Bubble burst: Cal offense disappears again in regular-season finale at Colorado 54-46

Colorado guard George King, center, is trapped with the ball by California guard Jabari Bird, left, and forward Ivan Rabb in the second half of an NCAA basketball game Saturday, March 4, 2017, in Boulder, Colo. Colorado won 54-46. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

By Morris Phillips

If the NCAA tournament committee were so inclined, they could have tuned in to the Pac-12 Network Saturday afternoon to see if the Cal Bears could pass the “eye test” for inclusion to the upcoming tournament.

If so, the committee would have been saddled with eye soreness watching a struggling team whose offense has mysteriously disappeared.

Cal’s offense was missing in action as the Bears fell short in the regular season finale at Colorado, 54-46.  Three days after the Bears shot 27 percent from the field, and lost by 30 at Utah, they were similarly saddled by anemic 27 percent shooting at Colorado.

“You just can’t keep getting stops and stops without scoring,” said Jabari Bird, who led Cal with just 11 points.

The recent spate of losing (five losses in six games) has taken the Bears from likely inclusion in March Madness to barely under consideration. Had the committee tuned in Saturday, they would have bypassed opportunities to watch bubble occupants Vanderbilt and Xavier in the same broadcast window as the Commodores upset Florida, and the once Top Ten-ranked Musketeers ended a six-game losing streak at DePaul.

While Xavier and Vanderbilt on first glance seem to be similarly challenged teams like Cal, the key differences are significant.  Cal has been anemic against top competition, going 1-7 against the nation’s Top 50, beating only USC in January.  Bubble teams–all from major conferences and many with more overall losses than Cal–have each pulled at least two Top 50 upsets, and none are the anemic offensively as Cal.

Consequently, the Bears (19-11, 10-8) are listed among the next four out in ESPN’s up-to-the-minute bracketology, at the bottom of a list of eight schools that are closest to NCAA inclusion, but are currently believed to be out.  With the regular season concluded, Cal’s only path is to win three consecutive days next week in Las Vegas, likely needing to beat Washington, UCLA and Oregon to reinvent their tournament resume.

 

Cal beat up by Utah, NCAA aspirations take a major hit

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By Morris Phillips

How will the Cal Bears get past their worst loss in two years as their NCAA tournament aspirations hang in the balance?

They’ll have to win games, there’s no other alternative.

Utah pounced on the Bears Thursday night, winning 74-44, the Utes’ biggest win ever in the series between the two schools.  On a night Cal needed to come up with a big win, they surprisingly played their worst game.  Offensively, they were present only in the game’s opening moments.  Defensively, the Bears never showed up.

“I don’t think we competed at the level we normally compete at,” Cal coach Cuonzo Martin said.  “You have to give Utah a lot of credit for making that happen.”

After the game was tied at six, the Utes scored 32 of the game’s next 42 points. Cal couldn’t defend the paint, allowing numerous drives to the bucket.  Utah’s Lorenzo Bonham and Sedrick Barefield hit key three-pointers as well.

Inexplicably, as the Bears fell down 20 at halftime, Ivan Rabb took only one shot. The Bears failed to get their preseason-All American the ball, and Rabb too easily slid into the background.

Rabb would finish with eight points, eight rebounds, but miss all three of his shot attempts.  Jabari Bird struggled too, scoring just six points while taking only seven shots.

The Bears have dropped four of five, and their desired fourth place finish in the Pac-12 regular season standings is in jeopardy.  The Bears (19-10, 10-7) will have to beat Colorado on Saturday to gain a bye in the Pac-12 tournament.

Most prognosticators have the Bears as one of the first four teams out as Cal has faltered, and a couple of other teams on the bubble, Illinois, Georgia and others have picked up key wins.  Consequently, the Bears may be NIT-bound if they can’t beat Colorado, then win their conference tournament opener, likely a rematch against Utah.

Cal climbing in the Pac-12 standings after home win over Stanford

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By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY–So what did first-year Stanford head coach Jerod Haase most desire on the occasion of his return to Berkeley, two decades after he was a freshman starter on one of Cal’s most memorable teams?

