Utah vs Cal #UteQuake

Utah vs Cal banner graphic

The University of Utah Utes took on the Cal Bears in Salt Lake City on October 14, 2023. The Utes came into the game with a #16 ranking and a record of 4-1 (1-1 Pac-12).

Game 1-4 Tunnel comps

During the 2023 season, the University of Utah Seismograph Stations installed a seismometer on the ground floor of the stadium to record ground shaking related to football games. Below is a summary of some recordings during the Cal game. The Utes started off slow and fell behind 0-7 at the end of the first quarter. However, the Utes owned the second quarter with a Ja’Quinden Jackson 3 Yd rushing touchdown at the 7:56 mark and a Sione Vaki 1 Yd rushing touchdown with 26 seconds left in the first half.

The Utes scored their third touchdown of the game with 9:11 left in the 3rd quarter when Bryson Barnes called his own number and ran 4 yards for the touchdown to put the Utes up 24-7.

Sione Vaki would add one more touchdown with 6:51 to go in the 4th quarter when he ran 72 yards to give the Utes a commanding 31-14 lead. This touchdown was the 2nd largest amplitude seismic signal of all touchdowns thus far in the season. Cole Becker would add another field goal at the 1:57 mark to finish the scoring and put the Utes up 34-14 where it would stay until the clock hit 0:00 to give the Utes the win and move them to 5-1 (2-1 Pac-12) on the season.

Sione Vaki TD run shown on RES

This game marked the coming out party for Sione Vaki as a 2-way player as he scored 2 rushing touchdowns and ran for a total of 158 yards. The Utes scored 4 touchdowns in the game and we ranked them from most ground shaking to least:

  1. Sione Vaki 72 yard TD run with 6:51 left in the 4th quarter.
  2. Sione Vaki 1 yard TD run with 0:26 left in the 2nd quarter.
  3. Ja’Quinden Jackson 3 yard TD run with 7:56 left in the 2nd quarter.
  4. Bryson Barnes 4 yard TD run with 9:11 left in the 3rd quarter.
TD ranks on RES games 1-6

Learn more about the UteQuake Project

Note: UteQuakes are not real earthquakes, they are measurements of ground motion caused by fans in the stadium.

For questions, please email Jamie Farrell at jamie.farrell@ utah.edu