, 1958 Two-Point Conversions Most: 3 vs. Utah, Oct. 11, 1958 Both Teams, Most: 4 Cal (3) vs. Utah (1), Oct. 11, 1958
KICK SCORING Points After Touchdown Attempted Most: 18 vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 9, 1920* 10 vs. Baylor, Aug. 31, 2002 10 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Both Teams, Most: 18 vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 9, 1920* 15 Cal (8) vs. Arizona (7), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 14 Cal (7) vs. Washington (7), Oct. 6, 1973
146
Robbie Keen
Chuck Muncie
14 Cal (7) vs. Virginia Tech (7), Dec. 26, 2003 (Insight Bowl) Points After Touchdown Most: 17 vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 9, 1920* 10 vs. Baylor, Aug. 31, 2002 10 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Both Teams, Most: 17 Cal (17) vs. St. Mary’s (0), Oct. 9, 1920* 15 Cal (8) vs. Arizona (7), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 14 Cal (7) vs. Washington (7), Oct. 6, 1973 14 Cal (7) vs. Virginia Tech (7), Dec. 26, 2003 (Insight Bowl) Field Goals Attempted Most: 6 Many times. Last at UCLA, Oct. 18, 2003 (ot) Both Teams, Most: 10 Cal (6) vs. Stanford (4), Nov. 19, 1988 Field Goals Most: 5 vs. Air Force, Sept. 21, 2002 Both Teams, Most: 8 Cal (4) vs. Stanford (4), Nov. 19, 1988
2 Many times. Last vs. USC, Sept. 29, 1945 Both Teams, Most: 59 Cal (24) vs. Missouri (35), Oct. 5, 1985 Both Teams, Fewest: 7 Cal (2) vs. UCLA (5), Nov. 2, 1935* 9 Cal (4) vs. Pacific (5), Oct. 14, 1944 Cal (2) vs. UCLA (7), Nov. 11, 1944 First Downs by Rushing Most: 24 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 24, 1959 Fewest: 0 vs. Illinois, Sept. 24, 1955 vs. USC, Nov. 4, 1967 First Downs by Passing Most: 21 at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. Washington State, Sept. 1976 First Downs by Penalty Most: 6 at Arizona State, Nov. 6, 1993 6 vs. Arizona, Nov. 14, 1998 6 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 4, 2003 Both Teams, Most: 12 Cal (6) vs. Arizona (6), Nov. 14, 1998
TOTAL OFFENSE Plays Most: 102 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 Fewest: 36 vs. Washington, Oct. 26, 1946 Both Teams, Most: 180 Cal (89) at Oregon State (91), Oct. 31, 1998 Both Teams, Fewest: 99 Cal (58) vs. Miami (41), Oct. 9, 1964 Yards Gained Most: 729 vs. Washington, Nov. 15, 2003 Fewest: -4 vs. USC, Nov. 9, 1946 Both Teams, Most: 1254 Cal (659) vs. Arizona (595), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) Both Teams, Fewest: 162 Cal (8) vs. Fleet City (154), Oct. 21, 1944 Average Gain Per Play Highest: 10.57 vs. Washington, Nov. 15, 2003 Lowest: -0.09 vs. USC, Nov. 9, 1946
FIRST DOWNS First Downs Most: 35 Fewest: 1
vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 31, 1981 vs. USC, Oct. 23, 1926* vs. Washington, Oct. 24, 1936
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
RUSHING Rushes Most: 84 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 Fewest: 19 vs. Georgia, Sept. 11, 1976 vs. San Diego State, Sept. 10, 1983 Both Teams, Most: 142 Cal (75) vs. UCLA (67), Nov. 2, 1957 Both Teams, Fewest: 54 Cal (27) vs. Washington State (27), Sept. 28, 2002 Net Yards Gained Most: 490 vs. Minnesota, Oct. 6, 1951 Fewest: -77 vs. Missouri, Sept. 30, 1972 Both Teams, Most: 758 Cal (350) vs. Pacific (408), Sept. 20, 1958 Both Teams, Fewest: -26 Cal (-36) vs. Stanford (10), Nov. 21, 1998 Average Gain Per Rush Highest: 10.9 vs. Washington, Nov. 15, 2003 Lowest: -2.7 vs. Missouri, Sept. 30, 1972 Touchdowns By Rushing Most: 8 vs. Montana, Nov. 15, 1947 Both Teams, Most: 10 Cal (7) vs. San Jose State (3), Aug. 31, 1985
Mike Pawlawski
DeSean Jackson
Sean Dawkins
PASSING
Both Teams, Most: 13 Cal (8) vs. Arizona (5), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 9 Cal (6) vs. Pacific (3), Sept. 7, 1991 9 Cal (5) at Arizona State (4), Nov. 9, 2002
Both Teams, Most: 202 Cal (36) at Washington (166), Oct. 17, 1998 Both Teams, Fewest: -10 Cal (-6) vs. Washington State (-4), Oct. 24, 1970 Average Gain Per Return (min. 3) Highest: 42.7 at Arizona, Nov. 11, 2006 (128/3) Lowest: -2.0 vs. Washington State, Oct. 24, 1970 (-6/3) Both Teams, Highest: 32.3 Cal (19/1) vs. Oregon (78/2) Oct. 6, 1979 Both Teams, Lowest: -1.7 Cal (-6/3) vs. Washington State (-4/3), Oct. 24, 1970 Cal (-1/1) vs. Arizona (-4/2), Sept. 22, 2007 Touchdowns Most: 2 vs. Washington State, Sept. 17, 1966 vs. Colorado State, Sept. 27, 2008 Both Teams, Most: 2 Cal (0) vs. USC (2), Nov. 6, 1965 Cal (2) vs. Washington State (0), Sept. 17, 1966 Cal (0) vs. Hawaii (2), Sept. 17, 1995 Cal (2) vs. Colorado State (0), Sept. 27, 2008
Pass Attempts Most: 60 at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 Fewest: 1 vs. Washington, Nov. 3, 1917* vs. San Francisco, Nov. 18, 1950 vs. Stanford, Nov. 19, 1960 Both Teams, Most: 105 Cal (47) at Oregon State (58), Oct. 31, 1998 Both Teams, Fewest: 5 Cal (1) vs. San Francisco (4), Nov. 18, 1950 Pass Completions Most: 43 vs. Florida, Sept. 13, 1980 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. Washington State, Sept. 17, 1966 Both Teams, Most: 63 Cal (24) vs. Texas Tech (39), Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl) Both Teams, Fewest: 0 Cal (0) vs. USC (0), Oct. 24, 1931* 1 3 times. Last time: Cal (1) vs. Nevada, Oct. 27, 1945 Completion Percentage Highest: 87.5 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 (14-16) 83.3 vs. UCLA, Nov. 4, 2006 (20-24) 82.6 at USC, Oct. 9, 2004 (29-35) Lowest (min. 15 att): 0.0 vs. Washington, Nov. 6, 1937 (0-15) Passes Had Intercepted Most: 10 vs. UCLA, Oct. 21, 1978 Both Teams, Most: 11 Cal (10) vs. UCLA (1), Oct. 21, 1978 Yards Allowed Interception Returns Most: 194 vs. UCLA, Oct. 21, 1978 Intercepted Passes Returned for Touchdown Most: 3 vs. UCLA, Oct. 21, 1978 Attempts Without Interception Most: 57 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 Yardage Most: 503 vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 443 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 15, 1983 Fewest: -4 vs. USC, Nov. 9, 1946 Both Teams, Most: 921 Cal (503) vs. Arizona (418), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 809 Cal (296) at Washington State (513), Sept. 22, 2001 Both Teams, Fewest: 0 Cal (0) vs. USC (0), Oct. 24, 1931* 6 Cal (0) vs. Washington (6), Nov. 6, 1937 Touchdown Passes Most: 8 vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 6 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991
PUNTING Punts Most: 18 vs. Olympic Club, Oct. 22, 1927* vs. Stanford, Nov. 19, 1932* 17 Many times. Last vs. Santa Clara, Oct. 11, 1941 Fewest: 0 Four times. Last time vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Both Teams, Most: 41 Cal (17) vs. Washington State (24), Nov. 4, 1922* 29 Cal (15) vs. Washington State (14), Oct. 11, 1938 Cal (16) vs. USC (13), Oct. 28, 1939 Both Teams, Fewest: 1 Cal (1) vs. Duke (0), Oct. 12, 1963 Yards Most: 535 vs. Indiana, Sept. 27, 1969 Fewest: 0 Four times. Last time vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Both Teams, Most: 973 Cal (535) vs. Indiana (438), Sept. 27, 1969 Both Teams, Fewest: 27 Cal (27) vs. Duke (0), Oct. 12, 1963 Average Per Punt (min. 4) Highest: 60.2 vs. Stanford, Nov. 22, 2008 (241/4) Lowest: 7.0 vs. UCLA, Nov. 8, 1958 (35/5)
PUNT RETURNS Returns Most: 9 vs. Oregon, Oct. 5, 1946 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. Utah, Dec. 23, 2009 Both Teams, Most: 14 Cal (7) vs. St. Mary’s (7), Sept. 24, 1949 Cal (7) vs. Stanford (7), Nov. 18, 1972 Cal (8) vs. Oregon State (6), Nov. 6, 1999 Both Teams, Fewest: 0 Cal (0) vs. Duke (0), Oct. 12, 1963 Yards Most: 187 vs. Colorado State, Sept. 27, 2008 Fewest: -9 vs. Arizona, Sept. 30, 1995
KICK RETURNS Returns Most: 11 vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. Stanford, Nov. 22, 2008 Both Teams, Most: 15 Cal (6) vs. Washington (9), Oct. 6, 1973 Cal (3) vs. Pacific (12), Sept. 7, 1991 Cal (7) vs. Arizona (8), Nov. 16, 2002 Both Teams, Fewest: 1 Many times. Last: Cal (0) at Utah (1), Sept. 11, 2003 Yards Most: 228 vs. Minnesota, Sept. 19, 1987 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. Stanford, Nov. 22, 2008 Both Teams, Most: 363 Cal (160) vs. Louisiana Tech (203), Sept. 15, 2007 Both Teams, Fewest: 7 Cal (0) at USC (7), Oct. 22, 1994 Average Gain Per Return Highest: 53.3 vs. Louisiana Tech, Sept. 15, 2007 (160/3) Lowest: 2.0 vs. Oregon, Oct. 15, 1955 (6/3)
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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RECORDS (continued)
Bob Reinhard
Andre Carter
Sam Chapman
Both Teams, Highest: 36.3 Cal (160/3) vs. Louisiana Tech (203/7), Sept. 15, 2007 Both Teams, Lowest: 3.5 Cal (3.5-14/4) vs. Michigan (3.5-7/2), Sept. 24, 1966 Touchdowns Most: 1 Eight times. Last time vs. Louisiana Tech, Sept. 15, 2007
TURNOVERS
Average Gain Per Play Allowed Lowest: 0.93 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 Highest: 9.14 vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973 9.52 at Washington State, Oct. 18, 1997
FUMBLES Fumbles Most: 8 Four times. Last time vs. San Jose State, Oct. 8, 1966 Both Teams, Most: 16 Cal (3) vs. San Jose State (13), Sept. 25, 1954 Fumbles Lost Most: 6 vs. Oregon State, Nov. 11, 1972 Both Teams, Most: 11 Cal (2) vs. San Jose State (9), Sept. 25, 1954 Both Teams, Fewest: 0 Many times. Last: Cal at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009
PENALTIES Penalties Most: 21 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 7, 1996 21 at Houston, Sept. 6, 1997 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. USC, Oct. 30, 1971 Both Teams, Most: 31 Cal (21) at Houston (10), Sept. 6, 1997 Both Teams, Fewest: 1 Cal (0) vs. Stanford (1), Nov. 22, 1958 Yards Most: 202 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 7, 1996 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. USC, Oct. 30, 1993 Most, Quarter: 105 vs. Washington, Oct. 6, 1973 (1st) Both Teams, Most: 307 Cal (154) vs. Arizona (153), Nov. 14, 1998 Both Teams, Fewest: 10 Three times. Last time: Cal (5) vs. Oregon State (5), Oct. 29, 1938
148
Turnovers Most: 12 vs. UCLA, Oct. 21, 1978 (10 int, 2 fum) Fewest: 0 Many times. Last at UCLA, Oct. 17, 2009 Both Teams, Most: 15 Cal (12-10 int, 2 fum.) vs. UCLA (3-1 int., 2 fum.) Oct. 21, 1978 Both Teams, Fewest: 0 Many times. Last: Cal (0) vs. Virginia Tech (0), Dec. 26, 2003 (Insight Bowl)
TEAM - GAME DEFENSE SCORING Points Allowed Most: 74 vs. USC, Nov. 8, 1930* 66 vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973 Most, Quarter: 33 vs. USC, Nov. 8, 1930* (3rd) 31 at Arizona State, Nov. 7, 1998 (2nd) Touchdowns Allowed Most: 9 vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973 9 at Washington State, Oct. 18, 1997 Field Goals Allowed Most: 5 vs. Stanford, Nov. 17, 1992 Two Point Conversion Attempts Allowed Most: 4 Three times. Last time vs. Washington, Nov. 9, 1974 Two Point Conversions Allowed Most: 3 vs. Pacific, Sept. 20, 1958 Point After Touchdown Attempts Allowed Most: 9 vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973 9 at Washington State, Oct. 18, 1997 Points After Touchdown Allowed Most: 9 vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973 9 at Washington State, Oct. 18, 1997
TOTAL DEFENSE Plays Allowed Fewest: 37 vs. Oregon State, Nov. 1, 1958 Most: 101 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 27, 1986 Yards Allowed Fewest: 13 vs. Cal Aggies, Sept. 30, 1933* 40 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 Most: 734 vs. USC, Nov. 8, 1930* 667 vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
FIRST DOWNS First Downs Allowed Fewest: 0 Four times. Last time vs. Cal Aggies, Oct. 16, 1937 Most: 54 vs. Washington, Nov. 6, 1915* 37 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 First Downs by Rushing Allowed Fewest: 0 vs. Cal Aggies, Sept. 30, 1933* vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 Most: 29 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 First Downs by Passing Allowed Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. Oregon State, Nov. 11, 1972 Most: 21 at Illinois, Sept. 20, 2003 First Downs by Penalty Allowed Most: 7 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 7, 1996
RUSHING Rushes Allowed Fewest: 14 vs. Stanford, Nov. 20, 1993 Most: 84 vs. Notre Dame, Sept. 18, 1965 Net Yards Allowed Fewest: -40 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 5, 1992 Most: 611 vs. Washington, Nov. 6, 1915* 532 vs. UCLA, Oct. 21, 1972 Average Gain Per Rush Allowed Lowest: -1.81 vs. Washington State, Nov. 13, 1976 Highest: 8.23 vs. Texas, Oct. 3, 1959 Touchdowns Rushing Allowed Most: 8 vs. Texas, Sept. 19, 1970
PASSING Pass Attempts Allowed Fewest: 1 vs. Kansas, Nov. 17, 1962 Most: 62 vs. Arizona, Sept. 22, 2007 Pass Completions Allowed Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. Washington, Nov. 7, 1964 Most: 42 vs. Arizona, Sept. 22, 2007 Completion Percentage Allowed (min. 15 att) Lowest: 0.0 vs. Washington State, Oct. 9, 1937 (0-15) Highest: 87.2 vs. Stanford, Nov. 21, 1959 (34-39) Yardage Allowed Fewest: 0 Many times. Last vs. Washington, Nov. 7, 1964 Most: 520 vs. Texas Tech, Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl)
Tarik Smith
Doug Brien
Tom Schneider
Touchdown Passes Allowed Most: 5 Many times. Last vs. Washington State, Oct. 22, 2005 Passes Intercepted By Most: 6 vs. Syracuse, Oct. 26, 1968 vs. Washington State, Nov. 16, 1974 Percentage of Passes Intercepted Highest: 50.0 vs. Washington State, Nov. 16, 1974 (6-12) Interception Return Yards Most: 146 vs. Syracuse, Oct. 26, 1968 Fewest: -16 vs. Oregon, Oct. 16, 1982 Interception Return Touchdowns Most: 2 vs. Washington State, Sept. 26, 1998 vs. Arizona State, Sept. 23, 2006 vs. UCLA, Oct. 25, 2008
Most: 298 at Washington State, Sept. 6, 2008 Average Gain Allowed Per Return (min. 3) Lowest: 5.7 vs. Washington, Oct. 27, 1956 (17/3) Highest: 55.3 vs. Arizona State, Nov. 11, 1995 (166/3) Touchdowns Allowed Most: 1 Many times. Last at Oregon State, Nov. 15, 2008
Game: 6 Dick Dunn vs. Nevada, Nov. 18, 1922* 5 Duke Morrison vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 9, 1920* Duke Morrison vs. Washington, Nov. 12, 1921* 4 Many times. Last by Jahvid Best vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008 (4-r)
OPPONENTS’ FUMBLES
PUNTING
OPPONENTS’ PENALTIES
Most Points Career: 288 Doug Brien, 1991-93 (120-pat, 56-fg) Season: 107 Mark Jensen, 2002 (50-pat, 19-fg) Game: 16 Doug Brien at Stanford, Nov. 20, 1993 (4-pat, 4-fg) 16 Tom Schneider vs. UCLA, Oct. 8, 2005 (4-pat, 4-fg) Most Points After Touchdown Attempted Career: 161 Tom Schneider, 2004-06 Season: 57 Tom Schneider, 2004 Game: 10 Doug Brien vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Mark Jensen vs. Baylor, Aug. 31, 2002 Most Points After Touchdown Career: 158 Tom Schneider, 2004-06 Season: 56 Tom Schneider, 2004 Game: 10 Crip Toomey vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 9, 1920* Doug Brien vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Mark Jensen vs. Baylor, Aug. 31, 2002 Consecutive: 72 Mark Jensen, 2000-02 60 Tom Schneider, 2005-06 Most Points After Touchdown, No Misses Career: 54 Tyler Fredrickson, 2000-03 Season: 54 Tyler Fredrickson, 2003 Game: 10 Doug Brien vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Mark Jensen vs. Baylor, Aug. 31, 2002 Most Field Goals Attempted Career: 81 Jim Breech, 1974-77 Season: 30 Tyler Fredrickson, 2003 Game: 6 Many times. Last by Tyler Fredrickson at UCLA, Oct. 18, 2003 (ot) Most Field Goals Career: 56 Doug Brien, 1991-93 Season: 22 Randy Pratt, 1983 Game: 5 Mark Jensen vs. Air Force, Sept. 21, 2002 Longest Field Goal 55 Robbie Keen vs. Washington, Nov. 12, 1988 Tom Schneider vs. Stanford, Dec. 2, 2006
Punts Forced Most: 24 vs. Washington State, Nov. 4, 1922* 12 Four times. Last time vs. Army, Sept. 29, 1973 Fewest: 0 vs. Duke, Oct. 12, 1963 Yards Allowed Most: 782 vs. Washington State, Nov. 4, 1922* 497 vs. Oregon State, Nov. 1, 1997 Fewest: 0 vs. Duke, Oct. 12, 1963 Average Per Punt (min. 4 punts) Lowest: 22.0 vs. USC, Nov. 2, 1974 (88/4) Highest: 51.0 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 (204/4)
PUNT RETURNS Returns Allowed Fewest: 0 Many times. Last at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 Most: 9 at Washington State, Oct. 16, 1993 at Oregon State, Oct. 21, 1995 Yards Allowed Fewest: -14 vs. Tennessee, Sept. 10, 1977 Most: 175 vs. USC, Nov. 6, 1965 Average Gain Allowed Per Return (min. 2) Highest: 54.0 at UCLA, Oct. 8, 2005 (3-162) Lowest: -3.5 Three times. Last time vs. Oregon, Nov. 1, 2008 (2-(-7)) Touchdowns Allowed Most: 2 vs. USC, Nov. 6, 1965
KICK RETURNS Returns Allowed Most: 12 by Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last by Arizona State, Oct. 7, 2000 Yards Allowed Fewest: 0 Many times. Last by Arizona State, Oct. 7, 2000
Fumbles Most: 13 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 25, 1954 Fumbles Lost Most: 9 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 25, 1954 Penalties Most: 17 at Arizona State, Nov. 6, 1993 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last at Arizona, Oct. 18, 2008 Yards Most: 179 vs. Missouri, Sept. 30, 1972 Fewest: 0 Many times. Last at Arizona, Oct. 18, 2008
OPPONENTS’ TURNOVERS Turnovers Most: 10 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 25, 1954 (9 fum, 1 int.) Fewest: 0 Many times. Last at Washington, Dec. 5, 2009
INDIVIDUAL RECORDS SCORING Most Points Career: 288 Doug Brien, 1991-93 (120-pat, 56-fg) Season: 131 Duke Morrison, 1922* (18-td, 1-fg, 20-pat) 107 Mark Jensen, 2002 (19-fg, 50-pat) Game: 36 Dick Dunn vs. Nevada, Nov. 18, 1922* 24 Many times. Last by Jahvid Best vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008 (4-td) Most Touchdowns Career: 42 Duke Morrison, 1920-22* 40 Russell White, 1990-92 (35-r, 4-p, 1-ret) Season: 18 Duke Morrison, 1922* 17 Lindsey Chapman, 1993 (14-r, 3-p)
KICK SCORING
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RECORDS (continued)
Russell White
Pat Barnes
Geoff McArthur
TOTAL OFFENSE
Game: 5 Duke Morrison vs. Washington, Nov. 12, 1921* 5 Jahvid Best at Minnesota, Sept. 19, 2009 4 Don Johnson vs. Minnesota, Oct. 2, 1952 Carl Montgomery vs. Oregon State, Oct. 31, 1981 4 Jahvid Best vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008
Most Passes Had Intercepted Career: 48 Gale Gilbert, 1980-84 Kyle Boller, 1999-02 Season: 19 Rich Campbell, 1978 Game: 6 Gale Gilbert vs. USC, Nov. 6, 1982 Fewest Passes Had Intercepted Career (200 att): 10 Randy Gold, 1960-62 (220 att) Season (100 att): 2 Gary Graumann, 1977 (118 att) Lowest Percentage of Passes Had Intercepted Career (200 att): 1.95% Aaron Rodgers, 2003-04 (13/665) Season (100 att): 1.43% Aaron Rodgers, 2003 (5/349) Consecutive Passes Attempted, None Intercepted Most: 150 Pat Barnes vs. UCLA, Arizona, Arizona State, Oregon, Stanford, Oct. 26-Nov. 23, 1996
Most Plays Career: 1576 Kyle Boller, 1999-02 Season: 506 Pat Barnes, 1996 Game: 70 Pat Barnes vs. UCLA, Oct. 26, 1996 Most Yards Career: 8236 Troy Taylor (8126-p, 110-r), 1986-89 Season: 3416 Pat Barnes (3499-p, (-83)-r), 1996 Game: 528 Pat Barnes vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 430 Pat Barnes vs. UCLA, Oct. 26, 1996 Most Touchdowns Responsible For Career: 71 Kyle Boller, 1999-02 Season: 32 Pat Barnes, 1996 32 Kyle Boller, 2002 Game: 8 Pat Barnes vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 6 Dick Dunn vs. Nevada, Nov. 18, 1922* Mike Pawlawski vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991
RUSHING Most Rushes Career: 715 Paul Jones, 1975-79 Season: 305 Justin Forsett, 2007 Game: 46 Paul Jones vs. Washington State, Nov. 11, 1978 Most Net Yards Career: 3367 Russell White, 1990-92 Season: 2018 J.J. Arrington, 2004 Game: 311 Jahvid Best, vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008 Half: 268 Jerry Drew vs. Oregon State, Nov. 13, 1954 (2nd) Longest Rush 98t Bill Powell vs. Oregon State, Oct. 27, 1951 Highest Average Gain Per Rush Career: 7.3 Jahvid Best, 2007-09 (364-2668) Season: 9.9 Charlie Sarver, 1949 (32317) Game: 25.7 Jerry Drew vs. Oregon State, Nov. 13, 1954 (11-283) Most Games, 100 Yards Rushing Career: 17 Marshawn Lynch, 2004-06 Season: 12 J.J. Arrington, 2004 Consecutive: 12 J.J. Arrington, 2004 Most Touchdowns Rushing Career: 35 Russell White, 1990-92 Season: 15 J.J. Arrington, 2004 Justin Forsett, 2007 Jahvid Best, 2008
150
PASSING Most Pass Attempts Career: 1301 Kyle Boller, 1999-02 Season: 421 Kyle Boller, 2002 Game: 58 Kevin Riley at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 Most Pass Completions Career: 683 Troy Taylor, 1986-89 Season: 250 Pat Barnes, 1996 Game: 43 Rich Campbell vs. Florida, Sept. 13, 1980 (53 att) Consecutive: 26 Aaron Rodgers at Oregon State, USC, Oct. 2-9, 2004 Consecutive, 23 Aaron Rodgers, at USC, One Game: Oct. 9, 2004 (shares NCAA record) Highest Passing Completion Percentage Career: 64.5 Rich Campbell, 1977-80 (599-929) Season: 70.7 Rich Campbell, 1980 (193-273) Game: 85.3 Aaron Rodgers at USC, Oct. 9, 2004 (29-34) Most Yardage Gained Career: 8126 Troy Taylor, 1986-89 Season: 3499 Pat Barnes, 1996 Game: 503 Pat Barnes vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 435 Pat Barnes vs. UCLA, Oct. 26, 1996 Most Games, 300 Yards Passing Career: 10 Pat Barnes, 1993-96 Season: 5 Pat Barnes, 1996 5 Aaron Rodgers, 2003 Consecutive: 3 Many times. Last by Aaron Rodgers vs. Washington (348), at Stanford (359), vs. Virginia Tech (394), Nov. 15-Dec. 26, 2003 Longest Pass Completion 88t Joe Roth (to Wesley Walker) vs. Georgia, Sept. 11, 1976 Most Touchdown Passes Career: 64 Kyle Boller, 1999-02 Season: 31 Pat Barnes, 1996 Game: 8 Pat Barnes vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 6 Mike Pawlawski vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
RECEIVING Most Receptions Career: 202 Geoff McArthur, 2000-04 Season: 100 Dameane Douglas, 1998 Game: 16 Geoff McArthur at Stanford, Nov. 22, 2003 Consecutive Games With A Reception: 42 Robert Jordan (Oct. 23, 2004 Dec. 28, 2007) Most Yards Career: 3188 Geoff McArthur, 2000-04 Season: 1504 Geoff McArthur, 2003 Game: 289 Wesley Walker vs. San Jose State, Oct. 2, 1976 Longest Reception 88t Wesley Walker (from Joe Roth) vs. Georgia, Sept. 11, 1976 Highest Average Gain Per Reception Career: 25.7 Wesley Walker, 1973-76 (NCAA Record-75-104 rec) Season: 29.8 Greg Woodard, 1979 (12-358) 29.5 Chase Lyman, 2004 (14-414) Game: 45.3 Wesley Walker at Georgia, Sept. 11, 1976 (4-181) Most Touchdowns Career: 31 Sean Dawkins, 1990-92 Season: 14 Sean Dawkins, 1992 Game: 3 Chase Lyman at Oregon State, Oct. 2, 2004 Bobby Shaw vs. Oregon State, Sept. 28, 1996 (3ot) Sean Dawkins at USC, Oct. 17, 1992 Sean Dawkins vs. San Jose State, Sept. 5, 1992 Sean Dawkins vs. USC, Nov. 2, 1991 Brian Treggs vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991
Nick Harris
Ken Wiedemann
Floyd Eddings vs. Texas A&M, Sept. 5, 1981 Wesley Walker vs. San Jose State, Oct. 2, 1976 Steve Sweeney vs. Washington, Oct. 28, 1972 Steve Sweeney vs. Oregon State, Oct. 9, 1971 Robert Jordan vs. Washington, Sept. 10, 2005 DeSean Jackson vs. Minnesota, Sept. 9, 2006
Most Touchdowns Career: 6 Season: 4 Game: 1
PUNTING Most Punts Career: 322 Nick Harris, 1997-2000 Season: 87 Nick Harris, 1998 Game: 12 Gary Fowler vs. Indiana, Sept. 27, 1969 12 Nick Harris at Illinois, Sept. 16, 2000 Most Yards Career: 13,621 Nick Harris, 1997-2000 Season: 3795 Nick Harris, 1999 Game: 535 Gary Fowler vs. Indiana, Sept. 27, 1969 Highest Average Per Punt Career (75 punts): 44.0 Scott Tabor, 1986-87 (118-5187) Season (30 punts): 45.3 Scott Tabor, 1987 (66-2993) Game (min. 4): 60.2 Bryan Anger vs. Stanford, Nov. 22, 2008 (4-241)
PUNT RETURNS Most Returns Career: 110 Deltha O’Neal 1996-99 Season: 42 Deltha O’Neal, 1999 Game: 7 Scott Stringer vs. Stanford, Nov. 18, 1972 Most Yards Career: 1169 Deltha O’Neal, 1996-99 Season: 455 DeSean Jackson, 2006 Game: 138 Jemeel Powell at USC, Oct. 28, 2000 Longest Punt Return 108t Don Guest vs. Washington State, Sept. 17, 1966 (missed FG att.) 105t Bobby Sherman vs. Stanford, Nov. 8, 1902* 95t DeSean Jackson vs. Arizona Nov. 11, 2006 Highest Average Gain Per Return Career: 16.7 DeSean Jackson, 2005-07 (38-633) Season: 21.3 Jeremy Ross, 2009 (9-192) Season: 18.2 DeSean Jackson, 2006 (25-455) Game: 100.0 Don Guest vs. Washington State, Sept. 17, 1966 (1-100)
DeSean Jackson DeSean Jackson, 2005-07 DeSean Jackson, 2006 Many times. Last by Jeremy Ross vs. Washington State, Oct. 24, 2009
KICK RETURNS Most Returns Career: 99 Deltha O’Neal, 1996-99 Season: 42 Lavelle Hawkins, 2007 Game: 10 Wesley Walker vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973 Most Yards Career: 2472 Deltha O’Neal, 1996-99 Season: 922 Lavelle Hawkins, 2007 Game: 186 Deltha O’Neal vs. Navy, Dec. 25, 1996 (Aloha Bowl) Longest Kickoff Return 102t Ed Solinsky vs. California Aggies, Oct. 16, 1937 Frank Brunk vs. USC, Oct. 15, 1949 Highest Average Gain Per Return Career: 26.3 Jahvid Best, 2007-09 (32-844) Season: 29.5 Frank Brunk, 1949 (10-295) Game: 90.0 Lavelle Hawkins vs. Louisiana Tech, Sept. 15, 2007 (1-90) 49.3 Russell White vs. USC, Nov. 2, 1991 (2-99) 44.3 Darrin Greer vs. Minnesota, Sept. 19, 1987 (3-133) Most Touchdowns Career: 2 Deltha O’Neal, 1996-99 Season: 1 By eight players. Last time by Lavelle Hawkins, 2007 Game: 1 By nine players. Last time by Lavelle Hawkins vs. Louisiana Tech, Sept. 15, 2007
Longest Interception Return 100t Jim Jurkovich vs. USC, Nov. 9, 1940 John Hardy at Wisconsin, Sept. 8, 1990 Deltha O’Neal vs. Oregon, Nov. 13, 2000 Matt Nixon vs. Baylor, Aug. 31, 2002 Most Touchdowns Career: 5 Deltha O’Neal, 1996-99 Season: 4 Deltha O’Neal, 1999 Game: 1 Many times. Last by Eddie Young vs. Utah, Dec. 23, 2009
ALL-PURPOSE Most Yards Career: 4943 Russell White, 1990-92 (rush-3367, rec-364, ret-1212) Season: 2247 Jahvid Best, 2008 (rush-1580, rec-246, ret-421)
FUMBLES Most Fumbles Recovered Game: 4 Anthony Green vs. UCLA, Oct. 13, 1976
ALL RETURNS Most Kickoff and Punt Returns Career: 209 Deltha O’Neal, 1996-99 Season: 61 Deltha O’Neal, 1999
INTERCEPTIONS BY Most Interceptions By Career: 16 Ken Wiedemann, 1967-69 Season: 9 Deltha O’Neal, 1999 Game: 4 Herman Edwards vs. Washington State, Nov. 16, 1974 Most Yards Career: 356 Deltha O’Neal, 1996-99 Season: 280 Anthony Washington, 1978 Game: 108 Syd'Quan Thompson at Washington State, Sept. 6, 2008
Deltha O‘Neal
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TOP 5 SINGLE-GAME RECORDS (1937-Present)
Bill Powell
Tarik Glenn
POINTS MOST POINTS IN A GAME BY CAL 86 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 70 vs. Baylor, Aug. 31, 2002 66 at Washington State, Sept. 6, 2008 60 vs. Montana, Nov. 15, 1947 59 vs. Eastern Washington, Sept. 12, 2009
MOST POINTS IN A GAME BOTH TEAMS 111 Cal (56) vs. Arizona (55) (4ot), Nov. 2, 1996 110 Cal (86) vs. Pacific (24), Sept. 7, 1991 103 Cal (54) vs. Washington (49), Oct. 6, 1973 101 Cal (52) vs. Virginia Tech (49), Dec. 26, 2003 (Insight Bowl) 100 Cal (37) at Washington State (63), Oct. 18, 1997
MOST POINTS IN A HALF BY CAL 51 vs. Pacific (1st), Sept. 7, 1991 45 vs. Baylor (1st), Aug. 31, 2002 45 vs. Temple (1st), Sept. 18, 1993 42 vs. San Jose State (1st), Oct. 1, 1977 42 vs. Portland State (1st), Sept. 16, 2006 42 vs. Arizona State (1st), Sept. 23, 2006 42 at Washington State (1st), Sept. 6, 2008
MOST POINTS IN A HALF BOTH TEAMS 68 Cal (51) vs. Pacific (17) (1st), Sept. 7, 1991 63 Cal (35) vs. Navy (28) (1st), Dec. 25, 1996 (Aloha Bowl) 58 Cal (41) at Arizona State (17), Nov. 1, 2003 58 Cal (42) vs. Portland State (16), Sept. 16, 2006 56 Cal (17) vs. Washington St. (39), Sept. 28, 2002
MOST PTS IN A QUARTER BY CAL 35 vs. Baylor (1st), Aug. 31, 2002 29 vs. Pacific (2nd), Sept. 7, 1991 28 vs. Cal Aggies (4th), Oct. 8, 1938 28 vs. Pacific (3rd), Sept. 7, 1991 28 vs. Temple (1st), Sept. 18, 1993 28 vs. Arizona State (2nd), Sept. 23, 2006 28 vs. Arizona (1st), Sept. 22, 2007
MOST POINTS IN A QUARTER BOTH TEAMS 43 Cal (22) vs. Navy (21) (2nd), Dec. 25, 1996 (Aloha Bowl) 42 Cal (35) vs. Baylor (7) (1st), Aug. 31, 2002 42 Cal (21) vs. Oregon (21) (4th), Oct. 14, 1995 38 Cal (14) vs. Arizona (24) (2nd), Nov. 16, 2002 38 Cal (17) at Arizona State (21) (3rd), Nov. 9, 2002 38 Cal (10) vs. Washington (28) (4th), Oct. 6, 1973
152
FIRST DOWNS MOST TOTAL FIRST DOWNS BY CAL 35 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 35 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 31, 1981 32 vs. Washington, Oct. 12, 1985 32 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 1, 1977 31 at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 31 at Stanford, Nov. 22, 2003 31 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 6, 1990
FEWEST TOTAL FIRST DOWNS BY CAL 3 vs. USC, Nov. 4, 1967 3 vs. Washington, Oct. 26, 1946 3 vs. USC, Nov. 9, 1946 4 vs. Iowa, Sept. 30, 1961 4 vs. Pittsburgh, Sept. 17, 1955
MOST TOTAL FIRST DOWNS BOTH TEAMS 59 Cal (24) vs. Missouri (35), Oct. 5, 1985 58 Cal (21) vs. Arizona State (37), Oct. 17, 1981 57 Cal (30) vs. Washington State (27), Sept. 22, 1990 57 Cal (27) vs. Texas Tech (30), Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl) 56 Cal (26) vs. Nevada (30), Sept. 21, 1996
FEWEST TOTAL FIRST DOWNS BOTH TEAMS 16 Cal (12) vs. USF (4), Nov. 18, 1950 16 Cal (10) vs. Oregon (6), Oct. 5, 1946 18 Cal (16) vs. Washington (2), Oct. 23, 1948 18 Cal (12) vs. Northwestern (6), Jan. 1, 1949 18 Cal (3) vs. USC (15), Nov. 9, 1946
MOST FIRST DOWNS RUSHING BY CAL 24 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 24 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 24, 1959 22 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 6, 1990 20 vs. Oregon, Nov. 7, 1959 20 vs. Washington State, Nov. 17, 1956
FEWEST FIRST DOWNS RUSHING BY CAL 0 vs. USC, Nov. 4, 1964 0 vs. Illinois, Sept. 24, 1955 1 Many times. Last at USC, Nov. 8, 2008
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Charlie Erb
MOST FIRST DOWNS RUSHING BOTH TEAMS 37 Cal (8) vs. Arizona State (29), Oct. 17, 1981 35 Cal (24) vs. Pacific (11), Sept. 7, 1991 35 Cal (12) vs. Missouri (23), Oct. 5, 1985 34 Cal (10) vs. Washington State (24), Nov. 16, 1974 33 Many times. Last: Cal (14) vs. UCLA (19), Oct. 25, 1975
FEWEST FIRST DOWNS RUSHING BOTH TEAMS 2 Cal (1) vs. San Diego State (1), Sept. 18, 1982 3 Cal (2) vs. San Jose State (1), Sept. 26, 1981 6 Cal (3) vs. Stanford (3), Nov. 21, 1998 6 Cal (2) at Arizona State (4), Oct. 31, 2009 6 Cal (5) vs. Oregon (1), Sept. 16, 1967 7 Many times. Last: Cal (4) at Washington (3), Oct. 17, 1998
MOST FIRST DOWNS PASSING BY CAL 22 at Washington State, Oct. 19, 1996 21 at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 20 vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 20 vs. UCLA, Oct. 26, 1996 19 vs. Arizona, Nov. 4, 1989 19 vs. Stanford, Nov. 18, 1989
FEWEST FIRST DOWNS PASSING BY CAL 0 vs. Washington State, Sept. 17, 1966 0 vs. Iowa, Sept. 30, 1961 0 vs. Stanford, Nov. 19, 1960 0 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 24, 1959 0 vs. Stanford, Nov. 19, 1949 0 vs. USC, Nov. 9, 1946
MOST FIRST DOWNS PASSING BOTH TEAMS 35 Cal (17) vs. Virginia Tech (18), Dec. 26, 2003 (Insight Bowl) 34 Cal (16) vs. Washington State (18), Sept. 28, 2002 33 Cal (12) at Illinois (21), Sept. 20, 2003 33 Cal (15) vs. Texas Tech (18), Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl) 32 Cal (15) vs. Arizona (17), Nov. 16, 2002 32 Cal (20) vs. Arizona (12), Nov. 2, 1996
FEWEST FIRST DOWNS PASSING BOTH TEAMS 1 Cal (1) vs. Washington (0), No. 14, 1959 2 Cal (0) vs. Iowa (2), Sept. 30, 1961 2 Cal (1) vs. USF (1), Nov. 18, 1950 3 Many times. Last: Cal (2) vs. UCLA (1), Oct. 17, 1959
Craig Morton
PLAYS MOST PLAYS BY CAL 102 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 101 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 6, 1990 98 vs. Washington, Oct. 12, 1985 95 vs. Washington State, Nov. 11, 1978 94 vs. Pacific, Sept. 15, 1984 94 vs. UCLA, Oct. 21, 1978
FEWEST PLAYS BY CAL 36 vs. Washington, Oct. 26, 1946 39 vs. Pittsburgh, Sept. 17, 1955 44 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 11, 1963 44 vs. Washington, Nov. 8, 1952 44 vs. USC, Nov. 9, 1946
MOST PLAYS - BOTH TEAMS 180 Cal (89) at Oregon State (91), Oct. 31, 1998 176 Cal (78) vs. Arizona State (98), Oct. 17, 1981 174 Cal (79) vs. Oregon (95), Sept. 12, 1970 173 Many times
FEWEST PLAYS - BOTH TEAMS 99 Cal (58) vs. Miami (41), Oct. 9, 1964 100 Cal (62) vs. USF (38), Nov. 18, 1950 104 Cal (61) vs. UCLA (43), Nov. 11, 1950 107 Cal (51) vs. Ohio State (56), Oct. 2, 1954 111 Cal (39) vs. Pittsburgh (72), Sept. 17, 1955 111 Cal (62) vs. Pennsylvania (49), Oct. 1, 1955
TOTAL YARDS MOST TOTAL YARDS BY CAL 729 vs. Washington, Nov. 15, 2003 670 vs. Utah, Oct. 11, 1958 661 vs. New Mexico State, Sept. 11, 2004 659 vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 638 vs. Minnesota, Oct. 6, 1951
FEWEST TOTAL YARDS BY CAL 4 vs. USC, Nov. 9, 1946 8 vs. Fleet City, Oct. 21, 1944 33 vs. St. Mary’s Pre-Flight., Nov. 25, 1944 45 vs. USC, Sept. 29, 1945 60 vs. UCLA, Oct. 13, 1945
Lindsey Chapman
Walter Gordon
MOST TOTAL YARDS BOTH TEAMS
FEWEST RUSHING ATTEMPTS BOTH TEAMS
1254 Cal (659) vs. Arizona (595), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 1148 Cal (548) vs. Washington State (600), Oct. 22, 2005 1096 Cal (505) vs. Washington State (591), Oct. 8, 1988 1096 Cal (625) vs. Washington (471), Oct. 6, 1973 1093 Cal (549) at Louisiana Tech (544), Oct. 4, 1997
54 Cal (27) vs. Washington State (27), Sept. 28, 2002 56 Cal (30) at Arizona State (26), Oct. 31, 2009 56 Cal (23) at Arizona (23), Nov. 11, 2006 57 Cal (26) at USC (31), Nov. 18, 2006 58 Cal (38) vs. Arizona (20), Sept. 15, 2007 59 Cal (27) vs. Arizona (32), Nov. 16, 2002 59 Cal (36) vs. San Diego State (23), Sept. 18, 1982
FEWEST TOTAL YARDS BOTH TEAMS 162 Cal (8) vs. Fleet City (154), Oct. 21, 1944 210 Cal (45) vs. USC (165), Sept. 29, 1945 222 Cal (108) vs. Washington (114), Nov. 6, 1937 241 Cal (135) vs. Nevada (106), Oct. 27, 1945 243 Cal (81) vs. UCLA (162), Nov. 11, 1944
MOST RUSHING YARDS BY CAL 490 vs. Minnesota, Oct. 6, 1951 442 vs. Montana, Nov. 15, 1947 435 vs. Pacific, Oct. 8, 1938 432 vs. St. Mary’s, Oct. 4, 1947 431 vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008
FEWEST RUSHING YARDS BY CAL
RUSHING MOST RUSHING ATTEMPTS BY CAL 84 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 79 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 24, 1959 78 vs. Oregon State, Nov. 1, 1958 75 vs. UCLA, Nov. 2, 1957 74 vs. Oregon, Nov. 7, 1959
FEWEST RUSHING ATTEMPTS BY CAL 19 vs. San Diego State, Sept. 10, 1983 19 vs. Georgia, Sept. 11, 1976 20 vs. Oregon, Oct. 13, 2001 20 vs. Penn State, Oct. 27, 1962 21 Many times
MOST RUSHING ATTEMPTS BOTH TEAMS 142 Cal (75) vs. UCLA (67), Nov. 2, 1957 125 Cal (69) vs. SMU (56), Sept. 21, 1957 121 Cal (54) vs. Oregon State (67), Oct. 18, 1975 121 Cal (62) vs. Pacific (59), Sept. 20, 1958 120 Cal (60) vs. UCLA (60), Oct. 17, 1959
-77 vs. Missouri, Sept. 30, 1972 -38 vs. Fleet City, Oct. 21, 1944 -36 vs. Stanford, Nov. 21, 1998 -28 vs. USC, Nov. 1, 1980 -20 vs. USC, Nov. 5, 1988
MOST RUSHING YARDS BOTH TEAMS 758 Cal (350) vs. Pacific (408), Sept. 20, 1958 663 Cal (226) vs. Colorado (437), Sept. 13, 1975 658 Cal (162) vs. Arizona State (496), Oct. 17, 1981 643 Cal (214) vs. Iowa (429), Jan. 1, 1959 (Rose Bowl) 633 Cal (191) vs. Washington State (442), Nov. 16, 1974 633 Cal (178) vs. UCLA (455), Oct. 27, 1973
FEWEST RUSHING YARDS BOTH TEAMS -26 Cal (-36) vs. Stanford (10), Nov. 21, 1998 41 Cal (2) vs. San Diego State (39), Sept. 18, 1982 47 Cal (-38) vs. Fleet City (85), Oct. 21, 1944 53 Cal (58) vs. Arizona (-5), Nov. 16, 2002 69 Cal (40) vs. UCLA (29), Oct. 19, 2002
MOST RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS BY CAL 8 vs. Montana, Nov. 15, 1947 7 vs. San Jose State, Aug. 31, 1985 7 vs. Eastern Washington, Sept. 12, 2009 7 at Air Force, Sept. 4, 2004 7 at Washington State, Sept. 6, 2008 6 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 1, 1994 6 vs. Arizona, Oct. 25, 2003
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TOP 5 SINGLE-GAME RECORDS (continued)
Dave Barr
Vince Ferragamo
Dick Erickson
MOST RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS BOTH TEAMS
FEWEST PASS COMPLETIONS BY CAL
HIGHEST COMPLETION PCT. (20+ ATTEMPTS) - BOTH TEAMS
10 Cal (7) vs. San Jose State (3), Aug. 31, 1985 9 Cal (3) vs. UCLA (6), Oct. 27, 1973 9 Cal (1) vs. Texas (8), Sept. 19, 1970 8 Many times. Last: Cal (7) at Air Force (1), Sept. 4, 2004
0 Many times. Last vs. Washington State, Sept. 17, 1966
74.5 Cal (29-34) at USC (15-35), Oct. 9, 2004 74.1 Cal (35-46) vs. Arizona (25-35), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 72.6 Cal (24-35) vs. Washington State (21-27), Sept. 22, 1990 72.6 Cal (13-23) vs. USC (32-39), Oct. 30, 1993 71.8 Cal (27-35) vs. Virginia Tech (24-36), Dec. 26, 2003 (Insight Bowl)
PASSING MOST PASS ATTEMPTS BY CAL 60 at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 57 vs. UCLA, Oct. 26, 1996 57 vs. Stanford, Nov. 18, 1989 57 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 56 at Arizona, Oct. 18, 2008
FEWEST PASS ATTEMPTS BY CAL 0 vs. Cal Aggies, Oct. 8, 1938 0 vs. Pacific, Oct. 8, 1938 1 vs. Stanford, Nov. 19, 1960 1 vs. USF, Nov. 18, 1950 2 vs. Washington, Oct. 16, 1965
MOST PASS ATTEMPTS - BOTH TEAMS 105 Cal (47) at Oregon State (58), Oct. 31, 1998 102 Cal (42) vs. Texas Tech (60), Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl) 99 Cal (50) vs. Miami (49), Sept. 15, 1990 96 Cal (49) at Washington State (47), Sept. 22, 2001 94 Cal (37) at Illinois (57), Sept. 20, 2003
FEWEST PASS ATTEMPTS - BOTH TEAMS 0 Cal (0) vs. Cal Aggies (0), Oct. 8, 1938 0 Cal (0) vs. Pacific (0), Oct. 8, 1938 5 Cal (1) vs. USF (4), Nov. 18, 1950 7 Cal (7) vs. St. Mary’s (0), Sept. 24, 1949 10 Cal (4) vs. St. Mary’s (6), Sept. 24, 1938
MOST PASS COMPLETIONS BY CAL 43 vs. Florida, Sept. 13, 1980 35 vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 33 at Washington, Nov. 12, 1994 33 at Washington State, Oct. 19, 1996 33, at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008
154
MOST PASS COMPLETIONS BOTH TEAMS 63 Cal (24) vs. Texas Tech (39), Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl) 62 Cal (29) vs. Miami (33), Sept. 15, 1990 60 Cal (35) vs. Arizona (25), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 59 Cal (28) at Oregon (31), Sept. 29, 2007 58 Cal (29) vs. Washington State (29), Sept. 28, 2002 58 Cal (16) vs. Arizona (42), Sept. 15, 2007
FEWEST PASS COMPLETIONS BOTH TEAMS 0 Cal (0) vs. Cal Aggies (0), Oct. 8, 1938 0 Cal (0) vs. Pacific (0), Oct. 8, 1938 1 Cal (0) vs. Washington (1), Nov. 6, 1937 1 Cal (0) vs. USF (1), Nov. 6, 1943 1 Cal (1) vs. Nevada (0), Oct. 27, 1945
MOST INTERCEPTIONS THROWN BY CAL 10 vs. UCLA, Oct. 21, 1978 8 vs. USC, Nov. 6, 1982 7 vs. Arizona State, Nov. 2, 1985 6 vs. Washington, Oct. 28, 1972 6 vs. Washington, Nov. 10, 1962
MOST INTERCEPTIONS THROWN BOTH TEAMS 11 Cal (10) vs. UCLA (1), Oct. 21, 1978 9 Cal (6) vs. Washington (3), Nov. 10, 1962 8 Many times. Last: Cal (7) vs. Arizona State (1), Nov. 2, 1985
HIGHEST COMPLETION PCT. (20+ ATTEMPTS) BY CAL 85.3 at USC (29-34), Oct. 9, 2004 84.0 vs. Hawaii (21-25), Nov. 27, 1993 83.9 vs. Arizona (26-31), Sept. 15, 1979 83.3 at San Jose State (20-24), Sept. 7, 1996 83.3 vs. UCLA (20-24), Nov. 4, 2006
LOWEST COMPLETION PCT. (20+ ATTEMPTS) BY CAL 17.9 vs. Notre Dame (5-28), Sept. 23, 1967 20.0 vs. USC (4-20), Oct. 28, 1939 23.8 vs. Washington (10-42), Oct. 10, 1981 23.8 vs. Coast Guard (5-21), Nov. 4, 1944 24.0 vs. USC (6-25), Sept. 29, 1945
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
LOWEST COMPLETION PCT. (20 ATTEMPTS) - BOTH TEAMS 27.4 Cal (12-40) vs. Oregon State (8-33), Nov. 9, 1999 31.1 Cal (5-21) vs. Coast Guard (14-40), Nov. 4, 1944 32.8 Cal (10-34) vs. San Jose State (10-27), Sept. 23, 1972 33.3 Cal (8-15) vs. Temple (6-27), Sept. 18, 1993 34.8 Cal (13-38) vs. Air Force (3-8), Sept. 21, 2002 34.8 Cal (8-20) vs. Oregon State (8-26), Nov. 13, 1954
MOST PASSING YARDS BY CAL 503 vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 443 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 15, 1983 436 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 15, 1977 435 vs. UCLA, Oct. 26, 1996 423 at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008
FEWEST PASSING YARDS BY CAL 0 Many times. Last vs. Washington State, Sept. 17, 1966
MOST PASSING YARDS BOTH TEAMS 921 Cal (503) vs. Arizona (418), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 845 Cal (371) vs. Washington State (474), Sept. 28, 2002 809 Cal (296) at Washington State (513), Sept. 22, 2001 792 Cal (394) vs. Virginia Tech (398), Dec. 26, 2003 (Insight Bowl) 790 Cal (298) vs. Arizona (477), Nov. 16, 2002
FEWEST PASSING YARDS BOTH TEAMS 6 Cal (0) vs. Washington (6), Nov. 6, 1937 7 Cal (7) vs. Nevada (0), Oct. 27, 1945 13 Cal (0) vs. St. Mary’s Pre-Flight. (13), Nov. 25, 1944 34 Cal (0) vs. Stanford (34), Nov. 23, 1940 35 Cal (12) vs. USF (23), Nov. 18, 1950
Vic Bottari
Gary Plummer
MOST PASSING TOUCHDOWNS BY CAL 8 vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 6 vs. Pacific, Sept. 7, 1991 5 at Oregon State, Oct. 2, 2004 5 vs. Arizona State, Nov. 9, 2002 5 Many times. Last at Washington, Oct. 5, 2002
MOST PASSING TOUCHDOWNS BOTH TEAMS 13 Cal (8) vs. Arizona (5), Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 9 Cal (5) at Arizona State (4), Nov. 9, 2002 9 Cal (6) vs. Pacific (3), Sept. 7, 1991 9 Cal 4) vs. Washington State (4), Oct. 22, 2005 8 Cal (4) vs. UCLA (4), Oct. 16, 2004 8 Cal (3) at Washington State (5), Oct. 18, 1997
PENALTIES MOST PENALTIES BY CAL 21 at Houston, Sept. 6, 1997 21 at San Jose State, Sept. 7, 1996 19 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 27, 1951 18 vs. Washington, Oct. 6, 1973 17 vs. Washington, Oct. 9, 1993 17 vs. Santa Clara, Sept. 20, 1947
MOST PENALTIES BOTH TEAMS 31 Cal (21) at Houston (10), Sept., 6, 1997 29 Cal (15) vs. Arizona (14), Nov. 14, 1998 29 Cal (13) vs. Washington State (16), Oct. 8, 1955 28 Cal (13) vs. Oklahoma (15), Sept. 20, 1997 28 Cal (21) at San Jose State (7), Sept. 7, 1996 28 Cal (17) vs. Santa Clara (11), Sept. 20, 1947
MOST YARDS PENALIZED BY CAL 202 at San Jose State, Sept. 7, 1996 194 vs. Washington, Oct. 6, 1973 189 at Houston, Sept. 6, 1997 178 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 1, 1994 172 vs. Oregon State, Oct. 16, 1976 172 vs. USC, Oct. 19, 1957
MOST YARDS PENALIZED BOTH TEAMS 307 Cal (154) vs. Arizona (153), Nov. 14, 1998 283 Cal (189) at Houston (94), Sept. 6, 1997 279 Cal (130) vs. Oklahoma (149), Sept. 20, 1997 272 Cal (152) vs. Oregon State (120), Oct. 13, 1979 262 Cal (86) vs. UCLA (176), Oct. 20, 1956
POINTS ALLOWED MOST POINTS IN A GAME ALLOWED 66 vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973 63 at Washington State, Oct. 18, 1997 61 at USC, Oct. 22, 1994 61 vs. UCLA, Oct. 27, 1973 60 vs. USC, Nov. 1, 1980
MOST POINTS IN A HALF ALLOWED 45 vs. Alabama (2nd), Sept. 15, 1973 42 at Washington State (1st), Oct. 18, 1997 39 vs. Washington State (2nd), Sept. 28, 2002 39 vs. USC (2nd), Nov. 1, 1980 38 vs. Illinois (1st), Sept. 1, 2001 38 at Purdue (1st), Sept. 12, 1992
MOST POINTS IN A QUARTER ALLOWED 31 at Arizona State (2nd), Nov. 7, 1998 29 vs. Washington State (3rd), Sept. 28, 2002 29 vs. USC (4th), Nov. 3, 1973 28 Many times. Last at Arizona, Oct. 18, 2008
Jack Clark
MOST FIRST DOWNS RUSHING ALLOWED 29 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 27 vs. Notre Dame, Sept. 18, 1965 24 vs. Washington State, Nov. 16, 1974 23 vs. Missouri, Oct. 5, 1981 22 Many times. Last vs. Michigan, Oct. 4, 1980
FEWEST FIRST DOWNS PASSING ALLOWED 0 Many times. Last vs. Oregon State, Nov. 11, 1972
MOST FIRST DOWNS PASSING ALLOWED 23 vs. Miami, Sept. 15, 1990 21 at Illinois, Sept. 20, 2003 20 vs. USC, Oct. 30, 1993 19 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 12, 1987 19 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 27, 1986 19 vs. Oregon, Sept. 12, 1970
PLAYS ALLOWED FEWEST PLAYS ALLOWED
FIRST DOWNS ALLOWED FEWEST TOTAL FIRST DOWNS ALLOWED 1 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 2 vs. Washington, Oct. 23, 1948 4 vs. USF, Nov. 18, 1950 5 vs. Kansas, Oct. 2, 1965 5 vs. Iowa, Dec. 31, 1993 (Alamo Bowl)
37 vs. Oregon State, Nov. 1, 1958 38 vs. Iowa, Dec. 31, 1993 (Alamo Bowl) 38 vs. USF, Nov. 18, 1950 38 vs. Washington, Oct. 23, 1948 39 vs. Oregon State, Nov. 12, 1955
MOST PLAYS ALLOWED 101 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 27, 1986 98 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 96 vs. Washington, Oct. 10, 1981 95 vs. Miami, Sept. 16, 1989 95 vs. Oregon, Sept. 12, 1970
MOST TOTAL FIRST DOWNS ALLOWED 37 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 35 vs. Missouri, Oct. 5, 1985 31 Many times. Last vs. Duke, Oct. 12, 1963
FEWEST FIRST DOWNS RUSHING ALLOWED 0 vs. Stanford, Nov. 20, 1993 0 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 1 Many times. Last vs. San Jose State, Sept. 5, 1992
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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TOP 5 SINGLE-GAME RECORDS (continued)
Chidi Ahanotu
TOTAL YARDS ALLOWED FEWEST TOTAL YARDS ALLOWED 22 vs. Cal Aggies, Oct. 16, 1937 23 vs. Pacific, Oct. 16, 1937 40 vs. San Jose State, Oct. 5, 1968 43 vs. Cal Aggies, Oct. 8, 1938 57 vs. Washington State, Oct. 9, 1937
MOST TOTAL YARDS ALLOWED 667 vs. Alabama, Sept. 15, 1973 646 vs. Navy, Dec. 25, 1996 (Aloha Bowl) 630 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 619 at Washington State, Oct. 18, 1997 619 vs. UCLA, Oct. 23, 1965
RUSHING DEFENSE FEWEST RUSHING ATTEMPTS ALLOWED 14 vs. Stanford, Nov. 20, 1993 19 vs. Washington State, Oct. 14, 2006 20 vs. Arizona, Sept. 15, 2007 21 at Minnesota, Sept. 19, 2009 21 vs. Texas Tech, Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl) 21 vs. Washington State, Nov. 13, 1976 21 vs. Stanford, Nov. 22, 1958
MOST RUSHING ATTEMPTS ALLOWED 84 vs. Notre Dame, Sept. 18, 1965 79 vs. Colorado, Sept. 13, 1975 78 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 78 vs. Missouri, Sept. 30, 1972 76 vs. Washington State, Nov. 16, 1974 76 vs. Washington, Nov. 10, 1962
FEWEST RUSHING YARDS ALLOWED -40 vs. San Jose State, Sept. 5, 1992 -38 vs. Washington State, Nov. 13, 1976 -17 vs. Oregon, Nov. 16, 1968 -5 vs. Arizona, Nov. 16, 2002 -5 vs. Stanford, Nov. 20, 1993 -5 vs. Oregon, Nov. 4, 1972
Paul Andrew
Je’Rod Cherry
MOST RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS ALLOWED
HIGHEST COMPLETION PERCENTAGE (20+ ATTEMPTS) ALLOWED
8 vs. Texas, Sept. 19, 1970 7 vs. UCLA, Oct. 23, 1965 7 vs. Kansas, Nov. 18, 1961 6 Many times. Last vs. Navy, Dec. 25, 1996 (Aloha Bowl)
PASSING DEFENSE MOST PASS ATTEMPTS ALLOWED
FEWEST PASSING YARDS ALLOWED 0 Many times. Last vs. Washington, Nov. 7, 1964
62 vs. Arizona, Sept. 15, 2007 60 vs. Texas Tech, Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl) 59 at Washington, Oct. 10, 2002 58 at Oregon State, Oct. 31, 1998 57 at Illinois, Sept. 20, 2003 57 vs. San Jose State, Aug. 31, 1985
MOST PASSING YARDS ALLOWED
FEWEST PASS COMPLETIONS ALLOWED
MOST PASSING TOUCHDOWNS ALLOWED
0 Many times. Last vs. Washington, Nov. 7, 1964
MOST PASS COMPLETIONS ALLOWED 42 vs. Arizona, Sept. 15, 2007 39 vs. Texas Tech, Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl) 35 vs. Brigham Young, Dec. 22, 2005 (Las Vegas Bowl) 35 at Illinois, Sept. 20, 2003 34 vs. Stanford, Nov. 21, 1959
MOST INTERCEPTIONS MADE BY CAL 6 vs. Syracuse, Oct. 26,1968 6 vs. Washington State, Nov. 16, 1974 5 Many times. Last vs. Washington, Oct. 21, 2006
LOWEST COMPLETION PERCENTAGE (20+ ATTEMPTS) BY AN OPPONENT 19.0 vs. Alameda Coast Guard (4-21), Nov. 20, 1943 22.2 vs. Temple (6-27), Sept. 18, 1993 24.2 vs. Oregon State (8-33), Nov. 6, 1999 25.0 vs. St. Mary’s (5-20), Sept. 24, 1949 25.0 vs. Washington State (5-20), Nov. 2, 1946 25.0 vs. Oregon State (5-20), Nov. 18, 1939
MOST RUSHING YARDS ALLOWED 532 vs. UCLA, Oct. 21, 1972 496 vs. Arizona State, Oct. 17, 1981 490 vs. Oklahoma, Sept. 18, 1976 455 vs. UCLA, Oct. 27, 1973 443 vs. Texas, Sept. 19, 1970
156
87.2 vs. Stanford (34-39), Nov. 21, 1959 84.0 at Stanford (21-25), Nov. 22, 1997 83.3 at Washington (20-24), Dec. 5, 2009 82.1 vs. USC (32-39), Oct. 30, 1993 81.8 at Arizona State (18-22), Nov. 14, 1992
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
520 vs. Texas Tech, Dec. 30, 2004 (Holiday Bowl) 513 at Washington State, Sept. 22, 2001 492 vs. Arizona, Nov. 16, 2002 477 at Arizona State, Nov. 9, 2002 477 vs. San Diego State, Sept. 14, 1996
5 at Arizona State, Nov. 7, 1998 5 at Washington State, Oct. 18, 1997 5 vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) 5 vs. Washington, Oct. 6, 1973 5 vs. Washington State, Oct. 22, 2005
OPPONENT PENALTIES MOST PENALTIES BY OPPONENT 17 vs. Arizona State, Nov. 6, 1993 16 vs. Washington State, Oct. 8, 1955 15 vs. Oklahoma, Sept. 20, 1997 15 vs. USC, Oct. 7, 1995 15 vs. Notre Dame, Oct. 10, 1959 15 vs. UCLA, Oct. 20, 1956
MOST YARDS PENALIZED OPPONENT 179 vs. Missouri, Sept. 30, 1972 176 vs. UCLA, Oct. 20, 1956 163 vs. Washington, Nov. 14, 1959 158 vs. Notre Dame, Oct. 10, 1959 153 vs. Arizona, Nov. 14, 1998
TOP 10 PERFORMERS NOTE: The following records do not include bowl statistics prior to the 2002 season, per NCAA rules. Active players are not listed among highest career averages | * all-time followed by modern record
SCORING
RUSHING
CAREER PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Doug Brien (1991-93) 2. Duke Morrison (1920-22) 3. Jim Breech (1974-77) 4. Tom Schneider (2004-06) 5. Mark Jensen (1999-2002) Robbie Keen (1987-90) 7. Russell White (1990-92) 8. Chuck Muncie (1973-75) 9. Jahvid Best (2007-09) Marshawn Lynch (204-06) 10. Sean Dawkins (1990-92)
TD 0 42 0 0 0 0 40 37 35 35 31
CAREER YARDS
PAT 120 22 110 158 109 103 0 0 0 0 0
2XP 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0
FG 56 1 50 33 45 47 0 0 0 0 0
PTS 288 277 260 257 244 244 242 224 210 210 186
SINGLE-SEASON PLAYER 1. Duke Morrison 2. Mark Jensen 3. Duke Morrison* 4. Lindsey Chapman* 5. Tyler Fredrickson 6. Russell White* Doug Brien* 8. Tom Schneider 9. Jahvid Best Jahvid Best 10. Pesky Sprott* Crip Toomey* Jim Monachino* Chuck Muncie Randy Pratt J.J. Arrington Justin Forsett
YEAR 1922 2002 1920 1993 2003 1991 1991 2006 2008 2009 1920 1920 1949 1975 1983 2004 2007
TD 18 0 17 17 0 16 0 0 16 16 15 7 15 15 0 15 15
PAT 20 50 2 0 54 1 41 52 0 0 0 39 0 0 24 0 0
FG 1 19 0 0 15 0 19 15 0 0 0 3 0 0 22 0 0
PTS 131 107 104 102 99 98 98 97 96 96 90 90 90 90 90 90 90
TOTAL 8236 7811 7001 6799 6599 5920 5805 5788 5018 4865
TD 53 71 56 43 55 49 51 33 44 31
TOTAL OFFENSE CAREER PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Troy Taylor (1986-89) 2. Kyle Boller (1999-02) 3. Pat Barnes (1993-96) 4. Rich Campbell (1977-80) 5. Nate Longshore (2005-08) 6. Dave Barr (1991-94) 7. Aaron Rodgers (2003-04) 8. Gale Gilbert (1980-84) 9. Mike Pawlawski (1988-91) 10. Justin Vedder (1997-98)
PLAYS 1479 1576 1115 1134 993 950 825 1178 815 975
RUSH 110 -169 -359 -375 -184 -385 336 -808 -163 -175
PASS 8126 7980 7360 7174 6783 6305 5469 6566 5181 5040
SINGLE-SEASON PLAYER 1. Pat Barnes* 2. Aaron Rodgers 3. Nate Longshore 4. Kevin Riley 5. Troy Taylor 6. Justin Vedder 7. Kyle Boller 8. Aaron Rodgers 9. Troy Taylor 10. Nate Longshore
YEAR PLAYS 1996 506 2003 435 2006 405 2009 464 1989 481 1997 489 2002 493 2004 390 1988 455 2007 403
RUSH -83 210 -52 464 46 25 -83 126 136 -44
PASS TOTAL 3499 3416 2903 3113 3021 2969 2901 2901 2738 2784 2718 2743 2815 2732 2566 2692 2416 2552 2580 2536
PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Russell White (1990-92) 2. Marshawn Lynch (2004-06) 3. Justin Forsett (2004-07) 4. Joe Igber (1999-2002) 5. Chuck Muncie (1973-75) 6. Paul Jones (1975, 77-79) 7. Jahvid Best (2008-09) 8. J.J. Arrington (2003-04) 9. John Olszewski (1950-52) 10. Reynard Rutherford (1992-95)
ATT 663 490 567 678 549 715 364 396 416 491
YDS 3367 3230 3220 3124 3052 2930 2668 2625 2504 2256
AVG 5.1 6.6 5.7 4.6 5.6 4.1 7.3 6.6 6.0 4.6
SINGLE-SEASON YARDS PLAYER 1. J.J. Arrington 2. Jahvid Best 3. Justin Forsett 4. Chuck Muncie 5. Marshawn Lynch 6. Marshawn Lynch 7. Adimchinobe Echemandu 8. Russell White* 9. Joe Igber 10. Jackie Jensen
YEAR 2004 2008 2007 1975 2006 2005 2003 1991 2002 1948
ATT 289 194 305 228 223 196 238 241 241 148
YDS 2018 1580 1546 1460 1356 1246 1195 1177 1130 1080
AVG 7.0 8.1 5.1 6.4 6.1 6.4 5.0 4.9 4.7 7.3
TD 15 15 15 13 11 10 13 14 7 7
SINGLE-GAME YARDS PLAYER (OPPONENT, DATE) 1. Jahvid Best vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008 2. Jerry Drew vs. Oregon State, Nov. 13, 1954 3. John Olszewski vs. Washington State, Oct. 13, 1951 4. J.J. Arrington vs. Southern Miss, Dec. 4, 2004 5. Justin Forsett vs. New Mexico State, Sept. 23, 2005 6. Paul Jones vs. Washington State, Nov. 11, 1978 7. Russell White vs. USC, Nov. 2, 1991 8. Joe Igber vs. Stanford, Nov. 23, 2002 9. Russell White vs. San Jose State, Sept. 5, 1992 10. Chuck Muncie vs. Oregon, Oct. 11, 1975
YDS 311 283 269 261 235 232 229 226 216 207
ATT 19 11 20 31 31 46 23 26 19 26
CAREER RUSHING TDs PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Russell White (1990-92) 2. Chuck Muncie (1973-75) 3. Marshawn Lynch (2004-06) Jahvid Best (2007-09) 5. Justin Forsett (2004-07) 6. Paul Jones (1975, 77-79) Lindsey Chapman (1991-93) 8. J.J. Arrington (2003-04) 9. John Tuggle (1979-82) 10. Joe Igber (1999-2002)
ATT 663 549 490 364 567 715 444 396 434 678
YDS 3367 3052 3230 2668 3220 2930 2190 2625 1813 3124
AVG 5.1 5.6 6.6 7.3 5.7 4.1 4.9 6.6 4.2 4.6
TD 35 32 29 29 26 22 22 20 16 16
SINGLE-GAME PLAYER (OPPONENT, DATE) 1. Pat Barnes vs. Arizona (4ot), Nov. 2, 1996 2. Pat Barnes vs. UCLA, Oct. 26, 1996 3. Aaron Rodgers vs. Virginia Tech, Dec. 26, 2003 4. Aaron Rodgers at Stanford, Nov. 22, 2003 5. Kevin Riley at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 6. Charlie Young vs. Oregon State, Oct. 15, 1977 7. Troy Taylor vs. Stanford, Nov. 18, 1989 8. Troy Taylor vs. Washington State, Nov. 11, 1989 9. Troy Taylor vs. Arizona, Nov. 4, 1989 10. Troy Taylor vs. San Jose State, Oct. 1, 1988
YARDS 528 430 424 414 400 399 398 395 394 379
Troy Taylor is Cal's all-time leader with 8,236 yards of total offense and has four of the top 10 games in school history.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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TOP 10 PERFORMERS (continued) SINGLE-SEASON RUSHING TDs PLAYER 1. J.J. Arrington Justin Forsett Jahvid Best 4. Russell White Lindsey Chapman 6. Chuck Muncie Adimchinobe Echemandu 8. Jim Monachino Jahvid Best Shane Vereen
YEAR 2004 2007 2008 1991 1993 1975 2003 1949 2009 2009
ATT 289 305 194 241 207 228 238 138 141 183
YDS 2018 1546 1580 1177 1037 1460 1195 781 867 952
AVG 7.0 5.1 8.1 4.9 5.0 6.4 5.0 5.7 6.1 5.2
SINGLE-SEASON PASSING YARDS
TD 15 15 15 14 14 13 13 12 12 12
YEAR COMP 1996 250 2006 227 2003 215 2009 209 2002 225 1983 216 1989 220 1997 221 1995 197 1993 187
ATT INT 420 8 377 13 349 5 382 8 421 10 365 17 394 12 390 14 362 11 275 12
PCT 59.5 60.2 61.6 54.7 53.4 59.2 55.8 56.7 54.4 68.0
YDS 3499 3021 2903 2850 2815 2769 2738 2718 2685 2619
SINGLE-GAME PASSING YARDS
100-YARD RUSHING GAMES (CAREER) PLAYER (YEARS) YDS 1. Marshawn Lynch (2004-06) 3230 2. Chuck Muncie (1973-75) 3052 Russell White (1990-92) 3367 Justin Forsett (2004-07) 3220 5. J.J. Arrington (2003-04) 2625 6. Jahvid Best (2007-09) 2668 7. John Olszewski (1950-52) 2504 Joe Igber (1999-02) 3124 9. Three tied
PLAYER 1. Pat Barnes* 2. Nate Longshore 3. Aaron Rodgers 4. Kevin Riley 5. Kyle Boller 6. Gale Gilbert 7. Troy Taylor 8. Justin Vedder 9. Pat Barnes 10. Dave Barr*
100-YD GAMES 17 15 15 15 14 13 10 10 6
PLAYER (OPPONENT, DATE) 1. Pat Barnes vs. Arizona (4ot), Nov. 2, 1996 2. Pat Barnes vs. UCLA, Oct. 26, 1996 3. Kevin Riley at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 4. Rich Campbell vs. Florida, Sept. 13, 1980 5. Aaron Rodgers vs. Virginia Tech, Dec. 26, 2003 6. Pat Barnes at Washington, Nov. 12, 1994 7. Joe Roth vs. Washington, Nov. 8, 1975 8. Joe Roth vs. Georgia, Sept. 11, 1976 Dave Barr at Hawai'i, Nov. 27, 1993 10. Troy Taylor vs. Stanford, Nov. 18, 1989
COMP-ATT 35-46 26-57 33-58 43-53 27-35 33-44 24-36 21-36 21-25 29-57
CAREER PASSING TDs
PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Kyle Boller (1999-2002) 2. Pat Barnes (1993-96) 3. Nate Longshore (2005-08) Troy Taylor (1986-89) 5. Dave Barr (1992-94) 6. Aaron Rodgers (2003-04) 7. Mike Pawlawski (1988-91) 8. Kevin Riley (2007-09) 9. Craig Morton (1962-64) 10. Rich Campbell (1977-80)
COMP 622 549 558 683 502 424 419 337 355 599
ATT 1301 950 936 1162 791 665 703 623 641 929
INT 48 26 31 46 31 13 29 13 31 42
PCT 47.8 57.8 56.7 58.8 63.5 63.8 59.6 54.0 55.4 64.5
YARDS 503 435 423 421 394 389 380 379 379 377
YDS 7980 7360 6783 8126 6305 5469 5181 4559 4501 7174
SINGLE-SEASON PASSING TDS
PLAYER 1. Pat Barnes* 2. Kyle Boller 3. Aaron Rodgers Nate Longshore 5. Mike Pawlawski Dave Barr* 7. Justin Vedder 8. Dave Barr Aaron Rodgers 10. Troy Taylor Kevin Riley
YEAR COMP 1996 250 2002 225 2004 209 2006 227 1991 191 1993 187 1997 221 1992 187 2003 215 1987 169 2009 209
ATT INT 420 8 421 10 316 8 377 13 316 13 275 12 390 14 275 12 349 5 278 12 382 8
PCT 59.5 53.4 66.1 60.2 60.4 68.0 56.7 68.0 61.6 60.8 54.7
TD 31 24 19 18 28 13 16 20 17 21
YDS 3499 2815 2566 3021 2517 2619 2718 2619 2903 2081 2850
TD 64 54 51 51 48 43 40 36 36 35 TD 31 28 24 24 21 21 20 19 19 18 18
300-YARD PASSING GAMES (CAREER) PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Pat Barnes (1993-96) 2. Rich Campbell (1978-80) Troy Taylor (1986-89) 4. Aaron Rodgers (2003-04) 5. Steve Bartkowski (1972-74) Gale Gilbert (1980-84) Dave Barr (1991-94) 8. Justin Vedder (1997-98) 9. Jay Cruze (1971-72) Joe Roth (1975-76) Kyle Boller (1999-02) Nate Longshore (2005-08) Kevin Riley (2007-09)
Aaron Rodgers
PASSING CAREER PASSING YARDS PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Troy Taylor (1986-89) 2. Kyle Boller (1999-2002) 3. Pat Barnes (1993-96) 4. Rich Campbell (1977-80) 5. Nate Longshore (2005-08) 6. Gale Gilbert (1980-84) 7. Dave Barr (1992-94) 8. Aaron Rodgers (2003-04) 9. Mike Pawlawski (1988-91) 10. Justin Vedder (1997-98)
158
COMP 683 622 549 599 558 548 502 424 419 431
ATT 1162 1301 950 929 936 984 791 665 703 776
INT 46 48 26 42 31 48 31 13 29 27
PCT 58.8 47.8 57.8 64.5 59.6 55.7 63.5 63.8 59.6 55.5
YDS 8126 7980 7360 7174 6783 6566 6305 5469 5181 5040
TD 51 64 54 35 51 32 48 43 40 31
300-YD GAMES 10 6 6 5 4 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 2
250-YARD PASSING GAMES (CAREER) PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Pat Barnes (1993-96) 2. Rich Campbell (1978-80) Troy Taylor (1986-89) 4. Dave Barr (1991-94) 5. Gale Gilbert (1980-84) Aaron Rodgers (2003-04) 7. Nate Longshore (2005-08) Justin Vedder (1997-98) 9. Kyle Boller (1999-02) 10. Kevin Riley (2007-09)
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
250-YD GAMES 14 13 13 12 10 10 9 9 8 6
SINGLE-SEASON RECEPTIONS PLAYER 1. Dameane Douglas 2. Geoff McArthur 3. Bobby Shaw 4. LaVelle Hawkins 5. Sean Dawkins DeSean Jackson 7. DeSean Jackson 8. Bobby Shaw 9. Steve Rivera Geoff McArthur
YEAR 1998 2003 1997 2007 1992 2007 2006 1996 1975 2004
NO 100 85 75 72 65 65 59 58 57 57
YDS 1150 1504 1093 872 1070 762 1060 888 790 862
AVG 11.5 17.7 14.6 12.1 16.5 11.7 18.0 15.3 13.9 15.1
TD 4 10 10 6 14 6 9 9 4 7
SINGLE-GAME RECEPTIONS PLAYER (OPPONENT, DATE) 1. Geoff McArthur at Stanford, Nov. 22, 2003 2. Dameane Douglas at Oregon State, Oct. 31, 1998 3. Iheanyi Uwaezuoke at Washington, Nov. 12, 1994 Dameane Douglas at USC, Oct. 10, 1998 Jack Schraub vs. Illinois, Sept. 28, 1964 Dameane Douglas vs. Stanford, Nov. 21, 1998 7. Bobby Shaw vs. UCLA, Oct. 26, 1996 Wayne Stewart vs. Colorado, Sept. 28, 1968 Dameane Douglas at Arizona, Nov. 15, 1997
NO 16 15 13 13 13 13 12 12 12
YDS 245 140 162 151 132 124 168 144 143
CAREER RECEIVING YARDS
Pat Barnes is third all-time at Cal in passer efficiency.
