<<

athletics at Notre Dame, serving as the university’s senior athletic history. She also hired Tommy Bowden as Tulane’s head football coach Barbour graduated cum laude in 1981 with a B.S. degree in physical administrator under Athletic Director Kevin White from July 2003 to during her first year. Bowden proceeded in 1997 to post the Green education from Wake Forest, where she was a four-year letterwinner September 2005. She previously held an associate athletic director Wave’s first winning season (7-4) in 16 years, and then directed the and served as captain of the field hockey team. She also played two position there starting in 2000. school to a 12-0 record, a Conference USA championship and a No. varsity seasons of women’s basketball. Barbour’s career in intercollegiate athletic administration spans 7 national ranking the following season as the 1998 Liberty Bowl Barbour earned advanced degrees at both Massachusetts (an M.S. 26 years, beginning as a field hockey assistant coach and lacrosse champions. in sports management in 1983) and Northwestern’s Kellogg School of administrative assistant at the University of Massachusetts in 1981. She In her position at Notre Dame, Barbour oversaw facilities and Management (an MBA in 1991). has since served as assistant athletic director at Northwestern and in event operations for the school’s 26-sport program, including football Between master’s programs, Barbour served as assistant field 1991 was recruited to Tulane as an associate athletic director. game management and the department’s two golf courses. She was hockey and lacrosse coach at Northwestern from 1982-84. She also While at Tulane, Barbour also worked for White – then Tulane’s also responsible for developing, maintaining and implementing Notre held the position of director of recruiting services during that period, athletic director. At the age of 36, she was appointed Tulane’s director of Dame’s $127 million athletics facilities master plan. before being promoted to assistant athletic director for intercollegiate athletics when White left in 1996 for a similar position at Arizona State. Additionally, her role at Notre Dame included responsibilities for programs in 1984, a position she held until 1989. During her three years as athletic director, Tulane teams won 12 women’s lacrosse, men’s and women’s cross country, indoor and Prior to joining Tulane, Barbour worked in programming and conference championships. In her first year in the position, Tulane won outdoor track, men’s and women’s swimming and men’s golf. She also production for FOX Sports Net in Chicago during the summer of 1990. four conference titles, a feat never before accomplished in that school’s assisted White with the administration of women’s basketball.

CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE 71 LGLG Deputy Director of Athletics/SWA Teresa Kuehn Gould eresa Kuehn Gould, who joined the Golden Bear staff groups. She was a member of the NCAA Division I Manage- Tin the fall of 2001, serves as Cal’s Deputy Director of ment Council from 2000-01. Athletics, as well as the department’s Senior Woman Admin- From 1992-94, Kuehn Gould worked for ESPN Regional istrator. Television in Charlotte, N.C., as conference relations coordi- In her capacity at Cal, Kuehn Gould manages the budget- nator. In addition, Kuehn Gould was director of championships ary and operational needs of many of the Bears’ intercollegiate and media relations for the Midwestern Collegiate Conference teams, providing guidance and support to each program’s in Indianapolis from 1990-92, public relations/promotions as- coach, in addition to overseeing several administrative units. sistant for the Iowa Games Sports Festival (1989-90) and as- Before moving to Berkeley in August 2001, Kuehn Gould sistant to the coordinator of football recruiting at Iowa State served as an associate commissioner of the West Coast Con- University (1987-89). ference in San Bruno, Calif. In seven years with the WCC, Kuehn Gould received her bachelor’s degree in journalism she managed the league’s television, marketing and corpo- and mass communications from Iowa State in 1990. She is rate sponsorship efforts, as well as administered conference married to assistant football coach Ron Gould. championships and served as staff liaison to various coaches

CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE 73 Chancellor Robert Birgeneau obert J. Birgeneau became the ninth chancellor of the Award from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. named chair of the physics department in 1988 and dean of sci- RUniversity of , Berkeley, on Sept. 22, 2004. An President John Hennessy of , and filmmaker ence in 1991. He became the 14th president of the University of internationally distinguished physicist, he is a leader in higher George Lucas also received the Founders award the same date. Toronto on July 1, 2000. education and is well known for his commitment to diversity and Established in the 225th anniversary year of the Academy, this At Berkeley, Birgeneau holds a faculty appointment in the De- equity in the academic community. award honors men, women and institutions that have advanced partment of Physics in addition to serving as chancellor. Before coming to Berkeley, Birgeneau served four years as the ideals and embody the spirit of the Academy founders - a He and his wife, Mary Catherine, have four grown children. president of the University of Toronto. He previously was dean commitment to intellectual inquiry, leadership and active en- of the School of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- gagement. nology, where he spent 25 years on the faculty. He is a foreign A Toronto native, Birgeneau received his B.Sc. in mathemat- associate of the National Academy of Sciences, has received ics from the University of Toronto in 1963 and his Ph.D. in phys- many awards for teaching and research, and is one of the most ics from Yale University in 1966. He served on the faculty of cited physicists in the world for his work on the fundamental Yale for one year, spent one year at Oxford University, and was properties of materials. a member of the technical staff at Bell Laboratories from 1968 March 18, 2006, Birgeneau received a special Founders to 1975. He joined the physics faculty at MIT in 1975 and was

74 CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE Ramarama Haas Pavilion Bob Haas n the same site where beloved Harmon Gym stood for alumni who made the entire project possible. Cal student-athletes are also able to take advantage of large Omore than 60 years, the Walter A. Haas Jr. Pavilion has When the construction of Haas was first proposed, alumni and locker rooms, a weight room and athletic training facility. In addi- risen as a state-of-the-art sports facility that retains the old build- fans wanted to ensure that the intimidating homecourt advantage tion, the facility houses administrative and coaches offices. ing’s famous spirit. Harmon provided could be maintained in a building twice its size. The idea of a new building to replace the aging Harmon Gym, The $57.5 million basketball arena opened in the fall of 1999 Haas was created specifically with this in mind. which was built in 1933, first surfaced in the mid-1970s under and has 11,877 seats - almost twice the capacity of its predeces- Consequently, sound-baffling devices were omitted intention- then-Athletic Director Dave Maggard. During the next 20 years, sor. And although the structure is 37 feet taller and 28 feet wider ally, and designers built the arena with the last row of seats just a number of studies were done to determine the feasibility of a than Harmon, it continues to keep fans close to the action. 88 feet from the floor. multitude of options. “The transformation of Harmon Gym into the Haas Pavilion is a Nearly 2,000 club seats with chair backs were installed in the Most people pushed for a renovation of Harmon, considering magnificent addition to our campus,” said former Chancellor Rob- arena. Fans also enjoy wider corridors and a quadrupling of the all the tradition already rooted there. Former Athletic Director ert Berdahl. “The moment you walk in you feel the vibrancy of the number of restrooms and concession areas. The arena features John Kasser, who served from 1994-2000, strongly agreed that place, but you instantly feel a very real connection to the past that two high-resolution video boards, more than 50 television moni- this was the proper course of action, and he set about drumming is just wonderful.” tors throughout the building and a team store. The elegant Haas up support from the administration, faculty and alumni. Haas Pavilion is very much an assertion of Cal’s commitment Club Room, which overlooks Evans Baseball Diamond, provides When Walter A. Haas Jr. and his wife, Evelyn, generously do- to athletics - from the administration and faculty, down through the a spacious banquet area. nated the lead gift of $11 million, the project suddenly became a

76 CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE reality. Cal alumni supported the renovation in an unprecedented Another Record-Breaking Home Season 9-6 in 2004-05. The Bears take a 24-game home non-conference manner. Of the $57.5 million final price tag, $41 million came from Cal matched its record-breaking 2005-06 mark in the 2006-07 winning streak into this season. private gifts, with $16.5 million coming from a combination of rev- season, going 12-3 at home and 6-0 at home against non-confer- Cal averaged a record 1,656 fans per home game in 2005-06 enues from the Athletic Department, a campus seismic safety ence opponents. Cal’s previous best mark at Haas Pavilion was and 2006-07, surpassing the old Haas and Harmon Gym record fund and miscellaneous income funds. of 1,615, set in 2003-04. A Cal women’s basketball record 5,027 Construction on Haas Pavilion began just after the final game fans attended the Stanford game Jan. 6, 2007, breaking the previ- at Harmon in March 1997 and finished in time for the start of the ous Haas Pavilion record of 4,859, which was set Feb. 11, 2006, in 1999-00 basketball season. the Cal-Stanford home game. Harmon Gym – Cal’s home before The men’s and women’s basketball teams assumed residency Haas Pavilion opened in 1999 – owned a women’s basketball at- in two of the country’s best locker rooms in December 2003. The tendance record of 4,908, established in the Cal-Stanford game women’s locker room features a locker area with wooden doors, Feb. 28, 1997. a player lounge with three plasma screen televisions and lounge Additionally, Cal’s 96-54 victory over Harvard last season set a chairs, a computer/study area and a team meeting room with a new Haas Pavilion Bears’ women’s scoring standard. movie-theater style projection screen.

CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE 77 Cal Marketing cross the country, women’s basketball is catching fire, features, promotions, giveaways and contests, which together Mark your calendars for the Saturday Cal Kids’ Days: Aand here in the Bay Area, everyone is talking about Cal guarantee a phenomenal game-day experience. • Jan. 12 vs. Oregon State Women’s Basketball. Together, the marketing department operates as a team with • Feb. 2 vs. USC Through a multi-faceted and creative promotion and marketing one goal – to create an event like no other. By focusing on our fans • Feb. 16 vs. ASU plan, Cal Athletics is 100 percent committed to turning the buzz and creating a memorable experience, this team compliments the • Feb. 23 vs. Stanford into cheers and engaging even more dedicated Golden Bear on-court team and the one-of-a-kind game that is Cal Women’s Also, be on the lookout for promotional giveaways, ticket offers, fans. Basketball. the National Girls and Women in Sports Day celebration, Black Within the Athletic Department, the marketing team creates and Heritage Day and the “Pack the House” Challenge. implements this plan. Part of the unit drives ticket sales through COMING THIS YEAR For information on promotions, event dates and season and advertising, electronic communication, Web site promotions, Thanks to its tremendous success last year, Cal Kids’ Days are game tickets, go to CalBears.com or call (800) GO-BEARS. marketing materials, group partnerships and community back – and bigger and better than before. Every Pac-10 Saturday Sign up at CalBears.com for the Cal Women’s Basketball involvement. is designed for kids. Music, poster-making, face-painting, pom- eNewsletters to receive pertinent information throughout the Before, during and after games, another part of the marketing poms, meet the team, kid contests, photos, food and fun…plus, season. team excites the fans through non-stop entertainment, videoboard this year, all youth get in for only $1! GO BEARS!

78 CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE Kelseykelsey ntering the 2007-08 season, the Pacific-10 Conference con- NCAA team champions from the Pac-10 in 2006-07 came from Individually, the Conference has produced an impressive number Etinues to uphold its tradition as the “Conference of Champi- Arizona (softball), Arizona State (women’s indoor track & field and of NCAA men’s individual champions as well, claiming 1,146 NCAA ons.” Pac-10 members have claimed an incredible 146 NCAA team women’s outdoor track & field), California (men’s water polo), Oregon individual crowns. titles over the past 17 seasons, for an average of more than eight State (baseball), Stanford (women’s cross country and men’s golf) On the women’s side, the story is much the same. Since the championships per academic year. and UCLA (women’s water polo). The Pac-10 also had runners-up NCAA began conducting women’s championships 26 years ago, Even more impressive is the breadth of the Pac-10’s success, as in seven NCAA Championship events: men’s soccer (UCLA), wom- Pac-10 members have claimed at least four national titles in a those 146 team titles have come in 24 different men’s and women’s en’s volleyball (Stanford), men’s water polo (USC), women’s water single season on 18 occasions. Overall, the Pac-10 has captured sports. The Pac-10 has led the nation in NCAA Championships 41 polo (Stanford), men’s swimming (Stanford), women’s swimming 105 NCAA women’s crowns, easily outdistancing the SEC, which of the last 47 years and finished second five times. (Arizona) and women’s tennis (UCLA). Overall, the Conference had is second with 70. Pac-10 members have dominated a number of Spanning nearly a century of outstanding athletics achievement, 32 teams finish in the top four at NCAA Championship events. sports, winning 19 softball titles, 17 tennis crowns, 11 of the last 17 the Pac-10 has captured 359 NCAA titles (254 men’s, 105 women’s), Participation in the postseason was a common occurrence for volleyball titles, 11 of the last 18 trophies in golf and eight in swim- far outdistancing the runner-up Big Ten Conference’s 212 titles. the Conference in 2006-07. Of the 22 sports sponsored by the Pac- ming and diving. The Conference’s reputation is further proven in the annual 10, 19 witnessed at least half its teams participating in NCAA or Pac-10 women athletes shine nationally on an individual basis as other postseason action. The men sent 62 of a possible 90 teams well, having captured an unmatched 488 NCAA individual titles, an Pac-10 Conference into the postseason (68.1 percent), while the women sent 74 of a average of more than 18 champions per season.

