Cal rebounds with a rout of Oregon State, Goff throws six TD passes

By Morris Phillips

photo credit: Bing images Jared Goff QB Cal Bears

Six weeks after their last and newly impressive win over Washington State, the Cal Bears are winners again.  Beating Oregon State, 54-24, on Saturday night not only allows 125 players and coaches to sleep comfortably again, it marks a milestone in the Cal program under Sonny Dykes as the Bears are bowl-eligible for the first time since 2011.

“It was really satisfying to go out there and really perform well tonight and get that next step in our program which is going to a bowl game,” Dykes said.  “We talked about how important that was over and over again.  I’m just happy for these guys.”

In the absence of a win over the last month-and-a-half, Dykes constantly reiterated that his was a team, a group of guys that were cohesive even in a difficult stretch that took the Bears from Pac-12 North contenders to revisiting their frustrations from 2014 when they finished the season by dropping six of their final seven games.  Dykes’ positive reinforcement can’t be minimized, and that belief showed on the field against OSU as Jared Goff threw for 453 yards and six touchdowns in the rout of the Beavers.

“This has been the culmination of three years of hard work since Coach Dykes got here and since a lot of guys got here, just putting in that work every day,” Goff said.  “I’ve said it a million times when we were 1-11, and last year when we lost to BYU, that all the work we put in will pay off eventually and by no means are we done.”

“We challenged them after four tough weeks to come out and just play relaxed and have fun playing football,” Dykes said.  “They did a great job of doing that tonight.”

Beginning with Kenny Lawler’s circus catch, a 4-yard touchdown in the first quarter, the Bears regained that pace Dykes’ Bear Raid offense was supposed to represent.  The Bears scored on their next six possessions to bury OSU and lead 44-18 in the third quarter.  Goff started slowly, completing just one of his first five with a pair of drops, but was virtually unstoppable after that.

Goff completed six touchdowns passes in regulation for the second time in his Cal career, the only two times that’s been accomplished by a Cal quarterback.  The junior completed passes to 12 different receivers and five of those caught touchdowns, including freshman big boy Malik McMorris, the 300-pound fullback who was left alone on Cal’s final score of the evening.

Oregon State, losers of seven straight, struggled to keep Cal from making big plays running or passing, and couldn’t buy time for their quarterback, freshman Nick Mitchell.  Mitchell threw for two scores and ran for another, but was under heavy pressure throughout, and was knocked out of the game in the third quarter and replaced by Marcus McMaryion.  The Beavers and Coach Gary Andersen had to be questioned regarding Storm Barr-Woods, OSU’s leading rusher, who inexplicably carried the ball just six times and caught one pass.

That the milestone victory came against Oregon State was noteworthy in that the Beavers had dominated the series between the schools in recent years.  OSU lost for the first time at Memorial Stadium in Berkeley since 1997.

The Bears now enter next week’s Big Game against Stanford with a surprising set of parameters after their victory and the Cardinal’s gut-wrenching loss to Oregon.  Stanford can clinch the Pac-12 North with a win, but if Cal pulls the upset, Oregon could sneak in as North champs, extinguishing Stanford’s aspirations.  The Bears have lost five straight to Stanford, more than enough motivation for the resurgent Bears.

Bear-ly scratching the surface: No. 14 Cal opens with impressive rout of Rice

Cal's back!

By Morris Phillips

With great size, long arms and superior depth, there were the Cal Bears on the floor at Haas Pavilion Friday night satisfying Bear Nation’s anticipation for what could be a very special season in Berkeley.

The beefed-up Bears, with super recruits Jaylen Brown and Ivan Rabb in the starting lineup, didn’t disappoint, routing the Rice Owls 97-65 as all five starters scored in double figures. Afterwards, Rabb said what most fans were already thinking: this talented team, already recognized by ranked 14th nationally, could get a whole lot better quickly.

“I feel the chemistry,” Rabb said. “I think if we continue to stop like that, it’s going to make our offense more potent and get better transitions. With the size and length that we have, all the different tools, there’s no reason why we can’t be one of the best defensive teams in the country.”

