Now it's Homecoming weekend, and I see this game as a must-win for the Grizzlies. They're hosting the Sacramento State Hornets, a program they've never lost to in their history (they're 15-0 lifetime). The Hornets have come close on three different occasions, but the third occasion was hilariously controversial. During their 2002 meeting, four Sacramento State defensive linemen greased their jerseys with PAM cooking spray, in an effort to make it difficult for Montana offensive linemen to block them. The sneaky strategy nearly worked for the Hornets, but Montana still prevailed 31-24. I was at that game, and I had no idea until a few days later that the Hornets tried to pull a fast one on the Grizzlies with the PAM. A UM athletics photographer snapped photos of the whodunnits and turned them in to the Big Sky Conference office, but the four slick Hornets--Bilal Watkins, Ben Fox, Brad Osterhout, and Eric Broden--were not suspended for their use of the cooking spray.
Even Tonight Show host Jay Leno made "PAM-gate" worth a mention in his opening monologue on the November 18, 2002 episode of his show, in saying:
"The Sacramento State football players were accused of spraying Pam on their uniforms to make them harder to tackle. The Cincinnati Bengals were accused of the same thing, but they did it so that the eggs won't stick when they're thrown by the fans."And on the subject of the Cincinnati Bengals, they finished an NFL-worst 2-14 in 2002.
To this day, some Griz fans still don't let Sacramento State forget about their bold yet futile decision to use a popular cooking spray on a cloudy November day in 2002. And one can only hope that they won't slip away from the Grizzlies on Saturday.