The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
There are eleven fucking conference opponents, and Cal plays nine of them, on a set schedule. Just like every other fucking conference team does. If Cal wants to have a schedule that's ranked more easy, then it needs to fucking toughen up and be one of the murderous matchups for those other teams that it has to play every fucking year. I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around. And those "college football schedule-makers" who were so fucking hard on Cal are the fucking Cal administration that made the OOC arrangements with Ole Miss, North Carolina, and OMGWE'REGONNADIE Weber State. What a colossally fuckingly stupid thing to say.
Long story short: CGB is you're source?!?
The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
There are eleven fucking conference opponents, and Cal plays nine of them, on a set schedule. Just like every other fucking conference team does. If Cal wants to have a schedule that's ranked more easy, then it needs to fucking toughen up and be one of the murderous matchups for those other teams that it has to play every fucking year. I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around. And those "college football schedule-makers" who were so fucking hard on Cal are the fucking Cal administration that made the OOC arrangements with Ole Miss, North Carolina, and OMGWE'REGONNADIE Weber State. What a colossally fuckingly stupid thing to say.
Long story short: CGB is you're source?!?
People were scared to play a team coached by a guy with one shared conference title in all of his years?
This is news. Oregon went 5-6 that year and a dropped gimme touchdown gave Cal the win in Berkeley.
As always, Cal is too high.
The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
There are eleven fucking conference opponents, and Cal plays nine of them, on a set schedule. Just like every other fucking conference team does. If Cal wants to have a schedule that's ranked more easy, then it needs to fucking toughen up and be one of the murderous matchups for those other teams that it has to play every fucking year. I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around. And those "college football schedule-makers" who were so fucking hard on Cal are the fucking Cal administration that made the OOC arrangements with Ole Miss, North Carolina, and OMGWE'REGONNADIE Weber State. What a colossally fuckingly stupid thing to say.
Long story short: CGB is you're source?!?
People were scared to play a team coached by a guy with one shared conference title in all of his years?
This is news. Oregon went 5-6 that year and a dropped gimme touchdown gave Cal the win in Berkeley.
As always, Cal is too high.
The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
There are eleven fucking conference opponents, and Cal plays nine of them, on a set schedule. Just like every other fucking conference team does. If Cal wants to have a schedule that's ranked more easy, then it needs to fucking toughen up and be one of the murderous matchups for those other teams that it has to play every fucking year. I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around. And those "college football schedule-makers" who were so fucking hard on Cal are the fucking Cal administration that made the OOC arrangements with Ole Miss, North Carolina, and OMGWE'REGONNADIE Weber State. What a colossally fuckingly stupid thing to say.
Long story short: CGB is you're source?!?
People were scared to play a team coached by a guy with one shared conference title in all of his years?
This is news. Oregon went 5-6 that year and a dropped gimme touchdown gave Cal the win in Berkeley.
As always, Cal is too high.
People are high on Wilcox?
I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around.
People are high on Wilcox?
I am genuinely curious how California does this year. I am not as high on Wilcox as most others, he was universally hated at USC and got destroyed by every team with a pulse at Washington. His resume at Boise State and Wisconsin is fairly impressive though.
The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
There are eleven fucking conference opponents, and Cal plays nine of them, on a set schedule. Just like every other fucking conference team does. If Cal wants to have a schedule that's ranked more easy, then it needs to fucking toughen up and be one of the murderous matchups for those other teams that it has to play every fucking year. I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around. And those "college football schedule-makers" who were so fucking hard on Cal are the fucking Cal administration that made the OOC arrangements with Ole Miss, North Carolina, and OMGWE'REGONNADIE Weber State. What a colossally fuckingly stupid thing to say.
Long story short: CGB is you're source?!?
People were scared to play a team coached by a guy with one shared conference title in all of his years?
This is news. Oregon went 5-6 that year and a dropped gimme touchdown gave Cal the win in Berkeley.
As always, Cal is too high.
Thanks you to Galdstone for correcting the formatting issue so I can respond to the duck:
I'm glad you brought up "that year," the 2004 game. That was exactly what good teams do; they take the best that the other team has in the first half, then completely flatten them in the second. Oregon gained 310 yards in the opening 30 minutes, and gained exactly 56 after halftime. Cal rolled in the second half, and while duckie fanz look to the dropped pass at the end of the game, they conveniently forget the missed Cal FG and Robert Jordan fumble at the Oregon 28 in the second half. The only reason Oregon was in a position to threaten at the end of the game was due to Cal's own unforced errors. Huskieies might remember their own experience with Cal that year, where the Bears blew open a close 13-12 game at the half to roll to a 41-12 final. Cal ran the ball 42 times that game, while throwing only 17 times, as most of the Cal receiving corps was injured.