Possessing the ability to drop 97 points with great scoring balance, along with suffocating defense, the Bears appear to immediately be on the path to something big. Coach Cuonzo Martin senses it, but as the orchestrator, he had his eye on the warts Friday and what needs to improve if the Bears want to compete for a Pac-12 championship this season.

“I don’t care what the talent says,” Martin said. “There have been so many teams over the past 50 years ranked this and ranked that but don’t pan out and don’t execute. There’s always a long way to go, and after our second game (Monday’s exhibition against Carroll being the first) we are still going through different things, dealing with the environment, the excitement.”

The process of creating something special seems to have already taken hold when the game’s box score is perused. The interchangeable Bears were led by senior Tyrone Wallace’s 20 points, eight assists and six rebounds, but Wallace’s big night was trumped by the team’s great balance.

Ten of the 11 Bears to see action had at least one made basket, seven had at least one made three-pointer and eight had at least one assist. Cal’s 48-30 advantage on the glass saw those same 10 players that scored also grab at least one rebound. Leading 14-11 early, the Bears took off, scoring 13 consecutive points over the next five minutes to turn the game into a rout.

Rabb and Brown played just 15 and 16 minutes respectively—the fewest of Cal’s top nine players on Friday—but may have been the most impressive anyway. Rabb finished with 14 points, 13 rebounds and two blocks making him unofficially the most efficient player in the country on opening night. But Brown made an immediate impression with his unselfish play, spinning off a defender in the lane and dumping a seamless pass off to Rabb for a dunk less than five minutes into the game. The 6’7” Brown struggled with his shot—finishing 5 of 15—but his talent and versatility was undeniable in his limited time on the floor.

“I think we’re just scratching the surface,” Brown said. “We have a lot of room to improve. I think as the season goes forward, you guys are going to see a lot of improvements.”

Rice shot just 37 percent for the game and trailed 47-31 at halftime. Arizona State transfer Egor Koulechov led the Owls with 19 points and eight rebounds. Marcus Evans added 18.

Cal brought 7’0” Kameron Rooks and Georgetown transfer Stephen Domingo off the bench first. Rooks missed all of last season with a broken foot and looked to be in great shape and far more active defensively than he did at any point during his freshman year two seasons ago. Domingo, a San Francisco native, looked to be the team’s jack of all trades with his ability to defend and take advantage of smaller defenders off the dribble on the other end.

The Bears take the floor again Monday when UC-Santa Barbara visits Haas Pavilion.

Cal Bears basketball podcast with Michael Duca: Cal expecting a Jolly good time with new recruits Rabb, Brown and Jolly

by Michael Duca

BERKELEY–The Cal Bears shored up their recruiting class as they bring in Jaylen Brown, Ivan Rabb, and Tyson Jolly. Jolly is another player in the top ten group. He’s one of the nation’s top shooting guards and was signed to a national letter of intent. Cal would expand this year’s class and didn’t sign Jolly with Cal last season and Jolly had to attend some academics and he went to a prep school for a year.

Head coach Cunzo Martin has kept contact with Jolly after he left Putnum City West Valley High School there in Oklahoma City. Jolly was a pretty good ball player he averaged 20 points nine rebounds three assists a game. At the prep school he managed to learn his craft.

He went to a prep school that had a lot of different programs and it optimizes what his school was 24-3 and he got into the semi finals. Cal who faced Carroll in the pre season game on Monday gave Martin a chance to try out his small line up he started to work on the post position. Cal starts the regular season this Fri the 13th against Rice.

Michael Duca does the Cal basketball podcast each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cal Bears Dominate Carroll College in Exhibition Win

By: Eric He

photo credit calbear.com Cal vs. Carroll exhibition game

Carroll College may not be much of a barometer, but the Cal Bears nonetheless were impressive in exhibition play Monday night as they routed Carroll College 93-58.

The No. 14-ranked Bears cruised with the help of an early 20-0 run and were never really tested by their little-known opponent at Haas Pavilion.

Highly-touted recruits Ivan Rabb and Jaylen Brown finished with 11 and 17 points, respectively, as five Bears finished in double figures.