Certainly not the opportunity to reminisce.   For Haase, a few more made baskets would have been more like it.

Haase’s Cardinal survived a cold-shooting first half, but when their accuracy numbers grew worse after halftime, Cal ran away from Stanford for a 66-55 win at sold out Haas Pavilion.

“I think we are improving on our process and implementing our gameplan. I really do,” Haase said after his Cardinal shot 39 percent against Cal, below their 42 percent shooting on the season, which ranks last in the Pac-12.

“I really do think we are making progress, I just wished we played a little more efficiently and knocked some more shots down and all that progress will lead to success and success on offense for sure.”

So long ago was Haase’s brief career at Cal, he didn’t play at Haas.  Back then, the building was far cozier and named Harmon Gym.  Haase was spurned by Mike Montgomery at Stanford, but revered by Lou Campanelli’s staff at Cal. The whirlwind recruiting process brought Haase from his home in South Lake Tahoe to Berkeley in the same class as local star/legend Jason Kidd.

Haase’s response to being teamed with Kidd?

“I just want to know: If I beat him out, will I get to start over him?” Haase recalled.

Haase settled for a starting role opposite Kidd, just one of the things that wasn’t as he expected in his season as a Bear. Campanelli was fired half way through that season, felled by the caustic language he used to address his players. Two weeks prior to the coaching change, Haase’s father Gary passed away after a sudden illness.

And after just one season at Cal, Haase transferred to Kansas.  The now 42-year old coach has yet to speak publicly about the circumstances of his departure, and that stance didn’t change on Sunday night.

When asked if this was his first return visit to Cal since his days in a Bears’ uniform, Haase’s questioner, KRON sportsreporter Vern Glenn in his signature, upbeat style, offered the coach a path to say a few, positive words. But Haase didn’t bite, pausing briefly before simply saying “yes” to Glenn, and moving on to the next question.

Both Cal and Stanford are moving on as well, now halfway through the conference season.  The Bears improved to 6-3 in Pac-12 play, moving into a three-way tie with UCLA and Utah for third place behind conference leaders Oregon and 9-0 Arizona.

Ivan Rabb led the Bears with 25 points and 13 rebounds, his sixth, consecutive double-double at home.  Jabari Bird added 17, including back-to-back threes late that allowed Cal to increase its lead to 15.

After shooting just 37 percent in the first half, Cal’s accuracy sharpened dramatically as the Bears missed only six times (11 for 17) the remainder of the game.

“It hit us in the mouth early on, but we just were missing good shots, Bird said. “We kept feeding down low, Ivan got going, I got going.  It wasn’t too difficult, we really just needed to start making shots.”

The Bears (15-6, 6-3) continue their three-game homestand on Thursday when the Utah Utes visit Haas. If any two remaining games possess a swing effect for Cal, it’s the home-and-home with the Utes, who have the same record as Cal, and like the Bears, lack marquee wins, and currently project to miss the NCAA tournament.

Bounce back on the Oregon trail: Cal rebounds against outmanned OSU

Oregon State’s Drew Eubanks (12) get his shot blocked by California’s Kingsley Okoroh (22) during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in Corvallis, Ore., Saturday, Jan. 21, 2017. California won 69-58. (AP Photo/Timothy J. Gonzalez)

By Morris Phillips

The two-tiered nature of the Cal Bears’ season continued at Corvallis on Saturday night.

After getting blown out at Oregon by the hyper-speed Ducks on Thursday,  the Bears found the pace more to their liking against Oregon State in a 69-58 victory. The Bears improved to 9-1 when they hold their opponent to 60 points or fewer.

While the Bears haven’t had any success against their four, highest-rated opponents, they have had success against everyone else, going 14-2 against anyone not named Arizona, Oregon, UCLA or Virginia.  Unfortunately,  the NCAA tournament committee won’t take notice unless there’s a breakthrough, and the Bears have just two scheduled opportunities remaining: February 11 at Arizona, and the February 22 rematch with the Ducks in Berkeley.

