Headline Sports podcast Pt. 2 with Barbara Mason: Warriors just a bad club or a rebuilding year?; Kings put together two wins in a row; plus more

Photo credit sfgate.com: San Francisco 49ers tight end George Kittle (85) is tackled short of the goal line by Arizona Cardinals safety Deionte Thompson (35) during the first half of an NFL football game, Thursday, Oct. 31, 2019, in Glendale, Ariz. 

On the Headline Sports podcast with Barbara Mason:

#1 Are the Warriors 2-5 just down on their luck or are they just outright a bad ball club since their offseason mass exodus?

#2 How much would would you allude to the Sacramento Kings’ struggle and their recent two straight wins? Were the wins looked at as encouraging for the Kings?

#3 The Cal Bears opened up their men’s basketball season against Pepperdine tonight at Haas Pavillion. The Bears are looking to have a much better season than they did last year.

#4 The San Francisco 49ers might be facing their toughest challenge this season yet when they host the Seattle Seahawks for Monday Night Football on Nov. 11th at Levis Stadium.

#5 The Oakland Raiders just got by the Detroit Lions with a 31-24 win on a Hunter Renfrow fourth quarter touchdown that help put the Lions away at the Oakland Coliseum.

Headline Sports with Barbara Mason is heard each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cal Bears podcast with Morris Phillips: With Washington State coming, will Bears be ready after the Utes experience?

calbears.com: Cal Bears Bednarik Semifinalist Award candidate Evan Weaver (89) goes in for the tackle as Weaver and the Bears prepare for the Washington State Cougars Saturday, November 9th.

On the Cal Bears podcast with Morris:

#1 The Bears (4-4) were dismantled in their last game on both sides of the ball in Utah (7-1) 35-0, a shutout, a beating the Bears haven’t experienced this season.

#2 In the game in Utah, Bears quarterback Spencer Brasch threw 7-19 for 47 yards and the Bears simply didn’t get any yardage in the game in Utah.

#3 On the defensive side of the ball, the Bears defense was like butter for the Utes, who scored five touchdowns on the Bears in the first three quarters.

#4 In the fourth quarter, the Utes didn’t score a touchdown and played the bench. Was it their version of the mercy rule since the score was already 35-0?

#5 The Bears host the Washington State Cougars (4-4). It could very well be the Bears best chance at getting back in the win column. They haven’t won since Sept 21st against Ole Miss.

Catch Morris on the Cal Bears podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cal routs Saint Martin’s 98-75 in exhibition game

Photo credit: calbears.com

By Ana Kieu

Cal men’s basketball opened the 2019-20 season with a 98-75 blowout over Saint Martin’s in an exhibition game Wednesday night at Haas Pavilion.

Graduate transfer Kareem South led the Bears with a game-high 23 points. Sophomore Matt Bradley added 18 points and 5 assists, junior Grant Anticevich had 13 points on 6-of-8 shooting along with 6 rebounds and freshman Lars Thiemann scored 9 points and 4 blocked shots.

Cal head coach Mark Fox told CalBears.com, “We tend to practice very unselfishly. I don’t think we have anybody that’s a ball-stopper … I think they enjoy making each other better. We talk about making each other better and I think tonight we were able to do that.”

The Bears used a 11-0 run to build a 10-point lead at the 14:02 mark of the first half and led by as many as 15 in the first 20 minutes before the Saints closed the half on a 7-2 run for a 44-41 lead at the break.

The Bears extended the lead back quickly after halftime and held a 57-45 advantage at the under-16 media timeout with 15:34 left in the game. Cal used a 10-1 run to take a 79-58 lead and Saint Martin’s was unable to pull closer than 17 the rest of the way.

Cal scored 22 points off of 15 Saint Martin’s turnovers, held a 44-22 advantage in points in the paint and outscored the Saints 21-0 in fastbreak points.

Fox told CalBears.com, “It was great to finally play a game. It is why we all fell in love with the game was the chance to compete and to play and it was really good for our team to actually have a chance to play … We did a lot of good things, we have a lot of teachable moments we can look back on.”

The Bears open the Mark Fox era on Tuesday, November 5 at 7 p.m. inside Haas Pavilion against the Pepperdine Waves. The game will be televised on the Pac-12 Networks.

