Cal Bears basketball podcast with Morris Phillips: Arizona (11-2) comes to the house of horrors Haas Pavilion to face Cal this Friday

TUCSON, AZ – DECEMBER 20: Arizona Wildcats forward Lauri Markkanen (10) (left), center Dusan Ristic (14) and center Chance Comanche (21) attempt to grab a rebound during the second half of the college basketball game against the New Mexico Lobos at McKale Center on December 20, 2016 in Tucson, Arizona. Arizona beat the Lobos 77-46. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Icon Sportswire) (Icon Sportswire via AP Images)

The non-conference schedule is over and the Pac 12 starts on Friday the 30th and Cal has it’s hands full to get off to a good start and good enough to be in the NCAA Tournament this year. The Bears will host the Arizona Wildcats on Friday for that first Pac 12 game and these two teams do match up in terms of size and Arizona is one of the bigger teams in the conference they have not been as good in terms of having a skilled guy whose a volume scorer or a high scorer this year they’ve had a couple tough loses.

They are ranked 18th nationally even though their not as good as normally that we’ve seen Arizona teams be they figure to give Cal all they could handle. From Arizona’s prospective coming to Berkeley it’s been kind of a house of horrors for the Wildcats recently last year they lost at Berkeley and two years ago it was that big upset when the Cats were ranked number one.

Morris Phillips has more as Cal gets set to open the Pac 12 part of the season listen to the podcast at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

Perrantes, Guy lead No. 12 Virginia past upset-minded Cal snapping school-record, home winning streak

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By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY–In a game this close, this low-scoring, experience and shot making often spell the difference.  Those two factors weighed heavily for No. 12 Virginia on Wednesday at Haas Pavilion as they squeezed past upset-minded Cal, 56-52.

Senior London Perrantes provided the experience for the Cavaliers with his smart decisions with the ball and 14 points, three assists. Freshman Kyle Guy contributed the shot making with nine of his game-high 17 points in the game’s final 6:12, not including the critical assist to teammate Isaiah Wilkins, whose layup with 1:02 remaining gave Virginia the lead for good.

California coach Cuonzo Martin said of Guy, “we knew coming in that he was a talented player that makes tough shots down the stretch.  I thought we played good defense, but he just made better shots.”

With the loss, Cal’s school-record, home winning streak came to an end at 27.  The Bears lost for only the third time in 27 non-conference, home games under Martin.  In a game of runs and surges, the Bears didn’t have an answer to Virginia’s final push.

“It went down to the wire,” Martin said.  “We had some costly turnovers and lost some momentum.”

“You knew it was going to be physical, I told our guys this was going to be a good, old-fashioned knuckle-buster,” Virginia coach Tony Bennett said.  “That’s what we called it, and that’s really what it was.”

For Cal, their fortunes fell squarely on their three most prominent players, starting with pre-season All-American Ivan Rabb.  The 6’10” forward stayed out of foul trouble, playing a season-best 38 minutes while grabbing a game-best 12 rebounds.  But while facing persistent double teams in the post, and manning a smaller lineup minus 7’0″ center Kingsley Okoroh down the stretch, Rabb fought all the physical battles while attempting just four shots and finishing with nine points.

Jabari Bird, in just his fifth game since returning from injury, led Cal with 15 points, but he needed 15 shots to get there. Overall, the Bears struggled from distance, missing seven of their first eight 3-point attempts, and 18 of 23 for the game.  With Virginia’s physical defenders pushing the Cal offense further out on the floor, the missed shots from distance came back to haunt the Bears.

And while Virginia’s freshman guard, Guy, excelled, Cal’s Charlie Moore did not, missing 11 of his 14 shots with four turnovers.  Martin described Moore’s night as a learning experience for the freshman who projects as one the team’s most prominent players going forward.

“Charlie, as talented as he is, was going against a senior, and all you can do is learn by playing against better players,” Martin said. ” He’ll begin to understand what it takes and how to take care of the ball, attack the ball screens, push through the game.”

