Brigham Young University
Sep 13 | 01:30 PM
59 - 0
University of California, Los Angeles
LaVell Edwards Stadium

1700 North Canyon Road Provo UT 84604

Anonymous | Posted: 13 Sep 2008 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Anonymous

Cougars Record 59-0 Victory over UCLA

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PROVO -- It will go down as one of the most dominating games in BYU football history. The 16th-ranked Cougars systematically dismantled the UCLA Bruins on Saturday, 59-0. The win improved BYU’s nation’s best winning streak to 13 straight games, including a perfect 3-0 mark on the season.

“Today’s game was the most physical performance I have ever seen from our team,” BYU head coach Bronco Mendenhall said. “I was impressed with what I saw today. We had a great week of practice and it showed. We came in prepared and started fast.”

The Cougars were led by Heisman Trophy candidate Max Hall who connected on 27-of-35 attempts for 271 yards before being relieved at the 7:43 mark of the third quarter. During the day, Hall equaled Jim McMahon and Marc Wilson’s school record seven touchdowns on the day. His six touchdowns in the first half alone set a BYU single-half record.

“We left our defense on the field too long and just couldn’t get to Hall,” UCLA head coach Rick Neuheisel said. “He was on target every pass.”

Junior receiver Austin Collie led the Cougars from the receiving end, totaling 110 yards over 10 receptions, including two touchdowns. Mackey Award candidate Dennis Pitta added five receptions for 47 yards and a pair of touchdowns, while running back Harvey Unga chipped in five receptions for 42 yards and two touchdowns. Senior receiver Michael Reed had five receptions for 90 yards and a touchdown.

BYU’s offense came to life early scoring on a 10-yard pass from Hall to Pitta in the first quarter. The Cougars poured on 35 more points in the second, marking the second-highest scoring quarter in BYU history.

The defensive performance was equally impressive as they stopped all UCLA scoring attempts and forced six turnovers while holding the Bruins to two of 10 third-down conversions, compared to BYU’s 13-of-17 showing.

After UCLA received the kickoff, the BYU defense kept the Bruins from achieving a first down and forced a punt during their first series. Hall and Collie connected on three plays, while Unga rushed for 15 yards on three carries to position the Cougars on the 10-yard-line. Hall made the 10-yard pass to Pitta to put the Cougars on the board.

UCLA drove down field for 17 yards before two incomplete passes forced the Bruins to punt during their second drive. With the ball on the BYU 18-yard line, Max Hall was unable to connect for the first time of the game, resulting in three-straight incomplete passes before the Cougars punted.

After forcing UCLA to punt during their third possession, BYU drove the ball from the 20-yard-line for 13 plays, highlighted with a 25-yard pass to Reed and spanning into the second quarter to take a 14-0 lead. Hall connected to Collie for two yards and the touchdown.

Craft passed to Cory Harkey for 13 yards for a UCLA first down, but was sacked by Ian Dulan for a loss of 11 yards during the following play. At second and 20, Jan Jorgensen sacked Craft and forced a fumble, which was recovered by Dulan at the UCLA 37.

In a single play, Hall made the 37-yard pass to Collie to put BYU up 21-0 with 12:59 remaining in the half.

UCLA dropped the ball again when Raymond Carter was tackled by Scott Johnson and Brett Denney was credited with the recovery. The Cougars made the 30-yard drive, ending with a 12-yard touchdown from Hall to Reed.

On the kickoff return UCLA fumbled and BYU recovered the ball on the 25-yard line, marking UCLA’s third-straight turnover. The Cougars took a 35-0 lead when Hall and Unga connected on a 15-yard touchdown pass.

Following the kickoff return, UCLA drove down the field by a series of three complete passes before the BYU defense forced 32-yard field goal attempt. Cougar Russell Tialavea blocked the field goal attempt and David Tafuna recovered the ball and at the BYU 48-yard-line.

The Cougars made a 13-play drive to take a 42-0 lead into the second half. Hall connected for a two-yard pass to Pitta for his record sixth touchdown of the half.

In the first drive of the second half Hall threw his only interception of the game, marking the Cougars only turnover. UCLA’s drive fell short when Craft’s fourth-and-two pass fell incomplete and the Cougars took over on the BYU 31. Led by Vakapuna’s 22-yard rush, the Cougars added to their lead with a six-yard touchdown reception by Unga.

Brenden Gaskins replaced Hall on the Cougar’s next possession. UCLA managed to hold BYU to a 25-yard field goal by Mitch Payne, giving BYU a 52-0 lead. The Cougars grabbed their first interception of the season when Matt Putnam picked off Kraft’s toss, at UCLA’s 25-yard-line, and returned the interception for seven yards.