United States Sports Academy Directors’ Cup competition, the possible 100 teams (74.0 percent). The roots of the Pacific-10 Conference date back over 90 years prestigious award that honors the best overall collegiate athletics The Pac-10 experienced continued success in football as the to December 2, 1915, when the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) programs in the country. Stanford continued its remarkable run in league sent six teams to bowl games. USC and California were was founded at a meeting at the Oregon Hotel in Portland, Ore. the 2006-07 season, winning its 13th consecutive Directors’ Cup. named co-Pac-10 Champions with identical 7-2 league records. Original membership consisted of four schools – the University of In the 2006-07 competition, seven of the top 30 Division I programs Overall, the Pac-10 went 3-3 in postseason bowl games with Ari- California at Berkeley, the University of Washington, the University were Pac-10 members: No. 1 Stanford, No. 2 UCLA, No. 5 USC, zona State, California, Oregon, Oregon State and UCLA also earn- of Oregon, and Oregon State College (now Oregon State Univer- No. 9 California, No. 10 Arizona State, No. 24 Arizona and No. 29 ing bowl appearances. sity). All are still charter members of the Conference. Washington. The Pac-10 landed five programs in the top 10, two On the men’s side, Pac-10 members have won 254 NCAA team In 1986-87, the league took on a new look, expanding to include more than the second-place SEC (2). championships, far ahead of the 195 claimed by the runner-up Big 10 women’s sports. The Pac-10 captured eight NCAA titles in 2006-07 to lead the Ten. Men’s NCAA crowns have come at a phenomenal rate for the Currently, the Pac-10 sponsors 11 men’s sports and 11 women’s nation. It should be noted that the Pac-10 total does not include Pac-10 – 15 basketball titles by five schools (more than any other sports. Additionally, the Conference is a member of the Mountain California’s national championship in men’s rugby or Washington’s conference), 49 tennis titles, 45 outdoor track and field crowns, Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) in four other men’s sports and national championship in men’s crew, as they are not counted as and 26 baseball titles. Pac-10 members have won 25 of the last 38 two other women’s sports. NCAA titles. The Pac-10 led the nation with the most NCAA titles in NCAA titles in volleyball, 33 of the last 48 in water polo, and 20 total The Pacific-10 Conference offices are located 25 miles east of women’s sports with five. swimming and diving national championships. San Francisco in Walnut Creek, Calif.

80 CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE Pac-10 Women’s Basketball ven in its infancy, the Pac-10 Conference played to the NCAA Tournament nine times in the decade of the ’90s, the 1996 WNIT title, while Oregon State won the WNIT in 1980 Ea significant role in the development of women’s and every Conference member made a trip to the Big Dance and 1982. basketball. On April 4, 1896, California and Stanford squared in the ’90s. In the new millennium, the story has proved much The 2007-08 Athlon Sports Top 25 Preseaons Poll lists off at the Page Street Armory in San Francisco in the first the same. Eight different Pac-10 teams have advanced to the three Pac-10 teams - No. 7 Stanford, No. 8 California and No. women’s intercollegiate game in the . NCAA Championships at least once in the last three seasons. 12 Arizona State. The Pacific-10 has consistently been among the nation’s Overall, Pac-10 schools have won four NCAA women’s finest women’s basketball conferences since its inception basketball titles, with USC winning back-to-back titles in 1983 during the 1986-87 season. The “Conference of Champions” and 1984, and Stanford claiming the national crown in 1990 has shared in the surge in popularity of women’s college and 1992. The Pac-10 has made a combined nine Final Four basketball with average attendance figures surpassing 2,000 appearances and has advanced to the Sweet 16 in 24 of 26 fans per game for 14 consecutive seasons. NCAA Tournaments. The Pacific-10 quickly established a reputation as one of the In addition, the Pac-10 has produced five Women’s National strongest women’s basketball leagues in the nation with solid Invitation Tournament (WNIT) champions, including Oregon teams across the board. The Pac-10 sent at least four teams which captured the 1989 and 2002 crowns. Arizona claimed

CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE 81 Jackie Jensen - 1958 American League MVP Newton Drury - Director, National Park Service ACADEMIA Kevin Johnson - NBA All-Star ENTERTAINMENT/AUTHORS Maria Echaveste - Deputy Chief of Staff, Clinton Administration - Chemist, Nobel Prize winner Scott Adams - creater of Dilbert comic strip Jeff Kent - 2000 National League MVP John W. Gardner - U.S. Secretary of Health, Education & Joseph Erlanger - Winner of 1944 Nobel Prize for medicine Bill Bixby - Actor, “The Incredible Hulk” Jason Kidd - NBA All-Star, U.S. Olympian Welfare David Flinn - President, University of Wisconsin Beverly Cleary - Author, “Ramona the Pest” Mary T. Meagher - U.S. Olympic swimmer, three gold medals Walter A. Gordon - Governor of Virgin Islands, U.S. District John Kenneth Galbraith - Economist Joan Didion - Author, “Play It as It Lays” Hardy Nickerson - NFL All-Pro linebacker Court Judge Jennifer Granholm - Governor of Michigan Adam Duritz - Lead singer, Counting Crows Helen Wills Moody Roark - Winner of eight Wimbledon Philip Habib - U.S. Special Envoy to Middle East Clark Kerr - Chancellor, UC Berkeley Mark Goodson - TV producer, “Family Feud”, “The Price is Right” championships Thelton E. Henderson - Chief judge, U.S. District Court of Timothy Leary - Psychologist and cult figure Marguerite Higgins - Journalist, Pulitzer Prize winner Northern California Yuan T. Lee - Chemist, Nobel Prize winner Susanna Hoffs - Lead singer of “The Bangles” CORPORATE Judith Heumann - Asst. U.S. Secretary of Education Willard Libby - Scientist, discovered Carbon 14, Nobel Prize Maxine Hong Kingston - Author, 1997 National Humanities Medal Roger Baccigaluppi - President, Blue Diamond Growers Lance Ito - Superior Court Judge, presided over O.J. Simpson Dan Mote - President, University of Maryland Jack London - Author, “The Call of the Wild” Peter Chernin - Chairman, 20th Century Fox trial Emil M. Mrak - Chancellor, UC Davis Jerry Mathers - Actor, “Leave it to Beaver” Choon Kun Cho - President, Korean Airlines Barbara Lee - U.S. Congresswoman (D-Oakland) Kenneth Pitzer - Chemist, president of Stanford University Terry McMillan - Author, “Waiting To Exhale,” “How Stella Got Her Don Fisher - Founder and Chairman of the Board, The Gap Wiley Manuel - First African-American California State Glenn Seaborg - Nuclear physicist, Nobel Prize winner Groove Back” Supreme Court Justice Gregory Peck - Actor, Academy Award winner, “To Kill a John A. McCone - Director of CIA, Atomic Energy Commission Notable Cal Alumni Mockingbird”

Best-Selling Academy Award NBA All-Star Sports Announcer NBA All-Star Author Winner & Olympian Michelle Tafoya Kevin Johnson Terry McMillan NFL Player Gregory Peck Counting Crows Jason Kidd Olympic Medalist Astronaut Tony Gonzalez Lead Singer Natalie Coughlin Rhea Seddon Adam Duritz