Turnovers keyed Virginia’s 12-2 run early in the second half that put them up 40-31 with 12:31 remaining.  But Cal answered right back with a 9-0 run to tie it, setting up the close, tense final minutes.

There were 11 ties and eight lead changes in the ballgame.

Perrantes, the former Los Angeles prep star, and the only California-reared player on the Cavaliers’ roster, played in front of 30 friends and family in the stands.  The senior was a familiar face to Cal players and coaches, his 3-pointer in the final 10 seconds of overtime last year at Charlottesville stood as the decider in that game.

GAME NOTES: Leon Powe, Richard Midgely and Omar Wilkes were among the Cal basketball alumni in attendance.

The Bears open conference play a week from Friday at home against Pac-12 contender No. 18 Arizona.  Virginia opens ACC play on December 28 at No. 11 Louisville.

 

Cal Bears basketball podcast with Michael Duca: Cavs-Bears go head to head in what is expected to be a great defensive show

California’s Jabari Bird, left, and UC Davis guard Darius Graham fight for the ball in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, Dec. 10, 2016, in Berkeley, Calif. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

The Virginia Cavaliers (9-1) and ranked 12th will match up with the Cal Bears (9-2) ranked 13th at Haas Pavilion tonight (Wednesday) a 7:00PM PST tip off in Cal’s bid to extend their home win streak to 28. The Bears are happy with Jabari Bird who is playing in his fifth game since returning from the DL. Bird has the ability to take the ball in and out. If you got Bird sitting on a wing ready to shoot kind of like Patrick Christopher did the last time Cal won a conference championship that draws the attention of the defense outside.

This game will be a very good testament of that Virginia has given up fewer than 48 points a game and they do it by packing all five of their players in the paint. That should open things up very much were talking Cal’s Sam Singer if the Cavs are paying attention to penetrate and kick out. There should be wings, mid wings and three point areas that are wide open.

Michael Duca does the Cal Bears podcasts each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

 

Cal Bears basketball podcast with Morris Phillips: For Cal Bird is the word Jarbari Bird nucleus in offense

usatoday.com file photo: Jabari Bird in file photo played his fourth game against Cal Poly last Saturday at Haas Pavilion

The Cal Bears Jabari Bird has been back for four games since his injury and looks like he hasn’t missed a step led Cal with 25 points on Saturday night at Haas Pavilion against the Col Poly Mustangs for a career high. Bird has in his short return from his injury in the last four games an amicle part of the Bears offense. Bird has been great on defense and has ability to shoot long distance.

Bird has shot accurately and that was an issue for him earlier in his college career, Cal head coach Cuonzo Martin can tell how frequently he can use Bird and get the most out of him. Bird’s return has made the team whole and it helps project what Cal is going to do on offense which is key thing.

Jabari Bird’s career best night an indication that the youthful California Bears are rounding into shape

calbears.com photo: Cal Bears Ivan Rabb goes for the high percentage shot against Cal Poly on Saturday night at Haas Pavilion for home consecutive win number 27

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY–Jabari Bird’s big night on the hardwood was destined to happen.  That it took 3 1/2 seasons and well over 100 basketball games to transpire helps describe what a winding, sometimes arduous, path the young man from Richmond has traveled.

Recruited by Mike Montgomery, Bird immediately became the iconic coach’s biggest signing in his six seasons in Berkeley, but the impact on the floor was not immediate.

It didn’t help that Bird shared his first name with Jabari Parker, Duke’s headline recruit that season, a one-and-done guy who also had Bay Area ties (Parker’s father Sonny was an important player for the Warriors in the 70’s and early 80’s) as expectations exceeded results early in Bird’s Cal career.

Jabari’s father, Carl, was Cal’s leading scorer for his two seasons in Berkeley in the mid-70’s.  Those teams weren’t great, but the 6’8″ Bird was, giving Cal a scoring presence in the paint.  Jabari developed into a far different player than his father,  slightly shorter, skinny, and far more athletic in his days at Salesian High School in Richmond.  Not surprisingly, Jabari had numerous suitors, and he initially balked at following his father’s footsteps to Cal.

