Offensive tackle Mike Tepper counts as a unique figure on this year's Cal football team, in ways beyond his size, loquaciousness and status as a sixth-year senior. Tepper also is the only member of these Bears to lose a bowl game.
It happened here in San Diego, when Texas Tech flattened Cal in the 2004 Holiday Bowl. Tepper vividly remembers the feeling, so he gathered his teammates during practice last week in Berkeley and implored them to treat tonight's Poinsettia Bowl with urgency.
"That sour taste in your mouth is the worst thing in the world, 10 times worse than spinach or whatever vegetable you hate," Tepper said. "You lose a bowl game and your offseason is terrible. All the coaches do is rag on you."
The Bears (8-4) face a sizable challenge in avoiding the ragging, despite falling into a low-profile bowl. They meet No. 23 Utah, which sports a splashy 22-3 record over the past two seasons - 13-0 last year, capped by a Sugar Bowl thumping of Alabama, and 9-3 this year.
The Utes also arrive with the nation's longest active bowl win streak, at eight games. Cal counters with bowl wins in each of the past four years, from the Las Vegas (over BYU) and Holiday (Texas A&M) to the Armed Forces (Air Force) and Emerald (Miami).
Linebacker Mike Mohamed acknowledged the Bears talked about Utah's streak the past several days, adding an extra layer of motivation. Cal also finds incentive in ending its strange, up-and-down season on a strong note, after playing miserably in losing its regular-season finale 42-10 to Washington.
Senior cornerback Syd'Quan Thompson, whose status for tonight's game is in doubt because of a nagging sprained ankle, doesn't pay much attention to Utah's streak. But Thompson is fully aware of Cal's bowl record since he arrived in 2005 from Grant High in Sacramento.
"I just want to be undefeated in bowl games myself," Thompson said. "This is my senior season and I haven't lost a bowl game since I've been here - and I don't plan on losing one."
The Bears could use Thompson, because Utah boasts an all-Mountain West Conference wide receiver in David Reed (75 catches, 1,085 yards). The Utes also have a 1,000-yard rusher in tailback Eddie Wide, giving true freshman quarterback Jordan Wynn ample help.
Most troubling for Cal, maybe, is Utah's style - the Utes run the spread-option offense, routinely setting up in the shotgun formation with one running back (or an empty backfield) and three or four wide receivers. Sound familiar? Oregon used the spread-option to shred the Bears on Sept. 26, gaining 524 yards of total offense in a resounding 42-3 victory.
Defensive coordinator Bob Gregory did not seem to wince as he made the Oregon comparison, insisting his team is equipped to handle Utah's speed - even when it's scattered all over the field.
"We've actually played pretty decently against that type of offense in the past," Gregory said. "We just didn't play very well the last time. ... It's all about us and making sure we execute our technique fast."
It's hard to know what to expect from Cal, given its dual personality in 2009. The Bears probably played their two best games of the season in November, smothering Arizona at home (24-16) and marching downfield, time after ruthless time, in beating Stanford in the Big Game (34-28).
And then, against Washington, they couldn't do anything right. In some ways, the 42-10 loss was a fitting end to a regular season unlike any other since Jeff Tedford took over in 2002.
"We've done some good things this year - and we've done some really bad things," quarterback Kevin Riley said.
Or, as tailback Shane Vereen said, "I think this bowl game will have a lot to do with how we remember the season."
Briefly: Numerical proof tonight's game isn't generating much buzz: Bowl officials expect a crowd between 30,000 and 35,000 at Qualcomm Stadium, where capacity is nearly 70,000. ... Four seniors - Tepper, Thompson, defensive tackle Tyson Alualu and wide receiver Verran Tucker - landed invitations to play in the East-West Shrine Game on Jan. 23 in Orlando. ... Cornerback Josh Hill will miss tonight's game because of a shoulder injury and probably will need offseason surgery.