“I thought he did a good job,” said head coach Cuonzo Martin. “I’ll have to watch film, but I thought a couple times Ivan could have taken tough shots with the double on him. I’ve told him sometimes you’ll force shots when the double team hits you just to be aggressive and assertive.”

For junior Tyrone Wallace, the game served as a chance for the team to get its feet wet.

“I think we just wanted to come out here and play as hard as we can, compete on both ends of the floor, defend, rebound and play hard,” he said.

Wallace finished with 15 points, including a couple of highlight-reel dunks in the first quarter.

Off the bench, Stephen Domingo chipped in 13 points, hitting 3-of-6 from downtown.

The Bears as a team shot 53.1 percent from the floor while limiting Carroll College to 35.2 percent.

Cal begins its season on Friday against Rice at Haas Pavilion.

Cal Bears football podcast with Morris Phillips: Linebacking issues, Goff is off with throws, and too many dropped passes

by Morris Phillips

BERKELEY–On Saturday during Cal’s game with the Oregon Ducks Cal missed a lot tackles a whole bunch as a matter of fact and the defense is suffering. The Bears just can’t seem to get off the field and the linebacker play has been poor. On Saturday night they were playing mainly with two linebackers.

Those guys have to be in position when they play and make tackles in the open field to make it happen. Cal allowed 477 yards for rushing yards. The other issue is Cal quarterback Jared Goff he played well last night and on the issue of time and protection he missed erred throws and there were too many dropped passes.

He did throw for 300 yards Saturday night but he missed on more than half of his passes and he just can’t get it done that way. So Cal has an extremely important football game next week against Oregon State and they need to end this losing streak or their season that started so promising will end far less than that.

Listen to the rest of Morris’ podcast on Cal right here at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

NCAA football podcast with Morris Phillips: Ducks get big win over Cal for third straight; Utes pick up their eighth win over the Huskies; The Cardinal take care business

On the podcast with Morris discusses the Oregon Ducks (6-3) who keep rolling with their third straight win over the Cal Bears (5-4). The offense has really improved over the last six games with Ducks quarterback Vernon Adams Jr who went 17-29 for 300 yards. The Ducks offense has improved and their streaking right now.

The Washington Huskies (4-5) took a tough loss to the Utah Utes (8-1) 34-23. Utah no question are a load for their opponents and picked up a huge win. The Utes are slowing down in some aspect of their defense and this win may not be as monumental as some of their wins earlier this year but nonetheless a huge win. Utes quarterback Travis Wilson went 12-25 for 155 yards.

The Stanford Cardinal (8-1) keep rolling with a win over the Colorado Buffaloes (4-6) 42-10. The Cardinal quarterback Kevin Hogan leads with a lot of success and you can almost expect the Cardinal to win on any given Saturday.

Morris Phillips is filling in for Michelle Richardson on the NCAA podcast this week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

google image Vernon Adams Jr Oregon Ducks quarterback

Cal run over by Oregon and their 777-yard offensive output

Carrington

By Morris Phillips

Talk about making your opponent pay.  On Saturday at Autzen Stadium, the Cal Bears found themselves reaching for scampering Ducks—and their symbolic wallets–repeatedly.

The Bears came in licking their chops, hungry for the opportunity to face the Pac-12’s worst defense and hopefully end their three-game losing streak.  Instead, Oregon feasted on Cal’s leaky defense for 777 yards total offense in a 44-28 win.

Oregon amassed 441 yards in offense in the first half alone when they buried the Bears with four touchdowns in the second quarter.  As a result, Cal’s early 10-0 lead evaporated into a 31-10 Oregon lead at the half.

The Bears seemed capable of engaging the Ducks in a high-scoring shootout, but that didn’t materialize either.  Jared Goff’s uneven performance in which he misfired on 23 of his 41 pass attempts had a lot to do with Oregon’s 31 unanswered points in the first half.  Goff finished with 329 yards passing with one pass intercepted, but his overall performance littered with errant throws and drop passes paled in comparison to what the junior signal caller accomplished in the season’s first five games.

Given all the misfortune, Cal started fast and had the Ducks on their heels in the first quarter. The Bears scored on their first two possessions to lead 10-0.  In between the two drives, Griffin Piatt picked off Vernon Adams Jr. in the end zone to keep Oregon from tying the score at 7.  Piatt’s pick short circuited Oregon’s 10-play, 79-yard drive and seemed to signal Cal’s fortunes were looking up.