But Bird relented, saw value in being close to home, and signed with Cal in part so his mom, Tonya, and dad could attend his games.

Initially,  Bird was a superstar in the making, averaging better than 13 points his first four games as a collegian as the Bears won all four. But then the struggles started, the missed jump shots, the turnovers and the lack of versatility offensively, as Bird had troubles creating offense off the dribble, something that plagued him in high school.

Soon, Bird’s playing time decreased, and his presence in the gym after games working on his failing shot became commonplace.  In speaking to Bird, he said he was determined to fix his shooting, and his repetitions from the spots on the floor where he was frequently missing shots spoke to his determination.

“He’ll be a lot better a month from now.  He is talented,” Montgomery said at the time, knowing better than anyone that great high school players don’t instantly get it as collegians.  “Once he figures out what he needs to do to be successful, he’ll make progress by leaps and bounds.  He’ll figure it out.”

Bird’s freshman year ended quietly, as the Bears slumped late, and Bird was in some ways eclipsed by fellow freshman Jordan Mathews.   Bird’s sophomore season saw him experience a lengthy bout with injuries and missed games.  In some ways, the team and new coach, Cuonzo Martin had to move on, with the persistent,  repetitive questions about Bird’s availability.

As a junior, Bird was initially upstaged by heralded recruits Ivan Rabb and Jaylen Brown.  But Bird’s game was kicking in, and Martin noticed, enamored with his off-guard’s defensive prowess and three-point shooting.  Soon, the freshman were playing slightly less than Bird, who sometimes came off the bench.

Finally,  Bird was the player he needed to be, but his ascension was blunted by nagging injuries.  He ended his junior year at less than full strength and began this season with health issues as well.  Last month, Bird missed six consecutive games with back spasms. Again, Martin had few answers for the press, frequently saying ‘I’m not a doctor…”

But with the season in full swing, Bird has returned.   In his fourth game back on Saturday against Cal Poly, Bird scored 25 points a career-best. Clearly,  all the patience that Montgomery said would be required, had come to fruition.  Bird described the process and the results succinctly.

“I put in a lot of work on my game, so why not show them out on the court,” Bird said after Cal’s 81-55 win.  “I feel like it’s a waste of time to put in all that work throughout the season and when the lights come on you don’t show out.  So I’ve just been trusting my game and shooting more, and look to keep it moving forward.”

“All I know is that when he hits that first 3, he hits open 3’s but if he gets contested, a pull-up whatever it is, I feel like he has it going,” Rabb said of his teammate.  “Once he does that and he gets to the basket the next time,  then you know he has it going.  So what I try to do is play off of him.  I’m sure everyone else does the same thing,  but when he’s going like that we have to continue to feed him, and we did tonight.”

GAME NOTES: The Bears broke open a close game with a 21-3 run at the conclusion of the first half.

Cal Bears basketball podcast with Michael Duca: Moore, Moore, Moore, Cal Bears can’t get enough of his offense

AP file photo: Cal Bears Charlie Moore (left) drives on UC Davis guard Siler Schneider (right) in the first half of last Saturday’s game at Haas Pavilion at UC Berkeley

The nice thing about the Cal Bears situation in the last couple of games they’ve maintained their game plan consistently which could simply explain why their having success keeping their 26 game winning streak going. If at the pattern their going against opponents they took off with leads in the first half and then let team play into a competitive situation. It’s good that the Bears are keeping a foothold once they’re in front and that’s forces the opponents to have to adjust.

Charlie Moore is a freshman and he’s still trying to learn what he can do and he’s going in a direction where he’s got his team excited about what he can do and what direction he has helped the offense. In the last game against UC Davis Moore lead his team with 33 minutes, 22 points and the 33 minutes was a high.