CAREER PASSER EFFICIENCY (min. 350 attempts) PLAYER (YEARS) COMP ATT INT 1. A. Rodgers (2003-04) 424 665 13 2. D. Barr (1992-94) 502 791 31 3. P. Barnes (1993-96) 549 950 26 4. R. Campbell (1978-80) 599 929 42 5. M. Pawlawski (1988-91) 419 703 29 6. N. Longshore (2005-08) 558 936 31 7. P. Larson (1951-54) 210 368 24 8. T. Taylor (1986-89) 683 1162 46 9. C. Morton (1962-64) 355 641 31 10. J. Roth (1975-76) 280 521 25
PCT 63.8 63.5 57.8 64.5 59.6 59.6 57.1 58.8 55.4 53.7
YDS 5469 6305 7360 7174 5181 6783 2986 8126 4501 3669
TD EFFIC 43 150.3 48 142.6 54 136.2 35 132.7 40 132.0 51 131.8 16 126.1 51 124.1 36 123.2 21 116.4
SINGLE-SEASON PASSER EFFICIENCY (min. 150 attempts) PLAYER YEAR COMP ATT INT 1. Dave Barr* 1993 187 275 12 2. Aaron Rodgers 2004 209 316 8 3. Pat Barnes* 1996 250 420 8 4. Aaron Rodgers 2003 215 349 5 5. Nate Longshore 2006 227 377 13 6. Mike Pawlawski* 1991 191 316 13 7. Joe Roth 1975 126 226 7 8. Rich Campbell* 1979 241 360 12 9. Paul Larson 1954 125 195 8 10. Troy Taylor 1987 169 278 12
PCT 68.0 66.1 59.5 61.6 60.2 60.4 55.8 66.9 64.1 60.8
YDS 2619 2566 3499 2903 3021 2517 1880 2859 1537 2081
PLAYER 1. Geoff McArthur (2000-04) 2. Bobby Shaw (1994-97) 3. DeSean Jackson (2005-07) 4. Brian Treggs (1988-91) Dameane Douglas (1995-98) 6. Wesley Walker (1973-76) 7. Na’il Benjamin (1993-96) 8. Sean Dawkins (1990-92) 9. Steve Rivera (1973-75) 10. Robert Jordan (2004-07)
NO 202 180 162 167 195 86 165 129 138 156
YARDS 3188 2731 2423 2335 2335 2206 2196 2124 2085 2047
SINGLE-SEASON RECEIVING YARDS PLAYER 1. Geoff McArthur (2003) 2. Dameane Douglas (1998) 3. Bobby Shaw (1997) 4. Sean Dawkins (1992) 5. DeSean Jackson (2006) 6. Mike Caldwell (1993) 7. Steve Rivera (1974) 8. Bobby Shaw (1996) 9. LaVelle Hawkins (2007) 10. Geoff McArthur (2004)
NO 85 100 75 65 59 55 56 58 72 57
YARDS 1504 1150 1093 1070 1060 962 938 888 872 862
TD EFFIC 21 164.5 24 154.3 31 150.1 19 146.6 24 141.6 21 141.1 14 139.9 15 139.5 10 139.0 18 136.4
RECEIVING CAREER RECEPTIONS PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Geoff McArthur (2000-04) 2. Dameane Douglas (1995-98) 3. Bobby Shaw (1994-97) 4. Brian Treggs (1988-91) 5. Na’il Benjamin (1993-96) 6. DeSean Jackson (2005-07) 7. Robert Jordan (2004-07) 8. Mike Caldwell (1989-93) 9. Steve Rivera (1973-75) 10. LaVelle Hawkins (2005-07)
NO 202 195 180 167 165 162 156 139 138 136
YDS 3188 2335 2731 2335 2196 2423 2047 1999 2085 1748
AVG 15.8 12.0 15.2 14.0 13.3 15.0 13.1 14.4 15.1 12.9
TD 20 13 27 15 13 22 13 13 9 12
Geoff McArthur rewrote the Golden Bears record book in receiving from 2000-04.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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TOP 10 PERFORMERS (continued) SINGLE-GAME RECEIVING YARDS PLAYER (OPPONENT, DATE) 1. Wesley Walker vs. San Jose State, Oct. 2, 1976 2. Geoff McArthur at Stanford, Nov. 22, 2003 3. Steve Rivera vs. Stanford, Nov. 23, 1974 4. Bobby Shaw at Houston, Sept. 6, 1997 5. Steve Sweeney vs. Oregon State, Oct. 9, 1971 6. Robert Jordan at Washington, Sept. 10, 2005 Lavelle Hawkins vs. Oregon State, Oct. 13, 2007 8. Steve Rivera vs. Washington, Nov. 8, 1975 9. Damien Semien vs. Oregon, Oct. 2, 1993 10. Wesley Walker at Georgia, Sept. 11, 1976
YDS 289 245 205 204 195 192 192 183 182 181
NO 8 16 9 11 7 11 9 10 7 4
AVG 16.5 15.2 25.7 15.0 15.5 15.8 14.0 14.4 13.3 12.0 13.1
TD 31 27 23 22 21 20 15 13 13 13 13
CAREER RECEIVING TDs PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Sean Dawkins (1990-92) 2. Bobby Shaw (1994-97) 3. Wesley Walker (1973-76) 4. DeSean Jackson (2005-07) 5. Steve Sweeney (1970-72) 6. Geoff McArthur (2000-04) 7. Brian Treggs (1988-91) 8. Mike Caldwell (1989-93) Na’il Benjamin (1993-96) Dameane Douglas (1995-98) Robert Jordan (2004-07)
NO 129 180 86 162 132 202 167 139 165 195 156
YDS 2124 2731 2206 2423 2043 3188 2335 1999 2196 2335 2047
SINGLE-SEASON RECEIVING TDs PLAYER 1. Sean Dawkins 2. Steve Sweeney 3. Bobby Shaw Geoff McArthur 5. Bobby Shaw DeSean Jackson 7. Cameron Morrah 8. Jim Hanifan Mike Caldwell Jonathan Makonnen Geoff McArthur DeSean Jackson
YEAR 1992 1972 1997 2003 1996 2006 2008 1954 1993 2002 2004 2005
NO 65 52 75 85 58 59 27 44 55 54 57 38
YDS 1070 785 1093 1504 888 1060 326 569 962 682 862 601
AVG 16.5 15.1 14.6 17.7 15.3 18.0 12.1 12.9 17.5 12.6 15.1 15.8
TD 14 13 10 10 9 9 8 7 7 7 7 7
100-YARD RECEIVING GAMES (CAREER) PLAYER (YEARS) 100-YD GAMES 1. Bobby Shaw (1994-97) 11 Geoff McArthur (2000-04) 11 3. DeSean Jackson (2005-07) 9 4. Wesley Walker (1973-76) 8 Dameane Douglas (1995-98) 8 6. Steve Sweeney (1970-72) 6 Brian Treggs (1988-91) 6 Sean Dawkins (1990-92) 6 9. Steve Rivera (1973-75) 5 Rance McDougald (1982-84) 5
PUNTING CAREER AVERAGE PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Scott Tabor (1986-87) 2. Nick Harris (1997-2000) 3. Robbie Keen (1987-90) 4. Dan Melville (1977-78) 5. Ryan Longwell (1993-96) 6. Bill Armstrong (1972) 7. Andrew Larson (2006-07) 8. Chris Noonan (1991-92) 9. David Lonie (2004-05) 10. Tom Gandsey (1983-84)
160
NO 118 322 184 101 257 64 110 110 108 142
YDS 5187 13621 7775 4233 10763 2676 4592 4586 4438 5627
AVG 44.00 42.30 42.26 41.91 41.88 41.80 41.75 41.69 41.10 39.6
Wesley Walker
SINGLE-SEASON AVERAGE PLAYER 1. Scott Tabor 2. Ryan Longwell* 3. Nick Harris 4. Robbie Keen 5. Bryan Anger 6. Chris Noonan 7. Andrew Larson 8. Robbie Keen 9. Dan Melville 10. Nick Harris
YEAR 1987 1996 1999 1989 2008 1992 2006 1988 1977 1997
NO 66 60 85 59 71 60 49 53 44 77
YDS 2993 2714 3795 2565 3063 2557 2087 2255 1863 3250
AVG 45.3 45.2 44.6 43.5 43.1 42.7 42.6 42.5 42.3 42.2
PUNT RETURNS CAREER AVERAGE PLAYER (YEARS) 1. DeSean Jackson (2005-07) 2. Paul Keckley (1946-48) 3. Jemeel Powell (1999-2002) 4. Tim Mixon (2003-05) 5. Jerry Bradley (1964-66) 6. Carl Van Heuit (1949-50) 7. Bill Main (1946-48) 8. Paul Larson (1952-54) 9. Deltha O’Neal (1996-99) 10. Joe Stuart (1943-45)
NO 38 35 57 56 53 38 26 42 110 58
YDS 633 453 724 710 662 422 285 450 1169 594
AVG 16.7 12.9 12.70 12.68 12.5 11.1 11.0 10.7 10.6 10.2
TD 6 0 3 1 2 0 0 1 1 0
AVG 21.3 18.20 18.17 15.3 14.9 12.9 12.7 12.3 12.22 12.17
TD 0 4 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 0
SINGLE-SEASON AVERAGE PLAYER 1. Jeremy Ross 2. DeSean Jackson 3. Jemeel Powell 4. Paul Keckley* 5. Tim Mixon 6. Jerry Bradley 7. Carl Van Heuit* 8. Syd'Quan Thompson 9. Jerry Bradley 10. Jerry Bradley
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
YEAR 2009 2006 2000 1948 2005 1966 1949 2008 1965 1964
NO 9 25 12 16 24 23 18 28 18 12
YDS 192 455 218 245 357 296 228 344 220 146
KICK RETURNS
SINGLE-SEASON
CAREER AVERAGE PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Jahvid Best (2007-09) 2. Isaac Curtis (1970-71) 3. Deltha O’Neal (1996-99) 4. Russell White (1990-92) 5. Jim Blakeney (1962-64) 6. LaShaun Ward (1999-2002) 7. Tom Blanchfield (1962-64) 8. Adamchinobe Echemandu (1999-2003) 9. Jerry Bradley (1964-66) 10. Tyrone Edwards (1991-94)
NO 32 41 99 49 44 45 37 22 25 32
YDS 844 1036 2472 1212 1081 1086 879 516 585 746
AVG 26.3 25.3 24.9 24.7 24.2 24.1 23.8 23.5 23.4 23.3
TD 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0
SINGLE-SEASON AVERAGE
PLAYER 1. Frank Brunk* 2. Tom Blanchfield 3. Deltha O’Neal 4. LaShaun Ward 5. Paul Larson 6. Frank Porto 7. Deltha O’Neal 8. Jim Blakeney 9. Darrin Greer 10. Jahvid Best
YEAR 1949 1963 1999 2002 1954 1942 1998 1963 1987 2007
NO 10 16 19 28 10 14 22 14 19 15
YDS 295 470 555 809 285 398 624 397 532 405
AVG 29.5 29.4 29.2 28.9 28.5 28.42 28.36 28.35 28.3 27.0
TD 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0
AVG 11.5 22.9 13.2 13.6 7.0 20.6 32.0 9.0 2.7 17.6 7.9 6.6
TD 2 4 1 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 1
INTERCEPTIONS CAREER PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Ken Wiedemann (1967-69) 2. Daymeion Hughes (2003-06) 3. Paul Keckley (1946-48) Paul Larson (1951-54) Ray Youngblood (1969-71) 6. Ron Coccimiglio (1978-80) Deltha O’Neal (1996-99) 8. Matt Hazeltine (1951-54) Ken Moulton (1963-65) Anthony Green (1975-77) Chris Cannon (1988-92) Jemeel Powell (1999-2002)
NO 16 15 12 12 12 11 11 10 10 10 10 10
YDS 184 344 158 163 84 227 352 90 27 176 79 66
PLAYER 1. Deltha O’Neal 2. Daymeion Hughes 3. Joe Stuart Jackie Jensen Paul Keckley* Jim Hunt Ken Wiedemann 8. Paul Larson Wayne Stewart Ken Wiedemann Ray Youngblood Clarence Duren Herman Edwards Anthony Washington David Ortega
YEAR 1999 2006 1944 1947 1948 1964 1968 1953 1966 1967 1970 1971 1974 1978 1987
NO 9 8 7 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6
YDS 280 113 NA 114 54 65 69 102 146 91 51 47 34 224 36
AVG TD 31.1 4 14.1 2 NA 1 16.3 0 7.7 0 9.3 0 9.9 0 17.0 0 24.3 2 15.2 1 8.5 0 7.8 0 5.7 1 37.3 2 6.0
ALL-PURPOSE YARDAGE CAREER PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Deltha O’Neal (1996-99) 2. Russell White (1990-92) 3. Marshawn Lynch (2004-06) 4. Chuck Muncie (1973-75) 5. Jahvid Best (2007-09) 6. Joe Igber (1999-2002) 7. Na’il Benjamin (1993-96) 8. Justin Forsett (2004-07) 9. Paul Jones (1975, 77-79) 10. Dwight Garner (1982-85)
RUSH 685 3367 3230 3052 2668 3124 145 3220 2930 1048
REC 319 364 600 1085 533 755 2196 386 733 1027
RET 3991 1212 744 57 844 0 1495 162 63 1232
TOTAL 4998 4943 4574 4194 4045 3879 3836 3768 3726 3307
REC 246 121 392 872 328 244 127 202 139 125
RET 421 0 19 922 101 561 629 0 408 271
TOTAL 2247 2139 1871 1854 1785 1757 1756 1748 1724 1642
SINGLE-SEASON PLAYER 1. Jahvid Best 2. J.J. Arrington 3. Chuck Muncie 4. LaVelle Hawkins 5. Marshawn Lynch 6. Shane Vereen 7. Russell White* 8. Justin Forsett 9. Russell White* 10. Marshawn Lynch
YEAR 2008 2004 1975 2007 2006 2009 1990 2007 1991 2005
RUSH 1580 2018 1460 60 1356 952 1000 1546 1177 1246
TACKLES CAREER PLAYER (YEARS) 1. David Ortega (1986-89) 2. Hardy Nickerson (1983-86) 3. Jerrott Willard (1991-94) 4. Ron Rivera (1980-83) 5. Eddie Walsh (1980-83) 6. Steve Hendrickson (1985-88) 7. Majett Whiteside (1985-88) 8. Donnie McCleskey (2002-05) 9. Syd'Quan Thompson (2006-09) 10. Anthony Felder (2005-08)
NO 525 501 469 336 288 286 268 258 257 251
SINGLE-SEASON PLAYER 1. Hardy Nickerson 2. David Ortega 3. Jerrott Willard* 4. David Ortega 5. Hardy Nickerson 6. Ron Rivera 7. Steve Hendrickson 8. Jerrott Willard 9. Hardy Nickerson David Ortega
YEAR 1985 1989 1993 1987 1984 1983 1988 1992 1986 1988
NO 167 159 147 142 141 138 134 133 132 132
Linebacker David Ortega is Cal’s all-time leading tackler with 525 stops from 1986-89.
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TOP 10 PERFORMERS (continued) SACKS CAREER PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Andre Carter (1997-2000) 2. Regan Upshaw (1993-95) 3. Tully Banta-Cain (1999-2002) 4. Mawuko Tugbenyoh (1996-99) 5. Brandon Whiting (1994-97) 6. Zack Follett (2005-08) 6. Ron Rivera (1980-83) 7. Ryan Riddle (2003-04) 8. Joel Dickson (1986-90) 10. Natu Tuatagaloa (1985-88) Sekou Sanyika (1996-99)
NO 31.0 28.0 26.5 25.0 24.5 23.5 22.0 21.0 20.0 19.5 19.5
SINGLE-SEASON PLAYER 1. Ryan Riddle 2. Andre Carter 3. Ron Rivera Tully Banta-Cain 5. Mawuko Tugbenyoh 6. Tom Canada 7. Regan Upshaw 8. Duane Clemons Zack Follett 10. Andre Carter
YEAR 2004 2000 1983 2002 1999 2002 1994 1995 2008 1999
NO 14.5 13.5 13.0 13.0 12.5 12.0 11.0 10.5 10.5 10.0
SINGLE-GAME PLAYER (OPPONENT, DATE) 1. Tully Banta-Cain vs. New Mexico State, Sept. 7, 2002 2. Mawuko Tugbenyo vs. USC, Oct. 30, 1999 Tully Banta-Cain vs. Rutgers, Nov. 23, 2001 4. Andy Jacobs vs. San Diego State, Sept. 14, 1996 John McLaughlin vs. Houston, Sept. 5, 1998 Sekou Sanyika vs. USC, Oct. 10, 1998 Andre Carter vs. Arizona State, Oct. 7, 2000 Daniel Nwangwu vs. UCLA, Oct. 20, 2001 Tom Canada vs. Stanford, Nov. 23, 2002 Ryan Riddle vs. Southern Miss, Aug. 30, 2003 Wendell Hunter vs. Illinois, Sept. 20, 2003
NO 4.5 4.0 4.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0
TACKLES FOR LOSS CAREER PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Sekou Sanyika (1996-99) 2. Andre Carter (1997-2000) 3. Jerrott Willard (1991-94) 4. Tully Banta-Cain (1999-2002) 5. Zack Follett (2005-08) 6. Regan Upshaw (1993-95) 7. Matt Beck (1996-99) 8. Ron Rivera (1980-83) 9. Andy Jacobs (1993-96) 10. Mawuko Tugbenyoh (1996-99)
NO 63.0 55.0 54.0 52.0 51.0 49.0 48.0 47.5 38.5 37.0
Ron Rivera is Cal's single-season leader in tackles for loss.
SINGLE-SEASON PLAYER 1. Ron Rivera 2. Duane Clemons 3. Sekou Sanyika Zack Follett 5. Tully Banta-Cain 6. Matt Beck 7. Scott Roseman Regan Upshaw 9. Andre Carter Andre Carter
YEAR 1983 1995 1998 2008 2002 1997 1992 1994 1999 2000
NO 26.5 26.0 23.0 23.0 22.0 21.0 20.5 20.5 20.0 20.0
PASS BREAKUPS CAREER PLAYER (YEARS) 1. Syd'Quan Thompson (2006-09) 2. Chidi Iwuoma (1997-2000) 3. Harrison Smith (2002-05) 4. Daymeion Hughes (2003-06) 5. Jemeel Powell (1999-2002) 6. John Hardy (1986-90) Donnie McCleskey (2002-05) 8. David Wilson (1988-91) 9. Tim Mixon (2003-05) 10. John Sullivan (1980-83) Kevin Devine (1993-96)
NO 36 35 32 29 27 25 25 23 22 20 20
SINGLE-SEASON
Andre Carter is Cal's all-time leader in sacks.
162
PLAYER 1. Harrison Smith Darian Hagan Syd'Quan Thompson 4. Jemeel Powell 5. John Hardy Donnie McCleskey 7. Issac Booth Daymeion Hughes 9. David Wilson Chidi Iwuoma Deltha O’Neal Chidi Iwuoma Daymeion Hughes
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
YEAR 2004 2008 2008 2000 1990 2003 1993 2005 1991 1998 1999 2000 2006
NO 18 18 18 16 13 13 12 12 11 11 11 11 11
YEARLY INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Jahvid Best
SCORING
YEAR PLAYER 2009 Jahvid Best 2008 Jahvid Best 2007 Justin Forsett 2006 Tom Schneider 2005 Tom Schneider 2004 J.J. Arrington 2003 Tyler Fredrickson 2002 Mark Jensen 2001 Mark Jensen 2000 Mark Jensen 1999 Deltha O’Neal 1998 Marcus Fields 1997 Bobby Shaw 1996 Ryan Longwell 1995 Ryan Longwell 1994 Ryan Longwell 1993 Lindsey Chapman 1992 Sean Dawkins 1991 Russell White Doug Brien 1990 Russell White 1989 Robbie Keen 1988 Robbie Keen 1987 Chris Richards 1986 Leland Rix 1985 Leland Rix 1984 Tom Gandsey 1983 Randy Pratt 1982 Joe Cooper 1981 Joe Cooper 1980 Mick Luckhurst 1979 Mick Luckhurst 1978 Joe Cooper 1977 Jim Breech 1976 Jim Breech 1975 Chuck Muncie 1974 Chuck Muncie 1973 Chuck Muncie 1972 Steve Sweeney 1971 Steve Kemnitzer 1970 Randy Wersching 1969 Randy Wersching 1968 Gary Fowler 1967 Ron Miller 1966 Jerry Bradley 1965 Don Sinclair 1964 Tom Blanchfield 1963 Tom Blanchfield 1962 Bill Turner 1961 Randy Gold 1960 George Pierovich 1959 Grover Garvin 1958 Jack Hart 1957 Jack Hart 1956 Jack Hart 1955 John Wilson 1954 Paul Larson 1953 Al Talley 1952 John Olszewski Don Johnson Bill Powell 1951 Don Robison 1950 Pete Schabarum 1949 Jim Monachino 1948 Jack Swaner 1947 Jack Swaner Bill Montagne Ted Kenfield 1946 Bill Main Jackie Jensen
TD 16 16 15 0 0 15 0 0 0 0 6 6 10 0 0 0 17 14 16 0 14 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 15 11 12 13 8 0 0 10 0 7 0 5 4 6 4 5 4 8 6 6 5 5 11 7 7 7 9 11 15 12 5 5 5 3 3
1XP 2XP FG 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 52-52 0 15-20 50-52 0 9-16 0-0 0 0-0 54-54 0 15-30 50-51 0 19-27 22-22 0 11-14 25-26 0 11-16 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 37-38 0 11-16 21-23 0 12-17 20-21 0 8-22 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 41-43 0 19-28 0-0 0 0-0 19-20 0 9-16 23-23 0 21-25 0-0 0 0-0 8-11 0 12-16 18-20 0 9-16 12-13 0 10-16 24-24 0 22-27 23-24 0 11-23 21-21 0 6-12 18-20 0 14-17 28-28 0 9-15 26-27 0 8-17 34-34 0 16-27 24-25 0 16-24 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 28-31 0 12-24 19-19 0 13-20 0-0 0 0-0 17-17 0 6-15 0-0 0 0-0 14-16 0 5-7 13-17 0 3-10 15-18 0 2-2 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 5 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 16-23 0 1-1 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0
TP 96 96 90 97 77 90 99 107 55 58 36 36 60 70 57 44 102 84 98 98 84 46 86 48 44 45 42 90 56 39 60 55 50 82 72 90 68 72 78 48 64 58 60 35 42 29 52 45 36 26 30 24 58 36 36 30 49 66 42 42 42 54 66 90 72 30 30 30 18 18
Shane Vereen
YEAR 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950 1949 1948 1947 1946
Kevin Riley
RUSHING
PLAYER Shane Vereen Jahvid Best Justin Forsett Marshawn Lynch Marshawn Lynch J.J. Arrington Adimchinobe Echemandu Joe Igber Terrell Williams Joe Igber Joe Igber Marcus Fields Tarik Smith Brandon Willis Reynard Rutherford Reynard Rutherford Lindsey Chapman Russell White Russell White Anthony Wallace Anthony Wallace Chris Richards Chris Richards Marc Hicks Ed Barbero Ed Barbero Ron Story John Tuggle John Tuggle John Tuggle Paul Jones Paul Jones Paul Jones Tom Newton Chuck Muncie Chuck Muncie Chuck Muncie Steve Kemnitzer Steve Kemnitzer Stan Murphy Gary Fowler Gary Fowler Paul Williams Rick Bennett Tom Relles Tom Relles Tom Blanchfield Alan Nelson Alan Nelson Steve Bates Walt Arnold Joe Kapp Jack Hart Herb Jackson Ted Granger Jerry Drew Don Marks John Olszewski John Olszewski John Olszewski Jim Monachino Jackie Jensen Johnny Graves Jackie Jensen
ATT 183 194 305 223 196 289 238 241 160 195 148 163 162 187 191 163 207 206 241 220 150 162 157 98 126 120 124 143 110 136 214 212 189 137 228 164 157 103 157 165 157 162 116 96 133 145 78 73 59 82 76 152 101 97 83 77 71 160 89 167 138 148 66 51
YDS 952 1580 1546 1356 1246 2018 1195 1130 688 901 694 734 636 701 868 713 1037 1069 1177 1002 606 729 668 357 586 554 435 538 486 580 888 801 805 546 1460 791 801 434 686 603 741 665 432 319 485 519 387 334 331 384 351 616 396 462 379 715 469 845 651 1008 781 1080 466 189
AVG 5.2 8.1 5.1 6.1 6.4 7.0 5.0 4.7 4.3 4.6 4.7 4.5 3.9 3.7 4.5 4.4 5.0 5.2 4.9 4.6 4.0 4.5 4.3 3.6 4.7 4.6 3.5 3.8 4.4 4.3 4.1 3.8 4.3 4.0 6.4 4.8 5.1 4.2 4.4 3.7 4.7 4.1 3.7 3.3 3.6 3.6 5.0 4.6 5.6 4.7 4.6 4.1 3.9 4.8 4.6 9.3 6.6 5.3 7.3 6.0 5.7 7.3 7.1 3.7
TD 12 15 15 11 10 15 13 7 4 5 2 4 7 5 6 4 14 9 14 5 2 5 8 1 3 1 2 6 5 4 6 7 6 6 13 8 11 2 8 4 5 9 1 0 2 0 2 1 2 4 3 5 5 3 4 6 5 7 3 4 12 7 4 2
PASSING
YEAR PLAYER ATT C OMP INT PCT YDS TD 2009 Kevin Riley 382 209 8 54.7 2850 18 2008 Kevin Riley 221 112 6 50.7 1360 14 2007 Nate Longshore 230 384 13 59.9 2580 16 2006 Nate Longshore 227 377 13 60.2 3021 24 2005 Joe Ayoob 125 254 14 49.2 1707 15 2004 Aaron Rodgers 209 316 8 66.1 2566 24 2003 Aaron Rodgers 215 349 5 61.6 2903 19 2002 Kyle Boller 225 421 10 53.4 2815 28 2001 Kyle Boller 134 272 10 49.3 1741 12 2000 Kyle Boller 163 349 13 46.7 2121 15 1999 Kyle Boller 100 259 15 38.6 1303 9 1998 Justin Vedder 210 386 13 54.4 2322 11 1997 Justin Vedder 221 390 14 56.7 2718 20 1996 Pat Barnes 250 420 8 59.5 3499 31 1995 Pat Barnes 197 362 11 54.4 2685 17 1994 Dave Barr 95 144 4 66.0 1077 5 1993 Dave Barr 187 275 12 68.0 2619 21 1992 Dave Barr 199 344 15 57.8 2343 19 1991 Mike Pawlawski 191 316 13 60.4 2517 21 1990 Mike Pawlawski 179 299 13 59.9 2069 17 1989 Troy Taylor 220 394 12 55.8 2738 16 1988 Troy Taylor 202 330 14 61.2 2416 16 1987 Troy Taylor 169 278 12 60.8 2081 18 1986 Troy Taylor 92 160 8 57.5 891 1 1985 Kevin Brown 122 227 12 53.7 1447 6 1984 Gale Gilbert 166 308 14 53.9 1693 6 1983 Gale Gilbert 216 365 17 59.2 2769 13 1982 Gale Gilbert 147 270 12 54.4 1796 12 1981 J. Torchio 155 363 12 42.7 2112 9 1980 Rich Campbell 193 273 11 70.7 2026 6 1979 Rich Campbell 216 322 12 67.1 2618 13 1978 Rich Campbell 164 293 19 56.0 2281 14 1977 Charlie Young 135 249 13 54.2 1875 12 1976 Joe Roth 154 295 18 52.2 1789 7 1975 Joe Roth 126 226 7 55.8 1880 14 1974 Steve Bartkowski* 182 325 7 56.0 2580 12 1973 Vince Ferragamo 82 170 12 48.2 1014 5 1972 Steve Bartkowski 70 165 13 42.4 944 4 1971 Jay Cruze 119 242 16 49.2 1284 6 1970 Dave Penhall 118 227 13 52.0 1785 10 1969 Dave Penhall 76 145 6 52.4 874 2 1968 Randy Humphries 98 207 15 47.3 1247 6 1967 Barry Bronk 65 146 2 44.5 708 9 1966 Barry Bronk 84 183 11 45.9 965 7 1965 Jim Hunt 26 63 7 41.3 383 2 1964 Craig Morton 185 308 9 60.1 2121 13 1963 Craig Morton 101 207 12 48.8 1475 14 1962 Craig Morton 69 126 10 54.8 905 9 1961 Randy Gold 41 81 3 50.6 403 4 1960 Randy Gold 65 117 7 55.6 696 2 1959 Wayne Crow 26 67 9 38.8 379 3 1958 Joe Kapp 64 114 6 56.1 775 3 1957 Joe Kapp 38 77 10 49.4 580 4 1956 Joe Kapp 52 112 13 46.4 667 1 1955 Hugh Maguire 38 80 8 47.5 564 3 1954 Paul Larson* 125 195 8 64.1 1537 10 1953 Paul Larson 85 171 16 49.7 1431 6 1952 Bill Mais 30 53 7 56.6 541 2 1951 Bill Mais 46 110 10 41.8 758 6 1950 Jim Marinos 28 49 3 57.1 383 3 1949 Bob Celeri 49 117 12 41.0 1081 9 1948 Bob Celeri 27 69 9 39.1 470 3 1947 Bob Celeri 35 103 16 33.9 635 6 1946 Dick Erickson 6 23 5 26.1 156 1 *NCAA leader
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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YEARLY INDIVIDUAL LEADERS (continued)
Brian Treggs YEAR 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950 1949 1948 1947 1946
Mike Ahr
RECEIVING
PLAYER Marvin Jones Nyan Boateng Lavelle Hawkins DeSean Jackson DeSean Jackson Geoff McArthur Geoff McArthur Jonathan Makonnen Charon Arnold Derek Swafford Vacated Dameane Douglas Bobby Shaw Bobby Shaw Na’il Benjamin Iheanyi Uwaezuoke Mike Caldwell Sean Dawkins Brian Treggs Brian Treggs Brian Treggs Todd Powers Brian Bedford James Devers Vince Delgado Dwight Garner Rance McDougald David Lewis Mariet Ford Matt Bouza Matt Bouza Holden Smith Jesse Thompson Jesse Thompson Steve Rivera Steve Rivera Chuck Muncie Steve Sweeney Geoff DeLapp Steve Sweeney Geoff DeLapp Wayne Stewart Wayne Stewart Jerry Bradley Jerry Bradley Jack Schraub Jack Schraub Bill Turner Bob Wills George Pierovich Gael Barsotti Jack Hart Jack Hart Norm Becker Roger Ramseier Jim Hanifan Jim Hanifan Don Johnson Dave Hood John Olszewski Dan Begovich John Cunningham Frank Van Deren John Cunningham
164
NO 43 29 72 59 38 57 85 54 53 25
YDS 651 439 872 1060 601 862 1504 682 606 335
AVG 15.1 15.1 12.1 18.0 15.8 15.1 17.7 12.6 11.4 13.4
TD 6 5 6 9 7 7 10 7 3 3
100 75 58 52 56 55 65 43 45 54 45 39 40 30 46 46 54 45 44 52 26 51 37 57 56 27 52 48 43 25 50 45 32 22 52 30 44 21 12 6 32 13 22 17 44 19 10 18 9 14 14 15 8
1150 1093 888 594 716 962 1070 643 564 746 378 515 582 358 376 797 715 600 651 717 641 797 411 790 938 283 785 464 679 261 679 503 473 360 663 467 537 302 90 111 395 276 313 209 569 247 142 215 109 275 222 302 143
11.5 14.6 15.3 11.4 12.8 17.5 16.5 15.0 12.5 13.8 8.4 13.2 14.6 11.9 8.2 17.3 13.2 13.3 14.8 13.8 24.7 15.6 11.1 13.9 16.8 10.5 15.1 9.7 15.8 10.4 13.6 11.2 14.8 16.4 12.8 15.6 12.2 14.4 7.5 18.5 12.3 21.2 14.2 12.3 12.9 13.0 14.2 11.9 12.1 19.6 15.9 20.1 17.9
4 10 9 5 5 7 14 4 6 4 0 4 0 2 1 5 6 2 2 4 5 5 2 4 4 1 13 1 3 0 4 2 5 3 2 5 6 3 1 1 2 1 3 0 7 0 0 3 1 3 1 3 2
YEAR 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950 1949 1948 1947 1946
Na’il Benjamin
PUNTING
PLAYER Bryan Anger Bryan Anger Andrew Larson Andrew Larson David Lonie David Lonie Tyler Fredrickson Tyler Fredrickson Tyler Fredrickson Nick Harris Nick Harris Nick Harris Nick Harris Ryan Longwell Ryan Longwell Ryan Longwell Ryan Longwell Chris Noonan Chris Noonan Robbie Keen Robbie Keen Robbie Keen Scott Tabor Scott Tabor Marc Hicks Tom Gandsey Tom Gandsey Mike Ahr Mike Ahr Mike Ahr Mike Ahr Dan Melville Dan Melville Steve Maehl Greg Cummins Don Miller Scott Overton Bill Armstrong Jay Cruze Steve Curtis Gary Fowler Gary Fowler Gary Fowler Dan Berry Dan Berry Jerry Walter Jerry Walter Jerry Walter Roger Stull Roger Stull Wayne Crow Wayne Crow Darrell Roberts Don Gilkey Don Gilkey Paul Larson Joe Hibbs Tom Keough Tom Keough Don Robison Bob Celeri Jackie Jensen Jackie Jensen Paul Keckley
NO 69 71 61 49 61 47 57 62 75 73 85 87 77 60 67 65 59 60 44 59 59 53 66 52 27 67 75 64 77 25 50 57 44 69 44 15 52 64 69 71 67 71 76 60 43 46 12 40 56 40 36 33 17 35 45 22 12 46 10 38 33 27 43 10
YDS 2861 3063 2505 2087 2559 1879 2281 2450 2959 3030 3795 3546 3250 2714 2708 2650 2396 2557 1758 2377 2565 2255 2993 2194 997 2614 3013 2399 3188 976 1892 2370 1863 2702 1629 580 1882 2676 2438 2725 2758 2706 2895 2304 1771 1586 444 1316 1995 1541 1335 1174 648 1187 1719 758 489 1680 370 1307 1140 980 1606 356
AVG 41.5 43.1 41.1 42.6 42.0 40.0 40.0 39.5 39.5 41.5 44.6 40.8 42.2 45.2 40.4 40.8 40.6 42.6 40.0 40.3 43.5 42.6 45.3 42.2 36.9 39.0 40.2 37.5 41.4 39.0 37.8 41.6 42.3 39.2 37.0 38.7 36.2 41.8 35.3 38.4 41.2 38.1 38.1 38.4 41.2 34.5 37.0 32.9 35.6 38.5 37.1 35.6 38.1 33.9 38.2 34.5 40.8 36.5 37.0 34.4 34.5 36.3 37.4 35.6
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
LG 72 76 73 72 56 61 58 66 57 64 70 63 63 62 53 57 75 63 59 59 65 66 89 78 56 66 57 56 60 53 54 84 58 61 52 50 52 70 57 56 64 51 56 71 65 66 47 49 56 67 59 46 56 50 50 59 53 60 59 66 63 -
PUNT RETURNS
YEAR PLAYER 2009 Jeremy Ross 2008 Syd'Quan Thompson 2007 DeSean Jackson 2006 DeSean Jackson 2005 Tim Mixon 2004 Tim Mixon 2003 Vincent Strang 2002 Jemeel Powell 2001 Jemeel Powell 2000 Jemeel Powell 1999 Deltha O’Neal 1998 Deltha O’Neal 1997 Deltha O’Neal 1996 Na’il Benjamin 1995 Na’il Benjamin 1994 Na’il Benjamin 1993 Matt Clizbe 1992 Wolf Barber 1991 Brian Treggs 1990 Brian Treggs 1989 Brian Treggs 1988 Vince Delgado 1987 Dwayne Jones 1986 Vince Delgado 1985 Gayland Houston 1984 Gayland Houston 1983 Dwight Garner 1982 Mariet Ford 1981 Mariet Ford 1980 Mark Funderburk 1979 Tyrone Portee 1978 Billy Kemp 1977 Ken McAllister 1976 Ken McAllister 1975 Vern Smith 1974 Steve Rivera 1973 Wesley Walker 1972 Scott Stringer 1971 Scott Stringer 1970 Stan Murphy 1969 Bernie Keeles 1968 Ken Wiedemann 1967 Paul Williams 1966 Jerry Bradley 1965 Jerry Bradley 1964 Jerry Bradley 1963 Tom Blanchfield 1962 Jim Blakeney 1961 Jim Burress 1960 Steve Bates 1959 Grover Garvin 1958 Wayne Crow 1957 Darrell Roberts 1956 Darrell Roberts 1955 John Wilson 1954 Paul Larson 1953 John Wilson 1952 Paul Larson 1951 Paul Larson 1950 Carl Van Heuit 1949 Carl Van Heuit 1948 Paul Keckley 1947 Bill Main 1946 Jackie Jensen * - NCAA leader
NO 9 28 12 25 24 25 27 32 13 12 42 38 25 16 20 19 19 21 21 22 30 13 26 11 17 16 28 30 20 6 10 14 33 23 14 26 16 34 26 18 10 25 13 23 18 12 8 5 4 4 8 9 9 9 9 9 5 24 8 20 18 16 12 9
YDS 192 344 129 455 357 277 220 389 117 218 428 447 256 123 158 198 174 154 160 111 170 65 173 92 129 126 245 302 158 48 49 84 252 158 123 183 86 375 170 132 44 207 100 296 220 146 145 38 31 30 137 110 68 79 55 71 86 261 118 194 228 245 80 142
AVG 21.3 12.3 10.8 18.2* 14.9 11.1 8.1 12.2 9.0 18.2 10.2 11.8 10.2 7.7 7.9 10.4 9.2 7.3 7.6 5.0 5.7 5.0 6.7 8.4 7.6 7.9 8.8 10.1 7.4 8.0 4.9 6.0 7.6 6.9 8.8 7.0 5.4 11.0 6.5 7.3 4.4 8.3 7.7 12.9 12.2 12.2 18.1 7.6 7.8 7.5 17.1 12.2 7.6 8.8 6.1 7.9 17.2 10.9 14.8 9.7 12.7 15.3 6.7 15.8
TD 1 1 1 4* 1 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Deltha O'Neal YEAR 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950 1949 1948 1947 1946
KICK RETURNS
PLAYER Shane Vereen Jahvid Best Lavelle Hawkins Marcus O'Keith Marshawn Lynch Marshawn Lynch James Bethea LaShaun Ward Charon Arnold Adimchinobe Echemandu Deltha O’Neal Deltha O’Neal Deltha O’Neal Deltha O’Neal Je’Rod Cherry Tyrone Edwards Na’il Benjamin Artis Houston Russell White Russell White Darrin Greer Darrin Greer Darrin Greer Darrin Greer Tyrone Moore Dwight Garner Dwight Garner Mariet Ford Tyran Wright Mark Funderburk Tyrone Portee John Williams Floyd Eddings Ken McAllister Vern Smith Howard Strickland Wesley Walker Sylvester Youngblood Isaac Cutris Isaac Curtis Bob Darby Paul Williams Paul Williams Jerry Bradley Jerry Bradley Tom Blanchfield Tom Blanchfield Jim Blakeney Rudy Carvajal Jim Burress Grover Garvin Hank Olguin Hank Olguin Nat Brazil John Wilson Paul Larson Don Marks Don Johnson Paul Larson Pete Schabarum Frank Brunk Jackie Jensen Bill Main Ted Kenfield
NO 24 16 42 12 13 15 34 28 29 22 19 22 30 22 18 22 19 9 17 24 32 11 19 22 14 10 21 12 21 24 6 17 17 13 11 14 21 13 30 11 23 16 18 11 13 17 16 18 20 8 7 10 5 7 6 10 12 10 9 8 10 7 4 8
YDS 551 421 922 293 271 372 644 809 593 516 555 624 646 461 386 529 382 202 408 629 630 237 532 501 259 227 387 253 452 495 148 310 372 266 234 318 425 259 799 237 556 301 321 275 281 326 470 456 358 158 161 199 116 122 128 285 264 260 155 129 295 158 81 179
AVG 23.0 26.3 22.0 24.4 20.8 24.8 18.9 28.9 20.4 23.5 29.2 28.4 21.5 21.0 21.4 24.0 20.1 22.4 24.0 26.2 19.7 21.5 28.0 22.8 18.5 22.7 18.4 21.1 21.5 20.7 24.7 18.2 21.9 20.5 21.3 22.7 20.2 19.9 26.6 21.5 24.2 18.8 17.8 25.0 21.5 19.2 29.4 25.3 17.9 19.8 23.0 19.9 23.2 17.4 21.3 28.5 22.0 26.0 17.2 16.1 29.5 22.6 20.3 22.4
TD 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0
YEAR 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950 1949 1948 1947
INTERCEPTIONS
PLAYER Mike Mohamed Syd'Quan Thompson Brandon Hampton Daymeion Hughes Daymeion Hughes Tim Mixon Five players tied Jemeel Powell Nnamdi Asomugha Jemeel Powell Deltha O’Neal Drae Harris Derrick Gardner Kato Serwanga Kevin Devine Ricky Spears Eric Zomalt Issac Booth David Wilson Chris Cannon Chris Cannon Doug Parish John Hardy David Ortega Travis Oliver David Ortega Gary Hein Gary Hein Matt Grimes Hardy Nickerson Matt Grimes David Carter Richard Rodgers Ray Noble Five players tied Richard Rodgers Ron Coccimiglio Ron Coccimiglio Anthony Washington Anthony Green Ken McAllister Anthony Green Anthony Green Phil Heck Greg Ricks Herman Edwards Ivan Weiss Karl Crumpacker Bill Armstrong Clarence Duren Ray Youngblood Phil Martyr Ken Wiedemann Ray Youngblood Irby Augustine Ken Wiedemann Ken Wiedemann Wayne Stewart Jerry Mosher Ken Moulton Jim Hunt Jerry Mosher Jim Phillips Larry Balliett Larry Balliett Six players tied Pete Domoto Wayne Crow Steve Bates Darrell Roberts Darrell Roberts Nat Brazil Ralph Hoffman Jim Carmichael Paul Larson Paul Larson Paul Larson Dick Lee Matt Hazeltine Dick Lee Carl Van Heuit Carl Van Heuit Paul Keckley Jackie Jensen
NO 3 4 2 8 5 3 2 5 3 4 9 3 2 4 2 3 4 4 5 5 4 4 2 2 2 6 4 3 3 2 2 4 4 4 2 3 4 3 6 3 4 4 3 3 3 6 3 3 4 6 6 3 3 3 3 7 6 6 4 4 7 3 3 2 5 1 2 2 3 4 5 2 2 3 3 6 3 3 3 6 4 5 7 7
YDS 6 128 62 113 159 58
AVG 2.0 32.0 31.0 14.1 31.8 19.3
TD 0 0 0 2 1 1
63 11 0 280 63 0 1 0 15 55 1 65 56 23 17 51 12 1 36 27 9 3 7 -1 56 35 26
12.6 3.7 0.0 31.1 21.0 0.0 0.3 0.0 5.0 13.8 0.3 13.0 11.2 5.8 4.3 25.5 6.0 0.5 6.0 6.8 3.0 1.0 3.5 -0.5 14.0 8.8 6.5
1 1 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
30 76 107 224 83 87 42 51 38 22 34 47 5 43 47 51 53 24 22 3 69 91 146 49 7 65 33 24 6 47
10.0 19.0 35.7 37.3 27.7 21.8 10.5 17.0 12.7 7.3 5.7 15.7 1.7 10.8 7.8 8.5 17.7 8.0 7.3 1.0 9.9 15.2 24.3 12.3 1.8 9.3 11.0 8.0 3.0 9.4
0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
51 10 54 35 81 49 15 100 0 102 61 40 5 106 62 35 54 114
25.5 5.0 18.0 8.8 16.2 24.5 7.5 33.3 0.0 17.0 20.3 13.3 1.7 17.7 15.5 7.0 7.7 16.3
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Hardy Nickerson
TACKLES
YEAR 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981
PLAYER Mike Mohamed Anthony Felder Thomas DeCoud Desmond Bishop Desmond Bishop Ryan Gutierrez Donnie McCleskey Bert Watts John Klotsche Nnamdi Asomugha Pete Destefano Albert Dorsey Marquis Smith Matt Beck Je’Rod Cherry Jerrott Willard Jerrott Willard Jerrott Willard Jerrott Willard Castle Redmond David Ortega Steve Hendrickson David Ortega Hardy Nickerson Hardy Nickerson Hardy Nickerson Ron Rivera Ron Rivera Ron Rivera
UA 69 37 71 63 62 50 75 61 59 48 46 49 49 52 75 65 96 77 63 56 82 70 79 61 91 96 78 56 54
YEAR 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981
PLAYER Tyson Alualu Zack Follett Zack Follett Zack Follett/Nu'u Tafisi Brandon Mebane Ryan Riddle Wendell Hunter Tully Banta-Cain Tully Banta-Cain Andre Carter Mawuko Tugbenyoh Sekou Sanyika Brandon Whiting Andy Jacobs Duane Clemons Regan Upshaw Regan Upshaw Scott Roseman Mick Barsala/Cornell Collier Rhett Hall Cornell Collier Natu Tuatagaloa Joel Dickson/Ken Harvey Ken Harvey Majett Whiteside/Marlin Wenstrom Mike Rusinek Ron Rivera Reggie Camp Ron Rivera
SACKS
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
A 43 56 45 63 27 29 27 19 12 28 34 35 23 45 16 29 51 56 22 35 77 64 63 71 76 45 60 43 45
TOT 112 93 116 126 89 79 102 80 71 76 80 84 72 97 91 94 147 133 85 91 159 134 142 132 167 141 138 99 99
NO 7.5 10.5 5.5 5.5 7.0 14.5 7.0 13.0 8.0 13.5 13.0 7.0 8.0 7.5 10.5 11.0 7.5 8.5 6.0 7.0 6.5 7.5 9.0 6.5 4.5 5.5 13.0 8.0 8.0
165
YEARLY INDIVIDUAL LEADERS (continued)
Natu Tuatagaloa
Regan Upshaw
TACKLES FOR LOSS
YEAR 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981
PLAYER Tyson Alualu Zack Follett Zack Follett Desmond Bishop Philip Mbakogu Nu’u Tafisi Ryan Riddle Wendell Hunter Donnie McCleskey Tully Banta-Cain Tully Banta-Cain Andre Carter Andre Carter Sekou Sanyika Matt Beck Andy Jacobs Andre Rhodes Duane Clemons Regan Upshaw Jerrott Willard Scott Roseman Mick Barsala Rhett Hall Rhett Hall Natu Tuatagaloa Joel Dickson Natu Tuatagaloa Majett Whiteside Mike Rusinek Ron Rivera Gary Plummer Ron Rivera
YEAR 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981
PLAYER Syd'Quan Thompson Darian Hagan Syd'Quan Thompson Syd'Quan Thompson Daymeion Hughes Daymeion Hughes Harrison Smith Donnie McCleskey Nnamdi Asomugha Jemeel Powell Atari Callen Jemeel Powell Deltha O'Neal Chidi Iwuoma Derrick Gardner Kato Serwanga Duane Clemons Kevin Devine Artis Houston Isaac Booth Isaac Booth David Wilson John Hardy Doug Parrish John Hardy David Ortega Gary Hein Matt Grimes Ken Pettway David Carter Fred Williams John Sullivan
166
PASSES DEFENDED
NO 11.5 23.0 12.5 15.0 10.0 10.0 19.0 12.0 12.0 22.0 17.0 20.0 20.0 23.0 21.0 11.0 11.0 26.0 20.5 19.0 20.5 13.0 14.5 19.0 11.0 14.0 12.0 10.0 8.0 26.5 9.0 13.0
NO 11 18 18 11 19 17 18 13 13 13 9 16 20 12 12 11 9 9 8 14 11 16 14 12 10 8 10 10 6 13 10 11
Steve Bartkowski
TOTAL OFFENSE
YEAR PLAYER 2009 Kevin Riley 2008 Jahvid Best 2007 Nate Longshore 2006 Nate Longshore 2005 Joe Ayoob 2004 Aaron Rodgers 2003 Aaron Rodgers 2002 Kyle Boller 2001 Kyle Boller 2000 Kyle Boller 1999 Kyle Boller 1998 Justin Vedder 1997 Justin Vedder 1996 Pat Barnes 1995 Pat Barnes 1994 Dave Barr 1993 Dave Barr 1992 Dave Barr 1991 Mike Pawlawski 1990 Mike Pawlawski 1989 Troy Taylor 1988 Troy Taylor 1987 Troy Taylor 1986 Troy Taylor 1985 Kevin Brown 1984 Gale Gilbert 1983 Gale Gilbert 1982 Gale Gilbert 1981 J. Torchio 1980 Rich Campbell 1979 Rich Campbell 1978 Rich Campbell 1977 Charlie Young 1976 Joe Roth 1975 Joe Roth 1974 Steve Bartkowski 1973 Vince Ferragamo 1972 Steve Bartkowski 1971 Jay Cruze 1970 Dave Penhall 1969 Dave Penhall Gary Fowler 1968 Randy Humphries 1967 Barry Bronk 1966 Barry Bronk 1965 Dan Berry 1964 Craig Morton 1963 Craig Morton 1962 Craig Morton 1961 Randy Gold 1960 Randy Gold 1959 Wayne Crow 1958 Joe Kapp 1957 Joe Kapp 1956 Joe Kapp 1955 Hugh Maguire 1954 Paul Larson 1953 Paul Larson* 1952 John Olszewski 1951 John Olszewski 1950 John Olszewski 1949 Bob Celeri 1948 Jackie Jensen 1947 Jackie Jensen 1946 Jackie Jensen *NCAA leader
PLAYS RUSH PASS TOT 464 51 2850 2901 194 1580 0 1580 403 -44 2580 2536 405 -52 3021 2969 312 58 1707 1765 390 126 2566 2692 435 210 2903 3113 493 -83 2815 2732 349 63 1741 1804 414 -44 2121 2077 380 -104 1303 1199 486 -200 2322 2122 489 25 2718 2743 506 -83 3499 3416 404 -160 2685 2525 170 -88 1077 989 350 -98 2619 2521 394 -157 2343 2186 353 -66 2517 2451 353 -68 2069 2001 481 46 2738 2784 455 136 2416 2552 338 -17 2081 2064 205 -55 891 836 293 -52 1447 1395 378 -148 1693 1545 423 -332 2769 2437 324 -292 1796 1504 435 -176 2112 1936 308 -80 2026 1946 391 -195 2618 2423 386 -80 2287 2207 297 1 1875 1876 331 -157 1789 1632 271 -65 1880 1815 398 -193 2580 2387 217 -42 1014 972 213 -189 944 755 316 -155 1284 1129 310 -57 1785 1728 185 -61 874 813 162 741 72 813 322 130 1247 1377 186 -51 708 657 235 -114 965 851 154 285 335 620 354 -238 2121 1883 294 -43 1475 1432 148 -90 905 815 143 88 403 491 209 13 696 709 144 223 379 602 266 616 775 1391 154 396 580 976 167 152 667 819 110 -22 564 542 281 -52 1537 1485 262 141 1431 1572 160 845 0 845 91 651 30 681 167 1008 0 1008 178 132 1081 1213 176 1080 150 1230 108 434 271 705 71 189 105 294
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Aaron Rodgers
Paul Larson
YEARLY TEAM STATISTICS
Reynard Rutherford
Rich Campbell
RUSHING
Year G ATT YDS 2009 13 471 2553 2008 13 435 2421 2007 13 441 2154 2006 13 427 2111 2005 12 483 2823 2004 12 509 3081 2003 14 542 2356 2002 12 392 1297 2001 11 390 1332 2000 11 405 1363 1999 11 395 1097 1998 11 381 870 1997 11 480 1601 1996* 11 437 1488 1995 11 375 1236 1994 11 412 1384 1993* 13 516 1945 1992 11 448 1672 1991* 12 519 2361 1990* 12 529 2235 1989 11 346 975 1988 11 459 1523 1987 11 390 1257 1986 11 400 1023 1985 11 518 2011 1984 11 450 1287 1983 11 362 620 1982 11 392 804 1981 11 347 1039 1980 11 370 1016 1979* 11 405 1053 1978 11 496 1481 1977 11 476 1543 1976 11 450 1452 1975 11 527 2774 1974 11 470 2073 1973 11 498 2437 1972 11 431 1683 1971 11 471 1875 1970 11 535 2300 1969 10 475 1980 1968 11 580 2293 1967 10 445 1376 1966 10 395 1237 1965 10 470 1683 1964 10 344 1240 1963 10 360 1262 1962 10 373 1362 1961 10 410 1604 1960 10 490 1501 1959 10 541 2023 1958 11 656 2594 1957 10 522 1670 1956 10 462 1471 1955 10 409 1406 1954 10 394 1600 1953 10 451 2282 1952 10 553 3170 1951 10 550 3024 1950 11 592 2765 1949 11 558 2583 1948 11 588 2974 1947 10 466 2470 1946 9 357 907 1945 10 n/a 1214 *bowl statistics not included
TD 27 22 23 21 27 30 28 14 8 12 6 7 16 11 11 13 21 14 26 20 9 9 12 11 21 9 8 9 15 13 13 12 18 16 26 20 23 9 16 22 12 22 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
AVG/GM AVG/RUSH 169.5 4.7 186.2 5.6 165.7 4.9 162.4 4.9 235.2 5.8 256.8 6.1 168.3 4.3 108.1 3.3 121.1 3.4 123.9 3.4 99.7 2.8 79.1 2.3 145.5 3.3 135.3 3.4 112.4 3.3 125.8 3.4 149.6 3.8 152.0 3.7 196.8 4.5 186.3 4.2 88.6 2.8 138.5 3.3 114.3 3.2 93.0 2.6 182.8 3.9 117.0 2.9 56.4 1.7 73.1 2.1 94.5 3.0 92.4 2.7 95.7 2.6 134.6 3.0 140.3 3.2 132.0 3.2 252.2 5.3 188.5 4.4 221.5 4.9 153.0 3.9 170.5 4.0 209.1 4.3 198.0 4.2 208.5 4.0 137.6 3.1 123.7 3.1 168.3 3.6 124.0 3.6 126.2 3.5 136.2 3.7 160.4 3.9 150.1 3.1 202.3 3.7 235.8 4.0 167.0 3.2 147.1 3.2 140.6 3.4 160.0 4.1 228.2 5.1 317.0 5.7 302.4 5.5 251.4 4.7 234.8 4.6 270.4 5.1 247.0 5.3 100.8 2.5 121.4 n/a
Ron Coccimiglio
PASSING
Year G ATT COMP INT 2009 13 393 214 8 2008 13 397 209 10 2007 13 443 266 14 2006 13 413 245 14 2005 12 321 167 17 2004 12 331 219 8 2003 14 452 278 8 2002 12 428 230 10 2001 11 426 203 17 2000 11 354 165 13 1999 11 322 127 21 1998 11 401 213 15 1997 11 391 222 14 1996* 11 427 253 8 1995 11 377 204 11 1994 11 345 207 13 1993* 13 348 212 16 1992 11 380 221 18 1991* 12 326 195 14 1990* 12 315 185 13 1989 11 412 227 14 1988 11 352 211 15 1987 11 348 201 17 1986 11 325 174 22 1985 11 340 174 21 1984 11 379 197 17 1983 11 416 234 22 1982 11 395 205 22 1981 11 425 184 13 1980 11 381 249 17 1979* 11 409 270 15 1978 11 345 189 24 1977 11 391 214 16 1976 11 385 205 21 1975 11 308 170 9 1974 11 331 184 8 1973 11 301 143 21 1972 11 361 182 32 1971 11 277 133 19 1970 11 265 137 14 1969 10 227 110 8 1968 11 231 107 19 1967 10 248 114 16 1966 10 217 95 13 1965 10 137 54 10 1964 10 316 192 9 1963 10 215 104 13 1962 10 272 146 20 1961 10 145 71 6 1960 10 132 72 8 1959 10 117 38 18 1958 11 147 78 9 1957 10 147 64 19 1956 10 198 96 21 1955 10 174 76 15 1954 10 228 139 13 1953 10 195 94 19 1952 10 117 48 7 1951 10 134 59 12 1950 11 108 48 11 1949 11 163 65 19 1948 11 170 64 25 1947 10 163 58 23 1946 9 131 41 23 1945 10 154 53 n/a *bowl statistics not included
PCT 54.5 52.6 .600 .593 .520 .662 .615 .537 .477 .466 .394 .531 .568 .593 .541 .600 .609 .582 .598 .587 .551 .599 .578 .535 .512 .520 .563 .519 .433 .654 .660 .548 .547 .532 .552 .556 .475 .504 .480 .517 .485 .463 .460 .438 .394 .608 .484 .537 .490 .545 .325 .531 .435 .485 .437 .610 .482 .410 .440 .444 .399 .376 .356 .313 .344
TD 18 25 21 25 22 27 28 31 15 15 10 12 20 32 18 10 22 19 21 18 16 16 18 5 9 8 14 15 10 8 17 17 18 10 17 14 9 20 7 12 6 7 7 8 6 14 14 15 5 3 3 3 4 5 5 11 7 5 n/a n/a 13 6 10 n/a n/a
YDS AVG/GM 2895 222.7 2467 189.8 3143 241.8 3292 253.2 2312 192.7 2828 235.7 3705 264.6 2971 247.6 2514 228.5 2129 193.5 1662 151.1 2344 213.1 2737 248.8 3536 321.5 2757 250.6 2301 209.2 2893 222.5 2610 237.3 2546 212.2 2128 177.3 2807 255.2 2596 236.0 2432 221.1 1927 175.2 2119 192.6 2045 185.9 3057 277.9 2533 230.3 2486 226.0 2862 260.2 3215 292.3 2698 245.3 2837 257.9 2365 215.0 2522 229.3 2599 236.3 1924 174.9 2444 222.2 1475 134.1 2126 193.3 1341 134.1 1389 126.3 1193 119.3 1148 114.8 718 71.8 2187 218.7 1515 151.5 1795 179.5 825 82.5 766 76.6 564 56.4 899 81.7 1057 105.7 1143 114.3 1073 107.3 1724 172.4 1612 161.2 907 90.7 936 93.6 715 65.0 1364 124.0 1021 92.8 1155 115.5 585 65.0 599 59.9
TOTAL OFFENSE
YEAR G PLAYS 2009 13 864 2008 13 832 2007 13 884 2006 13 840 2005 12 804 2004 12 840 2003 14 994 2002 12 820 2001 11 816 2000 11 759 1999 11 717 1998 11 782 1997 11 871 1996* 11 864 1995 11 752 1994 11 757 1993* 13 864 1992 11 828 1991* 12 845 1990* 12 844 1989 11 759 1988 11 812 1987 11 738 1986 11 725 1985 11 858 1984 11 829 1983 11 778 1982 11 787 1981 11 772 1980 11 571 1979* 11 814 1978 11 841 1977 11 867 1976 11 835 1975 11 835 1974 11 801 1973 11 799 1972 11 708 1971 11 748 1970 11 800 1969 10 702 1968 11 811 1967 10 693 1966 10 612 1965 10 607 1964 10 658 1963 10 575 1962 10 645 1961 10 555 1960 10 622 1959 10 658 1958 11 803 1957 10 669 1956 10 660 1955 10 590 1954 10 622 1953 10 646 1952 10 670 1951 10 684 1950 11 700 1949 11 721 1948 11 758 1947 10 629 1946 9 488 1945 10 n/a *bowl statistics not included
YDS 5098 4888 5297 5403 5135 5909 6061 4268 3846 3492 2759 3214 4338 5034 3993 3685 4838 4282 4907 4364 3782 4119 3689 2950 4130 3332 3677 3337 3525 3878 4268 4179 4380 3817 5044 4196 3872 4127 3350 4426 4023 4470 2569 2385 2152 3013 2777 3157 2429 2267 2587 3493 2727 2614 2188 3324 3424 3721 3960 3480 3947 3995 3625 1492 1813
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
AVG/GM 392.2 376.0 407.5 415.6 427.9 492.4 432.9 355.7 349.6 317.5 250.8 292.2 394.4 457.6 363.0 335.0 403.2 389.3 446.1 396.6 343.8 138.5 335.4 268.2 375.5 302.9 334.3 303.4 320.5 352.5 355.7 379.9 398.2 347.0 458.5 381.5 352.0 412.7 334.5 442.6 402.3 406.4 256.9 238.5 215.2 301.3 277.7 315.7 242.9 226.7 258.7 349.3 272.7 261.4 218.8 332.4 342.4 372.1 396.0 316.4 358.8 363.2 362.5 165.8 181.3
167
YEARLY TEAM STATISTICS (continued)
Jim Breech
Carl Van Heuit
SCORING
Year G TD FG 1XP 2009 13 48 15-24 45-46 2008 13 54 15-21 53-53 2007 13 49 13-20 48-48 2006 13 54 15-20 52-52 2005 12 53 9-16 50-52 2004 12 59 9-17 56-57 2003 14 59 15-30 54-54 2002 12 53 19-27 50-51 2001 11 24 11-14 22-22 2000 11 30 11-16 25-26 1999 11 24 5-15 21-23 1998 11 22 10-19 17-21 1997 11 39 7-12 24-31 1996* 11 35 11-16 37-38 1995 11 30 12-17 21-23 1994 11 27 8-22 20-21 1993* 13 47 15-18 43-44 1992 11 34 16-18 28-28 1991* 12 50 19-28 41-43 1990* 12 40 8-15 38-38 1989 11 25 9-16 19-20 1988 11 25 22-28 23-23 1987 11 31 8-14 21-22 1986 11 16 12-16 9-13 1985 11 30 9-16 18-21 1984 11 17 10-16 12-13 1983 11 25 22-27 24-24 1982 11 27 11-23 23-25 1981 11 25 7-15 24-24 1980 11 22 14-17 18-20 1979* 11 32 11-20 32-32 1978 11 31 8-20 26-27 1977 11 36 16-27 34-34 1976 11 26 16-24 24-25 1975 11 43 11-19 39-42 1974 11 36 10-18 24-30 1973 11 32 7-16 28-31 1972 11 30 5-12 23-25 1971 11 24 7-12 21-23 1970 11 34 12-24 28-31 1969 10 20 13-20 19-19 1968 11 31 10-22 25-26 1967 10 19 6-15 17-18 1966 10 17 3-9 14-14 1965 10 16 5-7 14-16 1964 10 21 3-10 13-17 1963 10 27 2-n/a 15-18 1962 10 19 4-7 9-14 1961 10 16 2-4 12-12 1960 10 12 1-3 12-12 1959 10 18 n/a 5-8 1958 11 30 n/a 1-2 1957 10 17 0-3 7-17 1956 10 20 1-1 1-12 1955 10 16 0-2 11-16 1954 10 37 1-1 24-36 1953 10 33 0-1 22-33 1952 10 36 1-0 31-36 1951 10 44 1-1 40-44 1950 11 33 n/a 1-26 1949 11 46 n/a 39-46 1948 11 42 n/a 37-42 1947 10 41 n/a 27-37 1946 9 17 n/a 7-13 *bowl statistics not included
168
2XP DXP SAF PTS AVG 0 0 0 378 29.1 0 0 1 424 32.6 0 0 0 381 29.3 2 0 1 427 32.8 0 0 0 395 32.9 1 1 0 441 36.8 2 0 0 457 32.6 0 0 1 427 35.6 1 0 0 201 18.3 2 0 2 246 22.4 0 0 0 180 16.4 0 0 2 183 16.6 6 0 2 295 26.8 4 n/a 1 344 31.3 3 n/a 0 343 22.1 2 n/a 1 212 19.3 1 n/a 1 374 31.2 1 n/a 1 284 25.8 1 n/a 0 406 36.9 2 n/a 1 308 28.0 1 n/a 1 200 18.2 2 n/a 0 243 22.1 4 n/a 0 239 21.7 1 n/a 1 145 13.2 2 n/a 2 233 21.2 3 n/a 0 150 13.6 0 n/a 1 242 22.0 0 n/a 1 220 20.0 0 n/a 1 197 17.9 0 n/a 1 194 17.6 n/a n/a n/a 257 21.4 0 n/a 0 236 21.5 1 n/a 0 300 27.3 0 n/a n/a 230 20.9 0 n/a n/a 330 30.0 3 n/a n/a 276 25.1 1 n/a 1 245 22.3 2 n/a n/a 228 20.7 n/a n/a n/a 186 16.9 2 n/a n/a 272 24.7 1 n/a n/a 180 18.0 1 n/a n/a 243 22.1 1 n/a n/a 155 15.5 2 n/a n/a 131 13.1 0 n/a n/a 125 12.5 2 n/a n/a 152 15.2 5 n/a 1 195 19.5 3 n/a n/a 143 14.3 2 n/a n/a 118 11.8 0 n/a 0 93 9.3 1 n/a n/a 115 11.5 13 n/a n/a 207 18.8 n/a n/a n/a 109 10.9 n/a n/a 0 135 13.5 n/a n/a 0 107 10.7 n/a n/a 0 249 24.9 n/a n/a n/a 220 22.0 n/a n/a n/a 247 24.7 n/a n/a 0 307 30.7 n/a n/a 0 224 20.4 n/a n/a n/a 319 29.0 n/a n/a n/a 291 26.5 n/a n/a n/a 275 27.5 n/a n/a n/a 112 12.4
Dwight Garner
PUNT/KICK RETURNS
YEAR PR-YDS AVG 2009 20-247 12.4 2008 38-448 11.8 2007 18-159 8.8 2006 27-466 17.3 2005 28-438 15.6 2004 27-299 11.1 2003 37-365 9.9 2002 36-461 12.8 2001 38-268 7.1 2000 41-399 9.7 1999 46-505 11.0 1998 39-448 11.5 1997 32-313 9.8 1996* 21-161 7.7 1995 23-208 9.0 1994 25-224 9.0 1993* 24-258 10.8 1992 29-213 7.3 1991* 31-263 8.5 1990* 24-133 5.5 1989 31-174 5.6 1988 31-123 4.0 1987 30-189 6.3 1986 27-182 6.7 1985 17-129 7.6 1984 23-155 6.7 1983 32-274 8.6 1982 33-316 9.6 1981 26-201 7.7 1980 10-59 5.9 1979* 27-157 5.8 1978 20-106 5.3 1977 38-261 6.9 1976 30-179 6.0 1975 26-189 7.3 1974 26-183 7.0 1973 29-179 6.2 1972 45-448 10.0 1971 33-202 6.1 1970 22-126 5.7 1969 26-135 5.2 1968 42-332 7.9 1967 29-303 10.4 1966 39-515 13.2 1965 27-280 10.4 1964 22-244 11.1 1963 12-169 14.1 1962 17-124 7.3 1961 11-62 5.6 1960 11-58 5.3 1959 29-278 9.6 1958 33-301 9.1 1957 27-196 7.3 1956 26-212 8.2 1955 31-164 5.3 1954 25-193 7.7 1953 20-189 9.5 1952 36-353 9.8 1951 25-192 7.7 1950 45-382 8.5 1949 43-541 12.6 1948 45-572 12.7 1947 36-351 9.8 1946 39-421 10.8 *bowl statistics not included
