Monday, December 31, 2018

TCU, Fans Get a Kick Out of Cheez-It Bowl Victory





It's not often that a holiday season visit with in-laws in St. Louis trumps (apologies to my Democratic friends) a football bowl game featuring TCU, but this time it did. Especially with the bowl game being named after a snack chip other than a Tostito.

Oh, any visit to Arizona in the winter would be a fine visit, but with the Cheez-It Bowl being the day after Christmas and featuring an unpredictable, mediocre TCU team playing an unpredictable, mediocre University of California team in a baseball stadium, it seemed to be the perfect time to suck it up and earn some brownie points from the family. So, the caravan headed north of Fort Worth, instead of west.

And, wouldn't you know it. The Cheez-It Bowl turned out to be a wacky, fun, memorable game.


The Horned Frogs earned a hard-fought 10-7 win in overtime (Midnite had predicted a 23-19 TCU win) when Jonathan Song kicked a 27-yard field goal 10 plays after an interception and long return by TCU linebacker Jawuan Johnson on Cal's third play of its first possession in overtime.

Song's winning kick, which made him 9-of-12 on the season and 17-of-20 in his career, took the monkey off the back of TCU kicker Cole Bunce. He missed a potential game-winning 44-yard field goal as time expired in regulation, sending the contest into overtime.

The victory raised TCU's 2018 season record to 7-6 and gave the Frogs a winning record for the 15th time in Gary Patterson's 18 years as head coach at TCU. Patterson is now 7-0 against Pac-12 teams. The win was the Frogs' 10th in their last 13 bowl games. The Horned Frogs are 11-6 in bowl games with Patterson as head coach and 13-6 with him on the coaching staff.

After a trying season and tough bowl win, Patterson was planning to take it easy for a few days after the Cheez-It Bowl, so after the Frogs' victory he penned a song. Listen: here 

This was the first bowl game for Justin Wilcox as head coach of the Cal Bears. The trip to Arizona didn't turn out as he had hoped, so he, too, penned a song after the game. Listen: here  

The game featured a ton of defense, and a little bit of everything else, including a perfectly timed career rushing night by TCU running back Sewo Olonilua and a nationally televised tumble on the sideline and onto the playing field by TCU Sports Information Director Mark Cohen, who was celebrating Johnson's long interception return during the overtime period. The Frogs were penalized 15 yards for Cohen's somersault (which would have earned a perfect 10, if not for a 9.5 awarded by the Russian judge), but TCU overcame the penalty and won the game on Song's field goal.

Just about the only thing missing in the game was a reception by TCU wide receiver Jalen Reagor, who came into the game with a touchdown catch in a TCU record seven consecutive games and leading TCU with 72 receptions for 1,061 yards and nine touchdowns. Reagor did have, however, a career-long 58-yard punt return in the game.

TCU entered the game No. 1 in the Big 12 and 26th nationally in total defense, despite facing five of the nation’s top-16 teams in total offense.

Cal entered the game ranked No. 16 nationally in total defense.

With two of the top defensive teams in the country going against one another, the game was predicted to be a defensive battle. So, it was somewhat surprising, and disheartening, that the two teams, and the 10-7 game, were criticized for a lack of offense and scoring.

TCU and Cal proved what TCU had been proving all season and what the Frogs have proved in many previous seasons with Patterson at the helm. When executed properly, defensive football is exciting, and good defense can win football games.

If offense is what you want from every football game, pin up a poster of Lincoln Riley or Mike Leach in your locker room.

But when it comes to Patterson, his heroes are defensive players, like Dick Butkus, Mean Joe Greene, Michael Singletary and a host of previous Horned Frog linebackers, defensive ends and nose tackles.

The defenses of the two Cheez-It Bowl teams combined to intercept nine passes: five by the TCU defense and four by the Cal defense.

The nine interceptions broke the previous Cheez-It Bowl high of six, between Arizona and New Mexico in 1997. The nine interceptions tied with the 1982 Liberty Bowl for the third-most ever in a bowl game and behind the 1942 Orange Bowl (10 interceptions), in which Georgia beat TCU 40-26, and the 1968 Sun Bowl (11 interceptions), which Auburn won, 34-10, over Arizona.

Cal redshirt junior safety Jaylinn Hawkins broke the Cheez-It bowl record for interceptions with three.

TCU's five interceptions were a Cheez-It Bowl team record and tied for the most in a game in the 18 seasons with Patterson as head coach. The Horned Frogs also had five picks in a 2012 win (24-16) at SMU. This is the first time TCU has had five different players with an interception in a game under Patterson.

In addition to Johnson's interception, which led to TCU's winning field goal, Niko Small, Vernon Scott, Jeff Gladney and Julius Lewis had interceptions for the Frogs.

Johnson's interception was his first as a Horned Frog. The senior linebacker led TCU with seven tackles, including one for a loss. His 72-yard interception return was the longest by a Horned Frog since Gladney's 94-yard pick-6 at Texas Tech last season.

Small's interception was his first of the season and third of his career.

Scott's interception was the first of his career.

Gladney's interception was his second of the season and fourth of his career, the most among active Horned Frogs. Gladney is the first TCU player with an interception in consecutive games since Innis Gaines in the Valero Alamo Bowl last season and this year's opener against Southern.

Lewis' interception was his second of the season, tying Gladney and Ridwan Issahaku for the team lead. It was the second career interception for Lewis.

With the game dominated by interceptions, it quickly was dubbed the "Cheez-I(N)T Bowl."

Even the Kellogg Company, maker of Cheez-It, joined the fun by proclaiming it was okay for ESPN and others to refer to the bowl as the Cheez-I(N)T Bowl. Anything for additional publicity!

TCU fifth-year senior quarterback Grayson Muehlstein, who made his second career start and who had led the Frogs to bowl eligibility in wins over Baylor and Oklahoma State in TCU's two final regular-season games, was seven for 20 for 27 yards passing, with four interceptions and no touchdowns. Muehlstein tied TCU's Casey Printers for most interceptions in a bowl game. Printers threw four against Texas A&M in the 2001 Galleryfurniture.com Bowl, which was played at the Astrodome in Houston and won by the Aggies, 28-9.

TCU freshman quarterback Justin Rogers, who has been recovering from an injury suffered during his senior year of high school, saw his first game action of the season. In the fourth quarter, Rogers briefly replaced an injured Muehlstein. He was sacked for a four-yard loss and completed his one pass attempt, for one yard, to Olonilua.

The Frogs' 28 total passing yards in the game were their fewest yards passing since November 2006, when TCU finished with 25 passing yards in a 27-21 win at New Mexico. TCU entered the bowl game 8-0 in games when it has under 100 yards passing in the Patterson era. The last time the Frogs pulled it off was during the 2017 season, when TCU had 85 yards passing in a 27-3 victory over Texas Tech.

TCU's defense recorded five sacks. The Frogs' offensive line limited Cal's defense to two sacks.

For the Frogs, L.J. Collier, Ben Banogu, Ty Summers, Corey Bethley and Arico Evans had sacks. TCU's five sacks tied a season-best from the Baylor game. The Horned Frogs have at least one sack in 67 of their last 70 games.

Banogu's sack gave him a team-best 8.5 on the season. He totaled five stops in the game.

Collier's sack was his sixth of the season, second on the team to Banogu's 8.5.

Summers had three tackles, including his 10th career sack, to give him 318 in his career and sole possession of second place for most stops in Patterson's 18-season head coaching tenure.

Evan's sack gave him 2.5 on the season.

Bethley's sack was his fifth of the season.

Cal had 164 yards passing and 100 yards rushing, for 264 total yards. Cal scored its lone touchdown on a four-yard run in the first quarter by quarterback Chase Garbers.

Along with its 28 passing yards, the Frogs had 262 rushing yards, to finish with 290 total yards.

Olonilua accounted for the majority of TCU's rushing yards. He carried the football 32 times for 194 yards, including a season-long 33-yard run and the Frog's lone touchdown, earning him Cheez-It Bowl Most Valuable Player honors. Running back Emari Demercardo had 51 yards on 13 carries.

Olonilua's 194 yards rushing are a TCU bowl record and the most by a Horned Frog since Ed Wesley ran for 209 yards in a 38-7 win over Air Force in 2010. Olonilua's 32 carries are the second-most in TCU bowl history, trailing only LaDainian Tomlinson's 36 carries (124 yards rushing) in a 28-14 win over East Carolina in the 1999 Mobile Alabama Bowl. Olonilua's 32 carries are the most since Joseph Turner had 33 carries in a 45-33 win over San Diego State in 2007

This was Olonilua's first career 100-yard game. His one-yard touchdown run in the first quarter was his second rushing touchdown of the season and 10th of his career.

In this era of Air-Raid offenses and high-scoring games, many pundits are saying that the Cheez-It Bowl will be remembered as one of the least exciting games of the 2018 bowl season.

It should not be remembered as the least exciting bowl game.

That distinction must go to the Servpro First Responder Bowl, which on Christmas Day was to have featured Boise State against Boston College in Dallas' Cotton Bowl Stadium. After a delay of about 1 1/2 hours, the game was canceled because of the threat of severe weather.

It is believed to be the first bowl game called off by weather.


And not a Cheez-It was in sight.

Good-bye 2018, hello 2019!