On the scoring drive Wayne Latu was stopped after three yards on the first down, but redeemed himself on the second down, rushing for a 13-yard touchdown, giving BYU a 59-0 advantage.

UCLA looked to upset the Cougars’ hopes of a shut out victory for the second time of the game when the Bruins marched the ball down field for 62 yards. UCLA was kept off the board when its field goal attempt was just wide of the uprights, keeping BYU’s hopes of a shutout intact.

The Cougars took over the ball and, J.J. Di Luigi led the team’s drive with 20 yards in four carries, but BYU was forced to punt the ball for the second time during the contest. UCLA managed two-straight first downs before falling short of a third. BYU held on to the ball following a punt return, and ran out the clock to complete to 59-0 victory.

The Cougars will play host to Wyoming on Saturday, Sept. 20. Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. (MT) at Edwards Stadium.

CLICK HERE for postgame notes.

Box Score (Final)

UCLA vs No. 16 BYU (Sep 13, 2008 at Provo, Utah)

Score by Quarters 1 2 3 4 Score

----------------- -- -- -- -- -----

UCLA................ 0 0 0 0 - 0 Record: (1-1)

No. 16 BYU.......... 7 35 17 0 - 59 Record: (3-0)

Scoring Summary:

1st 08:09 BY - PITTA, Dennis 10 yd pass from HALL, Max (PAYNE, Mitch kick), 11-75 4:50, UCLA 0 - BY 7

2nd 14:30 BY - COLLIE, Austin 2 yd pass from HALL, Max (PAYNE, Mitch kick), 13-80 4:46, UCLA 0 - BY 14

12:59 BY - COLLIE, Austin 37 yd pass from HALL, Max (PAYNE, Mitch kick), 1-37 0:06, UCLA 0 - BY 21

10:07 BY - REED, Michael 12 yd pass from HALL, Max (PAYNE, Mitch kick), 5-30 2:31, UCLA 0 - BY 28

09:42 BY - UNGA, Harvey 15 yd pass from HALL, Max (PAYNE, Mitch kick), 3-25 0:17, UCLA 0 - BY 35

00:14 BY - PITTA, Dennis 2 yd pass from HALL, Max (PAYNE, Mitch kick), 13-48 6:43, UCLA 0 - BY 42

3rd 07:43 BY - UNGA, Harvey 6 yd pass from HALL, Max (PAYNE, Mitch kick), 7-69 3:33, UCLA 0 - BY 49

03:08 BY - PAYNE, Mitch 24 yd field goal, 6-36 3:25, UCLA 0 - BY 52

00:39 BY - LATU, Wayne 13 yd run (PAYNE, Mitch kick), 2-16 0:35, UCLA 0 - BY 59

UCLA BY

FIRST DOWNS................... 13 30

RUSHES-YARDS (NET)............ 16-9 45-184

PASSING YDS (NET)............. 230 337

Passes Att-Comp-Int........... 39-23-1 40-31-1

TOTAL OFFENSE PLAYS-YARDS..... 55-239 85-521

Fumble Returns-Yards.......... 0-0 0-0

Punt Returns-Yards............ 1-8 3-36

Kickoff Returns-Yards......... 5-151 1-31

Interception Returns-Yards.... 1-5 1-9

Punts (Number-Avg)............ 4-49.0 2-50.5

Fumbles-Lost.................. 4-3 2-0

Penalties-Yards............... 4-35 8-71

Possession Time............... 22:24 37:36

Third-Down Conversions........ 2 of 10 13 of 17

Fourth-Down Conversions....... 0 of 2 0 of 0

Red-Zone Scores-Chances....... 0-2 8-8

Sacks By: Number-Yards........ 0-0 2-16

RUSHING: UCLA-Moline,Chane 7-12; Carter,Raymond 2-7; Dean,Aundre 1-0;

Craft,Kevin 6-minus 10. No. 16 BYU-UNGA, Harvey 17-71; VAKAPUNA, Fui 9-34;

DILUIGI, JJ 7-34; LATU, Wayne 5-24; HALL, Max 3-12; COLLIE, Austin 1-6; KARIYA,

Bryan 1-5; TEAM 2-minus 2.

PASSING: UCLA-Craft,Kevin 23-39-1-230. No. 16 BYU-HALL, Max 27-35-1-271;

GASKINS, Brende 4-5-0-66.