But that was hardly the case.  The Ducks and Adams rebounded with an 11-play drive that stalled when Hardy Nickerson Jr. sacked the Oregon quarterback on 3rd-and-3 at Cal’s 22-yard line.  Aidan Schneider’s 41-yard field goal brought Oregon within 10-3 with 1:49 remaining in the first quarter.

And then the roof fell in on Cal in the second quarter as Oregon scored touchdowns on four consecutive possessions.  Three of the four Oregon drives were preceded by three-and-outs by Cal, and none of the Oregon’s drives took more than 3 ½ minutes on the game clock.

Cal’s defense contributed to Oregon’s surge with its own poor play, which Coach Sonny Dykes referenced in his post-game remarks.

“I think we missed 50 tackles tonight,” Dykes said.   “We couldn’t generate any pass rush at all.”

“Obviously it starts up front,” Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said of his team’s offensive explosion.  “Those guy did a really good job of neutralizing their front and getting to the second level.”

Royce Freeman, Oregon’s powerful tailback, rushed for 180 yards on 29 carries.  But Freeman was just part of a committee that totaled 477 rushing.  Tony Brooks-James topped 100 yards rushing, and Kani Benoit had 94 yards on just eight carries.

The Bears rallied when they opened the second half with 11 consecutive points to cut Oregon’s lead to 31-21.  Matt Anderson’s 48-yard field goal, Vic Enwere’s 9-yard touchdown run and Goff’s two-point conversion on a designed run brought Cal with 10 points, but the Ducks rebounded with a second field goal from Aidan Schneider and Charles Nelson’s 20-yard touchdown catch to open the fourth quarter.

Bryce Treggs’ 80-yard touchdown on a deep ball that was tipped by the defender and then grabbed by the Cal receiver brought the Bears within 44-28 with 7:27 remaining.

Cal has dropped four straight following a 5-0 start to the season and a brief landing spot in the national Top 25.  Now the Bears must defeat downtrodden Oregon State on Saturday to secure a sixth win and bowl eligibility.  If not, the Bears face a daunting task trying to defeat either Stanford or Arizona State in their regular-season finale.

Cal Bears podcast with Michael Duca: Rabb ready to jump in and help out; expectations high on freshman

On the podcast the Cal Bears are ranked 14th on the top 25 AP polls their nemesis Arizona is ranked 12th and Utah is at #16. Michael takes a look at the beginning of pre season for Cal. Cal plays it’s first pre season game this coming Monday against Carroll (Montana).

Cal head coach Cuonzo Martin is going to take a look at a lot of the recruits and veterans on the team. The latest crop is young players are Jaylen Brown and Ivan Rabb. How much impact will these two key players have the Bears are about to find out. The Bears starters Tyronne Wallace, Jabari Byrd, and Jordan Matthews will be watched by Martin and he’ll see how they jell with the younger players.

Martin is looking at Cal playing more than a dozen games before conference play and will his intensity be as it would for a Pac 12 conference game? One would hope for some success against these teams even though they are a distant time from Pac 12 Tournament.

Michael Duca covers Cal basketball and does the podcast right here at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

AP photo of Cal freshman Ivan Rabb

 

Cal Bears podcast with Morris Phillips: With standings tightening up Goff, Cal need to throw everything at Oregon this week

by Morris Phillips

AP photo of Oregon quarterback Vernon Adams Jr

BERKELEY–The Cal Bears (5-3) wanted to win games with Utah (7-1), UCLA (6-2), and SC (5-3) and were frustrated in each of those with a loss that now amounts to three straight.  Right now the standings are extremely balanced and highly competitive. You’ve seen players go from the outhouse to the penthouse and back. For Cal this upcoming Oregon (5-3) game presents an opportunity that might be unlike the last three games.

Maybe this week’s game with Oregon will be a shootout and maybe that will benefit them to have a game that’s high scoring and both offenses are having their way. That’s the kind of game they can pull out the one thing they have to worry about Oregon is playing well. The Ducks have already pulled out a couple games in the last couple weeks.

