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jason
12-29-2006, 10:17 AM
do yall agree/disagree with what the players did on their own at the end of the game...

SAN DIEGO (AP) -- What a difference it made when California actually wanted to be in the Holiday Bowl.

Two years after a BCS snub led to an uninspired trip to San Diego, the No. 21 Golden Bears dominated the No. 21 Texas A&M Aggies 45-10 behind Marshawn Lynch, who ran for 111 yards and two touchdowns.

Nate Longshore threw for a touchdown and ran for another, and Lynch's backup, Justin Forsett, ran for 124 yards and one score.

Plus, the Golden Bears' defense showed a Big 12 team that the Pac-10 can be tough, too.

Cal (10-3) put an emphatic final touch to its second 10-win season in three years. The Golden Bears had lost to Arizona and Southern California in disheartening fashion before beating rival Stanford and then the Aggies (9-4).

In 2004, Cal was in position to end its long Rose Bowl drought but was leapfrogged in the final Bowl Championship Series standings by Texas. Although the fourth-ranked Golden Bears claimed not to be bothered by the snub, they couldn't even hang with No. 23 Texas Tech in the Holiday Bowl and were humiliated 45-31.

"There were a lot of things surrounding the Holiday Bowl last time," Cal coach Jeff Tedford said. "Obviously this was a different experience. Last time we were here we felt slighted by a computer ranking. This year we were where we deserved to play."

The Golden Bears heard a lot of talk about how physical Big 12 teams are.

"We wanted to prove our brand of football and I think we showed ourselves well," Tedford said. "I think we played pretty physical football in the Pac-10."

Aggies coach Dennis Franchione agreed.

"Cal played a great game," Franchione said. "We were not up to the task. They controlled the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball."

Lynch, the Pac-10 offensive player of the year, scored on a 2-yard run in the second quarter to give Cal a 14-7 lead. While Longshore lined up at wide receiver, Lynch was in the shotgun formation, took the snap and bulled into the end zone.

Lynch scored on a 1-yard run in the third, leaping over the line and fumbling as he came down in the end zone. The Aggies recovered and referee John O'Neill signaled first down for Texas A&M, then said the play was being reviewed. Replay official Jim Augustyn ruled that Lynch had possession when he broke the plane of the end zone, making it 21-10 Cal.

While the Golden Bears moved up and down the field, their defense came up big, too.

Jorvorskie Lane, Texas A&M's 274-pound tailback, wasn't much of a factor after tying a 79-year-old school record with 19 rushing touchdowns this year. He was held to 36 yards and no touchdowns on seven carries.

Longshore scored on a 1-yard keeper to tie the game at 7 in the first quarter, eight plays after Texas A&M's Stephen McGee threw a 19-yard TD pass to Chad Schroeder.

Longshore also threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to Lavelle Hawkins late in the third quarter. He finished 19-of-24 for 235 yards.

Texas A&M gambled a few times too many. After Bryce Reed gained 7 yards on a fake punt in the first quarter, the drive bogged down and the Aggies went for it on fourth-and-8 from the Cal 32. McGee was sacked by Nu'u Tafisi.

Lynch scored his first TD five plays later.

His second touchdown was set up when Texas A&M's Justin Brantly shanked a punt out of bounds for no gain at the Aggies' 41. Lynch scored four plays later.

The Aggies failed to convert on another fourth-down play in the fourth quarter.

"It comes down to making plays," McGee said. "When it mattered most, it seemed like we were always a yard short."

Cal's Eddie Young intercepted Aggies backup quarterback Ty Branyon with 2:25 left, setting up a 3-yard score by freshman tailback Bryan Schutte.

Tedford said he would have preferred that the Golden Bears take a knee to end the game, but that the players wanted Schutte, one of the quietest players on the team, to get a touchdown.

The Holiday Bowl is sponsored by Pacific Life.

from Yahoo Sports (http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/recap;_ylt=ArZelboWyUK2sW2GTDVRxH8cvrYF?gid=200612 280059)

Bull Butter
12-29-2006, 10:40 AM
If this kid would have been a Senior, playing his last game ever, I could see the team doing something for him like letting him score. But he's a Freshman, he'll have 3 more years to score TDs. I don't like the idea of kids disobeying their coach. I don't know how emphatic Tedford was about ordering a kneel-down, but he didn't look too pleased after it happened.

I do know one thing though. The last time A&M was in the Holiday Bowl, they certainly didn't call off the dogs against BYU.


However, I can see where this is going already. The Aggie fans will come here and say how Cal was running up the score and the Horn fans will talk about how great it was. And we will have yet another A&M-UT pissing match.

Ranger Mom
12-29-2006, 10:44 AM
Originally posted by Bull Butter


The Aggie fans will come here and say how Cal was running up the score and the Horn fans will talk about how great it was. And we will have yet another A&M-UT pissing match.

And....another closed thread!!:D

BIG BLUE DEFENSIVE END
12-29-2006, 10:50 AM
We put them into a position to score and they did. The coach's intentions to take a knee are reassurance enough for me to not get mad about him scoring that last play. Players do things, it happens, it's over. I'm not too concerned about it anymore, the game really didn't matter that much anyways. Sure, the loss hurts the pride, but there is always next year.

JJ7997
12-29-2006, 10:59 AM
Originally posted by BIG BLUE DEFENSIVE END
We put them into a position to score and they did. The coach's intentions to take a knee are reassurance enough for me to not get mad about him scoring that last play. Players do things, it happens, it's over. I'm not too concerned about it anymore, the game really didn't matter that much anyways. Sure, the loss hurts the pride, but there is always next year.