Thursday, December 27, 2018

TCU-California Game Scoring Summary and Links



California (7-6 , 4-5) -VS- TCU (7-6 , 4-5)


Team          1st     2nd     3rd     4th     OT     Total
California    7         0        0        0        0          7
TCU            0         0        7        0        3         10
 
         Time                Scoring Play                                                      CAL    TCU
1st    04:33    CAL - Garbers, Chase 4 yd run (Thomas, Greg kick)     7          0
3rd    00:03    TCU - Olonilua, Sewo 1 yd run (Song, Jonathan kick)   7         7
OT    15:00    TCU - Song, Jonathan 27 yd field goal                            7        10

Attendance: 33,121

Highlights: here and here

TCU Head Coach Gary Patterson Discusses the Win: not available

Cal Head Coach Justin Wilcox Discusses the Loss: here


Sunday, December 23, 2018

TCU-California Cheez-It Bowl Game GameDay Information




Game 13 of the 2018 TCU Football Season: TCU (6-6, 4-5 Big 12) vs California (7-5, 4-5 Pac 12): Wednesday, December 26, 2018, at 8 pm (Central); Chase Field, Phoenix, Arizona; TV: ESPN; Radio -- WBAP 820 AM, KTCU 88.7, Sirius 105, XM 199  (Radio Talent: Brian Estridge, John Denton, Landry Burdine); Spanish Radio: KFZO 99.1 (Radio Talent: Miguel Cruz, Elvis Gallegos).

Cheez-It Bowl: Information: here

Chase Field in Phoenix: The game will be played at Chase Field, home of the Arizona Diamondbacks of Major League Baseball. This will be TCU’s first game in a stadium used primarily for baseball. Opened on March 31, 1998, Chase Field features a swimming pool and a retractable roof. Information: here 

TCU's Cheez-It Bowl Hype Video: here

California's Cheez-It Bowl Announcement Video: here

The Line for TCU-California: The line opened with TCU as a two-point favorite. At press time, it was a "Pick-Em" game. The over/under was 39.5 points.

Midnite's TCU-California Prediction: TCU 23, California 19

TCU-California Game-Watching Party Locations: here 

TCU's Previous Game: In their regular-season finale and on Senior Night, the Horned Frogs became bowl-eligible by lassoing Oklahoma State, 31-24, in Fort Worth on Saturday, November 24. Highlights: here 

California's Previous Game: In their regular-season finale, California lost to Stanford 23-13. Highlights: here 

Previous TCU-Cailfornia Game: This will be the first time TCU and California have played each other. The two schools have games scheduled against each other in the 2020 (at California) and 2021 (at TCU) seasons.

TCU's Cheez-It Bowl Guide: here and here

TCU's 2018 Football Media Guide: here

2018 TCU Football Video: here

2018 California Football Guide: here

2018 California Bears Football Video: here

TCU-California Rivalry: This will be the first time TCU and California have played each other.
The two schools have games scheduled against each other in the 2020 (at California) and 2021 (at TCU) seasons.

TCU-California Connections:

  • During the 2017 football season, Sonny Dykes was an offensive analyst for TCU, before becoming SMU's head coach in 2018. Prior to TCU, Dykes was the head football coach at the University of California, from 2013-2016. Before he relocated to the west coast, Sonny was head football coach at Louisiana Tech, from 2010-2012. After coaching Cal football to its worst season (1–11) in program history in 2013, Dykes improved to 5–7 in 2014 and then to an 8–5 record and a victory in the 2015 Armed Forces Bowl in Fort Worth. Dykes finished the 2016 season with a 5–7 record, his third losing season in four years at California, culminating in him being fired in January 2017.
  • Cal is coached by Justin Wilcox. Wilcox served as the Boise State defensive coordinator from 2006-09, a stretch in which TCU and Boise State met twice in bowl games; the 2008 Poinsettia Bowl, which TCU won 17-16, and the 2010 Fiesta Bowl, which Boise State won 17-10.
  • Grayson Muehlstein and Cal’s Chase Forrest entered this season as the only Power 5 senior scholarship quarterbacks who had never started a game and were still at their original school.
  • California has five players from Texas on its roster, including one from Dallas and one from Denton.
  • TCU has six players from California on its roster.
  • California has played in eight Rose Bowl games. TCU has played in one Rose Bowl game
  • TCU has played in three Poinsettia Bowl games. California has played in one Poinsettia Bowl game.
  • TCU has played in two Alamo Bowl games. California has played in one Alamo Bowl game.
  • California has played in two Armed Forces Bowl games in Fort Worth. In 2003, TCU played in the Fort Worth Bowl, which now is the Armed Forces Bowl.
  • A trio of Horned Frogs are familiar with the Phoenix area. TCU offensive line coach Chris Thomsen was Arizona State’s assistant head coach and offensive line coach from 2013-16. TCU graduate assistant coaches Nick Kelly and Ilaiu Moeakiola played for Arizona State.

TCU Notables:

  • TCU is 114-35 in Saturday contests since 2005 and 20-11 on other days of the week (1-0 on Sundays, 0-1 on Mondays, 2-0 on Tuesdays, 2-0 on Wednesdays, 7-8 on Thursdays and 8-2 on Fridays).
  • TCU is playing its third bowl game in Arizona in the last 10 seasons. The Horned Frogs lost the 2010 Fiesta Bowl, 17-10, to Boise State. That game was played in University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale.TCU lost the 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl to Michigan State, 17-16. That game was played in Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe.
  • TCU is one of just 18 schools with at least 16 bowl trips in the last 18 seasons: Georgia (18), LSU (18), Oklahoma (18), Virginia Tech (18), Boise State (17), Clemson (17), Florida State (17), Ohio State (17), Wisconsin (17), Alabama (16), Auburn (16), Florida (16), Georgia Tech (16), Iowa (16), Oklahoma State (16), Oregon (16), TCU (16) and West Virginia (16)
  • The Horned Frogs also went to a bowl game all three years (1998-00) when Patterson was TCU's defensive coordinator.
  • The Horned Frogs are one of only 13 programs in the country to make at least 19 bowl trips in the last 21 seasons: Georgia (21), Virginia Tech (21), Florida State (20), Oklahoma (20), Wisconsin (20), Boise State (19), Clemson (19), Florida (19), Georgia Tech (19), LSU (19), Ohio State (19), Oregon (19) and TCU (19).
  • The Cheez-It Bowl will mark the 34th bowl appearance in TCU’s history. TCU is 16-16-1 in bowl games.
  • The Horned Frogs are 12-6 in bowls with Gary Patterson on its coaching staff and 10-6 with him as head coach.
  • TCU has won nine of its last 12 bowl games.
  • TCU is 6-0 against Pac-12 opponents under Patterson.
  • TCU is one of 21 schools to have won multiple national championships (1935, 1938) and produce a Heisman Trophy winner (Davey O’Brien, 1938). The other schools are Alabama, Army, Auburn, Florida, Florida State, Georgia, LSU, Miami (Fla.), Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Penn State, Pittsburgh, SMU, Texas, Texas A&M and USC.
  • TCU’s 46-21 record (.687) in road and neutral-site games since 2009 is the nation’s fifth-best mark.
  • Over the last five seasons, TCU (46-19, 30-15) has the Big 12’s second-best overall and conference records.
  • TCU is one of just five programs nationally to finish in the top 10 of the final polls at least three times in the last four seasons. The others are Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State and Oklahoma.
  • Gary Patterson’s 18 seasons as TCU’s head coach are more than the combined tenures of the 11 other FBS head coaches in Texas.
  • Under Patterson, TCU has posted seven top-10 finishes and 11 in the top 25. The Horned Frogs have won at least 11 games in 10 of the last 15 seasons.
  • TCU has won at least 10 games 11 times in Patterson’s teure as head coach, including three of the last four years and nine of the past 13.
  • TCU has reached the 11-win mark 10 times in the last 15 seasons.
  • Prior to Patterson’s arrival on campus in 1998, TCU had just four 10-win seasons in its history.
  • Patterson has accounted for 25.5 percent (166 of 650) of TCU’s all-time football victories.
  • TCU has had six winning streaks of at least 12 games under Patterson, tied for the most by any college football coach nationally since 1980.
  • Since 2005, TCU tops all private schools in victories and winning percentage: 134 wins, 46 losses (.744). USC is second: 119 wins, 50 losses (.704). Notre Dame is fourth: 116 wins, 61 losses (.655).
  • TCU’s record since 2005 (134 wins, 46 losses, .744) is No. 8 overall nationally. Ohio State is first: 157-27, .853.
  • Since 2001, Patterson’s first full season as TCU’s head coach, the Horned Frogs have been the most successful program in Texas: 166-62 (.728). Texas is second: 163-68 (.706). Texas Tech is third: 134-94 (.588).
  • Since 2008, Patterson is third nationally among head coaches in most Associated Press Top-10 finishes: Nick Saban, 10; Urban Meyer, 7; Gary Patteson, 6. Patterson’s top-10 finishes are in 2008, 2009, 2010, 2014, 2015 and 2017.
  • Patterson ranks first among active head coaches in most wins (166) at his current school. Kirk Ferentz, at Iowa, is second, with 151.
  • Patterson is one of seven active F BS coaches to be the winningest head coach at their current schools.
  • Patterson ranks fourth among active FBS coaches in winning percentage (minimum 10 years): Urban Meyer, Ohio State, 189-32 (.855); Chris Petersen, Washington, 139-32 (.813); Nick Saban, Alabama, 231-62-1 (.787); and Patterson, 166- 63 (.725).
  • TCU outgained its opponent in eight of 12 regular-season games this season.
  • Since 2014, when Sonny Cumbie arrived as co-offensive coordinator, TCU is tied for second nationally in most games with at least 300 yards passing and 200 rushing: Ohio State, 16; TCU and Baylor, 15.
  • The Horned Frogs have run the ball on 435 of their 824 snaps this season. The 52.8 percentage is the second-highest since Cumbie arrived with the spread offense in 2014.
  • TCU has topped 200 yards in rushing in four games this season, most recently with a season-high 243 in the 31-24 win over Oklahoma State in the regular-season finale.
  • TCU’s streak of scoring in 332 consecutive games is fourth on the NCAA’s all-time list, trailing only Florida (384, 1988-present), Michigan (365, 1984-04) and BYU (361, 1975-03).
  • TCU tops the Big 12 and is tied for 14th nationally in allowing just 14 sacks (1.2 per game). Four of the 14 sacks allowed were at West Virginia. The Horned Frogs’ other 11 games saw just 10 sacks surrendered
  • TCU is No. 1 in the Big 12 and 26th nationally in total defense (344.4 yards per game) despite facing five of the nation’s top-16 teams in total offense.
  • Since the NCAA began tracking statistics in 1937, TCU trails only Alabama for the most times leading the nation in total defense. The Crimson Tide have been No. 1 seven times, while all five No. 1 rankings for the Horned Frogs are in the last 18 seasons.
  • In 2010, TCU became just the third program in NCAA history to top the nation in total defense in three consecutive seasons (2008-10). The others are Toledo (1969-71) and Oklahoma (1985-87)
  • With the exception of one season (2015), TCU has been first or second in the Big 12 in total defense each year since joining the conference in 2012.
  • Since beginning Big 12 play in 2012, TCU is tied for second (with Washington) among Power 5 programs for most times leading its conference in total defense.Alabama is first.
  • TCU is first in the Big 12 and 13th nationally in third-down defense, allowing opponents to convert on just 31.8 percent (54-of-170) of its opportunities.
  • TCU has forced its opponents into a 3-and-out on 31.1 percent (47-of-151) of possessions this season.
  • TCU has the longest streak among Big 12 schools with 22 consecutive seasons with at least 25 sacks
  • TCU is third in the Big 12 with 2.5 sacks per game. Eleven players have combined for 30 sacks this season. Defensive end Ben Bangu leads with 7.5 sacks.
  • TCU has at least one sack in 66 of its last 69 contests.
  • Since beginning Big 12 play in 2012, TCU leads the conference in most games (46) with at least three sacks.
  • TCU ranks first in the Big 12 and fifth nationally with its average of 17.6 yards per punt return. Its 282 punt return yards are first in the conference and 16th in the country.
  • TCU is one of only nine schools in the nation with at least two punt return touchdowns.
  • TCU has sold out of football season tickets four times in the last seven campaigns. TCU has set a school record for season ticket sales in five of the past nine years.
  • TCU had an average home attendance last season of 44,080. It was 98.0 percent of capacity (45,000).
  • Eight TCU players graduated in December: Ben Banogu, L.J. Collier, Adam Nunez, Ridwan Issahaku, Ryan McGee, Alec Dunham, Patrick Zeller and Chris Gaynor. Fourteen TCU players have their degrees.
  • Wide receiver Jalen Reagor tops TCU with 72 receptions for 1,061 yards and nine touchdowns. The 1,061 yards rank second for a season in TCU history (Josh Doctson, 1,327, 2015).
  • Reagor has a touchdown catch in a TCU record seven consecutive games. Reagor broke the TCU record of six held by Doctson
  • In TCU's 31-24 win over Oklahoma State, Reagor became the first TCU and Big 12 wide receiver in history to top 100 yards (121) in rushing and 90 (91) in receiving in the same game.
  • Reagor has the fourth 1,000-yard season in TCU history and is the third player to reach the mark.
  • With 315 career tackles, linebacker/defensive end Ty Summers is tied for second place for most stops in Patterson’s 18 seasons as head coach. Travin Howard is first, with 343 tackes.
  • Summers’ 315 career tackles rank 11th nationally among active players in a Power 5 program.
  • Over his last eight games, Adam Nunez has put nine of his 33 punts at or inside the 10. He has placed 72 of 167 career punts (43.1 percent) inside the 20.
  • Field-goal kicker Jonathan Song has made 15-of-16 career attempts inside 40 yards.
  • This year’s Horned Frogs’ senior class is 34-18. The 2018 seniors have posted a pair of top-10 final rankings (2015, 2017) while being part of 2016 and 2017 Valero Alamo Bowl championships. They have six wins against ranked opponents the last four years. They also had two perfect seasons at home.
  • In Patterson’s tenure as head coach, TCU has had 45 players drafted with 113 in NFL camps.
  • TCU has 18 former players on current NFL rosters: Jonathan Anderson, Arizona; Marcus Cannon, New England; Josh Carraway, Washington; Aviante Collins, Minnesota; Andy Dalton, Cincinnati; Josh Doctson, Washington; Travin Howard, L.A. Rams; Jerry Hughes, Buffalo; Joey Hunt, Seattle; Colin Jones, Carolina; Derrick Kindred, Cleveland; Patrick Morris, Pittsburgh; Marshall Newhouse, Carolina; Joseph Noteboom, L.A. Rams; Matt Pryor, Philadelphia; Austin Schlottmann, Denver; Halapoulivaati Vaitai, Philadelphia; Jason Verrett, L.A. Chargers.
  • Twelve of TCU’s NFL players have earned their degree.