For Cal maybe if they can put the onus on the offense and the offense can kind of carry the defense then maybe the Bears can pull it out. They still have a lot to play for so the Bears are going to be highly motivated to play their best game against Oregon. Cal quarterback Jared Goff missed a few throws he’s had some guys locked up we saw wide out Kenny Lawler catch a few and he was blanked by the SC defender and WR Bryce Treggs has been super consistent and those are the guys who have to get going.

Morris Phillips does the Cal Bears football podcast each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cal can’t repel USC’s physical effort in 27-21 loss

By Morris Phillips

The Cal Bears showed up to Memorial Stadium on Saturday with the intent to play their best football game of the season.  Instead, the USC Trojans played professor and gave the Bears an impromptu math and history lesson.

Looking for a season-altering win, the Bears instead fell to USC 27-21 and learned that the Trojans’ 12-game win streak in the series—dating back to 2003—isn’t going away for at least another year.  If the Bears needed an explanation, there it was in the numbers: Cal wanted to wear out depth-challenged USC but ran just 61 offensive plays in large part due to a Trojans’ ground-and-pound effort that included 50 rushes for 183 yards and for the most part kept Jared Goff and Cal’s Bear Raid offense on the sidelines.

“We hear a lot that we’re not as physical as past teams or teams even in the Pac-12.  And we just want to execute that and establish ourselves as a physical team,” USC running back Tre Madden said.

Madden’s big fourth quarter run typified the Trojans’ physical effort.  With less than four minutes remaining and USC clinging to a six-point lead, Madden hit the line of scrimmage on 3rd-and-1 and appeared to be hemmed up by a crowd of Cal defenders.  But Madden bounced off the pile, moved outside and ran     14 yards for a momentum-changing first down that kept the clock moving.

The Bears (5-3, 2-3) looking to force a punt and give the ball back to Goff for a potential game-winning touchdown drive instead watched the Trojans run out the clock.  Without all-conference caliber center Max Turek and the overall depth that sunk USC in losses to Stanford and Notre Dame, the Trojans didn’t seem capable of such a physical offensive effort.  But they managed just fine thanks to Madden and Ronald Jones, who led all rushers with 80 yards and a touchdown.

Cody Kessler, USC’s more than capable passer, assisted with an 18 of 22 performance through the air that didn’t produce a bunch of yards but kept the chains moving, just what Cal couldn’t afford.

“Our defense did great, but offensively on that side of the ball, our offensive line won this game along with the running backs.  I was so proud of them.  They did such a great job,” Kessler said.

The Bears and Goff didn’t help their cause with two interceptions and a fumble.  USC’s two-way star, Adoree Jackson picked off Goff in the third quarter and raced 40 yards for a touchdown return that put USC up 24-7.  Jackson’s score was the second of two, third quarter scores that broke open a close game that USC led 10-7 at the half.

Cal has dropped a three straight after a 5-0 start and a two-week stay in the nation’s Top 25.  Now the Bears must reverse their fortunes and attempt to win at least two of their four remaining games against Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford and Arizona State to secure their first bowl appearance since 2011.

As far as getting even with the Trojans, the Bears may have even bigger issues going forward.  Interim coach Clay Helton has stabilized the USC program after Coach Steve Sarkisian was fired with two big wins.  If Helton is retained, the Trojans may maintain their momentum in recruiting and stay among the Pac-12’s best programs.  If so, Cal will be left to talk about scoring first on Saturday, their 7-0 lead marked the first time Cal has held a lead against USC since 2009.

“We’ve let some games slip away from us,” Goff said.  “We’ve let some games slip away from us.  We started off hot and haven’t been able a game in these last three games.  But I don’t think that’s going to keep us down.”

Goff threw for 272 yards on the afternoon and became only the 92nd passer to surpass 10,000 yards passing in his collegiate career.  Daniel Lasco returned to health with 64 yards rushing and a touchdown on 15 carries.  And Bryce Treggs had four catches for 85 yards, extending his streak of catching at least one pass in every game he’s played at California.

The Bears travel to suddenly-hot Oregon next week in attempt to end their three-game losing streak.