Amen brother !

jason
12-29-2006, 11:14 AM
Originally posted by BIG BLUE DEFENSIVE END
but there is always next year. that seems to have been the battle cry of the aggies for a while now...

Funk-d-fied
12-29-2006, 11:16 AM
They didn't run it up, the last td should not have happened but hell, they were the better team on that night. They had an awesome game plan and way to many game breakers.

BIG BLUE DEFENSIVE END
12-29-2006, 11:17 AM
Originally posted by jason
that seems to have been the battle cry of the aggies for a while now...

It's the battle cry of every team that loses their last game or has a bad season. Come on jason, you know that.

rundoe
12-29-2006, 11:20 AM
This sounds like bashing to me, lol



Originally posted by jason
do yall agree/disagree with what the players did on their own at the end of the game...

SAN DIEGO (AP) -- What a difference it made when California actually wanted to be in the Holiday Bowl.

Two years after a BCS snub led to an uninspired trip to San Diego, the No. 21 Golden Bears dominated the No. 21 Texas A&M Aggies 45-10 behind Marshawn Lynch, who ran for 111 yards and two touchdowns.

Nate Longshore threw for a touchdown and ran for another, and Lynch's backup, Justin Forsett, ran for 124 yards and one score.

Plus, the Golden Bears' defense showed a Big 12 team that the Pac-10 can be tough, too.

Cal (10-3) put an emphatic final touch to its second 10-win season in three years. The Golden Bears had lost to Arizona and Southern California in disheartening fashion before beating rival Stanford and then the Aggies (9-4).

In 2004, Cal was in position to end its long Rose Bowl drought but was leapfrogged in the final Bowl Championship Series standings by Texas. Although the fourth-ranked Golden Bears claimed not to be bothered by the snub, they couldn't even hang with No. 23 Texas Tech in the Holiday Bowl and were humiliated 45-31.

"There were a lot of things surrounding the Holiday Bowl last time," Cal coach Jeff Tedford said. "Obviously this was a different experience. Last time we were here we felt slighted by a computer ranking. This year we were where we deserved to play."

The Golden Bears heard a lot of talk about how physical Big 12 teams are.

"We wanted to prove our brand of football and I think we showed ourselves well," Tedford said. "I think we played pretty physical football in the Pac-10."

Aggies coach Dennis Franchione agreed.

"Cal played a great game," Franchione said. "We were not up to the task. They controlled the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball."

Lynch, the Pac-10 offensive player of the year, scored on a 2-yard run in the second quarter to give Cal a 14-7 lead. While Longshore lined up at wide receiver, Lynch was in the shotgun formation, took the snap and bulled into the end zone.

Lynch scored on a 1-yard run in the third, leaping over the line and fumbling as he came down in the end zone. The Aggies recovered and referee John O'Neill signaled first down for Texas A&M, then said the play was being reviewed. Replay official Jim Augustyn ruled that Lynch had possession when he broke the plane of the end zone, making it 21-10 Cal.

While the Golden Bears moved up and down the field, their defense came up big, too.

Jorvorskie Lane, Texas A&M's 274-pound tailback, wasn't much of a factor after tying a 79-year-old school record with 19 rushing touchdowns this year. He was held to 36 yards and no touchdowns on seven carries.

Longshore scored on a 1-yard keeper to tie the game at 7 in the first quarter, eight plays after Texas A&M's Stephen McGee threw a 19-yard TD pass to Chad Schroeder.

Longshore also threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to Lavelle Hawkins late in the third quarter. He finished 19-of-24 for 235 yards.

Texas A&M gambled a few times too many. After Bryce Reed gained 7 yards on a fake punt in the first quarter, the drive bogged down and the Aggies went for it on fourth-and-8 from the Cal 32. McGee was sacked by Nu'u Tafisi.

Lynch scored his first TD five plays later.

His second touchdown was set up when Texas A&M's Justin Brantly shanked a punt out of bounds for no gain at the Aggies' 41. Lynch scored four plays later.

The Aggies failed to convert on another fourth-down play in the fourth quarter.

"It comes down to making plays," McGee said. "When it mattered most, it seemed like we were always a yard short."

Cal's Eddie Young intercepted Aggies backup quarterback Ty Branyon with 2:25 left, setting up a 3-yard score by freshman tailback Bryan Schutte.

Tedford said he would have preferred that the Golden Bears take a knee to end the game, but that the players wanted Schutte, one of the quietest players on the team, to get a touchdown.

The Holiday Bowl is sponsored by Pacific Life.

from Yahoo Sports (http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/recap;_ylt=ArZelboWyUK2sW2GTDVRxH8cvrYF?gid=200612 280059)

Comeaux
12-29-2006, 09:48 PM
As Coach Bucky at Shelbyville used to say:
"Get your kids ready to play and you won't have to worry about someone running the score up on you."

Hupernikomen
12-29-2006, 11:49 PM
Originally posted by Comeaux
As Coach Bucky at Shelbyville used to say:
"Get your kids ready to play and you won't have to worry about someone running the score up on you."

I think Shelbyville needs coach Bucky back badly.

JasperDog94
12-29-2006, 11:57 PM
Originally posted by Hupernikomen
I think Shelbyville needs coach Bucky back badly. Hey Huper! I hope you had a great Christmas!