TD 1 3 1 4 2 1 2 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 n/a n/a 1 n/a n/a 1 n/a 4 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 0 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
KR-YDS 56-1152 43-877 66-1432 29-595 30-598 22-478 39-723 43-1052 51-958 49-969 31-735 36-794 48-865 49-969 48-826 35-716 46-878 37-717 38-769 49-1030 43-851 45-859 49-1063 53-1135 36-667 33-642 25-436 22-431 34-659 40-761 30-526 45-672 30-600 28-580 33-625 36-737 55-1088 50-872 46-1051 44-753 35-763 28-550 40-703 35-562 36-731 38-673 39-1001 44-880 50-884 35-570 43-830 40-721 33-646 32-598 40-619 34-677 36-699 27-508 29-504 22-351 n/a n/a n/a 35-688
AVG 20.6 20.4 21.7 20.5 19.9 21.7 18.5 24.5 18.8 20.2 23.7 22.1 18.0 19.8 17.2 20.5 19.1 19.4 20.2 21.0 19.8 19.1 21.7 21.4 18.5 19.5 17.4 19.6 19.4 19.0 17.5 14.9 20.0 20.7 18.9 20.5 19.8 17.4 22.8 17.1 21.8 19.6 17.6 16.1 20.3 17.7 25.7 20.0 17.7 16.3 19.3 18.0 19.6 18.7 15.5 19.9 19.4 18.8 17.4 16.0 20.9 18.8 15.7 19.7
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
TD 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
RUSHING DEFENSE
YEAR G ATT YDS 2009 13 436 1769 2008 13 495 1589 2007 13 532 2138 2006 13 430 1630 2005 12 428 1430 2004 12 368 990 2003 14 500 1872 2002 12 456 1368 2001 11 437 1650 2000 11 457 1219 1999 11 446 1297 1998 11 449 1472 1997 11 400 1588 1996 12* 471 2084 1995 11 525 2132 1994 11 456 1482 1993 12* 472 1733 1992 11 471 1551 1991 11* 455 1669 1990 12 462 2126 1989 11 532 2031 1988 11 440 1449 1987 11 507 1895 1986 11 533 2051 1985 11 480 1906 1984 11 532 2262 1983 11 521 1679 1982 11 501 1434 1981 11 645 2592 1980 11 579 2472 1979 12* 588 2236 1978 11 546 2458 1977 11 546 1948 1976 11 521 1965 1975 11 568 2401 1974 11 - 2566 1973 11 572 2800 1972 11 627 2394 1971 11 526 1833 1970 11 498 1644 1969 10 529 2001 1968 11 480 1208 1967 10 465 1293 1966 10 498 1774 1965 10 483 2086 1964 10 447 1824 1963 10 536 2183 1962 10 561 2450 1961 10 558 2824 1960 10 500 2393 1959 10 485 2195 1958 11 520 2467 1957 10 614 2428 1956 10 480 2213 1955 10 470 1874 1954 10 413 1581 1953 10 437 1550 1952 10 426 1313 1951 10 396 1179 1950 11 422 1318 1949 11 522 1652 1948 11 - 1230 1947 10 464 1277 1946 9 433 1705 1945 10 - 1389 *bowl game not included
TD 18 16 22 11 15 7 16 15 25 16 14 10 18 24 21 13 18 22 14 23 18 14 18 19 17 19 9 13 23 24 15 22 19 15 18 - 33 26 19 17 13 5 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
AVG/GM AVG/RUSH 112.0 3.3 122.2 3.2 164.5 4.0 125.4 3.8 119.2 3.3 82.5 2.7 133.7 3.7 114.0 3.0 150.0 3.8 110.8 2.7 117.9 2.9 133.8 3.3 144.4 4.0 189.5 4.4 193.8 4.1 134.7 3.3 144.4 3.7 141.0 3.3 151.7 3.7 177.2 4.6 184.6 3.8 131.7 2.9 172.3 3.7 186.5 3.8 173.3 4.0 205.6 4.3 152.6 3.2 130.4 2.9 235.6 4.0 224.7 4.3 203.3 3.8 223.5 22 177.1 3.6 178.6 3.8 218.3 4.2 233.3 254.5 4.9 217.6 3.8 166.6 3.5 149.4 3.3 200.1 13 109.8 2.5 129.3 2.78 177.4 3.6 208.6 4.3 182.4 4.08 218.3 4.1 245.0 4.4 282.4 5.1 239.3 4.8 219.5 4.5 224.3 4.74 242.8 4.0 221.3 4.6 187.4 3.99 158.1 3.8 155.0 3.5 131.3 3.08 117.9 2.98 119.8 3.12 150.2 3.2 111.8 127.7 2.7 189.4 3.9 138.9 -
Duane Clemons
Chidi Iwuoma
PASSING DEFENSE
YEAR G ATT COMP INT 2009 13 454 289 24 2008 13 432 223 24 2007 13 444 269 10 2006 13 421 237 21 2005 12 454 254 15 2004 12 426 221 10 2003 14 469 262 14 2002 12 435 253 15 2001 11 352 193 8 2000 11 353 175 11 1999 11 340 161 17 1998 11 349 161 14 1997 11 327 166 4 1996 12* 355 195 11 1995 11 304 171 5 1994 11 302 158 14 1993 13* 409 215 16 1992 11 268 136 7 1991 12* 350 183 22 1990 12* 355 198 9 1989 11 322 188 10 1988 11 319 187 12 1987 11 295 173 17 1986 11 304 185 13 1985 11 318 161 15 1984 11 206 105 7 1983 11 356 177 19 1982 11 324 180 15 1981 11 272 141 7 1980 11 246 152 8 1979 11 282 138 9 1978 11 252 114 18 1977 11 272 122 12 1976 11 290 138 16 1975 11 238 116 14 1974 11 - - 18 1973 11 262 104 17 1972 11 203 88 14 1971 11 300 159 18 1970 11 368 172 22 1969 10 247 110 20 1968 11 290 132 22 1967 10 222 117 19 1966 10 211 112 16 1965 10 215 99 18 1964 10 159 94 18 1963 10 207 107 16 1962 10 145 83 5 1961 10 140 63 13 1960 10 154 81 6 1959 10 162 92 9 1958 11 194 99 11 1957 10 153 76 15 1956 10 134 66 13 1955 10 150 78 9 1954 10 155 72 13 1953 10 196 87 23 1952 10 288 121 20 1951 10 278 142 20 1950 11 202 105 18 1949 11* 220 95 22 1948 11* 201 73 30 1947 10 207 81 1019 1946 9 144 53 11 1945 10 136 57 - *bowl statistics not included
PCT 51.6 51.6 60.6 56.3 55.9 51.9 55.9 58.2 54.8 49.6 47.4 46.1 50.8 54.9 56.3 52.3 52.6 50.7 52.3 55.8 58.4 58.6 58.6 60.9 50.6 51.0 49.7 55.6 51.8 61.8 48.9 45.2 44.9 47.6 48.7 - 39.7 43.3 53.0 46.7 44.6 45.5 52.7 53.1 46.0 59.1 51.7 57.2 45.0 52.6 56.8 51.0 49.7 49.3 52.0 46.5 44.4 42.0 51.0 51.9 43.2 36.3 39.1 36.8 -
TD 11 12 17 17 14 17 25 20 27 18 18 18 24 20 15 12 20 10 16 16 15 12 12 17 12 16 13 14 12 15 8 12 7 12 11 - 16 11 13 15 12 9 14 9 6 11 8 13 9 8 11 - - - - - 3 - - - - - - - -
YDS AVG/GM 3469 266.8 2509 193.0 2787 214.4 3131 240.8 2884 240.3 2861 238.4 3516 251.1 3346 278.8 3259 296.3 2800 254.5 2582 234.7 2271 206.5 2607 237.0 2979 270.8 2066 187.8 1817 165.2 3053 254.4 1752 159.3 2204 200.4 2587 235.2 2378 216.2 2485 225.9 2188 198.9 2184 198.5 2018 183.5 1556 141.5 2549 231.7 2297 208.8 1740 158.2 2054 186.7 1683 153.0 1647 149.7 1398 127.1 1929 175.4 1477 134.3 1526 138.7 1750 159.0 1351 122.8 2017 183.4 2307 209.7 1612 161.2 1566 142.4 1391 139.1 1412 141.2 1358 135.9 1345 134.5 1514 151.4 1157 115.7 828 82.8 1072 107.2 1436 143.6 1250 113.6 938 93.8 830 83.0 1184 118.4 1001 100.1 1209 120.9 1342 134.2 1568 156.8 1210 110.0 1056 105.6 1082 98.4 1019 101.9 813 90.3 827 82.7
Ken Harvey
TOTAL DEFENSE
YEAR G PLAYS 2009 13 890 2008 13 927 2007 13 976 2006 13 851 2005 12 882 2004 12 794 2003 14 969 2002 12 891 2001 11 789 2000 11 810 1999 11 786 1998 11 798 1997 11 727 1996 12* 826 1995 11 829 1994 11 758 1993 13 881 1992 11 739 1991 12* 805 1990 12* 817 1989 11 758 1988 11 759 1987 11 802 1986 11 837 1985 11 798 1984 11 738 1983 11 877 1982 11 825 1981 11 917 1980 11 825 1979 12* 870 1978 11 798 1977 11 818 1976 11 811 1975 11 806 1974 11 828 1973 11 834 1972 11 830 1971 11 826 1970 11 866 1969 10 776 1968 11 770 1967 10 687 1966 10 709 1965 10 698 1964 10 606 1963 10 743 1962 10 706 1961 10 698 1960 10 654 1959 10 647 1958 11 714 1957 10 675 1956 10 614 1955 10 620 1954 10 568 1953 10 633 1952 10 714 1951 10 674 1950 11 624 1949 11 742 1948 11 700 1947 10 671 1946 9 577 1945 10 - *bowl statistics not included
YDS 4925 4098 4925 4761 4314 3851 5388 4714 4909 4019 3879 3743 4195 5063 4198 3299 4786 3303 3873 4713 3782 3934 4083 4235 3924 3818 4228 3731 4332 4526 3919 4105 3346 3894 3878 4092 4550 3745 3850 3951 3613 3544 2684 3186 3445 3169 3697 3607 3652 3465 3631 3717 3466 3046 3058 2582 2759 2655 2747 2528 2542 2312 2296 2518 1844
AVG/GM 378.8 315.2 378.8 366.2 359.5 320.9 384.9 392.8 446.3 365.4 352.6 340.3 381.4 460.3 381.6 299.9 398.8 300.3 352.1 428.5 343.8 357.6 371.2 385.0 356.7 347.1 384.4 339.2 393.8 411.5 326.6 373.2 304.2 354.0 352.5 372.0 413.6 340.5 350.0 359.2 361.3 322.2 268.4 318.6 344.5 316.9 369.7 360.7 365.2 346.5 363.1 337.9 346.6 304.6 305.8 258.2 275.9 265.5 274.4 229.8 231.1 210.2 229.6 279.7 184.4
MISCELLANEOUS
(DEFENSE)
YEAR INT-YDS AVG TD TFL-YDS SACK-YDS 2009 11-159 14.5 2 85-290 31-195 2008 24-419 17.5 3 91-404 35-270 2007 10-144 14.4 0 66-322 22-165 2006 21-330 15.7 3 70-244 26-136 2005 15-392 26.1 2 88-326 32-198 2004 10-166 16.6 1 69-343 37-247 2003 14-219 15.6 1 83-412 38-296 2002 15-298 19.9 3 106-494 44-349 2001 8-63 7.9 1 88-339 25-201 2000 11-78 7.1 1 104-509 44-341 1999 17-459 27.0 5 127-576 53-342 1998 14-172 12.3 2 125-575 35-266 1997 4-10 2.5 0 95-392 31.5-253 1996* 11-91 8.3 1 75-345 36-n/a 1995 5-11 2.2 0 96-n/a 33.5-n/a 1994 14-177 12.6 3 92-n/a 40-n/a 1993* 16-134 8.4 2 84-n/a 30-n/a 1992 7-46 6.6 1 89-n/a 29-n/a 1991* 22-292 13.3 1 86-n/a 37-n/a 1990* 9-161 17.9 1 77.5-n/a 30-n/a 1989 11-52 4.7 0 92-n/a 28-n/a 1988 12-113 9.4 0 69-n/a 27-n/a 1987 17-88 5.2 1 69-n/a 33-n/a 1986 13-69 5.3 0 55-n/a 24-n/a 1985 15-72 4.8 0 69-n/a 19-n/a 1984 8-31 3.9 0 45-n/a 18-n/a 1983 20-200 10.0 2 66-n/a 29-n/a 1982 15-101 6.7 2 76-n/a 36-n/a 1981 7-65 9.3 0 66-n/a 1980 8-100 12.5 1 1979* 9-238 26.4 1 1978 18-360 20.0 2 1977 12-138 11.5 0 1976 17-228 13.4 0 1975 15-203 13.5 0 1974 18-159 8.8 n/a 1973 17-158 9.3 0 1972 14-172 12.3 1 1971 18-147 8.2 n/a 1970 22-235 10.7 n/a 1969 20-162 8.1 2 1968 22-325 14.8 1 1967 19-275 14.5 1 1966 16-266 16.6 2 1965 18-243 13.5 n/a 1964 18-127 7.1 n/a 1963 16-215 13.4 n/a 1962 5-35 7.0 n/a 1961 13-87 6.7 n/a 1960 6-37 6.2 n/a 1959 9-115 12.8 n/a 1958 11-269 24.5 2 1957 15-86 5.7 n/a 1956 14-223 15.9 n/a 1955 9-150 16.7 n/a 1954 13-222 17.1 n/a 1953 23-299 13.0 n/a 1952 20-186 9.3 1 1951 20-285 14.3 n/a 1950 18-318 17.7 n/a 1949 22-257 11.7 n/a 1948 30-428 14.3 n/a 1947 26-388 14.9 n/a 1946 11-n/a n/a n/a *bowl statistics not included Note: TFL and SACK became official NCAA Stats in 1981
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
169
LONGEST PLAYS
Jahvid Best has three of the longest runs in Cal history, including a 93-yarder at UCLA in 2009.
Tom Schneider matched the longest field goal in Cal history when he booted a 55-yarder against Stanford on Dec. 2, 2006.
RUNS FROM SCRIMMAGE 98 96 93 92 91 90 90 90 89 87 86 85 84 84 84
Bill Powell vs. Oregon State, Oct. 27, 1951 John Wilson vs. San Jose State, Sept. 25, 1954 Jahvid Best at UCLA, Oct. 17, 2009 Joe Kapp vs. Oregon, Oct. 25, 1958 Jerry Drew vs. Pennsylvania, Oct. 10, 1953 Tarik Smith vs. San Diego State, Sept. 14, 1996 Tyrone Moore vs. Arizona State, Nov. 14, 1987 Heine Heitmuller vs. Perris Indians, Nov. 28, 1902 J.J. Arrington at Air Force, Sept. 4, 2004 Joe Stuart vs. Coast Guard, Nov. 4, 1944 Jahvid Best at Washington State, Sept. 6, 2008 Benny Lom vs. USC, Nov. 22, 1929 Jahvid Best vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008 Don Johnson vs. Minnesota, Oct. 4, 1952 Jim Monachino vs. Stanford, Nov. 19, 1949
88 85 84 83 83 83 81 80 80 80 80 80
Joe Roth to Wesley Walker vs. Georgia, Sept. 11, 1976 Charlie Young to Oliver Hillmon vs. Oregon State, Oct. 15, 1977 Pat Barnes to Na’il Benjamin vs. Fresno State, Sept. 9, 1995 Kyle Boller to Drae Harris vs. Oregon State, Nov. 6, 1999 Charlie Young to Floyd Eddings vs. Oregon State, Oct. 15, 1977 Bob Powell to Bob Edmonston vs. St. Mary’s, Sept. 22, 1945 Kyle Boller to Derek Swafford vs. Oregon State, Nov. 4, 2000 Aaron Rodgers to Geoff McArthur vs. UCLA, Oct. 16, 2004 Gale Gilbert to David Lewis vs. Arizona, Oct. 1, 1983 Rich Campbell to Holden Smith vs. Arizona, Oct. 14, 1978 Joe Kapp to Hank Olguin vs. Washington, Nov. 16, 1957 Jackie Jensen to Paul Keckley vs. Stanford, Nov. 22, 1947
PASS PLAYS
170
PUNTS 89 84 78 76 75 75 73 72 72 72 72 72
Scott Tabor vs. USC, Sept. 26, 1987 Dan Melville vs. Nebraska, Sept. 9, 1978 Scott Tabor vs. Washington, Oct. 4, 1986 Bryan Anger vs. Stanford, Nov. 22, 2008 Bryan Anger vs. Stanford, Nov. 22, 2008 Ryan Longwell vs. USC, Oct. 30, 1993 Andrew Larson vs. Oregon State, Oct. 13, 2007 Bryan Anger at UCLA, Oct. 17, 2009 Bryan Anger vs. Arizona State, Oct. 4, 2008 Ryan Longwell vs. Navy, Dec. 25, 1996 (Aloha Bowl) Andrew Larson vs. Stanford, Dec. 2, 2006 Arleigh Williams vs. USC, Oct. 28, 1933
55 55 54 54 54 54 53 53 53 53 52 52 52 52 52 51 51 51 50
Tom Schneider vs. Stanford, Dec. 2, 2006 Robbie Keen vs. Washington, Nov. 12, 1988 Randy Pratt vs. UCLA, Oct. 22, 1983 Mick Luckhurst vs. Oregon State, Oct. 18, 1980 Ron Vander Meer vs. Illinois, Oct. 5, 1974 Archie Nisbet vs. Washington State, Nov. 4, 1922 Tyler Fredrickson at Oregon, Nov. 8, 2003 Ryan Longwell vs. San Diego State, Sept. 14, 1996 Robbie Keen vs. Wisconsin, Sept. 23, 1989 Leland Rix vs. Oregon State, Oct. 11, 1986 Doug Brien vs. Washington, Oct. 9, 1993 Robbie Keen vs. USC, Nov. 5, 1988 Leland Rix vs. Arizona, Oct. 25, 1986 Joe Cooper vs. Georgia Tech, Sept. 16, 1978 Jim Breech vs. Stanford, Nov. 20, 1976 Giorgio Tavecchio at Arizona State, Oct. 31, 2009 Tyler Fredrickson vs. USC, Sept. 27, 2003 Mark Jensen at Michigan State, Sept. 14, 2002 Ron Miller vs. Oregon, Nov. 16, 1968
FIELD GOALS
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Jim Blakeney returned a kickoff 85 yards for a touchdown against Pittsburgh on Oct. 5, 1963.
FIELD GOALS (continued) 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50
Ron Miller vs. Syracuse, Oct. 26, 1968 Randy Pratt vs. San Jose State, Sept. 17, 1983 Jim Breech vs. Washington State, Sept. 27, 1975 Robbie Keen vs. San Jose State, Oct. 7, 1989 Robbie Keen vs. Washington, Oct. 21, 1989 Robbie Keen vs. Stanford, Nov. 17, 1990 Doug Brien vs. Washington, Oct. 19, 1991 Doug Brien vs. San Jose State, Sept. 5, 1992 Mark Jensen at Oregon State, Oct. 26, 2002
102 102 100 100 99 98 94 92 90 85
Ed Solinsky vs. Cal Aggies, Oct. 16, 1937 Frank Brunk vs. USC, Oct. 15, 1949 Deltha O’Neal vs. Navy, Dec. 25, 1996 (Aloha Bowl) Deltha O’Neal vs. Stanford, Nov. 20, 1999 Russell White vs. Miami, Sept. 15, 1990 Don Johnson vs. UCLA, Nov. 1, 1952 LaShaun Ward vs. Arizona, Nov. 16, 2002 Tom Blanchfield vs. San Jose State, Oct. 19, 1963 Lavelle Hawkins vs. Louisiana Tech, Sept. 15, 2007 Jim Blakeney vs. Pittsburgh, Oct. 5, 1963
KICK RETURNS
Eric Zomalt’s interception return for a touchdown vs. Arizona in 1993 capped a 20-point comeback in Cal’s 24-20 victory.
PUNT RETURNS 108 105 95 92 90 84 83 80 79 77 76
Don Guest vs. Washington State, Sept. 17, 1966 (Missed FG Attempt) Bobby Sherman vs. Stanford, Nov. 8, 1902 DeSean Jackson at Arizona, Nov. 11, 2006 Grover Garvin vs. Washington State, Sept. 19, 1959 Jemeel Powell at Michigan State, Sept. 14, 2002 Jemeel Powell vs. Stanford, Nov. 23, 2002 Jemeel Powell at USC, Oct. 28, 2000 Leroy Sharp vs. Olympic Club, Oct. 2, 1915 Tim Mixon vs. Illinois, Sept. 17, 2005 DeSean Jackson vs. Tennessee, Sept. 1, 2007 Jeremy Ross vs. Washington State, Oct. 24, 2009
100 100 100 100 90 90 85 85 85 85 82
Matt Nixon vs. Baylor, Aug. 31, 2002 John Hardy at Wisconsin, Sept. 8, 1990 Jim Jurkovich vs. USC, Nov. 9, 1940 Deltha O’Neal vs. Oregon, Nov. 13, 1999 Bobby Smith vs. Oregon, Nov. 13, 1965 Syd'Quan Thompson at Washington State, Sept. 6, 2008 Nnamdi Asomugha at Arizona State, Nov. 9, 2002 Perry Thomas vs. St. Mary’s, Sept. 25, 1937 Will Lotter vs. UCLA, Nov. 6, 1948 Charley Erb vs. Olympic Club, Sept. 25, 1920 John Cunningham vs. Washington State, Oct. 4, 1947
INTERCEPTION RETURNS
In one of the most dramatic runs in Memorial Stadium history, Frank Brunk took a USC fourth quarter kickoff 102 yards for a TD to give Cal a 16-10 win in 1949. The Golden Bears’ come-from-behind victory was crucial en route to a 10-1 season and a Rose Bowl berth.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
171
THE LAST TIME CALIFORNIA TEAM
Kickoff Return for TD........90, Lavelle Hawkins vs. Louisiana Tech, Sept. 15, 2007 Punt Return for TD................73, Jeremy Ross vs. Washington State, Oct. 24, 2009 Interception Return for TD....31, Eddie Young vs. Utah (Poinsettia Bowl), Dec. 23, 2009 Scored 50+ Points .......................... 59, vs. Eastern Washington, Sept. 12, 2009 Back-To-Back 50+ Points....52, vs. Maryland/59, vs. E. Wash., Sept. 5-12, 2009 Shutout at home.................................................. vs. Arizona, Oct. 1, 2005 (28-0) Shutout at home (Pac-10) .................................. vs. Arizona, Oct. 1, 2005 (28-0) Shutout on road...................................................at Arizona, Oct. 23, 2004 (38-0) Shutout on road (Pac-10)................................... at Arizona, Oct. 23, 2004 (38-0) Overtime Game........................................ vs. Washington, Oct. 21, 2006 (31-24) 300+ yards rushing . ............................ 309 vs. Washington State, Oct. 24, 2009 400+ yards rushing . ......................................431, vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008 <25 yards rushing...........................................16, at Oregon State, Oct. 26, 2002 300+ yards passing......................................351, at Arizona State, Oct. 31, 2009 400+ yards passing ..........................................423, at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 500+ yards passing.......................................503, vs. Arizona (4ot), Nov. 2, 2006 <100 yards passing............................................ 88, at Oregon (ot), Nov. 2, 2005 500+ yards total offense ...................... 559 vs. Washington State, Oct. 24, 2009 600+ yards total offense ................... 611, vs. New Mexico State, Sept. 11, 2004 <200 yards total offense.............................................. 165, at USC, Nov. 8, 2008 <150 yards total offense...................................... 130, at Stanford, Nov. 20, 1999 Beat a Top 20 team at home...............vs. No. 18 Arizona, Nov. 14, 2009 (24-16) Beat a Top 15 team at home.......... vs. No. 15 Tennessee, Sept. 1, 2007 (45-31) Beat a Top 10 team at home............. vs. No. 3 USC, Sept. 27, 2003 (34-31, 3ot) Beat a Top 5 team at home............... vs. No. 3 USC, Sept. 27, 2003 (34-31, 3ot) Beat a Top 20 team on the road..........at No. 14 Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 (34-28) Beat a Top 15 team on the road..........at No. 14 Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 (34-28) Beat a Top 10 team on the road............at No. 10 Indiana, Nov. 27, 1969 (17-14) Beat a Top 5 team on the road................at No. 3 Stanford, Nov. 24, 1951 (20-7) Forced 4 or more turnovers ................................4, at Minnesota, Sept. 19, 2009 Forced 5 or more turnovers ..............................5, vs. Washington, Oct. 21, 2006 Had 4 or more interceptions ............................. 4, vs. Miami, Fla., Dec. 27, 2008 Had 5 or more interceptions .............................5, vs. Washington, Oct. 21, 2006 Had 0 TO .........................................................................at UCLA, Oct. 17, 2009
CALIFORNIA INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Rushed for 200+ yards ...............311, Jahvid Best vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008 Had a run of 50+ yards . ............50, Shane Vereen at Washington, Dec. 5, 2009 Had a run of 75+ yards . ........................ 93, Jahvid Best at UCLA, Oct. 17, 2009 Had 30+ rushing attempts............. 42, Shane Vereen at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 Had 35+ rushing attempts............. 42, Shane Vereen at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 Had 40+ rushing attempts............. 42, Shane Vereen at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 Had 3+ TD rushes........................... 3, Shane Vereen at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 Had 4+ TD rushes........................... 5, Jahvid Best at Minnesota, Sept. 19, 2009 Had 5+ TD rushes........................... 5, Jahvid Best at Minnesota, Sept. 19, 2009
CALIFORNIA INDIVIDUAL PASSING
Passed for 300+ yards .............351, Kevin Riley at Arizona State, Oct. 31, 2009 Passed for 350+ yards...................423, Kevin Riley at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 Passed for 400+ yards...................423, Kevin Riley at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 Passed for 500+ yards...............503, Pat Barnes vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) Had 30+ completions........................33, Kevin Riley at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 Had 50+ attempts.............................58, Kevin Riley at Maryland, Sept. 13, 2008 Completed a pass of 50+ yards................56, Riley to Ross at Arizona State, Oct. 31, 2009 Completed a pass of 75+ yards .... 80, Rodgers to McArthur, vs. UCLA, Oct. 16, 2004 Had 4+ TD passes.............................. 4, Kevin Riley vs. Maryland, Sept. 5, 2009
CALIFORNIA INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING
Had 10+ receptions .................. 11, DeSean Jackson at Oregon, Sept. 29, 2007 Had 100+ yards receiving....................107, Marvin Jones at Washington, Dec. 5, 2009 Had 150+ yards receiving....192, Lavelle Hawkins vs. Oregon State Oct. 13, 2007 Had 3+ TD catches.................. 3, DeSean Jackson vs. Minnesota, Sept. 9, 2006
CALIFORNIA INDIVIDUAL DEFENSE
Had 15+ tackles....... 15.0, Mychal Kendricks, vs. E. Washington, Sept. 12, 2009 Had 20+ tackles................................22.0, Jerrott Willard vs. USC, Oct. 30, 1993 Had 2+ interceptions................. 2, Mike Mohamed at Minnesota, Sept. 19, 2009 Had 5+ tackles for loss...5, Tully Banta-Cain vs. New Mexico State, Sept. 7, 2002 Had 4+ sacks............ 4.5, Tully Banta-Cain vs. New Mexico State, Sept. 7, 2002 Blocked a punt...................Mychal Kendricks vs. Colorado State, Sept. 27, 2008 Blocked a field goal...................Rulon Davis at Washington State, Sept. 6, 2008 Cal recorded a safety.......................................... Team vs. Oregon, Nov. 1, 2008
OPPONENT TEAM
Kickoff Return for TD........... 86, James Rodgers at Oregon State, Nov. 15, 2008 Punt Return for TD........................... 66, Damian Williams vs. USC, Oct. 3, 2009 INT Return for TD......27, Steve Sylvester vs. Utah (Poinsettia Bowl), Dec. 23, 2009 Scored 50+ Points................................................. 52, vs. Arizona, Nov. 16, 2002 Shutout by at home................................vs. Arizona State, Sept. 25, 1982 (15-0) Shutout by at home (Pac-10)................ vs. Arizona State, Sept. 25, 1982 (15-0) Shutout by on road.........................................at Nebraska, Sept. 11, 1999 (45-0) Shutout by on road (Pac-10)................................... at USC, Oct. 22, 1994 (61-0) Rushed for 300+ yards...312, vs. Air Force (Armed Forces Bowl), Dec. 31, 2007 Rushed for <25 yards...................... 14, vs. Eastern Washington, Sept. 12, 2009 Passed for 300+ yards .....................338, vs. Utah (Poinsettia Bowl), Dec. 23, 2009 Passed for 400+ yards........................ 422, vs. Washington State, Oct. 22, 2005 Passed for <100 yards.....................................96, vs. Washington, Dec. 6, 2008 Had 500+ yards total offense.............................. 524, at Oregon, Sept. 26, 2009 Had 600+ yards total offense.............. 600, vs. Washington State, Oct. 22, 2005 Had <200 yards total offense................ 167, at Washington State, Sept. 6, 2008 Had <150 yards total offense.................... 147, vs. San Jose State, Oct. 1, 1994 Forced 4 or more turnovers....................................... 5, vs. Oregon, Nov. 1, 2008 Forced 5 or more turnovers....................................... 5, vs. Oregon, Nov. 1, 2008 Had 4 or more interceptions....................................... 4, vs. UCLA, Oct. 25, 2008 Had 5 or more interceptions.............................. 5, at Arizona State, Nov. 7, 1998 Had 0 TO................................................................ at Washington, Dec. 5, 2009
OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Rushed for 200+ yards ........... 224, Louis Rankin, at Washington, Nov. 17, 2007 Had a run of 50+ yards................... 61, Toby Gerhart, at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 Had a run of 75+ yards . .............. 94, Casey Moore, vs. Stanford, Nov. 20, 1999 Had 30+ rushing attempts . ..33, Yvenson Bernard, vs. Oregon State, Oct. 13, 2007 Had 35+ rushing attempts . ..42, Yvenson Bernard, vs. Oregon State, Oct. 15, 2005 Had 40+ rushing attempts . ..42, Yvenson Bernard, vs. Oregon State, Oct. 15, 2005
OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL PASSING
Passed 300+ yards ....338, Jordan Wynn vs. Utah (Poinsettia Bowl), Dec. 23, 2009 Passed for 350+ yards ..... 422, Alex Brink, vs. Washington State, Oct. 22, 2005 Passed for 400+ yards ..... 422, Alex Brink, vs. Washington State, Oct. 22, 2005 Had 30+ completions .................. 31, Dennis Dixon, vs. Oregon, Sept. 29, 2007 Had 50+ attempts ................. 60, Sonny Cumbie, vs. Texas Tech, Dec. 30, 2004 Comp. a pass of 50+ yards ... 80, Sullivan to Williams, at Arizona State, Oct. 31, 2009 Comp. a pass of 75+ yards .....80, Sullivan to Wiliams, at Arizona St., Oct. 31, 2009 Had 4+ TD passes . ...........................4, Erik Ainge, at Tennessee, Sept. 2, 2006
OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING
Had 10+ receptions .......................... 11, Ed Dickson, at Oregon, Sept. 26, 2009 Had 100+ yards receiving . 147, Jermaine Kearse, at Washington, Dec. 5, 2009 Had 150+ yards receiving ..... 202, Mark Dell, vs. Michigan State, Aug. 30, 2008 Had 200+ yards receiving ..... 202, Mark Dell, vs. Michigan State, Aug. 30, 2008 Had 3+ TD catches . ........................... 3, Ed Dickson, at Oregon, Sept. 26, 2009
OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL DEFENSE
Had 15+ tackles ..........................15, Delano Howell, at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 Had 20+ tackles ................. 20, Chester Burnett, vs. Arizona, Nov. 2, 1996 (4ot) Had 2+ interceptions ................ 2, Otis Wiley, vs. Michigan State, Aug. 30, 2008 Had 5+ tackles for loss ..........5.0, Eric Manning, at Oregon State, Oct. 26, 2002 Had 4+ sacks .................... 4.5, Derrick Rodgers, at Arizona State, Nov. 9, 1996 Blocked a punt . ................................Chase Thomas, at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 Blocked a field goal ................Toby Turpin, vs. Washington State, Oct. 24, 2009 Recorded a safety ................................ Team, vs. Southern Miss, Aug. 30, 2003
OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL MISCELLANEOUS
Scored 4+ touchdowns . .................. 4, Toby Gerhart, at Stanford, Nov. 21, 2009 Punted the ball 60+ yards ................... 61, Josh Syria, vs. Oregon, Nov. 1, 2008 Kicked a 50+ yard field goal .. 52, Alexis Serna, vs. Oregon State, Oct. 13, 2007 Made 3+ field goals ...........3, Joe Phillips vs. Utah (Poinsettia Bowl), Dec. 23, 2009 Returned a blkd FG for a TD..... Brandon Chillar, at UCLA, Oct. 18, 2003 (65 yards) Returned a PAT for a score... Corey Ivy, vs. Oklahoma, Sept. 20, 1997 (blocked kick)
CALIFORNIA INDIVIDUAL MISCELLANEOUS
Scored 4+ TDs................................ 5, Jahvid Best at Minnesota, Sept. 19, 2009 Punted the ball 70+ yards ....................72, Bryan Anger at UCLA, Oct. 17, 2009 Kicked a 50+ yard FG ................. 55, Tom Schneider vs. Stanford, Dec. 2, 2006 Made 3+ FG.............................. 4, Giorgio Tavecchio vs. Arizona, Nov. 14, 2009 Returned a blkd FG for a TD............... Zack Follett @ Washington State, Sept. 6, 2008 (65 yards) Returned PAT for a score............... Wendell Hunter at Southern Miss, Dec. 6, 2004 (blocked kick) Returned a blkd punt for a TD....... Bryant Nnabuife vs. Colorado State, Sept. 27, 2008 (30 yards)
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CAL HISTORY
JACKIE JENSEN Cal Hall of Fame, Class of 1986
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HISTORY OF CAL FOOTBALL,YEAR-BY-YEAR YEAR –––––OVERALL––––– W L T PF PA 1886 6 2 1 88 35 1887 4 0 0 66 12 1888 6 1 0 104 10 1890 4 0 0 45 4 1891 0 1 0 0 36 1892 Sp 4 2 0 82 24 1892 Fa 2 1 1 44 34 1893 5 1 1 110 60 1894 0 1 2 12 18 1895 3 1 1 46 10 1896 6 2 2 150 56 1897 0 3 2 8 58 1898 8 0 2 221 5 1899 7 1 1 142 2 1900 4 2 1 53 7 1901 9 0 1 106 15 1902 8 0 0 168 12 1903 6 1 2 128 12 1904 6 1 1 75 24 1905 4 1 2 75 12 1915 8 5 0 242 184
COACH O.S. Howard None
Thomas McClung W.W. Heffelfinger Charles Gill Frank Butterworth Charles P. Nott Garrett Cochran Addison Kelly Frank Simpson James Whipple James Hopper J.W. Knibbs
COACHING SUMMARY COACH YEARS O.S. Howard 1886 Thomas McClung 1892 W.W. Heffelfinger 1893 Charles Gill 1894 Frank Butterworth 1895-96 Charles Nott 1897 Garrett Cochran 1898-99 Addison Kelly 1900 Frank Simpson 1901 James Whipple 1902-03 James Hooper 1904 J.W. Knibbs 1905 Oscar Taylor 1906-08 James Schaeffer 1909-15 Andy Smith 1916-25 Nibs Price 1926-30 Bill Ingram 1931-34 Stub Allison 1935-44 Lawrence Shaw 1945 Frank Wickhorst 1946 Pappy Waldorf 1947-56 Pete Elliott 1957-59 Marv Levy 1960-63 Ray Willsey 1964-71 Mike White 1972-77 Roger Theder 1978-81 Joe Kapp 1982-86 Bruce Snyder 1987-91 Keith Gilbertson 1992-95 Steve Mariucci 1996 Tom Holmoe 1997-2001* Jeff Tedford 2002-Present
W 6 2 5 0 9 0 15 4 9 14 6 4 13 73 74 27 27 58 4 2 67 10 8 40 35 18 20 29 20 6 12 67
L 2 1 1 1 3 3 1 2 0 1 1 1 10 16 16 17 14 42 5 7 32 21 29 42 30 27 34 24 26 6 43 35
T PCT 1 .722 1 .625 1 .786 2 .333 3 .700 2 .200 3 .868 1 .643 1 .950 2 .882 1 .813 2 .714 1 .563 8 .794 7 .799 3 .606 4 .644 2 .578 1 .450 0 .222 4 .670 0 .323 3 .238 1 .488 1 .538 0 .400 1 .373 4 .544 0 .435 0 .500 0 .218 0 .656
Andy Smith
Lynn “Pappy” Waldorf
Bruce Snyder
*includes four forfeits in 1999 for use of ineligible players Cal defeated Alabama 13-0 in the 1938 Rose Bowl. YEAR 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946
–––––OVERALL––––– W L T PF PA 6 4 1 192 103 5 5 1 149 104 7 2 0 187 62 6 2 1 147 64 9 0 0 510 14 9 0 1 312 33 9 0 0 398 34 9 0 1 182 7 8 0 2 162 51 6 3 0 192 56 3 6 0 105 167 7 3 0 184 64 6 2 2 141 36 7 1 1 155 78 4 5 0 87 170 8 2 0 106 41 7 3 2 169 89 6 3 2 161 39 6 6 0 176 110 9 1 0 163 22 6 5 0 147 74 10 0 1 214 33 10 1 0 219 44 3 7 0 93 134 4 6 0 84 128 4 5 0 107 71 5 5 0 98 107 4 6 0 99 143 3 6 1 78 149 4 5 1 93 107 2 7 0 112 169
––––CONFERENCE–––– W L T PF PA 0 3 0 24 66 2 1 0 41 24 2 0 0 73 0 2 2 0 35 45 3 0 0 104 7 4 0 0 167 10 4 0 0 146 7 5 0 0 66 7 2 0 2 54 34 2 2 0 77 41 0 5 0 33 129 2 3 0 55 45 3 0 2 45 16 4 1 0 95 46 1 4 0 46 144 4 1 0 50 13 2 2 1 37 46 2 2 2 51 19 3 2 0 69 37 4 1 0 55 22 4 3 0 87 51 6 0 1 137 26 6 1 0 107 37 2 5 0 58 107 3 4 0 75 68 3 4 0 76 58 3 4 0 74 94 2 2 0 26 26 1 3 1 19 78 2 4 1 55 81 1 6 0 85 128
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CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
FINISH, RANKING COACH 4 PCC Andy Smith 2 PCC 1 PCC 3t PCC 1t PCC, National Champions 1t PCC, National Champions 1t PCC, National Champions 1t PCC, National Champions 2 PCC 5 PCC 9 PCC Nibs Price 5t PCC 2 PCC 3t PCC 8t PCC 2 PCC Bill Ingram 5t PCC 6 PCC 5 PCC 1t PCC Stub Allison 4 PCC 1 PCC, National Champions, 2 AP 1t PCC, 14 AP 8 PCC 6 PCC 7 PCC 7 PCC 2 PCC 4 PCC 6 PCC Buck Shaw 9 PCC Frank Wickhorst
CAL’S EARLY RUGBY YEARS During these years, rugby was played instead of football. 1882-83 1884 1885 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914
W 2 2 4 2 4 7 12 12 11 10 6 14
L 1 0 0 4 3 3 3 0 2 2 3 1
T 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 2 1 1 3 0
PF PA 24 13 27 0 23 0 19 20 67 42 114 46 268 57 279 27 256 34 144 58 105 110 276 60
YEAR 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
–––––OVERALL––––– W L T PF PA 9 1 0 275 111 10 1 0 291 100 10 1 0 319 131 9 1 1 224 90 8 2 0 307 166 7 3 0 247 127 4 4 2 220 170 5 5 0 249 177 2 7 1 107 216 3 7 0 135 181 1 9 0 109 176 7 4 0 207 200 2 8 0 115 223 2 7 1 93 195 1 8 1 118 268 1 9 0 143 247 4 5 1 195 213 3 7 0 152 187 5 5 0 125 194 3 7 0 131 197 5 5 0 155 195 7 3 1 243 114 5 5 0 180 182 6 5 0 272 249 6 5 0 186 262 3 8 0 228 314 4 7 0 245 380 7 3 1 276 213 8 3 0 330 233 5 6 0 230 226 8 3 0 300 211 6 5 0 236 289 7 5 0 257 194 3 8 0 194 328 2 9 0 197 287 7 4 0 220 233 5 5 1 242 227 2 9 0 150 264 4 7 0 233 265 2 9 0 145 325 3 6 2 239 267 5 5 1 243 244 4 7 0 200 288 7 4 1 325 341 10 2 0 443 239 4 7 0 284 284 9 4 0 411 303 4 7 0 212 248 3 8 0 243 286 6 6 0 382 407 3 8 0 295 339 5 6 0 183 251 0 11 0* 180 254 3 8 0 246 295 1 10 0 201 431 7 5 0 427 318 8 6 0 457 341 10 2 0 441 192 8 4 0 395 254 10 3 0 427 251 7 6 0 381 348 9 4 0 424 259 8 5 0 378 331
––––CONFERENCE–––– W L T PF PA FINISH, RANKING COACH 5 1 0 135 84 2t PCC, 15 AP Pappy Waldorf 6 0 0 155 40 1t PCC, 4 AP 7 0 0 220 80 1 PCC, 3 AP 5 0 1 124 28 1 PCC, 5 AP, 4 UPI 5 2 0 183 152 3 PCC, 12 AP 3 3 0 109 80 4 PCC 2 2 2 127 98 4 PCC 4 3 0 178 129 4 PCC 1 5 1 60 162 7t PCC 2 5 0 95 142 8 PCC 1 6 0 97 123 7t PCC Pete Elliott 6 1 0 127 85 1 PCC, 16 AP 1 3 0 39 70 4 AAWU 1 3 0 38 92 4 AAWU Marv Levy 1 3 0 57 97 4t AAWU 0 4 0 35 115 6 AAWU 1 3 0 74 103 5 AAWU 0 4 0 61 93 8 AAWU Ray Willsey 2 3 0 50 112 5t AAWU 2 3 0 76 102 5 AAWU 2 3 0 79 107 6 AAWU 2 2 1 99 85 4 Pac-8 2 4 0 101 123 6 Pac-8 4 3 0 166 123 2t Pac-8 4 3 0 109 156 3t Pac-8 3 4 0 163 208 5 Pac-8 Mike White 2 5 0 168 272 5t Pac-8 4 2 1 184 148 3t Pac-8 6 1 0 235 133 1t Pac-8, 14 AP, 15 UPI 3 4 0 115 124 4t Pac-8 4 3 0 169 156 4 Pac-8 (includes UCLA forfeit) 3 4 0 124 204 6t Pac-10 Roger Theder 6 3 0 217 142 5 Pac-10 (includes Oregon forfeit) 3 5 0 149 223 9 Pac-10 2 6 0 132 204 8 Pac-10 4 4 0 135 209 6 Pac-10 Joe Kapp 3 4 1 179 173 8 Pac-10 1 8 0 104 219 10 Pac-10 2 7 0 146 212 10 Pac-10 2 7 0 116 269 9 Pac-10 2 3 2 137 170 8 Pac-10 Bruce Snyder 1 5 1 109 188 10 Pac-10 2 6 0 151 222 10 Pac-10 4 3 1 221 228 4 Pac-10 6 2 0 237 164 2t Pac-10, 8 AP, 7 Coaches 2 6 0 197 204 9 Pac-10 Keith Gilbertson 4 4 0 183 244 4t Pac-10, 25 AP, 24 Coaches 3 5 0 130 205 5t Pac-10 2 6 0 170 221 8t Pac-10 3 5 0 224 288 5t Pac-10 Steve Mariucci 1 7 0 186 259 9 Pac-10 Tom Holmoe 3 5 0 153 205 7 Pac-10 0 8 0* 131 164 6t Pac-10 2 6 0 204 240 8t Pac-10 0 8 0 148 333 10 Pac-10 4 4 0 256 238 4t Pac-10 Jeff Tedford 5 3 0 267 170 3t Pac-10 7 1 0 287 103 2 Pac-10, 9 AP, 9 Coaches 4 4 0 243 190 4t Pac-10, 25 AP, 25 Coaches 7 2 0 280 173 1t Pac-10, 14 AP, 14 Coaches 3 6 0 218 241 7t Pac-10 6 3 0 293 169 4 Pac-10, 25 Coaches 5 4 0 205 290 6 Pac-10
Mike White
Joe Kapp
OVERALL RECORDS NCAA Recognized Rugby All-Time Conference Collegiate
W-L-T 624-476-51 86-22-11 710-498-62 277-307-21 536-455-37
PCT .542 .769 .559 .426 .521
PF 22,895 1,602 24,487 11,672 21,108
PA 18,474 467 18,931 11,898 17,776
Jeff Tedford
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ALL-TIME SCORES All scheduled games were cancelled due to excessive rains.
1882-83*
1890
2-1-1 Head Coach: None Captain: W.E. Conner
D2 L Phoenix Club F10 T Allies F24 W Phoenix Club A7 W Allies SF – San Francisco, CA
4-7 SF 0-0 SF 7-6 SF 13-0 SF
4-0-0 Head Coach: None Captain: Fred W. McNear
J11 F8 F15 M1
W W W W
2-0-0 Head Coach: None Captain: Charles O. Bosse
18-0 SF 9-0 SF
4-0-1 Head Coach: None Captain: John G. Sutton W W W T W
Merions Merions Merions Wasps Wasps
13-0 4-0 4-0 0-0 2-0
H H H H H
1886 6-2-1 Head Coach: Oscar S. Howard Captain: Frederick C. Turner
J16 W Wasps F6 L Orions F22 W Hastings Law College M13 T Reliance M27 W Reliance A30 W Orions M5 L Reliance M21 W Wasps M22 W Hastings Law College O – Oakland, CA
20-2 10-12 1-0 12-12 10-0 29-2 4-7 1-0 1-0
4-0-0 Head Coach: None Captain: Frederick C. Turner W W W W
S.F. Club Volunteers Reliance Reliance
H O H H H H H H H
26-0 14-0 14-6 12-6
H H H H
1888 6-1-0 Head Coach: None Captain: Charles W. Reed
F18 W S.F. Club F25 L Volunteers M10 W S.F. Club M17 W Posens M31 W Wasps A21 W Wasps A23 W S.F. Club SR – Santa Rosa * Rugby
176
H H H H
L S.F. Club
0-36 H
1892 (Spring) 4-2-0 Head Coach: None Captain: George H. Foulks
D12 W S.F. Boys HS J5 W S.F. Boys HS J12 W Hopkins Academy F3 W Berkeley Gym. F20 L Olympic Club M19 L Stanford SF – San Francisco, CA
12-0 H 14-0 H 16-4 H 30-0 H 0-6 H 10-14 SF
1892 2-1-1 Head Coach: Thomas McClung Captain: Loren E. Hunt
1887
F18 F25 M5 M26
6-4 16-0 11-0 12-0
6-2-2 Head Coach: Frank Butterworth Captain: A.W. Ransome
0-1-0 Head Coach: None Captain: John H. White
M7
1885*
F14 F21 F28 M14 M28
Posens Posens Posens Posens
26-0 H 6-10 H 20-0 H 14-0 H 1-0 H 1-0 H 36-0 SR
O26 L Olympic Club N5 W Olympic Club N12 W Olympic Club D17 T Stanford SF – San Francisco, CA
10-20 SF 16-0 SF 8-4 SF 10-10 SF
1893 5-1-1 Head Coach: W.W. Heffelfinger Captain: H. Percy Benson
O28 W Reliance Club 30-0 H N1 W S.F. All-Stars 14-12 SF N3 W Olympic Club 22-10 SF N11 W Olympic Club 12-6 SF N14 W Reliance Club 22-10 P N17 L Reliance Club 4-16 P N30 T Stanford 6-6 SF P – Piedmont, CA; SF – San Francisco, CA
1894 0-1-2 Head Coach: Charles O. Gill Captain: H. Percy Benson
O13 T Reliance Club 12-12 SF O27 T Reliance Club 0-0 P N29 L Stanford 0-6 SF P – Piedmont, CA; SF – San Francisco, CA
1895 3-1-1 Head Coach: Frank Butterworth Captain: Eddie Sherman
O6 O12 O26 N9
L W W W
Reliance Club Reliance Club Reliance Club Olympic Club
6-6 SF
1896
1891
1884*
F9 W Merions M1 W Wanderers SF – San Francisco, CA
N28 T Stanford SF – San Francisco, CA
1889
NOTE: First number in parenthesis is Cal ranking, second number in parenthesis is opponent ranking.
0-4 H 12-0 H 8-0 H 20-0 SF
O3 L Reliance Club O6 T Olympic Club O10 T Reliance Club O17 W Olympic Club N3 W Reliance Club N26 L Stanford D25 W Los Angeles A.C. D29 W Redlands High D31 W San Diego High J1 W Whittier School SF – San Francisco, CA
2-12 SF 0-0 SF 0-0 SF 24-8 SF 16-10 SF 0-20 SF 14-0 A 32-0 A 52-0 A 10-6 A
1897 0-3-2 Head Coach: Charles P. Nott Captain: Percy W. Hall
S25 L Reliance O2 L Reliance O9 T Reliance N6 T Reliance N25 L Stanford SF – San Francisco, CA
0-12 H 0-10 SF 4-4 H 4-4 H 0-28 SF
1901 9-0-1 Head Coach: Frank Simpson Captain: Lloyd A. Womble
S28 T Reliance 0-0 H O5 W Olympic Club 5-0 H O10 W Olympic Club 6-0 H O12 W Reliance 6-0 H O26 W Olympic Club 6-5 SF N30 W Nevada 12-0 H N1 W Mare Island Marines 16-0 H N9 W Stanford 2-0 SF D25 W So. Cal. All-Stars 38-0 A D30 W Perris Indians 15-10 R R – Riverside, CA; SF – San Francisco, CA
1902 8-0-0 Head Coach: James R. Whipple Captain: William B. Albertson
S27 W Alumni Club 12-0 H O4 W Reliance 16-0 H O11 W Alumni Club 44-0 H O25 W Reliance 17-0 H O28 W ’98-’99 Alumni 5-0 H N1 W Nevada 29-0 H N8 W Stanford 16-0 SF N28 W Perris Indians 29-12 R R – Riverside, CA; SF – San Francisco, CA
1898 8-0-2 Head Coach: Garrett Cochran Captain: Percy W. Hall
O1 W Olympic Club 17-0 SF O8 W Washington Volunteers 4-0 H O13 W Washington Volunteers 44-0 H O15 W Olympic Club 18-0 SF O18 W Kansas Volunteers 33-0 H O31 T Iowa Volunteers 0-0 H N4 W St. Mary’s 51-0 H N12 T Olympic Club 5-5 SF N24 W Stanford 22-0 SF D26 W Multnomah A.C. 27-0 P P – Portland, OR; SF – San Francisco, CA
1899 7-1-1 Head Coach: Garrett Cochran Captain: James R. Whipple
S30 W Olympic Club O14 T Olympic Club O21 W League of the Cross N11 W Olympic Club N15 W Nevada N18 W Oregon N22 W State Normal N30 W Stanford D25 L Carlisle SF – San Francisco, CA
6-0 H 0-0 SF 11-0 H 15-0 SF 24-0 H 12-0 H 44-0 H 30-0 SF 0-2 SF
1900 4-2-1 Head Coach: Addison W. Kelly Captain: Charles A. Pringle
O6 T Reliance O20 W Reliance N10 W Reliance N14 W Nevada N17 L Oregon N22 W San Jose Normal N29 L Stanford SF – San Francisco, CA
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
0-0 H 5-0 H 11-0 H 32-0 H 0-2 H 5-0 H 0-5 SF
1903 6-1-2 Head Coach: James R. Whipple Captain: Orval F.
S26 T Reliance O3 W Navy Hospital O10 W Reliance O14 W Reliance O24 W Chemawa Indians O28 W Alumni O31 W Multnomah A.C. N7 L Nevada N14 T Stanford SF – San Francisco, CA
0-0 H 51-0 H 7-0 H 5-0 H 40-0 H 6-0 H 11-0 H 2-6 H 6-6 SF
1904 6-1-1 Head Coach: James Hopper Captain: Benjamin K. Stroud
O1 O8 O18 O22 O29 N5 N12 N24
W W W W W W L T
Sherman Indians Olympic Club Multnomah A.C. Oregon Pomona Nevada Stanford Washington
6-0 10-0 20-0 12-0 5-0 16-0 0-18 6-6
H H H H H H H A
1905 4-1-2 Head Coach: J.W. Knibbs Captain: James A. Force
S30 W St. Vincent’s O7 T Williamette O12 T Oregon O21 W Sherman Indians O28 W Oregon Aggies N4 W Nevada N11 L Stanford LA – Los Angeles, CA
23-0 0-0 0-0 21-0 10-0 16-0 5-12
H H H LA H H A
D29 W Victoria All-Stars J1 T Victoria All-Stars
1906* 2-4-0 Head Coach: Oscar Taylor Captain: Calvin W. Haffey
O17 O20 O24 O27 N3 N10
L W W L L L
S.F. All-Stars Pomona Vancouver Vancouver Nevada Stanford
5-8 6-0 5-0 0-3 0-3 3-6
1911* H H H H H H
1907* 4-3-0 Head Coach: Oscar Taylor Captain: Walter Fuller
S14 S21 O5 O19 O23 O28 N9
L W W W W L L
Barbarians Barbarians Barbarians Nevada Vancouver Vancouver Stanford
0-6 9-0 6-0 25-0 16-12 0-3 11-21
H H H H H H A
S19 S26 O3 O10 O21 O24 O28 O31 N3 N7 N14
W W W L W W T L W W L
Olympic Club Barbarians Olympic Club Barbarians St. Mary’s Barbarians Vancouver Vancouver Olympic Club Nevada Stanford
14-0 3-0 14-3 0-11 32-0 17-6 3-3 0-3 17-8 11-0 3-12
11-2-1 Head Coach: James G. Schaeffer Captain: Amos W. Elliott
S9 S16 S23 S30 O7 O14 O21 O25 O28 N4 N11 D25 D28 J1
W W W W W W W W W W W T L L
H H H H H H H H H H H
12-3-1 Head Coach: James G. Schaeffer Captain: Cedric Cerf 39-0 6-3 30-0 16-0 3-6 10-10 19-3 6-0 19-0 24-3 39-0 24-8 19-13 0-3 0-5 14-3
H H H H H LA LA H H H H H A A A A
1910* 12-0-2 Head Coach: James G. Schaeffer Captan: Jay Dwiggins, Jr.
S10 S17 S24 O1 O8 O19 O22 O26 O29 N5 N12 D26
W W W W W W W W W W W T
Barbarians Barbarians Olympic Club Barbarians Olympic Club Barbarians Olympic Club St. Mary’s Olympic Club Nevada Stanford Victoria All-Stars
9-0 32-5 17-3 26-0 16-0 22-0 40-10 6-0 18-0 62-0 25-6 0-0
11-0 8-0 31-3 16-8 29-0 14-3 18-3 21-0 24-0 60-0 21-3 0-0 3-6 0-8
H H H H A H H H H H A A A A
1912*
S9 S14 S21 S28 O5 O9 O12 O19 O26 O30 N2 N9 N28
W W W W W W W W L W L T W
1909*
S4 W Reliance S9 W Barbarians S11 W Reliance S18 W Olympic Club S25 L Barbarians O2 T Castaways O4 W So. Cal All-Stars O9 W Barbarians O23 W Olympic Club O27 W Vancouver O30 W Vancouver N6 W Nevada N13 W Stanford D25 L Vancouver D29 L Vancouver J1 W Vancouver LA – Los Angeles, CA
Barbarians Olympic Club Barbarians Olympic Club Nevada Barbarians Olympic Club B.C. All-Stars B.C. All-Stars Olympic Club Stanford Victoria All-Stars Victoria All-Stars Victoria All-Stars
10-2-1 Head Coach: James G. Schaeffer Captain: John A. Stroud, Jr.
1908* 7-3-1 Head Coach: Oscar Taylor Captain: Ralph H. Butler
3-0 A 3-3 A
H H H H H H H H H H H A
Barbarians Olympic Club Barbarians Olympic Club Nevada St. Mary’s Olympic Club Barbarians Australia Waratahs Australia Waratahs Australia Waratahs Stanford USC
8-3 5-3 16-0 9-0 34-0 21-0 5-0 16-3 0-18 6-5 3-23 3-3 18-0
H H H H H H H H H H H H H
1913* 6-3-3 Head Coach: James G. Schaeffer Captain: Stirling B. Peart
S9 T Titans S13 T Barbarians S20 W Titans S27 W Barbarians O4 W UC Alumni Club O8 L N.Z. All-Blacks O11 W Santa Clara O18 W UC Alumni Club O25 L N.Z. All-Blacks N8 L Stanford N22 W Barbarians N27 T USC SF – San Francisco, CA
6-6 H 0-0 H 4-3 H 21-0 H 18-0 H 0-31 H 6-3 H 13-3 H 3-38 H 8-13 A 23-10 SF 3-3 A
1914* 14-1-0 Head Coach: James G. Schaeffer Captain: Joseph L. McKim
S5 S9 S12 S19 S26 O3 O10 O17 O21 O24 O28 O31 N7 N14 N28
W W W W W W W W W W W W W L W
Olympic Club Titans Barbarians UC Alumni Olympic Club Titans UC Alumni Barbarians St. Mary’s Titans St. Mary’s Santa Clara UC Alumni Stanford Nevada
8-3 8-3 12-5 17-5 13-3 17-3 22-3 11-0 28-0 18-0 24-3 25-0 27-3 8-26 38-3
H H H H H H H H H H H H H H A
1915 8-5-0 Head Coach: James G. Schaeffer Captain: Clifford G. Canfield
S11 W Olympic Club S18 L Commerical Club S25 W Olympic Club O2 W Olympic Club O9 W Originals O16 W Sherman Indians O20 L St. Mary’s O23 L USC O30 W St. Mary’s N6 L Washington N13 L Washington N20 W Nevada N25 W USC R – Reno, NV
17-0 0-10 18-2 19-9 7-0 44-7 6-7 10-28 10-9 0-72 7-13 81-6 23-21
H H H H H H H H H H A R A
1916 6-4-1, 0-3-0 PCC (4th) Head Coach: Andy Smith Captain: Willis R. Montgomery
S16 S23 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18 N30
W W T W W L L W W L L
Olympic Club Originals Olympic Club Originals Whittier Oregon Occidental USC St. Mary’s Washington Washington
23-0 23-0 0-0 13-0 21-17 14-39 13-14 27-0 48-6 3-13 7-14
H H H H H H H A H H A
1917 5-5-1, 2-1-0 PCC (2nd) Head Coach: Andy Smith Captains: Daniel P. Foster, Fred T. Brooks
S15 S22 S29 O6 O13 O20 O27 N3 N10 N17 N29
L L L W W W W W L L T
Mare Island Marines Olympic Club Mare Island Marines Olympic Club Navy Hospital Corps Occidental Oregon Aggies Washington St. Mary’s Oregon USC
0-27 2-6 0-26 40-0 33-7 20-0 14-3 27-0 13-14 0-21 0-0
H H H H H H H H H A A
1918 7-2-0, 2-0-0 PCC (1st) Head Coach: Andy Smith PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Captain: Carlton G. Wells
O5 O12 O19 N9 N16 N23 N30 D7 D14
L W W W L W W W W
Ft. MacDowell S.F. Presidio Fort Scott St. Mary’s Mather Field Oregon Stanford San Pedro Navy USC
7-21 13-7 1-0 40-14 0-13 6-0 67-0 20-0 33-7
H H H H H H H H A
1919
S27 O4 O11 O18 O25
6-2-1, 2-2-0 PCC (3rd-T) Head Coach: Andy Smith Captain: Fred T. Brooks W T W W L
Olympic Club Olympic Club St. Mary’s Occidental Washington State
12-0 6-6 19-0 61-0 0-14
H H H H H
N1 N8 N22 N27
W W W L
Oregon Aggies USC Stanford Washington
21-14 14-13 14-10 0-7
H A A A
1920 9-0-0, 3-0-0 PCC (1st-T) Head Coach: Andy Smith PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Captain: Olin C. Majors
S25 W Olympic Club O2 W Mare Island Marines O9 W St. Mary’s O16 W Nevada O23 W Utah O30 W Oregon Aggies N6 W Washington State N20 W Stanford ROSE BOWL J1 W Ohio State P – Pasadena, CA
21-0 88-0 127-0 79-7 63-0 17-7 49-0 38-0
H H H H H A H H
28-0 P
1921 9-0-1, 3-0-0 Pac-10 (1st-T) Head Coach: Andy Smith PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Captain: George H. Latham
S24 W St. Mary’s 21-0 H O1 W Olympic Club 14-0 H O8 W Nevada 51-6 H O15 W Pacific Fleet 21-10 H O22 W Oregon 39-0 H O29 W Washington State 14-0 Po N5 W USC 38-7 H N12 W Washington 72-3 H N19 W Stanford 42-7 A ROSE BOWL J1 T Washington & Jefferson 0-0 Pa Po – Portland, OR; Pa – Pasadena, CA
1922 9-0-0, 4-0-0 PCC (1st-T) Head Coach: Andy Smith PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Captain: Charles F. Erb, Jr.