Cal Bears football podcast with Morris Phillips: Too much offense gives Cal dizzy spells in lopsided shutout win at Utes

photo from sfgate.com: Utah’s Zack Moss (2) reaches the end zone while scoring one of his two touchdowns in his a win over Cal in Salt Lake City.

On The Cal Bears Football podcast with Morris:

#1 In one of the most difficult games of the season for the Golden Bears (4-4) and no doubt their worst of 2019. The Utah Utes (7-1) went to work on the Cal scoring the opening volley with a touchdown. Running back Zack Moss carried for a 4-yard run at 4:50 in the first quarter.

#2 Cal would remain scoreless in the first half as the Utes would score three more touchdowns in the second quarter on a Utes quarterback Bryan Thompson 40-yard pass to Tyler Huntley, a Jason Shelly 1-yard run, and a Brant Kuithe 1-yard pass to Jason Shelly. At the half, Cal could have asked for the mercy rule. It was 28-0.

#3 In the second half, the Utes picked up one more score in the third quarter at 9:26. Zack Jones carried for ten yards to put the frosting on the cake as the Utes would win it 35-0.

#4 Morris, what best explains best why Cal just simply couldn’t get any offense going and did quarterback Spencer Brasch, who went 7-19 for 47 yards, lack enough time and protection to throw the ball?

#5 Washington State (4-4) is up next. Cougars lost to Oregon on Saturday 37-35 and are 1-4 in their last five games. Taking some of WSU’s defensive issues under consideration, do you see Cal with a light at the end of the tunnel to win this game this coming Saturday?

Morris Phillips is a Cal Bears beat writer and does the Cal podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Offensively Challenged: Cal’s makeshift lineup no match for Utah in 35-0 rout

By Morris Phillips

Nothing went right for the Cal Bears on Saturday night.

With Utah leading 35-0 in the third quarter, and FS1 TV announcers Tim Brando and Spencer Tillman pulling out all the stops to hold their wandering, viewing audience, Brando referenced Joe Starkey and his 500th Golden Bears broadcast. The announcers quickly listed Starkey’s accomplishments with Cal, previously with the 49ers, and named Starkey’s broadcast partners including Lee Grosscup.

But when it came time to show Starkey at work, the TV camera found the iconic broadcaster blocked from view by a well-placed window frame in the pressbox. Only Starkey’s trademark bushy eyebrows were visible with color man Mike Pawlawski seemingly holding down the radio broadcast alone.

Oh well. The Cal-Utah football game needed all the help it could get. Even Starkey couldn’t assist.

Anything would have been better than focusing on a beat-up Bears’ offense that managed just six first downs and failed to cross midfield after its initial possession of the game.

Again, six first downs and no potential, scoring drives over the game’s final 53 minutes.  Ouch.

“Spencer can throw the ball. It was tough to get things going, which would be a little bit of an understatement,” coach Justin Wilcox admitted. “The run game, pass game, we’ve got to help him some more. We have to give him answers. I think Spencer did fine.”

Wilcox appeared to be willing to give his inexperienced offense a break. He wasn’t as forgiving with his heralded defense that offered a second-straight subpar performance.

“We didn’t play well. We didn’t play the run well. We didn’t play the pass well. We didn’t tackle very well. We didn’t do anything,” said Wilcox. “Their offense, whether it was run game or pass game, they kind of did whatever they wanted and we weren’t able to get enough stops.”

“We didn’t make the plays and they did. It’s really frustrating. We have to go back and keep encouraging the guys and keep coaching them and giving them answers.”

Brasch, the third stringer who got mop up duty last week versus Oregon State, made his first collegiate start behind a makeshift offensive line, missing notable receivers and working with a pair of knicked up runners all but insuring this one wasn’t going to be pretty. Utah’s dominating defense would see to that.

But to this extreme? Utah pitched a shutout against Pac-12 competition for the first time since joining the conference in 2011.

The Bears saw Utah’s Tyler Huntley methodically move the Utes up and down the field in a flawless first half. Hundley’s participation was a gametime decision and he played with a noticeable limp. No matter, Huntley completed 11 of 17 passes as the Utes rolled up 351 yards in total offense in the first half and led 28-0 at the break.