Cal today
Story line:
Which team will show up, the mighty Bears or the meek version? Cal won four games this season by 19 points or more - and lost four others by 17 points or more. Coach Jeff Tedford's teams historically perform well in bowl games, with wins each of the past four years. But Utah owns an even longer streak: eight consecutive bowl victories (including four under current head coach Kyle Whittingham). The Utes savor any chance to play a Pac-10 opponent and will no doubt show up ready to play. It's hard to tell with the Bears: Will they bring their "A game" or will they show their disappointment in falling to a lower-tier bowl?
Injuries: Cal: TB Jahvid Best (concussion), G Matt Summers-Gavin (concussion) and CB Josh Hill (shoulder) are out; CB Syd'Quan Thompson (ankle) is questionable. Utah: DT Kenape Eliapo (virus) and WR John Peel (foot) are expected to play.
What to watch for
-- Cal must figure out a way to combat Utah's spread-option offense. The Bears rank No. 108 in pass defense (out of 120 teams), a problem potentially compounded if Thompson, the Bears' best coverage cornerback, cannot play.
-- Sixteen seniors will end their Cal careers, including eight regular starters: Thompson, defensive lineman Tyson Alualu, linebacker Devin Bishop, fullback Brian Holley, safety Brett Johnson, offensive tackle Mike Tepper, wide receiver Verran Tucker and linebacker Eddie Young.
-- Four defensive players for Utah have Bay Area connections: Eliapo (South San Francisco High), defensive end Koa Misi (Montgomery-Santa Rosa), linebacker Mo Neal (San Leandro High) and defensive tackle Joape Pela (Mountain View High/Foothill JC).
-- Tailback Shane Vereen needs 170 yards rushing to extend Cal's seven-season streak of 1,000-yard rushers.
Bowl of victories
Since Jeff Tedford became coach, Cal has played postseason games every season but his first, compiling a bowl record of 5-1. The results:
2008 Emerald Bowl: Beat Miami 24-17
2007 Armed Forces Bowl: Beat Air Force 42-36
2006 Holiday Bowl: Beat Texas A&M 45-10
2005 Las Vegas Bowl: Beat BYU 35-28
2004 Holiday Bowl: Lost to Texas Tech 45-31
2003 Insight Bowl: Beat Virginia Tech 52-49
It happened here in San Diego, when Texas Tech flattened Cal in the 2004 Holiday Bowl. Tepper vividly remembers the feeling, so he gathered his teammates during practice last week in Berkeley and implored them to treat tonight's Poinsettia Bowl with urgency.
"That sour taste in your mouth is the worst thing in the world, 10 times worse than spinach or whatever vegetable you hate," Tepper said. "You lose a bowl game and your offseason is terrible. All the coaches do is rag on you."
The Bears (8-4) face a sizable challenge in avoiding the ragging, despite falling into a low-profile bowl. They meet No. 23 Utah, which sports a splashy 22-3 record over the past two seasons - 13-0 last year, capped by a Sugar Bowl thumping of Alabama, and 9-3 this year.
The Utes also arrive with the nation's longest active bowl win streak, at eight games. Cal counters with bowl wins in each of the past four years, from the Las Vegas (over BYU) and Holiday (Texas A&M) to the Armed Forces (Air Force) and Emerald (Miami).
Linebacker Mike Mohamed acknowledged the Bears talked about Utah's streak the past several days, adding an extra layer of motivation. Cal also finds incentive in ending its strange, up-and-down season on a strong note, after playing miserably in losing its regular-season finale 42-10 to Washington.
Senior cornerback Syd'Quan Thompson, whose status for tonight's game is in doubt because of a nagging sprained ankle, doesn't pay much attention to Utah's streak. But Thompson is fully aware of Cal's bowl record since he arrived in 2005 from Grant High in Sacramento.
"I just want to be undefeated in bowl games myself," Thompson said. "This is my senior season and I haven't lost a bowl game since I've been here - and I don't plan on losing one."
The Bears could use Thompson, because Utah boasts an all-Mountain West Conference wide receiver in David Reed (75 catches, 1,085 yards). The Utes also have a 1,000-yard rusher in tailback Eddie Wide, giving true freshman quarterback Jordan Wynn ample help.