Oregon probably wasn't scared to play the Bears in 2006, but after the game I'm pretty sure they wanted nothing to do with Cal. 45-24 with two meaningless Oregon TDs to end the game, Marshawn faceplanting Chung, Dante Rosario stepping on a Bear in frustration as DeSean scampered for a spectacular TD, Dixon getting shredded, Stewart gaining maybe 25 yards the whole game. But maybe you're on to something; Oregon probably just wasn't smart enough to be scared.
The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
There are eleven fucking conference opponents, and Cal plays nine of them, on a set schedule. Just like every other fucking conference team does. If Cal wants to have a schedule that's ranked more easy, then it needs to fucking toughen up and be one of the murderous matchups for those other teams that it has to play every fucking year. I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around. And those "college football schedule-makers" who were so fucking hard on Cal are the fucking Cal administration that made the OOC arrangements with Ole Miss, North Carolina, and OMGWE'REGONNADIE Weber State. What a colossally fuckingly stupid thing to say.
Long story short: CGB is you're source?!?
People were scared to play a team coached by a guy with one shared conference title in all of his years?
This is news. Oregon went 5-6 that year and a dropped gimme touchdown gave Cal the win in Berkeley.
As always, Cal is too high.
Thanks you to Galdstone for correcting the formatting issue so I can respond to the duck:
I'm glad you brought up "that year," the 2004 game. That was exactly what good teams do; they take the best that the other team has in the first half, then completely flatten them in the second. Oregon gained 310 yards in the opening 30 minutes, and gained exactly 56 after halftime. Cal rolled in the second half, and while duckie fanz look to the dropped pass at the end of the game, they conveniently forget the missed Cal FG and Robert Jordan fumble at the Oregon 28 in the second half. The only reason Oregon was in a position to threaten at the end of the game was due to Cal's own unforced errors. Huskieies might remember their own experience with Cal that year, where the Bears blew open a close 13-12 game at the half to roll to a 41-12 final. Cal ran the ball 42 times that game, while throwing only 17 times, as most of the Cal receiving corps was injured.
Oregon probably wasn't scared to play the Bears in 2006, but after the game I'm pretty sure they wanted nothing to do with Cal. 45-24 with two meaningless Oregon TDs to end the game, Marshawn faceplanting Chung, Dante Rosario stepping on a Bear in frustration as DeSean scampered for a spectacular TD, Dixon getting shredded, Stewart gaining maybe 25 yards the whole game. But maybe you're on to something; Oregon probably just wasn't smart enough to be scared.
disagree. but then again, I don't care
Disagree
The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
There are eleven fucking conference opponents, and Cal plays nine of them, on a set schedule. Just like every other fucking conference team does. If Cal wants to have a schedule that's ranked more easy, then it needs to fucking toughen up and be one of the murderous matchups for those other teams that it has to play every fucking year. I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around. And those "college football schedule-makers" who were so fucking hard on Cal are the fucking Cal administration that made the OOC arrangements with Ole Miss, North Carolina, and OMGWE'REGONNADIE Weber State. What a colossally fuckingly stupid thing to say.
Long story short: CGB is you're source?!?
People were scared to play a team coached by a guy with one shared conference title in all of his years?
This is news. Oregon went 5-6 that year and a dropped gimme touchdown gave Cal the win in Berkeley.
As always, Cal is too high.
Thanks you to Galdstone for correcting the formatting issue so I can respond to the duck:
I'm glad you brought up "that year," the 2004 game. That was exactly what good teams do; they take the best that the other team has in the first half, then completely flatten them in the second. Oregon gained 310 yards in the opening 30 minutes, and gained exactly 56 after halftime. Cal rolled in the second half, and while duckie fanz look to the dropped pass at the end of the game, they conveniently forget the missed Cal FG and Robert Jordan fumble at the Oregon 28 in the second half. The only reason Oregon was in a position to threaten at the end of the game was due to Cal's own unforced errors. Huskieies might remember their own experience with Cal that year, where the Bears blew open a close 13-12 game at the half to roll to a 41-12 final. Cal ran the ball 42 times that game, while throwing only 17 times, as most of the Cal receiving corps was injured.
Oregon probably wasn't scared to play the Bears in 2006, but after the game I'm pretty sure they wanted nothing to do with Cal. 45-24 with two meaningless Oregon TDs to end the game, Marshawn faceplanting Chung, Dante Rosario stepping on a Bear in frustration as DeSean scampered for a spectacular TD, Dixon getting shredded, Stewart gaining maybe 25 yards the whole game. But maybe you're on to something; Oregon probably just wasn't smart enough to be scared.
disagree. but then again, I don't care.