Cal’s streak of holding 14 consecutive opponents to 24 points or less ended before the halftime.

So what remains for a team that was nationally ranked a month ago, and now is mired in a four-game losing streak?

Most importantly, a week off for a group that has more than its share of bumps and bruises.

 

Cal Bears football podcast with Morris Phillips: Bears will have to regroup after failed first half against OSU and answer the bell against Utah Saturday

photo from sfgate.com: California quarterback Devon Modster, left, hands off to running back Christopher Brown Jr. in the first quarter of an NCAA college football game in Berkeley, Calif., Saturday, October 19, 2019.

On the Cal Bears podcast with Morris:

#1 The Cal Bears (4-3), in the first half of the game, could never make good use once they got into the red zone except to elect to kick a field goal. If not for that, they would have got shutout in the first half of the game by the Oregon State Beavers (3-4).

#2 Here is a Beavers team, whose been on a struggle, came into Berkeley at 2-4 and there’s Cal, who had a lot of confidence. This would be a great building block going forward after losing their last two games to Oregon and ASU.

#3 Did OSU take Cal out of their game in that first half by scoring two first half touchdowns and holding Cal to only a field goal?

#4 OSU won 21-17. Did Beavers quarterback Jake Luton, who threw 18-34 for 174 yards and two touchdowns, get some good protection and some time to throw the ball Saturday?

#5 Cal travels to Utah to face the Utah Utes (6-1) and the Utes are no pushover. They beat ASU (5-2) in their last game 21-3 on the road in Utah. This is a game that might keep Cal head coach Justin Wilcox up all week.

Morris does the Cal Bears podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cal’s uneven effort on both sides of the ball spells doom in 21-17 loss to Oregon State

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY–Justin Wilcox wasn’t in the mood to explain all the complexities, but the synopsis was his Bears put forth an effort that was too uneven.

Too many poorly executed offensive plays, three, decisive Oregon State drives that saw the Cal defense compromised, and once the Bears fought all the way back–taking a 17-14 lead with 32 seconds remaining in the third quarter–nothing. Two three-and-outs, then after Oregon State regained the lead, and Cal starting quarterback Devon Modster was injured, freshman Spencer Brasch was forced into a near impossible spot for his first snaps at the Division I level.

“It’s a tough position to be in,” Wilcox explained. “First time he’s taken a snap.”

With 4:35 remaining, and Cal approaching midfield, trailing 21-17, Brasch, with one completion under his belt, couldn’t get another. OSU’s Jaydon Grant picked off Brasch effectively ending the Bears’ afternoon. Ironically in a game where the Beavers committed 13 penalties (and the Bears only two), Brasch’s intercepted pass would rank as the one quantifiable mistake for Cal. It would be costly.

Just as costly, the Bears were tardy to the party. Oregon State seized momentum and built a 14-0 with Isaiah Hodgins scoring on a 4-yard pass play with 4:33 remaining before halftime. OSU operated smartly to that point, mixing up runs and passes that kept Cal off balance.

At the same juncture, Cal’s run game was stalled on its way to a paltry 107 yards rushing on 43 carries. Modster again struggled, completing 12 of 27 passes for 151 yards. The  crowd and social media platforms reacted to offensive coordinator Beau Baldwin’s ambitious, but ineffective play calling.

That combination left the Bears trailing 14-3 at halftime, only after Greg Thomas’ 44-yard field goal with 26 seconds remaining capped a 13-play drive that could have yielded more.

Cal’s offensive line again operated without starting center Michael Saffell and OSU pounced in his absence, producing season bests in sacks (9) and tackles for a loss (14).

“Some of that is protection,” Wilcox said of the sacks. “Some of that is getting rid of the football at the quarterback position. We have a lot of work to do there.”

Linebacker Evan Weaver, the nation’s leading tackler, came up with 21 tackles in the game, but Wilcox noted there were plays that Weaver failed to make. A 3rd-and-10 play for the Beavers during their game-winning drive turned into a 20-yard run for Artavis Pierce was especially vivid for Wilcox.

“We were in Bear defense, every gap is covered, I know exactly which one you’re talking about,” Wilcox said. “We had a chance to make the tackle and didn’t make it.”