TCU's Bowl History: TCU's bowl record is 16-16-1. Here are TCU's bowl game results:

  • December 28, 2017; Alamo Bowl: TCU 39, Stanford 3
  • December 30, 2016; Liberty Bowl: Georgia 31, TCU 23
  • January 2, 2016; Alamo Bowl: TCU 47, Oregon 41 (3OT)
  • December 31, 2014; Peach Bowl: TCU 42, Mississippi 3
  • December 29, 2012; Insight Bowl: Michigan St. 17, TCU 16
  • December 21, 2011; Poinsettia Bowl: TCU 31, Louisiana Tech 24
  • January 1, 2011; Rose Bowl: TCU 21, Wisconsin 19
  • January 4, 2010; Fiesta Bowl: Boise St. 17, TCU 10
  • December 23, 2008; Poinsettia Bowl: TCU 17, Boise St. 16
  • December 28, 2007; Texas Bowl: TCU 20, Houston 13
  • December 19, 2006; Poinsettia Bowl: TCU 37, Northern Illinois 7
  • December 31, 2005; Houston Bowl: TCU 27, Iowa St. 24
  • December 23, 2003; Fort Worth Bowl: Boise St. 34, TCU 31
  • December 31, 2002; Liberty Bowl: TCU 17, Colorado St. 3
  • December 28, 2001; Galleryfurnture.com Bowl: Texas A&M 28, TCU 9
  • December 20, 2000; Mobile Alabama Bowl: Southern Miss. 28, TCU 21
  • December 22, 1999; Mobile Alabama Bowl: TCU 28, East Carolina 14
  • December 31, 1998; Sun Bowl: TCU 28, Southern Cal 19
  • December 28, 1994; Independence Bowl: Virginia 20, TCU 10
  • December 31, 1984; Bluebonnet Bowl: West Virginia 31, TCU 14
  • December 31, 1965; Sun Bowl: UTEP 13, TCU 12
  • December 19; 1959 Bluebonnet Bowl: Clemson 23, TCU 7
  • January 1, 1959; Cotton Bowl: TCU 0, Air Force 0
  • January 1, 1957; Cotton Bowl: TCU 28, Syracuse 27
  • January 2, 1956; Cotton Bowl: Mississippi 14, TCU 13
  • January 1, 1952; Cotton Bowl: Kentucky 20, TCU 7
  • January 1, 1948; Delta Bowl: Mississippi 13, TCU 9
  • January 1, 1945; Cotton Bowl: Oklahoma St. 34, TCU 0
  • January 1, 1942; Orange Bowl: Georgia 40, TCU 26
  • Januar 2, 1939; Sugar Bowl: TCU 15, Carnegie Mellon 7
  • January 1, 1937; Cotton Bowl: TCU 16, Marquette 6
  • January 1, 1936; Sugar Bowl: TCU 3, LSU 2
  • January 1, 1921; Fort Worth Classic: Centre 63, TCU 7

California's Bowl record: California has played in 22 bowl games. California's bowl record is 11-10-1. Here are California's bowl game results:

  • Rose Bowl, 1920: California 28, Ohio State 0
  • Rose Bowl, 1921: California 0, Washington & Jefferson 0
  • Rose Bowl, 1928: Georgia Tech 8, California 7
  • Rose Bowl, 1937: California 13, Alabama 0
  • Rose Bowl, 1948: Northwestern 20, California 14
  • Rose Bowl, 1949: Ohio State 17, California 14
  • Rose Bowl, 1950: Michigan 14, California 6
  • Rose Bowl, 1958: Iowa 38, California 12
  • Garden State Bowl, 1979: Temple 28 California 17
  • Copper Bowl, 1990: California 17, Wyoming 15
  • Citrus Bowl, 1991: California 37, Clemson 13
  • Alamo Bowl, 1993: California 37, Iowa 3
  • Aloha Bowl, 1996: Navy 42, California 38
  • Insight Bowl, 2003: California 52, Virginia Tech 49
  • Holiday Bowl, 2004: Texas Tech 45, California 31
  • Las Vegas Bowl, 2005: California 35, BYU 28
  • Holiday Bowl, 2006: California 45, Texas A&M 10
  • Armed Forces Bowl, 2007: California 42, Air Force 36
  • Emerald Bowl, 2008: California 24, Miami 17
  • Poinsettia Bowl, 2009: Utah 37, California 27
  • Holiday Bowl, 2011: Texas 21, California 10
  • Armed Forces Bowl, 2015: California 55, Air Force 36

TCU Injuries: TCU continues to deal with injuries, especially to key players. About 40 Horned Frogs have dealt with significant injuries this season, with about 20 being season-ending injuries. Several recently injured players, including running back Darius Anderson, quarterback Michael Collins and offensive lineman Austin Myers are not expected to play in the bowl game because of their injuries. Offensive guard Cordel Iwuagwu, who has missed games because of an injury, is expected to be able to play in the bowl game. Offensive lineman Linebacker/defensive end Ty Summers may be able to play in the bowl game.