Michael Duca does the Cal Bears podcast each week with Morris Phillips on game coverage at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

Cal Bears basketball podcast with Morris Phillips: Bears 26 game winning streak still alive as they prepare for next Sat vs. Cal Poly

AP file photo: Cal Bears Ivan Rabb (1) dribbling on Louisiana Tech Bulldogs Omar Sherman (24) during their game Nov 30th game at Haas Pavilion in Berkeley Rabb will be leading the offense against Cal Poly this coning Saturday

The Cal Bears win streak still is running now at 26 their next game another one filled with home cooking against Cal Poly next Sat Dec 16th a victory would break their all time consecutive winning record. Cal led by 21 points at the half last Saturday against Cal Poly and won by 25. I can tell you on press row the consensus was the Bears have a lot of work to do. What’s interesting about that is when you win 26 in a row at home and you got an All-American player on your roster Ivan Rabb and you win that night by 25 points it’s not that unusual that you have to answer a bunch of questions and talk about a bunch of issues that’s just the nature of the beast.

 

 

Bears tie school-record win streak at home with wire-to-wire win over UC Davis

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By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY–For a team that led by 21 points at halftime, and won by 25—for a record-tying 26th consecutive time at home—the Cal Bears had issues on Saturday night.  Not big issues, but issues for a young team that has challenges looming and needs to improve to meet them.

Even mercurial, freshman guard Charlie Moore had problems holding on to the ball.  Moore committed five turnovers in Cal’s 86-61 win over UC Davis, although that was about the extent of his struggles.  Moore again led Cal, playing a team-high 33 minutes, scoring 22 points with four assists and four steals.  And with the pressure of the halftime buzzer present, Moore went spectacular, rivaling anything crosstown star Steph Curry has pulled off in recent times.

Off an undervalued pass from Sam Singer that evaded an Aggie defender, Moore—seemingly in one motion—caught Singers’ pass and turned and fired a 50-foot banker that not only looked good, but was good.  Moore then finished it off with a little showmanship, even starting his celebration a split second early ala Curry.

“It felt good when I released it,” Moore said. “That’s why I followed through and ran down the court with it.”

Moore’s banker was the crescendo to Cal’s hot night of shooting in which they shot 69 percent from the field after halftime, and 56 percent for the game.  While UC Davis’ defense wasn’t confounding, their offensive game was—especially early in the second half when they briefly trimmed Cal’s lead to 14.  That stretch claimed Cal star Ivan Rabb, who picked up his fourth foul.  Then a few minutes later, Jabari Bird left the game, appearing to favor his back, which cost him six consecutive games recently.

“I thought UC Davis in the second half really started imposing their will and driving the ball, playing hard and making plays at the rim, showing off what they really do well,” Coach Cuonzo Martin said. “I thought in the first half we did a great job at taking away those passing lanes and not giving a lot of options for their perimeter guys to make those plays, and in the second half we gave up a little bit.”

The Bears played their fourth game in seven days on Saturday night–including their trip to Hawaii, where they beat Princeton, and narrowly lost to Seton Hall—and maybe the accompanying fatigue contributed to their uneven effort.  Along with the team’s hot shooting, they committed 17 turnovers and allowed UC Davis to shoot 51 percent in the second half.  But you can only nitpick so much with a team that’s won eight of its 10 games despite a slew of injuries and the resulting issues with continuity.

While Rabb fouled out, and Bird didn’t play well (1 0f 6 shooting) before he departed gingerly, lesser known Bears picked up the slack.  Grant Mullins—always in attack mode—shot 6 for 7 and scored 17 points in 22 minutes off the bench.  Cole Welle, in his most significant action as a collegian, contributed 10 points on 5 of 8 shooting.  And Roger Moute A Bidias–the Bear most affected by whether Bird is available or not—started and contributed nine points and two rebounds in just 14 minutes.

“I think it’s huge,” Mullins said of how he and others stepped up in support of Cal’s stars. “Obviously, those guys (Ivan and Jabari) are so talented that when they’re off a little bit or they’re being doubled, other guys can step up, that’s huge for us going forward.”

In the coming weeks, the Bears will face ACC contender Virginia and ranked Pac-12 power Arizona at home, both sure to challenge Cal’s home dominance.  Also, the first conference road trip of the new year brings the Bears to Los Angeles, where they’ll face suddenly red-hot UCLA, undefeated and ranked No. 2 nationally this week behind uber talented guard Lonzo Ball.

