California 42, Air Force 36

1234T
CAL (7-6)014141442
AFA (9-4)7146936

Final

12:30 PM ET, December 31, 2007
Amon Carter Stadium
FORT WORTH, TX

California-Air Force Preview

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Bowl Overview
FORT WORTH, TX - 12:30 PM ET
Air Force plays in its first bowl in five years thanks to a revitalized offense under first-year coach Troy Calhoun. Sophomore Chad Hall blossomed in the second half of the season and leads the MWC with 1,415 yards and 14 touchdowns. The Falcons want to be in Fort Worth, and then there are the Bears, who lost six of their final seven games. Motivation might be a problem there.
-- Ivan Maisel
Complete Bowl Overview
Scouts Preview
Cal struggled down the stretch, but expect the Bears to have plenty of success against Air Force.
Complete Scouts Inc. Preview
Matchup
 W-LPFPAHOMEROADDIVCONF
CAL7-63813484-23-43-63-6
AFA9-43892746-13-36-26-2
· Complete Standings
In Close Games (7 points or less. Since 2001)
 RECORD
CAL8 - 11
AFA10 - 14
Record When Scoring... (Since 2001)
 20 OR MORE30 OR MORE40 OR MORE50 OR MORE
CAL49-21-039-4-026-2-07-0-0
AFA43-24-029-12-017-2-03-0-0
 LESS THAN 20LESS THAN 30LESS THAN 40LESS THAN 50
CAL1-15-011-32-024-34-043-36-0
AFA0-16-014-28-026-38-040-40-0
TEAM AVERAGES & NCAA RANKS
OFFENSETMPER GAME AVERAGE / NCAA RANK
Total YardsCAL
 
399.2 / 56th
AFA
 
418.9 / 40th
Passing YardsCAL
 
241.8 / 57th
AFA
 
128.6 / 119th
Rushing YardsCAL
 
162.7 / 49th
AFA
 
298.5 / 2nd
Points ScoredCAL
 
28.3 / 71st
AFA
 
29.4 / 51st
Full Team Stats: California | Air Force
Individual Leaders
California Passing
 CMP%YDSTDINT
Riley55.72421166
Sweene...55.64500
Air Force Passing
 CMP%YDSTDINT
Jeffer...54.468752
Dietz47.419710
California Rushing
 CARYDSAVGTD
Best1418676.112
Vereen1477385.010
Air Force Rushing
 CARYDSAVGTD
Tew2127973.87
Clark1347365.55
California Receiving
 RECYDSAVGTD
Jones3250015.66
Tucker2642316.31
Air Force Receiving
 RECYDSAVGTD
Fogler2147822.85
Warzek...1520113.41
Full Player Stats: California | Air Force

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -- California was on the verge of being the nation's No. 1 team in mid-October. Then the Bears lost, and kept losing.

An early comer in the unprecedented trend of No. 2 losers, Cal eventually fell out of poll. Now far from the Bowl Championship Series, the Bears (6-6) go into the Armed Forces Bowl against Air Force on Monday with a much more modest goal: trying to avoid a losing record.

"We're not proud of the way we finished the season and we're just looking to get it back," linebacker Greg Van Hoesen said.

"Of course, it hurts just knowing you were that close to being No. 1 and couldn't get it done. But you can't hang on to the past," running back Justin Forsett said. "A lot of teams are home right now, so we're just very fortunate to be in this bowl."

For Air Force (9-3), the Armed Forces Bowl is a natural fit for its first postseason appearance since 2002.

While Cal has lost six of its last seven games, Air Force -- no longer the triple-option, run-only team like in years past -- won six of its last seven under first-year coach Troy Calhoun.

"You look at us as a whole, we're a group that's not going to be overly impressive size-wise and speed-wise," Calhoun said. "What we do have is a bunch of kids that are five-star kids. That's how we succeed."

California is making its fifth straight bowl appearance, a first in school history. And the last time the Bears had six straight winning seasons was 1947-52, something they can still accomplish since coach Jeff Tedford took over after a 1-10 season.

The Bears had loftier expectations when they were 5-0 and still playing at home Oct. 13 after then-No. 1 LSU had already lost.