“We had a couple of those. There was a second-and-five right before that where we had the guy in the backfield for minus three or four, so it was going to be 3rd-and-8, and we missed that tackle.”

The Bears lost a third straight after their 4-0 start gave them a Top 25 ranking. Up next are the Pac-12 South-leading Utah Utes, who have won their last two games, while allowing just 10 points. On Saturday, the No. 13 Utes knocked out Arizona State, 21-3.

 

 

 

Cal Bears Football podcast with Morris Phillips: Golden Bears look to rebound on OSU after loss in Oregon

photo from calbears.com: The Cal Bears Deandae Johnson sacks Oregon QB Justin Herbert in the October 5th

On the Cal Bears (4-2) Football podcast with Morris:

#1 Morris, Cal head coach Justin Wilcox reflected on the tough loss in their last game October 5th at Oregon (4-1) saying “It’s not one person, the way we meet, the extra work they do” referring to the work ethic of the team was that element lacking referring to the loss to the Ducks on the 5th?

#2 Morris, talk about Cal’s defensive backfield: Ashtyn Davis, Jaylinn Hawkins, Trey Turner III, Treyvon Beck, Josh Drayden, Camryn Bynum, and Elijah Hicks. How much of a percentage you would put on the game in Oregon that defense was there or not there?

#3 How much pressure will be on David Modster to get it done this coming Saturday. He just wasn’t able to get some of the passes he wanted in Oregon last game.

#4  Modster will get a chance to throw against Oregon State (2-4). Oregon State had their heads handed to them in their last game by the Utah Utes (5-1) 52-7 nearly getting shutout. Could Modster have a game like that throwing for scores all day?

#5 Lastly, talk about coach Wilcox’s game plan the Bears need a lot more offense than they got in Oregon and how sore is the wounded Golden Bear that wants to come out with a vengeance on Saturday?

Morris does the Cal podcasts each Monday morning at http://www.spotsradioservice.com

Cal defensive backs find success, but not quite satisfied yet

Photo credit: calbears.com

By Ana Kieu

The hype surrounding the Cal Golden Bears’ defensive backs in 2019 is real.

With the entire unit returning from a stellar season last fall, the group entered 2019 ranked among the top 10 nationally by nearly every media outlet, and as high as No. 2 in one ranking behind only Alabama.

Perhaps the coolest part of the attention was that the emphasis and accolades were bestowed upon the group more than any single individual.

“It’s not one person,” Cal head coach Justin Wilcox said. “It’s the way they play together, the way they meet, the extra work they do. The thing that’s special is the collective group. It’s the connection of the players in that room — their humility and their work ethic combined with the talent. Sometimes you have some of that without the other, but what is different is to have that many guys with that humility, that work ethic and that talent.”

The core returnees to Cal’s defensive backfield made all but two of the team’s possible starts in 2018, and they combine for nearly a quarter century of collegiate football experience. The group features a trio of fifth-year seniors (Ashtyn Davis, Jaylinn Hawkins and Trey Turner III), three fourth-year players (senior nickelbacks Traveon Beck and Josh Drayden, and junior cornerback Camryn Bynum), and the “baby” of the family in third-year junior cornerback Elijah Hicks.

They were all still pups in January 2017 when Wilcox was hired after the Bears had arguably posted some of the worst defensive seasons in the history of college football in the years leading up to his arrival. Wilcox put his trust in a then-mostly unproven assistant coach in Gerald Alexander to nurture a young but talented group of defensive backs. Alexander had only two seasons of experience as a full-time member of a collegiate coaching staff when Wilcox brought him to Berkeley, but Wilcox had coached Alexander at Boise State before he went on to play in the NFL and believed in the young coach.

After two-plus seasons in Berkeley, it looks to be a genius hire that has yielded both results on the field and admiration from the players.

“I feel like he’s the best defensive backs coach in the nation,” Hawkins said. “He doesn’t just teach out of the playbook. He teaches you the game of football. He’s got what we call ‘above the neck.'”

Alexander admitted that he didn’t know what he had in his defensive backs when he arrived at Cal, but he certainly knew what he wanted.

“I had a vision of what I wanted this group to be,” Alexander said. “From the beginning, our goal has been to be the best, and we are going to work like hell until we are. I knew what my job was, and I knew what I wanted out of this group. I knew how I wanted this group to play. It’s my responsibility to get them to believe.”