2019 TCU Football Schedule: Here is the 2019 TCU football schedule, which features an away game at Purdue, a home game against cross-town rival SMU, a Thursday night road game against Kansas State, road games at Oklahoma State and Oklahoma, and a Friday night home game against West Virginia on the Friday after Thanksgiving:

  • August 31 (Saturday): versus Arkansas State
  • September 14 (Saturday): at Purdue
  • September 21 (Saturday): vs SMU
  • September 28 (Saturday): vs Kansas
  • October 5 (Saturday): at Iowa State
  • October 17 (Thursday): at Kansas State
  • October 26 (Saturday): vs Texas
  • November 2 (Saturday): at Oklahoma State
  • November 9 (Saturday): vs Baylor
  • November 16 (Saturday): at Texas Tech
  • November 23 (Saturday): at Oklahoma
  • November 29 (Friday): vs West Virginia
December 7: Big 12 Championship Game

Big 12's 2019 Football Schedule: here

Thursday, December 20, 2018

TCU Football Signs 22 Student-Athletes



The TCU football program announced the signing of 22 student-athletes, beginning on the early signing date of Wednesday, December 19, 2018.

The Horned Frogs' 2019 recruiting class is ranked third in the Big 12 and 30th nationally by 247Sports.com.

Eight states and Australia are represented by the signees. Twelve are from Texas, two players are from California and Nevada and one each are from Florida, Iowa, Ohio, Oklahoma and Utah.

Fourteen signees are on defense, including six defensive backs, six defensive linemen and two linebackers. Seven offensive signees include three offensive linemen, two wide receivers, a quarterback and running back. The Horned Frogs also signed a punter.

Here are overviews of the signees, with the information coming from GoFrogs.com: 

Thomas Armstrong (DL, 6-3, 220, Hollywood, Fla.; Chaminade-Madonna Prep): Three-star recruit … rated by 247Sports as the No. 100 defensive end in the nation and the No. 202 overall player in Florida … had 93 stops with 17 sacks and an interception as a senior … totaled 12 tackles, including 3.5 for loss, with 1.5 sacks and a quarterback hurry in a 38-10 win over King's Academy in the Class 3A state championship game … chose TCU over USF and Rutgers. 

Mikel Barkley (WR, 5-11, 165, Temecula, Calif.; Palomar College; Great Oak HS): Ranked by 247Sports as the nation's No. 11 JUCO wide receiver and No. 20 overall prospect in California … had 25 receptions for 583 yards and nine touchdowns in nine games at Palomar College … ran track in high school and has 10.4 speed in the 100 meters … chose TCU over Utah and UCLA. 

Nook Bradford (S, 5-11, 190, Helotes, Texas; Fork Union Military Academy; O'Connor HS): Rated by 247Sports as the No. 1 prep school player in the nation … ranked as the nation's No. 54 safety prospect coming out of O'Connor High School … chose TCU over Arizona State, Purdue, Virginia Tech and Houston. 

Brannon Brown (OL, 6-5, 295, San Antonio, Texas; O'Connor HS): Three-star recruit … rated by 247Sports as the No. 41 offensive guard in the nation and No. 72 overall player in Texas … named to the Second-Team Tops in Texas by Dave Campbell's Texas Football … selected to the Whataburger Super Team … a unanimous first-team all-district selection as a junior … was also first-team all-district his sophomore year … chose TCU over Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, Houston and SMU. 

Andrew Coker (OL, 6-7, 310, Katy, Texas; James E. Taylor HS): A three-star recruit by 247Sports … rated as the No. 41 offensive tackle in the nation and No. 69 overall player in Texas in the 247Sports composite rankings … named to the First-Team Tops in Texas by Dave Campbell's Texas Football … selected to the Whataburger Super Team … three-year starter … earned second-team all-district honors as a junior … honorable mention all-district his sophomore year … chose TCU over Florida, Georgia, Oklahoma, Texas A&M and Texas. 

Donavann Collins (DB, 5-11, 170, Cedar Hill, Texas; Cedar Hill HS): Three-star recruit … the 247Sports composite rankings has him as the No. 57 cornerback in the nation and No. 67 overall player in Texas … the first commit for TCU's Class of 2019 … helped lead Cedar Hill to a 9-2 record his senior year … named the District 7-6A Sophomore Defensive Most Valuable Player … chose TCU over Kansas State, Illinois and Houston. 

Blair Conwright (WR, 5-11, 176, Lubbock, Texas; Coronado HS): A three-star recruit … listed as the No. 77 wide receiver in the nation and the No. 70 overall player in Texas by 247Sports … had 105 receptions for 1,540 yards and 25 touchdowns as a senior … totaled 185 catches for 3,179 yards and 48 touchdowns over his junior and senior years combined … earned Associated Press Class 5A second-team all-state honors as a junior … chose TCU over Kansas, SMU, Air Force and Cornell.

Max Duggan (QB, 6-2, 190, Council Bluffs, Iowa; Lewis Central HS): The Iowa Gatorate Player of the Year … four-star recruit … ranked by 247Sports as the No. 3 dual-threat quarterback in the nation and No. 2 overall player from the state of Iowa … passed for over 2,100 yards and 24 touchdowns as a senior while adding 1,200 yards rushing … led Lewis Central to an 11-1 record … named the Most Valuable Player at the Canton (Ohio) Elite 11 Camp … totaled 3,788 yards passing and 35 touchdown tosses along with 1,500 yards on the ground and 27 rushing scores over his prep career … chose TCU over Georgia, Penn State, Notre Dame and Ohio State. 

Colt Ellison (DL, 6-4, 235, Aledo, Texas; Aledo HS): Three-star recruit … ranked as the No. 27 defensive end in the nation and No. 50 overall player in Texas in the 247Sports composite rankings … totaled 43 tackles with 6.5 sacks before being sidelined by injury his senior year … first-team all-district as a junior … earned District 6-5A Defensive Newcomer of the Year honors his sophomore year … totaled 229 tackles, 30 sacks, six fumble recoveries and two interceptions in his prep career … chose TCU over Notre Dame, Washington, Penn State, Tennessee and Oklahoma State. 

Daimarqua Foster (RB, 5-10, 195, Wichita Falls, Texas; Hirschi HS): The highest-rated recruit in TCU's Class of 2019 … a four-star player by 247Sports … ranked as the No. 7 running back nationally and No. 23 overall player in Texas … ran for 2,800 yards and 44 touchdowns as a senior … named to the Second-Team Tops in Texas by Dave Campbell's Texas Football … selected to the Whataburger Super Team … closed his career as the leading rusher in the history of high school football in the city of Wichita Falls with over 6,700 yards and more than 100 touchdowns … Hirschi won 27 games in his three years on varsity after being 0-10 the year before his arrival … named the Associated Press Class 4A Offensive Player of the Year as a junior and the District 4-4A-I Offensive Newcomer of the Year his sophomore year … has 4.40 speed in the 40 … chose TCU over Baylor, Texas Tech and Virginia Tech. 

Josh Foster (DB, 6-0, 165, Newton, Texas; Newton HS): The No. 79 athlete in the nation and No. 136 overall player in Texas in the 247Sports composite rankings … three-star recruit … played quarterback, running back and defensive back for Newton … passed for nearly 1,500 yards and ran for almost 700 … had 52 tackles and two interceptions on defense … named the District 10-3A-II Overall Most Valulable Player as a junior … the District 10-3A-II Defensive Newcomer of the Year his sophomore year … totaled 1,977 yards passing and 30 touchdowns at quarterback and more than 700 yards rushing and 16 touchdowns as a running back … had 147 tackles and five interceptions while at defensive back … chose TCU over Arkansas, Utah, Baylor and Vanderbilt. 

Wyatt Harris (LB, 6-3, 218, Aledo, Texas; Aledo HS): Rated by 247Sports as the No. 58 linebacker in the nation and No. 104 overall player in Texas … three-star recruit … four-year member of the Aledo varsity team … sidelined by injury during his senior season … returned to action late in the year to help lead Aledo to the Class 5A Division II semifinals … totaled 179 tackles, six interceptions and two fumble recoveries in his prep career … younger brother of TCU offensive guard Wes Harris … chose TCU over SMU. 

Karter Johnson (DT, 6-3, 302, Pickerington, Ohio; Pickerington Central HS): Three-star defensive tackle … listed as the No. 27 defensive tackle in the ESPN 300 … the nation's No. 34 defensive tackle in the 247Sports composite rankings … rated the No. 19 overall player in Ohio … also saw action at tight end … awarded a Semper Fidelis Player of the Game Award in 2017… through his junior year, he had totaled 80 solo tackles among 107 total stops with 4.5 sacks and five forced fumbles … chose TCU over Penn State, Michigan State, West Virginia, Kentucky and Nebraska. 

Zach Marcheselli (LB, 6-2, 220, Broken Arrow, Okla.; Broken Arrow HS): A three-star recruit by 247Sports … rated as the No. 9 overall player in Oklahoma and No. 46 linebacker in the nation … totaled 202 tackles, including 150 solo, 2.0 sacks, two interceptions and two fumble recoveries over his junior and senior years … helped lead Broken Arrow to the Oklahoma Class 6A state championship … also a state champion wrestler … chose TCU over Arkansas, Nebraska, Texas Tech, Colorado and Kansas State. 