Cool that you brought it up, then.
The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
There are eleven fucking conference opponents, and Cal plays nine of them, on a set schedule. Just like every other fucking conference team does. If Cal wants to have a schedule that's ranked more easy, then it needs to fucking toughen up and be one of the murderous matchups for those other teams that it has to play every fucking year. I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around. And those "college football schedule-makers" who were so fucking hard on Cal are the fucking Cal administration that made the OOC arrangements with Ole Miss, North Carolina, and OMGWE'REGONNADIE Weber State. What a colossally fuckingly stupid thing to say.
Long story short: CGB is you're source?!?
People were scared to play a team coached by a guy with one shared conference title in all of his years?
This is news. Oregon went 5-6 that year and a dropped gimme touchdown gave Cal the win in Berkeley.
As always, Cal is too high.
Thanks you to Galdstone for correcting the formatting issue so I can respond to the duck:
I'm glad you brought up "that year," the 2004 game. That was exactly what good teams do; they take the best that the other team has in the first half, then completely flatten them in the second. Oregon gained 310 yards in the opening 30 minutes, and gained exactly 56 after halftime. Cal rolled in the second half, and while duckie fanz look to the dropped pass at the end of the game, they conveniently forget the missed Cal FG and Robert Jordan fumble at the Oregon 28 in the second half. The only reason Oregon was in a position to threaten at the end of the game was due to Cal's own unforced errors. Huskieies might remember their own experience with Cal that year, where the Bears blew open a close 13-12 game at the half to roll to a 41-12 final. Cal ran the ball 42 times that game, while throwing only 17 times, as most of the Cal receiving corps was injured.
Oregon probably wasn't scared to play the Bears in 2006, but after the game I'm pretty sure they wanted nothing to do with Cal. 45-24 with two meaningless Oregon TDs to end the game, Marshawn faceplanting Chung, Dante Rosario stepping on a Bear in frustration as DeSean scampered for a spectacular TD, Dixon getting shredded, Stewart gaining maybe 25 yards the whole game. But maybe you're on to something; Oregon probably just wasn't smart enough to be scared.
disagree. but then again, I don't care.
Cool that you brought it up, then.
I do that all the time. Don't get excited Poncho.
I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around.
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The college football schedule-makers were pretty cruel to the California Golden Bears.
There are eleven fucking conference opponents, and Cal plays nine of them, on a set schedule. Just like every other fucking conference team does. If Cal wants to have a schedule that's ranked more easy, then it needs to fucking toughen up and be one of the murderous matchups for those other teams that it has to play every fucking year. I miss the apex of the Tedford years when teams were afraid to play Cal, instead of the other way around. And those "college football schedule-makers" who were so fucking hard on Cal are the fucking Cal administration that made the OOC arrangements with Ole Miss, North Carolina, and OMGWE'REGONNADIE Weber State. What a colossally fuckingly stupid thing to say.
Long story short: CGB is you're source?!?
People were scared to play a team coached by a guy with one shared conference title in all of his years?
This is news. Oregon went 5-6 that year and a dropped gimme touchdown gave Cal the win in Berkeley.
As always, Cal is too high.
Thanks you to Galdstone for correcting the formatting issue so I can respond to the duck:
I'm glad you brought up "that year," the 2004 game. That was exactly what good teams do; they take the best that the other team has in the first half, then completely flatten them in the second. Oregon gained 310 yards in the opening 30 minutes, and gained exactly 56 after halftime. Cal rolled in the second half, and while duckie fanz look to the dropped pass at the end of the game, they conveniently forget the missed Cal FG and Robert Jordan fumble at the Oregon 28 in the second half. The only reason Oregon was in a position to threaten at the end of the game was due to Cal's own unforced errors. Huskieies might remember their own experience with Cal that year, where the Bears blew open a close 13-12 game at the half to roll to a 41-12 final. Cal ran the ball 42 times that game, while throwing only 17 times, as most of the Cal receiving corps was injured.
Oregon probably wasn't scared to play the Bears in 2006, but after the game I'm pretty sure they wanted nothing to do with Cal. 45-24 with two meaningless Oregon TDs to end the game, Marshawn faceplanting Chung, Dante Rosario stepping on a Bear in frustration as DeSean scampered for a spectacular TD, Dixon getting shredded, Stewart gaining maybe 25 yards the whole game. But maybe you're on to something; Oregon probably just wasn't smart enough to be scared.
disagree. but then again, I don't care.
Cool that you brought it up, then.
I do that all the time. Don't get excited Poncho.
Don't flatter yourself