RECEIVING: UCLA-Austin,Terrence 8-88; Johnson, Domini 7-61; Moya,Ryan

3-26; Ketchum,Gavin 2-20; Harkey,Cory 2-17; Embree,Taylor 1-18. No. 16

BYU-COLLIE, Austin 10-110; REED, Michael 5-90; PITTA, Dennis 5-47; UNGA, Harvey

5-42; GEORGE, Andrew 2-15; VAKAPUNA, Fui 1-11; WHITE, Reed 1-10; KOZLOWSKI, Tyle 1-9; PRITCHARD, Iona 1-3.

INTERCEPTIONS: UCLA-Moore, Rahim 1-5. No. 16 BYU-PUTNAM, Matt 1-9.

FUMBLES: UCLA-Ketchum,Gavin 1-0; Craft,Kevin 1-1; Carter,Raymond 1-1;

Austin,Terrence 1-1. No. 16 BYU-UNGA, Harvey 1-0; COLLIE, Austin 1-0.

SACKS (UA-A): UCLA-None. No. 16 BYU-DULAN, Ian 1-0; JORGENSEN, Jan 1-0.

TACKLES (UA-A): UCLA-Carter,Reggie 4-16; Verner,Alterra 9-4; Hale,John

3-6; Moore, Rahim 4-4; Lockett,Bret 3-5; Harwell, Brigha 2-6; Westgate,Sean 1-7;Ayers,Akeem 1-4; Blake,Tom 1-4; Bosworth,Kyle 3-1; Bosworth,Korey 0-4;

Ware,Aaron 1-2; Norris,Michael 1-1; Stokes,Reggie 0-2; Anyanwu,Chinons 0-2;

Craft,Kevin 1-0; Dye,Tony 1-0; Yount,Christian 0-1; Edwards,Joshua 0-1;

Viney,Courtney 0-1; Chandler,Nate 0-1; Moline,Chase 0-1. No. 16 BYU-BAUMAN, Matt2-4; FOWLER, Kellen 2-3; JOHNSON, Scott 1-4; BRADLEY, Brando 4-0; PUTNAM, Matt 3-0; JORGENSEN, Jan 2-1; HADLEY, Spencer 2-1; HOWARD, Brandon 1-2; ALISA,

Michael 1-1; PRITCHARD, Iona 1-1; DULAN, Ian 1-1; MORGAN, Blake 1-1; AH YOU,

Matt 1-1; SORENSEN, Danie 1-1; NIXON, David 0-2; SORENSEN, Justi 1-0; ASHWORTH,

Luke 1-0; FOKETI, Mosese 1-0; DENNEY, Brett 1-0; BRIGHT, Travis 1-0; TAFUNA,

David 1-0; TIALAVEA, Russe 0-1; RICH, Andrew 0-1; RICHARDSON, Bro 0-1; CLAWSON,

Coleby 0-1; DOMAN, Shawn 0-1.

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Anonymous | Posted: 10 Sep 2008 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Anonymous

Game Notes: Cougars, Bruins to Battle Third Time in 370 Days

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THE BYU-UCLA SERIES

Beating the Bruins has been something the Cougars have struggled with over the years. Entering the 2007 Pioneer Las Vegas Bowl, the Bruins enjoyed a 7-1 advantage over BYU, dating back to 1983. In fact, it had been 24 years since the Cougars had defeated UCLA. BYU’s 17-16 bowl victory ended the Bruins’ seven-game win streak over the Cougars and marked the first BYU victory since the 1983 season. The victory also avenged an early 2007 season loss to the Bruins -- one of only two losses the team suffered all year. The two teams will meet again on Saturday in Provo and will mark the third meeting between the two teams in a span of 370 days.

Oct. 1, 1983 -- BYU 37, UCLA 35 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.

Steve Young threw 25-36 for 270 yards and two touchdowns.

Sep. 7, 1985 -- UCLA 27, BYU 24 at Cougar Stadium in Provo, Utah

BYU failed to hold on to a 3-point halftime lead, allowing 11 fourth quarter points.

Dec. 30, 1986 -- UCLA 31, BYU 10 at Anaheim Stadium in Anaheim, Calif.

The Bruins won their second straight game over the Cougars in the two teams’ first Freedom Bowl appearances.

Sep. 7, 1991 -- BYU 23, UCLA 27 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.

UCLA TB Kevin Williams rushed for 132 yards on 13 carries, including the game-winning TD.

Sep. 19, 1992 -- UCLA 17, BYU 10 at Cougar Stadium in Provo, Utah

Daron Washington, another Bruin TB, scored two rushing touchdowns in this narrow UCLA win.

Oct. 9, 1993 -- BYU 14, UCLA 68 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.

Bruins Derek Ayers (174 yards) and James Milliner (113 yards) rushed for a combined 287 yards, while the

UCLA defense had 11 sacks on the day.

