Utah coach Kyle Whittingham flashes the Utah "U" while wearing a sombrero during a reception for the team at El Paso International Airport on Monday, Dec. 26, 2011, in El Paso, Texas. The team will take on Georgia Tech on Saturday in the Sun Bowl college football game.
AP Photo/El Paso Times, Victor Calzada
EL PASO, Texas —
Aside from the fact Utah beat Georgia Tech the last time they met, and notwithstanding the reassurance the Utes are now in a BCS conference, there is one overriding reason they should expect to win Saturday's Sun Bowl.
They own this town.
From the banks of the Rio Grande, to the Guadalupe Mountains, it's Utah property, lock, stock and honky tonk.
Technically, it's been a long time since the Utes were beating UTEP at the site of Saturday's Sun Bowl game. Last time they played on the border was 1996, a 34-27 win over the Miners. They also played there in 1995, 1993, 1991 and 1989 — all wins. It has been 23 years since they lost a game in the place that calls itself Sun City.
You might say El Paso became a safe zone. Back in the days of the old WAC, it was just another familiar and usually successful road trip. After eight schools broke off from the WAC to form the Mountain West, the Utes never returned. But that doesn't mean they don't still own the deed to the property. Utah is 12-4 in games at the Sun Bowl, 11-4 against UTEP and 1-0 against New Mexico, thanks to a surprisingly easy win in the 1939 Sun Bowl game.
Utah won its first-ever regular-season game in El Paso, too, a 41-0 trouncing of Texas Western (now UTEP) in 1964.
In that sense, the Utes shouldn't worry about anything except how to get some good chili verde. They've certainly played in tougher bowl conditions. For instance, Memphis and San Francisco, where it can be dank and humid in winter. Even last year's Las Vegas Bowl was nearly ruined by a relentless, cold rain. Then it was ruined anyway for the Utes, thanks to a relentless, cold Boise State.
Temperatures on Saturday are expected to be in the mid-60s. This shouldn't be a surprise to Utah coach Kyle Whittingham, who visited El Paso as a BYU player and later as a Cougar and Ute assistant. But it has been awhile.
"Gosh, I think the last time I was there, I think we scored 82 points — something in the 80s — a Doug Scovil (ex-BYU assistant) special," he said of his playing days at BYU. "I just remember the Sun Bowl had a hard turf, just like they had here at Utah. It was like playing on concrete. I'm sure they've upgraded it several times."
Whittingham's memory is fairly good, at least in one sense. As a BYU player he was on a team that beat the Miners 83-7. But that game was actually in Provo. A year later (1981) the Cougars beat UTEP 65-8 in El Paso.
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