Deshawn McCuin (DB, 6-0, 177, Jacksonville, Texas; Jacksonville HS): Rated as the No. 86 safety in the nation and No. 131 overall player in Texas … three-star recruit by 247Sports … utilized at quarterback, running back and wide receiver … named to the Whataburger Super Team … limited by injury his senior year but still totaled 400 yards rushing and 164 receiving … chose TCU over ULM and Incarnate Word.  

Soni Misi (DL, 6-2, 305, Rohnert Park, Calif.; Santa Rosa JC; Rancho Cotate HS): Rated by 247Sports as the No. 15 JUCO defensive tackle in the nation and No. 25 overall player in California … comes from the same Santa Rosa JC that produced TCU two-time All-America cornerback Jason Verrett … earned all-conference honors after totaling 43 tackles with 4.5 sacks … chose TCU over New Mexico and San Jose State.  

Adam Plant, Jr. (DL, 6-5, 245, Las Vegas, Nev.; Bishop Gorman HS): The nation's No. 41 defensive end in the 247Sports composite rankings … three-star recruit rated as Nevada's 6 overall player … originally signed with Arizona out of Bishop Gorman … chose TCU over Oregon, Penn State, Arizona and USC. 

Jordan Sandy (P, 6-2, 200, Traralgon, Australia; ProKick Australia): Rugby-style punter rated by 247Sports as the No. 5 punter in the Class of 2019 … ranked No. 1 in Australia … chose TCU over Texas Tech. 

Tony Wallace (DB, 5-10, 180, Las Vegas, Nev., Independence CC; Desert Pines HS): Consensus three-star recruit … had two interceptions for Independence in 2018 … began his collegiate career at Arizona … helped lead Desert Pines to a 12-1 record and state championship his senior year … also lettered in basketball and track and field … chose TCU over Nebraska and Minnesota. 

Marcus Williams (OL, 6-6, 285, Longview, Texas; Longview HS): The No. 130 offensive tackle in the nation and No. 206 overall player in Texas … three-star recruit by 247Sports … helped Longview reach the Class 6A Division I semifinals … instrumental in the Lobos averaging close to 300 yards per game rushing … chose TCU over Baylor, Houston and SMU. 

Dee Winters (DB, 6-1, 192, Brenham, Texas; Burton HS): Rated by 247Sports in its composite rankings as the No. 40 athlete in the nation and No. 87 overall player in Texas … four-year varsity letterman …  helped lead Burton to an 11-3 record his senior year … saw action on both sides of the ball but utilized primarily at wide receiver … named the District 13-2A-II Co-Most Valuable Player as a junior … selected as the District 13-2A-II MVP his sophomore year … totaled over 1,100 yards receiving and 18 touchdowns … chose TCU over Arkansas, Texas Tech, Northwestern and Arizona State. 

Parker Workman (DL, 6-3, 240, Ephraim, Utah; Snow College; Bingham HS): Posted 49 tackles for Snow College in 2018 while ranking eighth nationally among JUCO players with 11.5 sacks … chose TCU over Hawaii and UNLV.

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Midnite's 2018 Big 12 Bowl Game Picks




Midnite's 2018 Regular Season Record (through 14 weeks): 52-22
Midnite's 2018 Big 12 Bowl Game Picks:
  • Cheez-It Bowl; December 26; TCU vs California: Midnite's Pick: TCU 23, California 19
  • Texas Bowl; December 27; Baylor vs Vanderbilt: Midnite's Pick: Vanderbilt 31, Baylor 23
  • Camping World Bowl; December 28; West Virginia vs Syracuse: Midnite's Pick: Syracuse 30, West Virginia 27
  • Alamo Bowl; December 28; Iowa State vs Washington State: Midnite's Pick: Iowa State 32, Washington State 31
  • Orange Bowl; Playoff Semifinal; December 29; Oklahoma vs Alabama: Midnite's Pick: Alabama 49, Oklahoma 39
  • Liberty Bowl; December 31; Oklahoma State vs Missouri: Midnite's Pick: Missouri 30, Oklahoma State 21
  • Sugar Bowl; January 1; Texas vs Georgia: Midnite's Pick: Georgia 38, Texas 24


Tuesday, December 18, 2018

TCU 2018 Cheez-It Bowl Opponent Overview: University of California Football



2018 University of California Football Schedule: vs North Carolina, won, 24-17; at Brigham Young, won, 21-18; vs Idaho State, won, 45-23; vs Oregon, lost, 42-24; at Arizona, lost, 24-17; vs UCLA, lost, 37-7; at Oregon State, won, 49-7; vs Washington, won, 12-10; at Washington State, lost, 19-13; at USC, won, 15-14; vs Colorado, won, 33-21; vs Stanford, lost, 23-13. 

2018 University of California Football Media Guide: here




California Football Bowl Announcement Video: here

2018 University of California Football Video: here  


Justin Wilcox
2018 University of California Football: It is only natural that since arriving in Berkeley two years ago to lead the California Golden Bears football team, Justin Wilcox has quickly helped Cal earn a reputation as a defensive-minded unit. That's because before be became Cal's head coach in January of 2017, Wilcox built his reputation by leading some of the top defenses in the nation as an FBS defensive coordinator for the prior 11 seasons.

Prior stops for Wilcox included two stints at Boise State (2001-2002, and 2006-2009), where TCU head football coach Gary Patterson and the Horned Frogs became familiar with his hard-nosed defenses. In fact, with Wilcox as its defensive coordinator, No. 6 Boise State beat No. 3 TCU 17-10 in the Fiesta Bowl on January 4, 2010. Wilcox also was a defensive coordinator at Tennessee, Washington, USC and Wisconsin.

In 2017, Wilcox posted a 5-7 overall mark in his first campaign at the helm of the Golden Bears. This season, Wilcox and his Cal Beas improved to 7-5, 4-5 in the Pac-12, and finished fifth in the North Division of the Pac-12.California was 4-3 at home, 3-2 on the road. The Bears won their first three games of the season, then lost three in a row, and then won two in a row before splitting their final four games of the season. Cal's vicims included Washington, which finished first in the Pac-12 North Division and ranked ninth in the country. California also beat USC and Colorado. The Bears' defeats included losses to Washington State and Stanford.

For 2018 California returned 10 starters on offense and seven starters on defense.

Offensively, the Bears only scored 273 points during the season, an average of 22.75 points per game. Cal racked up 4,202 total yards, for an average of 350.2 yards per game and an average of five yards per play.

Through the air, California accumulated 2,257 yards on 237 pass completions out of 390 attempts. The Bears averaged 188.08 yards passing per game. They scored 16 touchdowns through the air and had 15 passes intercepted. Opponents sacked Cal quarterbacks 29 times.

On the ground, Cal rushed for 1,945 yards on 457 plays, an average of 162.1 yards per game and 4.3 yards per play. The Bears had 12 rushing touchdowns. The fumbled the football 21 times, losing 11 of the fumbles. 


Chase Garbers
California is led by quarterbacks Chase Garbers (#7) and Brandon McIlwain (#5).

Garbers, a 6-2, 205-pound redshirt freshman, played in 11 games. He completed 147 out of 241 passes for 1,413 yards, for a per-game average of 128.45 yards. He threw 14 touchdown passes, had a long pass of 55 yards and threw seven interceptions.

McIlwain, a 6-1, 200-pound redshirt sophomore, played in 10 games. He completed 80 of 129 passes for 763 yards, for per-game average of 76.3 yards. He threw two touchdown passes, had a long pass of 45 yards and threw eight interceptions.

Redshirt senior wide receiver Vic Wharton III (#17), 5-11, 190 pounds, caught 50 passes for 502 yards, for a per-game average of 41.83 yards and per-catch average of 10.04 yards. He caught one pass for a touchdown and had a long reception of 55 yards.

Redshirt senior wide receiver Moe Ways (18), 6-4, 220 pounds, caught 31 passes for 346 yards and one touchdown. Redshirt junior wide receiver Kanawai Noa (9), 6-foot, 185 pounds, caught 28 passes for 326 yards and two touchdowns. Redshirt senior running back Patrick Laird (#28), 6-foot, 205 pounds, caught 50 passes for 291 yards and four touchdowns. Junior wide receiver Jordan Duncan (2), 6-1, 205 pounds, caught 19 passes for 234 yards and four touchdowns. Senior fullback Malik McMorris (99), 5-11, 290 pounds, caught two touchdown passes. 


Sophomore wide receiver Jeremiah Hawkins (10), 5-8, 175 pounds, and redshirt senior tight end Jake Ashton (80), 6-4, 235 pounds, each had one touchdown reception.

Cal returned all of its offensive line starters from 2017. Redshirt senior Kamryn Bennett (#72), 6-3, 315-pounds, redhistr senior Addison Ooms (#57), 6-4, 295 pounds, and edshirt sophomore Jake Curhan (#71), 6-6, 330 pounds, each started all 12 games a year ago. Senior Patrick Mekari (#69), 6-4 320-pounds, redshirt sophomore Valentino Daltoso (#61), 6-4, 305-pounds, redshirt junior Ryan Gibson, (#74), 6-2, 295-pounds, and sophomore Michael Saffell (#53), 6-3, 300-pounds, also made starts in 2017.


Patrick Laird
The Bears' rushing attack was led by Laird, who began his California career as a walk-on. He carried the football 216 times for 932 yards, a per-game average of 77.67 yards and a per-carry average of 4.3 yards. He had five rushing touchdowns and a long run of 62 yards. From their quarterback position, McIlwain ran 80 times for 402 yards and four touchdowns, and Garbers carried the ball 90 times for 398 yards and one touchdown. Freshman running back Chris Brown, Jr. (#34), 6-1, 220 pounds, and junior running back Marcel Dancy (29) 5-10, 190 pounds, each had one rushing touchdown.

