ANGRY BEARS CHEW UP BRUINS HOT STREAK: Cal wins 3rd straight at Pauley Pavilion. By JOHN AKERS Mercury News Staff Writer LOS ANGELES -- Pauley Pavilion and all that it represents -- Wooden, Walton, Alcindor and the 10 NCAA championship banners -- did little Saturday to intimidate the Cal Bears. To the Bears, this was just the court where UCLA Coach Jim Harrick showed up 30 minutes before the end of Cal's practice Friday, a ''sign of disrespect'' that became their rallying cry. This was just a place where freshmen Tremaine Fowlkes and Jelani Gardner, Saturday's stars, had played pickup games during their high school years. And this was just another Cal victory at Pauley, albeit a shocking 100-93 triumph over the No. 4 Bruins. The Bears' third win in a row at Pauley is unprecedented in the Pacific 10 Conference and second only to Notre Dame, a four-time winner here from the 1977-'80 seasons. Cal Coach Todd Bozeman is 3-1 against UCLA, including an 85-70 victory at the Oakland Coliseum Arena last season when the Bruins were ranked No. 1. These were the same Bears who were struggling just last Sunday -- trailing Northridge State at halftime, when they were the losers of five of their previous six games -- and the same program that, just 10 years ago, finally ended a 52-game string of UCLA dominance over Cal. The Bears have won eight of their past 20 against the Bruins. Cal (11-5, 3-4) was nearly flawless. Fowlkes, 0 for 12 last Sunday, was 8 for 9 from the field and scored a career-high 24 points, and Gardner had a career-high 18 points and six assists. The Bears made a season-high 10 three-point shots, went 32 for 43 from the free-throw line and used a zone defense that allowed the Bruins (12-2, 6-2) to make only six of 22 three-point shots and kept UCLA's active senior forward, Ed O'Bannon, off the offensive boards. ''I've been here so many times playing pickup ball, I don't even think of it as UCLA,'' said Gardner, who played at nearby St. John Bosco High. ''I just think of it as another Pac-10 school.'' Just another Pac-10 school. If that seems disrespectful to this hallowed court and the banners that hang above it, the Bears figured that what goes around comes around. ''Disrespect comes around, always,'' Cal guard Randy Duck said. Bozeman said he was amazed to see Harrick saunter across the Pauley floor at about 2:30 p.m. Friday, 30 minutes before the end of the Bears' closed practice. UCLA assistant coach Steve Lavin came through about 10 minutes later, Bozeman said, and Bruins players wandered in at about 2:45. They stood around and watched, said Bozeman, sometimes clapping at missed free throws. Lavin said the coaches always walk through an opponent's practice, because it's the easiest way to get from their offices to the locker rooms. The Bears didn't buy the explanation, and Bozeman's teams are at their best when he convinces them it's us against them. ''I told my guys, 'Keep your head -- listen to me,' '' Bozeman said, managing to jab himself for taking a poke at a Northridge State security guard last Sunday. ''You give (opponents) respect until they don't deserve respect. That's common courtesy.'' Bozeman said he was too angry Friday to confront Harrick. ''I already had one incident in L.A.,'' Bozeman said. But it was a motivated team that broke from practice. ''It was obvious (the Bruins) worried about something,'' Duck said. ''Granted, they have something to be worried about.'' Such as a 2-3 zone that contributed to Cal's early 34-20 lead. This was the same zone that ''Lou Campanelli used much of the time,'' Harrick said, taking an obvious dig at Bozeman, Campanelli's controversial successor. The Bruins came back, taking a 61-58 lead with 14 minutes, 12 seconds remainin g in the game, but O'Bannon picked up his fourth foul less than two minutes later. With the Bears leading 70-66, Fowlkes went on the attack. Fowlkes dunked, hit a three-pointer and tossed in a ''line-drive jump hook,'' as Harrick called it, on consecutive possessions, with O'Bannon helpless to pursue. That made it 77-66, and the Bears were well on their way to a historic third win in a row at Pauley.