But for now, the Bears can bask in the accomplishment of extending their home streak to 26, equaling the school-record established by the ’59-’60 National Championship team.  While the opponents during their streak haven’t always been top notch, the Bears have performed, and the streak includes them running the table at home in conference play last season.  For that, Martin, said they should be proud.

“It’s been since 1960,” Martin said. “That’s a long time ago, and to be a part of that is incredible. We still want to win home games, protect our court and there’s still work to be done, but in most cases with players, these streaks and such don’t set in until the players leave the school, years later, because right now you’re still competing and trying to win games.”

The Bears have a week off to finish the semester and take final exams, then they return to Haas Pavilion next Saturday with a chance to establish a new school-record streak when they face Cal Poly at 5pm.

 

Cal shoots poorly and falls short to Seton Hall on the 75th anniversary of the bombing of Pearl Harbor

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By Morris Phillips

Ivan Rabb was off his game, Jabari Bird needed help, and the Bears came up just short at Pearl Harbor on Wednesday.

Bird’s 3-point attempt at the buzzer would have tied it, but Seton Hall survived 60-57 after they broke open a close game with 12 minutes remaining.

The loss dropped Cal to 7-2 on the season as they split a pair of games at Pearl Harbor’s Bloch Arena.  On Wednesday, on the 75th anniversary of the Pearl Harbor attack, the Bears and Pirates played before more than 2,000 service men and women.

Seton Hall improved to 7-2 on the season, and captured an important, resume building win.  The Pirates were led by Angel Delgado with 16 points and 12 rebounds.  Desi Rodriguez added 15, and Khadeen Carrington 14 for Seton Hall, the Big East entrant that also was a NCAA tournament qualifier along with Cal in 2015.

The Bears shot 43 percent from the field for the game, but more pointedly, they missed too many threes and squandered too many opportunities at the free throw line.  Along with Bird’s miss at the buzzer, Cal missed 13 of 16 three-point attempts.  They also missed 10 of 18 free throw attempts, and failed to take advantage of Seton Hall’s similar struggles at the stripe (9 of 20).

Bird led the Bears with a game-best 22 points, and freshman Charlie Moore added 12, but no other Bears scored in double figures.  Rabb played 30 minutes, but seemed to struggle with a wrist injury, finishing with 8 points and 8 rebounds.

The Bears led by three at the half, and were even with the Pirates with 12 minutes to go after Carrington’s three tied it.  But Seton Hall scored the next seven points of the game, and never trailed again.

The Bears return to the mainland and Haas Pavilion on Saturday for a matchup with Big West opponent UC Davis.

Cal Bears basketball podcast with Michael Duca: After win over Princeton Cal trying to battle with an injured Rabb against Seton Hall

CSN Bay Area photo: Cal Bears Jabari Bird who returned to the line up Tuesday led all scorers with 22 points on Wednesday against the Seton Hall Pirates in a 60-57 loss at Bloch Center in Pearl Harbor

On the Cal Bears (6-2) basketball podcast Cal is playing game two with the Seton Hall Pirates (7-1) on Wednesday after defeating the Princeton Tigers on Tuesday night at Pearl Harbor’s Bloch Arena on the 75th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor Day the Bears were in a close battle with the Pirates. Cal came to Pearl Harbor with limited prep time they enjoyed winning their 26th consecutive home game at Haas Pavilion before embarking onto Honolulu.

Ivan Rabb who was suffering from a left wrist injury was taped up for the game but his free throwing and shooting was off compared to his 26 point night he had against Alcorn State last week. Rabb insisted that he was ready to play in Wednesday’s game against Princeton. The Bears are missing his shot Rabb has scored four points late into the first half and the Bears are now leaning on Charlie Moore and the recently returning Jabari Bird for some offense.

Michael Duca talks Cal Bears basketball on the podcast at http://www.sportsradioservice.com