



“This is definitely a different kind of team from the one we faced in the Pac-12” said Scalley before the game, “but we are going to stick to our game and stay true to our gameplan.”
Taking the opening kickoff, Utah showed that whatever their plan was it was working out of the game. A solid drive from QB Rodney Denbow would see the Utes make it all the way down the field to face a 3rd & Goal from the 6. With HB Arthur Levine having a good opening drive, a play action pass seemed like the right move to catch Cal off guard. Unfortunately Cal DT Ben Nicholson was not fooled, and a sack turned it into 4th & Goal from the 13. K Bryce Keating would come on and kick a 30-yard FG to give the Utes a 3-0 lead.
It would be their last score over four brutal quarters, leaving Utah fans heading for the exits early.
It’s hard to say where things went so poorly for Utah, but after that first drive Cal were able to make adjustments that basically shut down Utah’s offense, and the Utes never had an answer for Cal’s offense.
WR George Cheeseman would have two TD in the 1st quarter, one from 53 yards out and one from 14 yards on a Jet Touch Pass that had him walking into the endzone. Utah would have a great punt after their third possession, pinning Cal at their own 6, but it would take Cal just two plays to make it 21-3. An 84-yard bomb to WR Darryl Hawkinson would leave Scalley wondering if there was anything they could do to stop the Golden Bears.
If adjustments were made by Utah after the 1st quarter, they somehow made things worse. As Utah abandoned their run game, which was doing well but not well enough to keep the chains moving, it fell right into Cal’s strengths on defense.
With the game in Denbow’s hands, they accelerated toward a historic beating as Cal’s defensive line started to get to the QB and get the turnovers flowing. A LOLB Taylor Webb interception gave Cal the ball on their own 19, and that drive would end with a 21-yard HB Deuce Linwood TD run. More sacks, and more Cheeseman would come, with the WR catching two more TD passes. Cal would enter the half with five sacks, and Cheeseman would have 229 yards and 4TD on just seven receptions.
Utah would come out for the 3rd down 49-3, and with the way things were going Scalley would have to choose between limiting the damage and going all-in on trying to get back in the game. Denbow would be given another chance to try and get back in the game, but things just got so much worse and the game spiraled out of control.
HB Larry Hall would score a 1-yard TD run after Cal received the second half kickoff, and then Denbow would put them right back in the endzone on the first play of their drive. Trying to throw for a 1st down, Denbow would find SS Tremayne Landman instead. Landman would have a wide open field for a 31-yard pick six and a 63-3 lead before the 3rd quarter was even half way through.

The next drive, Utah would move the ball well but Denbow would be intercepted once again. This time it was MLB Josh Sanford on the 1 yard line, and Utah couldn’t even catch a break there with Sanford escaping to Cal’s 49. A 17-yard TD pass to Hawkinson would push it to 70-3, and then CB Joey Eddie would intercept Denbow and put Cal back on their own 31.
Cal, now exclusively running the ball, would finally be stopped by failing to convert a 4th & 2 just before the 4th quarter.
Denbow, somehow still in the game, would finally break Scalley with his 5th interception of the game. CB Jamison Dyer would be the man this time, making it 5INT for the beleaguered passer. He would have to watch Linwood run for a 65-yard TD, and he would not come out again with QB Anthony Trainer taking his place.
Trainer wouldn’t do much better, though he would manage to complete nearly as many passes in just a single quarter of work. He’d also be intercepted, this time by FS Scoot Henderson, which would immediately lead to a 70-yard TD run by QB Duane Dinson. One last Utah drive would end in a punt, and HC Tosh Lupoi would have mercy on Utah by running the clock out for an eye-watering 98-3 win.
THE TAKEAWAY
Coaches across the country are going to need to study this game as an example of what not to do against Cal. Six turnovers is clearly not the way to go, but Utah’s defense was an absolute sieve today. This game was like facing wet toilet paper for Cal, who rolled up 1,074 yards of offense compared to Utah’s 308. It might be more frightening that those 1,000+ yards came from a balanced attack, with Dinson (552 yards, 7TD) and the ground game (522 yards, 6TD) making it look like they were playing against an empty field.
UP NEXT
California : Home against UCF.
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