Most troubling for Cal, maybe, is Utah's style - the Utes run the spread-option offense, routinely setting up in the shotgun formation with one running back (or an empty backfield) and three or four wide receivers. Sound familiar? Oregon used the spread-option to shred the Bears on Sept. 26, gaining 524 yards of total offense in a resounding 42-3 victory.
Defensive coordinator Bob Gregory did not seem to wince as he made the Oregon comparison, insisting his team is equipped to handle Utah's speed - even when it's scattered all over the field.
"We've actually played pretty decently against that type of offense in the past," Gregory said. "We just didn't play very well the last time. ... It's all about us and making sure we execute our technique fast."
It's hard to know what to expect from Cal, given its dual personality in 2009. The Bears probably played their two best games of the season in November, smothering Arizona at home (24-16) and marching downfield, time after ruthless time, in beating Stanford in the Big Game (34-28).
And then, against Washington, they couldn't do anything right. In some ways, the 42-10 loss was a fitting end to a regular season unlike any other since Jeff Tedford took over in 2002.
"We've done some good things this year - and we've done some really bad things," quarterback Kevin Riley said.
Or, as tailback Shane Vereen said, "I think this bowl game will have a lot to do with how we remember the season."
Briefly: Numerical proof tonight's game isn't generating much buzz: Bowl officials expect a crowd between 30,000 and 35,000 at Qualcomm Stadium, where capacity is nearly 70,000. ... Four seniors - Tepper, Thompson, defensive tackle Tyson Alualu and wide receiver Verran Tucker - landed invitations to play in the East-West Shrine Game on Jan. 23 in Orlando. ... Cornerback Josh Hill will miss tonight's game because of a shoulder injury and probably will need offseason surgery.
Cal today
Story line:
Which team will show up, the mighty Bears or the meek version? Cal won four games this season by 19 points or more - and lost four others by 17 points or more. Coach Jeff Tedford's teams historically perform well in bowl games, with wins each of the past four years. But Utah owns an even longer streak: eight consecutive bowl victories (including four under current head coach Kyle Whittingham). The Utes savor any chance to play a Pac-10 opponent and will no doubt show up ready to play. It's hard to tell with the Bears: Will they bring their "A game" or will they show their disappointment in falling to a lower-tier bowl?
Injuries: Cal: TB Jahvid Best (concussion), G Matt Summers-Gavin (concussion) and CB Josh Hill (shoulder) are out; CB Syd'Quan Thompson (ankle) is questionable. Utah: DT Kenape Eliapo (virus) and WR John Peel (foot) are expected to play.
What to watch for
-- Cal must figure out a way to combat Utah's spread-option offense. The Bears rank No. 108 in pass defense (out of 120 teams), a problem potentially compounded if Thompson, the Bears' best coverage cornerback, cannot play.
-- Sixteen seniors will end their Cal careers, including eight regular starters: Thompson, defensive lineman Tyson Alualu, linebacker Devin Bishop, fullback Brian Holley, safety Brett Johnson, offensive tackle Mike Tepper, wide receiver Verran Tucker and linebacker Eddie Young.
-- Four defensive players for Utah have Bay Area connections: Eliapo (South San Francisco High), defensive end Koa Misi (Montgomery-Santa Rosa), linebacker Mo Neal (San Leandro High) and defensive tackle Joape Pela (Mountain View High/Foothill JC).
-- Tailback Shane Vereen needs 170 yards rushing to extend Cal's seven-season streak of 1,000-yard rushers.
Bowl of victories
Since Jeff Tedford became coach, Cal has played postseason games every season but his first, compiling a bowl record of 5-1. The results:
2008 Emerald Bowl: Beat Miami 24-17
2007 Armed Forces Bowl: Beat Air Force 42-36
2006 Holiday Bowl: Beat Texas A&M 45-10
2005 Las Vegas Bowl: Beat BYU 35-28
2004 Holiday Bowl: Lost to Texas Tech 45-31
2003 Insight Bowl: Beat Virginia Tech 52-49