S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18 N25
W W W W W W W W W
Santa Clara Mare Island Marines St. Mary’s Olympic Club USC Washington State Washington Nevada Stanford
45-14 80-0 41-0 25-0 12-0 61-0 45-7 61-13 28-0
H H H H A H A H A
1923 9-0-1, 5-0-0 PCC (1st-T) Head Coach: Andy Smith PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Captain: Donald P. Nichols
S22 W Alumni All-Stars S29 W St. Mary’s O6 W Santa Clara O13 W Olympic Club O20 W Oregon Aggies O27 W Washington State N3 T Nevada N10 W USC N17 W Washington N24 W Stanford P – Portland, OR
3-0 49-0 48-0 16-0 26-0 9-0 0-0 13-7 9-0 9-0
H H H H H P H A H H
* Rugby
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1924 8-0-2, 2-0-2 PCC (2nd) Head Head Coach: Andy Smith Captain: Edwin C. Horrell
S27 O4 O11 O18 O25 N1 N8 N15 N22 J1
W W W W W W T W T W
Santa Clara St. Mary’s Pomona Olympic Club Washington State USC Washington Nevada Stanford Pennsylvania
13-7 17-7 28-0 9-3 20-7 7-0 7-7 27-0 20-20 14-0
H H H H H H A H H H
1925
H H H H P LA H H A
1926 3-6-0, 0-5-0 PCC (9th) Head Coach: Clarence M. Price Captain: Bert Griffin
S25 O2 O9 O16 O23 O30 N6 N13 N20
W W L L L L L W L
Santa Clara Olympic Club St. Mary’s Oregon Aggies USC Oregon Washington Nevada Stanford
13-6 32-0 7-26 7-27 0-27 13-21 7-13 20-6 6-41
1934
1938
6-6-0, 3-2-0 PCC (5th) Head Coach: William A. Ingram Captain: Arleigh Williams
10-1-0, 6-1-0 PCC (1st-T) Final AP Ranking: No. 14 Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CO-CHAMPIONS Captain: Vic Bottari
S28 O5 O12 O19 O26 N2 N9 N16 N23
W T W W W W W W L
H H H H H H A H H
14-6 54-0 13-0 16-0 21-0 0-13 33-13 0-6 6-13 27-13
H H H P H A H H A H
1928 6-2-2 Overalll, 3-0-2 PCC (2nd) Head Coach: Clarence M. Price Captain: Irvine Phillips
S29 W Santa Clara O6 W St. Mary’s O13 W Washington State O20 T USC O27 L Olympic Club N3 W Oregon N10 W Washington N17 W Nevada N24 T Stanford ROSE BOWL J1 L Georgia Tech P – Pasadena, CA
178
22-0 7-0 13-3 0-0 0-12 13-0 6-0 60-0 13-13
27-6 0-0 14-0 12-7 21-19 15-7 53-18 7-0 6-21
H H H A H A H H A
1930
S27 O4 O11 O18 O25 N1 N8 N15 N22
W L W L L W L W L
H H H H H H A H H
7-8 P
Santa Clara Washington State St. Mary’s Olympic Club Washington Montana USC Nevada Stanford
19-7 0-16 7-6 7-13 0-13 46-0 0-74 8-0 0-41
H H H H A H A H H
1931 8-2-0, 4-1-0 PCC (2nd) Head Coach: William A. Ingram Captain: Edwin Griffiths
S26 W Santa Clara O3 L St. Mary’s O10 W Olympic Club O17 W Washington State O24 L USC O31 W Nevada N7 W Washington N14 W Idaho N21 W Stanford D26 W Georgia Tech P – Portland, OR
1927 7-3-0, 2-3-0 PCC (5th-T) Head Coach: Clarence M. Price Captain: Fritz Coltrin
S24 W Santa Clara O1 W Nevada O8 W St. Mary’s O15 W Oregon O22 W Olympic Club O29 L USC N5 W Montana N12 L Washington N19 L Stanford D31 W Pennsylvania P – Portland, OR
Santa Clara St. Mary’s Washington State Pennsylvania Olympic Club USC Montana Washington Stanford
4-5-0, 1-4-0 PCC (8th-T) Head Coach: Clarence M. Price Captain: Carl Handy
6-3-0, 2-2-0 Overall (5th) Head Head Coach: Andy Smith
Captain: Talma W. Imlay S26 W Santa Clara 28-0 O3 W Nevada 54-0 O10 L Olympic Club 0-15 O17 W St. Mary’s 6-0 O24 W Oregon 28-0 O31 W Pomona 27-0 N7 W Washington State 35-7 N14 L Washington 0-7 N21 L Stanford 14-27 P – Portland, OR; LA – Los Angeles, CA
1929 7-1-1, 4-1-0 PCC (3rd-T) Head Coach: Clarence M. Price Captain: Roy Riegels
6-2 0-14 6-0 13-7 0-6 25-6 13-0 18-0 6-0 19-6
H H H P H H H H A A
1932 7-3-2, 2-2-1 PCC (5th-T) Head Coach: William A. Ingram Captain: Richard C. Tozer
S17 S17 S24 O1 O8 O15 O22 O29 N5 N12 N19 D17
W W L W T L W W L W T W
California Aggies West Coast Navy Santa Clara Olympic Club St. Mary’s Washington State Washington Nevada USC Idaho Stanford Georgia Tech
20-6 13-0 0-12 22-6 12-12 2-7 7-6 38-0 7-27 21-6 0-0 27-7
H H H H H H A H A H H H
1933 6-3-2, 2-2-2 PCC (6th) Head Coach: William A. Ingram Captain: John Ransome
S23 S30 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18 N25
L W W W W T L T W W L
Santa Clara California Aggies Nevada St. Mary’s Olympic Club Washington State USC UCLA Washington Idaho Stanford
0-7 39-0 34-0 14-13 23-0 6-6 3-6 0-0 33-0 6-0 3-7
H H H H H A H A H H A
S29 S29 O6 O13 O20 O27 N3 N10 N17 N24 D25 J1
W W L W W L L W W L L L
California Aggies Nevada St. Mary’s Pacific UCLA Washington Santa Clara USC Idaho Stanford Honolulu Twn Tm. Hawaii
54-0 33-0 0-7 7-6 3-0 7-13 0-20 7-2 45-13 7-9 13-26 0-14
H H H H H A H A H H A A
1935 9-1-0, 4-1-0 PCC (1st-T) Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CO-CHAMPIONS Captain: Larry Lutz
S28 W California Aggies S28 W Whittier O5 W St. Mary’s O12 W Oregon O19 W Santa Clara O26 W USC N2 W UCLA N9 W Washington N16 W Pacific N23 L Stanford P – Portland, OR
47-0 6-0 10-0 6-0 6-0 21-7 14-2 14-0 39-0 0-13
H H H P H H A H H A
6-5-0, 4-3-0 Pac-10 (4th) Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison Captain: Ray Nordstrom 14-0 39-0 0-10 7-0 6-17 0-13 13-14 13-7 28-0 20-0 7-13
H H H P H A H A H H A
1937 10-0-1, 6-0-1 PCC (1st) Final AP Ranking: No. 2 Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Captain: John Meek
S25 W St. Mary’s 30-7 H O2 W Oregon State 24-6 H O9 W Washington State 27-0 H O16 W California Aggies 14-0 H O16 W Pacific 20-0 H O23 W (1) USC (11) 20-6 H O30 W (1) UCLA 27-14 A N6 T (1) Washington 0-0 H N13 W (2) Oregon 26-0 Po N20 W (2) Stanford (13) 13-0 A ROSE BOWL J1 W (2) Alabama (4) 13-0 Pa Po – Portland, OR; Pa – Pasadena, CA
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
W W W W W W W L W W W
St. Mary’s Washington State California Aggies Pacific UCLA (3) Washington (3) Oregon State (3) USC (13) (14) Oregon (9) Stanford (9) Georgia Tech
12-7 27-3 48-0 39-0 20-7 14-7 13-7 7-13 20-0 6-0 13-0
H A H H H A H A H H H
1939 3-7-0, 2-5-0 PCC (8th) Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison Captain: Louie Smith
S30 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18 N25
W L L L W L L L L W
California Aggies Pacific St. Mary’s Oregon Washington State USC (8) UCLA (19) Washington Oregon State (19) Stanford
32-14 0-6 3-7 0-6 13-7 0-26 7-20 6-13 0-21 32-14
H H H H H H A H A A
1940
1936
S26 W Pacific S26 W California Aggies O3 L St. Mary’s O10 W Oregon State O17 L UCLA O24 L Washington (8) O31 L Washington State N7 W USC (11) N14 W Oregon N21 W Stanford N28 L Georgia Tech P – Portland, OR
S24 O1 O8 O8 O15 O22 O29 N5 N12 N19 D26
4-6-0, 3-4-0 PCC (6th) Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison Captain: Bill Elmore
S28 O5 O12 O19 O26 N2 N9 N16 N30 D28
L W L W L L W W L L
Michigan St. Mary’s Washington State UCLA Washington (16) Oregon State USC Oregon Stanford (3) Georgia Tech
0-41 9-6 6-9 9-7 6-7 13-19 20-7 14-6 7-13 0-13
H H H H A H A H H A
1941 4-5-0, 3-4-0 PCC (7th) Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison Captains: Bob Reinhard, Jack McQuary
S27 W St. Mary’s O4 L Washington State O11 L Santa Clara O18 L Oregon O25 W USC N1 W UCLA N8 L Washington N15 L Oregon State N29 W Stanford P – Portland, OR
31-0 6-13 0-13 7-19 14-0 27-7 6-13 0-6 16-0
H A H P H A H H A
1942 5-5-0, 3-4-0 PCC (7th) Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison Captains: Jim Jurkovich, John Ferguson
S26 O3 O10 O17 O24 O31 N7
W L L L W W L
St. Mary’s Oregon State Santa Clara UCLA Washington Oregon USC
6-0 8-13 6-7 0-21 19-6 20-7 7-21
H A H H A H A
N14 W Montana N21 L Stanford D12 W Navy Pre-Flight
13-0 H 7-26 H 12-6 H
1943 4-6-0, 2-2-0 PCC (2nd) Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison Captain: Art Honegger
S25 O2 O9 O16 O23 O30 N6 N13 N20 N27
W L L W L L W W L L
St. Mary’s 27-12 USC 0-7 Pacific (20) 6-12 UCLA 13-0 St. Mary's Pre-Flight 0-39 (20) USC (5) 0-13 San Francisco 32-0 UCLA 13-6 Alameda Coast Guard 0-7 Del Monte Pre-Flight (10) 8-47
H H H A H A H H H H
1944 3-6-1, 1-3-1 PCC (4th) Head Coach: Leonard B. Allison Captains: Game Captains
S23 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18 N25
W W T W L L L L L L
St. Mary’s UCLA USC Pacific (12) Fleet City Washington Coast Guard UCLA USC (12) St. Mary's Pre-Flight
31-7 6-0 6-6 14-0 2-19 7-33 6-12 0-7 0-32 6-33
H H A H H H H A H H
1945
S22 S29 O6 O13 O27 N3 N10 N17 N24 D1
4-5-1, 2-4-1 PCC (6th) Head Coach: Buck Shaw Captains: Game Captains L L W L W T L L W W
St. Mary’s USC Washington UCLA Nevada Washington State USC Oregon UCLA (12) St. Mary’s Pre-Flight
13-20 2-13 27-14 0-13 19-6 7-7 0-14 13-20 6-0 6-0
H H H A H H A H H H
1946 2-7-0, 1-6-0 PCC (9th) Head Coach: Frank Wickhorst Captain: Harry Pieper
S28 O5 O12 O19 O26 N2 N9 N16 N23
L L W L L W L L L
Wisconsin Oregon St. Mary’s (16) UCLA (4) Washington Washington State USC (14) Oregon State Stanford
7-28 13-14 20-13 6-13 6-20 47-14 0-14 7-28 6-25
H H H H A H A H H
1947 9-1-0, 5-1-0 PCC (2nd-T) Final AP Ranking: No. 15 Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf Captains: John Graves, Harry Agler
S20 S27 O4 O11 O18 O25 N1 N8 N15 N22
W W W W W L W W W W
Santa Clara Navy St. Mary’s (8) Wisconsin (4) Washington State (4) USC (10) (14) UCLA (19) (12) Washington (10) Montana (9) Stanford
33-7 14-7 45-6 48-7 21-6 14-39 6-0 13-7 60-14 21-18
1948 10-1-0, 6-0-0 PCC (1st-T) Final AP Ranking: No. 4 Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CO-CHAMPIONS Captain: Gene Frassetto
S18 W Santa Clara 41-19 S25 W Navy 21-7 O2 W St. Mary’s 20-0 O9 W (9) Wisconsin 40-14 O16 W (6) Oregon State 42-0 O23 W (4) Washington 21-0 O30 W (4) USC 13-7 N6 W (5) UCLA 28-13 N13 W (4) Washington State 44-14 N20 W (4) Stanford 7-6 ROSE BOWL J1 L (4) Northwestern (7) 14-20 P – Pasadena, CA; B – Baltimore, MD
H B H H H A A H H H P
L W W W
S17 W Santa Clara 21-7 H S24 W St. Mary’s 29-7 H O1 W Oregon State 41-0 Po O8 W (10) Wisconsin 35-20 A O15 W (9) USC (12) 16-10 H O22 W (5) Washington 21-7 H O29 W (4) UCLA (20) 35-21 A N5 W (4) Washington State 33-14 H N12 W (4) Oregon 41-14 H N19 W (3) Stanford (12) 33-14 A ROSE BOWL J2 L (3) Ohio State (6) 14-17 Pa Po – Portland, OR; Pa – Pasadena, CA
1950 9-1-1, 5-0-1 PCC (1st) Final AP Ranking: No. 5 Final UPI Ranking: No. 4 Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Captains: Pete Schabarum, Jim Monachino
S23 W (14) Santa Clara 27-9 H S30 W (14) Oregon 28-7 Po O7 W (9) Pennsylvania (20) 14-7 H O14 W (7) USC 13-7 A O21 W (5) Oregon State 27-0 H O28 W (5) St. Mary’s 40-25 H N4 W (6) Washington (12) 14-7 A N11 W (6) UCLA (19) 35-0 H N18 W (4) San Francisco 13-7 H N25 T (4) Stanford 7-7 H ROSE BOWL J1 L (5) Michigan (9) 6-14 Pa Po – Portland, OR; Pa – Pasadena, CA
8-2-0, 5-2-0 PCC (3rd) Final AP Ranking: No. 12 Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf Captains: Les Richter, Charlie Harris
S22 S29 O6 O13 O20 O27
W W W W L W
(5) Santa Clara Pennsylvania (2) Minnesota (2) Washington State (1) USC (11) (9) Oregon State (6)
34-0 35-0 55-14 42-35 14-21 35-14
(9) UCLA (17) Washington (16) Oregon (19) Stanford (3)
7-21 37-28 28-26 20-7
A H H A
1952 7-3-0, 3-3-0 PCC (4th) Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf Captains: John Olszewski, Bill Mais
S20 W (8) Pacific S27 W (8) Missouri O4 W (4) Minnesota O11 W (3) Oregon O18 W (3) Santa Clara O25 L (4) USC (7) N1 L (11) UCLA (7) N8 L Washington N15 W Washington State N22 W Stanford P – Portland, OR
1949 10-1-0, 7-0-0 PCC (1st) Final AP Ranking: No. 3 Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Captains: Rod Franz, Jim Turner
1951 H H H A H H A H H A
N3 N10 N17 N24
34-13 28-14 49-13 41-7 27-7 0-10 7-28 7-22 28-13 26-0
H H A P H A H A H H
1953
0-25 26-0 19-33 40-0 34-14 20-32 7-20 53-25 0-0 21-21
H P H A H H A H H A
1954 5-5-0, 4-3-0 PCC (4th) Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf Captains: Paul Larson, Jim Hanifan, Matt Hazeltine
S18 S25 O2 O9 O16 O23 O30 N6 N13 N20
L W L L W L L W W W
(12) Oklahoma (2) (17) San Jose State (18) Ohio State (14) Oregon Washington State USC (17) UCLA (3) Washington Oregon State Stanford
13-27 45-0 13-21 27-33 17-7 27-29 6-27 27-6 46-7 28-20
H H A H H A H A H H
1955 2-7-1, 1-5-1 PCC (7th) Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf Captain: Jim Carmichael
S17 L Pittsburgh S24 L Illinois O1 W Pennsylvania O8 T Washington State O15 L Oregon O22 L USC (10) O29 L UCLA (6) N5 W Washington N12 L Oregon State N19 L Stanford (18) P – Portland, OR
7-27 13-20 27-7 20-20 0-21 6-33 0-47 20-6 14-16 0-19
A H H H P H A H H A
1956 H A H A H H
3-7-0, 2-5-0 PCC (8th) Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf Captains: Don Gilkey, Herb Jackson
S22 L Baylor S29 L Illinois O6 W Pittsburgh (7)
L L W L L L W
Oregon State UCLA Washington Oregon USC (16) Washington State Stanford
13-21 20-34 16-7 6-28 7-20 13-14 20-18
A H A H A H H
1957
4-4-2, 2-2-2 PCC (4th) Head Coach: Pappy Waldorf Captains: Tom Dutton, Al Talley
S19 L (14) Baylor (20) S26 W (14) Oregon State O3 L Ohio State (6) O10 W Pennsylvania (20) O17 W (16) San Jose State O24 L USC (11) O31 L UCLA (10) N7 W Washington N14 T Oregon N21 T Stanford (16) P – Portland, OR
O13 O20 O27 N3 N10 N17 N24
1-9-0, 1-6-0 PCC (7th-T) Head Coach: Pete Elliott Captains: Mike White, Bob Currie, Art Forbes
S21 S28 O5 O12 O19 O26 N2 N9 N16 N23
L L L L W L L L L L
SMU Washington State Michigan State (2) Navy USC Oregon (18) UCLA Oregon State Washington Stanford
6-13 7-13 0-19 6-21 12-0 6-24 14-16 19-21 27-35 12-14
H A H H H A A H H A
1958 7-4-0, 6-1-0 PCC (1st) Final AP Ranking: No. 16 Head Coach: Pete Elliott PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Captains: Joe Kapp, Jack Hart
S20 L Pacific S27 L Michigan State (4) O4 W Washington State O11 W Utah O18 W USC O25 W Oregon N1 L Oregon State N8 W UCLA N15 W Washington N22 W (19) Stanford ROSE BOWL J 1 L (16) Iowa (2) P – Pasadena, CA
20-24 12-32 34-14 36-21 14-12 23-6 8-14 20-17 12-7 16-15
H A H H A H A H A H
12-38 P
1959 2-8-0, 1-3-0 AAWU (4th) Head Coach: Pete Elliott Captains: Pat Newell, Pete Domoto
S19 W Washington State S26 L Iowa (13) O3 L Texas (10) O10 L Notre Dame O17 L UCLA O24 L Oregon State O31 L USC (6) N7 L Oregon (15) N14 L Washington (13) N21 W Stanford S – Seattle, WA
20-6 12-42 0-33 6-28 12-19 20-24 7-14 18-20 0-20 20-17
S H A H A H H A H A
1960 2-7-1, 1-3-0 AAWU (4th) Head Coach: Marv Levy Captains: Steve Bates, Bill Patton
S17 S24 O1 O8 O15 O22 O29 N5 N12 N19
L L L T L L W L L W
Tulane Notre Dame Army Washington State USC Oregon Oregon State (15) UCLA (15) Washington (6) Stanford
3-7 7-21 10-28 21-21 10-27 0-20 14-6 0-28 7-27 21-10
H A H H A H A H A H
6-7 H 20-32 A 14-0 H
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S23 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18 N25
1961
1966
1-8-1, 1-3-0 AAWU (4th-T) Head Coach: Marv Levy Captain: Jim Burress
3-7-0, 2-3-0 AAWU (5th-T) Head Coach: Ray Willsey Captains: John Beasley, Dan Goich
L L T W L L L L L L
Texas (4) Iowa (1) Missouri Washington USC Penn State UCLA Air Force Kansas Stanford
3-28 7-28 14-14 21-14 14-28 16-33 15-35 14-15 7-53 7-20
H A A H H A A H H A
1962
S22 S29 O6 O13 O20 O27 N3 N10 N17 N24
1-9-0, 0-4-0 AAWU (6th) Head Coach: Marv Levy Captain: Larry Balliett
L W L L L L L L L L
Missouri San Jose State Pittsburgh Duke USC (3) Penn State UCLA Washington Kansas Stanford
10-21 25-8 24-26 7-21 6-32 21-23 16-26 0-27 21-33 13-30
S21 S28 O5 O12 O19 O26 N2 N9 N16 N30
W L L T W L W L W L
Iowa State Illinois Pittsburgh (9) Duke San Jose State USC UCLA Washington Utah Stanford
15-8 0-10 15-35 22-22 34-13 6-36 25-0 26-39 35-22 17-28
H H H A A H H A A H
H A A H H H A H A A
1964
W L L W W L L L L L
Missouri Illinois (3) Minnesota Miami, Fla. Navy USC UCLA Washington Utah Stanford
21-14 14-20 20-26 9-7 27-13 21-26 21-25 16-21 0-14 3-21
H H H A H A H A H H
1965 5-5-0, 2-3-0 AAWU (5th-T) Head Coach: Ray Willsey Captains: Jim Phillips, Stan Dzura
S18 L Notre Dame (3) S25 L Michigan (4) O2 W Kansas O9 W Air Force O16 W Washington O23 L UCLA O30 W Penn State N6 L USC (6) N13 W Oregon N20 L Stanford P – Portland, OR
180
6-48 7-10 17-0 24-7 16-12 3-56 21-17 0-35 24-0 7-9
S H H H A H A A H H
S16 S23 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18
5-5-0, 2-3-0 AAWU (6th) Head Coach: Ray Willsey Captains: Bob Crittenden, George Gearhart W L W W L L L L W W
Oregon Notre Dame (1) Michigan Air Force UCLA (4) Syracuse Washington USC (1) San Jose State Stanford
21-13 8-41 10-9 14-12 14-37 14-20 6-23 12-31 30-6 26-3
H A H H A A H H H A
1968
3-7-0, 0-4-0 AAWU (8th) Head Coach: Ray Willsey Captains: Craig Morton, Ron Calegari
S19 S26 O3 O10 O17 O24 O31 N7 N14 N21
21-6 7-17 30-15 0-24 24-20 15-28 15-33 9-35 3-6 7-13
1967
1963 4-5-1, 1-3-0 AAWU (5th) Head Coach: Marv Levy Captain: Jim Anderson
S17 W Washington State S24 L Michigan (9) O1 W Pittsburgh O8 L San Jose State O15 W Washington O22 L UCLA (3) O29 L Penn State N5 L USC (9) N12 L Army N19 L Stanford S – Seattle, WA
H A H A H A H H P A
7-3-1, 2-2-1 Pac-8 (4th) Head Coach: Ray Willsey Captains: John McGaffie, Mike McCaffrey
S21 S28 O5 O12 O19 O26 N2 N9 N16 N23 N30
W W W L W W T L W L W
Michigan Colorado (18) San Jose State (16) Army UCLA (11) Syracuse (10) (8) Washington (11) USC (1) (18) Oregon (18) Stanford Hawaii
21-7 10-0 46-0 7-10 39-15 43-0 7-7 17-35 36-8 0-20 17-12
A H H A H H A A H H A
1969 5-5-0, 2-4-0 Pac-8 (6th) Head Coach: Ray Willsey Captains: Irby Augustine, Jim Calkins
S20 L Texas (4) S27 W Indiana (10) O4 W Rice O11 W Washington O18 L UCLA (8) O25 W Washington State N1 L USC (6) N8 L Oregon State N15 W San Jose State N22 L Stanford (14) S – Spokane, WA
0-17 17-14 31-21 44-13 0-32 17-0 9-14 3-35 31-7 28-29
H A H H A S H H H A
1970 6-5-0, 4-3-0 Pac-8 (2nd-T) Head Coach: Ray Willsey Captains: Bob Richards, Phil Croyle S12 S19 S26 O3 O10 O17 O24
L L W L W L W
Oregon Texas (2) Indiana Rice Washington UCLA (19) Washington State
24-31 15-56 56-14 0-28 31-28 21-24 45-0
P A H A A H H
O31 W USC (18) N7 L Oregon State N14 W San Jose State N21 W Stanford (11) P – Portland, OR
13-10 10-16 35-28 22-14
A A H H
1971 6-5-0, 4-3-0 Pac-8 (3rd-T) Head Coach: Ray Willsey Captains: Sherman White, Ray Youngblood
S11 L Arkansas (7) S18 W West Virginia S25 W San Jose State O2 L Ohio State (14) O9 W Oregon State O16 W Washington State O23 W UCLA O30 L USC (20) N6 L Washington (20) N13 W Oregon N20 L Stanford (18) LR – Little Rock, AR S – Spokane, WA
20-51 LR 20-10 H 34-10 H 3-35 A 30-27 H 24-23 S 31-24 A 0-28 H 7-30 H 17-10 A 0-14 A
1972
10-20 37-23 10-17 27-34 18-35 14-42 13-49 21-35 31-12 23-26 24-21
A H H A H A H A H P H
1973 4-7-0, 2-5-0 Pac-8 (5th-T) Head Coach: Mike White Captains: Kevin O’Dorisio, Fred Weber
S15 L Alabama (6) S22 L Illinois S29 W Army O6 W Washington O13 L Oregon O20 W Oregon State O27 L UCLA (13) N3 L USC (9) N10 W San Jose State N17 L Washington State N24 L Stanford B – Birmingham, AL
0-66 7-27 51-6 54-49 10-41 24-14 21-61 14-50 19-9 28-31 17-26
B H A H A H A H H A A
1974 7-3-1, 4-2-1 Pac-8 (3rd-T) Head Coach: Mike White Captains: Steve Bartkowski, Rob Swenson
S14 S21 S28 O5 O12 O19 O26 N2 N9 N16 N23
L W W W W W L T W W L
Florida San Jose State Army Illinois (14) Oregon Oregon State (20) UCLA USC (6) (18) Washington (19) Washington State (19) Stanford
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
S13 S20 S27 O4 O11 O18 O25 N1 N8 N15 N22
L L W W W W L W W W W
Colorado West Virginia (20) Washington State San Jose State Oregon Oregon State UCLA (19) USC (4) (18) Washington (15) Air Force (13) Stanford
27-34 10-28 33-21 27-24 34-7 51-24 14-28 28-14 27-24 31-14 48-15
17-21 17-16 27-14 31-14 40-10 17-14 3-28 15-15 52-26 37-33 20-22
A H H A H A H A A H H
A H A H A H A H H A A
1976 5-6-0, 3-4 Pac-8 (4th-T) Head Coach: Mike White Captains: Joe Roth, Phil Heck
3-8-0, 3-4-0 Pac-8 (5th) Head Coach: Mike White Captains: Steve Sweeney, Bob Kampa
S9 L Colorado (2) S16 W Washington State S23 L San Jose State S30 L Missouri O7 L Ohio State (3) O14 L USC (1) O21 L UCLA (11) O28 L Washington N4 W Oregon N11 L Oregon State N18 W Stanford P – Portland, OR
1975 8-3-0, 6-1-0 Pac-8 (1st-T) Final AP Ranking: No. 14 Final UPI Ranking: No. 15 Head Coach: Mike White PACIFIC-8 CONFERENCE CO-CHAMPIONS Captains: Chuck Muncie, Paul Von der Mehden
S11 S18 S25 O2 O9 O16 O23 O30 N6 N13 N20
L L W W W L L L W W L
(15) Georgia (16) Oklahoma (4) Arizona State San Jose State Oregon Oregon State UCLA (4) USC (4) Washington Washington State Stanford
24-36 17-28 31-22 43-16 27-10 9-10 19-35 6-20 7-0 23-22 24-27
A A A H H A H A A H H
1977 8-3-0, 4-3-0 Pac-8 (4th) Head Coach: Mike White Captains: George Freitas, Burl Toler
S10 W Tennessee 27-17 A S17 W Air Force 24-14 H S24 W Missouri 28-21 A O1 W (17) San Jose State 52-3 H O8 L (14) Washington State 10-17 A O15 W (20) Oregon State 41-17 H O22 L (15) UCLA 19-21 A* O29 W USC (10) 17-14 H N5 L (17) Washington 31-50 H N12 W Oregon 48-16 A N19 L Stanford 3-21 A *UCLA forfeited due to an ineligible player.
1978 6-5-0, 3-4-0 Pac-10 (6th-T) Head Coach: Roger Theder Captains: Duke Leffler, Ralph DeLoach
S9 S16 S23 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18
L W W W W W L L L W L
Nebraska (10) Georgia Tech Pacific West Virginia Oregon Arizona UCLA (10) USC (6) Arizona State Washington State Stanford
26-36 34-22 24-6 28-21 21-18 33-20 0-45 17-42 21-35 22-14 10-30
A A H A H A H A A H H
1979
1983
7-5-0, 6-3-0 Pac-10 (5th) Head Coach: Roger Theder Captains: Paul Jones, Ron Hill
5-5-1, 3-4-1 Pac-10 (8th) Head Coach: Joe Kapp Captains: Gale Gilbert, Ron Rivera, Richard Rodgers
S8 W Arizona State (18) 17-9 A S15 W Arizona 10-7 A S22 W San Jose State 13-10 H S29 L Michigan (11) 10-14 H O6 L Oregon 14-19 A* O13 W Oregon State 45-0 H O20 L UCLA 27-28 A O27 L USC (3) 14-24 H N3 L Washington (16) 24-28 H N10 W Washington State 45-13 A N17 W Stanford 21-14 A *Oregon forfeited due to ineligible player GARDEN STATE BOWL D15 L Temple 17-28 ER ER – East Rutherford, NJ
1980 3-8-0, 3-5-0 Pac-10 (9th) Head Coach: Roger Theder Captains: Rich Campbell, Ron Coccimiglio, Kirk Karacozoff
S13 L Florida S20 L Army S27 L Arizona O4 L Michigan O11 W Oregon O18 W Oregon State O25 L UCLA (3) N1 L USC (7) N8 L Arizona State N15 L Washington State N22 W Stanford T – Tampa, FL
13-41 19-26 24-31 13-38 31-6 27-6 9-32 7-60 6-34 17-31 28-23
T A H A H H H A A H H
1981 2-9-0, 2-6-0 Pac-10 (8th) Head Coach: Roger Theder Captains: Harvey Salem, Ron Rivera
S5 L Texas A&M S12 L Georgia (6) S19 W Arizona S26 L San Jose State O10 L Washington O17 L Arizona State (17) O24 L UCLA O31 W Oregon State N7 L USC (3) N14 L Washington State (17) N21 L Stanford S – Spokane, WA
28-29 13-27 14-13 24-27 26-27 17-45 6-34 45-3 3-21 0-9 21-42
H A A H H A A H H S A
1982 7-4-0, 4-4-0 Pac-10 (6th) Head Coach: Joe Kapp Captains: Harvey Salem, Reggie Camp, Richard Rodgers
S11 S18 S25 O2 O9 O16 O23 O30 N6 N13 N20
W W L W L W L W L W W
Colorado San Diego State Arizona State (14) San Jose State Washington (1) Oregon UCLA (11) Oregon State USC (16) Washington State Stanford
31-17 28-0 0-15 26-7 7-50 10-7 31-47 28-14 0-42 34-14 25-20
A H H H A H H A A H H
S3 S10 S17 O1 O8 O15 O22 O29 N5 N12 N19
W L W T L W L L W L W
Texas A&M San Diego State San Jose State Arizona Oregon Oregon State UCLA USC Arizona State Washington State Stanford
A A H H A H A H H A A
1984 2-9-0, 1-8-0 Pac-10 (10th) Head Coach: Joe Kapp Captains: Gale Gilbert, John Haina, Dave Pillsbury
S8 S15 S22 S29 O6 O13 O20 O27 N3 N10 N17
L W L L W L L L L L L
Arizona Pacific Oregon San Jose State Arizona State Oregon State UCLA USC (20) Washington (1) Washington State Stanford
13-23 28-12 14-21 18-33 19-14 6-9 14-17 7-31 14-44 7-33 10-27
A H H H A A H A A H H
1985 4-7-0, 2-7-0 Pac-10 (10th) Head Coach: Joe Kapp Captains: Mark Stephens, Hardy Nickerson, Ken Pettway
A31 W San Jose State S7 L Washington State S14 L Oregon State S21 L Arizona O5 W Missouri O12 L Washington O19 W Oregon O26 L UCLA (17) N2 L Arizona State N9 W USC N23 L Stanford P – Portland, OR
48-21 19-20 20-23 17-23 39-32 12-28 27-24 7-34 8-30 14-6 22-24
H A P H A H A A H H A
1986 2-9-0, 2-7-0 Pac-10 (9th) Head Coach: Joe Kapp Captains: Gary Hein, Doug Riesenberg, Hardy Nickerson
S13 S20 S27 O4 O11 O18 O25 N1 N8 N15 N22
L W L L L L L L L L W
Boston College Washington State San Jose State Washington (12) Oregon State UCLA (19) Arizona (14) Oregon Arizona State (5) USC (13) Stanford (16)
15-21 31-21 14-35 18-50 12-14 10-36 16-33 9-27 0-49 3-28 17-11
A H H A H H A H A A H
1987 3-6-2, 2-3-2 Pac-10 (8th) Head Coach: Bruce Snyder Captains: Brian Bedford, Kam King, Ken Harvey, Darryl Stallworth
S5 W Pacific S12 L San Jose State
19-17 14-28 30-9 33-33 17-24 45-19 16-20 9-19 26-24 6-16 27-18
42-0 H 25-27 H
S19 L Minnesota S26 L USC O3 L Tennessee (10) O10 T Arizona O24 L UCLA (8) O31 W Oregon N14 W Arizona State N21 L Stanford N28 T Washington State T – Tokyo, Japan
23-32 14-31 12-38 23-23 18-42 20-6 38-20 7-31 17-17
A H A H A A H A T
1988 5-5-1, 1-5-1 Pac-10 (10th) Head Coach: Bruce Snyder Captains: Chris Richards, Darryl Ingram, Natu Tautagaloa, Majett Whiteside
S10 S17 S24 O1 O8 O15 O22 O29 N5 N12 N19
W L W W L L W W L L T
Pacific Oregon State Kansas San Jose State Washington State UCLA (2) Temple Arizona USC (2) Washington Stanford
30-7 16-17 52-21 21-14 13-44 21-38 31-14 10-7 3-35 27-28 19-19
H A H H A H H A A A H
1989 4-7-0, 2-6-0 Pac-10 (10th) Head Coach: Bruce Snyder Captains: Troy Taylor, Tony Smith, David Ortega, Joel Dickson
S9 S16 S23 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18
L L W L W L L L W W L
Oregon Miami, Fla. (2) Wisconsin UCLA San Jose State USC (10) Washington Oregon State Arizona (15) Washington State Stanford
19-35 3-31 20-14 6-24 26-21 15-31 16-29 14-25 29-28 38-26 14-24
S8 W Wisconsin S15 L Miami, Fla. (10) S22 L Washington State S29 W Arizona (18) O6 W San Jose State O13 W Arizona State O20 W UCLA O27 L Washington (7) N3 T USC (21) N10 W Oregon (20) N17 L Stanford COPPER BOWL D31 W Wyoming T – Tucson, AZ
28-12 24-52 31-41 30-25 35-34 31-24 38-31 7-46 31-31 28-3 25-27
A A H A H H H H H H A
A H A A H A H A A H H
17-15 T
1991 10-2-0, 6-2-0 Pac-10 (2nd-T) Final AP Ranking: No. 8 Final Coaches Ranking: No. 7 Head Coach: Bruce Snyder Captains: Game Captains (Seniors)
S7 W Pacific S14 W (24) Purdue S21 W (20) Arizona
27-24 45-7 17-24 41-20 52-30 27-14 25-6 21-38
A H H H H A H A
37-13 O
1992 4-7-0, 2-6-0 Pac-10 (9th) Head Coach: Keith Gilbertson Captains: Greg Zomalt, Al Casner, Mack Travis, Mick Barsala
S5 S12 S24 O3 O10 O17 O24 O31 N7 N14 N21
W L W W L L L W L L L
(20) San Jose State (17) Purdue Kansas (24) Oregon State (24) Washington (1) USC (18) Arizona UCLA Oregon Arizona State Stanford (13)
46-16 14-41 27-23 42-0 16-35 24-27 17-24 48-12 17-37 12-28 21-41
H A A H A A H H A A H
1993
1990 7-4-1, 4-3-1 Pac-10 (4th) Head Coach: Bruce Snyder Captains: Game Captains (Seniors)
O5 W (18) UCLA (24) O12 W (13) Oregon O19 L (7) Washington (3) O26 W (10) San Jose State N2 W (10) USC N9 W (7) Oregon State N16 W (6) Arizona State N23 L (6) Stanford (21) CITRUS BOWL J1 W (14) Clemson (13) O – Orlando, FL
9-4-0, 4-4-0 Pac-10 (4th-T) Final AP Ranking: No. 25 Final Coaches Ranking: No. 24 Head Coach: Keith Gilbertson Captains: Doug Brien, Todd Steussie, Michael Davis, Eric Zomalt
S4 W UCLA S11 W San Diego State S18 W (21) Temple S25 W (20) San Jose State O2 W (15) Oregon O9 L (16) Washington (13) O16 L (20) Washington State O30 L USC N6 L Arizona State N13 W Arizona (13) N20 W Stanford N27 W Hawaii ALAMO BOWL D31 W Iowa SA – San Antonio, TX
27-25 45-25 58-0 46-13 42-41 23-24 7-34 14-42 0-41 24-20 46-17 42-18
A H A H H H A H A H A A
37-3 SA
1994 4-7-0, 3-5-0 Pac-10 (5th-T) Head Coach: Keith Gilbertson Captains: Brian Thure, Jerrott Willard, Artis Houston, Ricky Spears, Tyrone Edwards
S10 S17 S24 O1 O8 O15 O22 O29 N5 N12 N19
L L W W W L L L L L W
San Diego State Hawaii Arizona State San Jose State UCLA Oregon USC Washington State Arizona (18) Washington (22) Stanford
20-22 7-21 25-21 55-0 26-7 7-23 0-61 23-26 6-13 19-31 24-23
A H H H H A A H A A H
86-24 H 42-18 H 23-21 A
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
181
1995
1999
3-8-0, 2-6-0 Pac-10 (8th-T) Head Coach: Keith Gilbertson Captains: Dante DePaola, Je’Rod Cherry, Ben Lynch, Reynard Rutherford
S2 S9 S23 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18
L L W L L L W L W L L
San Diego State Fresno State San Jose State Arizona USC (5) Oregon (15) Oregon State UCLA (24) Washington State Arizona State Stanford
9-33 24-25 40-7 15-20 16-26 30-52 13-12 16-33 27-11 29-38 24-29
A H H A H H A A H H A
1996 6-6-0, 3-5-0 Pac-10 (5th-T) Head Coach: Steve Mariucci Captains: Pat Barnes, Brandon Whiting, Ryan Longwell
S7 W San Jose State 45-25 S14 W San Diego State 42-37 S21 W Nevada 33-15 S28 W Oregon State 48-42 (3ot) O5 W USC (17) 22-15 O19 L (19) Washington State 18-21 O26 L (25) UCLA 29-38 N2 W Arizona 56-55 (4ot) N9 L Arizona State (4) 7-35 N16 L Oregon 23-40 N23 L Stanford 21-42 ALOHA BOWL D25 L Navy 38-42 H – Honolulu, HI
A H H H A A H H A A H H
1997 3-8-0, 1-7-0 Pac-10 (9th) Head Coach: Tom Holmoe Captains: Brandon Whiting, Bobby Shaw, Jeremy Newberry
S6 W Houston 35-3 S20 W Oklahoma 40-36 S27 L USC 17-27 O4 L Louisiana Tech 34-41 O11 L Washington (10) 3-30 O18 L Washington State (13) 37-63 O25 L UCLA (13) 17-35 N1 W Oregon State 33-14 N8 L Arizona State (15) 21-28 N15 L Arizona 38-41 (2ot) N22 L Stanford 20-21 S – Shreveport, LA
A H H S H A A H H A A
1998 5-6-0, 3-5-0 Pac-10 (7th) Head Coach: Tom Holmoe Captains: Dameane Douglas, Matt Beck, Sekou Sanyika, John Welbourn
S5 S12 S19 S26 O10 O17 O24 O31 N7 N14 N21
W L W W W L L W L L L
182
Houston Nebraska (4) Oklahoma Washington State USC (19) Washington UCLA (2) Oregon State Arizona State Arizona (9) Stanford
14-10 3-24 13-12 24-14 32-31 13-21 16-28 20-19 22-55 23-27 3-10
2003
0-11-0, 0-8-0 Pac-10 (6th-T)* Head Coach: Tom Holmoe Captains: Matt Beck, Sekou Sanyika, Deltha O’Neal, Andre Carter, Mawuko Tugbenyoh, Kevin Doherty
S4 W Rutgers* 21-7 S11 L Nebraska (5) 0-45 S25 W Arizona State* 24-23 O2 L Washington State 7-31 O9 L Brigham Young (24) 28-38 O16 W UCLA* 17-0 O23 L Washington 27-31 O30 W USC* 17-7 N6 L Oregon State 7-17 N13 L Oregon 19-24 N20 L Stanford 13-31 *Game later forfeited by Cal due to ineligible players
H A H A A A H H A H A
2000 3-8-0, 2-6-0 Pac-10 (8th-T) Head Coach: Tom Holmoe Captains: Andre Carter, Chidi Iwuoma, Reed Diehl, Jacob Waasdorp
S9 S16 S23 S30 O7 O14 O21 O28 N4 N11 N18
W L L L L W L W L L L
Utah 24-21 Illinois (19) 15-17 Fresno State 3-17 Washington State 17-21 Arizona State 10-30 UCLA (13) 46-38 (3ot) Washington (9) 24-36 USC 28-16 Oregon State (14) 32-38 Oregon (6) 17-25 Stanford 30-36 (ot)
H A A H A H A A H A H
2001
L L L L L L L L L L W
Illinois Brigham Young Washington State Washington (13) Oregon (5) UCLA (4) Oregon State Arizona USC Stanford (13) Rutgers
17-44 16-44 20-51 28-31 7-48 17-56 10-19 24-38 14-55 28-35 20-10
H H A H H A A H H A A
2002
H H A H A A H A A H H
7-5-0, 4-4-0 Pac-10 (4th-T) Head Coach: Jeff Tedford Captains: Nnamdi Asomugha, Kyle Boller, Joe Igber, Matt Nixon
A31 S7 S14 S21 S28 O5 O12 O19 O26 N9 N16 N23
W W W L L W L W L W L W
Baylor New Mexico State Michigan State (15) (23) Air Force Washington State (16) Washington (12) USC (20) UCLA Oregon State Arizona State (25) Arizona Stanford
70-22 34-13 46-22 21-23 38-48 34-27 28-30 17-12 13-24 55-38 41-52 30-7
A23 L Kansas State A30 W Southern Miss S6 L Colorado State S11 L Utah S20 W Illinois S27 W USC (3) O4 L Oregon State O18 L UCLA O25 W Arizona N1 W Arizona State N8 L Oregon N15 W Washington N22 W Stanford INSIGHT BOWL D26 W Virginia Tech P – Phoenix, AZ
28-42 34-2 21-23 24-31 31-24 34-31 (3ot) 21-35 20-23 (ot) 42-14 51-23 17-21 54-7 28-16
A H H A A H H A H A A H A
52-49 P
2004
1-10-0, 0-8-0 Pac-10 (10th) Head Coach: Tom Holmoe Captains: Scott Fujita, Marcus Fields, Dewey Hale, Brandon Ludwig, Adam Sugarman
S1 S8 S22 S29 O13 O20 O27 N3 N10 N17 N23
8-6-0, 5-3-0 Pac-10 (3rd-T) Head Coach: Jeff Tedford Captains: Adimchinobe Echemandu, Aaron Rodgers, Lorenzo Alexander, Donnie McCleskey
H H A H H A A H A A H H
10-2-0, 7-1-0 Pac-10 (2nd) Final AP Ranking: No. 9 Final Coaches Ranking: No. 9 Head Coach: Jeff Tedford Captains: J.J. Arrington, Aaron Rodgers, Lorenzo Alexander, Ryan Gutierrez
S4 W (13) Air Force S11 W (13) New Mexico State O2 W (9) Oregon State O9 L (7) USC (1) O16 W (8) UCLA O23 W (7) Arizona O30 W (7) Arizona State (20) N6 W (4) Oregon N13 W (5) Washington N20 W (4) Stanford D4 W (4) Southern Miss HOLIDAY BOWL D30 L (4) Texas Tech SD – San Diego, CA
56-14 41-14 49-7 17-23 45-28 38-0 27-0 28-27 42-12 41-6 26-16
A H A A H A H H A H A
31-45 SD
2005 8-4-0, 4-4-0 Pac-10 (4th-T) Final AP Ranking: No. 25 Final Coaches Ranking: No. 25 Head Coach: Jeff Tedford Captains: Marvin Philip, Donnie McCleskey
S3 W (19) Sacramento State 41-3 S10 W (16) Washington 56-17 S17 W (15) Illinois 35-20 S23 W (13) New Mexico State 41-13 O1 W (12) Arizona 28-0 O8 L (10) UCLA (16) 40-47 O15 L (18) Oregon State 20-23 O22 W (25) Washington State 42-28 N5 L (23) Oregon (13) 20-27 (ot) N12 L USC (1) 10-35 N19 W Stanford 27-3 LAS VEGAS BOWL D 22 W BYU 35-28 LV – Las Vegas, NV
H A H A H A H H A H A
LV
2006 10-3-0, 7-2-0 Pac-10 (1st-T) Final AP Ranking: No. 14 Final Coaches Ranking: No. 14 Head Coach: Jeff Tedford PAC-10 CONFERENCE CO-CHAMPIONS Captains: Desmond Bishop, Craig Stevens
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
S2 L (9) Tennessee (23) 18-35 A S9 W (22) Minnesota 42-17 H S16 W (21) Portland State 42-16 H S23 W (21) Arizona State (22) 49-21 H S30 W (20) Oregon State 41-13 A O7 W (16) Oregon (11) 45-24 H O14 W (10) Washington State 21-3 A O21 W (11) Washington 31-24(ot) H N4 W (10) UCLA 38-24 H N11 L (8) Arizona 20-24 A N18 L (17) USC (4) 9-23 A D2 W (22) Stanford 26-17 H HOLIDAY BOWL D28 W (20) Texas A&M (21) 45-10 SD SD – San Diego, CA
2007 7-6-0, 3-6-0 Pac-10 (7th-T) Head Coach: Jeff Tedford Captains: Craig Stevens, Thomas DeCoud
S1 W (12) Tennessee (15) S8 W (10) Colorado State S15 W (8) Louisiana Tech S22 W (6) Arizona S29 W (6) Oregon (11) O13 L (2) Oregon State O20 L (10) UCLA O27 L (18) Arizona State (7) N3 W (24) Washington State N10 L USC (12) N17 L Washington D1 L Stanford ARMED FORCES BOWL D31 W Air Force FW – Fort Worth, TX
45-31 34-28 42-12 45-27 31-24 28-31 21-30 20-31 20-17 17-24 23-37 13-20
H A H H A H A A H H A A
42-36 FW
2008 9-4-0, 6-3-0 Pac-10 (4th) Final Coaches Ranking: No. 25 Head Coach: Jeff Tedford Captains: Alex Mack, Zack Follett
A30 W Michigan State S6 W Washington State S13 L (23) Maryland S27 W Colorado State O4 W Arizona State O18 L (25) Arizona O25 W UCLA N1 W Oregon (24) N8 L (21) USC (7) N15 L Oregon State (23) N22 W Stanford D6 W Washington EMERALD BOWL D27 W Miami, Fla. SF – San Francisco, CA
38-31 66-3 27-35 42-7 24-14 27-42 41-20 26-16 3-17 21-34 37-16 48-7
H A A H H A H H A A H H
24-17 SF
2009 8-5-0, 5-4-0 Pac-10 (5th-T) Head Coach: Jeff Tedford Captains: Tyson Alualu, Kevin Riley
S5 W (12) Maryland 52-13 H S12 W (10) Eastern Washington 59-7 H S19 W (T7) Minnesota 35-21 A S26 L (6) Oregon 42-3 A O3 L (19) USC (7) 30-3 H O17 W UCLA 45-26 A O24 W Washington State 49-17 H O31 W Arizona State 23-21 A N7 L (23) Oregon State 31-14 H N14 W Arizona (18) 24-16 H N21 W Stanford (14) 34-28 A D5 L (19) Washington 42-10 A POINSETTIA BOWL D23 L Utah (23) 37-27 SD SD – San Diego, CA
RECORD vs. ALL OPPONENTS OPPONENT W-L-T PF PA FIRST/LAST Air Force 6-2-0 226 135 1961/2007 Alabama 1-1-0 13 66 1937/1973 Arizona 14-13-2 743 700 1978/2009 Arizona State 15-14-0 638 775 1976/2009 Arkansas 0-1-0 20 51 1971/1971 Army 2-4-0 117 90 1960/1980 Baylor 1-2-0 76 54 1953/2002 Boston College 0-1-0 15 21 1986 BYU 1-2-0 79 110 1999/2005 Carlisle 0-1-0 0 2 1899 Clemson 1-0-0 37 13 1991 Colorado 2-2-0 78 71 1968/1982 Colorado State 2-1-0 97 58 2003/2008 Duke 0-1-1 29 43 1962/1963 Eastern Washington 1-0-0 59 7 2009 Florida 0-2-0 30 62 1974/1980 Fresno State 0-2-0 27 42 1995/2000 Georgia 0-2-0 37 63 1976/1981 Georgia Tech 4-3-0 107 69 1928/1978 Hawai'i 2-2-0 66 65 1934/1994 Houston 2-0-0 49 13 1997/1998 Idaho 4-0-0 90 19 1931/1934 Illinois 3-7-0 183 228 1955/2005 Indiana 2-0-0 73 28 1969/1970 Iowa 1-3-0 68 111 1958/1993 Iowa State 1-0-0 15 8 1963 Kansas 3-2-0 124 130 1961/1992 Kansas State 0-1-0 28 42 2003 Louisiana Tech 1-1-0 76 53 1997/2007 Maryland 1-1-0 79 48 2008/2009 Miami, Fla. 2-2-0 60 107 1964/2008 Michigan 2-6-0 74 150 1940/1980 Michigan State 2-2-0 96 104 1957/2008 Minnesota 4-2-0 224 123 1951/2009 Missouri 4-2-1 167 150 1952/1985 Montana 5-0-0 205 45 1927/1947 Navy 3-2-0 106 90 1947/1996 Nebraska 0-3-0 29 105 1978/1999 Nevada 22-1-1 810 71 1899/1996 New Mexico State 3-0-0 116 40 2002/2005 Northwestern 0-1-0 14 20 1948 Notre Dame 0-4-0 27 138 1959/1967 Occidental 2-1-0 94 14 1916/1919 Ohio State 1-5-0 95 141 1920/1972 Oklahoma 2-2-0 83 103 1954/1998 Oregon 39-31-2 1418 1187 1899/2009 Oregon State 33-29-0 1377 960 1905/2009 Pacific 12-3-0 403 110 1934/1991 Pennsylvania 7-0-0 169 34 1924/1955 Penn State 1-3-0 73 106 1961/1966 Pittsburgh 2-3-0 90 103 1955/1966 Pomona College 4-0-0 66 0 1904/1925 Portland State 1-0-0 42 16 2006 Purdue 1-1-0 56 59 1991/1992 Rice 1-1-0 31 49 1969/1970 Rutgers 1-1-0 41 17 1999/2001 St. Mary’s 33-8-2 945 265 1898/1950 San Diego State 3-3-0 158 145 1982/1996 San Francisco 2-0-0 45 7 1943/1950 San Jose State 29-6-0 1084 514 1899/1996 Santa Clara 19-5-0 461 159 1913/1952 SMU 0-1-0 6 13 1957 Southern Miss 2-0-0 60 18 2003/2004 Stanford 46-55-11 1784 1799 1892/2009 Syracuse 1-1-0 57 20 1967/1968 Temple 2-1-0 106 42 1979/1993 Tennessee 2-2-0 102 121 1977/2007 Texas 0-4-0 18 134 1959/1970 Texas A&M 2-1-0 92 60 1981/2006 Texas Tech 0-1-0 31 45 2004 Tulane 0-1-0 3 7 1960 UC Davis 8-0-0 293 20 1932/1939 UCLA 30-49-1 1399 1884 1933/2009 USC 30-62-5 1190 2105 1912/2009 Utah 4-2-0 182 109 1920/2003 Virginia Tech 1-0-0 52 49 2003 Washington 38-47-4 1652 1714 1904/2009 Washington & Jefferson 0-0-1 0 0 1921 Washington State 41-25-5 1653 1194 1919/2009 West Virginia 2-1-0 58 59 1971/1978 Whittier 2-0-0 27 17 1916/1935 Wisconsin 5-1-0 178 95 1946/1990 Wyoming 1-0-0 17 15 1990 Notes: 2010 opponents in bold type; data includes games against "Collegiate" teams only
NOTES Cal: 2007 Armed Forces Bowl win Cal: 1938 Rose Bowl win Cal: Won in 2009 to take all-time series lead Cal: Has won six of last seven to take all-time series lead Only game in Little Rock Cal: Won back-to-back games in 1973 and '74 All three games in Berkeley BC wins only meeting in Boston to open 1986 season Cal: 2005 Las Vegas Bowl win after two previous losses Cal: First intersectional game Cal: 1992 Citrus Bowl victory Cal: Won Joe Kapp’s debut in 1982 last time teams met Cal: Has won two in a row after dropping 2003's first meeting Cal: Came back to tie second meeting after losing first Cal: Ran for 342 yards to win first-ever meeting Both games at Florida Cal dropped one-point game in 1995's first-ever meeting Both games in Athens Cal: 1929 Rose Bowl loss First three meetings in Honolulu before 1994 game in Berkeley Cal: Won 1997 opener in Astrodome All four games in Berkeley Two of Cal’s wins in Champaign Cal: Back-to-back wins in Bloomington and Berkeley Cal: 1993 Alamo Bowl 37-3 win Cal: Victory in 1963 opener in Berkeley Cal: Three straight wins after starting series with two losses Cal fell in 2003 opener in only meeting between teams Cal: Evened series with convincing 2007 victory Cal: Beat Terps in 2009 opener to even all-time series Cal: Beat Miami in 2008 Emerald Bowl in first meeting since 1990 Michigan: Two straight wins Cal: Has last won last two games after dropping first two Cal: Beat Golden Gophers in first road contest of 2009 Cal: Two straight wins All games in Berkeley Navy: Won 1996 Aloha Bowl Nebraska: Outscored Cal 69-3 in back-to-back games (1998, '99) Cal: 12 straight wins and 19-game series unbeaten streak Last meeting a Friday night ESPN game Northwestern: 1949 Rose Bowl winners in only meeting Cal winless in series with last meeting 42 years ago Teams haven't played in 90 years Five straight wins for Ohio State after Cal won first meeting in 1920 Cal: Back-to-back wins in last two meetings (1997, '98) Cal: Won three of last four Oregon State: Won four of last five Cal: Won seven of last eight before Pacific dropped program Cal dominated seven games beteween schools Only Cal victory in series in 1965 in Berkeley Cal: Won last meeting, 30-15 Cal pitched shutouts in all four games between teams Cal: Second 40-point game in five-game 40-point streak Both games decided by at least 24 points Home team victories in both games 2001: Game moved to Nov. 23 from Sept. 15 after "9/11" Cal: 127-0 win in 1920 Teams played four four straight seasons from 1992-96 Both games in Berkeley Cal: Nine straight wins Cal: Six straight wins Only game in Berkeley 2004 game postponed from Sept. 16 to Dec. 4 (Hurricane Ivan) Cal: Won seven of eight; tied for nation's 10th-longest series Cal: Won last meeting, 43-0 Cal: Won last meeting, 58-0 Cal: Evened all-time series with win in 2007 opener Golden Bears still winless in four tries Cal: Cruised to 45-10 victory in 2006 Holiday Bowl 2004 Holiday Bowl only meeting between teams Only game in Berkeley All eight games in Berkeley Cal: Won last five in Berkeley USC: Has won six in a row since Cal's thrilling 2003 win (3 ot) Utah: Has won two of three since Cal won first three High-scoring game in only meet at Insight Bowl Cal: Won last three in Berkeley Only meeting in 1922 Rose Bowl Cal: Has won five in a row Cal: Won last game, 28-21 Both games in Berkeley Cal: 3-0 in Madison Cal: Won only meeting at 1990 Copper Bowl
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
183
BOWL HISTORY ROSE BOWL
ROSE BOWL
JANUARY 1, 1929
JANUARY 1, 1921 CALIFORNIA OHIO STATE
GEORGIA TECH CALIFORNIA
28 0
College football may never again witness the sheer dominance displayed by California’s legendary “Wonder Teams” of the 1920s, and the 1920 football team, in particular, will forever be remembered as one of the sport's all-time great teams. Under the genius of coach Andy Smith, the Golden Bears completely dismantled opponents en route to an 8-0 record and made their first appearance in the Rose Bowl. Despite their record and having outscored opponents by a total margin of 482-14, the Bears entered the contest as an underdog. Possibly because some Easterners had not yet developed much respect for sutdent-athletes on the West Coast, a respected Ohio State team was predicted to beat Cal by six points. The Bears wasted little time in refuting such predictions, as Pesky Sprott scored a touchdown early in the first quarter to give California a 7-0 lead. Smith’s team was able to score two more touchdowns in the second quarter while a ferocious Bear defense held Ohio State scoreless for a 21-0 halftime lead. One of the scores came on a piece of Wonder Team trickery, as Sprott pitched the ball to end Brick Muller on a reverse who heaved the ball over 50 yards to Brodie Stephens for the touchdown. That play helped Cal break the game open and is thought of as one of the most famous plays in the history of the Rose Bowl. The Bears subsequently earned the unofficial national title. California 7 14 0 7 - 28 Ohio State 0 0 0 0 - 0 Cal Ohio State First Downs 17 11 Net Yards Rushing 244 105 Passing (Comp-Att) 6-9 11-24 Net Yards Passing 102 133 Total Offense Yards 346 238
The Rose Bowl of 1929 will be remembered forever as one of the most amazing and most talked about games played in the history of collegiate football. California faced an undefeated Georgia Tech squad in a very closely contested battle that was made most memorable thanks to a single play by California’s Roy Riegels. After a scoreless first quarter, the Bears threatened by moving the ball to Georgia Tech’s 25-yard-line. They were unable to get any farther, however, and possession was lost on downs. The next play became one of the most famous (or infamous) of all time. Riegels, California’s All-American center, placed his name in the game’s lore when Georgia Tech’s Stumpy Thomason was hit by the Bears' Benny Lom at the Georgia Tech 30. Riegels scooped up the fumble and started in the right direction, but suddenly he spun around and headed the wrong way. Riegels had reached the Cal one-yard-line before Lom was able to spin him back around, only to be tackled by Georgia Tech. The play led to a safety when the Engineers blocked Lom’s subsequent punt. Georgia Tech had a 2-0 lead at halftime, then scored again in the third quarter for an 8-0 lead going into the fourth quarter. The Bears finally scored late in the fourth quarter when Lom passed to Irv Phillips in the end zone. California 0 0 0 7 - 7 Georgia Tech 0 2 6 0 - 8 Cal Georgia Tech First Downs (Rush-Pass) 11 (8-3) 5 (4-1) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 51-204 42-166 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 4-12-1 1-3-0 Net Yards Passing 67 23 Total Offense Plays 63 45 Total Offense Yards 271 189
ROSE BOWL
ROSE BOWL
JANUARY 1, 1938
JANUARY 1, 1922 CALIFORNIA WASHINGTON & JEFFERSON
CALIFORNIA ALABAMA
0 0
California’s Wonder Team of 1921 defeated every opponent they faced in the regular season, scoring a total of 167 points against conference opponents while only allowing 10. California took a 9-0 record into its second straight Rose Bowl, and although the Bears were predicted to record an easy victory, steady rains had reduced the field to a quagmire, and coach Andy Smith predicted a 0-0 tie. The Bears were fortunate to escape with that, as they only gained 49 yards in total offense and had two first downs while Washington and Jefferson had a 36-yard touchdown run called back on an offside penalty. The Bears original strategy to use a wide-open passing attack was impossible given the condition of the field, and they instead had to rely entirely on power. The results were almost disastrous for the Bears, but Archie Nisbet averaged 39.7 yards on 13 punts and deserved much credit for keeping the Presidents from the end zone. Washington and Jefferson had a distinct advantage in maturity as most of the men on its team were older than the average college player, and California originally objected to having to play a team from a school whose scholarship requirements were far below that of California. The relatively unknown school representing the East was able to keep the Bears from scoring in the swamp-like condition of the field and put an end to California’s winning streak at 18 games. California 0 0 0 0 - 0 Wash. & Jeff. 0 0 0 0 - 0 Cal Wash. & Jeff. First Downs 2 8 Net Yards Rushing 49 114 Passing (Comp-Att) 2-6 1-4 Net Yards Passing 0 23 Total Offense Yards 49 137
184
8 7
13 0
California returned to the Rose Bowl with the “Thunder Team” of 1937. With a devastating offensive backfield and a rock-solid defense, the Golden Bears trampled their opponents in the regular season, posting a 9-0-1 record and scoring a total of 201 points while allowing only 33. The Bears, under coach Stub Allison, recorded six shutouts against opponents and utilized a punishing ground game which not only earned the team the nickname “The Thunder Team” but landed the undefeated squad a berth in the Rose Bowl. In the Rose Bowl of 1938, the Bears recorded an impressive victory over Alabama, 13-0. California relied on its brilliant backfield of Vic Bottari and Sam Chapman to pave the way on offense. And on defense, the Bears rendered the Crimson Tide offense ineffective, holding Alabama scoreless. Following a fumble recovery by Perry Schwartz in the second quarter, the Bears marched 61 yards and scored on a four-yard run by Bottari. The only other score came early in the third quarter, when Bottari added a second touchdown on another four-yard run, making the final margin 13-0. California had completed an undefeated season for the first time since the Wonder Teams of the 1920s, and was rewarded with its most recent national championship. California 0 7 6 0 - 13 Alabama 0 0 0 0 - 0 Cal Alabama First Downs 11 11 Net Yards Rushing 192 140 Passing (Comp-Att) 2-9 3-13 Net Yards Passing 16 40 Total Offense Yards 208 180
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
ROSE BOWL
ROSE BOWL
JANUARY 1, 1949
JANUARY 1, 1951
NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA
20 14
Pappy Waldorf will always be remembered as one of the greatest coaches ever at California, and his 1948 team was the first of three consecutive squads he would lead to the Rose Bowl. The Bears of 1948 crushed their opponents en route to an undefeated 10-win regular season and a berth in the Rose Bowl of 1949. The Bears scored nearly three times as many total points as they allowed, and proved themselves as the top team on the West Coast. The Rose Bowl of 1949 was billed as a battle of wits, as it pitted Pappy Waldorf against one of his former players, Northwestern coach Bob Voights. It proved to be an outstanding game, as the Bears matched the running of Jackie Jensen and Jack Swaner against Frank Aschenbrenner, Ed Tunnicliff and Art Murakowski of Northwestern. Aschenbrenner opened the scoring with a 73-yard touchdown run in the first quarter, but Jensen returned the favor with a 67-yard scoring run of his own on the next series. The game may have been decided on a controversial touchdown in the second quarter, when Murakowski scored from one yard out as he fumbled into the end zone. With Jensen sidelined by leg cramps, the Bears took the lead, 14-13, in the third quarter on a run by Swaner. Northwestern came back, however, to score the winning touchdown on a 43-yard run by Tunnicliff with 2:59 left in the game. Although the Bears lost the game, the final Associated Press Poll still ranked California fourth in the nation. California 7 0 7 0 - 14 Northwestern 7 6 0 7 - 20 Cal Northwestern First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 12 (8-4-0) 6 (5-1-0) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 54-173 45-273 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 6-16-4 1-4-0 Net Yards Passing 83 17 Total Offense Plays 70 49 Total Offense Yards 256 290
Pappy Waldorf took his Golden Bears team of 1950 to a third consecutive Rose Bowl. Again the Bears entered the Rose Bowl as an undefeated team that had laid waste to the Pacific Coast Conference. And once again California’s string of hard luck Rose Bowl defeats continued. The Bears appeared ready to give coach Waldorf his first post-season victory, as they entered the game with a 9-0-1 record, having outscored opponents 218-76 during the regular season. On the third play of the game, Pete Schabarum exploded on a 73-yard touchdown run that was wiped out because of a penalty. The Bears went ahead 6-0 in the second quarter on a 39-yard touchdown pass from Jim Marinos to Bob Cummings, and it looked as if the Bears might get that elusive Rose Bowl victory. After halftime, however, the Wolverines dominated the action and with only 5:37 left in the game, Michigan took its first lead. Moments later they added a second touchdown to secure a 14-6 win. Although Pappy was never able to lead California to a Rose Bowl victory, the Golden Bears compiled a 53-9-1 record under coach Waldorf from 194752. Even after the Bears lost to Michigan in 1951, California was ranked as high as the fourth best team in the nation in the final polls (No. 4 UPI, No. 5 AP), making it three straight seasons that the Bears had finished among the top five teams in the country. California 0 6 0 0 - 6 Michigan 0 0 0 14 - 14 Cal Michigan First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 12 (11-1-0) 17 (8-8-1) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 51-175 39-145 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 4-8-0 15-21-2 Net Yards Passing 69 146 Total Offense Plays 59 60 Total Offense Yards 244 291
JANUARY 1, 1959
JANUARY 2, 1950 17 14
The Golden Bears entered the 1950 Rose Bowl with a perfect 10-0 regular season record and what many considered to be the West Coast’s finest postWorld War II team. Under coach Pappy Waldorf, the 1949 Bears were an even more dominant team than the previous year’s Rose Bowl team. Cal scored an average of over 30 points per contest while only allowing slightly over 11 points per game in the regular season. The Bears had built a 7-0 halftime lead on a seven-yard run by Jim Monachino, but Ohio State scored 14 unanswered points to open a 14-7 lead at the end of the third quarter. Monachino stunned the Buckeyes early in the final period when his 44-yard touchdown run tied the score at 14-14, but the Bears were to be denied once again. A bad punt by Bob Celeri gave Ohio State the ball deep in California territory late in the game and Ohio State’s Jim Hague kicked a 17-yard game-winning field goal with 1:57 left in the contest. The Bears had managed to lose two consecutive Rose Bowls, but if it was any consolation, the final Associated Press Poll ranked the Golden Bears third in the country. California 0 7 0 7 - 14 Ohio State 0 0 14 3 - 17 Cal Ohio State First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 12 (8-3-1) 19 (18-1-0) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 40-133 67-221 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 3-13-4 5-14-1 Net Yards Passing 106 34 Total Offense Plays 53 81 Total Offense Yards 239 255
14 6
ROSE BOWL
ROSE BOWL OHIO STATE CALIFORNIA
MICHIGAN CALIFORNIA
IOWA CALIFORNIA
38 12