Sep. 9, 1995 -- UCLA 23, BYU 9 at Cougar Stadium in Provo, Utah

BYU QB Steve Sarkisian’s 305 passing yards were not enough to overcome a 17-point UCLA third quarter

outburt that put the game away.

Sep. 8, 2007 -- BYU 17, UCLA 27 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.

Despite racking up 435 yards of total offense, including 391 yards passing, BYU saw its 11-game winning

streak come to an end, as No. 13 UCLA beat the Cougars 27-17 in front of 72,986 fans.

Dec. 22, 2007 -- BYU 17, UCLA 16 at the 2007 Las Vegas Bowl

BYU avenged its loss to the Bruins earlier in the season by defeating them 17-16 in the 2008 Las Vegas Bowl. The victory was reached in dramatic fashion--a block on UCLA’s potential game-winning field goal attempt.

VERSUS THE PAC-10

A 28-27victory over Washington last week improved BYU’s record against Pac-10 opponents to 4-2 over the past three seasons. Throughout the 2006-08 seasons, the Cougars are 1-1 against Arizona, 1-1 against U CLA, 1-0 against Oregon and 1-0 against the Huskies. Interestingly, BYU has outscored Pac-10 opponents 148-120 over the past six match-ups.

ON THE TUBE

Saturday’s game will be broadcast live to a national television audience on VERSUS. Joe Beninati will call the action, Glenn Parker will lend analysis and Tim Neverett will report from the sidelines. Beninati has worked for over a decade as the play-by-play announcer for the Washington Capitals. The Capital Region Emmy Award winning broadcaster has also called action for the NBA, WNBA, Major League Baseball and college football. Parker is a former NFL offensive lineman who, in his 12-year career, played for the Kansas City Chiefs, the New York Giants and the Buffalo Bills. Parker has been an analyst for the NFL Network show PLAYBOOK and the main college football analyst for CSTV. Neverett, a 22-year sports broadcaster, can be heard on ESPN radio in Denver and covers the Colorado Rockies as well as other sports in the Rocky Mountain region. He has covered three Olympics, and worked with both ESPN and ESPN2 covering various events. He has also worked in Las Vegas, covering UNLV football and baseball and hosting the Tim Neverett Show on SportsRadio 1460 and ESPN Radio 920 and in New England as host of the nationally distributed The Sports Final radio program. Neverett is also one of the top play-by-play announcers on The mtn.VERSUS will televise 19 college football games this fall with a schedule that includes nine games in the Mountain West Conference as well as five games from each the Pac-10 and Big 12 conferences.

BRIGHAM YOUNG-UCLA TIES

UCLA’s current offensive coordinator, Norm Chow, spent 27 years (1973-99) at BYU. At various times, he was the Cougars’ assistant head coach, offensive coordinator, co-offensive coordinator, quarterbacks coach, receivers coach, recruiting coordinator and graduate assistant (1973 and 1974). The Cougars posted a 244-91-3 record during Chow’s time in Provo, appeared in 22 bowls and saw 21 offensive players earn All-America honors. In 12 of his 18 years as offensive coordinator at BYU, Chow led the offense to a place in the NCAA’s top 10 in total offense. Chow was with former BYU head coach LaVell Edwards for all but two (1972 & 2000) of Edwards’ 29 years at BYU.

Bruin quarterback Ben Olson spent the 2002 season as a Cougar at BYU before transferring to UCLA following an LDS mission.

BYU’s current roster features 20 players from the state of California -- four of those attending the same high school as players on the UCLA roster. All-American candidate Austin Collie and UCLA tight end Ryan Moya both hail from Oak Ridge HS in El Dorado Hills. Bruin tight end Cory Harkey and Cougar Steven Thomas both attended Chino Hills High School, while BYU’s Bernard Afutiti shares the same alma mater as UCLA’s defensive end David Carter (Kaiser HS). Freshman linebacker Daniel Sorensen signed with BYU following his graduation from Colton HS, the same school defensive end Damien Holmes left to go to UCLA.

PITTA POWER

Averaging 180.5 yards per game, junior tight end Dennis Pitta continued to dominating the receiving game -- recording 148 yards with 10 catches against Washington. One week prior, Pitta’s performance against Northern Iowa (213 yards, 11 catches) equaled the 10th highest performance in BYU history, tying Eric Drage’s mark set against Air Force back in 1993. He also set the MWC record for receiving yards by a tight end with his performance, breaking Jonny Harline’s record of 181 yards against Oregon in the 2006 Las Vegas Bowl. Pitta’s performance against Northern Iowa also marked the top receiving performance during the opening week of the 2008 season. The Mackey Award and All-America candidate not only led all receivers, nationally, but also he was the top-ranked tight in the country by 90 yards. Pitta, a 6-foot-5, 250-pound native of Moorpark, Calif., is a 2008 Mackey Award and All-America candidate.

