DISNEYLAND PIGSKIN GAME : It's Just the First Step for Colorado, Tennessee - Los Angeles Times
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DISNEYLAND PIGSKIN GAME : It’s Just the First Step for Colorado, Tennessee

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Colorado and Tennessee are about to embark on what they trust will be 13-game seasons, and their coaches want the teams to remember this: The bowl game is the one at the end.

The game they will play at Anaheim Stadium Aug. 26, the first Disneyland Pigskin game, only has the look of a bowl game, matching two teams that finished the 1989 season with 11-1 records and enter this season ranked among the nation’s best.

“We don’t want to treat this like a bowl game because it’s just the first game of a long season,†said Colorado Coach Bill McCartney, who guided the Buffaloes through an emotion-charged season last year during which quarterback Sal Aunese died of complications from stomach cancer in September.

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Colorado, dedicating its season to Aunese and making a memorial of his locker, went undefeated last year until a 21-6 loss to Notre Dame in the Orange Bowl left them a step shy of a national championship.

Joe Garten, Colorado’s consensus All-American offensive lineman from Valencia High School and a contender for the Outland Trophy this season, said the team has been ready to reassert itself since that loss.

“You bet,†Garten said. “We wanted to start it right then.â€

They are back for another run, this time behind a coach whose job is secure for the rest of his career. McCartney, who turns 50 this month, signed a 15-year contract in July.

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Once again, Colorado will make its run behind Darian Hagan, the junior whom Tennessee Coach Johnny Majors calls the “most exciting quarterback I have seen run the option in my entire coaching career.â€

Hagan ran for 1,004 yards last season and passed for 1,002 in the offense that has come to be known as the I-bone, and finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting.

Colorado will be without running back Eric Bieniemy, who is suspended for the game for disciplinary reasons.

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Tennessee will begin this season against a team whose name is not much different from last year’s opening opponent, Colorado State.

The Volunteers struggled against a lesser opponent before winning, 17-14. They cannot afford to start slowly this year.

“This is a big game,†Tennessee quarterback Andy Kelly said. “Colorado is a big challenge this early in the season.â€

Tennessee’s only loss last season was to Southeastern Conference rival Alabama, 47-30, and Majors focuses his attention on the SEC race.

“You’d swap this for a conference win,†he said. “I’d swap anything for a conference win.â€

Majors breathed a sigh of relief this summer when he learned running back Chuck Webb had satisfied academic eligibility requirements.

“I think Chuck Webb has the talent to be as fine a running back as there is in the country,†Majors said.

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Webb rushed for an average of 123.6 yards a game last season, despite not becoming a starter until the sixth game.

Game organizers said 25,000 to 30,000 tickets have been sold for the game.

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