California’s last Rose Bowl appearance was one that many Old Blues would like to forget. Behind quarterback Joe Kapp and halfback Jack Hart, the Bears defeated both USC and UCLA en route to a 7-3 regular season record and the Pacific Coast Conference title. Cal was the premier team on the West Coast and on January 1, 1959, the Bears faced Iowa in the Rose Bowl. Cal wasn't given much of a chance of upending Iowa and that played out true to form as the Hawkeyes recorded a convincing 38-12 victory. The Bears could do little to stop Iowa’s powerful rushing game, as the Hawkeyes broke the Rose Bowl record for rushing yardage (429) and total offense (516). Iowa’s Bob Jeter erased another Rose Bowl record with an 81-yard touchdown run and finished with 194 yards on only nine carries. Iowa had a commanding 20-0 halftime lead, then increased it to 32-6 after three quarters. Hart was able to score a pair of second half TDs on two runs, but it was hardly enough to turn the tide. California 0 0 6 6 - 12 Iowa 7 13 12 6 - 38 Cal Iowa First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 20 (15-5-0) 24 (18-5-1) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 53-214 55-429 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 9-20-2 9-14-0 Net Yards Passing 130 87 Total Offense Plays 73 69 Total Offense Yards 344 516
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
185
GARDEN STATE BOWL
CITRUS BOWL
DECEMBER 15, 1979 TEMPLE CALIFORNIA
JANUARY 1, 1992 28 17
California returned to post-season play for the first time in 20 years at the 1979 Garden State Bowl. Behind quarterback Rich Campbell, Cal featured a good offense and a solid defense that only yielded 15 points per contest in the regular season. The Bears won their first two and last two games of the year, all on the road, including impressive victories over Washington State and Stanford to bring home the Axe. Facing Temple in the Garden State Bowl was no easy task for the Bears, as California failed to answer the Owls' rushing attack and suffered a 28-17 defeat. The Owls took control of the game early, scoring on their first three possessions to open a 21-0 first quarter lead. Campbell put the Bears back in the game on a pair of second quarter touchdown passes to Matt Bouza and Joe Rose. The scored remained 21-14 Temple until the fourth quarter when Mick Luckhurst’s 34-yard field goal pulled California within four at 2117. That was as close as the Bears were able to come, however, as Temple scored another touchdown late in the game to secure the win. California 0 14 0 3 - 17 Temple 21 0 0 7 - 28 Cal Temple First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 15 (3-11-1) 21 (17-4-0) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 24-23 59-300 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 25-39-1 9-20-0 Net Yards Passing 241 81 Total Offense Plays 63 79 Total Offense Yards 264 381
CALIFORNIA CLEMSON
Led by Mike Pawlawski and Russell White, the Golden Bears put more points on the board than any California squad since the Wonder Team of 1920. The Bears brought a 9-2 record into their first Jan. 1 bowl game in 33 years, capping a season in which they scored a modern-day record 86 points against Pacific, won dramatic come-from-behind games at Arizona and UCLA, and scored more points than any team in history against USC, a 52-30 whipping at Memorial Stadium. California faced a very tough Clemson squad that had one of the strongest defenses in college football. The Bears, however, exploding for 17 first quarter points to leap to open a comfortable lead before the Tigers knew what hit them. Among the first quarter highlights was a 72-yard punt return for a touchdown by Brian Treggs that just about crushed any hope Clemson had of a comeback victory, as a ferocious Bear defense kept the Tigers at bay for the rest of the afternoon. White rushed for a 103 yards on 22 carries against a run defense that had not allowed a 100-yard runner in nearly four years, and the Golden Bears proved to a national television audience that they were indeed one of the elite Top 10 teams in the nation. California 17 10 10 0 - 37 Clemson 3 7 3 0 - 13 Cal Clemson First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 22 (8-11-3) 19 (13-5-1) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 42-146 44-206 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 21-33-0 15-36-3 Net Yards Passing 230 123 Total Offense Plays 75 80 Total Offense Yards 376 329
COPPER BOWL
ALAMO BOWL
DECEMBER 31, 1990 CALIFORNIA WYOMING
DECEMBER 31, 1993
17 15
The 1990 Golden Bears surprised the college football world by refuting predictions that they would be a last place team, capturing a 6-4-1 record and finishing in the top half of the conference for the first time since 1979. Perhaps most memorable in the regular season, California put an end to “The Streak” by beating UCLA at Memorial Stadium and making a late rally to tie USC in Los Angeles. Under coach Bruce Snyder, the Bears awakened from their hibernation of the 1980s and were hungry for their first bowl victory in more than half a century. The Bears offense, which was very potent during the regular season, had its poorest showing of the season, netting only 261 total yards. Fortunately, California’s defense rose to the occasion to yield a season-low 15 points. Quarterback Mike Pawlawski fired a 25-yard touchdown pass to Brian Treggs in the second quarter to give the Bears a lead they would never relinquish. Robbie Keen nailed a 46-yard field goal in the third quarter, and fullback Greg Zomalt bulled into the end zone from four yards out early in the fourth as the Bears built a 17-9 advantage. In the final minutes of the game, the Bears had to hold off a Cowboy rally that included a 70-yard punt return for a touchdown. However, California stuffed the two-point conversion attempt to seal the victory. California 0 7 3 7 - 17 Wyoming 0 3 0 12 - 15 Cal Wyoming First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 14 (5-9-0) 18 (7-10-1) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 46-89 32-129 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 15-26-1 20-39-2 Net Yards Passing 172 226 Total Offense Plays 72 71 Total Offense Yards 261 355
186
37 13
CALIFORNIA IOWA
37 3
Riding a roller coaster of a regular season that began with five straight wins only to be followed by four consecutive losses and then three more victories, California received a bid to the inaugural Alamo Bowl in San Antonio, Texas. The Bears scored on four of their first five possessions and completely shut down the Iowa offensive attack, limiting the Hawkeyes to just 90 yards of total offense in the 37-3 victory. After three Doug Brien field goals gave Cal a 9-0 lead 20 minutes into the contest, quarterback Dave Barr hit Mike Caldwell for a six-yard score. Linebacker Jerrott Willard followed by picking off a pass and rumbling 61 yards for the touchdown as time ran out in the first half to give Cal a 23-0 margin heading to the locker room. Barr, who passed for two more scores in the second half to Iheanyi Uwaezuoke and Brian Remington, finished the game 21-of-28 for 266 yards, while Lindsey Chapman led the rushing attack with 89 yards. As a team, the Bears ended the contest with an impressive time of possession advantage of 43:14 to 16:46. The victory lifted Cal into the final national polls (No. 24 Coaches/No. 25 AP). California 6 17 7 7 - 37 Iowa 0 0 3 0 - 3 Cal Iowa First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 28 (14-13-1) 5 (2-3-0) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 55-179 21-20 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 21-28-0 6-17-1 Net Yards Passing 266 70 Total Offense Plays 83 38 Total Offense Yards 445 90
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
ALOHA BOWL
HOLIDAY BOWL
DECEMBER 25, 1996
DECEMBER 30, 2004
NAVY CALIFORNIA
42 38
In a game that followed a pattern established throughout the season, Cal provided plenty of offensive fireworks, but couldn't hold on in a 42-38 loss to Navy at the Aloha Bowl. Cal seemed to have the game well in hand with a 10-point lead late in the contest, but Navy rallied for a pair of touchdowns in the final eight minutes. The game got off to a bang when Cal's Deltha O’Neal returned the opening kickoff 100 yards for a score. Then the Bears settled into their offense, seeming to score at will in the first half, putting together drives of 81, 73, 35 and 61 yards en route to taking a 35-28 halftime lead. Quarterback Pat Barnes threw for three scores, two to wideout Bobby Shaw and one to tight end Sean Bullard, and O’Neal added a 31-yard TD scamper. However, Cal could manage only a 41-yard Ryan Longwell field goal in the second half, before Navy put on its late rush that culminated on a 10-yard game-winning TD run by backup QB Ben Fay with 1:41 left in the contest. Navy 7 21 0 14 - 42 California 13 22 3 0 - 38 Cal Navy First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 24 (7-17-0) 25 (12-12-1) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 38-121 50-251 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 27-38-0 14-21-1 Net Yards Passing 313 395 Total Offense Plays 76 71 Total Offense Yards 434 646
INSIGHT BOWL DECEMBER 26, 2003 CALIFORNIA VIRGINIA TECH
52 49
After 98 points and 1,081 yards of offense, the Insight Bowl came down to a 35-yard field goal try, and Tyler Fredrickson made the final kick of his Cal career as time expired to give the Bears a 52-49 victory over Virginia Tech. Cal’s Aaron Rodgers flirted with 400 yards passing in an aerial duel that saw both teams rally from 14-point deficits. Rodgers was 27-of-35 passing for 394 yards and two TDs. He also ran for two scores and was named the game’s offensive MVP. Chase Lyman, starting in place of injured wide receiver Geoff McArthur, caught five passes for a Cal bowl-record 149 yards, including a 33-yarder from Rodgers for a touchdown. Rodgers, who was 15-for-17 for 245 yards in the second half, scored on an eight-yard option play to put Cal ahead 42-28 with 48 seconds left in the third quarter. Virginia Tech came back as DeAngelo Hall reversed his field for a 52-yard punt return TD that tied the game at 49-49 with 3:11 remaining. The winning drive came after Virginia Tech's subsequent kickoff went out of bounds, giving Cal the ball on the 35. Rodgers completed three passes to the Hokie 20-yard line, and a five-yard run by J.J. Arrington set up Fredrickson’s winning field goal on the game’s final play. California 7 14 21 10 - 52 Virginia Tech 21 7 0 21 - 49 Cal Virginia Tech First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 27 (9-17-1) 27 (8-18-1) Rushing (Att-Net Yds.) 41-136 26-153 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 27-35-0 24-36-0 Net Yards Passing 394 398 Total Offense Plays 76 62 Total Offense Yards 530 551
TEXAS TECH CALIFORNIA
45 31
Perhaps pining for a Rose Bowl bid that was snatched away by voters in the final week, Cal came up against the vaunted Texas Tech aerial attack led by Sonny Cumbie and fell, 45-31, in the Pacific Life Holiday Bowl. Cumbie threw for a career-high 520 yards and three touchdowns, as 21st-ranked Texas Tech upended the Golden Bears. Cal’s J.J. Arrington became just the third running back in Pac-10 history and the first for California to rush for 2,000 yards in a season when he reached the milestone against the Red Raiders. The senior carried 25 times for 173 yards against Tech to finish the year with a school-record 2,018 yards. His two-yard run in the first quarter was his 15th rushing touchdown of the year, breaking Cal’s season record that has later been tied by Justin Forsett (2007) and Jahvid Best (2008). Tech had four scoring drives that took under two minutes each. Trailing 14-7 after the first quarter, the Red Raiders scored 24 straight points and held a commanding 31-14 lead by early in the third quarter. Cal quarterback Aaron Rodgers threw an 11-yard TD pass to Garrett Cross and scored on a 1-yard sneak, both in the final quarter. Texas Tech 7 17 14 7 - 45 California 14 0 3 14 - 31 Texas Tech Cal First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 30 (8-18-4) 27 (11-15-1) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 21-77 39-221 Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 39-60-0 24-42-1 Net Yards Passing 520 246 Total Offense Plays 81 81 Total Offense Yards 597 467
LAS VEGAS BOWL DECEMBER 22, 2005 CALIFORNIA BYU
35 28
Marshawn Lynch rushed for career highs of 194 yards and three touchdowns to win the game's MVP award, and DeSean Jackson caught two scoring passes before Cal’s defense held off BYU for a 3528 victory. Junior Steve Levy passed for 228 yards in his second career start for the Bears, who held off BYU’s fourth-quarter comeback in a high-octane game that featured 915 total yards. Cal took a 35-14 lead into the final quarter after Lynch’s 35-yard scoring run and Jackson’s exceptional 22-yard diving TD catch in the third. But BYU quarterback John Beck responded with scoring passes to Jonny Harline and Todd Watkins, whose nine-yard grab with 5:35 left cut Cal’s lead to the final seven-point margin. The Bears missed a 50-yard field goal with 2:20 to play in the fourth, but the Cougars moved just seven yards before Beck’s arm was hit by Cal lineman Phillip Mbakogu on the ensuing series. Daymeion Hughes intercepted the wobbling pass to seal the victory. The Bears’ stars were the difference. Jackson scored on a 42-yard romp through the BYU secondary three seconds before halftime, while Lynch had scoring runs of 3, 23 and 35 yards along with a handful of jaw-dropping second-effort rushes. His 194 yards rushing and three touchdowns on the ground also were Cal bowl records. BYU 0 14 0 14 - 28 California 7 14 14 0 - 35 BYU Cal First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 27 (6-18-3) 26 (16-7-3) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 27-94 43-241 Passes (Comp-Att-Int) 35-53-2 16-23-0 Net Yards Passing 352 228 Total Offense Plays 80 66 Total Offense Yards 446 469
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HOLIDAY BOWL
EMERALD BOWL
DECEMBER 28, 2006 CALIFORNIA TEXAS A&M
DECEMBER 27, 2008 45 10
California posted its largest margin of victory in its bowl history with a 45-10 win over Texas A&M. In his final game in a Golden Bear uniform, Marshawn Lynch rushed for 111 yards and two touchdowns to earn the game’s co-offensive MVP honors. Justin Forsett was the game’s leading rusher with 124 yards, and also found the end zone in the fourth quarter on an eight-yard dash. Quarterback Nate Longshore completed 19-of-24 passes for 235 yards and a touchdown, en route to co-offensive MVP honors. Longshore also scored a touchdown on the ground in the first quarter to even the score at 7-7. Not to be overshadowed by the offense, linebacker Desmond Bishop recorded a game-high 12 tackles to earn the game's Defensive MVP honors. The Cal defensive unit was spectacular, allowing just 10 points, including a shutout in the second half. San Diego native Mickey Pimentel recorded seven tackles, while Eddie Young intercepted a pass (his first career INT) in the fourth quarter to highlight the other defensive notables. Texas A&M 7 3 0 0 - 10 California 7 7 14 17 - 45 Texas A&M Cal First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 21 (9-11-1) 22 (11-11-0) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 38-163 32-241 Passes (Comp-Att-Int) 18-29-1 19-24-1 Net Yards Passing 186 235 Total Offense Plays 67 56 Total Offense Yards 349 476
ARMED FORCES BOWL DECEMBER 31, 2007 CALIFORNIA AIR FORCE
17 24
California played its first bowl game ever in the Bay Area and made its hometown fans happy with a 24-17 victory over Miami, Fla. Cal jumped out to an early 14-0 first quarter lead on a pair of Jahvid Best touchdown runs but Miami eventually came back to tie the contest at 17-17 in the fourth quarter. The game remained tied until late in regulation when Nate Longshore connected with Anthony Miller on a two-yard scoring strike with 2:37 to go. The winning touchdown was set up moments earlier when Zack Follett forced a fumble deep in Hurricane territory and Cameron Jordan returned it to the Miami two-yard line. Miami was able to put together eight plays on an ensuing drive but time ran out on the Hurricanes after reaching the Bears' 37-yard line. Best capped a tremendous season for Cal by rushing for an Emerald Bowl record 186 yards and two touchdowns, marking his fourth consecutive 100-yard rushing game and eighth of the season. The Golden Bears also set several other school bowl records, including the team's 10.0 tackles for loss, Follett's bowl-record-tying 4.0 tackles and 2.0 sacks, a 74-yard first quarter passing play between Longshore and Verran Tucker, and Jordan's seven-yard fumble return. Miami, Fla. 0 7 7 3 - 17 California 14 0 3 7 - 24 Miami, Fla. Cal First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 17 (5-11-1) 11 (9-2-0) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 32-119 30-217 Passes (Comp-Att-Int) 25-41-1 10-21-0 Net Yards Passing 194 121 Total Offense Plays 73 51 Total Offense Yards 313 338
42 36
California scored its largest comeback victory in a bowl game with a 42-36 win over Air Force. The Falcons’ crisp option offense kept the Golden Bears guessing through the first 20 minutes as Air Force scored on two drives, then pushed in another seven points after a Bear miscue on a kickoff. However, with Cal backup quarterback Kevin Riley stepping in under center, the Cal offense came to life. The freshman signal-caller connected with DeSean Jackson for a 40-yard score and found fellow standout receivers Lavelle Hawkins and Robert Jordan for touchdowns to pull the Bears within three, 24-21, midway through the third quarter. Cal ran a relentless ground attack behind tailback Justin Forsett, who scored a pair of TDs before Riley put the game away with a nifty option run for a 42-30 advantage. Riley earned MVP honors by connecting on 16-of-19 passes for 269 yards and three TDs. Forsett tallied 140 yards rushing and Thomas DeCoud paced the defense with 10 tackles. Jordan caught six catches for 148 yards. California 0 14 14 14 - 42 Air Force 7 14 6 9 - 36 Cal Air Force First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 26 (11-14-1) 24 (18-5-1) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 34-202 61-312 Passes (Com-Att-Int) 21-27-0 9-20-0 Net Yards Passing 305 113 Total Offense Plays 61 81 Total Offense Yards 507 425
188
MIAMI, FLA. CALIFORNIA
POINSETTIA BOWL DECEMBER 23, 2009 UTAH CALIFORNIA
37 27
The Golden Bears jumped out to a two-touchdown lead but could not prevail as Utah’s Jordan Wynn threw for a career-high 338 yards and three touchdowns to rally the Utes to a 37-27 victory over California in the Poinsettia Bowl. The Bears, in a bowl game for the school-record seventh straight year, had their four-game postseason winning streak snapped. The Utes scored 27 straight points to win their ninth straight bowl game, the longest streak in the country and tied for the second-longest ever following the 2009 season. Shane Vereen, who scored twice, became the seventh Cal back to gain more than 100 yards in a bowl, finishing with 122 yards on 20 carries. Vereen started the scoring with a 36-yard touchdown run and Eddie Young intercepted Wynn on the first play of Utah's next drive, returning it 31 yards for a score. But Utah's defense shut down Cal while the Utes offense on its last four possessions of the first half. Cal finally scored again on a 1-yard run by Vereen with 39 seconds left in the third quarter to put the Bears within six at 27-21 before Utah kicked a 25-yard field goal to pull away. Utah 7 17 3 10 - 37 California 14 0 7 6 - 27 Utah Cal First Downs (Rush-Pass-Pen) 20 (6-13-1) 17 (6-10-1) Net Yards Rushing (Att-Yards) 35-51 28-96 Passes (Com-Att-Int) 26-37-1 20-36-2 Net Yards Passing 338 214 Total Offense Plays 72 64 Total Offense Yards 389 310
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
BOWL HISTORY & RECORDS TEAM RECORDS
ALL-TIME BOWL RECORD (10-9-1)
CALIFORNIA Points: 52 vs. Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl First Downs: 28 vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl Rushing Attempts: 55 vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl Rushing Yards: 244 vs. Ohio State, 1921 Rose Bowl Rushing Touchdowns: 5 vs. Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl 5 vs. Texas A&M, 2006 Holiday Bowl Pass Attempts: 42 vs. Texas Tech, 2004 Holiday Bowl Pass Completions: 27 vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl 27 vs. Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl Completion Percentage: 79.2% (19-24) vs. Texas A&M, 2006 Holiday Bowl Passing Yards: 394 vs. Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl Passing Touchdowns: 3 vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl 3 vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl 3 vs. Air Force, 2007 Armed Forces Bowl Had Intercepted: 4 vs. Ohio State, 1950 Rose Bowl 4 vs. Northwestern, 1949 Rose Bowl Total Offense Plays: 83 vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl Total Offense Yards: 530 vs. Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl Fumbles Lost: 2, Many times. Last time: vs. Air Force, 2007 Armed Forces Bowl Penalties: 9 vs. Ohio State, 1950 Rose Bowl 9 vs. BYU, 2005 Las Vegas Bowl Penalty Yards: 85 vs. BYU, 2005 Las Vegas Bowl Sacks By: 7.0 vs. Wyoming, 1990 Copper Bowl Tackles For Loss: 10.0, vs. Miami, Fla., 2008 Emerald Bowl
Alamo Bowl (San Antonio, TX): 1-0 December 31, 1993 – California 37, Iowa 3 Aloha Bowl (Honolulu, HI): 0-1 December 25, 1996 – Navy 42, California 38 Armed Forces Bowl (Fort Worth, TX): 1-0 December 31, 2007 – California 42, Air Force 36 Citrus Bowl (Orlando, FL): 1-0 January 1, 1992 – California 37, Clemson 13 Copper Bowl (Tucson, AZ): 1-0 December 31, 1990 – California 17, Wyoming 15 Emerald Bowl (San Francisco, CA): 1-0 December 27, 2008 – California 24, Miami, Fla. 17 Garden State Bowl (East Rutherford, NJ): 0-1 December 15, 1979 – Temple 28, California 17 Holiday Bowl (San Diego, CA): 1-1 December 30, 2004 – Texas Tech 45, California 31 December 28, 2006 – California 45, Texas A&M 10 Insight Bowl (Phoenix, AZ): 1-0 December 26, 2003 – California 52, Virginia Tech 49 Las Vegas Bowl (Las Vegas, NV): 1-0 December 22, 2005 – California 35, BYU 28 Poinsettia Bowl (San Diego, CA): 0-1-0 December 23, 2009 – Utah 37, California 27 Rose Bowl (Pasadena, CA): 2-5-1 January 1, 1921 – California 28, Ohio State 0 January 1, 1922 – California 0, Washington & Jefferson 0 January 1, 1929 – Georgia Tech 8, California 7 January 1, 1938 – California 13, Alabama 0 January 1, 1949 – Northwestern 20, California 14 January 2, 1950 – Ohio State 17, California 14 January 1, 1951 – Michigan 14, California 6 January 1, 1959 – Iowa 38, California 12
OPPONENT Points: 49, Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl First Downs: 30, Texas Tech, 2004 Holiday Bowl Rushing Attempts: 67, Ohio State, 1950 Rose Bowl Rushing Yards: 429, Iowa, 1959 Rose Bowl Rushing Touchdowns: 6, Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl Pass Attempts: 60, Texas Tech, 2004 Holiday Bowl Pass Completions: 39, Texas Tech, 2004 Holiday Bowl Completion Percentage: 71.4% (15-21), Michigan, 1951 Rose Bowl Passing Yards: 520, Texas Tech, 2004 Holiday Bowl Passing Touchdowns: 4, Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl Had Intercepted: 3, Clemson, 1992 Citrus Bowl Total Offense Plays: 81, Ohio State, 1950 Rose Bowl 81, Texas Tech, 2004 Holiday Bowl
Total Offense Yards: 646, Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl Fumbles Lost: 5, Georgia Tech, 1929 Rose Bowl Penalties: 12, BYU, 2005 Las Vegas Bowl Penalty Yards: 103, BYU, 2005 Las Vegas Bowl Sacks By: 5.0, Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl Tackles For Loss: 11.0, Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl
BOWL RECORD VS. OPPONENT OPPONENT W-L-T Alabama 1-0-0 Air Force 1-0-0 BYU 1-0-0 Clemson 1-0-0 Georgia Tech 0-1-0 Iowa 1-1-0 Miami, Fla. 1-0-0 Michigan 0-1-0 Navy 0-1-0 Northwestern 0-1-0 Ohio State 1-1-0 Temple 0-1-0 Texas A&M 1-0-0 Texas Tech 0-1-0 Utah 0-1-0 Virginia Tech 1-0-0 Washington & Jefferson 0-0-1 Wyoming 1-0-0
PF 13 42 35 37 7 49 24 6 38 14 42 17 45 31 37 52 0 17
PA 0 36 28 13 8 41 17 14 42 20 17 28 10 45 27 49 0 15
FIRST/LAST 1938 Rose 2007 Armed Forces 2005 Las Vegas 1992 Citrus 1929 Rose 1959 Rose/1993 Alamo 2008 Emerald 1951 Rose 1996 Aloha 1949 Rose 1921 Rose/1950 Rose 1979 Garden State 2006 Holiday 2004 Holiday 2009 Poinsettia 2003 Insight 1922 Rose 1990 Copper
NOTES Win secures most recent national title for Cal Cal’s biggest comeback ever in a bowl game after trailing 21-0 Cal able to hold off BYU fourth quarter rally First New Year’s Day bowl for Cal since 1959 Cal scores fourth quarter TD but rally falls short Cal redeems Rose Bowl loss in Alamo Bowl 34 years earlier Cal wins school record fourth straight bowl game Cal drops third straight Rose Bowl Two fourth quarter touchdowns give Midshipmen comeback win First of school record three straight Rose Bowl teams Bears finish third in final AP poll despite loss Cal’s first bowl game in 20 years is played in Giants Stadium Largest margin of victory in Cal bowl history J.J. Arrington becomes first Cal RB to post 2,000-yard season Bears make seventh straight bowl appearance Tyler Fredrickson caps offensive fireworks with game-winning FG Teams play to a 0-0 tie in heavy rains Bears snap five-game bowl skid, win first bowl game since 1938
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BOWL HISTORY & RECORDS (continued)
Marshawn Lynch
Justin Forsett
Jerrott Willard
INDIVIDUAL RECORDS RUSHING Attempts: 34, Vic Bottari vs. Alabama, 1938 Rose Bowl Yards: 194, Marshawn Lynch vs. BYU, 2005 Pioneer PureVision Las Vegas Touchdowns: 3, Marshawn Lynch vs. BYU, 2005 Pioneer PureVision Las Vegas Bowl Longest Rush: 67, Jackie Jensen vs. Northwestern, 1949 Rose Bowl
PASSING Attempts: 42, Aaron Rodgers vs. Texas Tech, 2004 Holiday Bowl Completions: 27, Pat Barnes vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl 27, Aaron Rodgers vs. Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl Yards: 394, Aaron Rodgers vs. Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl Touchdowns: 3, Pat Barnes vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl 3, Dave Barr vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl Interceptions: 3, Bob Celeri vs. Ohio State, 1950 Rose Bowl Completion Percentage: 84.2% (16-19), Kevin Riley vs. Air Force, 2007 Armed Forces Bowl Longest Pass: 74, Nate Longshore to Verran Tucker vs. Miami, Fla., 2008 Emerald Bowl
RECEIVING Receptions: 9, Tony Gonzalez vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl Yards: 149, Chase Lyman vs. Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl Touchdowns: 2, Bobby Shaw vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl 2, DeSean Jackson vs. BYU, 2005 Las Vegas Bowl Longest Reception: 74, Verran Tucker from Nate Longshore vs. Miami, Fla., 2008 Emerald Bowl
SCORING Points: 18, Marshawn Lynch vs. BYU, 2005 Las Vegas Bowl Touchdowns: 3, Marshawn Lynch vs. BYU, 2005 Pioneer PureVision Las Vegas Bowl Kicking Points: 13, Doug Brien vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl 13, Doug Brien vs. Clemson, 1992 Citrus Bowl Extra Points: 7, Tyler Fredrickson vs. Virginia Tech, 2003 Insight Bowl Field Goals: 3, Doug Brien vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl 3, Doug Brien vs. Clemson, 1992 Citrus Bowl Field Goal Attempts: 3, Doug Brien vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl 3, Doug Brien vs. Clemson, 1992 Citrus Bowl Longest Field Goal: 46, Robbie Keen vs. Wyoming, 1990 Copper Bowl
PUNTING Punts: 13, Archie Nesbit vs. Washington & Jefferson, 1922 Rose Bowl Punting Yards: 516, Archie Nesbit vs. Washington & Jefferson, 1922 Rose Bowl
190
Punting Average: 52.8, Ryan Longwell vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl Longest Punt: 72, Ryan Longwell vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl
PUNT RETURNS Returns: 5, Brian Treggs vs. Clemson, 1992 Citrus Bowl Return Yards: 124, Brian Treggs vs. Clemson, 1992 Citrus Bowl Longest Return: 72, Brian Treggs vs. Clemson, 1992 Citrus Bowl Punt Return Touchdowns: 1, Brian Treggs vs. Clemson, 1992 Citrus Bowl
KICKOFF RETURNS Returns: 6, Deltha O’Neal vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl 6, Marshawn Lynch vs. Texas Tech, 2004 Holiday Bowl 6, Isi Sofele vs. Utah, 2009 Poinsettia Bowl Return Yards: 186, Deltha O’Neal vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl Longest Return: 100, Deltha O’Neal vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl Kickoff Return Touchdowns: 1, Deltha O’Neal vs. Navy, 1996 Aloha Bowl (100 yards)
PASSES DEFENDED Interceptions: 1, Many times. Last by Eddie Young vs. Utah, 2009 Poinsettia Bowl Interception Return Yards: 61, Jerrott Willard vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl Longest Interception Return: 61, Jerrott Willard vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl Interception Return Touchdowns: 1, Jerrott Willard vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl (61 yards) 1, Eddie Young vs. Utah, 2009 Poinsettia Bowl (31 yards) Passes Broken Up: 3, Harrison Smith vs. Texas Tech, 2004 Holiday Bowl
FUMBLES Recoveries: 1, Many times. Last by Cameron Jordan vs. Miami, Fla., 2008 Emerald Bowl Fumble Return Yards: 7, Cameron Jordan vs. Miami, Fla., 2008 Emerald Bowl Longest Return: 7, Cameron Jordan vs. Miami, Fla., 2008 Emerald Bowl Fumble Return Touchdowns: 0
TACKLES Total Tackles: 15, Greg Bracelin vs. Temple, 1979 Garden State Bowl Tackles for Loss: 4.0, Jerrott Willard vs. Iowa, 1993 Alamo Bowl 4.0, Zack Follett vs. Miami, Fla., 2008 Emerald Bowl Sacks: 2.0, Many times. Last by Zack Follett vs. Miami, Fla., 2008 Emerald Bowl
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
NATIONAL HONORS CFPA ELITE PERFORMERS 2009 2009 2009 2009
Jahvid Best, RB Jeremy Ross, PR Shane Vereen, TB Eddie Young, Bowl Game LB
WILLIAM V. CAMPBELL TROPHY 2008
Alex Mack, C
2006
Daymeion Hughes, DB
2006
DeSean Jackson, RET
LOTT TROPHY RANDY MOSS AWARD Jeff Tedford with 2008 William V. Campbell Trophy winner Alex Mack
RIVALS RECRUITER OF THE YEAR 2009
Tosh Lupoi, Defensive Line Coach
ALL-AMERICANS (FIRST-TEAM ONLY)
1921 1922 1924 1928 1929 1930 1931 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1940 1941 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1958 1964 1968 1971 1974 1975
Brick Muller, E Brick Muller, E Babe Horrell, C Irv Phillips, E Roy Riegels, C Bert Schwarz, G Ted Beckett, G Rusty Gill, HB Arleigh Williams, HB Lawrence Lutz, T Bob Herwig, C Sam Chapman, HB Bob Herwig, C John Meek, QB Perry Schwartz, E Vard Stockton, G Vic Bottari, HB Bob Reinhard, T Bob Reinhard, T Rod Franz, G Rod Franz, G Jackie Jensen, FB Jim Turner, T Bob Celeri, QB Rod Franz, G Forrest Klein, G Jim Turner, T Jim Monachino, RB Les Richter, G Carl Van Heuit, DB Les Richter, G John Olszewski, HB Matt Hazeltine, C Matt Hazeltine, C Paul Larson, QB Sam Williams, QB Joe Kapp, QB Craig Morton, QB Ed White, NG Sherman White, DT Steve Bartkowski, QB Chris Mackie, OG Chuck Muncie, RB Steve Rivera, WR
WC WC WC A-A B, NANA, NYS, UPI AP, CP AP, NYS A-A B, GR, SFC AFP, NYS INS A-A B, AP, NANA AFCA, UN, UPI A-A B, AP, GR, INS, NYS, UPI COL COL, NYS A-A B INS, UPI A-A B, CP, GR, INS, ISWA, HW, NW GR GR A-A B, AFCA, GR AP, NYS A-A B, GR, INS, NEA, NYDN INS FD AP, INS, LOOK, NYS, UPI NEA INS LOOK AP, INS, LOOK, SN, UPI HAF, LOOK AP, INS, LOOK, SN, UPI INS, NEA, FC INS, NBC, LOOK INS FW, FN, LOOK Academic FW, TIME AFCA, FN, FW, NEA, SN AFCA, AP, FW AP, FW, NEA, SN, UPI Consensus FW Consensus Consensus
1976 1982 1983 1987 1989 1991 1992 1993 1995 1996 1997 1999 2000 2004 2006 2007 2008
Ted Albrecht, OT Joe Roth, QB Harvey Salem, OT David Lewis, TE Ron Rivera, LB Scott Tabor, P Robbie Keen, P Troy Auzenne, OT Russell White, RB Sean Dawkins, WR Todd Steussie, OT Duane Clemons, LB Regan Upshaw, DE Tony Gonzalez, TE Bobby Shaw, WR Deltha Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Neal, CB/RET Andre Carter, DE Nick Harris, P J.J. Arrington, TB Marvin Philip, C Ryan Riddle, DE Daymeion Hughes, CB DeSean Jackson, PR Marshawn Lynch, RB DeSean Jackson, WR Alex Mack, C Alex Mack, C
AP SN SN GNS Consensus SN AFCA AFCA FW, WC Consensus AFCA FN PFW FN, SN SN Consensus Consensus Consensus Consensus SI SI, SN Consensus Consensus FW AFCA SN R
LEGEND A-A B AFCA AFP AP COL CP FD FN FW GNS GR HAF HW INS ISWA
All-America Board American Football Coaches Association American Football Players Associated Press Colliers Central Press Football Digest Football News Football Writers Gannett News Service Grantland Rice Helms Athletic Foundation Hearst Writers International News Service Intercollegiate Sports Writers Association
LOOK NANA NBC NEA NYDN NYS NW PFW R SI SFC SN TIME UPI WC
Look Magazine National American Newspaper Alliance National Broadcasting Company Newspaper Enterprises Association New York Daily News New York Sun Newsweek Magazine Pro Football Weekly Rivals Sports Illustrated San Francisco Chronicle Sporting News Time Magazine United Press International Walter Camp
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CONFERENCE/REGIONAL HONORS FIRST-TEAM ALL-CONFERENCE 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1956
192
Fred Coltrin, T Irv Phillips, E Stephen Bancroft, T Ben Lom, HB Irv Phillips, E Ben Lom, HB Robert Norton, E Roy Riegels, C Bert Schwarz, G Ted Beckett, G Rusty Gill, HB Ralph Stone, E Hank Schaldach, HB Larry Lutz, T Arleigh Williams, HB Floyd Blower, HB Jack Brittingham, E Bob Herwig, C Larry Lutz, T Bob Herwig, C Vic Bottari, HB Sam Chapman, HB Bob Herwig, C John Meek, QB Perry Schwartz, E Vard Stockton, G Dave Anderson, FB Vic Bottari, HB Dave De Varona, T Willard Dolman, E Lee Artoe, T Bob Reinhard, T Bob Reinhard, T John Ferguson, E Art Honneger, HB Williams Hachten, G Roger Harding, C Wendell Beard, T Rod Franz, G John Graves, FB Jon Baker, LB Rod Franz, G Jack Jensen, FB Jack Swaner, HB Jim Turner, T Frank Van Deren, E Bob Celeri, QB Jim Cullom, T Rod Franz, G Jim Turner, T Ed Bartlett, DE Bob Karpe, T Jim Minahen, E Jim Monachino, HB Les Richter, C Pete Schabarum, FB Carl Van Heuit, DB Bob Karpe, T Charles Harris, C Dick Lemmon, DB Les Richter, C John Olszewski, FB Matt Hazeltine, C Jim Hanifan, E Paul Larson, QB Matt Hazeltine, C Don Gilkey, G
1958 1959 1960 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1974 1975 1976 1977 1980 1981 1982 1983 1985 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991
Jack Hart, HB Joe Kapp, QB Frank Sally, T George Pierovich, FB Stan Dzura, DT Craig Morton, QB Jack Schraub, SE John Garamendi, OG Wayne Stewart, DB Mike McCaffrey, DE Mike McCaffrey, DE Wayne Stewart, SE Ed White, DT Ken Wiedemann, DB Irby Augustine, DE Bob Richards, OT Phil Croyle, DT Bob Richards, OT Sherman White, DT Ray Youngblood, DB Steve Sweeney, FL Sherman White, DT Ray Youngblood, DB Bob Kampa, DT Steve Sweeney, FL Steve Bartkowski, QB Chuck Muncie, RB Steve Rivera, WR Ted Albrecht, OT Chuck Muncie, RB Steve Rivera, WR Ted Albrecht, OT Jim Breech, K Duane Williams, C Jim Breech, K Ralph DeLoach, DL George Freitas, TE Rich Dixon, LB Harvey Salem, OT Harvey Salem, OT Ron Rivera, LB Keith Kartz, OT Hardy Nickerson, LB Ken Harvey, LB Scott Tabor, P Robbie Keen, PK/P David Ortega, LB Russell White, RB Troy Auzenne, OT Doug Brien, PK
DeSean Jackson
Jackie Jensen 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Mike Pawlawski, QB Russell White, RB Chidi Ahanotu, DT Sean Dawkins, WR Todd Steussie, OT Eric Mahlum, C Todd Steussie, OT Jerrott Willard, LB Eric Zomalt, S Jerrott Willard, LB Duane Clemons, LB Regan Upshaw, DL Tarik Glenn, OT Tony Gonzalez, TE Ryan Longwell, P/PK Bobby Shaw, WR John McLaughlin, ST Bobby Shaw, WR Dameane Douglas, WR John McLaughlin, ST Sekou Sanyika, OLB John Welbourn, OT Andre Carter, DE Nick Harris, P Deltha O’Neal, CB/RET Sekou Sanyika, LB Jacob Waasdorp, DT Andre Carter, DE Nick Harris, P Tully Banta-Cain, DE LaShaun Ward, KOR Adimchinobe Echemandu, TB Donnie McCleskey, ROV Mark Wilson, OT J.J. Arrington, TB Matt Giordano, S Wendell Hunter, LB Geoff McArthur, WR Ryan O’Callaghan, OL Marvin Philip, C Ryan Riddle, DE Aaron Rodgers, QB Daymeion Hughes, DB Brandon Mebane, DL Ryan O’Callaghan, OL Marvin Philip, C Desmond Bishop, LB Daymeion Hughes, CB DeSean Jackson, WR/PR Marshawn Lynch, RB Alex Mack, OL Brandon Mebane, DT
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
2007 Jahvid Best, ST Justin Forsett, RB Alex Mack, OL 2008 Jahvid Best, RB Zack Follett, LB Alex Mack, OL Syd'Quan Thompson, DB 2009 Tyson Alualu, DT Bryan Anger, P Mike Mohamed, LB Mike Tepper, OT Syd'Quan Thompson, DB Note: All-Coast prior to 1947
PAC-10 COACH OF THE YEAR 1982 1990 2002 2004
Joe Kapp Bruce Snyder Jeff Tedford Jeff Tedford
PAC-10 PLAYER OF THE YEAR 1975 1983 1991 1999 2006
Chuck Muncie Ron Rivera (Co-Def.) Mike Pawlawski (Co-Off.) Deltha O’Neal (Def.) Daymeion Hughes (Def.) Marshawn Lynch (Off.)
MORRIS TROPHY Outstanding Pac-10 Lineman 1993 Todd Steussie (Offense) 2000 Andre Carter (Defense) 2005 Ryan O’Callaghan (Offense) 2007 Alex Mack (Offense) 2008 Alex Mack (Offense)
POP WARNER TROPHY Top Senior on West Coast 1958 Joe Kapp 1964 Craig Morton 1975 Chuck Muncie 1983 Ron Rivera 1999 Deltha O’Neal 2004 J.J. Arrington
CAL IN THE NFL CAL PLAYERS ACTIVE IN THE NFL (39) according to ESPN (July 15, 2010) Lorenzo Alexander – LB....................Washington *Tyson Alualu – DT........................... Jacksonville J.J. Arrington – RB...................................Denver Nnamdi Asomugha – CB........................ Oakland Tully Banta-Cain – LB..................... New England *Jahvid Best – RB.....................................Detroit David Binn – LS...................................San Diego Desmond Bishop – LB........................ Green Bay #Devin Bishop – LB..................................Denver Kyle Boller – QB..................................... Oakland Andre Carter – DE.............................Washington
* = 2010 NFL Draft # = 2010 Undrafted Free Agent Signee
Brian De La Puente – G............... San Francisco Thomas DeCoud – S................................ Atlanta Zack Follett – LB.......................................Detroit Justin Forsett – RB................................... Seattle Scott Fujita – LB.................................. Cleveland Mike Gibson – G....................................... Seattle Matt Giordano – S.................................... Atlanta Tony Gonzalez – TE................................. Atlanta Nick Harris – P...........................................Detroit Lavelle Hawkins – WR....................... Tennessee Daymeion Hughes – CB......................San Diego DeSean Jackson – WR....................Philadelphia #Brett Johnson – DB........................Philadelphia L.P. Ladouceur – LS.................................. Dallas Ryan Longwell – PK............................Minnesota Marshawn Lynch – RB............................. Buffalo Alex Mack – C..................................... Cleveland Brandon Mebane – DT............................. Seattle Cameron Morrah – TE.............................. Seattle Ryan O'Callaghan – OT................... Kansas City Aaron Rodgers – QB.......................... Green Bay Craig Stevens – TE............................ Tennessee Nick Sundberg – LS..........................Washington Will Ta'ufo'ou – FB.................................. Chicago #Mike Tepper – OT.................................... Dallas *Syd'Quan Thompson – DB.....................Denver #Verran Tucker – WR................................ Dallas Langston Walker – OT............................ Oakland
DeSean Jackson
CAL’S TOP NFL DRAFT PICKS FIRST ROUND (25)
SECOND ROUND (15)
1952 – Les Richter – LB (New York Yanks, 2) 1953 – John Olszewski – RB (Chicago Cards, 4) 1965 – Craig Morton – QB (Dallas, 6) 1972 – Sherman White – DE (Cincinnati, 2) 1975 – Steve Bartkowski – QB (Atlanta, 1) 1976 – Chuck Muncie – RB (New Orleans, 3) 1977 – Ted Albrecht – OL (Chicago, 15) 1981 – Rich Campbell – QB (Green Bay, 6) 1984 – David Lewis – TE (Detroit, 20) 1988 – Ken Harvey – LB (Phoenix, 12) 1993 – Sean Dawkins – WR (Indianapolis, 16) 1994 – Todd Steussie – OL (Minnesota, 19) 1996 – Regan Upshaw – DE (Tampa Bay, 12) Duane Clemons – LB (Minnesota, 16) 1997 – Tony Gonzalez – TE (Kansas City, 13) Tarik Glenn – OL (Indianapolis, 19) 2000 – Deltha O’Neal – CB (Denver, 15) 2001 – Andre Carter – DE (San Francisco, 7) 2003 – Kyle Boller – QB (Baltimore, 19) Nnamdi Asomugha – CB (Oakland, 31) 2005 – Aaron Rodgers – QB (Green Bay, 24) 2007 – Marshawn Lynch – RB (Buffalo, 12) 2009 – Alex Mack – OL (Cleveland, 21) 2010 – Tyson Alualu – DL (Jacksonville, 10) Jahvid Best – RB (Detroit, 30)
1951 – Pete Schabarum – HB (San Francisco, 17) 1958 – Proverb Jacobs – T (Philadelphia, 17) 1969 – Ed White – G/T (Minnesota, 39) 1977 – Wesley Walker – WR (NY Jets, 33) 1980 – Daryle Skaugstad – DT (Houston, 52) 1983 – Harvey Salem – DT (Houston, 30) 1984 – Ron Rivera – LB (Chicago, 44) 1989 – David Zawatson – OT (Chicago, 54) 1992 – Troy Auzenne – OT (Chicago, 49) 1994 – Eric Mahlum – C (Indianapolis, 32) 1996 – Je’Rod Cherry – DB (New Orleans, 40) 1998 – Jeremy Newberry – OL (San Francisco, 58) 2002 – Langston Walker – OT (Oakland, 53) 2005 – J.J. Arrington – RB (Arizona, 44) 2008 – DeSean Jackson – WR (Philadelphia, 49)
THIRD ROUND (13)
Tyson Alualu
1938 – Sam Chapman – HB (Washington, 24) 1953 – Don Johnson – HB (Philadelphia, 34) 1973 – Bob Kampa – DE (Buffalo, 77) 1983 – Reggie Camp – DE (Cleveland, 68) 1991 – James Richards – OL (Dallas, 64) 1993 – Russell White – RB (Los Angeles, 73) 1994 – Doug Brien – PK (San Francisco, 85) Eric Zomalt – S (Philadelphia, 103) 1999 – Marquis Smith – S (Cleveland, 76) 2007 – Brandon Mebane – DT (Seattle, 85) Daymeion Hughes – CB (Indianapolis, 95) 2008 – Craig Stevens – TE (Tennessee, 85) Thomas DeCoud – S (Atlanta, 98)
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CAL IN THE NFL (continued)
Nnamdi Asomugha
David Binn
Desmond Bishop
Listed below are 202 former California football players drafted or with experience on an AAFC, AFL or National Football League team according to NFL. com as of July 15, 2010 (2010 undrafted free agents are not included). Listed in parentheses is the first pro team and the round in which the player was drafted (example D-2). If an athlete was drafted by a team other than the first team he played with, this is indicated.
A AHANOTU, Chidi – DE (D-6) Tampa Bay 1993-2000, St. Louis 2001, Buffalo 2002, San Francisco 2003, Miami 2004, Tampa Bay 2004 ALBRECHT, Ted – OL (D-1) Chicago 1977-81 ALEXANDER, Lorenzo – DT (UFA) Baltimore 2006, Washington 2006-Present
BARR, Dave – QB (D-4 Philadelphia) St. Louis Rams 1995 BARTKOWSKI, Steve – QB (D-1) Atlanta 1975-85, Washington 1985, Los Angeles Rams 1986 BEACH, Fred – G (UFA) Los Angeles Buccaneers 1926 BEASLEY, John – TE (D-8) Minnesota 1967-73, New Orleans 1973-74
BOUZA, Matt – WR (UFA) San Francisco 1981, Baltimore 1982-83, Indianapolis 1984-89 BRACELIN, Greg – LB (D-9) Denver 1980, Oakland 1981, Baltimore 198283, Indianapolis 1984 BREECH, Jim – K (D-8 Detroit) Oakland 1978-79, Cincinnati 1980-92 BRIEN, Doug – PK (D-3) San Francisco 1994-95, New Orleans 19952000, Indianapolis 2001, Tampa Bay 2001, Minnesota 2002, New York Jets 2003-04, Chicago Bears 2005
ARRINGTON, J.J. – RB (D-2) Arizona 2005-08, Denver 2010-Present
BECK, Matt – LB (UFA) St. Louis 2000
ARTOE, Lee – T (D-11) Chicago Bears 1940-42, 1945, Los Angeles Dons (AAFC) 1946-47, Baltimore (AAFC) 1948
BEDFORD, Brian – WR (D-9 San Diego, 1989) BEEDE, Frank – C/G (UFA) Seattle 1996-2000
ASOMUGHA, Nnamdi – CB (D-1) Oakland 2003-Present
BERRY, Dan – HB (D-5) Philadelphia 1967
CALDWELL, Mike – WR (UFA) San Francisco 1995-96
AUZENNE, Troy – T (D-2) Chicago 1992-95, Indianapolis 1996
BESANA, Fred – QB (D-5) Buffalo 1977, New York Giants 1978
CAMP, Reggie – DE (D-3) Cleveland 1983-87, Atlanta 1988
BEST, JAHVID – RB (D-1) Detroit 2010-Present
CAMPBELL, Rich – QB (D-1) Green Bay 1981-84
BAILEY, Mark – RB (D-4) Kansas City 1977-78
BIEDERMANN, Leo – T (D-12) Cleveland 1978
BAKER, Jon – LB/G (D-7 Los Angeles) New York Giants 1949-52
BINN, David – LS (UFA) San Diego 1994-Present
CARTER, Andre – DE (D-1) San Francisco 2001-05, Washington 2006-Present
BANTA-CAIN, Tully – LB (D-7) New England 2003-06, 2009-Present, San Francisco 2007-08
BISHOP, Desmond – LB (D-6) Green Bay, 2007-Present
B
BARNES, Jeff – LB (D-5) Oakland 1977-81, Los Angeles Raiders 1982-87 BARNES, Pat – QB (D-4) Kansas City 1997, Oakland 1998, San Francisco 1999
194
BOLLER, Kyle – QB (D-1) Baltimore 2003-07, St. Louis 2009, Oakland 2010-Present BOOTH, Issac – CB (D-5) Cleveland 1994-95, Baltimore 1996
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CELERI, Bob – QB (D-10 San Francisco) New York Yanks 1951, Dallas 1952 CHERRY, Je’Rod – DB (D-2) New Orleans 1996-99, Philadelphia 2000, New England 2001-04 CLEMONS, Duane – LB (D-1) Minnesota 1996-99, Kansas City 2000-02, Cincinnati 2003-05
Tony Gonzalez
Justin Forsett
COLLONS, Ferric – DT (UFA) Los Angeles Raiders 1993, New England 1995-99 COOPER, Joe – K (UFA) Houston 1984, New York Giants 1986 CROW, Wayne – HB (D-8 Chicago Cards) Oakland 1960-61, Buffalo 1962-63 CROYLE, Phil – LB (D-7) Houston 1971-73, Buffalo 1973 CULLOM, Jim – G (D-17 Washington) New York Yanks 1951 CURTIS, Isaac – WR (D-1) Cincinnati 1973-84
D DAWKINS, Sean – WR (D-1) Indianapolis 1993-97, New Orleans (1998), Seattle 1999-2000, Jacksonville 2001 DeCOUD, Thomas – S (D-3) Atlanta 2008-Present De LA PUENTE, Brian – G (UFA) Kansas City 2008-09, San Francisco 2010-Present DeLOACH, Jerry – DL (UFA) Washington 2001, Houston 2002-05 DeLOACH, Ralph – DE (D-4 Dallas) New York Jets 1981 DEVINE, Kevin – CB (UFA) Jacksonville 1997-98, Minnesota 1999 DIXON, Rich – DE (UFA) Atlanta 1983
Scott Fujita
E
G
EATON, Lou – T (UFA) New York Giants 1945
GARDNER, Derrick – CB (UFA) Atlanta 1999
ECHEMANDU, Adimchinobe – RB (D-7) Cleveland 2004, Minnesota 2005, Oakland 2006-07, Houston 2007
GARNER, Dwight – RB (UFA) Washington 1986
EDDINGS, Floyd – WR (UFA) New York Giants 1982-83 EDWARDS, Herman – DB (UFA) Philadelphia 1977-85, Los Angeles Rams 1986, Atlanta 1986 EVANS, Jack – HB (UFA) Green Bay 1929
F FERRAGAMO, Vince – QB (D-4) LA Rams 1977-80, 1982-84, Buffalo 1985, Green Bay 1985-86 FETHERSTON, Jim – LB (UFA) San Diego 1968-69 FOLLETT, Zack – LB (D-7) Detroit 2009-Present
GILBERT, Gale – QB (UFA) Seattle 1985-86, Buffalo 1990-93, San Diego 1994-95 GIORDANO, Matt – S (D-4) Indianapolis 2005-Present GLENN, Tarik – T (D-1) Indianapolis 1997-2006 GOICH, Dan – DT (D-8 St. Louis) Detroit 1969-70, New Orleans 1971, New York Giants 1972-73, Denver 1974 GONZALEZ, Tony – TE (D-1) Kansas City 1997-2008, Atlanta 2009-Present GORDON, Steve – C (D-10) New England 1992-93, San Francisco 199798
H
FORSETT, Justin – RB (D-7) Seattle 2008, 2008-Present, Indianapolis 2008
HALL, Rhett – DT (D-6) Tampa Bay 1991-93, San Francisco 1994, Philadelphia 1995-98
FRANTZ, Jack – LB (D-16) Buffalo 1968
HARDY, John – CB (UFA) Chicago 1991
FUJITA, Scott – LB (D-5) Kansas City 2002-04, Dallas 2005, New Orleans 2006-09, Cleveland 2010-Present
HARDING, Roger – C (D-5) Cleveland 1945, Los Angeles Rams 1946, Philadelphia 1947, Detroit 1948, New York Bulldogs 1949, Green Bay 1949
DOUGLAS, Dameane – WR (D-4 Oakland) Philadelphia 1999-2002, Kansas City 2003
HARRIS, Nick – P (D-4 Denver) Cincinnati 2001-03, Detroit 2003-Present
DUREN, Clarence – CB (UFA) St. Louis 1973-76, San Diego 1977
HARVEY, Ken – LB (D-1) Phoenix 1988-93, Washington 1994-98 HAWKINS, Lavelle – WR (D-4) Tennessee 2008-Present
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CAL IN THE NFL (continued)
Ryan Longwell
Marshawn Lynch
HAZELTINE, Matt – LB (D-4) San Francisco 1955-68, New York Giants 1970 HENDRICKSON, Steve – LB (D-6) San Francisco 1989, Dallas 1989, San Diego 1990-94, Houston 1995 HICKMAN, Dallas – DE (D-9) Washington 1976-81, Baltimore 1981 HOLLOWAY, Stan – LB (UFA) New Orleans 1980 HUFFORD, Guy – E (UFA) Los Angeles Buccaneers 1926 HUGHES, Daymeion – CB (D-3) Indianapolis 2007-09, San Diego 2010-Present
I IMLAY, Tut – HB (UFA) Los Angeles Buccaneers 1926, New York Giants 1927 INGRAM, Darryl – TE (D-4) Minnesota 1989, Cleveland 1991, Green Bay 1992-93 IWUOMA, Chidi – CB (UFA) Detroit 2001, Pittsburgh 2002-05, 2006, New England 2006, St. Louis 2006, Tennessee 2007
J JACKSON, DeSean – WR (D-2) Philadelphia 2008-Present JACOBS, Proverb – T (D-2) Philadelphia 1958, New York Giants 1960, New York Titans 1961-62, Oakland 1963-64
Chuck Muncie
K KAMPA, Bob – DE (D-3) Buffalo 1973-74, Denver 1974
MACK, Alex – C (D-1) Cleveland 2009-Present
KAPP, Joe – QB (D-18 Washington) Minnesota 1967-69, Boston 1970
MAHLUM, Eric – C (D-2) Indianapolis 1994-97
KARTZ, Keith – T (UFA) Denver 1987-94
MANDERINO, Chris – DB (UFA) Cincinnati 2006
KEEN, Robbie – P/K (D-9 Kansas City 1992)
McCAFFREY, Mike – LB (D-4) Buffalo 1970
KLEIN, Perry – QB (UFA) Atlanta 1994-95
L LADOUCEUR, L.P. – LS (UFA) Dallas 2005-Present LARSON, Paul – QB (D-8) Chicago Cardinals 1957, Oakland 1960 LEWIS, David – TE (D-1) Detroit 1984-86, Miami 1987 LONGWELL, Ryan – PK (UFA) Green Bay 1997-2005, Minnesota 2006-Present LUCAS, Tim – LB (D-10) Denver, 1987-93 LUCKHURST, Mick – PK (UFA) Atlanta 1981-87 LYMAN, Chase – WR (D-4) New Orleans 2005-06 LYNCH, Ben – C (D-7 Kansas City 1996) Minnesota 1997, San Francisco 1999-2002, Houston 2003 LYNCH, Marshawn – RB (D-1) Buffalo 2007-Present
JOHNSON, Don – HB (D-3) Philadelphia 1953-55 JOHNSON, Sidney – DB (UFA) Kansas City 1988, Washington 1990-92
196
M
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McCARTHY, Jack – T (UFA) Duluth 1927 McLAUGHLIN, John – DE (D-5) Tampa Bay 1999-2000 MEADOW, Ralph – E (UFA) Canton 1920 MEBANE, Brandon – DT (D-3) Seattle 2007-Present MELVILLE, Dan – P (UFA) San Francisco 1979 MERZ, Aaron – OL (D-7) Buffalo 2006 MILLER, Keith – LB (UFA) St. Louis 2000, Seattle 2002 MONACHINO, Jim – HB (D-12) San Francisco 1951, 1953, Washington 1955 MORRAH, Cameron – TE (D-7) Seattle 2009-Present MORTON, Craig – QB (D-1) Dallas 1965-74, New York Giants 1974-76, Denver 1977-82 MULLER, Brick – E (UFA) Los Angeles Buccaneers 1926 MUNCIE, Chuck – RB (D-1) New Orleans 1976-80, San Diego 1980-84
Jeremy Newberry
Gary Plummer
N NEWBERRY, Jeremy – C (D-2) San Francisco 1998-2006, Oakland 2007, San Diego 2008 NEWMEYER, Don – T (UFA) Los Angeles Buccaneers 1926 NEWTON, Tom – RB (UFA) New Jets 1977-82 NICKERSON, Hardy – LB (D-5) Pittsburgh 1987-92, Tampa Bay 1993-99, Jacksonville 2000-01, Green Bay 2002 NORRIS, Hal – LB (D-16) Washington 1955-56
O O'BRIEN, Mike – DB (UFA) Seattle 1979 O'CALLAGHAN, Ryan – T (D-5) New England 2006-08, Kansas City 2010-Present OLSZEWSKI, John – FB (D-1) Chicago Cardinals 1953-57, Washington 1958-60, Detroit 1961, Denver 1962 O’NEAL, Deltha – CB (D-1) Denver 2000-03, Cincinnati 2004-07, New England 2008, Houston Texans 2009 O'STEEN, Dwayne – DB (UFA) Los Angeles Rams 1978-79, Oakland 198081, Baltimore 1982, Tampa Bay 1982-83, Green Bay 1983-84
P PARKER, Jeremiah – DL (D-7) New York Giants 2000 PAWLAWSKI, Mike – QB (D-8) Tampa Bay 1992
Aaron Rodgers
PHILIP, Marvin – C (D-2) Pittsburgh 2006-07, Cleveland 2007, Buffalo 2009 PLUMMER, Gary – LB (UFA) San Diego 1986-93, San Francisco 1994-97 PERRY, Gerry – T/K, (D-29 Los Angeles Rams) Detroit 1954, 1956-59, St. Louis 1960-62 POWELL, Jemeel – CB (UFA) Dallas 2003
R REED, James – LB (UFA) Philadelphia 1977 REINHARD, Bill – HB (D-23 Washington) Los Angeles Dons (AAFC) 1947-48 REINHARD, Bob – T/DT (D-5 Chicago Cardinals), Los Angeles Dons (AAFC) 194649, Los Angeles Rams 1950 RICHTER, Les – LB (D-1 New York Yanks) Los Angeles Rams 1954-62 RIDDLE, Ryan – LB (D-6) Oakland 2005, New York Jets 2006 RIESENBERG, Doug – T (D-6) New York Giants 1987-95, Tampa Bay 1996 RIVERA, Ron – LB (D-2) Chicago 1984-92 RIVERA, Steve – WR (D-4) San Francisco 1976-77, Chicago 1977 RODGERS, Aaron – QB (D-1) Green Bay 2005-Present ROMERO, John – DL (D-6 Philadelphia 2000) ROSE, Joe – TE (D-7) Miami 1980-85, Los Angeles Rams 1987 ROZIER, Bob – DE (D-9) St. Louis 1979
S SALEM, Harvey – T (D-2) Houston 1983-86, Detroit 1986-90, Denver 1991, Green Bay 1992 SANDERS, Ward "Buck" (UFA) Toledo Maroons 1922 SANYIKA, Sekou – LB (D-7) Arizona 2000-01 SCHABARUM, Pete – HB (D-2) San Francisco 1951, 1953-54 SCHAFFNIT, Pete – E (UFA) Los Angeles Buccaneers 1926 SERWANGA, Kato – CB (UFA) New England 1998-2000, Washington 200102, New York Giants 2002-03 SEVY, Jeff – T (D-12) Chicago 1975-78, Seattle 1979-80 SHAW, Bobby – WR (D-6) Seattle 1998, Pittsburgh 1998-2001, Jacksonville 2002, Buffalo 2003-04, San Diego 2004 SKAUGSTAD, Daryle – NT (D-2) Houston 1981-82, San Francisco 1983, Green Bay 1983 SMITH, Byron – DE (D-3 Supplemental Draft) Indianapolis 1984-85 SMITH, George – C (UFA) Washington 1937, 1941-43, Brooklyn 1944, Boston 1945, San Francisco (AAFC) 1947 SMITH, Harrison – DB (UFA) San Francisco 2006 SMITH, Holden – WR (D-11) Baltimore 1982 SMITH, Marquis – S (D-3) Cleveland 1999-2001
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CAL IN THE NFL (continued)
Harvey Salem SMITH, Tarik – TB (D-7) Dallas 1998-99 STACHOWSKI, Rich – NT (UFA) Denver 1983 STEUSSIE, Todd – T (D-1) Minnesota 1994-2000, Carolina 2001-03, Tampa Bay 2004-05, St. Louis 2006-07 STEVENS, Craig – TE (D-3) Tennessee 2008-Present STEWART, Todd – T (UFA) Carolina Panthers 1997 STEWART, Wayne – TE (D-15) New York Jets 1969-72, San Diego 1974 STORER, Byron – FB (UFA) Tampa Bay 2007-09 STRINGER, Scott – DB (UFA) St. Louis 1974 SULLIVAN, John – DB (D-3 Supplemental Draft) Green Bay 1986, San Diego 1986, San Francisco 1987 SUNDBERG, Nick – LS (UFA) Carolina 2009, Washington 2010 SWEENEY, Steve – WR (D-9) Oakland 1973 SWENSON, Rob – LB (UFA) Denver 1975-79, 1981-83
Todd Steussie
Ed White
T
W
TA'UFO'OU, Will – FB (UFA) Chicago 2009-Present
WALKER, Langston – T (D-2) Oakland 2002-06, 2010-Present, Buffalo 2007
TAYLOR, Troy – QB (D-4) New York Jets 1990-91
WALKER, Wesley – WR (D-2) New York Jets 1977-89
TERCERO, Scott – G (D-6) St. Louis 2003-04
WALLACE, Anthony – RB (D-9 New Orleans Saints, 1992) Atlanta 1993-94
THOMPSON, Jesse – WR (D-6) Detroit 1978, 1980 THOMPSON, SYD'QUAN – DB (D-7) Denver 2010-Present THURE, Brian – T (D-6) Washington 1995-96 TOEWS, Loren – LB (D-8) Pittsburgh 1973-83 TREGGS, Brian – WR (UFA) Seattle 1992 TUATAGALOA, Natu – DT (D-5) Cincinnati 1989-91, Seattle 1992-93, Houston 1995
WARD, LaShaun – DB (UFA) Kansas City 2003 WELBOURN, John – OL (D-4) Philadelphia 1999-2003, Kansas City 2004-07 WERSCHING, Ray – PK (UFA) San Diego 1973-76, San Francisco 1977-87 WHITE, Ed – G/T (D-2) Minnesota 1969-77, San Diego 1978-85 WHITE, Russell – RB (D-3) Los Angeles Rams 1993, Green Bay 1995 WHITE, Sherman – DE (D-1) Cincinnati 1972-75, Buffalo 1976-83
TUGGLE, John – RB/KR (D-12) New York Giants 1983
WHITING, Brandon – DT (D-4) Philadelphia 1998-2003, San Francisco 2004
TURPIN, Miles – LB (UFA) Green Bay 1986, Tampa Bay 1987
WILLARD, Jerrott – LB (D-5) Kansas City 1995, 1998
U
WILSON, David – FS (D-7) Minnesota 1992, New England 1992
UPSHAW, Regan – DE (D-1) Tampa Bay 1996-99, Jacksonville 1999, Oakland 2000-02, Washington 2003, New York Giants 2004
WILSON, Mark – T (D-5) Washington 2004, Oakland 2006-Present
UWAEZUOKE, Iheanyi – WR (D-5) San Francisco 1996-98, Miami 1998, Detroit 1999, Carolina 2000
ZAWATSON, Dave – T (D-2) Chicago 1989, New York Jets 1990, Miami 1991, Atlanta 1992
Z
ZOMALT, Eric – S (D-3) Philadelphia 1994-96, New York Jets 1996
198
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ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS -AAbd Allah, Fahim, 2005 Abrams, Charles J., 1911, 13 Abreu, Dennis, 1962, 63, 64 Acker, Joseph, 1969, 70, 71 Acree, Dennis, 1969, 70 Adams, Kenneth, 1969, 70 Aeschliman, Shawn, 1989, 91 Agler, Harry, 1942, 47 Agness, Neil, 1970, 71 Agnew, William, 1945 Agorastos, Manny, 1956 Ahanotu, Chidi, 1989, 90, 91, 92 Ahr, Mike, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Akbar, Jihad, 1994, 95 Akeo, Ladd, 1982 Alaman, Don, 1976, 77 Albertson, William B., 1900, 01, 02 Albrecht, Ted, 1974, 75, 76 Alcott, Paul, 1991 Alford, Ray M., 1917 Alexander, Don, 1971 Alexander, Lorenzo, 2001, 02, 03, 04 Allen, Chester A., 1909, 10, 11, 12 Allen, John, 1987 Allen, John, 2005, 06, 07 Alualu, Tyson, 2006, 07, 08, 09 Amadi, Charles, 2007, 08, 09 Amajoyi, Obi, 2002, 03 Ambrose, Roy, 1983, 84 Amling, Raymond, 1939, 40 Amling, Wallace, 1946 Andersen, Lance, 1972 Andersen, Steve, 1986, 1988 Anderson, Ahmad, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Anderson, Andy, 1970 Anderson, Arthur, 1940 Anderson, David A., 1934, 35 Anderson, David L., 1936, 37, 38 Anderson, Don, 1964, 65, 66 Anderson, Edwin M., 1944 Anderson, Eric, 1977, 78, 79 Anderson, Frank M., 1896 Anderson, Fred, 1937, 38 Anderson, Jim, 1961, 62, 63 Anderson, Mike, 1984, 85 Anderson, Ned, 1967 Anderson, Rick, 1978 Andrew, Paul, 1950, 51, 52 Anger, Bryan, 2008, 09 Anthony, Mark, 2009 Archer, William, 1934, 35, 36 Arkley, William, 1896 Armendariz, Gus, 1946 Armstrong, Bill, 1971, 72 Arner, Brock, 1966 Arnold, Charon, 2000, 01 Arnold, Pat, 1985, 86, 87 Arnold, Walt, 1958, 59, 60 Arrillaga, Gabe, 1957 Arrington, J.J., 2003, 04 Arthur, Julian, 2005, 06, 07 Artoe, Lee, 1939 Asbell, Rick, 1993 Aschenbrenner, Rick, 1966 Ashley, Harold H., 1909, 10 Asomugha, Nnamdi, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Astromoff, Nick, 1983, 84, 85
Troy Auzenne Athearn, Fred W., 1898, 99 Augustine, Irby, 1967, 68, 69 Auzenne, Troy, 1988, 89, 90, 91 Avery, H.S., 1896 Avery, Lewis, 1943 Avery, Russell, 1928, 29, 30 Ayer, Bill, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Ayoob, Joe 2005, 06
-BBachman, Forrest, 1946 Backstrom, Bill, 1971 Baeta, Mike, 1994, 96 Baggett, Matthew A., Jr., 1962 Bagley, Bob, 1950, 51 Bagnall, Rick, 1988, 89 Baham, Robert L., 1951 Bailey, Brian, 1977, 78, 79, 80 Bailey, Jack, 1945 Bailey, Mark, 1973, 74 Bailey, Rick, 1974 Bailey, Tim, 1979, 80, 81, 83 Baker, Jon, 1944, 46, 47, 48 Baldwin, Maurice, 1931, 32 Baldwin, Paul, 1949 Ball, Chris, 2000, 01 Balliett, Larry, 1960, 61, 62 Bancroft, Steven G., 1926, 27, 28 Banta-Cain, Tully, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Barber, Wolf, 1991, 92 Barbero, Ed, 1984, 85 Bark, Andy, 1982, 83 Barnes, Jeff, 1975, 76 Barnes, John W., 1897 Barnes, Pat, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Barnes, Stanley, 1918, 19, 20, 21 Barnes, Theodore L., 1898 Barnett, Edward, 1943, 44 Barnicott, John W., 1907, 08 Barr, Dave, 1992, 93, 94 Barr, Stanley L., 1927, 28, 29 Barsala, Mick, 1991, 92 Barsochini, Robert, 1943 Barsotti, Gael, 1959, 60 Bartkowski, Steve, 1972, 73, 74 Bartlett, Ed, 1949, 50, 51 Bartlett, Robert, 1929 Bateman, Dave, 1972, 73, 74 Bates, Henry, 1917 Bates, Steve, 1958, 59, 60
Bates, Tom, 1958, 59, 60 Baxter, Jim, 1953 Baze, Ross B., 1926 Beagle, Gregg, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Beal, Bob, 1950, 51, 52 Beam, Stewart N., 1922, 23 Beard, Wendell, 1945 Beasley, John, 1964, 65, 66 Bebelaar, John, 1960 Beck, Matt, 1996, 97, 98, 99 Becker, Jeremy, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Becker, Norm, 1955, 56 Beckett, Theodore, 1928, 29, 30 Beckham, Josh, 2000, 01, 02, 03 Bedford, Brian, 1984, 85, 86, 87 Beebe, Mike, 1990, 92 Beede, Frank, 1993, 94 Beedy, J. Crosby, 1934 Beegun, Eric, 2002, 04, 05, 06 Begovich, Dan, 1949 Bell, Albert, 1906, 07 Bell, Charles R., 1916 Bell, William M., 1922 Belli, John, 1987, 88, 89, 90 Bemoll, Kevin, 2008, 09 Bender, Allan, 1951, 52 Bender, Ralph W., 1899 Bender, William L., 1915 Benjamin, Naâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;il, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Bennett, Harlo, 1936 Bennett, Rick, 1966 Bensley, Jon, 2001 Benson, Jim, 1982 Berkey, Robert A., 1920, 21, 22 Bernard, Ken, 1984 Berry, Dan, 1965, 66 Bertoli, Charles, 1934 Besana, Fred, 1975, 76 Best, Arthur Le Roy, 1923 Best, Jahvid, 2007, 08, 09 Best, Sam, 1975, 76 Bethea, James, 2000, 01, 02, 03 Bican, Nickolas L., 1930 Biedermann, Leo, 1975, 76, 77 Bimson, Rob, 1985, 86, 87, 88 Binggeli, Ernie, 1976, 77 Binkley, Jack, 1953 Binn, David, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Binswanger, Anthony, 2004 Birdsall, Ernest S., 1896 Bishop, Desmond, 2005, 06
Bishop, Devin, 2008, 09 Blackmon, Allen, 1977, 78, 79 Blackwell, Todd, 1992, 93 Blakeney, Jim, 1962, 63, 64 Blanchfield, Tom, 1962, 63, 64 Blay-Miezah, Francis, 2003, 04 Blewett, Richard E., 1925, 26 Blewett, William F., 1923 Blower, Floyd, 1933, 34, 35, 36 Bluntzer, Nolan, 2000, 01, 03 Boateng, Nyan, 2008, 09 Bock, Lauren, 1960, 61 Boensch, Fred, 1943 Bogardus, Darrell J., 1913, 14 Bohlke, Russ, 1948 Boller, Kyle, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Boone, William, 1932, 33, 34 Booth, Issac, 1992, 93 Booth, Rick, 1974 Boothe, D. Power, 1904 Bordonaro, Sebastian, 1954 Borghi, Henry, 1944, 46, 47, 48 Borgia, Gerald, 1967, 68, 69 Bornstein, Jeff, 1975 Boskovich, Mark, 2007, 08, 09 Bottari, Vic, 1936, 37, 38 Boucher, David, 1919 Bouza, Matt, 1978, 79, 80 Bowers, Brad, 1991, 92, 93, 94 Boynton, William H., 1904 Bracelin, Greg, 1976, 77, 79 Brache, Ignacio, 1997, 98, 99 Bradley, Jerry, 1964, 65, 66 Brady, Jim, 1968, 69, 70 Brady, Michael, 1980, 81, 82 Brady, Patrick, 1980, 81, 82 Braley, Harold H., 1900 Brandon, Eric, 1995, 96, 97, 98 Brandt, Ed, 1953, 54, 55 Brandt, Fred, 1943 Brant, David O., 1911, 13 Brazil, Jim, 1976, 77 Brazill, Nat, 1955, 56 Breakenridge, Harold R., 1926, 28 Breech, Jim, 1974, 75, 76, 77 Breeden, Jack, 1937, 38 Breidenthal, John, 1978, 79, 80 Brien, Doug, 1991, 92, 93 Briner, Andy, 2003 Brittingham, Jack, 1933, 34, 35 Brittingham, Robert, 1933, 34, 35 Bronk, Barry, 1966, 67 Brooks, Bob, 1952 Brooks, Fred T., 1914, 15, 16, 19 Brooks, Gerald, I., 1954 Brooks, Jesse, 2006, 07, 08, 09 Brown, Caleb, 1994, 96, 97, 98 Brown, Darryl, 1990, 91 Brown, Donald, 1944 Brown, Gavin, 1995 Brown, Kenny, 1986, 87 Brown, Kevin, 1983, 84, 85, 86 Brown, Mike, 1965, 66 Brown, Myron M., 1924, 25 Brown, Robert L., 1917 Brown, Tom, 1962, 63, 65 Browner, Keith, 2008, 09 Brumsey, Larry, 1971 Brunk, Frank, 1947, 48, 49 Budelman, Herman D., 1906, 07, 08
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ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS (continued) Buestad, Bud, 1945 Bugbee, Dennis, 1967 Buggs, Michael, 1978, 79, 80 Bullard, Sean, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Bundy, Randy, 2003, 04, 05, 06 Burch, Todd, 1984 Burke, Tom, 1961 Burns, Samuel, 1972 Burnside, David, 1995, 96, 97 Burress, Jim, 1959, 60, 61 Burrows, Bruce, 1968 Bush, Franklin W., Jr., 1905 Butler, James B., 1906, 08 Butler, Ralph H., 1909 Byrd, Emerson, 1958 Bystrom, Gary, 1963
-CCacciari, Steve, 1980, 81, 83 Cadenasso, John, 1951 Cafaro, J.D., 2001, 03, 04 Cahill, Mark, 1974 Cahn, Albert, 1929, 30 Caldwell, Keith, 1985, 86 Caldwell, Mike, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Calender, Clayton, 1943 Calkins, Jim, 1967, 69 Calkins, Russell, 1933, 34 Calegari, Ron, 1962, 64 Callaghan, Judson, 1935, 37 Callan, Brett, 1991 Callan, Howard, 1944 Callen, Atari, 1999, 2001 Calvin, Michael, 2008, 09 Camera, Paul, 1983 Cameron, Andrew, 2003, 04, 05, 06 Camp, Reggie, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Campbell, D.J., 2008, 09 Campbell, Rich, 1978, 79, 80 Canada, Tom, 2001, 02 Canfield, Clifford G., 1913, 14, 15 Cannon, Chris, 1989, 90, 91, 92 Cantlon, John E., 1964, 65 Carabello, Hector, 1945 Cardon, Monty, 1985 Carey, H. Dana, 1923, 24, 25 Carlsen, Dick, 1960 Carlson, Arthur, 1931, 32, 33 Carlson, Glenn E., 1924, 25 Carlton, Robert, 1932, 35 Carmel, Ray, 2001 Carmichael, Jim, 1953, 54, 55 Carnell, Mike, 1978 Carpenter, Chris, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Carpenter, Kenneth L., 1909 Carr, S.D., 1896 Carter, Andre, 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Carter, Charles, 1986, 87 Carter, David, 1981, 82, 83, 85 Carter, Jerome, 1970, 71 Carvajal, Rudy, 1961, 62, 63 Casey, Mike, 1953 Casner, Al, 1989, 90, 92 Cass, Harold P., 1919 Castelhun, Paul, 1900 Castle, James S., 1935 Castro, Augustus, 1930, 31 Cattouse, Sean, 2008, 09 Celeri, Robert, 1944, 47, 48, 49 Cerf, Cedric S., 1906, 07, 08
200
Cernius, Bob, 1989 Cezario, Michael A., 1962 Chambers, Roland, 1945, 46 Champion, Jerome, 1967, 68, 69 Chapman, Darnell, 1977, 78, 79 Chapman, Lindsey, 1991, 92, 93 Chapman, Samuel, 1935, 36, 37 Cheadle, Justin, 2008, 09 Cherry, Jamaal, 1998, 99, 2001, 02 Cherry, Je'Rod, 1992, 93, 94, 95 Cherry, Jim, 1955, 56 Cherry, William, 1986 Chiapppone, Bob, 1957 Chick, Chris, 1999, 2000 Christensen, Brunel, 1941, 42 Christie, Howard, 1932, 33 Clark, Jack, 1976, 77 Clark, Webster V., 1920, 21, 22 Clay, John A., 1900 Clemons, Duane, 1992, 93, 95 Clemons, Sam, 1998, 99 Cline, James J., 1918, 19 Clizbe, Matt, 1991, 92, 93, 94 Clymer, John F., 1924 Clymer, Paul S., 1926 Coccimiglio, Ron, 1978, 79, 80 Cock, Howard B., 1926 Cockburn, James D., 1927, 28 Cockett, Keith, 1983, 84, 85 Coffeen, J.M., 1917 Coffey, Andrew, 1998 Cohen, Douglas B., 1914 Coleman, Jim, 1967 Collier, Cornell, 1988, 89, 90, 91 Collier, John H., 1899 Collier, Leonard, 1936 Collins, Evan, 1994, 95, 96 Collins, Greg, 1974, 75 Collins, Robert H., 1900 Coltrin, Frederic C., 1925, 26, 27 Comer, Brian, 1996 Conley, John, 1970 Conte, Chris, 2007, 08, 09 Contestabile, Joe, 1956 Conway, Cassius, 1993 Coombs, Malcolm, 1931 Cooper, Bill, 1958 Cooper, Joe, 1978, 81, 82 Cornell, George, 1936, 38 Cornish, Henry L., 1898, 99 Costanzo, Michael, 2008, 09 Cotton, Charles, 1933, 34, 35 Cotton, Kenneth, 1935, 36, 37 Couper, Frank C., 1925 Covarrubias, Jesse, 1979, 80 Cox, Donald, 1948 Cox, Howard V., 1926 Cox, James, 1943 Cox, Stanley, 1940, 41 Cox, Stewart, 1941 Craig, John W., 1896, 98 Craig, V.H., 1897 Crane, Markey, 1976, 77 Crane, Percy L., 1913 Cranmer, Lee D., 1919, 20, 21 Cristol, Brian, 2005 Crittenden, Bob, 1965, 66, 67 Crosby, Vern, 1943 Cross, Garrett, 2003, 04 Crow, Wayne, 1958, 59
Croyle, Phil, 1968, 69, 70 Crumpacker, Karl, 1973, 74 Cruze, Jay, 1971, 72 Cullom, Jim, 1947, 48, 49 Culpepper, John, 1972, 73, 74 Cummings, Bob, 1949, 50 Cummins, Greg, 1974, 75 Cunningham, Bill, 1950 Cunningham, Dustin, 1993 Cunningham, Kevin, 1993, 94 Cunningham, John, 1946, 47, 48 Cunningham, LaReylle, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Curran, Don, 1950, 51, 52 Curran, Skylar, 2008, 09 Currie, Bob, 1955, 56, 57 Currie, Ron, 1959 Currin, Matt, 2001, 03, 04 Currin, Sean, 1998, 99, 2000, 01 Curry, Robert, 1972 Curtis, Dick, 1961 Curtis, Isaac, 1970, 71 Curtis, Steve, 1969, 70 Cushing, Kevin, 1985, 86
-DD'Amato, Vince, 2009 Dal Porto, Robert, 1946, 47, 48 Dalton, Wesley, 1999 Daniels, Marcus, 2000, 01, 02 Daniels, Raymond, 1993 Daniels, Victor, 1933 Dantzler, Alex, 1970 Darby, Robert, 1968, 69, 70 Davis, Michael, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Davis, Rashawn, 1997 Davis, Rulon, 2006, 07, 08 Dawkins, Sean, 1990, 91, 92 Day, Dick, 1951, 53 Dean, Calvin J., 1920, 21, 22 DeBoskie, Covaughn, 2009 DeBruin, Jaylon, 2003, 04 DeCoud, Thomas, 2004, 05, 06, 07 Decoudres, Charles, 1942 Deeds, Karl S., 1918, 19, 20 Deemer, Bryan, 2005, 06 Degnan, George, 1931 DeJong, Raymond, 1947, 48, 49 De La Cruz, Tino, 1981 De La Puente, Brian, 2005, 06, 07 DeLapp, Geoff, 1969, 70, 71 Delgado, Vincent, 1984, 85, 86, 88 Del Giorgio, Seldon, 1930 DeLoach, Jerry, 1996, 97, 98, 99 DeLoach, Ralph, 1976, 77, 78 Del Prado, Josh, 1996, 97 DePaola, Dante, 1992, 93, 94, 95 De Rosa, Joe, 1974, 75 Demeritt, Reno E., 1901, 02, 03 Derian, Albert, 1940, 41 Derian, Steve, 1973, 74 DeSa, Sam, 2004, 05, 06, 07 Desmond, James, 1945 Desomber, Nate, 1999 Destefano, Pete, 1996, 97, 98, 99 Deutsch, Derek, 2000, 01 De Varona, David, 1936, 37, 38 Devers, James, 1985, 86, 88 Devine, Kevin, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Devora, Wayne, 1992
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Dickson, Joel, 1986, 87, 88, 90 Diehl, Reed, 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Diffenbang, William, 1945, 46 Dilello, Pete, 1995 Dill, Forrest, 1972 Dillon, Jim, 1952, 53 Dills, Thomas H., 1910, 12 Dimeff, Steve, 1953, 54, 55 Dinkler, Ted, 1959, 60 DiResta, Louis, 1930, 31 Dixon, Alex, 1983, 84, 85, 86 Dixon, James A., 1923, 24 Dixon, John, 1975, 76 Dixon, Rich, 1978, 79, 80, 82 Dodds, John, 1942 Dodds, Robert, 1946, 47, 49 Doerr, Donald, 1942, 43, 46 Doherty, Kevin, 1997, 98, 99 Dolan, Lawrence J., 1911 Dolman, Sam, 1962 Dolman, Willard, 1936, 37, 38 Domoto, Pete, 1957, 58, 59 Donnelly, Ray, 1954 Donohoe, Charles A., 1939 Doretti, Frank, 1957, 58, 59 Dorsey, Albert, 1997, 98 Dos Remedios, Robert, 1987, 88 Dotsy, Terence, 2000, 01, 02 Dotur, Steve, 1945 Dougery, James C., 1926, 27 Dougery, Ralph H., 1927 Douglas, Dameane, 1995, 96, 97, 98 Douglas, James M., 1912, 13, 14 Doxy, Gary, 2006, 07 Dozier, Melville, Jr., 1899 Drake, Jeremy, 2001, 02 Drew, Jerry, 1953, 54, 56 Drnovich, Louis, 1934 Duddleson, William J., 1915 Duden, Ernest, 1900, 01 Dunbar, Palmer H., 1899 Duncan, Douglas, 1946, 47, 48 Duncan, Scott, 1973 Dunn, Raymond, 1939, 40, 41 Dunn, Richard M., 1921, 22, 23 Dunn, Steve, 1981, 82, 83, 84 Duren, Clarence, 1971, 72 Dutriz, Antonio, 1934 Dutton, Bill, 1953 Dutton, Tom, 1951, 52, 53 Dwiggins, Jay, Jr. 1908, 09, 10 Dyer, Ephraim, 1906, 07 Dzura, Stan, 1963, 64
-EEasley, Chris, 1994, 95, 96 East, Raymond, 1930 Easterbrooks, Gerald, 1930, 31 Eaton, Lou, 1934 Ebert, Jeff, 1987, 88 Echemandu, Adimchinobe, 1999, 2000, 03 Eddings, Floyd, 1977, 78, 80, 81 Edgar, Brad, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Edmonston, Don, 1950 Edmonston, Robert, 1944, 45 Edwards, Donovan, 2008, 09 Edwards, Herman, 1972, 74 Edwards, Tyrone, 1991, 92, 93, 94
Eells, Walter H., 1918, 19, 20 Eickmeyer, Herman, 1929, 30 Eisan, Dan, 1976 Eisan, Lee G., 1927, 28, 29 Eisenbrand, Clay, 1981, 82, 83 Elerding, Eugene, 1930 Eley, Jeff, 1984, 86 Elliott, Amos W., 1908, 09, 10, 11 Elliott, John, 1944, 46 Elliott, Roy H., 1905 Ellis, Frank F., 1896 Ellis, Hal, 1951, 52 Elmore, William, 1938, 39, 40 Ely, Dwight, 1951 Engerbretson, Karl L., 1918, 19 English, Ron, 1987, 88, 89, 90 Epstein, Michael P., 1962 Erb, Charles F., Jr., 1920, 21, 22 Erb, Charles F. III, 1946, 49 Erby, John, 1960, 61, 62 Erickson, Richard, 1946, 47, 48 Eriksen, Kristian, 2001, 02 Evans, Claude, 1936, 37 Evans, Clinton W., 1910, 1912 Evans, F. Howard, 1923 Evans, Jack V., 1926, 27 Evans, Stafford, 1992, 93 Everett, Lucas, 2003 Everett, Whit, 1974, 75 Everhart, Jef, 1993 Ezeff, Marcus, 2006, 07, 08, 09
-FFa’avae, Fa’avae, 1997, 98, 99 Fackrell, Carlos, 1955, 59 Fairbanks, John R., 1907 Farmer, Clarence W., 1917 Farmer, Milton T., 1906 Faumuina, Pana, 2002 Favreau, Mike, 1986 Favro, Dave, 1961 Fay, John, 1967, 68 Felder, Anthony, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Fenston, Earl J., 1915 Ferguson, Jim, 1960, 61 Ferguson, John, 1941, 42 Ferragamo, Vince, 1972, 73 Fetherston, Jim, 1965, 66, 67 Fiebiger, Roy, 1974, 75 Field, Drew, 1979 Fields, Marcus, 1997, 98, 99, 2001 Fike, Harold, 1973, 74, 75 Firpo, Anthony, 1938, 39 Fish, George W., 1912, 13 Fisher, Emerson W., 1919 Fisher, Richard, 2008, 09 Fitz, Frank M., 1927 Fitzgerald, Chuck, 1950 Flagg, Justin, 1995, 96, 97, 98 Fleming, Howard W., 1911, 12, 13 Fletcher, Harold A., 1912 Flores, Ron, 1988, 89 Fodor, Bob, 1979, 81, 82, 83 Follett, Zack, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Folmer, Richard, 1939, 40 Foltz, Ryan, 2002, 03, 04, 05 Fong, George, 1946, 47 Foran, Marshall, 1991, 92, 93, 94 Forbes, Art, 1955, 56, 57 Force, James A., 1903, 04, 05 Ford, Mariet, 1981, 1982 Ford, Mike, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Ford, Orrin, 1981, 83, 84 Forrester, Wale, 2002, 03
Jim Cullom Forsett, Justin, 2004, 05, 06, 07 Foster, Daniel P., 1914, 15, 17 Foster, Robert N., 1904 Foster, Roger, 1963, 64, 65 Fowler, Donald, 1935 Fowler, Gary, 1967, 68, 69 Fowler, Nate, 1992, 94 Fox, Charley, 1949 Fraley, Paul, 2004 Francis, Robert C., 1926 Frank, Kenny, 2006 Franklin, Oran, 1957 Frantz, John, 1965, 66, 67 Franz, Rod, 1946, 47, 48, 49 Fraser, Jim, 1969, 70 Frassetto, Gene, 1942, 47, 48 Fredrickson, Tyler, 2000, 01, 02, 03 Freedman, Tony, 1942, 43 Freeman, Edgar A., 1906, 07, 08 Freeman, Mike, 1997, 98 Freitas, George, 1974, 75, 76, 77 Frey, Dave, 1972, 73, 74 Frisbee, Bob, 1943 Frisch, John, 1972, 73 Fujita, Scott, 1998, 99, 2000, 01 Funderburk, Mark, 1980, 81, 83, 84 Furuta, Doug, 1959
-GGalas, Dominic, 2009 Galas, Tim, 1979, 80, 82 Galbraith, Huxley, 1945 Gallagher, William G., Jr., 1922 Gammon, Walter, 1900 Gandsey, Tom, 1983, 84 Garamendi, John, 1963, 64, 65 Garamendi, Sam, 1969, 70, 71 Garcia, Nicanor, 1992 Gardner, Derrick, 1995, 96, 97, 98 Garlinger, Howard, 1955 Garner, Dwight, 1982, 83, 84, 85 Garrity, Clarence, 1928, 29, 30, 31 Garthwaite, Edwin, 1943, 44 Garvin, Grover, 1958, 59 Garzoli, John, 1954 Gaskins, Martin 1994, 95 Gay, Thomas E., 1916 Geanelli, Rudolph L., 1913, 14, 15 Gearhart, George, 1966, 67
Geldermann, Nate, 1996, 97, 98 Gendotti, Joseph, 1901 Gentner, Ernie, 1942 George, Dave, 1959, 60 Geringer, John, 1983, 84, 85, 86 Gerner, Kenneth, 1945 Geurts, Peter, 2008 Ghilarducci, Harry, 1954 Gianulias, Gus, 1955, 56, 58 Gibbert, Vince, 1967 Gibbs, Ronald D., 1915 Gibson, James, 1997 Gibson, Mike, 2006, 07 Giddings, Mike, 1953, 54 Gierlich, James, 1944, 45 Giesel, Jon, 2002, 03, 04 Gifford, John V., 1917 Gilbert, Gale, 1980, 82, 83, 84 Gilbert, Robert, 1935, 36 Gilkey, Charles, 1945 Gilkey, Don, 1954, 55, 56 Gill, Carol, 1932, 33, 34, Gill, Frank, 1928 Gill, Harry W., 1927, 28, 29 Gill, Ralston, 1929, 30, 31 Gill, Sam, 1931, 32 Gillespie, George, 1956 Gillis, Kenneth C., 1907 Gillies, Ed, 1976 Gillum, Charles, 1993 Gimbal, LeRoy M., 1919 Giordano, Matt, 2003, 04 Giroday, Paul, 1971, 72, 73 Glagola, Steve, 1957 Glascock, John R., 1907 Glass, Charles, 1978 Gleason, Dave, 1971, 72 Glenn, Stan, 1976, 77 Glenn, Tarik, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Glick, Steve, 1951, 52 Glover, Drew, 2007, 08 Godde, Harry A., 1918 Goich, Dan, 1965, 66 Goff, Jerry, 1985 Gold, Randy, 1960, 61 Gonzales, Bob, 1958 Gonzalez, Tony, 1994, 95, 96 Gordon, Steve, 1988, 89, 90, 91 Gordon, Walter A., 1916, 17, 18
Gordon, Walter A., Jr., 1941, 42 Gosbey, J.S., 1896 Gosling, George, 1953 Gottlieb, Ziv, 1994, 95, 96 Gough, Harlan, 1939, 40 Goulet, James, 1985, 86 Grady, Larry, 1975, 76 Graf, Robert E., 1915 Graff, Edwin C., 1909 Graffort, Garry, 2009 Graham, Doug, 1959, 60, 61 Graham, Jody, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Graham, Pat, 1977, 78, 79, 80 Grandison, Anthony, 1987, 88, 89, 90 Granger, Ted, 1954, 55 Graumann, Gary, 1977, 78 Graves, John, 1941, 42, 47 Gray, Dan, 1974, 75 Gray, David, 1980, 81 Gray, David, 2003, 04, 05, 06 Gray, Mark, 2006, 07 Gray, Prentiss N., 1904, 05 Gray, Robert, 1945 Gray, Robert F., 1915 Grealish, Steve, 1973 Green, Anthony, 1975, 76, 77 Green, Bob, 1988, 89 Green, Edward P., 1927 Green, Jim, 1957, 58, 59 Green, Kenny, 2005 Green, Robert C., 1927 Greer, Darrin, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Greisberg, Frederick J., 1896, 97, 98, 99 Gridley, Mike, 1962, 64, 65 Grieb, Tom, 1970 Griffin, Bert F., 1924, 25, 26 Griffiths, Edwin, 1929, 30, 31 Griggs, Ken, 1989 Grillos, John, 1988 Grimes, Matt, 1983, 84, 85 Gritsch, Steve, 1973, 74, 75 Groefsema, Ken, 1943, 46, 47 Groger, Dick, 1949, 50 Grothus, Joe, 1944 Guarnero, Chris, 2008, 09 Guest, Don, 1965, 66 Guiberson, Nathaniel G., 1901 Gulvin, Glen, 1950, 51, 52 Gustaveson, Josh, 2001, 02 Gutierrez, Ryan, 2002, 03, 04 Guyton, Trevor, 2008, 09
-HHatchen, Bill, 1943 Haffey, Calvin, 1904, 05, 06, 09 Hagan, Darian, 2007, 08, 09 Hahn, Leighton, 1951, 52 Hailey, Mike, 1972 Haina, John, 1983, 84 Hale, Dewey, 1998, 99, 2000, 01 Hale, Max, 1956, 57 Hale, William M., 1919 Hall, Brandon, 2003 Hall, Layne, 1991, 92 Hall, Lowell C., 1920 Hall, Percy W., 1896, 97, 98, 99 Hall, Rhett, 1989, 90 Hammes, Bob, 1964 Hampton, Brandon, 2004, 05, 06, 07 Hampton, Chris, 1980, 81, 82, 83 Hampton, Kerry, 1970, 71
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
201
ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS (continued) Handy, Carl, 1929, 30 Hanford, Ray, 1936, 38 Hanford, William, 1936 Hanifan, Jim, 1952, 53, 54 Hansen, George D., 1911 Hansen, J. Owen, 1901 Hansen, Thorvald, 1930 Hanson, Kenneth I., 1917 Hard, Sam, 1964, 65, 66 Hardin, Tim, 1987 Harding, Roger, 1943, 44 Hardy, David P., 1909, 10, 11 Hardy, John, 1986, 87, 88, 90 Harmon, Mike, 1978, 79 Harrell, Tubby, 1975 Harris, Al, 1943 Harris, Charles, 1950, 51 Harris, Don, 1951, 52 Harris, Drae, 1998, 99 Harris, George, 1968 Harris, John, 1977, 78 Harris, Myron W., 1908, 09, 10 Harris, Neal, 1908 Harris, Nick, 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Harrison, Brian, 2004, 05 Harrison, Jack, 1973, 74, 75 Hart, Jack, 1956, 57, 58 Hartman, Dick, 1955 Harvey, Ken, 1986, 87 Hasbrouck, Lamar, 1986, 87 Haskell, Robert K., 1896, 97 Haskins, William H., 1912 Hatcher, Orville, 1939, 40 Hatfield, Greg, 1966 Hawkins, LaVelle, 2005, 06, 07 Hawkins, Tom, 1970, 71 Hawley, Loren, 1961, 63, 64 Hay, Jack, 1935 Hay, Richard, 1935 Hayes, Horace H., 1917 Hayes, Kenneth A., 1914 Hays, David, 2000, 02, 03 Hazeltine, Matthew E., 1912, 13, 15 Hazeltine, Matt, Jr., 1951, 52, 53, 54 Hazzard, Roy T., 1916 Heathwood, Matt, 1985 Heck, Dave, 1978, 79 Heck, Phil, 1973, 74, 75, 76 Hector, Byron, 1984, 85, 86 Hein, Gary, 1983, 84, 85, 86 Heisinger, Kris, 1982 Heitmuller, William F., 1902, 03, 04 Helfman, Marcus, 1999 Heltne, Bruce, 1951 Henderson, Vic, 1974, 76, 77, 78 Hendren, Greg, 1969, 70 Hendrickson, Steve, 1985, 86, 87, 88 Hennington, Marshall, 1984 Henry, Leslie A., 1904 Hering, John, 1982 Herrero, George, 1940, 41 Herrero, Jack, 1941, 42 Hershey, Jeremy 1999, 2000 Herwig, Robert, 1935, 36, 37 Hewitt, Lloyd E., 1918 Hextrum, Chuck, 1973, 74, 75 Heydorff, Chad, 2000 Hibbs, Doug, 1956 Hibbs, Joe, 1952, 53
202
Hibler, Rasheed, 1994, 95, 96, 97 Hickingbotham, Joe, 1929, 30 Hickman, Dallas, 1973, 74 Hicks, Bernard, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Hicks, George M., 1916 Hicks, Marc, 1985, 86 Higgins, John M., 1944 Higson, John W., 1917 Hileman, Robert, 1943, 47, 48 Hill, Derrick, 2007, 08, 09 Hill, Josh, 2009 Hill, Harvey C., 1912 Hill, Reuben C., 1899 Hill, Ron, 1977, 78, 79 Hillesland, Brian, 1981, 82, 83 Hillmon, Oliver, 1976, 77 Hilton, Delongion, 2005 Hingst, Steve, 1986, 87 Hischler, David, 1944, 46, 47, 48 Hoberg, Carl, 1939, 40 Hodgins, Mike, 1974 Hoeber, Paul, 1965 Hoenisch, Robert, 1945 Hoffman, Ralph, 1955 Holleman, Jack, 1974, 75 Holley, Brian, 2007, 08, 09 Holloway, Stan, 1978, 79 Holly, Marty, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Holston, Charlie, 1957, 58, 59 Holt, D.J., 2008, 09 Holtfreter, Eric, 2000, 01 Honegger, Arthur, 1942, 43 Honey, Jason, 2004, 05 Hongola, Robert, 1940, 41 Hood, Dave, 1951, 52 Hooper, Burt E., 1897 Hooper, Leon L., 1917, 18 Hopper, James P., 1896, 97, 99 Horrell, Edwin C., 1923, 24 Hosey, Calvin, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Hoskins, John O., 1912 Houghton, Mark, 1977, 78 Houston, Artis, 1991, 92, 93, 94 Houston, Gayland, 1984, 85 Houston, Norman B., 1942 Howard, C. Harry, 1900, 02, 03 Howard, Eric, 1986, 87, 88 Howard, Harry M., 1902, 03, 04 Howard, Jack, 1935, 36 Howard, John C., 1915 Howard, Randolph, 1972 Howe, Brad, 1987 Howell, Wes, 1982 Huber, Gordon, 1924, 25, 26 Huber, Skip, 1958, 59 Hubert, Theodore, 1937, 38, 39 Hudgins, Scott, 1971 Hudson, C. Harry, 1900, 02, 03 Hudson, Don, 1978, 79 Hufford, Guy D., 1924 Hughes, Daymeion, 2003, 04, 05, 06 Hughes, James, 1976, 77 Hultgren, Mark, 1967, 68, 69 Humpert, Frank, 1949 Humphries, Randy, 1967, 68, 69 Hunt, Archie M., 1913, 14 Hunt, Jim, 1963, 64, 65 Hunter, Jordon, 2001, 03 Hunter, Wayne, 1999
Hunter, Wendell, 2001, 02, 03, 04 Hurrell, J.P., 2009 Huston, Norman, 1942 Huters, William, 1937, 38, 39, 40
-IIaukea, Curt, 1956, 57 Igber, Joe, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Imlay, Talma W., 1924, 25 Ingram, Darryl, 1985, 86, 87, 88 Ingram, Wilbur, 1937 Ipson, Dan, 1960 Iwuoma, Chidi, 1997, 98, 99, 2000
-JJabs, Earl F., 1925, 26 Jack, Raymond, 1934 Jackman, Brad, 1984, 85, 86, 87 Jackson, DeSean, 2005, 06, 07 Jackson, Herb, 1955, 56 Jackson, John, 1973, 74 Jackson, Roy, 1998, 99, 2000 Jackson, William, 1985, 86 Jacobs, Andy, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Jacobs, Proverb, 1957 Jacques, Joe, 1987 Jacuzzi, Remo, 1955, 56 James, Don, 1981, 82, 83, 84 James, Paul, 1972, 73, 74 Jamile, Alex, 1959 Jefferson, Marcus, 1993 Jenkins, Tim, 1988, 89 Jensen, Jack, 1946, 47, 48 Jensen, Mark, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Jessen, Jess E., 1933 Jiminez, Juan, 1999, 2000 Johns, Walter R., 1907, 08, 09 Johnson, Brett, 2006, 07, 08, 09 Johnson, Charles, 1957, 58 Johnson, Charles, 2008, 09 Johnson, Don, 1952 Johnson, Gordon, 1968 Johnson, John, 1984, 85 Johnson, Matt, 1993 Johnson, Maurice, 1992, 93, 94, 95 Johnson, Raymond, 1943 Johnson, Richard J., 1936 Joiner, Jim, 1990, 92 Joiner, Paul, 1991, 92, 93 Johnson, Ron, 1975 Johnson, Sidney, 1985, 86 Johnson, Wade, 1976, 77 Johnson, Walter H., 1916 Johnson, William Charles, 1971 Johnson, William Curtis, 1971, 72 Johnston, Richard D., 1936 Jones, Brent, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Jones, Cody, 2006, 07, 08 Jones, Dexter, 1986, 87 Jones, Dwayne, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Jones, George, 1906 Jones, Harry, 1932, 33, 34 Jones, Jeff, 1989, 90, 91, 92 Jones, Jerry, 1972, 73 Jones, John L., 1936 Jones, Len, 1947, 48, 49 Jones, Marvin, 2008, 09 Jones, Paul, 1975, 77, 78, 79 Jones, Rick, 1971, 72 Jones, Ryan, 2000, 01, 02
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Jones, Terry, 1957, 58, 59 Jordan, Cameron, 2007, 08, 09 Jordan, Ray F., 1909, 10 Jordan, Robert, 2004, 05, 06, 07 Joslyn, William, 1943 Joyce, Derek, 2002, 03, 04 Jurkovich, James, 1940, 41, 42
-KKaarsberg, Pete, 1897, 98, 99 Kai Kee, Sam, 1918 Kampa, Bob, 1971, 72 Kane, Mika, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Kapp, Joe, 1956, 57, 58 Kapp, Will, 2008, 09 Karacozoff, Kirk, 1977, 78, 79, 80 Karpe, Bob, 1950, 51 Kartz, Keith, 1981, 82, 84, 85 Kastner, Eric, 1968 Kaufman, Harold A., 1927 Kaufman, Joseph, 1931 Kay, Jordan, 2007, 08 Keanaaina, Keala, 1999, 2000 Keckley, Paul, 1946, 47, 48 Keefer, James, 1931, 32, 33 Keeles, Bernie, 1969 Keen, Robbie, 1987, 88, 89 Kelly, Kevin, 1991, 92, 93 Kelly, Mike, 1986 Kelly, Steve, 2004, 05, 06 Kemnitzer, Steve, 1971, 72 Kemp, Billy, 1978 Kendricks, Mychal, 2008, 09 Kenfield, Ted, 1945, 46, 47 Kennedy, Eugene P., 1896 Keogh, Tom, 1952 Kern, Claude C., 1904 Kern, Dick, 1953 Kerr, George P., 1904 Keyser, Chris, 1972 Kidder, Jim, 1951, 54 King, Dick, 1955 King, Kam, 1985, 87 King, William N., 1910, 12, 13 Kirst, Kyle, 2006 Kirwan, Edwin, 1929, 30, 31 Kitrelle, Reginald W., 1904, 05 Klein, Forrest, 1948, 49 Klein, Perry, 1990, 91 Klein, Phil, 1932, 33 Klemmer, Grover, 1942 Klinger, Jack, 1944, 45 Klink, Mark, 1971, 72 Klotsche, John, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Klotz, Richard, 1985 Kobzeff, John, 1967, 68 Koch, Donald E., 1929 Koepf, Monte, 1945 Kotler, Jim, 1952, 53 Kramer, Tom, 1953, 54 Krieg, Tyler, 2006 Krueger, Ralph, 1950, 51, 52 Krum, Bill, 1962, 63, 65 Kuhl, Chuck, 1956 Kunkle, A.J., 1997, 98 Kunzi, Taylor, 2005
Paul Larson
-LLadner, Spencer, 2009 Ladouceur, L.P., 2001, 03, 04 La Fountaine, Chris, 1981 Lagemann, Alex, 2009 Laird, Matt, 2008 LaMothe, Steve, 1986 Lance, Dane, 1983 Lane, Charles D., 1917 Lane, Davis W., 1913 Lane, Eldred, 1929 Lane, Travis P., 1919 Lang, James, 1939 Larson, Andrew, 2006, 07 Larson, Paul, 1952, 53, 54 Lasater, Fred, 1904 Lasater, William, 1941 Lasher, Roland, 1958, 59, 60 Laster, Wally, 1949, 50 Latham, George H., 1919, 20, 21 Lathrop, Larry, 1964, 65, 66 Latimer, Norv, 1945 Laven, Rick, 1966, 67 Laveroni, Bill, 1967, 68, 69 Lawrence, Steve, 1972, 73 Lawson, Dave, 1972 Lawyer, Kem, 1972 Leathers, Fred, 1972, 73 LeBeouf, Dave, 1974, 75, 76 Lee, Dick, 1950, 51, 52 Leffler, Duke, 1976, 77, 78 Leiba, Ned, 1971 Leidholt, Jack, 1940, 41 Leipzig, Jerome, 1939 LemMon, Dick, 1949, 50, 51 Leonard, Skip, 1970 Lerond, Jack, 1944, 45 Levy, Steve, 2004, 05, 06 Lewis, David, 1979, 80, 82, 83 Lewis, John, 1939 Lewis, Stuart, 1939, 40, 41 Lieb, Harry, 1940 Lilly, Steve, 1995 Lindgren, Axel Fred, Jr., 1930 Lindsey, Andre, 1982, 83, 85 Lindsey, Yancy, 1983, 84 Lippma, Frederick, 1898 Little, Chris, 2009 Liversedge, Harry B., 1914, 16 Loberg, Greg, 1980, 81, 82, 83 Lockhart, Robert R., 1913, 14, 15 Lofton, Syd, 1975, 76 Loggins, Matt, 1994, 95, 96 Lom, Benjamin A., 1927, 28, 29 Long, Mark, 1983, 84 Long, Ralph, 1942 Longshore, Nate, 2005, 06, 07, 08
Longwell, Ryan, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Lonie, David, 2004, 05 Lonon, Don, 1996, 97 Loper, John C., 1945 Lorenz, Jim, 1956 Lossie, Robert, 1945 Lotter, Will, 1948 Lowell, Larry, 1961, 63 Lozica, Michael, 1980, 82 Lozica, Nick, 1980 Lucas, Tim, 1980, 81, 82 Luckhurst, Mick, 1979, 80 Ludlow, Robert H., 1896, 97 Ludwig, Brandon, 1998, 99, 2000, 01 Lundgren, Gerald, 1958, 59, 60 Lundy, Lamar, 1977, 78 Lupoi, Tosh, 2001, 02, 03, 05 Lutes, Gerald, 1939 Lutes, Tom, 1962 Lutz, Lawrence, 1933, 34, 35 Lyman, Chase, 2000, 01, 03, 04 Lynch, Ben, 1992, 93, 94, 95 Lynch, Frank, 1965, 66 Lynch, Marshawn, 2004, 05, 06
-MMaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;afala, Abu, 2005, 06 MacAdam, Don, 1960 MacDonald, Bruce, 1962, 63 Machado, Steve, 1984 Mack, Alex, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Mackie, Chris, 1973, 74 Madigan, Richard, 1943 Madison, Marshall P., 1916 Madison, Ulysses, 1979, 80 Maehl, Steve, 1975, 76 Maggard, Dave, 1959 Maguire, Alfred L., 1916 Maguire, Hugh, 1955 Maguire, Leo Joseph, Jr., 1918 Mahlum, Eric, 1991, 92, 93 Main, Timothy, 1946, 47 Main, William, 1946, 47, 48 Maiorana, Vince, 1951, 52 Mais, Bill, 1951, 52 Mais, Dan, 1991, 93 Majors, Olin C., 1918, 20 Makonnen, Jonathan, 2002, 04 Malele, Matthew, 2004, 05, 06, 07 Malele, Noris, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Malili, Brent, 1995, 96 Mallory, Milo, 1931 Manderino, Chris, 2002, 03, 04, 05 Maningo, Joe, 2003, 04 Manning, Marlon, 1993, 94 Manning, Tim, 1991, 92, 93, 94 Mansion, Brock, 2008, 09 Marcus, Irving H., 1927 Marinos, Jim, 1950 Marks, Don, 1952, 53 Markwart, Earl H., 1910 Markwart, Irving G., 1908, 09, 10 Marshall, Dupre, 1977, 78, 79, 80 Martin, Harley, 1956, 57 Martin, Tevis, 1952, 53 Martucci, Chares, 1952, 54 Martyr, Paul, 1967, 68, 69 Marzett, Damian, 1998, 99 Mason, Jon, 1961 Mason, Paul, 1983, 84 Mason, Tom, 1940, 41, 42 Mathewson, Morley, 1938, 39, 40 Mattarocci, Frank, 1956
Mattox, Brudy, 1995, 96 Mayer, Mathias, 1897 Mayfield, Duane, 1966, 67 Mazik, Ron, 1962, 63 Mazzucco, Tom, 1981 Mbakogu, Phillip, 2004, 05 McAllister, Ken, 1976, 77 McArthur, Geoff, 2000, 02, 03, 04 McArthur, Robert, 1931, 32 McAteer, Eugene, 1934, 36 McCaffrey, Mike, 1966, 67, 68 McCallister, Tate, 1995, 96, 97, 98 McCarthy, Dan, 1942 McCarty, Terence, 1986 McClanahan, Mel, 1984, 85, 86 McCleskey, Donnie, 2002, 03, 04, 05 McCormick, James, 1932, 33 McCoy, Paul J., 1919 McCray, Broderick, 1979 McCulloch, Frank D., 1917 McCurdy, Taggart, 2003, 04 McCutcheon, William, 1930 McDaniels, James, 1937, 38, 39 McDermott, M.C., 1897 McDonald, Pat, 1984, 85, 86 McDougald, Rance, 1982, 83, 84 McElderry, Stu, 1985, 86, 87, 88 McGaffie, John, 1967, 68 McGhee, Brian, 1986, 88, 89 McGillis, Mike, 1972 McGlinchey, Mike, 1989 McGonigal, Kerry, 1992, 93, 94, 95 McGrath, Michael, 2001, 02, 03, 04 McIntyre, Eric, 1978, 79 McIntyre, Shea, 2007, 08 McIsaac, Hugh, 1896 McKim, Joseph L., 1912, 13, 14 McLaughlin, Hollis G., Jr., 1944 McLaughlin, John, 1997, 98 McLean, Norm, 1959, 60, 61 McMahon, John, 1977 McMahon, Rhett, 1911 McMillan, Dan A., 1920, 21 McNab, John B., 1899 McNutt, William F., Jr., 1896 McQuary, Jack, 1939, 40, 41 McWilson, Marlon, 1994, 95, 96 Mead, Harry R., 1904, 05 Meadows, Jerome, 2009 Meade, Ken, 1958-59 Mebane, Brandon, 2003, 04, 05, 06 Medanich, Frank, 1929, 30, 31 Medaris, John, 1970 Meek, Dave, 1932, 33, 34 Meek, John, 1935, 36, 37 Meers, Mike, 1967, 68, 69 Mehan, Tim, 1975 Mell, Charles N., 1923, 25 Mell, Lowell W., 1924 Melville, Dan, 1977, 78 Meredith, Bob, 1976, 77 Mering, Pete, 1950, 51 Merlo, Fred, 1971 Merlo, Joe, 1941, 42 Merz, Aaron, 2002, 03, 04, 05 Meserve, Keith, 1951, 52, 54 Meshak, Tom, 1961 Messner, Russell, 1941, 42 Metoyer, Mike, 1983, 84 Meyer, Herb, 1944 Meyers, Walter, 1945 Meyersieck, Jim, 1976, 77 Micco, Pat, 1972, 74, 75
Michael, John, 1956, 57, 58 Michelsen, Ed, 1952 Miksits, John, 1950, 51 Miles, Darrell, 1993, 94 Miller, Anthony, 2008, 09 Miller, Don, 1974 Miller, Keith, 1998, 99 Miller, Otis A., 1925, 26 Miller, Rich, 1977, 78 Miller, Robert E., 1912 Miller, Ron, 1966, 67, 68 Miller, Roswell, 1915 Miller, Tim, 1977 Minahen, Bob, 1948, 49, 50 Minahen, Timothy, 1946, 47, 48 Minamide, Ron, 1965 Mini, Elvezio, 1901, 02, 03 Mitchell, Don, 1955 Mixco, Edgardo, 1979, 80 Mixon, Tim, 2003, 04, 05 Moeller, Kenneth, 1933, 34 Moen, Kevin, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Moffett, Ron, 1977, 78 Mogni, Dave, 1977, 78 Mohamed, Mike, 2007, 08, 09 Mohn, Elden, 1945 Momson, Chris M., 1916 Monachino, James, 1948, 49, 50 Monahan, Brad, 1991, 92 Moncrease, Chris, 2009 Montagne, William, 1947, 48, 49 Montgomery, Carl, 1981, 1984 Montgomery, James, 2007 Montgomery, Willis, 1914, 15, 16 Moore, Jascha, 1992, 93 Moore, Shawn, 1992, 93 Moore, Tyrone, 1985, 87 More, John F., 1898, 1901, 02, 03 Morey, Charles, 1934 Morrah, Cameron, 2006, 07, 08 Morris, Howard, 1932, 33 Morris, Laird M., 1909, 10, 11, 12 Morrison, Jesse B. (Duke), 1920, 21, 22 Morse, Clinton R., 1896 Morton, Craig, 1962, 63, 64 Moser, Mark, 1985 Mosher, Jerry, 1963, 64, 65 Moskowite, George, 1979, 80 Mosley, Dan, 1979, 80, 82 Moulton, Ken, 1963, 64, 65 Moye, Jeff, 1975, 76 Moye, Justin, 2005, 06, 07 Moyle, Mike, 1972 Muehlberger, Roy, 1949 Muga, Dave, 1961 Muhammad, Saleem, 1998, 99, 2000 Muir, James, 1944, 46, 47 Muller, Harold P., 1920, 21, 22 Mullins, Robert, 2008, 09 Muncie, Chuck, 1973, 74, 75 Munn, Greg, 1973, 74 Munroe, Richard, 1973 Murphy, Chris, 2000, 01, 02, 03 Murphy, Jonathan, 2003, 04, 05 Murphy, Stan, 1969, 70
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ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS (continued) -NNady, Scott, 1992, 93 Najarian, George, 1952, 53, 54 Najarian, John, 1945, 47, 48 Najarian, Paul, 1979, 80, 82, 83 Nartey, Kofi, 1994, 95, 96, 97 Nelms, Joe, 1986, 87, 88 Nelson, Alan, 1961, 62 Nelson, Gill, 1952 Nelson, Lyle, 1949 Neuhaus, John A., 1915 Neuhaus, Robert, 1930 Newberry, Dave, 1976 Newberry, Jeremy, 1995, 96, 97 Newell, Pat, 1957, 58, 59 Newman, Sterling R., 1927, 28 Newmeyer, Donald, 1923 Newton, Tom, 1975, 76 Nichelmann, Will O., 1925 Nicholas, Rey, 1986, 87 Nicholau, George E., 1942 Nichols, Donald P., 1921, 22, 23 Nickerson, Hardy, 1983, 84, 85, 86 Nicolson, Murdo, 1955 Nightingale, Chad, 1988, 89 Nisbet, Archie, 1920, 21, 22 Niswander, Roy F., 1926 Niualiku, George, 1981, 82, 83 Nixon, Matt, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Nnabuife, Bryant, 2008, 09 Noble, Don, 1983, 84, 85, 86 Noble, Ray, 1983, 84 Nobles, Donald, 1985, 86, 87 Nonhof, Randy, 1993, 94 Noonan, Chris, 1988, 91, 92 Nordstrom, Raymond, 1934, 35, 36 Northcraft, James F., 1909 Norris, Hal, 1951, 52, 53, 54 Norton, Robert B., 1927, 28, 29 Norwood, Jim, 1963 Nourse, William, 1943 Nwangwu, Daniel, 1999, 2000, 01, 02
-OO’Brien, Mike, 1976, 77 O’Brien, Walter M., 1922 O’Callaghan, Ryan, 2002, 03, 04, 05 Odom, DeWayne, 1987, 88, 89, 90 O’Donnell, Mike, 1984, 85 O’Dorisio, Kevin, 1972, 73 Ogden, Brenton R., 1951 O’Hare, Dean, 1951 O’Keith, Marcus, 2003, 04, 05, 06 Olguin, Hank, 1958 Oliver, Bob, 1953, 54, 55 Oliver, Bryan, 1985 Oliver, Marcus, 1997, 98, 99 Oliver, Steve, 1972, 73, 74 Oliver, Travis, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Olivia, Joe, 1954, 56 Olson, Pete, 1961 Olszewski, John, 1950, 51, 52 O’Neal, Deltha, 1996, 97, 98, 99 Orlich, Jeff, 1973, 74 Orr, Mark, 1996, 97, 98 Ortega, David, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Ortlieb, Craig, 1943 O’Steen, Dwayne, 1973, 74
204
Purnell, Rick, 1976, 77 Purnell, Rob, 1970, 71 Purtz, Chris, 2005 Pyle, Bob, 1972, 73
-QQueen, David, 1938, 40 Quisling, Milo, 1932, 33 Quist, George, 1943
-R-
Steve Rivera O’Toole, Lawrence S., 1905 Overall, Orval F., 1900, 01, 02, 03 Overton, Scott, 1973 Owusu, Ernest, 2008, 09
-PPaga, Shaun, 1997, 2000 Palamountain, Greg, 1963, 65 Palmer, David, 1978, 79, 80, 81 Palmer, Jeff, 1963, 64, 65 Papais, Louis, 1947, 48 Papini, John, 1960 Pappa, John, 1949, 50, 51 Parker, Drake, 1994, 95, 96, 97 Parker, Jeremiah, 1996, 97, 98, 99 Parkinson, Stan, 1960, 61 Parks, Ted, 1965 Parque, Larry, 1958, 59 Parrish, Doug, 1988, 89 Parson, Monte, 2002, 03 Partee, Ben, 1974 Pascoe, Robert, 1930, 31, 32 Patterson, Craig, 1981, 83 Patton, Billy, 1958, 59, 60 Pauley, Charles W., 1908, 10, 11 Pavlow, Fred, 1944 Pawlawski, Mike, 1988, 89, 90, 91 Paxton, Marshall W., 1917 Payne, Kendrick, 2008, 09 Pearce, Gerald G., 1924 Pearson, Harold, 1998, 99, 2000 Peart, Stirling, 1909, 10, 11, 12, 13 Peele, Robert, 2006, 07 Peery, Ryan, 1990, 91 Pelonis, George, 1951 Penaflor, Manuel, 1960, 61 Penhall, Dave, 1969, 70 Penton, John, Jr. 1993, 94, 95 Peoples, Wendell, 1985, 86 Perkins, Randall, 2001 Perrin, Paul V., 1925 Perrin, Toni, 1958 Perry, Cliff, 1939 Perry, Donald C., 1923 Perry, Gerald, 1952 Pessler, Daryl, 1989, 91 Peters, Greg, 1974, 75, 76 Peters, Matt, 1998 Peterson, Howard, 1944, 45 Peterson, John, 1951 Pettway, Ken, 1984, 85
Philip, Marvin, 2000, 03, 04, 05 Phillips, Don, 1953 Phillips, Irvine L., 1926, 27, 28 Phillips, Jim, 1962, 63, 65 Phillips, John, 1968, 69 Phleger, Carl A., 1908, 10, 11 Phleger, Herman H., 1910, 11 Pickett, Gene, 1940, 41, 42 Pieper, Harry, 1942, 46, 47 Pierovich, George, 1959, 60, 61 Pierre, Bruce, 1997, 98 Piestrup, Don, 1956, 58, 59 Piestrup, Mel, 1961 Piller, Lloyd, 1932 Pillsbury, Dave, 1982, 83, 84 Pimentel, Mickey, 2005, 06 Pinson, Jim, 1962, 63, 64 Pipersburg, Phillip, 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Pitta, Dennis, 1967, 68 Pitto, Louis, 1928, 29 Pittore, Jess, 1961 Plasch, William, 1937, 38, 39 Pleis, Matt, 1977 Plummer, Gary, 1981, 82 Plunkett, W.T., 1896 Poddig, Herbert, 1946, 47, 48 Poe, Keith, 1981, 83, 84, 85 Pollack, Milton, 1936, 37 Pollock, Morris, 1936, 37 Pompa, Tim, 1999, 2000 Poppin, Nick, 1954, 55 Portee, Tyrone, 1979, 80, 81 Porter, Michael, 2003 Porto, Frank, 1942 Potter, Sheldon, 1930 Povio, Brandon, 2002, 03 Powell, Jemeel, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Powell, Robert, 1944, 45 Powell, William, 1951, 52 Powers, Todd, 1985, 86, 87, 88 Pratt, Randy, 1983 Premo, George W., 1901 Pressley, Legro, 1918 Pressley, Norman, 1948, 49 Preuitt, Justin, 2009 Price, Jarred, 2009 Price, Tyrone, 1962 Prindiville, Terry, 1956 Pringle, Charles A., 1897, 98, 99, 1900
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Radich, Steve, 1963, 64, 65 Ralston, John, 1950 Ramseier, Rager, 1955, 56, 57 Randolph, Anthony, 1989, 90, 91 Ransome, Arthur W., 1896 Ransome, Clark, 1861 Ransome, John, 1931, 32, 33 Rasmussen, George, 1943 Rau, Walter F., Jr., 1923, 24, 25 Raulston, Brad, 1990 Rawn, Walter, 1941 Ray, Thomas, 1938 Redmond, Castle, 1988, 89, 90 Reece, Steve, 1969, 70 Reed, C. W., Jr., 1898 Reed, Chuck, 1967 Reed, Delroy, 1979 Reed, James, 1975, 76 Reed, Mike, 1983, 84 Reedy, Mountford, 1933, 34 Reginato, Angelo, 1938 Reinhard, Robert, 1939, 40, 41 Reinhard, William, 1941, 46 Reis, Larry, 1966, 67, 68 Reist, Lloyd, 1965, 66, 67 Relles, George, 1932, 33 Relles, Tom, 1963, 64, 65 Remington, Brian, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Renouf, Clement A., 1907 Rhodes, Andre, 1994, 95, 96, 97 Rice, Leland, 1928, 29 Richards, Bob, 1968, 69, 70 Richards, Chris, 1986, 87, 88 Richards, James, 1989, 90 Richardson, Darrell H., 1917 Richardson, Rich, 1994, 95 Richardson, Stanley M., 1905 Richter, Les, 1949, 50, 51 Ricks, Greg, 1975, 76 Riddle, Ryan, 2003, 04 Riegels, Roy, 1927, 28, 29 Riesenberg, Doug, 1983, 84, 85, 86 Rigisich, Serge, 1977 Riley, Kevin, 2007, 08, 09 Rios, Matt, 2009 Risley, Thomas E., 1905 Rivera, Ron, 1980, 81, 82, 83 Rivera, Steve, 1973, 74, 75 Rix, Leland, 1985, 86 Roberson, Winfred, 1985, 86, 87 Roberts, Cliff, 2000, 01, 03 Roberts, Darrell, 1956, 57 Roberts, Frank, 1945 Roberts, George, 1995, 96, 97 Robertson, Erik, 2004, 05, 06 Robertson, Reggie, 2001, 02, 03, 04 Robison, Don, 1949, 50, 51 Rochlin, Dave, 1984 Rochlin, Steve, 1983
Rodger, Tom, 1957 Rodgers, Aaron, 2003, 04 Rodgers, Richard, 1980, 81, 82, 83 Rogers, Bob, 1970, 71 Rogers, Ernie, 1987, 1989, 90 Rojeski, Frank, 1944 Romero, John, 1997, 98, 99 Rose, Joe, 1977, 78, 79 Roseman, Scott, 1989, 90, 91, 92 Ross, Jeremy, 2008, 09 Ross, Kelvin, 1985, 86, 87, 88 Rosso, Ray, 1938, 39 Roth, Joe, 1975, 76 Rottke, Curtis, 1944 Rowe, Andrew C., 1917, 19 Roycroft, Glen, 1976 Rozier, Bob, 1977, 78 Rusev, John, 1963, 64 Rusinek, Mike, 1983, 84 Russell, William, 1913, 14, 15, 16 Russi, Matt, 2006, 07, 08 Rust, John, 2003, 04, 05 Rutherford, Reynard, 1992, 93, 94, 95 Ryan, Dan, 1967, 68
-SSabichi, George C., 1903 Saffold, Terry, 1977 Sagapolu, Onesemo (Sam), 1991, 92 Salem, Harvey, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Salisbury, John, 1965, 67, 68 Sally, Frank, 1957, 58, 59 Sanders, Ray, 1989, 90, 91 Sanguinetti, Don, 1979 Santos, Rick, 1986, 87 Sanyika, Sekou, 1996, 97, 98, 99 Sargent, John E., 1924, 25, 26 Sargent, Kevin, 1984 Sarver, Charles, 1948, 49 Sasaki, Kenji, 1961 Satchell, Charles, 2009 Sauer, Ralph, 1937, 38, 39 Saunders, Ward B., 1913, 14, 15 Sawin, Steve, 1968, 69, 70 Sayer, Tom, 1983 Scarlett, Richard, 1929 Scattini, Anthony, 1987 Scattini, Jerry, 1959, 60, 61 Schabarum, Pete, 1948, 49, 50 Schaeffer, James G., 1906, 07 Schaldach, Henry, 1930, 31, 32 Schell, Mike, 1968 Schellenberg, Bob, 1988, 89 Schlichting, Fred, 1929 Schmalenberger, Herb, 1948, 49 Schmidt, Charles, 1928 Schmidt, John, 1964, 65, 66 Schmidt, Randy, 1972, 73 Schneider, Tom, 2004, 05, 06, 07 Schraub, Jack, 1963, 64 Schueller, Jeff, 1984 Schultz, Eric, 1948, 49 Schultz, Steve, 1967, 68, 69 Schurr, Werner A., 1921 Schutte, Bryan, 2006 Schwartz, Bert F., 1926, 27, 28, 29 Schwartz, Mitchell, 2008, 09 Schwartz, Perry, 1935, 36, 37 Schwartz, Richard, 2003 Schwenke, Brian, 2009 Schwocho, Kenneth L., 1953, 54 Scott, Dennis, 1938
Scott, Gerald L., 1949 Scott, Myron, 1993 Scott, Will, 2002 Seaver, Donald, 1942,46, 47 Seawright, David, 2008, 09 Sebahar, Ron, 1985, 86, 87 Segale, Andy, 1958, 59, 61 Segura, J.P., 1999, 2000 Seifert, Ted, 1972, 73 Selfridge, James R., 1897 Semien, Damien, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Semmens, Paul, 1937, 39 Senior, Walt, 1955 Seppi, Dave, 1968, 69, 70 Sergeant, Lou, 1985, 86, 87 Serwanga, Kato, 1996, 97 Setoga, Setoga, 1973 Sevy, Jeff, 1972, 73 Sewell, Edward G., 1918 Shaeffer, Nick, 2001 Sharp, Jason, 1995 Sharp, Leroy B., 1914, 15, 16 Shaughnessy, Mike, 1972, 73 Shaw, Bobby, 1994, 95, 96, 97 Shaw, Dave C., 1977, 78 Shaw, David S., 1977, 78 Sheeman, Edward J., 1901, 02 Sheridan, Jim, 1966, 68, 69 Sheridan, Kursten, 1994, 95, 96, 97 Sherman, Marc, 1981 Sherman, Robert P., 1901, 02 Sherwood, Jon, 1985, 86, 87, 88 Shields, Brian, 1994, 95, 96, 97 Shore, Nathan, 1946, 47 Shotwell, Steve, 1980, 81, 82, 83 Shwayder, David, 1945 Simmons, Cliff, 1966 Simms, Rusty, 1982, 84 Simpson, Frank W., 1896, 97 Sims, Fred, 1993, 94 Sinclair, Dan, 1965, 66 Sitta, Pete, 1975, 76 Skaugstad, Daryle, 1975, 78, 79 Skinner, Edward A., 1917 Skinner, Horace R., 1913 Slater, Sid, 2001, 02, 03, 04 Slauson, Sal, 1957 Slevin, Dan, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Slocum, Tracy, 2008 Smidt, Joe, 1956 Smiland, Bob, 1976, 77 Smith, Blaise, 1984, 85 Smith, Bobby, 1965, 66, 67 Smith, Byron, 1981, 82, 83 Smith, Corey, 1998, 99, 2000 Smith, Don, 1997, 98 Smith, Donn, 1955 Smith, G. V., 1896 Smith, George, 1934 Smith, Harrison, 2002, 03, 04, 05 Smith, Holden, 1976, 78, 80 Smith, Jack, 1937, 38, 39 Smith, James, 2000, 01 Smith, Jason, 2000 Smith, Jerry D., 1972 Smith, John H., 1914, 15 Smith, Joseph, 1931 Smith, Louis, 1937, 38, 39 Smith, Marquis, 1995, 96, 97, 98 Smith, Michael, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Smith, Mortimer, Jr., 1942 Smith, Noah, 2004, 05 Smith, Robert, 1972, 74, 75
Smith, Scott, 1982, 83, 84 Smith, Scott, 2004, 05, 06 Smith, Tad, 2007, 08, 09 Smith, Tarik, 1993, 95, 96, 97 Smith, Tim, 1942 Smith, Tim, 1980, 81, 82 Smith, Tony, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Smith, Vern, 1975, 76 Smith, Warren W., 1898, 99, 1900 Smith, Zach, 2007, 08 Snedigar, Ollie F., 1901, 02, 03, 04 Snell, Eric, 2005 Snow, Jeff 1958, 60 Sockolov, Ronald, 1946, 47 Sofele, Isi, 2009 Solari, Ray, 1949, 50 Solinsky, Edward, 1937 Solvin, Howard, 1957 Sorenson, Bruce, 1979, 80 Sorenson, Robert S., 1907, 08 Souza, Alfred, 1936 Souza, George, 1948, 49 Souza, George, 1955 Spalding, James E., 1923 Sparks, Henry, 1935, 36, 37 Sparks, Jarrett, 2009 Sparks, Michael, 2001 Spears, Ricky, 1991, 92, 93, 94 Sperry, Willard E., 1904, 05 Spitz, Jeff, 1976, 77 Sprague, Don, 1979, 80 Sprott, Albert B., 1918, 19, 20 Stachowski, Rich, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Staffler, Theodore, 1938, 39, 40 Stafford, Pete, 1981 Stafford, Roger A., 1946 Stafford, Steve, 1988, 90, 91, 92 Stahlheber, Sam, 1991, 92 Stallworth, Darryl, 1984, 85, 86, 87 Stallworth, James, 1992, 93, 94, 95 Stanek, Stan, 1972 Stanger, Ryan, 1999, 2000, 01 Stanton, Forrest Q., 1906 Starr, Claude D., 1901 Staskus, Kim, 1973, 74 Stassi, Sam, 1961 Stathakis, George, 1949 Steele, Chuck, 1985, 86 Stephens, Howard, 1920, 21 Stephens, Mark, 1982, 83, 84, 85 Stephens, Paul, 1966 Steussie, Todd, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Stevens, Craig, 2004, 05, 06, 07 Stevens, Eric, 2009 Stewart, Charles, 1932, 33 Stewart, Jimmy, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Stewart, John, 1955, 56, 57 Stewart, John A., 1918 Stewart, Todd, 1993, 94, 95, 96 Stewart, Wayne, 1966, 67, 68 Stockton, Vard, 1935, 36, 37 Stoll, William, 1936, 37, 38 Stone, Bud, 1946 Stone, James, 1937, 38 Stone, Maike, 1966 Stone, Ralph, 1930, 31 Storer, Byron, 2003, 04, 05, 06 Story, Ron, 1981, 82, 83, 84 Stow, Edgar W., 1905, 06, 07 Stow, S. M., 1900, 01, 02, 03 Stowers, Bill, 1971 Strang, Vincent, 2002, 03 Streshley, Bill, 1958 Stress, Skip, 1967
Strickland, Howard, 1973, 74 Stringer, Scott, 1971, 72 Stroud, Alex, 2008 Stroud, Benjamin, 1901, 02, 03, 04 Stroud, John A., 1909, 10, 11, 12 Stuart, Joe, 1943, 44, 45 Stubblefield, Greg, 1979, 80 Stull, Roger, 1960, 61, 62 Stump, Lawrence, 1941, 46 Stumpf, Brian, 1997, 99 Sugarman, Adam, 1999, 2000, 01 Sullivan, John, 1980, 81, 82, 83 Sullivan, Kevin, 1983, 84, 85, 86 Sullivan, Michael, 1983, 84, 85, 86 Summerfield, Sean, 1984 Summers, Steve, 1978 Summers-Gavin, Matt, 2009 Sundberg, Nick, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Sundstrom, Walter, 1945 Surgener, Brian, 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Susoeff, Jack, 1945 Sverchek, Tom, 2002, 03, 04 Swafford, Derek, 2000, 01 Swain, Steven L., 1968 Swaner, Jack, 1946, 47, 48, 49 Swanson, Daryl, 1977, 78 Swanson, Eric, 1970, 71 Swartz, Burton A., 1908, 10, 11 Swartzbaugh, John, 1946 Sweeney, Beau, 2009 Sweeney, Steve, 1970, 71, 72 Swenson, Rob, 1972, 73, 74 Swigart, Robert, 1941 Swillis, Kevin, 1995, 96, 97, 98 Swinney, Marcus, 1932, 33 Swisher, Armand, 1940, 41 Swoboda, Tom, 1999, 2000, 01, 02
-TTabor, Scott, 1986, 87 Tafisi, Nu’u, 2005, 06 Tagaloa, Faasamala, 1988, 89 Tago, Ray, 2003, 04 Talley, Al, 1952, 53 Ta’ufo’ou, Will, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Tavake, Johnny, 1993, 94, 95 Tavecchio, Giorgio, 2008, 09 Taylor, Derek, 1985, 86, 87, 88 Taylor, Troy, 1986, 87, 88, 89 Tenney, Conrad, 1933, 34, 35 Teofilo, Chet, 2005, 07, 08, 09 Tepper, Mike, 2006, 07, 09 Tercero, Scott, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Thane, Bartlett L., 1897, 98 Thatcher, Frank D., 1924 Thomas, Greg, 1958 Thomas, Perry, 1935, 36, 37 Thompson, Brad, 1989, 90, 91, 92 Thompson, Jesse, 1975, 76, 77 Thompson, Syd'Quan, 2006, 07, 08, 09 Thorell, Alvin, 1933, 34, 35 Thornton, Ellis, 1929, 30 Thrams, Neil, 1944, 46 Thure, Brian, 1991, 92, 93, 94 Tilden, Charles L., Jr., 1914 Timmerman, Dolph, 1929, 30 Tinkham, Frank, 1955 Tipoti, Aaron, 2009 Todd, Tim, 1969, 70, 71 Toews, Loren, 1971, 72 Toler, Burl II, 1974, 75, 76, 77 Toler, Burl III, 2001, 02, 03, 04
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ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS (continued) Toles, Tyson, 1988, 89, 90 Tollner, Ryan, 1997, 98 Toney, Charles T., 1920, 21 Toomey, Irving F. (Crip), 1920, 21 Topham, Wellman H., 1924 Torchio, J., 1980, 81, 82, 83 Torchio, Lloyd, 1952, 53, 54 Torgersen, Steve, 2003 Tozer, Richard, 1931, 32 Travis, Mack, 1989, 90, 91, 92 Treggs, Brian, 1988, 89, 90, 91 Tremblay, Brian, 2001, 02, 03, 04 Tronstein, Don, 1954, 55 Trowbridge, Josh, 1995, 96, 97, 98 Truhitte, Robert, 2000 Trumbo, Jack, 1960, 61 Tuatagaloa, Natu, 1985, 86, 87, 88 Tucker, Verran, 2008, 09 Tuft, Morton M., 1896 Tugbenyoh, Mawuko, 1996, 97, 98, 99 Tuggle, John, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Tuitama, Nofoaalii, 2000, 01 Tuller, Walker K., 1907 Tupy, Joe, 1982, 84, 85 Turner, Bill, 1961, 62 Turner, James, 1946, 47, 48, 49 Turner, Pat, 1976, 77, 78, 79 Turpin, Miles, 1982, 83, 84, 85 Twitchell, Frederick M., 1906, 07, 08 Tyndall, John, 2008, 09
-UUgenti, Paul, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Uperesa, Kevin, 1977, 78 Upshaw, Regan, 1993, 94, 95 Urrea, Dave, 1962 63 Uteritz, Irvine, Jr., 1945 Uwaezuoke, Iheanyi, 1992, 93, 94, 95
-VValianos, Leon, 1930, 31, 32 Vallejo, Edward, 1936 Vallotton, Bill, 1955, 56 Van Deren, Frank, 1947, 48 VanderLeest, Wayne, 1978 Vander Meer, Ron, 1972, 74 Van Heuit, Carl, 1949, 50 Van Hoesen, Greg, 2004, 05, 06, 07 Van Horn, Eugene E., 1928 Van Meter, Bryan, 2005, 06 Vartan, Brent, 1995, 96, 97 Vaughn, Darryl, 1990 Vaughn, Ron, 1961, 62 Vedder, Justin, 1997, 98 Vera, Marc, 1994, 95, 96, 97 Verducci, Joseph, 1932, 33 Vereen, Shane, 2008, 09 Vessey, Ned, 1975, 76 Vidmar, Bruce, 1988, 89 Vincent, Brian, 1979 Vincent, Mike, 1971 Volker, Ray, 1971, 72 Von der Mehden, Paul, 1974, 75
-WWaasdorp, Jacob, 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Wagner, Dick, 1968, 69, 70
206
WOODALL SCHOLARSHIP CREATED FOLLOWING WORLD TRADE CENTER TRAGEDY A Brent Woodall Memorial Scholarship Fund has been established to honor the former Cal tight end who died in the attacks on New York’s World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. The scholarship will provide funding for future student-athletes to play Cal football. Woodall was working as a stock trader on the 89th floor of the South Tower when the building was hit. He was a four-year letterman at Cal (1988-91) and a key member of the ’91 squad that finished ranked No. 8 in the nation after a 10-2 record and a Citrus Bowl victory over Clemson. He completed his career with 55 receptions for 646 yards and four touchdowns. Contributions to the Woodall Scholarship should be made out to the U.C. Regents/Brent Woodall Memorial Scholarship Fund and mailed to Bear Backers, University of California Athletic Department, 195 Haas Pavilion, Berkeley, CA 94720.
Walgenbach, Brian, 1982, 83, 84, 85 Walker, Andrew, 1983, 84 Walker, Franklin, 1934 Walker, Langston, 1998, 99, 2000, 01 Walker, Wesley, 1973, 74, 75, 76 Wallace, Anthony, 1989, 90 Walsh, Eddie, 1980, 81, 82, 83 Walsh, Jeff, 1981 Walsh, Michael, 1985 Walter, Jerry, 1962, 64 Walthall, John M., 1896 Ward, LaShaun, 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Ward, Roy, 1949, 50 Wardlaw, Joe, 1950 Warhurst, Blane, 1972, 73, 74 Warner, Bob, 1975, 76 Washington, Anthony, 1977, 78 Washington, Leon, 1975, 76 Washington, Timmy, 1978 Waterbury, Edward, 1931 Watkins, Brian, 1990, 91 Watkins, Craig, 1976, 77, 78 Watkins, George, 1930, 31 Watson, Robert B., 1918 Watts, Bert, 2000, 01, 02 Watts, David, 1998, 99, 2000 Watts, Edward L., 1908, 09, 11 Webb, Greg, 1993, 94 Weber, Fred, 1972, 73 Webster, Percy E., 1908 Webster, Staten, 1948 Wedemeyer, Kale, 1989 Weeks, Robert, 1943 Weeth, Waldo W., 1928 Weil, Richard, S., 1962 Weingarten, Bob, 1973 Weiss, Ivan, 1973, 74 Welbourn, John, 1995, 96, 97, 98 Welch, Bert, 1934 Welch, Edward, 1945, 46 Wells, Carlton G., 1916, 17, 18, 19 Wells, D’Andre, 1986, 87, 88 Wendt, Mark, 1971, 72, 73
Wenstrom, Marlin, 1984, 85 Wersching, Randy, 1969, 70 Wersching, Ray, 1971, 72 West, Francis S., 1923 West, Harry, 1951 West, William D., 1917 Westbrook, Tony, 1993 Westerfield, Otto F., 1900 Westerman, Chris, 1988, 89, 90 Westfall, Andy, 1969 Westfall, Kevin, 1973 Wetherell, Dan, 1979, 80, 81 Whalen, Glenn, 1938, 39, 41 Wheatcroft, Ron, 1955, 56, 57 Wheeler, Charles, 1937 Wheeler, Charles S., Jr., 1910 Wheeler, Len, 1943 Whipple, James, 1896, 97, 98, 99, 1901, 02, 03 White, Brian, 1999, 2000 White, Ed, 1966, 67, 68 White, Edwin D., 1904 White, Gordon H., 1924 White, Henry K., 1917 White, Joshua, 1997, 98, 99 White, Mike, 1955, 56, 57 White, O. Z., 1969, 70, 71 White, Russell, 1990, 91, 92 White, Sherman, 1969, 70, 71 White, Steve, 1982, 83 White, Terry, 1981 Whiteside, Majett, 1985, 86, 87, 88 Whiting, Brandon, 1994, 95, 96, 97 Whitman, Julian C., 1905, 06 Whyte, Charles J., 1931 Whyte, Don, 1953 Wiedemann, Ken, 1967, 68, 69 Wilborn, Jason, 1988, 89, 90, 91 Wilcox, Don, 1968 Wilder, Francis A., 1898 Wiley, Peron, 2001, 03 Wiley, Terry, 1980, 82 Wilhelm, Robert, 1937, 38, 39 Wilkes, Dwayne, 1978
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Willard, Jerrott, 1991, 92, 93, 94 Willi, Charles W., 1925 Williams, Arleigh, 1932, 33, 34 Williams, Charles, 1933 Williams, Clemont, 1979, 81, 82, 83 Williams, Dick, 1963, 64, 65 Williams, Duane, 1975, 76 Williams, Fred, 1979, 80, 81, 82 Williams, Garey, 1982, 84, 85 Williams, John, 1977, 78 Williams, Justin, 1995 Williams, Paul, 1967, 68 Williams, Sam, 1951, 52, 54 Williams, Sam, 1973 Williams, Terrell, 2001, 02, 04, 05 Williams, Worrell, 2005, 06, 07, 08 Williams, Yauger, 1995, 96, 97, 99 Willis, Brandon, 1994, 96, 97 Wills, Bob, 1959, 60, 61 Willsey, Ray, 1951, 52 Wilson, David, 1988, 89, 90, 91 Wilson, John, 1953, 54, 55 Wilson, Leo K., 1918, 19 Wilson, Mark, 2000, 01, 02, 03 Wilson, Theodore, 1937, 38 Winkler, George H., 1896 Winterbottom, Raymond, 1936, 38 Winton, Keith, 1943 Witter, Jean, 1941 Witter, John I., 1923 Witter, William, 1946 Wolf, Oscar, 1898 Wolfe, Terry, 1962 Wolleck, Tim, 1997, 98 Womble, Lloyd, 1898, 99, 1900, 01 Woodall, Brent, 1988, 89, 90, 91 Woodard, Greg, 1979 Woods, Jerry, 1966, 67, 68 Wright, Cliff, 1953 Wright, Darell, 1978 Wright, Tyran, 1979, 80, 81
-YYamamoto, Greg, 2005 Yauman, Charles, 1976 Yerman, Jack, 1957, 58 Yon, Hugo, 1994 Youdall, Peter, 1939 Young, Charlie, 1977, 78 Young, Eddie, 2007, 08 Young, Joel, 1997, 98, 99 Young, John A., 1924, 25 Young, Ray, 1955 Young, Robert W., 1930 Young, Sean, 2004, 05, 06, 08 Young, Travon, 1993 Youngblood, Raymond, 1969, 70, 71 Youngblood, Sylvester, 1972, 73 Yun, Patrick, 1994, 95, 96
-ZZacharias, Henry, 1940, 41 Zahler, Derek, 2000 Zawatson, Dave, 1984, 86, 87, 88 Zenker, Ron, 1983, 84, 85 Zenovich, Duke, 1948 Zomalt, Eric, 1990, 91, 92, 93 Zomalt, Greg, 1989, 90, 91, 92
HALL OF FAMERS The California Hall of Fame, which is located in the Hall of Fame Room in Memorial Stadium, honors the greatest Golden Bears in school history. Founded in 1986, the Hall features 234 individuals and six rowing teams. The following pages highlight the careers of all 72 Cal football players who are members of the California Hall of Fame.
TED ALBRECHT (Inducted 2000) A standout offensive tackle for the Bears from 1974-76, Albrecht earned first team Associated Press All-American honors as a senior and went on to become a first round NFL Draft choice of the Chicago Bears. A two-time first team All-Pac-8 selection, he played alongside Joe Roth, Chuck Muncie and Wesley Walker in 1975 on one of the greatest offensive teams in school history. During that ’75 season, he helped the Bears earn a share of the conference title, lead the NCAA in total offense yards and set a Cal modern record for most points in a season.
LEONARD “STUB” ALLISON (1997) As Cal’s head coach from 1935-44, Allison compiled a 10-year record of 58-42-2 and guided the Bears to a 13-0 Rose Bowl victory over Alabama in 1938. He was coach of Cal’s “Thunder Teams,” and his 1937 squad finished with a 10-0-1 mark and a No. 2 national Associated Press ranking. Among the All-Americans to play under Allison were Bob Herwig, John Meek, Sam Chapman, Jon Baker, Vic Bottari, Larry Lutz, Perry Schwartz, Vard Stockton and Bob Reinhard. Prior to arriving at Cal, Allison saw duty in World War I, where he earned the nickname “Top Sarge.”
TROY AUZENNE (2003) Auzenne, a left tackle for the Bears from 198891, earned first team All-American honors by the Football Coaches Association his senior year. Playing on Bear teams that won both the 1990 Copper Bowl (17-15 over Wyoming) and the 1992 Citrus Bowl (37-13 over Clemson), Auzenne earned All-Pac-10 first team recognition in his final season. Drafted in the second round of the NFL Draft by the Chicago Bears, he played five years in the NFL with the Bears (1992-95) and Indianapolis Colts (1996).
JON BAKER (1991) Baker lettered for the Bears in 1944 and from 1946-48 as a guard on offense and a linebacker on defense. After earning second team All-Coast honors in 1947, he picked up first team recognition in 1948. In those two seasons, Cal won all but a pair of games and captured the conference championship twice to earn a spot in the Rose Bowl. Baker earned the Vard Stockton Award as Cal’s outstanding defensive player in the 1949 Rose Bowl. He also played rugby in 1947
and 1948. After graduating with a degree in civil engineering, he went on to a fine NFL career. Baker was the league’s Rookie Defensive Lineman of the Year in 1949 for the New York Giants and an All-Pro in 1951. In 1952, he was named to the Pro Bowl.
STANLEY BARNES (1986) Stanley Barnes played left tackle for Coach Andy Smith from 1919-21 and the Golden Bears went 24-2-2 in those years. The 1920 and 1921 teams, the first of the five immortal "Wonder Teams," went on to play in the Rose Bowl. Barnes, who served as President of his junior class, was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1954.
STEVE BARTKOWSKI (1990) The only Cal player ever picked No. 1 overall in the NFL Draft, Bartkowski quarterbacked the Bears from 1972-74. As a senior, he led the nation in passing with 2,580 yards, and he completed his career with a then-Cal-record four 300-yard passing games. Cal’s Most Valuable Player and a consensus first team All-American in 1974, he was taken first in the 1975 NFL Draft by the Atlanta Falcons, playing in the NFL from 1975-86. In addition, Bartkowski was an All-American first baseman for the Bears baseball team in 1973 and led the squad with a .329 batting average.
VIC BOTTARI (1986) Nicknamed “Vallejo Vic,” Bottari was a starting halfback for Cal from 1936-38 and served as team captain as a senior. He suffered just one defeat in his final two seasons and was a consensus All-American selection in 1938. He finished his career as the third-leading scorer in Cal history with 145 points. Bottari was inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame in 1996 and is also a member of the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame. He later served as president of the San Francisco Touchdown Club.
JIM BREECH (1999) One of the finest placekickers in both Cal and NFL history, Breech connected on 50 field goals for the Bears from 1974-77 and completed his career as the most accurate collegiate kicker ever inside 40 yards, hitting 30-of-34 efforts. He was a two-time first team All-Pac-8 performer, leading the conference in scoring in 1977 with 82 points. Selected by the Detroit Lions in the 1978 NFL Draft, Breech spent 15 seasons in the league with Oakland (1978-79) and Cincinnati (1980-92), setting an NFL record by scoring in 186 consecutive games.
SAM CHAPMAN (1986) Chapman was a three-year starter at halfback from 1935-37 and an outstanding player on both sides of the ball. He played on Cal’s undefeated 1937 squad and earned first team All-America honors that season. In 1984, he was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame. Also an exceptional baseball player, Chapman batted .431 in 1936 and had a long professional career with the Philadelphia Athletics.
JIM “TRUCK” CULLOM (1995) A first team All-Coast tackle in 1949, Cullom was known as “The Toe” for his kicking abilities. He set a Cal record by scoring in 25 consecutive games from 1947-49 and made 103 PAT attempts during his career. The Bears were 29-3 during his career and went to the Rose Bowl in his junior and senior seasons. Cullom, who played briefly in the NFL, served as an assistant coach with the Bears from 1964-71 under Ray Willsey. He also was a standout rugby player at Cal and helped Doc Hudson coach that team upon his graduation.
SEAN DAWKINS (2005) Dawkins, a consensus first team All-American wide receiver for Cal teams that earned backto-back appearances in the Copper and Citrus Bowls following the 1990-91 seasons, snared 65 passes for 1,070 yards and a school-record 14 touchdowns to lead the Pac-10 during his senior season in 1992. Also named first team All-Pac-10 and Cal’s Most Valuable Player in 1992, Dawkins was chosen by the Indianapolis Colts in the first round of the 1993 NFL Draft. He played 10 seasons in the NFL with Indianapolis (1993-97), New Orleans (1998), Seattle (1999-2000) and Jacksonville (2001).
CHARLEY ERB (1992) One of the top quarterbacks in school history, Erb was a leader of Andy Smith’s “Wonder Teams” that won consecutive conference championships in 1920, ’21 and ’22. He had a combined record of 27-0-1 as a starter, during which the Bears outscored their opponents, 1220-81. Erb directed Cal to its first Rose Bowl appearance and No. 1 ranking in 1920. He teamed with Pesky Sprott, Crip Toomey and Duke Morrison to form the highest scoring backfield at Cal, rolling up 72 touchdowns and 510 points during the 1920 season.
ROD FRANZ (1986) Cal’s only three-time first team All-American in football, Franz was Cal’s starting right guard from 1947-49. He helped the Bears to a 29-3 cumulative record during those three seasons and back-to-back Rose Bowl appearances in his two campaigns. Also an assistant coach at Cal in 1956 and ’57, Franz was elected to the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1977.
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HALL OF FAMERS (continued) WALTER GORDON (1986) Gordon, a standout tackle and guard, was the first Cal player to achieve national recognition when he was chosen to the Walter Camp third team All-America squad in 1918. He earned three letters in football and helped the Bears to the Pacific Coast Conference championship his senior season. Voted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1975, he also won the intercollegiate boxing title in 1917.
RUSTY GILL (2006) A versatile three-year letterman, Gill played both fullback and halfback for Cal’s football team. He was a dependable back who gained his greatest fame in his senior year, leading Cal to an 8-2 record and second place in the Pacific Cost Conference in 1931. Gill was tabbed with an assortment of All-American honors, including first team by both the New York Sun and the American Football Players, second team by United Press and honorable mention by the Associated Press. A first team All-Coast selection, Gill came from a very athletic family, as brothers Frank, Harry, Sam and Carol all played football at Cal.
PERCY HALL (1993) Hall was part of one of the top backfields during the early years of Cal football (1896-99), teaming with Locomotive Smith and Kangaroo Pete Kaarsberg. Cal historian Brick Morse selected him as the first team halfback on his 1937 all-time Golden Bear football squad. In 1898, Hall helped Cal to an 8-0-2 record, including the Bears’ first Big Game win over Stanford when he gained 183 yards and scored a pair of touchdowns. In addition, he played three years on Cal’s baseball team at both first base and in the outfield.
JIM HANIFAN (2006) Jim Hanifan started three years at defensive end for the Bears, and in 1953 and 1954 he also started at tight end. The Bears’ 1954 team captain led the nation in receiving with 44 receptions for 569 yards and seven touchdowns. He received the Andy Smith Trophy for most conference minutes, was a unanimous first team All-Coast honoree and was chosen to the Catholic All-American team. After participating in the East-West Shrine Bowl, the Hula Bowl and the College All-Star game, Hanifan was selected by the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League and later starred for the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League. In 1973, he entered the coaching ranks and has been a long-time NFL assistant and is a former NFL head coach.
LOREN HAWLEY (2007) Loren Hawley played both rugby and football for the Bears from 1961-65 and is known as one of the best American-born rugby players to ever play
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the game. Tabbed “King of the Lineouts,” Hawley helped revolutionize the game with his tremendous aerial skills. Playing for the legendary Miles “Doc” Hudson, he led Cal to an undefeated record vs. U.S. competition in 1965. On the football field, he was an accomplished defensive back and wide receiver.
he earned first team Walter Camp All-American honors. He played a big role in the first game ever contested in Memorial Stadium, tackling a Stanford runner in the end zone for a safety in a 9-0 victory. In 1969, Horrell was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame.
JACK HART (2010)
TALMA “TUT” IMLAY (2000)
A first-team all-conference selection in 1958, Hart served as co-captain the team that won the Pacific Coast Conference and played in the 1959 Rose Bowl. As a running back, he led Cal in rushing (395 yards), receiving (396 yards) and scoring (58 points) his senior season, which was capped with two touchdowns vs. Iowa in the Rose Bowl. He also paced the Bears in scoring as a sophomore (36 points) and junior (36 points). Hart has remained close to Cal and college football since graduating, serving as executive director of the annual East-West Shrine Game and as committee chairman for the Glenn Seaborg Award, which is presented to a distinguished former Cal football player each fall. He is also a past president of Pappy's Boys, an organization of players who played for head coach Pappy Waldorf that continues to support the Golden Bears.
MATT HAZELTINE (1988) Hazeltine was an All-American center for the Bears in both 1953 and ’54, playing under head coach Pappy Waldorf. He also earned Freshman All-America honors in 1951. After graduating from Cal, Hazeltine played 15 years in the NFL, the first 14 with the San Francisco 49ers, and played in a pair of Pro Bowls.
GARY HEIN (1997) A two-sport star for the Bears, Hein started at cornerback in 1985 and ’86. He earned honorable mention All-Pac-10 honors as a senior and accumulated 132 tackles and eight interceptions during his career. Hein, though, gained most of his accolades on the rugby field, where he was a four-time All-American and captured the Woodley Award as the nation’s top collegian in both 1987 and ’88. He helped Cal to three collegiate titles and also played for the U.S. national team from 1986-94.
BOB HERWIG (1988) A three-year letterman in both football and basketball from 1935-37, Herwig played on Cal’s “Thunder Teams” on the gridiron. He picked up AllAmerica honors at center his senior year and was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1964. On the basketball court, Herwig served as team captain his final year.
EDWIN “BABE” HORRELL (1987) The starting center on Cal’s undefeated “Wonder Teams” in 1923 and ’24, Horrell served as captain of the 1924 squad, the same year
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
A two-year letterman at halfback who played for Andy Smith, Imlay was a third team Walter Camp All-American in 1924. His running and pass-catching abilities helped the ’24 squad to a No. 2 national ranking at one juncture and an 8-0-2 overall record. After serving as team captain in 1925, Imlay played in the inaugural East-West Shrine game and scored the game’s first touchdown.
JACKIE JENSEN (1986) One of the greatest athletes ever to play at Cal, Jensen excelled in both football and baseball for the Bears. On the gridiron, he earned first team All-America honors at running back in 1948 when he became the first Cal runner to rush for more than 1,000 yards (1,080 yards). For his career, he finished with 1,703 yards and averaged 6.0 yards per carry. In baseball, he was twice named All-American and helped Cal to the 1947 College World Series title. At the professional level, Jensen was voted the American League MVP while with the Boston Red Sox in 1958. He was voted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1984.
JOE KAPP (1992) Kapp played both football and basketball for the Bears in the late 1950s before returning as head football coach from 1982-86. As a player, he quarterbacked Cal to the Rose Bowl following the 1958 campaign, a season in which he also earned first team All-American honors. Kapp also lettered in basketball in 1956 and ’57. After graduating, he spent eight years in the Canadian Football League before moving to the NFL, where he led the Minnesota Vikings to the Super Bowl IV on January 11, 1970. As head coach of the Bears, he compiled a 20-34-1 record.
GROVER KLEMMER (1988) A talented all-around athlete, Klemmer lettered in track and field, football and basketball in the early 1940s. Most of his exploits came in track, where he set a world record in the 400 meters (46.0) and the 440 yards (46.4). As anchor for Cal’s mile relay in 1941, he helped the Bears to a world record-time of 3:09.4.
PAUL LARSON (1994) The only Cal quarterback ever to lead the nation in total offense, Larson earned first team All-
American honors in 1954 when he also paced the country in passing with 1,537 yards and completed 64.1 percent of his attempts. Larson was 3-0-1 vs. Stanford while at Cal and his 280 passing yards vs. UCLA in 1954 was a school record at the time.
HARRY LIVERSEDGE (1996) A versatile athlete who made his biggest headlines in track and field, Liversedge also lettered at guard in football in 1916 and in rugby in 1914. He won a bronze medal at the 1920 Olympics in the shot put with a mark of 46-5 1/4 and was an alternate for the 1924 Olympic team. Liversedge went on to a distinguished military career with the U.S. Marines, receiving both a Navy Cross and a Bronze Star and rising to the rank of brigadier general. He also helped lead the Marines ashore during the Iwo Jima campaign in 1944.
BEN LOM (1991) Lom lettered for the Bears from 1927-29 and earned All-Pacific Coast Conference honors his last two seasons. He was a member of the Cal squad that played in the 1929 Rose Bowl and later served as the first president of the San Francisco chapter of the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame. However, he is perhaps best known as the player who tackled Roy Riegels near the goal line on his wrong way run in the ’29 Rose Bowl.
MICK LUCKHURST (2005) Luckhurst was a two-sport standout in rugby and football. He was named tournament MVP when he helped Cal to its first collegiate national rugby title by kicking a pair of penalty kicks and a dropkick to give the Bears a come-from-behind victory over Air Force in 1980. Also a standout placekicker on the Cal football team, he led the Bears in scoring as both a junior (55 points, 9-for-15 in field goals) and senior (60 points, 14-of-17 field goals). He later enjoyed a distinguished career in the NFL, playing for Atlanta from 1981-87.
LAWRENCE LUTZ (2003) Lutz was voted a first team All-American tackle by the Associated Press, the All-America Board and National American Newspaper Alliance in 1935. With Cal posting a 21-10-2 record during his three years (1933-35) on the team, he served as team captain on the ’35 club that finished with a 9-1 mark. Known for his punt-blocking prowess, Lutz blocked punts against Oregon and UCLA his senior year, with both plays leading to winning touchdowns. Lutz also lettered in track and field as a discus thrower his senior year at Cal.
O.C.“CORT” MAJORS (1990) One of only nine athletes in Cal history to earn letters in three different sports, Majors excelled in football, track and field and baseball from 1918-21. He served as captain of the 1920 football team that
went 9-0, including a win over Ohio State in the Rose Bowl. The team's captaincy is now named in his honor. Majors was also a shot put specialist in tracak and field, and twice lettered as a guard in basketball. He remained active with Cal Athletics after graduation, serving as president of the Big C Society and chairman of the Athletic Council.
DAN McMILLAN (1989) A key member of Cal’s “Wonder Teams” in both 1920 and ’21 as a tackle, McMillan helped Cal to an 18-0-1 record and a pair of Rose Bowl appearances during that span. He was also a twotime second team All-American and was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1971. In addition, McMillan was a stroke in crew and served as captain in 1921.
JOHNNY MEEK (1989)
CRAIG MORTON (1992) Morton was a three-year starter at quarterback from 1962-64 who broke nearly every school record. He earned first team All-American honors as a senior and was the recipient of the Pop Warner Trophy, given to the most valuable senior on the West Coast. Morton finished his career with 4,501 passing yards, a school and Pac-8 record at the time. He was the fifth player selected in the 1965 NFL Draft and guided both the Dallas Cowboys and Denver Broncos to the Super Bowl. Morton was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1992.
HAROLD “BRICK” MULLER (1986)
A multi-talented quarterback on coach Stub Allison’s “Thunder Teams” in the 1930s, Meek served as captain of the 1937 squad that finished 10-0-1, including a 13-0 win over Alabama in the Rose Bowl. He also earned first team All-American honors that season.
Muller was the first Cal football player to earn first team All-American honors, receiving the recognition in both 1921 and '22. He led the Bears to a 27-0-1 record as a three-year starter and was voted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1951. Also a standout high jumper, he won a silver medal at the 1920 Olympics, clearing 6-2 3/4.
JIM MONACHINO (1999)
CHUCK MUNCIE (1995)
Monachino was a first team All-American running back for the Bears in 1950. His 84-yard rush vs. Stanford in 1949 still stands as a Cal record in the Big Game, and his 189 net rushing yards during the contest established a school record (since broken). Monachino’s performance earned him a spot on the all-time Cal Big Game team announced in 1997.
JESSE “DUKE” MORRISON (1997) Jesse “Duke” Morrison lettered at fullback in from for Cal’s "Wonder Teams" that compiled a 27-0-1 record from 1920-22. Approaching a decade after his career, he remains Cal’s all-time leader in career touchdowns (42) and points in a season (131, 1922). His 277 career points were a Cal record for over 70 years and remains No. 2 on the all-time charts. Known for his powerful, twisting and dodging runs, Morris was named a third team All-American by Walter Camp in 1922.
CLINTON “BRICK” MORSE (1988) The first three-sport letterman in Cal history set a number of track and field records, and was an outstanding back on the football team from 189295. In addition, he played outfield for the Golden Bears' baseball squad. Morse later served as the director of the Cal Glee Club for several years and composed “Sons of California” and “Hail to California,” two of the best known Cal fight songs. He is the founder of the Big C Society and wrote a book entitled “California Football History,” published in 1937 that detailed Cal football history from the start through the 1937 season.
One of the finest running backs in Cal history, Muncie was the Pac-8 Offensive Player of the Year, a consensus first team All-American and the runnerup in Heisman Trophy voting as a senior in 1975. He finished his career as Cal’s all-time leading rusher with 3,052 yards (since broken), including 1,460 during his final campaign, still the fourth-highest mark for a season at Cal. Muncie was the No. 3 pick overall in the 1976 NFL Draft by the New Orleans Saints and spent nine seasons (1976-84) in the NFL, making three trips to the Pro Bowl.
HARDY NICKERSON (2004) Nickerson led the Golden Bears in tackles from 1984-86 and was voted the team’s Most Valuable Player each season. Nickerson was a first team All-Pac-10 selection as a junior with his 167 stops that remain a Cal single-season record, while his 501 career tackles rank second in school history. A fifth-round pick in the 1987 NFL Draft by Pittsburgh, Nickerson played the first six of his 16 NFL seasons with the Steelers and seven more with Tampa Bay before ending his career with brief stops in Jacksonville and Green Bay, earning Pro Bowl honors five times.
JOHNNY OLSZEWSKI (1993) A three-year letterman as a running back for the Bears from 1950-52, Olszewski earned first team All-American honors as a senior. As a sophomore in ’50, he topped the 1,000-yard mark with 1,008 yards and finished his career with 2,504 yards, still eighth all-time at Cal. He was the fourth overall pick of the old Chicago Cardinals in the first round of the 1953 NFL Draft and spent 10 seasons in the league with the Cardinals (1953-57), Washington
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HALL OF FAMERS (continued) Redskins (1958-60), Detroit Lions (1961) and Denver Broncos (1962).
DAVID ORTEGA (2008) Cal’s all-time leading tackler with 525 stops, Ortega was a four-year starter for the Bears from 1986-89, earning All-Pac-10 honors three times. As a senior in 1989, he totalled 159 tackles, an average of 14.5 per game, including a career-high 22 takedowns against Wisconsin and 20 in the Big Game. Ortega had a team-high 142 tackles and six interceptions - the most ever by a Cal linebacker - as a sophomore in 1987 and followed that with a 132-tackle season in 1988. After playing in the EastWest Shrine Game in 1990, he signed a free agent contract with Los Angeles Rams. Currently, Ortega serves as the Compliance Director for Cal Athletics.
ORVAL OVERALL (1987) Overall played both football and baseball for the Bears from 1900-03. He was a four-year starter at guard in football and is best remembered for starring in three Big Games. He blocked a kick for a safety in a 2-0 victory in 1901, booted two field goals in a 16-0 win in ’02 and kicked the Bears into a 6-6 tie in ’03. Overall also lettered in baseball and went on to pitch nine seasons with the Cincinnati Reds (1905-06) and Chicago Cubs (1906-13), playing in four World Series. He is the only player to ever strikeout four batters in a World Series game, accomplishing the feat in 1908.
MIKE PAWLAWSKI (2002) Pawlawski led Cal to back-to-back bowl appearances as the Bears’ starting quarterback in 1990 and ’91. In his first year as signal caller, he guided Cal to a 7-4-1 record, including a victory over Wyoming in the Copper Bowl. The next season, he earned Pac-10 Co-Offensive Player of the Year honors when the Bears posted a 10-2 overall record, earned a final No. 8 national ranking from the Associated Press and defeated Clemson in the Citrus Bowl. As a senior, Pawlawski completed 60.4 percent of his passes for 2,517 yards and 21 touchdowns.
CLARENCE “NIBS” PRICE (1986) A coaching fixture at Cal for more than 30 years, Price served as head coach of both the football and basketball teams during his career. In football, he was 27-17-3 from 1926-30 and led the Bears to the 1929 Rose Bowl. Price also handled basketball duties from 1924-54 and is the school’s all-time victory leader, finishing with a 449-294 mark. He took the Bears to the Final Four in 1946. Price graduated from Cal in 1914 after lettering on the baseball team.
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IRVINE PHILLIPS (1994) Phillips played end for the Bears from 192628, earning first team All-American honors as a senior. He served as captain of Cal’s 1928 team that went to the Rose Bowl and earned All-Pacific Coast Conference honors in 1927 and ’28. Phillips also lettered as a discus and shot put specialist in track and field.
BOB REINHARD (1990) Reinhard claimed first team All-American honors at tackle in 1940 and ’41. He was also a top-rated punter for the Bears. In the 1941 Big Game, he sacked Stanford quarterback Frankie Albert for a nine-yard loss, blocked a punt and caught another blocked punt for a touchdown.
LES RICHTER (1987) Another of Cal’s National Football Foundation Hall of Fame members, Richter was a two time All-American at Cal during the final two seasons of his 1949-51 career. He kicked 40 PATs in 1951 to set a Pacific Coast Conference record. Richter played in two Rose Bowls with the Bears and also served as valedictorian of his graduating class. He went on to a nine-year NFL career with the Los Angeles Rams (1954-62).
ROY RIEGELS (1998) Riegels, a center, served as team captain in 1929 when he earned first team All-American honors and helped the Bears to a 7-1-1 record. However, he is most noted for his role in one of the most famous plays in college football history. In the 1929 Rose Bowl, he scooped up a Georgia Tech fumble and ran 69 yards the wrong way until teammate Ben Lom spun him around at the Cal one-yardline.
RON RIVERA (1994)
receiving yards in the 1974 Big Game marked the best receiving day in Cal history at the time. Also a rugby player, Rivera played two seasons in the NFL with the San Francisco 49ers (1976-77) and Chicago Bears (1977).
JOE ROTH (2000) As quarterback, Roth directed Cal to an 8-3 record and the Pac-8 Co-Championship in 1975 when the Bears led the nation in total offense with an average of 458.5 yards per game. A first team All-American in 1976, he passed away in February 1977 after a battle with cancer. Roth’s No. 12 is the only retired jersey in the history of Cal football, and he is remembered with a special display in the Cal locker room.
HARVEY SALEM (2004) Salem, a four-year starting offensive tackle at Cal from 1979-82, earned both first-team AllAmerica and Academic All-America honors his senior season. A two-time first team All-Pac-10 selection, he played on Joe Kapp’s 7-4 team in 1982, a year that featured “The Play” in the nowfamous Big Game. Drafted in the second round by Houston, Salem played 10 seasons in the NFL with the Oilers (1983-85), Detroit Lions (1986-91) and Denver Broncos (1991-92).
PETE SCHABARUM (1998) A rugged fullback who was a three-year letterman (1948-50) and an all-conference selection on Cal’s 1950 team, Schabarum helped the Bears to a 9-1-1 record and a Rose Bowl berth that season. He went on to play three season (1951, '53-54) with the San Francisco 49ers. Schabarum also lettered in baseball at Cal in 1950.
PERRY SCHWARTZ (2002)
A consensus All-American linebacker his senior year in 1983, Rivera set a school record that still stands today with 26.5 tackles for loss that season. He was also named the 1983 Pac10 Co-Defensive Player of the Year and was the recipient of the Pop Warner Trophy as the top senior on the West Coast. Rivera ended his career with 336 tackles, including 47.5 for loss. Rivera played in the NFL for the Chicago Bears from 1984-92, winning the Super Bowl XX title with the 1985 squad. He was the Bears’ Man of the Year for community service in 1990.
Schwartz earned first team All-American honors as a member of Cal’s 1937 team that played in the Rose Bowl to start the new year. Perhaps his finest moment came in Pasadena when he forced an Alabama punt returner to fumble, a play that set up a Bear touchdown in Cal’s 13-0 victory. Schwartz also displayed his talents on the tennis court, where he lettered for the Bears in 1934 and '35.
STEVE RIVERA (2001)
Schwarz was a first team All-American for the Bears in 1929 when the club was 7-1-1. A twoyear starter at guard, he helped Cal to a 6-2-2 record and a Rose Bowl appearance following the 1928 season.
Steve Rivera wrapped up his Cal career as the school’s all-time leading receiver in 1975 with 138 catches as still ranks No. 9 all-time. He played from 1973-75 and was a consensus AllAmerican as a senior. In 1975, he also set Cal’s single-season record with 57 catches and his 205
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
BERT SCHWARZ (1996)
ANDY SMITH (1986) One of the finest football coaches in the history of the game, Smith is Cal's all-time winningest coach and led the Golden Bears to a 74-16-7 record from 1916-25. His “Wonder Teams” posted a 50-game unbeaten string (46-0-4) during one stretch, and he guided the Bears to Rose Bowl appearances in 1920 and ’21. Smith was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1951.
WARREN “LOCOMOTIVE” SMITH (1995) Smith lettered in three sports at Cal - football, baseball, track and field - between 1898-1901. He was regarded as the top back on the West Coast at the turn of the century and led Cal to its first two wins over Stanford. Smith served as captain of both the football and baseball teams, and he was a hammer thrower during track season.
PESKY SPROTT (1993) Sprott was a standout in both football and track and field from 1918-20. He lettered on the gridiron three times as a running back and punter. Also a middle distance runner, Sprott was the PCC champion in the 800 meters in 1920 and earned a spot on the U.S. Olympic team that year, finishing sixth in the 800.
VARD STOCKTON (2005) Stockton, who died in an auto accident in 1946, earned first team All-American, All-Pacific Coast Conference and All-West Coast honors on Cal’s 1937 football team that registered a 10-0-1 record, including a 13-0 win over Alabama in the Rose Bowl. Noted for his blocking ability that opened holes for the likes of Vic Bottari and Sam Chapman, perhaps his most shining moment came in the 1936 Big Game when he stole the ball from Stanford’s Jimmy Coffis to set up a touchdown in Cal’s 13-0 win over its cross-town rival.
JIM TURNER (1996) Turner was a first team All-American tackle in both 1948 and ’49. He served as captain of the ’49 team that finished 10-1 and earned a Rose Bowl date with Ohio State. Turner overcame a knee injury his senior season after having one of his ribs removed prior to his final campaign because of a tumor.
CARL VAN HEUIT (1992) One of the top safeties in college football, Van Heuit played on Pappy Waldorf’s Rose Bowl teams of 1949 and ’50, Van Heuit was a 1950 All-American for the Bears. He also earned the team’s Vard Stockton Award for being the outstanding defensive player in the two bowl games. Following graduation, Van Heuit served as an assistant coach at Cal for six seasons and
as a volunteer freshman coach for another 20 years. He was selected the Bear Backer “Bear of the Year” in 1988.
FRANK “BUD”VAN DEREN (2004) A 1948 first team all-conference end, Van Deren played on Cal clubs that posted a 19-2 record during his two seasons (1947-48). Also selected to Cal’s Centennial Team, he starred on a 1948 squad that registered a 10-1 mark and earned a share of the Pacific Coast Conference championship. Van Deren also coached on Pappy Waldorf’s 1950 and '51 Rose Bowl teams, returned to Cal in the 1960s to coach on Ray Willsey’s staff, and later served as head coach at Humboldt State for 26 years.
PAPPY WALDORF (1987) Head coach at Cal from 1947-56, Waldorf compiled a 67-32-4 record. In his first four seasons, his teams lost only one regular season game and played in three Rose Bowls. Between 1947 and 1951, Waldorf’s teams played 38 consecutive regular season games without a defeat. He also has the best record of any Cal coach in the Big Game with a 7-1-2 mark. Waldorf was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1966.
WESLEY WALKER (1992) One of the greatest deep threats in Cal history, Walker was a prolific receiver for the Bears from 1973-76, in addition to starring on the track and field team for four years. He set an NCAA record for highest average gain per catch in a career (minimum 75 catches) at 25.7 ypc. Walker finished his career with 86 receptions for 2,206 yards and 23 touchdowns, with his greatest game coming against San Jose State in 1976 when he had eight grabs for a school record 289 receiving yards. He went on to a 13-year NFL career with the New York Jets (1977-89) and played in a pair of Pro Bowls.
ED WHITE (1993) White earned first team All-American status at nose guard in 1968, playing on Cal’s “Bear Minimum” defense that allowed opponents an average of only 3.6 yards per play. At the NFL level, he switched to the offensive line. White played in four Super Bowls and made four Pro Bowls while playing for the Minnesota Vikings (1969-77) and San Diego Chargers (1978-85) over a 17-year pro career. White returned to Cal to coach the offensive line from 1999-2001.
MIKE WHITE (2007) A varsity letterman in football, rugby, and track and field at Cal from 1955-57, Mike White also served as the Bears’ head football coach from 1972-77, compiling a 35-30-1 record and leading the team to a share of the 1975 Pac-8 title. As an undergraduate, White played wide receiver and was a team captain as a senior in 1957. On the track, he won the high hurdles and high jump
competition in the 1957 Big Meet vs. Stanford. In addition to his three varsity sports, White also earned a pair of junior varsity letters for Pete Newell in basketball.
RUSSELL WHITE (2003) White is Cal’s all-time rushing leader with 3,367 yards and averaged 5.1 yards per carry during his three years in Berkeley from 1990-92. He was a key member of the 1991 team that posted a 10-2 record, including a 37-13 victory over Clemson in the Citrus Bowl, and earned a No. 7 final national ranking by USA Today. A first team All-American in 1991 and a two-time first team All-Pac-10 selection, White led the Bears in rushing in both 1991 (1,177 yards, 14 TDs) and 1992 (1,069 yards, 9 TDs). He registered 15 100-yard rushing days during his Cal career, tied for second all-time at Cal.
SHERMAN WHITE (1989) Sherman White had played little football before coming to Berkeley as a sophomore in 1969. In his second year with the team (1970), he sacked opponent quarterbacks 18 times, including Heisman Trophy winner Jim Plunkett twice in the Big Game. He also knocked down five passes, made 44 unassisted tackles and aided in 31 others. He was named first team All-Coast and All-Pac-8. As a team captain in 1971, he earned All-American honors, as well as All-Pac-8 recognition for the second straight year, when he registered 75 tackles and three pass breakups. White was the second pick overall in the 1972 NFL Draft by Cincinnati and played four seasons for the Bengals (1972-75) before playing eight more campaigns with the Buffalo Bills (1976-83) to round out his career.
ARLEIGH WILLIAMS (2004) Williams starred in both football and baseball in the 1930s and earned first team All-American notice as a senior halfback in 1934. Williams finished his career with 1,404 yards on 526 carries. Williams lettered on the 1934 and 1935 Cal baseball teams, with both clubs finishing first in the conference and combining for a 45-15-1 record during that period.
JACK YERMAN (1994) Yerman lettered as a running back in 1957 and 1958, helping Cal to a 1959 Rose Bowl appearance in his senior season. On the track, he was one of the top quarter-milers in the nation, running a best of 46.0 in the 400 meters. Yerman won an Olympic gold medal as part of the U.S. 1600-meter relay team in 1960 and also competed as an individual in the 400. He finished third in the NCAA 440 yards in 1958.
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NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME The California Golden Bears depicted on this page have earned the highest honor accorded a collegiate football player - membership into the National Football Foundation's College Football Hall of Fame. Californiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s proud gridiron tradition is showcased by a total of 21 Golden Bears enshrined
Stan Barnes Line, 1918-21 Inducted 1954
Vic Bottari Halfback, 1936-38 Inducted 1981
Walter Gordon Tackle, 1916-18 Inducted 1975
Matt Hazeltine Linebacker, 1951-54 Inducted 1989
Bob Herwig Center, 1935-37 Inducted 1964
Joe Kapp Quarterback, 1956-58 Inducted 2003
Eggs Manske Asst. Coach 1947-52 Inducted 1999
Dan McMillan Tackle, 1920-21 Inducted 1971
Les Richter Guard, 1949-51 Inducted 1982
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Buck Shaw Head Coach, 1945 Inducted 1972
in this prestigious Hall of Fame, a number which ranks the Blue and Gold among the top schools in the country. Housed in a $6 million structure in South Bend, Ind., the Hall of Fame first opened its doors in 1978 and is open to the public year-round.
Sam Chapman Halfback, 1935-37 Inducted 1984
Rod Franz Guard, 1946-49 Inducted 1977
Babe Horrell Center, 1923-24 Inducted 1969
Bill Ingram Head Coach, 1931-34 Inducted 1973
Jackie Jensen Fullback, 1946-48 Inducted 1984
Craig Morton Quarterback, 1962-64 Inducted 1992
Brick Muller End, 1920-22 Inducted 1951
John Ralston Asst. Coach, 1956-58 Inducted 1992
Andy Smith Head Coach, 1916-25 Inducted 1951
Pappy Waldorf Head Coach, 1947-56 Inducted 1966
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Ed White Defensive Line 1966-68 Inducted 1999
THIS IS CAL
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THE UNIVERSITY
CAL STUDENT BODY Number of Students (Fall 2008)......... 35,843 Undergraduate............................... 25,530 Graduate........................................ 10,313 Degrees Granted (2008-09) Bachelor’s......................................... 7,247 Master’s and Professional................ 2,385 Doctoral............................................... 864 Profile of Freshmen From California................................... 73% From Public High School.................... 75% At Least 1 Parent Born Outside U.S... 70% First in Family to Attend College......... 25%
F
ounded in the wake of the gold rush by leaders of the newly established 31st state, the University of California’s flagship campus at Berkeley has become one of the preeminent universities in the world. Its early guiding lights, charged with providing education (both “practical” and “classical”) for the state’s people, gradually established a distinguished faculty (with 21 Nobel laureates to date), a stellar research library, and more than 350 academic programs. This California institution became a catalyst of economic growth and social innovation — the place where vitamin E was discovered, a lost Scarlatti opera found, the flu virus identified, and the nation’s first no-fault divorce law drafted. Scholars
at Cal have conducted groundbreaking research on urban street gangs and on basic human nutritional requirements, identified why wartime supply ships were failing at sea, invented technologies to build faster and cheaper computer chips, and imaged the infant universe. In recognition of broad and deep excellence, respected sources have repeatedly ranked the University at or near the top in fields ranging from engineering and the “hard” sciences to the social sciences, arts and humanities. The National Research Council, in the most recent version of its highly regarded report on U.S. public and private universities, ranked Cal No. 1 nationally in the number of campus graduate programs (35 out of
DISCOVERIES AND CONTRIBUTIONS BY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SCHOLARS 1887 • EARTHQUAKE SCIENCE Earth Sciences professors set up the Western Hemisphere’s first string of seismographic stations, to systematically record seismic activity and publish these earthquake records.
1895 • NUTRITION M.E. Jaffe becomes the first professor of nutrition in the United States. UC Berkeley quickly moves to the top in this field, making important contributions to the emerging understanding of the positive dietary role of vitamins, minerals and protein, and the negative role of cholesterol and fats.
1907 • CLEANER SMOKESTACKS Frederick G. Cottrell, professor of chemistry, develops an electrical precipitation device to clean smokestack emissions; it is still in use today.
1922 • VITAMIN E Anatomy professor Herbert M. Evans and his assistant, Katharine S. Bishop, co-discover vitamin E.
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1924 • DEEP-SEA DIVING
1940S • FLU VACCINE
Chemist Joel H. Hildebrand formulates a mixture of helium and oxygen for deep-sea diving, enabling divers to explore deeper into the sea than ever before, without experiencing the “bends.”
The influenza-virus vaccine is developed during World War II by biochemist Wendell M. Stanley and colleagues.
1931 • THE CYCLOTRON Ernest O. Lawrence designs the first cyclotron, launching the scientific use of particle physics to discover the fundamental structure of matter. The cyclotron has a major impact on the treatment of diseases, making it possible to create in large quantities the radioactive isotopes used in medical treatments. In 1939, Lawrence becomes UC Berkeley’s first Nobel laureate.
1940S • CARBON-14 AND PHOTOSYNTHESIS A team led by chemist Melvin Calvin resolves the riddle of photosynthesis, tracing the pathways by which plants use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide to carbohydrates. As part of this effort, Calvin discovers that carbon-14 can be used as a molecular tracer, and uses it to reveal the path of carbon as it travels through a plant. In 1961, Calvin is awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
1941 • TRANSURANIC ELEMENTS Using the cyclotron, plutonium is produced by professors Glenn T. Seaborg and Edwin McMillan and colleagues. For this work, Seaborg and McMillan share the 1951 Nobel Prize in chemistry.
1943 • THE ATOMIC BOMB During World War II, UC directs operation of the U.S. government laboratory at Los Alamos, New Mexico, incorporating work by Berkeley faculty and others to develop the atomic bomb. The laboratory is directed by physics professor J. Robert Oppenheimer.
1947-1955 • LIPOPROTEINS AND HEART DISEASE John Gofman, medical physics professor, and his former doctoral students Frank Lindgren and Alex Nichols, discover and name the various lipoprotein classes — such as low-density lipoproteins
NOBEL PRIZE WINNERS CURRENT FACULTY NOBEL LAUREATES AT CAL 2009 - Oliver E. Williamson (Economics) 2006 - George F. Smoot (Physics) 2001 - George A. Akerlof (Economics) 2000 - Daniel L. McFadden (Economics) 1997 - Steven Chu (Physics) 1986 - Yuan T. Lee (Chemistry) 1964 - Charles H. Townes (Physics) 1960 - Donald A. Glaser (Physics)
DECEASED FACULTY NOBEL LAUREATES 1994 - John C. Harsanyi (Economics) 1983 - Gerard Debreu (Economics) 1980 - Czeslaw Milosz (Literature) 1968 - Luis Alvarez (Physics) 1961 - Melvin Calvin (Chemistry) 1959 - Owen Chamberlain (Physics) 1959 - Emilio G. Segre (Physics) 1951 - Edwin M. McMillan (Chemistry) 1951 - Glenn T. Seaborg (Chemistry) 1949 - William F. Giauque (Chemistry) 1946 - John H. Northrop (Chemistry) 1946 - Wendell M. Stanley (Chemistry) 1939 - Ernest O. Lawrence (Physics) 36) among the top 10 in their fields. In accordance with the University’s “public” character, Cal has long served talented individuals (LDL), today referred to as “bad” cholesterol, and “good” high-density lipoproteins (HDL) — and discover the role of LDL and HDL in heart disease.
1952 • WETSUITS Hugh Bradner invents first wetsuit. The new protective garment helps to spawn new sports such as board sailing and body boarding; transform commercial, military, and recreational deep-sea diving; and advance understanding of oceans.
1961• GROUND-FAULT INTERRUPTER Charles Dalziel, a professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences, invents a groundfault interrupter, a device now found in virtually every home and building to protect people from electrical shocks caused by defects in appliances or grounding systems.
1964 • FREE SPEECH MOVEMENT Inspired by the Civil Rights movement and fueled by opposition to the war in Vietnam, Cal students organize against rules limiting their political activities on campus. Asserting their Constitutional rights, Free Speech Movement activists hold a series of demonstrations and actions for the right to use Sproul Plaza for political discussion and the dissemination of political literature. The student movement compels the university to drop restrictions on speech, a reform subsequently adopted by most other U.S. campuses.
CAL STUDENT-ATHLETE FACTS • Nearly half (49%) of Cal's student athletes earned a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher. Divided by gender, they break out as follows: 190 men (39%) and 203 women (63%) earned a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher. • Six of the 13 men’s teams (46%) and nine of the 14 women’s teams (64%) earned cumulative GPAs of 3.0 or higher. • Six of the 13 men’s teams (46%) and eight of the 14 women’s teams (57%) earned cumulative team GPAs higher than their historical average. • Nearly 60 percent of the University's student-athletes were honored at halftime of men’s basketball and football games for earning a term GPA over 3.0. • Over 70% of Jeff Tedford's first football recruiting class has graduated. • Eight teams scored perfect Academic Progress Rates for the 2008-2009 academic year.
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CAL FACTS • Berkeley has one of the top university libraries in the nation. With well over 10 million volumes and more than 400 special collections, Berkeley’s library holdings are the fourth-largest in North America and have been ranked first in the nation among public libraries. • There are over 600 clubs on campus from which students may choose. regardless of means. As early as 1897, financial aid was available for “needy and deserving” students. More than a century later, Cal combines outstanding teaching and research programs with broad access for students of all means — educating more federal Pell Grant recipients from lowincome families than all eight Ivy League universities combined. Close to 30 percent of freshmen are the first in their families to attend college.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
College of Letters & Science Haas School of Business College of Chemistry Graduate School of Education College of Engineering College of Environmental Design School of Information Graduate School of Journalism School of Law College of Natural Resources School of Optometry School of Public Health Richard & Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy School of Social Welfare
1971 • BIRTH OF BIOTECH
1995 • U.S. POET LAUREATE
The first biotechnology company, Cetus, is founded by Donald Glaser, winner of the 1960 Nobel Prize in physics.
English Professor Robert Hass is named U.S. Poet Laureate by Library of Congress. The landscapes of his native Northern California figure large in the sensual geography of his work. He is later awarded the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize for his book Time and Materials.
1978 • BETA-ENDORPHIN Beta-endorphin, a substance produced in the brain that acts as a pain killer, is discovered by Choh Hao Li.
1980 • POET NOBELIST Poet Czeslaw Milosz receives the Nobel Prize in literature, UC Berkeley’s first Nobel outside the sciences. A native of Poland who obtained political asylum in France before becoming a Cal professor in 1961, his work was prohibited by Poland’s communist government; the ban falls apart when Milosz is awarded the Nobel and becomes a national hero in his homeland. Later, Milosz’s poems are placed on the monument to fallen shipyard workers in Gdańsk.
1992 • REVOLUTION IN TELESCOPE DESIGN UC astronomers led by Jerry Nelson co-develop the world’s largest telescope, the W.M. Keck Telescope, atop Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano on the island of Hawaii. Revolutionary in design, the Keck’s primary mirror is composed of 36 hexagonal segments that join to form a single, honeycombed piece of reflective glass.
1998 • PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS UC Berkeley enlists its 3,000th Peace Corps volunteer, more than from any other university.
2003 • MARK TWAIN ONLINE The Bancroft Library brings author Mark Twain into the 21st century, publishing his body of letters online. Cal library houses the world’s largest collection of Twain’s writings, photos, scrapbooks and books from his personal library.
2006 • THE “SEEDS” OF THE MODERN UNIVERSE In 1992, a team led by cosmologist George Smoot obtains the earliest images of the infant universe and observes minute variations in temperature across the sky, revealing the early beginnings of galaxies and clusters of galaxies. These findings confirm the predictions of the Big Bang theory. In 2006, Smoot is awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics, becoming the most recent of Cal’s 20 Nobel laureates.
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CAMPUS ADMINISTRATION ROBERT J. BIRGENEAU CHANCELLOR Robert J. Birgeneau became the ninth chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, on September 22, 2004. An internationally distinguished physicist, he is a leader in higher education and is well known for his commitment to diversity and equity in the
academic community. Before coming to Berkeley, Birgeneau served four years as president of the University of Toronto. He previously was Dean of the School of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he spent 25 years on the faculty. He is a fellow of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the Royal Society of London, the American Philosophical Society and other scholarly societies. He has received many awards for teaching and research and is one of the most cited physicist in the world for his work on the fundamental properties of materials. In 2006, Birgeneau received a special Founders Award from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences along with President John Hennessy of Stanford University and filmmaker George Lucas. Established in the 225th anniversary year of the Academy, this award honors men, women and institutions that have advanced the ideals and embody the spirit of the Academy founders — a commitment to intellectual inquiry, leadership and active engagement. In 2008, Birgeneau and President Nancy Kantor of Syracuse University received the 2008 Carnegie Corporation Academic Leadership Award as “Champions of Excellence and Equity in Education.” Most recently, Birgeneau was one of three recipients of the Shinnyo-en Foundation’s 2009 Pathfinders to Peace Prize for his contributions to bringing about a more peaceful world. The foundation singled out Birgeneau for his “commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion and to the integration of public service as an essential component of the academic experience.” In 2009, Birgeneau became Chair of the Council of Presidents, Universities Research Association, Inc. A Toronto native, Birgeneau received his B.Sc. in mathematics from the University of Toronto in 1963 and his Ph.D. in physics from Yale University in 1966. He served on the faculty of Yale for one year, spent one year at Oxford University, and was a member of the technical staff at Bell Laboratories from 1968 to 1975. He joined the physics faculty at MIT in 1975 and was named Chair of the Physics Department in 1988 and Dean of Science in 1991. He became the 14th president of the University of Toronto on July 1, 2000. At Berkeley, Birgeneau holds faculty appointments in the Departments of Physics and Materials Science and Engineering in addition to serving as Chancellor. He and his wife, Mary Catherine, have four grown children and nine grandchildren.
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FRANK D.YEARY
ROBERT G. JACOBSEN
VICE CHANCELLOR – ADMINISTRATION
FACULTY REPRESENTATIVE
Frank D. Yeary was appointed Vice Chancellor at the University in 2008. Mr. Yeary has for many years served as a strategic and financial advisor to senior executives and board members of leading global corporations, educational institutions and non-profit organizations. As Vice Chancellor, Mr. Yeary is acting as Chief Administrative Officer, overseeing much of the administrative operations on campus, including finance, human resources and intercollegiate athletics. In addition, he serves as an advisor to the Chancellor on strategic and financial issues important to the campus. In this regard, he guides a number of major strategic initiatives, including the development of a sustainable long-range financial strategy and the implementation of a major re-engineering and cost reduction effort for the campus. Prior to this appointment, Mr. Yeary was one of the nation’s leading investment bankers and merger advisors. During his career, he personally advised on a number of the largest and most complicated merger transactions on record. As Head of Global Mergers and Acquisitions at Salomon Smith Barney (and then Citigroup) he initially restructured the department and then led the firm from a fifth-place rank to a second-place rank in the global M&A league tables—a ranking Citi retained when he departed in 2008. Mr. Yeary began his career in 1984 at Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb in San Francisco, California. He later moved to New York City and in 1990 joined Salomon Brothers Inc where, at the age of 31, he became one of the youngest investment bankers ever promoted by Salomon to Managing Director; he later went on to lead Salomon’s highly regarded Global Telecom and Media investment banking practice. In 1998, he joined The Carlyle Group as the Partner responsible for opening a New York City office for the global private equity firm. Under his leadership, Carlyle grew dramatically in New York and anchored successful investment practices in the Telecom, Media, and Healthcare industries. Mr. Yeary rejoined Salomon Smith Barney in 2001 and subsequently became Head of the firm’s Global Telecom, Media and Technology effort prior to running the firm’s Global M&A business. In addition, he was a member of the investment bank’s Operating and Management Committees, a member of the investment committee for Citigroup Capital Partners I and II (private equity investment funds) and he focused the investment bank’s commitment to diversity by developing and chairing a newly created Diversity Committee at the firm. Mr. Yeary is a member of the Board of Directors of Intel Corp. An active supporter of education and community, he serves as a Trustee on the boards of New York Public Radio, University of California Berkeley Foundation and Head-Royce School.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Bob Jacobsen, a Professor of Physics, serves as Cal’s faculty athletics representative. Appointed to the FAR position in 2010, Jacobsen provides oversight and advice to the athletics program concerning compliance with NCAA rules and student-athletes academic matters. He is empowered by the NCAA to represent Cal in dealings with both the NCAA and the Pacific-10 Conference, and advises the chancellor on campus policies relating to studentathletes. Jacobsen spent 1976 through 1986 working in the computer and data communications industry for a small company that was successively bought out by larger and larger companies before he returned to graduate school. From 1991 through 1994, he was a Scientific Associate and Scientific Staff Member at CERN, the European Laboratory for Nuclear Physics, in Geneva, Switzerland. While there, he was a member of the ALEPH collaboration concentrating on B physics and on the energy calibration of the LEP collider. He joined the faculty at the University in 1995. Among Jacobsen’s honors at the University are its Distinguished Teaching Award, the Noyce Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching and the Goldman Award for Distinguished Faculty Advising of Undergraduates. He has delivered lectures on his research activities on four continents and taught special classes for graduate students at 11 universities. Jacobsen's research has studied the basic properties of the Universe using the techniques of particle physics. Upon arrival at Berkeley he joined the BaBar experiment, a worldwide collaboration of more than 500 scientists and engineers who built a device to study the fundamental interactions of matter and antimatter. During its run from 1999 through 2006, the experiment accumulated the world’s largest sample of particles for studying the intrinsic difference between matter and antimatter. His current project, the LUX collaboration, is installing a detector 4,000 feet underground in the Homestake Mine in South Dakota to study dark matter, which comprises the majority of the Universe yet is largely unknown. Jacobsen obtained a B.S.E.E. from MIT in 1978 and his Ph.D. in experimental high-energy physics from Stanford in 1991.
DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS SANDY BARBOUR DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS As Director of Athletics at the University of California, Sandy Barbour oversees an Athletic Department that ranks as one of the most successful in the country with a mission that seeks to match its level of excellence with that attained by the entire University. Built upon four pillars – to teach, to serve, to compete and to excel – Cal Athletics strives to combine high athletic achievement with the academic rigors of the No. 1 public university in the country, and to do so with integrity, passion, respect, teamwork, innovation, diversity and professionalism. The department is charged not only to be a campus and community leader, but also to be a place where individuals can grow to their utmost potential. Under Barbour’s leadership, the Golden Bears have developed into a model program that has excelled in academics and increased its revenues in tickets, sponsorship and fundraising while becoming a mainstay among the Top 10 in the annual NACDA Directors’ Cup standings. Cal placed in that elite group for the fifth straight year, its seventh Top 10 in the past decade, with a No. 9 finish in 2009-10, during which Cal's programs recorded a pair of NCAA runner-up finishes in men's swimming and women's rowing. The Bears were also in the top five in women's swimming (3rd), men's gymnastics (5th) and women's volleyball (5th). In all, 17 programs contributed to Cal's total. “Sandy Barbour was my first appointment at Berkeley, and I consider it a privilege to have her as our athletic director,” Chancellor Robert J. Birgeneau said. “Under her leadership, our student-athletes are excelling on and off the field, supported by a department committed to excellence, equity and comprehensive compliance with the rules.” Since Barbour began her tenure in Berkeley on Sept. 15, 2004, Cal programs have captured 12 national team championships and 51 individual titles. In 2009-10, the men's basketball team earned its first Pac-10 conference title in 50 seasons, while the women's basketball program won the Women's National Invitational Tournament. In addition, the Golden Bear football team has appeared in seven straight bowl games, with a four-game bowl winning streak from 2005-2008 and a share of the Pac-10 championship for the first time in 21 seasons in 2006. Overall, Cal supports a 27-sport program with more than 800 student-athletes and a budget of approximately $70 million. On the academic front, more than half of Cal’s 27 programs maintain cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher, with 14 of them earning cumulative GPAs higher than their historical average last year. All Bear teams also surpassed the required minimum score in the most recent Academic Progress Report, with eight teams earning perfect scores.
More than 175 student-athletes have earned academic all-conference recognition in each of the last six years and over 70 percent of Jeff Tedford's first football recruiting class has graduated. Amid these achievements, Barbour has led the department's efforts to raise funds, design and begin construction on the longawaited renovation and retrofit of California Memorial Stadium as well as the Student-Athlete High Performance Center, scheduled to open in September of 2011. One of the “100 Most Influential Women in Business” in the Bay Area according to the San Francisco Business Times, Barbour was named a regional Athletic Director of the Year for 2008-09 by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA), and she was a finalist for National AD of the Year at the Sports Business Awards. Barbour was previously chosen a 2006 Woman of Distinction by the East Bay Business Times and the 2006 National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators (NACWAA) Division I-A National Administrator of the Year. Barbour is an active member of several committees on both the national and conference levels. In July 2010 she was selected as the Pac-10 representative to the NCAA Division I Leadership Council, a four-year appointment. She chairs the Pac-10 Revenue Sharing Committee and serves on the conference's Compliance & Enforcement and Diversity Leadership Invitatives. Barbour is also on the NACDA Executive Committee, the NCAA Diversity Leadership Strategic Planning Committee, the NCAA Women’s Basketball Discussion Group and the WBCA Defensive Player of the Year Selection Committee. In the past, Barbour has also served as the chair of the Pac-10 Budget and Finance Committee, a member of the Pac-10 Executive Committee and the Pac-10 Television Committee, as well as vice president of the conference in 2007-08. Prior to moving to Berkeley, Barbour was the deputy director of athletics at Notre Dame, serving as the university’s senior athletic administrator from July 2002 to September 2004. She previously held an associate athletic director position there starting in 2000. Barbour’s career in intercollegiate athletic administration spans 29 years, beginning as a field hockey assistant coach and lacrosse administrative assistant at the University of Massachusetts in 1981. She has since served as assistant athletic director at Northwestern and in 1991 was recruited to Tulane as an associate athletic director. In 1996, Barbour was appointed Tulane’s director of athletics at age 36, and during her three years overseeing the program, Green Wave teams won 12 conference championships. In her first year in the position, the school captured four conference titles, a feat never before accomplished in Tulane history. She also hired
Tommy Bowden as head football coach during her first year. Bowden proceeded in 1997 to post the Green Wave’s first winning season (7-4) in 16 years, and then directed the school to a 12-0 record, a Conference USA championship and a No. 7 national ranking the following season as the 1998 Liberty Bowl champions. In her position at Notre Dame, Barbour oversaw facilities and event operations for the school’s 26-sport program, including football game management and the department’s two golf courses. She was also responsible for developing, maintaining and implementing Notre Dame’s $127 million athletics facilities master plan. Additionally, her role at Notre Dame included responsibilities for women’s lacrosse, men’s and women’s cross country, indoor and outdoor track, men’s and women’s swimming and men’s golf. She also assisted with the administration of women’s basketball. Born Dec. 2, 1959, in Annapolis, Md., Barbour grew up in a military family. Her father was a career aviator in the U.S. Navy, and her family lived in various U.S. locations as well as in Western Europe during her childhood. Barbour graduated cum laude in 1981 with a B.S. degree in physical education from Wake Forest, where she was a four-year letterwinner and served as captain of the field hockey team. She also played two varsity seasons of women’s basketball. Barbour earned advanced degrees at both Massachusetts (an M.S. in sports management in 1983) and Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management (an MBA in 1991). Between master’s programs, Barbour served as assistant field hockey and lacrosse coach at Northwestern from 1982-84. She also held the position of director of recruiting services during that period, before being promoted to assistant athletic director for intercollegiate programs in 1984, a position she held until 1989. Prior to joining Tulane, Barbour worked in programming and production for FOX Sports Net in Chicago during the summer of 1990.
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ATHLETICS EXECUTIVES STEVE HOLTON DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS Steve Holton, who brings a vast background in intercollegiate athletics to the Golden Bears, joined the Cal staff as deputy director of athletics in May of 2005. His duties include oversight of business operations, facilities, game management, capital projects and
sport management. Prior to moving to Berkeley, he served as director of athletics at Northern Arizona for 10 years. During his tenure there, NAU claimed three combined Big Sky Conference All Sports Trophy competitions and captured more than 40 conference championships. In addition, the school also set records in graduation rates, student-athlete grade-point average and fund raising. Holton began his athletics career as an administrative assistant at Michigan from 1981-82 before becoming director of marketing and promotions at Houston for two years. While at UH, he was responsible for the marketing of all athletics programs, highlighted by the famous “Phi Slama Jama” slogan used to promote the three-time Final Four teams featuring Clyde Drexler and Hakeem Olajuwon. He later served as associate athletic director at Long Beach State from 1984-93. Holton holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from Western Michigan and a master’s in sports administration from Ohio University. He and his wife, Judi, reside in the Berkeley area.
TERESA KUEHN GOULD DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS Teresa Gould, who joined the Golden Bear staff in the Fall of 2001, serves as Cal’s Deputy Director of Athletics, as well as the Department’s Senior Woman Administrator. In her capacity at Cal, Gould oversees the budgetary and operational needs of various intercollegiate varsity teams, including both Men’s and Women’s Basketball, providing guidance and support to each program’s Head Coach. Gould also oversees all administrative units associated with External Affairs as well as the University’s multi-media agreement with International Sports Properties (ISP). Before moving to Berkeley in September of 2001, Gould served as Associate Commissioner of the West Coast Conference in San Bruno, Calif. In seven years with the WCC, she managed the league’s television, marketing and corporate sponsorship efforts, as well as administered conference championships and served as staff liaison
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to various coaches groups. She was a member of the NCAA Division I Management Council for two years during her tenure at the WCC. From 1992-94, Gould worked for ESPN Regional Television in Charlotte, N.C., as Conference Relations Coordinator. In this role, Gould served as the liaison to several NCAA Division I conferences. In addition, Gould was Director of Championships and Media Relations for the Midwestern Collegiate Conference in Indianapolis from 1990-92, Public Relations/Promotions Assistant for the Iowa Games Sports Festival (1989-90) and Assistant to the Coordinator of Football Recruiting at Iowa State University (1987-90). Gould received her bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communications from Iowa State University in 1990 and her master’s degree in education from the University of California in May of 2009. Gould is married to Cal running backs coach Ron Gould.