Samuel Smith - President, Washington State University Andrew Grove - CEO, Intel Corporation James Schamus - Producer, “In the Bedroom” Robert McNamara - U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gordon Sproul - President, University of California Walter Haas Jr. - President, Levi Strauss & Co.; owner of Oakland Michael Silver - Senior writer, Sports Illustrated Norman Mineta - U.S. Secretary of Transportation Athletics Michelle Tafoya - TV Sports Personality, Monday Night Football William G. Simon - Director, FBI ASTRONAUTS William R. Hearst Jr. - Newspaper publisher reporter Roger Traynor - Chief Justice, California Supreme Court Leroy Chiao - First Chinese-American astronaut Edgar F. Kaiser - Founder, Kaiser Permanente George Takei - Actor, Mr. Sulu on “Star Trek” Earl Warren - Chief Justice, U.S. Supreme Court Margaret Rhea Seddon - Astronaut Jean Lemmon - Editor, “Better Homes and Gardens” Jann Wenner - Founder, “Rolling Stone” magazine Frederick Weyand - U.S. Army Chief of Staff Rex Walheim - Space Shuttle astronaut Tung Yen Lin - World-renown civic engineer Lionel Wilson - First African-American mayor of Oakland Brian Maxwell - Founder, PowerBar GOVERNMENT/MILITARY Pete Wilson - Governor of California ATHLETICS Gordon Moore - Co-founder, Intel Corp. Horace Albright - Awarded 1980 Medal of Freedom James D. Zellerbach - U.S. Ambassador to Italy Shareef Abdur-Rahim - NBA All-Star, 2000 U.S. Olympian Eric Schmidt - CEO, Google Tom Bates - Mayor of Berkeley Steve Bartkowski - No. 1 overall NFL draft pick in 1975 Leigh Steinberg - Lawyer, sports agent Rose Bird - Chief Justice, California Supreme Court HUMANITARIAN Matt Biondi - Three-time Olympic swimmer, eight gold medals Irving Stone - Chairman, American Greetings Co. W. Michael Blumenthal - U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Ida Jackson - United Nations observer, founder local chapter of Natalie Coughlin - Winner of five Olympic medals in swimming Eugene Trefethen Jr. - President, Kaiser Industries Allen Broussard - Assoc. Justice, California Supreme Court National Council of Negro Women Joy (Biefeld) Fawcett - Member of three U.S. Olympic soccer Alice Waters - Chef, restaurateur, “Chez Panisse” Jerry Brown - Governor of California, Mayor of Oakland Mimi Silbert - Co-founder, Delancey Street Foundation teams Dean Witter - Founder, Dean Witter Financial Services Rachelle Chong - Member, Federal Communications Commission Tony Gonzalez - NFL All-Pro tight end Steve Wozniak - Co-founder, Apple Computer Systems Shirley Dean - Mayor of Berkeley Michele Granger - Olympic gold medalist, softball pitcher Brig. Gen. James H. Doolittle - World War II hero, Medal of Honor

82 CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE moochmooch National Champions - Cal Water Polo

Cal Athletic Excellence

2006-07 Cal Highlights 2 National Team Champions 3 NCAA Relay Champions National Champions - Cal Rugby 3 IRA Crew Champions 7 NCAA Individual Champions 9 National Top 10 Team Rankings 25 Postseason Participants 1 National Player of the Year 1 National Coach of the Year Kirk Everist, Water Polo 2007 USA Water Polo Elite 5 Conference Athlete of the Year Co-Coach of the Year 5 Conference/Region Coach of the Year Kelechi Anyanwu, Track & Field 2007 NCAA Champion Dana Vollmer, Swimming 17 Individual Conference Champions Henrique Barbosa, Swimming Discus 2007 NCAA Champion 3 Team Conference Champions 2006 NCAA Champion 100 Butterfly 200 Breaststroke

84 CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE Tim McNeill, Gymnastics 2007 NCAA Champion Jessica Hardy, Swimming Alysia Johnson, Track & Field Parallel Bars 2007 NCAA Champion 2007 NCAA Champion Pommel Horse 100 Breaststroke 800 meter

Pac-10 Player of the Year Pac-10 Coach of the Year Devanei Hampton Joanne Boyle

Susie Babos, Tennis 2006 NCAA Champion Singles

Valentina Godfrid, Field Hockey NorPac Player of the Year Daymeion Hughes, Football Marshawn Lynch, Football Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year

CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE 85

Trim: 11" Trim: 11" Trim: Trim: 8.5" Trim: LEVEL THE PLAYING FIELD TODAY.TOMORROW FIELD PLAYING BOARDROOM THE LEVEL THE LEVEL NIKEWOMEN.COM

86 CAL BASKETBALL 07-08 MEDIA GUIDE Trim: 8.5" Trim: