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Cal squashes SEC arrogance with mauling of Tennessee - NCAA Football Sports News
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Cal squashes SEC arrogance with mauling of Tennessee

 

BERKELEY, Calif. -- SEC RULES, PAC-10 DROOLS.

You knew that didn't you? Les Miles reminded the world over the summer. The SEC, the LSU coach said, features "stiffer competition" than the Pac-10. No. 1 USC had "an easier road to travel" to the national championship game. The Trojans would face some real (sarcasm dripping) "knock down, drag outs" with the likes of Cal.

Good luck getting a handle on Cal runningback Justin Forsett. (US Presswire)  
Good luck getting a handle on Cal runningback Justin Forsett. (US Presswire)  
Then someone picked up the banner for Miles, literally, and flew it over Memorial Stadium a couple of hours before Cal met Tennessee on Saturday. Paid big bucks, it is assumed, for an airplane to drag that capital-lettered taunt across the sky.

"It's pathetic they have to go and do that," Cal linebacker Zack Follett said following his team's 45-31 victory. "They wasted their money. If you're confident in the SEC, be confident in it. You don't have to be flying planes around. I thought that was stupid on their part." See what you did, Les? Now it's personal. A simple intersectional season opener between ranked teams turned into a culture war. And a whipping. The points were the most scored on Tennessee in 12 years, since Steve Spurrier dropped 62 on the Vols.

The Bears were much nicer about it than those old hated Gators. But the Vols -- and in a small way their conference -- were still humiliated. Don't write me, write the LSU coach and the guy who paid for the airplane. By the end, the sellout crowd had bought in to the theme. They were chanting, "Pac-10 foot-ball!"

That might be the most emotion from this typically laidback crowd since Cal's triple-overtime win over USC in 2003. Which reminds us, the Trojans have won a couple of national championships since then, and Cal did win 10 games for the second time in three years last season.

A good case can be made for the Pac-10 being second-best league in the land right now. Behind the SEC. Still. But on this sun-splashed day by the Bay, who cared?

"I'm not responding to his comments," Cal coach Jeff Tedford said of Miles. "That was probably an emotional comment from him. Maybe he threw us in there because we did get beat by Tennessee."

That's what this was really about. The plane wouldn't have taken off had not the Bears been emasculated in a 17-point loss in Knoxville last season.

"They were bigger and stronger than we were," Cal safety Thomas DeCoud said before Saturday's game, "just because of the kind of football they play and how they recruit."

Nothing changed much except the venue. Well, actually a lot changed. Tennessee doesn't have anyone to compare to DeSean Jackson, Jahvid Best and Justin Forsett.

Tennessee still has back breakers, but Cal has a few too many ankle breakers. While the Vols can still bust heads, the Bears were busting long gains.

Jackson may never get another ball punted to him again. It took only the first half, but Phil Fulmer quickly decided Cal's All-American Heisman candidate was too good. After Jackson returned his sixth career punt for a touchdown (77 yards) in the second quarter, Britton Colquitt mysteriously got a case of the shanks. You see, when the ball sails out of bounds the best player on the field can't get it.

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