Defensively, California held its opponents to 255 points, a per-game average of 21.25 points. Opponents ran 818 plays for 3,833 yards, an average of 319.4 yards per game and 4.7 yards per play. Opponents accumulated 2,245 yards on 215 pass completions out of 366 attempts, for an average of 187.08 passing yards per game. Opponents scored 13 touchdowns through the air. The Bears snared 17 interceptions. On the ground, opponents rushed for 1,588 yards, an average of 132.3 yards per game and 3.5 yards per carry. Opponents scored 12 touchdowns on the ground. They fumbled 17 times, losing the football seven times. The Bears sacked opposing quarterbacks 31 times. In the red zone, opponents score 28 of 31 times, with 18 touchdowns.

The Bears have many leaders on defense, including junior linebacker Evan Weaver (#89). The 6-3, 245-pound junior led the team with 142 tackles, with 77 of them being solo tackles. He had nine tackles for loss, 4.5 sacks and two interceptions.



Jordan Kunaszyk
Redshirt senior linebacker Jordan Kunaszyk (#59), 6-3, 235 pounds, had 133 tackles, 83 solo. He had 11 tackles for loss and four sacks. Redshirt junior safety Ashtyn Davis (#27), 6-1, 190 pounds, had 53 tackles, 35 solo, and four interceptions. Redshirt sophomore cornerback Camryn Bynum (#24), 6-0, 180 pounds, had 43 tackles and two interceptions. Junior cornerback Traveon Beck (#22), 5-9, 160 pounds, had three interceptions. Redshirt junior safety Jaylinn Hawkins (#6), 6-2, 205 pounds, had three interceptions. Sophomore cornerback Elijah Hicks (#3), 5-11, 190 pounds, had one interception. Junior cornerback Josh Drayden (#20), 5-10, 185 pounds, had one interception. Redshirt sophomore linebacker Cameron Goode (#19), 6-3, 225 pounds, had one interception. Redshirt defensive end Luc Bequette (#93), 6-2, 295-pounds, had five sacks and 6.5 tackles for loss. Senior linebacker Alex Funches (#36), 6-2, 240-pounds, had five sacks and eight tackles for loss.

The punter is redshirt senior Steven Coutts (#37), 6-4, 225-pounds. He punted 63 times for an average of 41.83. He had a long punt of 73 yards. He did not have a punt blocked.

The field-goal kicker is redshirt junior Greg Thomas (#39), 5-9, 175 pounds. He converted 12 of 17 field goal attempts. he kicked a long field goal of 46 yards. He did not have a field goal attempt blocked.

Kickoffs are handled by redshirt freshman Chris Landgrebe (#49), 6-2, 190 pounds. 


University of California Football: California has been playing football since 1886 -- 132 years.

The team's overall record is 669-539-51 (.552). The Bears have claimed 14 conference titles and five national titles: 920, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1937. Cal has participated in 22 bowl games, winning 11, losing 10 and tying one.

The team also has produced two of the oddest and most memorable plays in college football: Roy "Wrong Way" Riegels' fumble recovery and run toward the California goal line in the 1929 Rose Bowl, and "The Play" in the 1982 Big Game (against Stanford), with the last-play five-lateral winning kickoff return.

California's main rival is Stanford. The most anticipated sporting event between the two universities is the annual football game dubbed the Big Game, which was first played in 1892 and has become one of the oldest college rivalry games in the country. Since 1933, the winner of the game has received the Stanford Axe. Stanford leads the series, 63–46–11.

California also has a rivalry with UCLA. The schools are the two largest public universities in the state of California and both have been part of the same conference for many years. UCLA maintains a winning record in the series, 55–33–1.

Football was first played on the Berkeley campus in 1882, albeit in a form that resembled rugby. It was not until 1886 that American football began play. Football was put on hiatus in 1906 when it was decided by the Theodore Roosevelt administration that American football was too dangerous a sport and rugby once again took over the scene. Football returned for good in 1915 and Cal has fielded a team in every year since. 


Andy Smith
The 1920s saw the first golden age of California football, as the Golden Bears went 50 straight games without a defeat from 1920 to 1925, with a record of 46 wins and 4 ties. As of 2010, this is the third-longest unbeaten (not to be confused with winning) streak in NCAA history. The 1920–1924 squads were so dominant that they were nicknamed "The Wonder Teams", and were coached by Andy Smith. He is considered to be the greatest football coach in Golden Bears' history.

In 1928, the team was again undefeated, with six shutouts and was invited to the Rose Bowl to play against Georgia Tech. While this team is considered to be one of the greats in Cal history, it also is remembered for what happened during its game at the Rose Bowl. It has become the most famous (or infamous) moment in Rose Bowl history.

In the second quarter, California's defense forced a Georgia Tech fumble on their 30-yard line. The loose ball was scooped up by California center Roy Riegels. He began to run towards the Georgia Tech end zone for a score, but then, in trying to get around the Tech players, he inexplicably turned around and headed in the other direction. Riegels advanced all the way to the Golden Bears' one-yard line before teammate Benny Lom was able to stop him. He was tackled by what seemed like the entire Georgia Tech team. California elected to punt on the next play; the punt was blocked for a safety, giving the Yellow Jackets a 2–0 lead and what turned out to be the decisive points of the 7–8 loss.


Marv Levy
In 1960, Marv Levy became the head coach. Bill Walsh was an assistant coach. They were at Cal until 1963. Although each would go on to become future Pro Football Hall of Famers, Levy for his coaching with the Buffalo Bills and four straight Super Bowl appearances and Walsh for his three Super Bowl titles with the San Francisco 49ers, they did not produce a single winning season at Cal.

Craig Morton was an All-American quarterback at Cal who held multiple California football records, including for most career passing yards and touchdown passes. His touchdown record of 36 lasted for 24 years. He was picked 5th in the 1965 draft by the Dallas Cowboys, and was with them for 10 years.

Steve Bartkowski was another All-American quarterback at Cal. In 1975, he was the number one NFL draft pick for the Atlanta Falcons and was named the NFL Rookie of the Year.

During the 1980s, California posted only one winning season. Joe Kapp was the most famous coach in this period. Kapp was a Cal quarterback during the 1950s and was considered to be one of the greatest players in Cal history. Unfortunately Kapp's success as a player did not translate into success as a coach. 


Joe Kapp
As a coach, Kapp is most remembered for what happened in the annual Big Game against Stanford during his first season in 1982, which is now known as the "band play" or simply The Play. After Stanford, quarterbacked by John Elway, had taken the lead on a field goal with four seconds left, the Golden Bears used five lateral passes on the ensuing kickoff return to score the miraculous winning touchdown, with the Stanford marching band rushing onto the field during the last part of the play. Cal won, 25–20.

In 1996 California hired Green Bay Packers assistant coach Steve Mariucci. Cal went 6–6 and after the season Mariucci left Cal to be the head coach of the San Francisco 49ers.

In 2001, was hired as head coach. Under him, the Golden Bears posted eight consecutive winning seasons, a feat that had not been accomplished in decades. After being ruled ineligible for a bowl game in 2002 due to academic infractions under the previous administration, the Bears appeared in seven straight bowl games.

In 2004, the Bears posted a 10–2 record under Tedford and quarterback Aaron Rodgers, with their only regular season loss coming against the eventual national champion, USC. During that game, Rogers tied a then NCAA record of 23 consecutive complete passes.

In December of 2012, Sonny Dykes was announced as the new head coach of California Football. In his first season, Dykes finished with a 1–11 record. He became the first head of coach of the Golden Bears since the University began playing football in 1886 to fail to defeat a single D-1 opponent in a season that has lasted at least five games. In 2015, the Bears went 8–5. including a 55–36 victory over Air Force in the Armed Forces Bowl in Fort Worth. That year was the last year for quarterback Jared Goff, who was the starting quarterback for three years, beginning the same year as Dykes' initial season, and setting 26 team record. He left Cal as a junior and was the first overall pick of the 2016 NFL Draft.

In 2016, Cal went 5–7, winning only 3 out of nine Pac-12 games. On January 8, 2017, Dykes was fired, with a four-year record of 19–30. The firing came as a surprise as his contract was previously extended and most coaching changes come right after the end of a season and not the following year. Dykes later would become an offensive consultant for the TCU football program before being named head coach of SMU in 2017.

On January 14, 2017, less than one week after Dykes was fired, Justin Wilcox was named head coach. Prior to becoming the 34th head coach of the Golden Bears, Wilcox had a successful season as a defensive coordinator for the University of Wisconsin. The Bears went 5–7 in 2017, and 7-5 in 2018, earning a berth in the Cheez-It Bowl against the TCU Horned Frogs on December 26, 2018.

University of California Football Stadium: California Memorial Stadium was built in 1923 to honor Berkeley alumni, students and other Californians who died in World War I and modeled after the Colosseum in Rome.

The stadium is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. It is on the Hayward Fault, which passes under the playing field, nearly from goal post to goal post. So, the stadium is seismically unsafe.

The stadium has a neoclassical motif. In addition to its unique architecture, the stadium's position at the foot of the Berkeley hills provides top row spectators with panoramic views of San Francisco Bay and west side viewers with views of the Berkeley Hills and Strawberry Canyon. This has earned it a reputation as one of the most scenic venues in college football. In fact, Memorial Stadium has been named one of the 40 best college football stadiums by the Sporting News.

After the 2010 season, the entire west side of the bowl was demolished and rebuilt. The stands in the original stadium descended right down to the football field, and the view from the lowest midfield seats on the west side could be blocked by the standing visiting team members. To eliminate this problem, the surface of the field was lowered four feet to allow unobstructed seats in the first few rows during a 2010-12 renovation.

During the massive renovation, California played their home games in AT&T Park in San Francisco, California. After the $321-million renovation, the stadium reopened September 2012 after a $321 million renovation. The university incurred a controversial $445 million of debt for the stadium and a new $153 million student athletic center, which it planned to finance with the sale of special stadium endowment seats. However, in June 2013 news surfaced that the university has had trouble selling the seats. The roughly $18 million interest-only annual payments on the debt consumes 20 percent of Cal's athletics' budget; principal repayment begins in 2032 and is scheduled to conclude in 2113.

The capacity of the refurbished stadium is 63,186. When the stadium opened, the permanent capacity of the venue was around 75,000 and expandable to around 85,000.
In 2003, artificial turf -- Momentum Turf -- was reinstalled in the stadium. The Momentum Turf surface allows for minimal maintenance and increased utilization of the stadium, for football practices and other sport.

Traditionally, during football games, and especially during the Big Game against Stanford, the hill overlooking the eastern side of Memorial Stadium attracts spectators hoping to watch a game for free, earning the nickname "Tightwad Hill". 

Monday, December 17, 2018

TCU 2018 Cheez-It Bowl Opponent Overview: University of California



The University of California: The University of California, Berkeley is a public research university that is located in the city of Berkeley. It was founded in 1868 and serves as the flagship institution of the 10 research universities affiliated with the University of California system. Fall 2018 enrollment was 41,910 (30,574 undergraduate and 11,336 graduate students).

The original name, University of California, was frequently shortened to California or Cal. UC Berkeley's athletic teams date to this time and so are referred to as the California Golden Bears, Cal Bears, or just Cal. Today, the term "University of California" refers to the statewide school system of which UC Berkeley is a part. The university discourages referring to the University of California, Berkeley as UCB, University of California at Berkeley, Cal Berkeley, U.C. Berkeley, and UC-Berkeley. Berkeley is unaffiliated with the Berklee College of Music or Berkeley College.

To the west of the central campus is the downtown business district of Berkeley; to the northwest is the neighborhood of North Berkeley, including the so-called Gourmet Ghetto, a commercial district known for high quality dining due to the presence of such world-renowned restaurants as Chez Panisse. Immediately to the north is a quiet residential neighborhood known as Northside with a large graduate student population; situated north of that are the upscale residential neighborhoods of the Berkeley Hills. Immediately southeast of campus lies fraternity row, and beyond that the Clark Kerr Campus and an upscale residential area named Claremont. The area south of the university includes student housing and Telegraph Avenue, one of Berkeley's main shopping districts with stores, street vendors and restaurants catering to college students and tourists. In addition, the University also owns land to the northwest of the main campus, a 90-acre (36 ha) married student housing complex in the nearby town of Albany ("Albany Village" and the "Gill Tract"), and a field research station several miles to the north in Richmond, California.

The campus is home to several museums including the University of California Museum of Paleontology, the UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, and the Lawrence Hall of Science. The Museum of Paleontology, found in the lobby of the Valley Life Sciences Building, showcases a variety of dinosaur fossils including a complete cast of a Tyrannosaurus Rex.

Originally, military training was compulsory for male undergraduates and Berkeley housed an armory for that purpose. In 1917, Berkeley's ROTC program was established and its School of Military Aeronautics trained future pilots, including Jimmy Doolittle, who graduated with a B.A. in 1922. Both Robert McNamara and Frederick C. Weyand graduated from Berkeley's ROTC program, earning B.A. degrees in 1937 and 1938, respectively. In 1926, future fleet admiral Chester W. Nimitz established the first Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps unit at Berkeley. During World War II, the military increased its presence on campus to recruit more officers, and by 1944, more than 1,000 Berkeley students were enrolled in the V-12 Navy College Training Program and naval training school for diesel engineering. The Board of Regents ended compulsory military training at Berkeley in 1962.

Various human and animal rights groups have conflicted with Berkeley. Native Americans conflicted with the school over repatriation of remains from the Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology. Animal-rights activists have threatened faculty members using animals for research. The school's response to tree sitters protesting construction caused controversy in the local community.

On May 1, 2014, Berkeley was named one of fifty-five higher education institutions under investigation by the Office of Civil Rights "for possible violations of federal law over the handling of sexual violence and harassment complaints" by the White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault. Investigations have continued into 2016, with hundreds of pages of records released in April 2016, showing a pattern of documented sexual harassment and firings of non-tenured staff.

Berkeley often is ranked as a top-ten university in the world and the top public university in the United Statess, as well as the top public university producing Nobel laureates and billionaires. For 2017–18, the Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU) ranked Berkeley fifth in the world. Berkeley also ranks 6th internationally in the CWUR World University Rankings. It is additionally ranked 4th in the world by U.S. News & World Report. Berkeley is ranked 15th internationally in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings, and as the 6th most reputed university in the world by the Times Higher Education World Reputation Rankings.

As of October 2018, Berkeley alumni, faculty members and researchers include 107 Nobel laureates, 25 Turing Awards winners, and 14 Fields Medalists. They have also won 9 Wolf Prizes, 45 MacArthur Fellowships, 20 Academy Awards, 14 Pulitzer Prizes and 207 Olympic medals (117 gold, 51 silver and 39 bronze). In 1930, Ernest Lawrence invented the cyclotron at Berkeley, based on which UC Berkeley researchers along with Berkeley Lab have discovered or co-discovered 16 chemical elements of the periodic table – more than any other university in the world.[18][19][20] During the 1940s, Berkeley physicist J. R. Oppenheimer, the "Father of the Atomic Bomb", led the Manhattan project to create the first atomic bomb. In the 1960s, Berkeley was particularly noted for the Free Speech Movement as well as the Anti-Vietnam War Movement led by its students. In the 21st century, Berkeley has become one of the leading universities in producing entrepreneurs and its alumni have founded a large number of companies worldwide.

Steve Wozniak
Notable University of California Alumni: As of 2018, 34 alumni and 40 past and present full-time faculty are counted among the 107 Nobel laureates associated with the university. The Turing Award, the "Nobel Prize of computer science", has been awarded to 11 alumni and 12 past and present full-time faculty, with Dana Scott being an alumnus and a faculty member. UC Berkeley alumni and faculty have founded a large number of companies, some of which are: AIG, 1919, founder Cornelius Vander Starr (attended); Apple, 1976, co-founder Steve Wozniak (BS); eBay, 1995, founder Pierre Omidyar (attended); Gap Inc., 1969, co-founder Donald Fisher (BS); Intel, 1968, co-founders Gordon Moore (BS) and Andy Grove (PhD); Mozilla Corporation, 2005, co-founder Mitchell Baker (BA, JD); Myspace, 2003, co-founder Tom Anderson (BA); Rotten Tomatoes, 1998, founders Senh Duong (BA), Patrick Y. Lee (BA) and Stephen Wang (BA); SanDisk, 1988, co-founder Sanjay Mehrotra (BS, MS); Sun Microsystems, 1982, co-founder Bill Joy (MS); Tesla, 2003, co-founder Marc Tarpenning (BS); and  VMware, 1998, co-founders Diane Greene (MS) and Mendel Rosenblum (PhD).

Earl Warren
Other noted alumni include: Earl Warren, BA 1912, JD 1914, 14th Chief Justice of the United States; former Alameda County District Attorney; California Attorney General; 30th Governor of California; Steven Chu, PhD 1976, Nobel laureate and former United States Secretary of Energy; Jennifer Granholm, BA 1984, First female Governor of Michigan; Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, BA 1950,  4th President of Pakistan, 9th Prime Minister of Pakistan; Robert Reich, Professor of Public Policy, 22nd United States Secretary of Labor; Eric Schmidt, MS 1979, PhD 1982, Executive Chairman of Alphabet; Edmund Gerald "Jerry" Brown, Jr, BA 1961, Governor of California, former California Attorney General; Gregory Peck, BA 1939, Academy Award-winning actor; Natalie Coughlin, BA 2005, multiple gold medal-winning Olympic swimmer; Robert McNamara, BA 1937, President of World Bank (1968–81), United States Secretary of Defense (1961–68), President of Ford Motor Company (1960); United States Attorney General Edwin Meese III, JD; United States Secretary of State Dean Rusk, LL.B.; United States Secretary of Transportation and United States Secretary of Commerce Norman Mineta, BS; astronauts James van Hoften, BS 1966, Margaret Rhea Seddon, BA 1970, Leroy Chiao, BS 1983, and Rex Walheim, BS 1984; Unix was created by Ken Thompson, BS 1965, MS 1966, along with colleague Dennis Ritchie; Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Marguerite Higgins, BA 1941, was a pioneering female war correspondent who covered World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam Warr; Novelist Robert Penn Warren, MA 1927, won three Pulitzer Prizes, including one for his novel All the King's Men; author Jacklond, BA 1923, author of The Call of the Wild; Terry McMillan, BA 1986, who wrote How Stella Got Her Groove back; Chris Innis, BA 1991, who won the 2010 Oscar for film editing for her work on best picture winner, The Hurt Locker. Edith Head, BA 1918, who was nominated for 34 Oscars during her career, won eight Oscars for costume design; Grateful Dead bass guitarist Phil Lesh; The Police drummer Stewart Copeland; Rolling Stone Magazine founder Jann Wenner; The Bangles lead singer Susanna Hoffs, BA 1980; Counting Crows lead singer Adam Duritz; tennis athlete Helen Wills Moody, BA 1925, won 31 Grand Slam titles, including eight singles titles at Wimbledon; Tarik Glenn, BA 1999, is a Super Bowl XLI champion; Michele Tafoya, BA 1988, is a sports television reporter for ABC Sports and ESPN; sports agent Leigh Steinberg, BA 1970, JD 1973; Matt Biondi, BA 1988, won eight Olympic gold medals during his swimming career; and billionaires, with some of the more prominent being J. Paul Getty, Sanford Diller and Helen Diller, Donald Fisher, and members of the Haas (Walter A. Haas, Rhoda Haas Goldman, Walter A. Haas Jr., Peter E. Haas, Bob Haas), Hearst, and Bechtel families; at least 18 living alumni billionaires: Masayoshi Son (SoftBank),[323] Gordon Moore (Intel founder), James Harris Simons, Jon Stryker (Stryker Medical Equipment), Bill Joy (computer programmer and Sun Microsystems founder), Eric Schmidt (Google Chairman), Michael Milken, Bassam Alghanim (wealthiest Kuwaiti), Kutayba Alghanim, Charles Simonyi (Microsoft), Cher Wang (HTC, wealthiest Taiwanese), Robert Haas (Levi Strauss & Co.), Carlos Rodriguez-Pastor (Interbank, Peru), Fayez Sarofim, Daniel S. Loeb, Paul Merage, Victor Koo, and Lowell Milken.