But Cal's dreams of an undefeated season and its first No. 1 ranking since 1951 were ruined with a loss to Oregon State. It was the first time in 11 years that the top two teams lost on the same day -- though it happened twice more after that this season.

Another loss the next week completely extinguished the Bears' national title hopes, and a third straight loss knocked them out of Pac-10 contention.

"It seems like that was so long ago," Tedford said about the 5-0 start. "There's been the share of misery that has been between then and now that I don't look back and say what if."

A week after Southern California started the trend, the Bears became the second straight No. 2-ranked team to lose -- and five more did after that. Oregon is the only other second-ranked loser that finished the regular season unranked.

Quarterback Nate Longshore didn't play against Oregon State because of a sprained right ankle. That bothered him the rest of the season, but he didn't miss another game and threw for 2,544 yards and 16 touchdowns.

Forsett, the Pac 10's second-leading rusher (117 yards per game) and top TD scorer (13), has also been hobbled by a sore ankle. Receiver DeSean Jackson missed the regular season finale with a bruised thigh.

At least the 30-day break between games gave the three playmakers some time to heal.

While this isn't how Forsett envisioned ending his collegiate career, he gets to play his final game about a half-hour from home with more than 300 family and friends there.

For Air Force seniors, their final game is against the same team the Falcons faced for their first game. California won the 2004 opener 56-14 with a 35-point outburst after halftime.

"This is definitely a chance to make up for it," said linebacker Drew Fowler, who got in only for the last few plays.

"It's a big motivation," Chad Hall said. "It would be nice, first game get blown out and last game beat them."

Unlike 2004 when Hall didn't play as a freshman, he won't be a bystander this time.

Hall is third in the nation in all-purpose yards (208.7 yards per game) and is the only player in the nation to lead his team in rushing and receiving yards.

Calhoun, an Academy graduate who spent last season as an NFL offensive coordinator in Houston, certainly isn't having to convince anybody now about the drastic offensive changes he made.

"I'm sure the first play, first drive, the first few games, everybody thought is this guy crazy?," Calhoun said. "We're no longer an option team, we're in the shotgun some, we're using no-huddle. ... We had to make a change."

Change turned out to be a good thing for the Falcons, who have a chance for a 10-win season.

College Football Scores

Other Scores:

Thursday, December 20th
Utah 35 Final
Navy 32
Friday, December 21st
Memphis 27 Final
Florida Atlantic 44
Saturday, December 22nd
Southern Miss 21 Final
Cincinnati 31
Nevada 0 Final
New Mexico 23
UCLA 16 Final
Brigham Young 17
Sunday, December 23rd
Boise State 38 Final
East Carolina 41
Wednesday, December 26th
Purdue 51 Final
Central Michigan 48
Thursday, December 27th
Arizona State 34 Final
Texas 52
Friday, December 28th
Boston College 24 Final
Michigan State 21
TCU 20 Final
Houston 13
Maryland 14 Final
Oregon State 21
Saturday, December 29th
Connecticut 10 Final
Wake Forest 24
UCF 3 Final
Mississippi State 10
Penn State 24 Final
Texas A&M 17
Sunday, December 30th
Alabama 30 Final
Colorado 24
Monday, December 31st
California 42 Final
Air Force 36
Georgia Tech 28 Final
Fresno State 40
South Florida 21 Final
Oregon 56
Kentucky 35 Final
Florida State 28
Indiana 33 Final
Oklahoma State 49
Clemson 20 Final
Auburn 23 OT
Tuesday, January 1st
Wisconsin 17 Final
Tennessee 21
Missouri 38 Final
Arkansas 7
Michigan 41 Final
Florida 35
Texas Tech 31 Final
Virginia 28
Illinois 17 Final
USC 49
Hawaii 10 Final
Georgia 41
Wednesday, January 2nd
West Virginia 48 Final
Oklahoma 28
Thursday, January 3rd
Kansas 24 Final
Virginia Tech 21
Saturday, January 5th
Rutgers 52 Final
Ball State 30
Sunday, January 6th
Bowling Green 7 Final
Tulsa 63
Monday, January 7th
LSU 38 Final
Ohio State 24