TALE OF THE TAPE

BYU’s starting five offensive linemen weigh in at an average 326.4 pounds and average 6-feet-6. The front five will be going up against a Washington defensive front that measures an average 6-feet-5, 270 pounds. Defensively, the Cougars’ front three average 6-feet-3, 278 pounds, while the Washington offensive line tips the scales at an average 6-feet-5, 305 pounds per man.

PAPER OR PLASTIC

Four Cougars recorded sacks against Washington’s Jake Locker on Saturday, including, Matt Bauman, David Nixon, Ian Dulan and Coleby Clawson. Junior Jan Jorgensen, the returning MWC sack leader (14), was credited with a sack for an eight-yard loss in the season opener against Northern Iowa.

HALL OF MAX

After going 34-of-41 for 486 yards and two touchdowns last week against Northern Iowa, Heisman Trophy candidate Max Hall turned in another standout performance in the Cougars’ 28-27 victory over Washington. Hall completed 30-of-41 attempts for 338 yards and three touchdowns, including a 15-yard game-winning pass to Dennis Pitta with 3:31 left in the game. On the season, Hall is averaging 401 yards passing per game and is completing 78 percent of his attempts. During the opening drive of the game, Hall led the Cougars on a 9-play drive, for 76 yards. During the drive he was 6-for-6 for 80 yards, including a 38-yard touchdown pass to Austin Collie for the early 7-0 lead.

PAT BLOCK LONG TIME COMING

Junior defensive lineman’s block on Washington’s PAT attempt to tie the game last week broke a BYU drought that lasted close to 10 years. The last time a Cougar blocked a PAT attempt was Derik Stevenson’s block against Air Force on December 5, 1998.

DON’T LOOK BACK

In the Bronco Mendenhall era, BYU is 28-4 when leading at halftime and 27-1 when taking a

lead into the fourth quarter.

FIRST HALF DOMINANCE

The Cougars held a 27-3 lead at halftime against Northern Iowa, marking the 13th time in the past 14 games BYU has held the lead at intermission. The Cougars have held their opponent to seven or fewer points in the opening half eight times in 14 games. BYU has led at halftime in 26 of the last 27 games. During those 26 games, the team is 23-3.

MOVING THE CHAINS

BYU’s ability to convert on third down played a key role in the 28-27 victory over Washington. The Cougars were 12-of-14 on third-down conversions, including 4-of-4 in the second half of the game.

UNGA PASSES CENTURY MARK

With 14:21 left in the fourth quarter, sophomore Harvey Unga turned in a 15-yard run to move him past the 100-yard mark for the game. Unga had a BYU record seven, 100-yard games as a freshman last season. Unga finished the game with 23 carries for a game-high 136 yards rushing. Unga also had five completions for 39 yards and one touchdown against the Huskies.

IT’S BEEN A WHILE

BYU has been unable to return a kickoff for a touchdown for 120 consecutive games. Mike Rigell was the last Cougar to accomplish the feat, turning in a 96-yard touchdown in a 31-9 victory at Hawaii on October 17, 1998.

MOST PLAYS IN A SCORING DRIVE

BYU evened the score at 14-14 against Washington with 4:18 remaining in the first half on a 14-play, 71-yard drive. The drive marked the most plays in a scoring drive this season. The previous season-high was a nine-play scoring drive on the opening series of the game.

BALL HOGS

The Cougars used 6:11 minutes off the clock during their second-quarter scoring drive against Washington, marking the longest scoring drive of the season (in terms of time off the clock.) On the day, On the day, BYU had x scoring drives over five minutes. Last week, vs. Northern Iowa, the Cougars didn’t have a single scoring drive that lasted over 2:50.

TOUCHDOWN, VAKAPUNA

Senior fullback Fui Vakapuna scored his first touchdown of the season against Washington with 4:17 left in the third quarter to equal the score at 21. His first carry of the game marked an 11-yard touchdown run that capped a 7-play, 63-yard drive. The carry marked his first touchdown run since the 12:17 mark of the fourth quarter at San Diego State last season. Vakapuna had only two rushing touchdowns during his junior season and eight as a sophomore.

LOSING THE LEAD

After the Cougars scored on the opening drive of the game at Washington, the Huskies came back to score 14 straight points, marking the first time BYU has given up a lead since UCLA took a 3-0 advantage in the first quarter of the Las Vegas Bowl. (BYU won the game 17-16.)

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