FOTI MELLIS SENIOR ASSOCIATE ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Foti Mellis, who has more than 20 years of experience in intercollegiate athletics and has worked at Cal since 2002, serves as the Athletic Department’s Senior Associate Athletic Director for Intercollegiate Services. In his role, Mellis oversees Cal’s Compliance Services and Student Services units. In addition, he is the department’s liaison to campus for Admissions, Financial Aid and the Center for Student Conduct and Community Standards. He also supervises Men's and Women's Track & Field and Cross Country, Women’s Soccer, Softball, Field Hockey, Women's Gymnastics and Men's Crew. During his tenure at Cal, Mellis has reorganized and enhanced Cal’s compliance operations, and implemented a student-athlete database networked to all department staff and various campus units. He has also helped to restructure the Student Services unit that included additional staff and the development of a new philosophy for the student-athlete experience. Mellis arrived at Cal after spending four years as Assistant AD for compliance at Arizona State, where he oversaw all areas of compliance for the department. Prior to his stay in Tempe, he spent two years at the University of Tulsa as Director of Compliance from 1996-98. Mellis began his administrative career at Northwestern in 1994, spending one year as an intern and a second year as a compliance assistant. A graduate of UC Davis, Mellis held various positions with the Aggies from 1988-94, including assistant men’s basketball coach, academic advisor and intern in the athletic department administration. He received his bachelor’s degree in managerial economics in 1990 and his master’s in education in 1996, both from UC Davis.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
KEITH POWER HIGH PERFORMANCE DIRECTOR Keith Power joined the University in July of 2009 as the first High Performance Director for intercollegiate athletics, a role in which he focuses on the development of the High Performance Initiative into a vital resource for student-athletes, coaches and staff. An accredited sport psychologist with the British Association of Sport and Exercises Sciences (BASES), Power has worked as a consultant for a wide range of elite teams and individuals from many sports, including soccer, rugby, track and field, golf, swimming and tennis. Clients in the corporate world have turned to him for guidance in human performance enhancement with coaching, human change systems and processes, creating and sustaining elite teams and cultural performance analysis and culture change programs. Previously, he has served as a performance adviser to UK Sport, a senior executive member and chair of the Interdisciplinary Sport Science section of BASES, a member of the British Olympic Association Coaches Advisory Group and a coach educator in several sports. Corporate clients have included Motorola, Hewlett Packard and Toshiba. As an athlete, Power competed internationally for Great Britain in track and field and was a World Cup series triple silver medalist in the bobsled. He holds a B.A. in Sport Studies and History from the West London Institute of Higher Education and a Master’s of Philosophy in Education (Sports Psychology) from the University of Exeter. Keith and his wife, Hazel, have two daughters, Scarlett and Abi.
LAURA HAZLETT ASSOCIATE ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Laura Hazlett, who joined the Golden Bear Staff in 2009, serves as Cal’s Associate Athletic Director for Business and Finance. She oversees a staff of eight that manages the purchasing, payables, budgets, financial reporting and analysis for the department. Hazlett also works on department's strategic plan and the financial feasibility models for the Student-Athlete High Performance Center and California Memorial Stadium projects. In addition, Hazlett acts as a liaison between the department and campus administration. Prior to moving to Berkeley, Hazlett created the financial feasibility model for University of Oregon's Matthew Knight Arena. Hazlett earned bachelor’s degrees in mathematics and economics from Arizona State University and a PhD in Finance from UCLA. Hazlett lives in North Berkeley with her husband and two-year old daughter.
DAVID ROSSELLI
MATT TERWILLIGER
DAWN WHALIN
ASSOCIATE ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
ASSOCIATE ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
ASSOCIATE ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
David Rosselli manages the front-line fund raisers and day-to-day operations necessary to develop annual and major gifts for the California Athletic Department. He currently oversees all fund-raising related to the California Memorial Stadium Renovation, Endowment Seat Program and Student-Athlete High Performance Center. With nearly 20 years of fund-raising experience, Rosselli has led the Cal development team to record-breaking fund-raising totals in each of the last three years. The Cal athletic development team consists of 16 people, one of the largest departments in the country. Under his direction, Cal has undertaken ground-breaking strategies to boost donor income for the department. Rosselli arrived at Cal in June 2004 after leaving his post as associate athletic director for development at Santa Clara University, where he led the campaign to build the Broncos’ new Steven Schott Baseball Complex. In addition to his athletic development experience, Rosselli spent eight years as the director of development for the Schools of Engineering and Business at the University of the Pacific in the early 1990s. Also an accomplished broadcaster, Rosselli has 20 years of radio experience, including six years at KNBR Radio in San Francisco and time spent as the host of Cal’s football and men’s basketball postgame radio programs.
Matt Terwilliger serves as the Associate Athletic Director for Business Development and a member of the Athletic Director's Executive Team. He oversees nine full-time staff and six seasonal ticket sales staff focused on ticket sales, advertising, database management and fan communication, branding, licensing, merchandising and promotions. Terwilliger also works with ISP Sports to maximize corporate sponsorship revenue for the department. Moreover, he is the chairperson for the department's newly formed Revenue Generation Committee tasked with generating additional ticket sales and annual donation revenues as well as evaluating new revenue opportunities for the department. During his time, Cal has experienced record levels of ticket sales and attendance as well as royalties from licensing and merchandise sales. Terwilliger served as Assistant Athletic Director from 2006 through 2009 and prior to that was the Director of Ticket Sales and Advertising from 2003-05. When he first came to the University in 1999, Terwilliger was Assistant Director of Marketing and Promotions. Terwilliger, who graduated from Florida State in 1997 with a bachelor’s degree in marketing, stayed at his alma mater as he completed his master’s in 1999 in the field of sports management. While earning his master’s, Terwilliger was an associate in marketing and promotions. He resides in the East Bay with his wife, Andrea, and daughter, Hailey.
Dawn Whalin, who joined the Golden Bear Staff in 1991, serves as Cal’s Associate Athletic Director for Human Resources & Finance. She oversees a staff of 17 that manage the purchasing, payables, travel, human resources, payroll, business contracts, budgets, financial reporting and risk management, as well as the administration of youth camps, for the department. During her time at Cal, Whalin has filled several roles in the business office, working her way up from an administrative assistant to the business manager to her current role. She has also worked with the information systems unit as a computer programmer, including the Bear Hunt of the 1990s, and she continues to consult on programming projects, most recently automating financial aid processing and developing the department’s intranet. In addition, Whalin acts as a liaison between the department and ISP Sports. Whalin graduated Phi Beta Kappa, earning her bachelor’s degree in economics, with minors in business and mathematics, from the University of Oregon in 1991. She has long ties to Berkeley, having been born and raised in the city and having graduating from Berkeley High School. Her parents are both Cal graduates, and her 14-year old nephew Garrett yearns to be a Cal graduate.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF
AMY BAIR Director of Student-Athlete Development
HUNT HOLSAPPLE Director of Ticket Operations
GORDON BAYNE HERB BENENSON Assistant AD, Assistant AD, Media Relations Events Management
MICHAEL HUFF Assistant AD, Facilities Management
BOB MILANO JR. Assistant AD, Capital Planning & Management
MIKE BLASQUEZ Head Strength & Conditioning Coach
NATE PINE Assistant AD, Development & Major Gifts
RYAN COBB Head Athletic Trainer
CHRIS STIVERS Assistant AD, Compliance
DAMON DUKAKIS General Manager, Cal ISP Sports Network
ED GARLAND Equipment Manager
DEREK VAN RHEENEN Director, Athletic Study Center
DAN WILLIAMS Assistant AD, Information Systems
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HEAD COACHES
DAVID ESQUER Baseball
MIKE MONTGOMERY Basketball-Men
JOANNE BOYLE Basketball-Women
MIKE TETI Crew-Men
DAVE O’NEILL Crew-Women
TONY SANDOVAL Cross Country - M/W Track & Field - M/W
SHELLIE ONSTEAD Field Hockey
JEFF TEDFORD Football
STEVE DESIMONE Golf-Men
NANCY McDANIEL Golf-Women
TBD Gymnastics-Men
CARI DuBOIS Gymnastics-Women
THERESA SHERRY Lacrosse
JACK CLARK Rugby
KEVIN GRIMES Soccer-Men
NEIL McGUIRE Soccer-Women
DIANE NINEMIRE Softball
DAVID DURDEN Swimming-Men
TERI McKEEVER Swimming-Women
PETER WRIGHT Tennis-Men
AMANDA AUGUSTUS Tennis-Women
RICH FELLER Volleyball
KIRK EVERIST Water Polo - Men
RICH CORSO Water Polo - Women
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2009-10 ATHLETIC HIGHLIGHTS 2009-10 DIRECTORS’ CUP
2010 National Champions – Rugby
NATIONAL TEAM CHAMPIONS Rugby Men’s Crew (Varsity 8+)
NCAA INDIVIDUAL CHAMPIONS Nathan Adrian (Men’s Swimming) – 100 Freestyle Damir Dugonjic (Men’s Swimming) – 100 Breast Tom Shields (Men’s Swimming) – 100 Fly Relay Team (Men’s Swimming) – 200 Freestyle Relay Team (Men’s Swimming) – 400 Freestyle Relay Team (Men’s Swimming) – 200 Medley Relay Team (Men’s Swimming) – 400 Medley Liv Jensen (Women’s Swimming) – 50 Free
2010 IRA National Champions – Men’s Crew
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California extended its streak of top-10 finishes in the Directors’ Cup to five in a row with a ninth-place showing in 2009-10. The Golden Bears, along with Stanford and Florida, are the only three schools in the country to finish among the top 10 of the rankings of best overall collegiate athletic programs each of the last five years. During the 2009-10 campaign, Cal’s programs recorded a pair of NCAA runner-up finishes in men’s swimming and women’s rowing. The Bears were also in the top five in women’s swimming (3rd), men’s gymnastics (5th) and women’s volleyball (5th), while softball and women’s tennis both tied for ninth nationally. Cal’s top-10 run began in 2006 when the Bears placed seventh in the Directors’ Cup, a level Cal also reached in 2008 and ’09. The Bears were also ninth in 2007. Cal first achieved top-10 status in 2003 and 2004, taking ninth both years. The Directors’ Cup was developed as a joint effort between the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) and USA Today. Points are awarded based on each institution’s finish in up to 20 sports – 10 women’s and 10 men’s. Because they are not NCAAsponsored sports, Cal’s national championship in rugby and runner-up team finish in men’s crew were not counted.
NATIONAL TOP-10 TEAM FINISHES Women’s Crew – NCAA Championships (2nd) Men’s Gymnastics – NCAA Championships (5th) Men’s Swimming & Diving – NCAA Championships (2nd) Women’s Swimming & Diving – NCAA Championships (3rd) Women’s Volleyball – NCAA Regional Finalist (8th poll) Men’s Water Polo – Final poll (3rd) Women’s Water Polo – NCAA Championships (3rd)
Nathan Adrian – 2009 Men’s Swimming & Diving 100 Freestyle Champion
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
OTHER POSTSEASON PARTICIPANTS Men’s Basketball – NCAA Tournament 2nd Round Women’s Basketball – WNIT Champions Baseball — NCAA Regionals Men’s Cross Country – NCAA Regionals Women’s Cross Country – NCAA Regionals Football – Poinsettia Bowl Men’s Golf – NCAA Championships Women’s Golf – NCAA Regionals Men’s Indoor Track & Field – NCAA Championships (individuals) Women’s Indoor Track & Field – NCAA Championships (individuals) Women’s Soccer – NCAA Tournament 2nd Round Softball – NCAA Super Regionals Women’s Tennis – NCAA Tournament 3rd Round Men’s Tennis – NCAA Tournament 2nd Round Men’s Outdoor Track & Field – NCAA Championships (individuals) Women’s Outdoor Track & Field – NCAA Championships (individuals)
NATIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR David Durden – Men’s Swimming & Diving
2009-10 CAL ALL-AMERICANS BASEBALL
Justin Jones - Collegiate Baseball, NCBWA (Freshman AA) Tony Renda - Collegiate Baseball (Freshman AA)
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Jerome Randle (4th team)
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Alexis Gray-Lawson – Associated Press (HM)
WOMEN’S CREW
Iva Obradovic Mary Jeghers Kara Kohler (2nd team) Taryn O’Connell (2nd team)
FOOTBALL
Bryan Anger –College Football Insiders (HM) Jahvid Best – Pro Football Weekly (HM) Matt Summers-Gavin (Phil Steele freshman 3rd team) Mike Tepper – (Sports Illustrated) Syd’Quan Thompson – Sporting News (3rd team)
MEN’S GOLF
2009-10 Pacific-10 Champions – Men’s Basketball
CONFERENCE ATHLETE OF THE YEAR Hana Cutura (Women’s Volleyabll) – Pac-10 Player of the Year Glen Ishino (Men’s Gymnastics) – MPSF Gymnast of the Year Caitlin Leverenz (Women’s Swimming) – Pac-10 Freshman of the Year Jerome Randle (Men’s Basketball) – Pac-10 Player of the Year Tom Shields (Men’s Swimming) – Pac-10 Freshman of the Year
TEAM CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Men’s Basketball (Regular Season Pac-10 Champions) Women’s Crew (Pac-10 Champions)
CONFERENCE COACH OF THE YEAR Barry Weiner – Men’s Gymnastics David Durden – Men’s Swimming & Diving
INDIVIDUAL CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS Varsity 8+ (Women’s Crew) Eric Mina (Men’s Golf) – Pac-10 Championships Individual Medalist Mark Matusak (Men’s Indoor Track & Field) – 3000m Deborad Maier (Women’s Indoor Track & Field) – 3000m Mike Morrison (Men’s Indoor Track & Field) – Heptathlon Patrick Kowalsky (Men’s Indoor Track & Field) – Shot Put Nathan Adrian (Men’s Swimming) – 50 Freestyle Nathan Adrian (Men’s Swimming) – 100 Freestyle Damir Durgonjic (Men’s Swimming) – 100 Breast Tom Shields (Men’s Swimming) – 100 Fly Martin Liivamagi (Men’s Swimming) – 200 IM Relay Team (Men’s Swimming) – 400 Freestyle Relay Team (Men’s Swimming) – 200 Medley Relay Team (Men’s Swimming) – 400 Medley Lauren Boyle (Women’s Swimming) – 500 Freestyle Hannah Wilson (Women’s Swimming) – 100 Freestyle Steve Sodaro (Men’s Outdoor Track & Field) – 3,000m Steeplechase
Eric Mina – PING (HM)
WOMEN’S GOLF
Joanne Lee – NGCA (HM)
MEN’S GYMNASTICS
Glen Ishino (pommel horse) Jim Kerry (parallel bars) Christian Monteclaro (vault) Bryan del Castillo (floor)
RUGBY
Derek Asbun — USA Rugby, Rugby Magazine (HM) Danny Barrett — USAR, RM Neill Barrett — RM (HM) James Besser — American Rugby News Keegan Engelbrecht — USAR, ARN, RM Sean Gallinger — USAR Eric Fry — USAR, ARN, RM Colin Hawley — USAR, ARN, RM Drew Hyjer — USAR (HM) Seamus Kelly — USAR Dustin Muhn — USAR, ARN, RM (HM) Tom Rooke — ARN Blaine Scully — USAR, ARN, RM
SOFTBALL
Valerie Arioto — Louisville Slugger/ NFCA (1st team) xxxxx
MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING
Nathan Adrian (five events, two HM) Graeme Moore (five events, two HM) Guy Barnea (four events) Tom Shields (four events, two HM) Josh Daniels (three events) Damir Dugonjic (three events) Martti Aljand (two events, 200 IM HM) Mathias Gydesen (two events, 200 back HM) Martin Liivamagi (200 IM, 400 IM HM) Sean Mahoney (100 breast, 200 IM HM) Ben Hinshaw (two events HM) Aaron Casey (400 IM HM) Nolan Koon (100 breast HM) Robert Sullivan (200 fly HM)
WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING
Lauren Boyle (three events, HM 200-yard freestyle) Erica Dagg (two events, HM 100yard freestyle) Alexandra Ellis (two events, HM 200-yard breaststroke) Colleen Fotsch (three events) Sara Isakovic (four events) Liv Jensen (six events) Katie Kastes (HM 500-yard freestyle) Caitlin Leverenz (two events, HM 400-yard individual medley) Amanda Sims (three events) Heather White (400-yard individual medley, HM 200-yard IM) Hannah Wilson (six events, HM 100yard freestyle)
WOMEN’S TENNIS
Marina Cossou, Singles Jana Juricova, Singles
MEN’S TRACK & FIELD
Tom Blocker (DMR – indoor) Michael Coe (3000, DMR – indoor) Mark Matusak (3000, DMR – indoor; 1500 – outdoor) Mike Morrison (Heptathlon – indoor; Decathlon – outdoor) Sebastian Sam (DMR – indoor) Steve Sodaro (3000SC – outdoor)
WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD
Deborah Maier (5000 – outdoor)
VOLLEYBALL
Hana Cutura - AVCA (1st team) Carli Lloyd - AVCA (2nd team)
MEN’S WATER POLO
Spencer Warden - ACWPC (1st team) Ivan Rackov - ACWPC (3rd team) Zach White - ACWPC (3rd team) Brian Dudley - ACWPC (HM) Cory Nasoff - ACWPC (HM)
* Results as of June 7, 2010
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2009-10 ACADEMIC ALL-CONFERENCE BASEBALL
Dixon Anderson (1st team) Mark Canha (2nd team) Erik Johnson (2nd team) Brian Diemer (2nd team)
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Jorge Gutierrez (2nd team)
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Lauren Greif (1st team) Rachelle Federico (HM)
MEN’S CREW
Will Dean (1st team) Sean Engel (2nd team) Samuel Walker (2nd team) Nikola Zunic (2nd team) Chris Yeager (HM)
WOMEN’S CREW
Taylor Christensen (1st team) Laurel Kuhn (1st team) Bridget Moran (1st team) Taryn O’Connell (1st team) Shay Seager (1st team) Kirsten Campbell (2nd team) Jill Costello (2nd team) Elise Etem (2nd team) Iva Obradovic (2nd team) Avalon Radys (2nd team) Nora Franzen (HM) Kristina Lofman (HM)
MEN’S CROSS COUNTRY
Matthew Miller (1st team). Maxime Chevee (2nd team) Kari Karlsson (HM) Steve Sodaro (HM)
WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY
Michelle Davis (HM) Alison Greggor (HM) Ellie Keene (HM) Keena Kohl (HM) Deborah Maier (HM) Chelsea Reilly (HM)
FIELD HOCKEY
Kristen Goodman (1st team) Maddie Hand (1st team) Jessica Kreck (1st team) Stacy Lee (1st team) Lauren Livingston (1st team) Lisa Lohre (1st team) Shannon Millson (1st team) Natalie Nurnberg (1st team) Jessica Pizarek (1st team) Megan Psyllos (1st team) Megan Shimojima (1st team) Sophie Sproats (1st team)
FOOTBALL
Alex Lagemann (1st team) Mark Boskovich (1st team) Mike Mohamed (1st team) Matt Summers-Gavin (2nd team) Ernest Owusu (2nd team) Georgio Tavecchio (2nd team) Skylar Curran (HM) Chris Guarnero (HM) Mitchell Schwartz (HM)
MEN’S GOLF
Stephen Hale (2nd team)
WOMEN’S GOLF
Pia Halbig (2nd team) Roseanne Niven (HM)
MEN’S GYMNASTICS
Nicholas Blair (1st team) Bryan Del Castillo (1st team) Eric Haeussler (1st team) Raion Sabo (1st team)
WOMEN’S GYMNASTICS
Avery Gee (HM) Sophia Hocini (HM) Shana Johnson (HM) Alexandra Leggitt (HM)
LACROSSE
Emily Abbood (1st team) Tara Arolla (1st team) Tori Harrison (1st team) Vail Horn (1st team) Chapin Jackson (1st team) Lauren Johnson (1st team) Alyse Kennedy (1st team) Melissa Sheehan (1st team) Alex Tickner (1st team)
MEN’S SOCCER
Andrew Wiederman (1st team) Hector Jimenez (2nd team) Ted Jones (2nd team) Davis Paul (2nd team) Evan Sassano (2nd team)
2009 ACADEMIC ALL-CONFERENCE (FOOTBALL)
Servanda Carrasco (HM) Imaan Kerchgani (HM) Michael Munoz (HM) Demitrius Omphroy (HM) A.J. Soares (HM) Jacob Wilson (HM)
WOMEN’S SOCCER
Lisa Kevorkian (2nd team) Brianna Bak (HM) Kathryn Benz (HM) Danielle Brunache (HM) Megan Jesolva (HM) Alex Morgan (HM) Katie Oakes (HM) Katrin Omarsdottir (HM) Gina Pellegrini (HM) Emily Shibata (HM) Miranda White (HM)
SOFTBALL
Melissa Drewrey (HM)
MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING
Nathan Adrian (1st team) Guy Barnea (1st team) Miller Douglas (1st team) Nick Ferrif (1st team) Peter Davis (2nd team) Andrew Godbe (2nd team) Issac Howell (2nd team) Nolan Koon (2nd team)
WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING
Lauren Boyle (2nd team) Alexandra Ellis (2nd team) Shelley Harper (2nd team) Blake Hayter (2nd team) Sara Isakovic (2nd team) Amanda Sims (2nd team) Alissa Barker (HM) Courtney Eronemo. (HM) Molly Hayes (HM) Kelsey Hoff (HM) Laura Sanford (HM) Heather White (HM)
MEN’S TENNIS
Mark Boskovich
Skylar Curran
Chris Guarnero
Nick Andrews (2nd team) Bozhidar Katsarov (2nd team) Jonathan Dahan (HM) Pedro Zerbini (HM)
WOMEN’S TENNIS
Jana Juricova (1st team) Mari Andersson (HM) Marina Cossou (HM)
MEN’S TRACK & FIELD (INDOOR)
Alex Lagemann
Mitchell Schwartz
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Mike Mohamed
Matt Summers-Gavin
Ernest Owusu
Georgio Tavecchio
Aaron Burney (1st team) Michael Coe (1st team) Yosef Ghebray (1st team) Ryan Holmes (1st team) Kari Karlsson (1st team) Patrick Kowalsky (1st team) Kevin Kuechler (1st team) Mark Matusak (1st team) Matt Miller (1st team) Miles Palacios (1st team) Kellan Patterson (1st team) Sebastian Sam (1st team) Ryan Shuler (1st team)
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
MEN’S TRACK & FIELD (OUTDOOR)
Mark Matusak (2nd team) Aaron Burney (HM) Michael Coe (HM) Yosef Ghebray (HM) Ryan Holmes (HM) Austin Jett (HM) Kari Karlsson (HM) Patrick Kowalsky (HM) Kevin Kuechler (HM) Matt K. Miller (HM) Miles Palacios (HM) Sebastian Sam (HM) Ryan Shuler (HM)
WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD (INDOOR)
Kayla Dixon (1st team) Taylor Dutch (1st team) Cyrena Giordano (1st team) Alison Greggor (1st team) Amanda Hunter (1st team) Mercedes Marchbanks (1st team) Deborah Maier (1st team) Linda Oseso (1st team) Theresa Raub (1st team) Chelsea Reilly (1st team) Allison Stokke (1st team)
WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD (OUTDOOR) Alison Greggor (1st team) Deborah Maier (1st team) Kristen Meister (1st team) Michelle Davis (2nd team) Kendall Morris (2nd team) Theresa Raub (2nd team) Kayla Dixon (HM) Taylor Dutch (HM) Cyrena Giordano (HM) Dantia Hudson (HM) Mercedes Marchbanks (HM) Linda Oseso (HM) Allison Stokke (HM) Rowena Tam (HM)
VOLLEYBALL
Hana Cutura (HM) Kristen Kathan (HM) Carli Lloyd (HM) Tarah Murrey (HM) Meagan Schmitt (HM) Mindi Wiley (HM)
MEN’S WATER POLO
Travis Bickham (1st team) Mason Cox (1st team) Brian Dudley (1st team) Michael Sample (1st team) Charles Steffens (1st team) Will Toppen (1st team) Spencer White (1st team) Zach White (1st team)
WOMEN’S WATER POLO
Remy Champion (1st team) Emily Csikos (1st team) Camille Hewko (1st team) Elizabeth McLaren (1st team) Julie Oreglia (1st team) Stephanie Peckham (1st team) Erin Scully (1st team) Stephanie Schnugg (1st team)
CAL TRADITIONS Perhaps nowhere else in America is the color and pageantry of college football better captured on autumn Saturdays than at the University of California and Memorial Stadium, which was judged to have the best view of any college stadium in the country by Sports Illustrated. The rich history of the Golden Bears on the gridiron has borne some of the most colorful and time-honored traditions in the sport today.
BLUE AND GOLD Official colors of the University of California were established at Berkeley in 1868. The colors were chosen by the University’s founders, who were mostly Yale men who had come West. They selected gold as a color representing the “Golden State” of California. The blue was selected from Yale blue. Cal teams have donned the blue and gold since the beginning of intercollegiate athletic competition in 1882.
GOLDEN BEARS In 1895, the University of California track & field team was the dominant power on the West Coast and decided to challenge several of the top teams in the Midwest and East on an eight-meet tour that is now credited by many historians as putting Cal athletics onto the national scene. As a symbol of the University, Regent Arthur Rodgers, class of 1872, commissioned a blue silk banner emblazoned with a golden grizzly bear, the symbol of the state of California. The banner was carried by the team on its successful tour, which saw them win five of the eight competitions. Cal athletic fans were so ecstatic over the team’s performance that Professor Charles Mills Gayley was inspired to write the song “The Golden Bear.” Cal’s athletic teams have been known as the Golden Bears ever since.
CARD STUNTS The Cal rooting section is credited with establishing one of the most timehonored traditions in college football - performing card stunts at college football games. Cal began this activity for the 1910 “Big Game,” a rugby match between California and Stanford. The original stunts performed that afternoon depicted the Stanford Axe and a big blue “C” formed on a white background. The tradition is a crowd favorite at Memorial Stadium as several times each season Cal students perform as many as 10 different stunts, using more than 5,000 cards. The painstaking process of plotting the positions of the cards, which once took days to complete, is now aided by computers that add to the precision of the images produced in the card section.
CAL BAND
BIG ‘C’
The University of California Marching Band has been a tradition at Berkeley for more than 100 years, exemplifying many of the best aspects of student life at one of the nation’s most prestigious public universities. It boasts over 200 members, a student-run management and a unique high-step marching style, all of which combine to make it one of the most singular bands of its kind. Formed as the R.O.T.C. Cadet Band in 1889, the Cal Band adopted its present name in 1923. It has performed across the country and around the world at such events as the Brussels World Fair in 1958, Expo ’70 in Japan and a Bicentennial Tour of the United States in 1976. In 1980, the Band took to the stage with the San Francisco Ballet, and it was the official state band for the city’s welcome to Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip of Great Britain in 1983.
The Big “C” is located on Charter Hill above Memorial Stadium and was constructed in 1905 by the classes of 1907 and ’08. The road up to the Big “C” was built in 1916 by the male members of the Cal student body in three-and-a-half hours, using 2,000 picks and shovels that were donated by the Southern Pacific Railroad. The Rally Committee became the custodians and guardians of the Big “C” some time after 1952. Since then, the Committee has been in charge of painting the “C” and protecting it from vandalism.
CALIFORNIA VICTORY CANNON
Cal began a new “tradition” in the fall of 2002 with the March to Victory. Approximately twoand-a-half hours before kickoff of each home game, more than 1,000 Golden Bear fans form a human tunnel outside the north end of Memorial Stadium to cheer on the team as it marches into the locker room.
The California Victory Cannon was presented to the Rally Committee in time for the 1963 Big Game by the class of 1964. It is shot off at the beginning of each game, after each score and after each Cal victory. Only once, against Pacific on Sept. 7, 1991, did the Bears score too many times, racking up 12 touchdowns before the cannon ran out of ammunition. The cannon, which was originally kept on the sidelines, has been mounted on Tightwad Hill above Memorial Stadium since 1971.
TIGHTWAD HILL For decades, enterprising Golden Bear fans have hiked to Tightwad Hill high above the northeast corner of Memorial Stadium. Not only does the perch provide a free look at the action on the field, but it also offers a spectacular view of San Francisco Bay and many of the area bridges to the west.
MARCH TO VICTORY
SONGS OF CAL While through the years Cal has collected numerous songs that are popular with its alumni and fans alike, two songs are regularly heard on football Saturdays. Those songs include the familiar fight song entitled “Big C,” a brisk marching tune composed by N.S. McLaren and H.P. Williams of the class of 1914. The other is the Cal alma mater, “Hail to California,” written and composed by Clinton R. “Brick” Morse, class of 1896.
HAIL TO CALIFORNIA Hail to California, Alma Mater Dear Sing the joyful chorus, Sound it far and near. Rallying ‘round her banner, We will never fail. California Alma Mater, Hail! Hail! Hail!
BIG C California! On our rugged Eastern foothills, stands our symbol clear and bold. Big C means to fight and strive and win for Blue and Gold. Golden Bear is ever watching. Day by day he prowls. And when he hears the tread of lowly Stanford Red, from his lair he fiercely growls! (Yell: Gr-rr-rah, Gr-rr-rah, Gr-r, r-r-r-, r-r-rah!)
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SPIRIT GROUPS which opens three hours prior to kickoff, include appearances by the Cal Marching Band and Cal Cheerleaders. Game-day ticket purchase and will-call windows are also now located in FunZone.
FOOTBALL ALUMNI TAILGATES Football alumni from all eras of the Golden Bears history are encouraged to attend an exclusive tailgate prior to every home game. Athletic Director Sandy Barbour and Head Football Coach Jeff Tedford have endorsed this pregame gathering as the official tailgate for all Cal football alumni and encourage all to join friends, teammates and staff at the School of Optometry courtyard (Minor Hall). Each tailgate begins two hours before kickoff and concludes 30 minutes prior to kickoff.
CAL SPIRIT GROUPS The Cal Spirit groups are responsible for promoting all spirit-related activities at the University of California and are active at home events, as well as many away games. In addition, they act as ambassadors of the University by assisting with alumni functions, fund-raising events and other formal occasions promoting Cal spirit. The groups are the Rally Committee, Cal Dance Team, Cal Mic Men and the Cal mascot, Oski. The Rally Committee, the oldest student group on campus, upholds school spirit and tradition. Above and beyond producing all rallies on campus, Rally Com is responsible for maintaining the Big C, displaying the California banner, the Cal flags, and constructing and executing card stunts at football games. Not to be forgotten is the California Victory Cannon, and when the Axe is in the possession of the Bears, the Committee is the custodian of the Axe. The Cal Dance Team consists of 20 women who dance to traditional Cal fight songs and Cal Band rock songs. During the football season, they perform on a platform that is elevated off the football field. During the basketball season, the team dances on the sidelines and on the basketball court during timeouts and performs entertaining halftime productions. Cal Mic Men, are student leaders of the rooting sections at all Cal sporting events. In addition, they emcee at rallies, alumni and community events. Oski, the official mascot of the University of California, has been a tradition at the school since making his debut during the 1941 football season. Prior to his arrival, live mascots were used at Memorial Stadium with varying degrees of success. It was decided in 1940 that a costumed mascot would make a more suitable alternative to a live bear. Named after the popular “Oski Wow-Wow” yell, the Cal mascot is selected by the Oski Committee, a governing body that oversees all aspects of caring for the lovable Bear. Oski’s identity is unknown to everyone, with the exception of the committee.
CAL BEARENTS Initiated in the fall of 1986, Cal Bearents has grown from an idea of six people into an organization numbering in the hundreds. Proud moms, dads,
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siblings, aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, in-laws and friends all gather together to share the Cal football experience with the players. Because no one understands the triumphs and tribulations in an athlete’s season as thoroughly as family and friends do, all Bearents share a special bond. Regardless of whether their player plays in a starring or supporting role, Bearents consistently provide a network of support for the players and for each other. In addition to extending an open invitation for all players to join family and friends for postgame barbecues after each home game, Bearents also participate in and coordinate various other events throughout the year with Cal alumni and Bear Backers.
ESP / BEAR BACKER FOOTBALL HOSPITALITY Due to the current renovation of California Memorial Stadium, the 2010 pregame and halftime hospitality will be dramatically different for qualified Bear Backers and ESP participants. ESP participants along with Bear Backers at the Athletic Legends, Director’s Circle, Athletics Scholarship, Pete Newell, “Pappy” Waldorf and Andy Smith giving levels will be invited to join us at an exclusive tented area of Maxwell Family Field in 2010 for pregame & halftime hospitality. Doors to the football hospitality will open immediately following March to Victory (approximately 2.5 hours prior to kick-off) for every home game and they will reopen again at halftime and close at the beginning of the second half. The hospitality area will be complete with food, beverages and big screen televisions to track the other college games in progress.
FUNZONE Cal fans can enjoy a tailgate atmosphere right outside of the stadium for every home football Saturday at FunZone. Located on Maxwell Family Field just north of California Memorial Stadium, FunZone offers fans a chance to get revved up for every big game. Best of all, admission to FunZone is free. Each weekend, Cal fans can enjoy great food and drinks for purchase and take in the lively gameday atmosphere. Other features at FunZone,
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
CALIFORNIA LETTERMAN’S CLUB Cal’s football alumni association, the California Letterman’s Club, is an active organization that supports the Golden Bear program. Formerly known as the Sons of California, the group was created several years ago to continue the relationships that were forged inside Memorial Stadium. Each year, the Letterman’s Club has a reunion at a home game and holds a fund-raising golf tournament in the spring. In addition, they sponsor a reception at the end of the year for graduating football players and honor a deserving alumnus with the Glenn T. Seaborg Award named for the renowned Nobel laureate and former University of California Chancellor. For more information about the California Letterman’s Club please contact the Athletic Development Office at 510-642-2427.
PAPPY’S BOYS Founded in 1986, Pappy’s Boys is an organization of more than 500 former Golden Bears who played under legendary Cal football coach Lynn “Pappy” Waldorf. Not only does the group get together to relive the success of the Cal team’s during the Waldorf era, but it also supports the current program in many ways. Recent efforts include establishing a $400,000 endowment for football scholarships and raising funds for two of the most recent additions to campus statuary: that of Waldorf kneeling near Faculty Glade and the giant grizzly bear by Memorial Stadium. Waldorf compiled a 67-32-4 record as head coach at Cal from 1947-56. For the 1948, ’49 and ’50 seasons, Waldorf guided the Bears to a 39-3-1 record and three consecutive Rose Bowls. He was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1966 and into the Cal Athletic Hall of Fame in 1987. In the late 1990s, Pappy’s Boys produced a book, “Pappy’s Boys, The Rose Bowl Years: A Legacy of Winning,” which was edited by Sports Illustrated writer Ron Fimrite and produced by former Cal quarterback Dick Erickson. The book contains 59 autobiographical essays by players, coaches, and others involved in the Waldorf Rose Bowls, plus a preface by former Cal chancellor Glenn Seaborg.
STRENGTH & CONDITIONING
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n integral part of Cal Football is the strength and conditioning department. The program’s philosophy is geared towards helping each student-athlete achieve the highest level of athletic development and injury prevention. By teaching how all the components of strength and conditioning fit together, student-athletes understand how to maximize power as it applies to sports. This includes enhancement of speed, strength, agility and flexibility, which results in improved power. Motivating, educating and helping to reach maximum athletic development is the primary focus of the Cal program. The Cal football weight room includes eight Olympic platforms, more than 15,000 pounds of Olympic bars and bumper plates, and an array of aerobic and anaerobic equipment. Originally opened in Memorial Stadium in 1983 as part of the Cal Sports 80s facility project, the 5,000 squarefoot weight room is currently located in a surge facility for Cal’s football team and selected Olympic sports teams. The 14,000 foot-surge tensile structure that also houses the athletic training staff is part of a larger development built in Strawberry Canyon that includes four temporary buildings for football's day-to-day operations, as well as two for Olympic sports operations that opened in the spring of 2010 while Memorial Stadium is undergoing renovation. The facility also houses the athletic training staff. The training regimen at Cal is a year-round process that emphasizes improving athleticism. With closely monitored workouts that involve a great deal of individual instruction and attention,
student-athletes are taught the correct techniques to increase their ability to perform at their peak during competition. Cal’s program stresses comprehensive training in order to improve both strength and speed. Flexibility is a key component because it is essential for developing athleticism and agility. It also improves the running mechanics needed for acceleration and deceleration, both essential for playing football. Athlete workouts are position-specific and closely monitored by the conditioning staff, who work in collaboration with the entire sports
medicine team (doctors, athletic trainers, physical therapists, nutritionists, etc.) to ensure the health and safety of all of student-athletes. In this way, Cal’s strength and conditioning program is a vital component linking the “full circle” of a student-athlete’s physical development from conditioning through rehabilitation and re-conditioning.
FOOTBALL STRENGTH & CONDITIONING STAFF assistant at Florida State University from 2003-07. JOHN KRASINSKI DAVID ZIEMBA His career began at the University of Nebraska,
HEAD STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING COACH
A complete profile of John Krasinski can be found on page 60.
where he received a bachelor’s of science, as a volunteer assistant from 1999-2003. He also holds a master’s degree from Florida State. Conner currently resides in Alameda.
KEN MILLER ASSISTANT COACH
ZACARY CONNER ASSISTANT COACH Zacary Conner enters his fourth year with the strength and conditioning department, where he currently works with football, men’s and women’s golf, field hockey, lacrosse and rugby. Prior to his arrival at Cal, Conner was an intern with the NFL’s Miami Dolphins in 2007 following his work as a graduate
Ken Miller returns for a fifth year of service as an assistant strength and conditioning coach with the Cal football program. Miller also works with Cal’s softball and women’s gymnastics teams. Prior to his work with the Bears, Miller logged over 10 years of work in the personal training and fitness field. He was a fitness manager in Oakland for two years prior to his arrival on campus, and spent four years as a consultant, providing education for trainers, therapists and health clubs. Miller also enjoyed a three-year stint as a corporate wellness instructor for the Department of Defense in Las Vegas from 1993-95. Miller earned a bachelor’s degree in exercise science at Cal Poly Pomona, before earning his master’s in exercise science and health promotion from California University in Pennsylvania.
ASSISTANT COACH
David Ziemba brought 15 years of experience in collegiate strength and conditioning training to Cal when he joined the Golden Bear staff in the spring of 2006. Prior to moving to Berkeley, Ziemba worked as a sports performance coach in Michigan. Previously, he served as an assistant strength and conditioning coach at Eastern Michigan from 2001-05. From 1996-2000, Ziemba was the head strength and conditioning coach at the University of Denver, coordinating the development of 19 intercollegiate sport programs. After earning his bachelor’s degree in exercise and movement science from Oregon in 1989, Ziemba worked for one year as a graduate assistant coach at Northern Arizona. He returned to his alma mater in 1990 and served as an assistant strength and conditioning coach with the Duck program from 1990-96. Ziemba earned his master’s degree in exercise and movement science from Oregon in 1995.
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SPORTS MEDICINE & ATHLETIC TRAINING The mission of the Sports Medicine Program at the University of California, Berk eley, is to pro v i d e s y s t e m a t i c , multidisciplinary services that utilize advanced scientific and administrative practices to support student-athletes in the pursuit of optimal physiological and psychological health, personal development and high performance. Golden Bear student-athletes are privileged to be supported by one of the top medical staffs in college athletics, along with some of the most modern training and rehabilitation equipment in the country. The comprehensive program features state-of-the-art facilities, as well as a staff of acclaimed sports medicine practitioners. Cal’s athletic training facilities include more than 6,000-square feet, split between the Witter Complex Sports Medicine Facility and the Paul F. White Sports Medicine Complex at Haas Pavilion. Both facilities include rehabilitation space and equipment, hydrotherapy space and an extensive pre-practice preparation area, as well as physician examination areas. With both facilities operational year round, Cal Sports Medicine is able to serve the student-athletes in close proximity to their practice and competition sites. In addition, Cal student-athletes also use University Health Services (UHS), which jointly with Intercollegiate Athletics oversees and coordinates sports medicine services to all injured or ailing Golden Bear athletes. UHS, housed in the Tang Center, is recognized as one of the largest and most comprehensive campus health service centers in the country. It provides access to physician clinics, laboratory services, X-ray and other ancillary services such as sports nutrition and counseling. The expert staff of team physicians is led by Dr. Casey G. Batten. Dr. Batten was named Head Team Physician for Cal’s athletic program in 2010, after serving as an Associate Physician since 2006. The staff features specialists from the fields of orthopedic surgery, family medicine, internal medicine, physiatry and podiatry, among others. The medical staff, with its diverse backgrounds and areas of expertise, has vast experience treating injured athletes at every level of competition, including Olympic and professional athletes. Cal’s athletic training staff, led by head athletic trainer Ryan Cobb and supported by administrative assistant Shelly Sharda and insurance coordinator Dan Westbrook, includes 15 certified athletic trainers and 30 sports medicine interns. The staff tends to the day-to-day health care needs of Cal student-athletes in all sports, including the evaluation and treatment of injuries and illnesses. Rehabilitation of injuries is also the responsibility of the athletic training staff, with additional assistance from two experienced staff physical therapists. The athletic trainers provide coverage at home and away athletic contests, and practices are staffed on a full-time basis. Whether it’s for taping, physical therapy or the prompt recovery from an illness or injury, Golden Bear student-athletes have the full confidence that Cal’s medical staff will provide the best care available with one of the most progressive treatment and rehabilitation programs in the country.
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FIRST ROW: Shelly Sharda, Ann Caslin MA ATC , Katie Lorens MS ATC, Clem Jones MD, Brad Buchman MD, Ryan Cobb MS ATC, Casey Batten MD. SECOND ROW: Tim Dutra DPM, Shelly Taketa ATC, Shane Besedick ATC, Christy Allen MD, Jessica Greaux, DC, Nina Patterson, DPT. THIRD ROW: Whitney Johnson DDS, Wes McGaugh MS ATC, Elaine Garcia MS ATC, Christopher DaPrato DPT, Brian Schulman MA ATC, Cindy Chang MD. FOURTH ROW: Bill Coysh PhD, David Stenger MEd ATC, Linda Smith ATC, Barry Parsons MEd ATC, Craig Dennis MD, Matthew Havranek MS ATC. FIFTH ROW: Deirdre McLoughlin MSPT, Lynn Schankliess PT ATC, Ellen De Neef PT, Maureen Lee DPM, Carol Rogers MS ATC, Amy Fong DPT ATC. SIXTH ROW: David Walden ATC, Jeff Nelson MD, Harris Masket MD, Roger Iliff MD, Veronica Jow MD, Dan Westbrook, Jason Dinius ATC, Rudy Gutierrez DC ATC, Will Workman MD, Robert Eppley MD.
SPORTS MEDICINE STAFF Along with head team physician Dr. Casey G. Batten, Cal’s three associate team physicians provide medical care and event coverage for Golden Bear student-athletes. Dr. Brad Buchman is Medical Director of Cal’s University Health Services, as well as a Cal alumnus and former Golden Bear on the gridiron from 1979-81. Dr. Jeff Nelson, a Cal grad and fellowship trained in sports medicine, has been a Team Physician and Staff Physician at University Health Services since 1998. Dr. Harris Masket, also a Cal alum, was Cal’s post-graduate sports medicine intern before becoming the Chief of Urgent Care at UHS in 2006.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
The staff psychologists who provide and coordinate counseling are Drs. Bill Coysh and Chris McLean. In addition, the success of the sports medicine program would not be possible without the support and expertise of medical specialists in the community, representing all areas of sports medicine. More detailed information can be found on the web at CalBears.com under Inside Athletics/ Sports Medicine.
PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS Dr. Cindy Chang served as Cal’s head team physician from 1995 to 2008. She serves parttime at the University Health Services as a sports medicine consultant/musculoskeletal specialist and volunteers as a team physician. Chang is recognized as one of the leading primary care sports medicine physicians in the country. Dr. Craig Dennis is board certified in emergency medicine and has a special interest in water polo. His daughter was a Cal Water Polo goalie. Dr. Roger Iliff has been a valuable member of the program since 1980, and many coaches and other athletic department staff select him as their personal family physician.
ORTHOPEDIC PHYSICIANS Dr. Christina Allen played soccer and earned her biomedical engineering degree at Duke, and is a sports medicine fellowship-trained assistant professor of orthopedics at UCSF. Dr. Lamont Cardon, a former Cal football player, is a fellowship-trained orthopedic consultant for hand, wrist and upper extremity injuries and practices in Berkeley. Dr. Robert Eppley, who played collegiate basketball at Swarthmore College, has been one of Cal’s primary orthopedic consultants since 1992. Fellowship trained in sports medicine, he is in private practice in Berkeley, and is repeatedly voted one of “Bay Area’s Best Doctors” by fellow physicians. Dr. Joshua Hatch, who played football at Princeton, was fellowship trained in sports medicine at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City and is in practice at Kaiser-Oakland. Dr. Clement Jones played football at Merrimack College in Massachusetts, and is Cal’s fellowshipTrained orthopedic spine consultant in private practice in San Francisco. Dr. Benjamin Ma is chief of sports medicine at UCSF and did a sports medicine fellowship at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City. Dr. Jeffrey Mann, a gymnast at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is a fellowship-trained orthopedic foot and ankle consultant in private practice in Oakland. Dr. Mathias Masem is a fellowship-trained orthopedic consultant for hand, wrist and upper extremity injuries. The Chief of the Division of Hand Surgery at Alta-Bates Summit Medical Center is in private practice in Oakland. Dr. Will Workman, a member of Cal’s 1988 College World Series baseball team, is a fellowshiptrained orthopedic sports medicine consultant in private practice in Walnut Creek.
PHYSIATRISTS Cal’s consultants trained in physical medicine and rehabilitation see student-athletes for non operative injuries of the neck and back, as well as nerve disorders. Dr. Gerry Keane is in private practice in Menlo Park. Dr. Tim Shen completed a physiatry spine and sports medicine fellowship at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City and practices in Oakland and Lafayette.
PODIATRISTS Dr. Tim Dutra is an Assistant Professor at the California School of Podiatric Medicine at Samuel Merritt University, a Fellow of the American Acad-
emy of Podiatric Sports Medicine and holds a Masters in Health Care Administration. Dr. Maureen Lee is in private practice in San Francisco and also serves as a consultant for San Francisco State University’s athletic program.
DENTISTS Cal’s team of sports dentistry specialists provides emergency dental care, performs oral exams during pre-participation physicals and fabricates protective mouth guards for student-athletes. Dr. James Ho, a Cal grad, is an endodontist (root canal specialist) and practices in Berkeley. Dr. Whitney Johnson practices in Berkeley, is a fellow in the International Academy for Sports Dentistry and a board director on the Berkeley Dental Society. Dr. Eric Yabu, another Cal grad, is on faculty at UCSF and practices in Oakland.
OPTOMETRISTS The UC Berkeley School of Optometry, under the clinical supervision of Dr. Mika Moy and Dr. Chris Wilmer, provides visual screenings and also serves as a consultant for ocular injuries and ocular medical conditions.
PHYSICAL THERAPISTS Cal’s sports physical therapists offer a variety of skills, including manual therapy techniques, biomechanical evaluations and Pilates, to assist the athletic trainers with both injury and postoperative rehabilitation. Led by staff physical therapists Christopher DaPrato and Ellen de Neff, the physical therapists include Amy Fong, Kristy Illg, Deirdre McLoughlin, Nina Patterson and Lynn Schankliess. Also on staff is occupational therapist Caroline D’Angelo, a Certified Hand Therapist.
CHIROPRACTORS Cal’s team of sports chiropractors works alongside the athletic trainers and physical therapists in the training quarters to assist with the treatment of musculoskeletal injuries and dysfunctions. Dr. Sue Bromley has worked with NASCAR, the Professional Rodeo Association and the San Jose Lasers, and practices in Union City. Dr. Jessica Greux, a four-year letter winner in soccer at Brown University, has been with the Cal Sports Medicine team since 1994 and is also in private practice in Berkeley. Dr. Rudy Gutierrez, a member of the Cal Sports Medicine Department since 1998, currently works as a sport chiropractor. He is owner and director of Inner-Action Sports Rehab in Oakland and Walnut Creek. Dr. Paul Walton is in private practice in Orinda and has been on the teaching and clinical faculty of Life Chiropractic West since 1989.
ACUPUNCTURISTS Glen Oberman, O.M.D., L.Ac., has been involved with Cal Sports Medicine since 2007. He supervises the treatment of Cal student-athletes by acupuncture interns from the Acupuncture and Integrative Medicine College – Berkeley. He is Clinic Dean at the college and has a national board certification in Acupuncture Orthopedics. He also teaches courses in Acupuncture Orthopedics, Research Methodology and Ethics and Law. Dr. Oberman is in private practice in Berkeley.
CASEY BATTEN, M.D. LEAD TEAM PHYSICIAN, FOOTBALL Dr. Casey G. Batten enters his fifth year as a team physician with Cal Athletics, and 2010 marks his first year as head team physician. Prior to Cal, Batten was an assistant clinical professor of orthopaedics at the University of California – San Francisco. He also has provided medical coverage for NCAA championship events including men’s and women’s basketball, track & field and FCS football. In addition to his responsibilities with the student-athletes at Cal, Dr. Batten continues as an invited speaker on various sports medicine topics on a local and national level, and also serves as a peer reviewer for two respected sports medicine publications. He has published on topics such as concussion, and physical activity factors in adolescent athletes. As a member of the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM), Dr. Batten is active in committee work dedicated to expanding the quality and availability of sports medicine training for medical students and resident physicians. Batten is also responsible for clinical and academic instruction for the UC Davis/UC Berkeley Sports Medicine Fellowship. Dr. Batten holds a bachelor’s degree in Kinesiology-Exercise Science from the University of Wisconsin. After attending medical school at the Medical College of Wisconsin, he completed a residency in Family Medicine at the University of Tennessee College of Medicine-Chattanooga Unit. Batten then earned a fellowship with the UC Davis/UC Berkeley Sports Medicine Program. Born and raised in Madison, Wisc., Dr. Batten currently resides with his wife, Alison, in Berkeley.
WES McGAUGH FOOTBALL ATHLETIC TRAINER A complete profile of Wes McGaugh can be found on page 63.
MATT HAVRANEK ASSISTANT FOOTBALL ATHLETIC TRAINER A complete profile of Matt Havranek can be found on page 63.
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STUDENT PROGRAMS
Speed Interviewing
Graduation at the Greek Theater
here is more to life than wins and losses, and University of California student-athletes have the opportunity to learn that lesson through participation in an NCAA program – CHAMPS/Life Skills – which is designed for athletes to get more out their college years than just what they experience in the athletic arena. By focusing on “real life” skills and personal development, the CHAMPS/Life Skills Program not only assists student-athletes with meeting daily challenges, but enhances student-athletes’ growth in their college years and beyond. This program helps students by concentrating in four major areas: Academics, Career Development, Community Outreach and Personal Development.
The Athletic Department receives requests from local schools and community organizations for student-athletes to speak to kids ranging from kindergarten to high school. The student-athletes address a wide variety of wellness-related topics in addition to emphasizing the importance of education and maintaining self-esteem. The goal is to support young students in finding a path to productive and healthy futures, taking an interest in the children’s lives and providing encouragement to do well in school.
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CAREER DEVELOPMENT The career development portion of the Life Skills Programs offers student-athletes opportunities to prepare themselves for life after college. Each year a variety of workshops on career development are offered including resume writing, interview skills and networking. In addition, the annual Career Connections event puts student-athletes in direct contact with Bay area professionals who are looking to hire for both internships and full-time jobs. The program has proven to be a valuable source of contact with successful Cal alumni and has initiated career paths for many Golden Bear student-athletes.
PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT Through their involvement in the Life Skills Program, Cal student-athletes are prepared to be productive and successful adults when they graduate from the university and move on to their next challenge in life. Whether it is learning how to make a solid first impression as they represent Cal through etiquette training or participating in leadership roles in the department and campus to shape action plans that enhance the studentathlete experience, our student-athletes are actively engaging in opportunities to develop a well-balanced lifestyle, encouraging emotional well-being, personal growth and decision-making skills.
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CAL IN THE COMMUNITY Many Cal student-athletes have been active participants in various student-mentor programs with low-income and/or minority youth in the East Bay community. Working in conjunction with the Sage Project, Cal athletes have been paired with young students in a mentor/role-model project, often growing to be a part of the child’s extended family. These student-athletes are a positive force in assisting youth to stay in school, eventually enter college and succeed as members of the community.
STUDENT-ATHLETE ADVISORY COMMITTEE With representatives from all 27 sports at Cal, the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee not only does the group work to improve interaction between athletes, coaches and administrators, but it also works with other campus organizations to create positive student-athlete experiences. Among the areas of emphasis are student-athlete welfare, student-athlete image, community service, community building, communication and input on proposed NCAA legislation. The committee recently developed a student-athlete Facebook site and was effective in increasing student-athlete support for each of Cal’s teams.
BIG C SOCIETY
COMMUNITY OUTREACH Cal’s student-athletes exhibit a strong commitment to the community. Over 3000 hours of giving back is completed each year by participation in a variety of activities such as College Sports Day where they teach 200 kids about their sport, as well as raising funds for various charitable organizations and making meaningful contributions to the community. In doing so, the student-athletes serve as ambassadors between the University and the community and as role models to children.
Apple Conference at Disneyland
College Sports Day
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
The Big C Society is a group of athletes – both men and women – who share a common bond: they have distinguished themselves by their athletic skill and/or unwavering dedication to Cal Athletics. The purpose of the Big C Society is to encourage and support the athletic program through an uncompromising commitment to excellence. Among the many activities sponsored by the Big C Society are: the Cal Athletic Hall of Fame Dinner, Student-Athlete Career Night, the Honors Celebration Luncheon, first-year varsity letter awards and beginning-of-the-year picnic for all Cal student-athletes.
PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCE
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he Pacific-10 Conference continues to uphold its tradition as the “Conference of Champions” ®, claiming an incredible 171 NCAA team titles over the past 20 years, including eight in 2009-10, averaging nearly nine championships per academic year. Even more impressive has been the breadth of the Pac-10’s success, with championships coming in 26 different men’s and women’s sports. The Pac-10 has led the nation in NCAA Championships in 44 of the last 50 years and finished second five times. Spanning nearly a century of outstanding athletics achievements, the Pac-10 has captured 390 NCAA titles (267 men’s, 123 women’s), far outdistancing the runner-up Big Ten Conference’s 226 titles. The Conference’s reputation is further proven in the annual Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup competition, the prestigious award that honors the best overall collegiate athletics programs in the country. STANFORD won its unprecedented 16thconsecutive Directors’ Cup in 2009-10, continuing its remarkable run. Seven of the top 25 Division I programs were Pac-10 member institutions: No. 1 STANFORD, No. 4 UCLA, No. 9 CALIFORNIA, No. 13 USC, No. 14 OREGON, No. 22 ARIZONA STATE and No. 24 WASHINGTON. The Pac-10’s three teams in the top 10 was second-most for any conference, behind only the ACC (4), while the Big 12, Big Ten and SEC had one team each. It was also a historic year for the Pac-10 off the field. After 26 years as Pac-10 Commissioner, Tom Hansen retired from his position and on July 1 2009 was succeeded by Larry Scott, the former Chairman and CEO of the WTA Tour, a 2008 TIME Magazine Best Sports Executive and a former AllAmerican tennis player at Harvard. Eleven months later, the Conference announced the expansion of the Pac-10 to include Colorado (2012) and Utah (2011); the first time since 1978 the league has invited new members. The Pac-10 captured eight NCAA titles in 2009-10, tying with the ACC for the most in the country. Of the eight titles, Pac-10 teams claimed a nation’s-best five women’s NCAA crowns. California also captured the IRA National Championship in men’s rowing, the Pac-10’s ninth national title of the season. The Trojans swept the men’s and women’s water polo titles, also adding the men’s tennis crown to its trophy case. The Cardinal claimed the top spot in men’s volleyball and women’s tennis, while the Bruins took home titles in women’s gymnastics and softball. The Pac-10 also had runners up in 14 NCAA Championship events: baseball (UCLA), women’s basketball (STANFORD), men’s cross country (OREGON), women’s golf (USC), men’s gymnastics (STANFORD), women’s rowing (CALIFORNIA), men’s indoor track and field (OREGON), women’s outdoor track and field (OREGON), women’s soccer (STANFORD), softball (ARIZONA), men’s swimming and diving (CALIFORNIA), women’s swimming and diving (CALIFORNIA), men’s water polo (UCLA) and
women’s water polo (STANFORD). Overall, the conference had 33 teams finish in the top four at 20 NCAA Championship events. The Pac-10 experienced continued success in football as the league sent seven teams to bowl games, tying a Pac-10 record for most bowl participants. The Pac-10 faced tough competition in the bowl season, as four of the seven opponents were ranked in the top 20. Oregon claimed its eighth Pac-10 title in the sport and first since 2001, posting an 8-1 league record. Meanwhile, ARIZONA (Pacific Life Holiday), CALIFORNIA (San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia), OREGON STATE (Maaco Las Vegas), STANFORD (Brut Sun), UCLA (EagleBank) and USC (Emerald) also earned bowl bids. OREGON and USC were ranked in the top 25 of the Associated Press’ poll at season’s end, finishing 11th and 22nd, respectively. Pac-10 regular-season champion WASHINGTON and tournament champion CALIFORNIA represented the Conference in the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament, and two others competed in other postseason events. The Pac-10 saw a balanced race crown the Golden Bears regularseason champions for the first time since 1960, while every team logged at least six league wins, a first in the history of the league. The Golden Bears won a first-round NCAA game against Louisville before falling to eventual NCAA champ Duke. On the women’s side, CALIFORNIA captured its first-ever WNIT crown, and ARIZONA STATE and OREGON also garnered WNIT bids, while
WASHINGTON participated in the first-ever WBI. It was a historic year for the Pac-10 in baseball as a Conference-record eight teams earned NCAA Tournament bids. ARIZONA STATE and UCLA reached the NCAA College World Series with the Bruins advancing to the championship series. ARIZONA, CALIFORNIA, OREGON, OREGON STATE, STANFORD and WASHINGTON STATE also represented the Conference in the postseason event. The 80 percent postseason participation rate marked the best percentage by a conference in NCAA Division I history. The Conference swept two men’s and women’s sports, capturing national championship in water polo and tennis. USC claimed the men’s and women’s titles in water polo. The Trojans also claimed the men’s tennis crown, while STANFORD came out on top in the women’s bracket. On the men’s side, Pac-10 members have won 267 NCAA team championships, far ahead of the 200 claimed by the runner-up Big Ten. Men’s NCAA crowns have come at a phenomenal rate for the Pac-10 – 15 basketball titles by five schools (more than any other conference), 51 tennis titles, 44 outdoor track and field crowns, and 26 baseball titles. Pac-10 members have won 24 of the last 41 NCAA titles in volleyball, 36 of the last 51 in water polo, and 21 in swimming and diving national championships. Individually, the Conference has produced an impressive number of NCAA men’s individual champions, as well, boasting 1,171 individual crowns.
PAC-10 CONFERENCE HISTORY The roots of the Pacific-10 Conference date back nearly 95 years to December 2, 1915, when the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) was founded at a meeting at the Oregon Hotel in Portland, Ore. The original membership consisted of four schools – the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Washington, the University of Oregon, and Oregon State College (now Oregon State University). All still are charter members of the Conference. Pacific Coast Conference play began in 1916 and, one year later, Washington State College (now Washington State University) was accepted into the league, with Stanford University following in 1918. In 1922, the PCC expanded to eight teams with the admission of the University of Southern California (USC) and the University of Idaho. In 1924, the University of Montana joined the league roster, and in 1928, the PCC grew to 10 members with the addition of UCLA. The Pacific Coast Conference competed as a 10-member league until 1950, with the exception of 1943-45 when World War II curtailed intercollegiate athletic competition to a minimum. During that time, the league’s first commissioner was named. Edwin N. Atherton was Commissioner in 1940 and was succeeded by Victor O. Schmidt in 1944. In 1950, Montana resigned from the Conference and joined the Mountain States Conference. The PCC continued as a nine-team Conference through 1958. In 1959, the PCC was dissolved and the Athletic Associates of Western Universities was formed and Thomas J. Hamilton was appointed Commissioner of the new league. The original AAWU membership included California, Stanford, Southern California, UCLA and Washington. Washington State joined the membership in 1962, while Oregon and Oregon State joined in 1964. Under Hamilton’s watch, the name Pacific-8 Conference was adopted in 1968. In 1971, Wiles Hallock took over as Commissioner of the Pac-8. Ten years later, on July 1, 1978, the University of Arizona and Arizona State University were admitted to the league and the Pacific-10 Conference became a reality. In 1986-87, the league took on a new look, expanding to include 10 women’s sports. Thomas C. Hansen was named the Commissioner of the Pac-10 in 1983, a role he would hold for 26 years until 2009. Hansen was succeeded by current Commissioner Larry Scott, who took on the new role in July 2009. Currently, the Pac-10 sponsors 11 men’s sports and 11 women’s sports. Additionally, the Conference is a member of the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) in four other men’s sports and three women’s sports. The University of Colorado accepted an invitation to join the Pac-10 on June 11, 2010, and on June 17, 2010, the University of Utah agreed to join the Conference. The Buffaloes and Utes will become the 11th and 12th members of the Conference, the first additions to the league since 1978. The Pacific-10 Conference offices are located 25 miles east of San Francisco in Walnut Creek, Calif.
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
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PACIFIC-10 COMPOSITE & BOWL SCHEDULES WEEK ONE: SEPT. 4
USC at Hawaii (Thu., Sept. 2) Oregon State vs. TCU UCLA at Kansas State Washington at BYU Arizona at Toledo Washington State at Oklahoma State New Mexico at Oregon UC Davis at California Portland State at Arizona State Sacramento State at Stanford
WEEK FOUR: SEPT. 25
Oregon State at Boise State UCLA at Texas OREGON at ARIZONA STATE Stanford at Notre Dame USC at WASHINGTON STATE
WEEK FIVE: OCT. 2
WEEK TWO: SEPT. 11
Oregon at Tennessee Stanford at UCLA Colorado at California Syracuse at Washington Virginia at USC Montana State at Washington State Northern Arizona at Arizona State Citadel at Arizona
WASHINGTON at USC STANFORD at OREGON CALIFORNIA at ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE at OREGON STATE WASHINGTON STATE at UCLA
WEEK SIX: OCT. 9
USC at STANFORD UCLA at CALIFORNIA ARIZONA STATE at WASHINGTON OREGON STATE at ARIZONA OREGON at WASHINGTON STATE
WEEK THREE: SEPT. 18
Nebraska at Washington Houston at UCLA Iowa at Arizona USC at Minnesota California at Nevada Arizona State at Wisconsin Wake Forest at Stanford Louisville at Oregon State Washington State at SMU Portland State at Oregon
WEEK SEVEN: OCT. 16
CALIFORNIA at USC OREGON STATE at WASHINGTON ARIZONA at WASHINGTON STATE
WEEK EIGHT: OCT. 23
UCLA at OREGON (Thu., Oct. 21) WASHINGTON at ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE at CALIFORNIA WASHINGTON STATE at STANFORD
WEEK NINE: OCT. 30
OREGON at USC CALIFORNIA at OREGON STATE
STANFORD at WASHINGTON ARIZONA at UCLA WASHINGTON STATE at ARIZONA STATE
WEEK 10: NOV. 6
WASHINGTON at OREGON OREGON STATE at UCLA ARIZONA at STANFORD ARIZONA STATE at USC
WEEK 11: NOV. 13
OREGON at CALIFORNIA UCLA at WASHINGTON USC at ARIZONA STANFORD at ARIZONA STATE WASHINGTON STATE at OREGON STATE
WEEK 12: NOV. 20
USC at OREGON STATE CALIFORNIA at WASHINGTON STATE
WEEK 13: NOV. 27
ARIZONA at OREGON (Fri., Nov. 26) UCLA at ARIZONA STATE (Fri., Nov. 26) Notre Dame at USC OREGON STATE at STANFORD WASHINGTON at CALIFORNIA
WEEK 14: DEC. 4
ARIZONA STATE at ARIZONA (Thu., Dec. 2) OREGON at OREGON STATE USC at UCLA Stanford at California Washington at Washington State
2010-11 COLLEGE BOWL SCHEDULE Bowl Game New Mexico uDrove Humanitarian R+L Carriers New Orleans Beef ‘O’ Brady’s St. Petersburg MAACO Las Vegas S.D. County Credit Union Poinsettia Sheraton Hawaii Little Caesars AdvoCare V100 Independence Champs Sports Insight EagleBank Texas Valero Alamo Bell Helicopter Armed Forces New Era Pinstripe Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bridgepoint Education Holiday Meineke Car Care Brut Sun AutoZone Liberty Chick-fil-A Dallas Football Classic Outback Capital One Gator Rose Bowl Game presented by Citi Tostitos Fiesta Orange Allstate Sugar GMAC AT&T Cotton Papajohns.com Kraft Fight Hunger Tostitos BCS National Championship
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Date, Time (ET) Dec. 18, 2 p.m. Dec. 18, 5:30 p.m. Dec. 18, 9 p.m. Dec. 21, 8 p.m. Dec. 22, 8 p.m. Dec. 23, 8 p.m. Dec. 24, 8 p.m., Dec. 26, 8:30 p.m. Dec. 27, 5 p.m. Dec. 28, 6:30 p.m. Dec. 28, 10 p.m. Dec. 29, 2:30 p.m. Dec. 29, 6 p.m. Dec. 29, 9:15 p.m. Dec. 30, Noon Dec. 30, 3:20 p.m. Dec. 30, 6:40 p.m. Dec. 30, 10 p.m. Dec. 31, Noon Dec. 31, 2 p.m. Dec. 31, 3:30 p.m. Dec. 31, TBD Jan. 1, Noon Jan. 1, 1 p.m. Jan. 1, 1 p.m. Jan. 1, 1:30 p.m. Jan. 1, 4:30 p.m. Jan. 1, 8:30 p.m. Jan. 3, 8 p.m. Jan. 4, 8 p.m. Jan. 6, 8 p.m. Jan. 7, 8 p.m. Jan. 8, Noon Jan. 9, 9 p.m. Jan. 10, 8 p.m.
Site Albuquerque, NM Boise, ID New Orleans, LA St. Petersburg, FL Las Vegas, NV San Diego, CA Honolulu, HI Detroit, MI Shreveport, LA Orlando, FL Tempe, AZ Washington, DC Houston, TX San Antonio, TX Fort Worth, TX` Bronx, NY Nashville, TN San Diego, CA Charlotte, NC El Paso, TX Memphis, TN Atlanta, GA Dallas, TX Tampa, FL Orlando, FL Jacksonville, FL Pasadena, CA Glendale, AZ Miami, FL New Orleans, LA Mobile, AL Arlington, TX Birmingham, AL San Francisco, CA Glendale, AZ
CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS 2010 Football Information Guide
Matchup Mountain West vs. WAC MAC vs. WAC C-USA vs. Sun Belt Big East vs. C-USA Mountain West vs. Pac-10 Mountain West vs. Navy C-USA vs. WAC Big Ten vs. MAC Detroit ACC vs. Mountain West ACC vs. Big East Big Ten vs. Big 12 ACC vs. C-USA Big Ten vs. Big 12 Big 12 vs. Pac-10 C-USA vs. Mountain West Big 12 vs. Big East ACC vs. SEC Big 12 vs. Pac-10 ACC vs. Big East ACC vs. Pac-10 C-USA vs. SEC TBD Big Ten vs. Big 12 Big Ten vs. SEC Big Ten vs. SEC Big Ten vs. SEC BCS vs. BCS BCS vs. BCS BCS vs. BCS BCS vs. BCS MAC vs. Sun Belt Big 12 vs. SEC Big East vs. SEC Pac-10 vs. WAC BCS No. 1 vs. BCS No. 2
Network ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN TBD ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN CBS ESPN TBD ESPNU ABC ESPN ESPN2 ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN FOX ESPN ESPN ESPN
2010 SCHEDULE UC DAVIS Sept. 4
COLORADO Sept. 11
at Nevada Sept. 17
at Arizona* Sept. 25
UCLA* (HOMECOMING) Oct. 9
at USC* Oct. 16
ARIZONA STATE* Oct. 23
at Oregon State* Oct. 30
at Washington State* Nov. 6
OREGON* Nov. 13
STANFORD* Nov. 20
WASHINGTON* Nov. 27
*Denotes Pacific-10 Conference game CAPS denote home games at Memorial Stadium Visit CalBears.com for game times Schedule subject to change