University of California Traditions: Here are some traditions observed by University of California students, alumni and fans:

Colors: Blue and gold. The first school colors, established in 1873 by a committee of students, were blue (specifically Yale Blue) and gold. Yale Blue was originally chosen because many of the university's founders were Yale University graduates (for example Henry Durant, the first university president). Blue and gold were specified and made the official colors of the university and the state colors of California in 1955. However, the athletic department has recently specified a darker blue, close to but not the same as the Berkeley Blue now used by the school.

Nickname: Golden Bears, or just Bears. In 1895 a 12-man track team became the first Cal team to compete outside the state. They carried banners with the state’s emblem, a grizzly bear, in gold. The athletes won several meets, and the Golden Bear became the mythical guardian of the university.

Oski
Mascot: The official university mascot is Oski the Bear, who debuted in 1941. Previously, live bear cubs were used as mascots at Memorial Stadium until it was decided in 1940 that a costumed mascot would be better. Oski is named after the Oski-wow-wow yell, that began, "Oski wow wow! Whiskey wee wee!" Oski is cared for by the Oski Committee, whose members have exclusive knowledge of the identity of the costume-wearer.

Marching Band: The University of California Marching Band has served the university since 1891. The band performs at every home football game and at select road games. A smaller subset of the Cal Band, the Straw Hat Band, performs at basketball games, volleyball games, and other campus and community events.

Songs: here 

University of California Marching Band
Fight for California: Of all Cal songs, “Fight for California” has the distinction of being played in arguably the most unique venue: outer space. In 1987, NASA launched a shuttle mission to rescue and repair a communications satellite known as SolarMax. Several members of the shuttle crew were graduates from Berkeley, and one morning during the mission, mission control woke the crew to the blaring strains of “Fight for California.” “Fight for California” is played whenever a Cal athletic team enters the field of play, after every Cal scoring play in football, and whenever the Straw Hat Band marches into a performance. “Fight for California” traditionally is the fourth song of the Cal Band’s pregame, to which the Band marches from a block formation into the Script Cal.

Alma Mater: The University of California had no Alma Mater until “All Hail Blue and Gold” was written by Harold W. Bingham in 1905. Bingham is one of the most prolific composers of Cal songs, also penning “The Blue and Gold,” “California March,” “A Toast to California,” “Hurrah for California,” and “California Indian Song.” “All Hail Blue and Gold” was popularized by the Budweiser Quartet and the California Glee Club (both of which Bingham was a member), achieving the status of unofficial California Hymn. “All Hail Blue and Gold” is played by the Band at the end of all University events and athletic contests.

All Hail Blue and Gold: Listen here

All Hail Blue and Gold,
Thy colors unfold
O’er loyal Californians,
Whose hearts are strong and bold.
All Hail Blue and Gold,
Thy strength ne’er shall fail;
For thee we’ll die,
All Hail! All Hail!

All Hail Blue and Gold,
To thee we shall cling;
O’er golden fields of poppies,
Thy praises we shall sing.
All Hail Blue and Gold,
On Breezes ye sail;
Thy sight we love!
All Hail! All Hail!

Hail to California: “Hail to California” was written by Clinton “Brick” Morse while improvising at the piano in 1907. He was asked by University President Benjamin Ide Wheeler and Professor Gayley to write songs for the rooting section, and “Hail to California” was one of many he composed. Morse’s sentiment was that “Sons of California” and “Hail to California” would be “nothing unless sung in harmony.” The fraternities began to sing “Hail to California” (though not in harmony), and its popularity subsequently spread. In fact, “Hail to California” has often threatened to supplant “All Hail Blue and Gold” as the official Alma Mater of Berkeley. Indeed, “Hail to California” is used as the Alma Mater of UC Davis, UCLA, and of the UC system as a whole. The Cal Band traditionally sings “Hail to California” in harmony after playing the “Star Spangled Banner” at every home men’s basketball game.

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!

Hail to California,
Queen in whom we’re blest;
Spreading light and goodness
Over all the West.
Fighting ‘neath her standard,
We shall sure prevail;
California, Alma Mater,
Hail! Hail! Hail!

UC Rally Committee Members
The UC Rally Committee: Formed in 1901, The UC Rally Committee is the official guardian of California's Spirit and Traditions. Wearing their traditional blue and gold rugbies, Rally Committee members can be seen at all major sporting and spirit events. Committee members are charged with the maintenance of the five Cal flags, the large California banner overhanging the Memorial Stadium Student Section and Haas Pavilion, the California Victory Cannon, Card Stunts and The Big "C" among other duties. The Rally Committee is also responsible for safekeeping of the Stanford Axe when it is in Cal's possession. The Chairman of the Rally Committee holds the title "Custodian of the Axe" while it is in the Committee's care.

The Stanford Axe
The Stanford Axe: First appeared at a California-Stanford baseball game on April 15, 1899. The axe was brandished in the Stanford rooting section and captured by Cal fans at the game's end. In the 1930s it was made into the trophy for the annual Big Game.  Cal's big rival is Stanford. Its other main rival is UCLA.

The Cal Mic Men:
Originally a standard at home football games, Cal Mic Men has expanded to involve basketball and volleyball. The traditional role comes from students holding megaphones and yelling, but now includes microphones, a dedicated platform during games, and the direction of the entire student section. Both men and women are allowed to fulfill the role, despite the name.

The Big "C": Overlooking the main Berkeley campus from the foothills in the east, The Big "C" is an important symbol of California school spirit. The Big "C" has its roots in an early 20th-century campus event called "Rush," which pitted the freshman and sophomore classes against each other in a race up Charter Hill that often developed into a wrestling match. It was eventually decided to discontinue Rush and, in 1905, the freshman and sophomore classes banded together in a show of unity to build "the Big C". Owing to its prominent position, the Big "C" is often the target of pranks by rival Stanford University students who paint the Big "C" red and also fraternities and sororities who paint it their organization's colors. One of the Rally Committee's functions is to repaint the Big "C" to its traditional color of King Alfred Yellow. 

The California Victory Cannon: Placed on Tightwad Hill, overlooking the stadium,  the California Victory Cannon is fired before every football home game, after every score, and after every Cal victory. First used in the 1963 Big Game, it was originally placed on the sidelines before moving to Tightwad Hill in 1971. The only time the cannon ran out of ammunition was during a game against Pacific in 1991, when Cal scored 12 touchdowns.

Founders Rock: Trustees of the College of California stood on the north side of the campus near the corner of Hearst Avenue and Gayley Road on April 16, 1860, and dedicated the property as the future campus. A memorial tablet was placed on the stone in 1896.

RRR week: In 1961, students requested that the week before final exams become “Dead Week,” which now is Reading, Review and Recitation week. Quizzes, projects and activities are not scheduled, to allow time to study and prepare for exams.

Big Game Rally: Cal's big rival is Stanford. Before 1916, the rally was the one time that the Stanford Axe would be removed from its vault. The "Axe" rally is now held only when Berkeley, not Stanford, is in possession of the Axe; otherwise it's called the Big Game rally.


Wheeler Oak: This tree, in front of the Wheeler Hall steps, was a favorite meeting place for students between 1917 and 1934, when the oak had to be removed because of its age. The tree was so missed that another oak, and a bronze plaque, was planted in its place. 

4.0 ball: The stone ball in front of the Campanile is more than a century old, but this tradition is much newer. Just a few years ago, students began referring to the sphere as the "4.0 ball." Rubbing it before taking an exam is considered good luck.

Ludwig's Fountain
Ludwig's Fountain: Soon after the Student Union complex opened in 1960, the nearby fountain became the favorite spot of a German short-haired pointer named Ludwig. Ludwig spent every day in the fountain, and in 1961 it was named in his honor.

Sophomore Lawn: Sophomore Lawn is the grass between California Hall and the Valley Life Sciences Building. Sophomore men would gather on the lawn to haze freshmen, who retaliated by burning their class numerals in the lawn at night. These days it’s a nice napping place.

Card Stunts: Cal students invented the college football tradition of card stunts. Then known as Bleacher Stunts, they were first performed during the 1910 Big Game and consisted of two stunts: a picture of the Stanford Axe and a large blue "C" on a white background. The tradition continues today in the Cal student section and incorporates complicated motions, for example tracing the Cal script logo on a blue background with an imaginary yellow pen.
 
Daffodil festival: Each spring, Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity sponsors the week-long Daffodil Festival, selling the yellow flowers on campus for charity since 1946. In the past a Daffodil Queen was crowned at week's end.