That vision yielded dramatic improvement on defense in year one and the defensive backs were a big reason why the Bears cut 14.2 points off their per game allowed average from the previous season. Cal also improved in 14 of 15 primary defensive statistics by an average of nearly 40 spots by category.

But that was just the beginning.

“We thought we were good at the time,” Bynum said. “When we look back at it now, it’s like ‘what were we doing?'”

What they were doing was getting better and putting in the work to pull off what they did in 2018.

Despite their hefty statistics last season, they’re far from satisfied.

“We haven’t accomplished our goals,” Hicks said. “We haven’t won a bowl game. We haven’t won a Pac-12 Championship. We’re going to have a chip on our shoulder because although we’ve done some good things, there is still a lot more to be done. That’s how we’re going about everything — in the film room, in the weight room and on the field.”

“We just want to win, that’s it,” Beck added. “We want to win in every aspect — every 1-on-1, every practice. That will translate to helping us win games. That’s really our ultimate goal.”

“We just need to be us,” Drayden chimed in. “We need to keep grinding away the way we are, keep studying the way we are, keep watching film the way we are. If you see somebody slacking, tell them let’s go because like (Alexander) says the most important part of the day is practice.”

Alexander recognizes the culture of sacrifice and accountability the group has created and applauds them for it.

“This group understands what sacrifice is,” Alexander said. “They sacrifice their time to be able to work and do the things necessary for them to have the success that they have. One of the things that we always talked about last year and now into this year was continuing to raise the bar. Nobody’s expectations for these guys should exceed their own.”

“Our hunger just to be good is one of the best things,” Bynum said. “We all want to outwork each other, which just breeds a bunch of competition and good energy around the whole group.”

Bynum believes the efforts of Cal’s current group of defensive backs will influence generations to come.

“They see how much work we put in and they have nothing else to expect out of our football program because that’s normal to them,” Bynum said.

Defensive coordinator Tim DeRuyter is also excited about the possibilities ahead.

“I think they’re as a competitive of a position unit that I’ve ever been around,” said DeRuyter, who’s now in his 29th season in collegiate coaching. “They all push each other, and that competitive drive is challenging each of them to get better at their craft. It shows at practice and it shows in the games.

“What’s nice is having this same core group for the third season,” DeRuyter added. “The first year, it was just learning the fundamentals of the position. That next offseason after guys had demonstrated they understood the concepts, it was time to take the next step. That’s where we were a year ago — our guys could disguise and really understand what was happening around them. This year, we can play at an even faster speed and have more guys involved.”

Cal’s current defensive backfield has combined for 27 career interceptions with the most recent, thanks to Davis at Oregon last Saturday. The Bears hope their continued evolution and development will help them make history.

“Legacies are made when you leave places better than you found them,” Alexander said. “When we’re looking at the end of it and they can wipe their hands clean, hopefully this group is going to be forever remembered for the work they’ve put in and the foundation they’ve laid for this football program.”

Headline Sports podcast with Barbara Mason: Raiders gain ground with win against Chicago on road trip; 49ers leave no doubt in win over Browns; plus more

Photo credit: nbcsports.com

On Headline Sports with Barbara:

#1 Which Oakland Raider (3-2) team is this? The Raider team who lost to Kansas City and Minnesota or the Raider team who beat Indianapolis and Chicago?

#2 The San Francisco 49ers (4-0)  left little doubt about their game on Monday Night Football against the Cleveland Browns (2-3) in a lopsided win at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara.

#3 The Golden State Warriors struggled in their first preseason game against the Los Angeles Lakers. Are they showing signs or cracks of a different older team — not as fast, not as accurate — or is this a real study of them finding who they are without Kevin Durant?

#4 The Stanford Cardinal (3-3) got an important 23-13 win against Washington (4-2) on Saturday, thanks to the help of Cameron Scarlett, who carried 33 times for 151 yards and one touchdown.

#5 A tough loss last Saturday in Oregon (4-1) for the Cal Bears (4-2) and quarterback David Modster. The Bears only got one touchdown against the Oregon Ducks.

Barbara Mason does Headline Sports podcasts each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com