If there’s a Bears’ barometer for success than it would have to be sophomore Ivan Rabb, who missed his first eight shots against the Ducks, but was far more settled against the Beavers with a team-best 18 points, eight rebounds.

“Shots weren’t dropping and I wasn’t getting to the free-throw line.  But tonight I made an effort to get to the line, knock down shots, and just be more patient on the block. Overall, my teammates played better, I played better and we were way better as a team,” Rabb said.

The injury-riddled Beavers dropped their seventh in a row, losing to Cal, while the Ducks extended their school-record win streak to 15 in their win over Cal on Thursday.  So the contrast between the two challenges couldn’t be more extreme.  But the pace of the two games was probably more telling, as the Bears aren’t ideally suited for transition basketball, and benefitted from being matched with the more deliberate Beavers.

Cal got little resistance from OSU after the game was tied at 9 with seven minutes elapsed.   Cal scored the next basket and led for the final 33 minutes without enduring as much as one Oregon State run.  OSU shot just 40 percent from the field, and missed 24 of their 40 shots inside the three-point arc.

“I just think we have more bodies with more experience. Not that they didn’t play hard. They have a lot of talent, they have young talent,” coach Cuonzo Martin said.

“We just had to utilize our experience, our older guys and also our bodies, try to run in transition and ultimately get to Ivan Rabb to make plays.”

Charlie Moore added 15 for Cal (14-6, 5-3), and Jabari Bird  finished with 12.

Drew Eubanks led Oregon State with 22 points, and sophomore Stevie Thompson Jr. added 19 points, six rebounds.  The Beavers were without leading scorer Tres Tinkle, who has missed the last 14 games with a broken wrist.

The Bears have a week to prepare for rival Stanford,  who visits Haas Pavilion on Sunday. If the Bears win, they’ll post a respectable 6-3 record at the Pac-12 schedule’s halfway point.  And projecting forward, the Bears could win 21 or 22 games, without pulling an eye-opening upset.

Unfortunately, that might not be enough for the NCAA selection committe, and far more palatable for the NIT.

Too much, too many shooters: No. 11 Oregon blows past Cal, 86-63

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By Morris Phillips

Cal’s current situation is this: the opponents the Bears really need to beat, are indeed really good, as exhibited by the host Oregon Ducks on Thursday evening.

The Bears fell to 0-4 against the four, highest-rated opponents on their regular season schedule after Oregon cruised to a 86-63 victory, their 15th straight win tying a school record set 104 years ago.

As if to celebrate the occasion, the Ducks put on a shooting display that would have caused Dr. Robert Naismith to alter the shooting dimensions of his emerging game way back in 1913.  Oregon shot 58 percent from the field, including 11 made threes, the most Cal had allowed in almost two years.

But shooting was just the byproduct of the Ducks’ stifling defense, and then their unselfishness ball distribution on the offensive end. Oregon blocked 10 shots and forced 20 Cal turnovers, which led to their balanced offensive attack, where they compiled 19 assists on their 29 made baskets.

With those sparkling numbers it seemed inconsequential that Cal’s leading scorer, Ivan Rabb missed his first eight shots and finished with just four points. With Rabb struggling, and Oregon’s crisp play, the game was decided early. The Ducks led by 14 points at the half, then maintained a double-digit lead for all but one minute of the second half.

“With the threes we got a little momentum going there in the first half,” Oregon coach Dana Altman said. “We played pretty well.”

Only an injury suffered by preseason All-American Dillon Brooks before halftime took away from the victory.  Brooks suffered a lower leg injury and missed the second half. The fear being that Brooks may have reinjured his leg that forced him to miss the season’s first two games.

Cal was led by Jabari Bird with 21 points. Charlie Moore was Cal’s only other double-digit scorer with 10 points, six rebounds, five assists, but the Ducks harassed the freshman into six turnovers.

Oregon got 26 points from big guy Jordan Bell, the recipient of the Ducks’ ball movement.  Tyler Dorsey had 16, and Casey Benson contributed 15.

The loss ended Cal’s modest three game win streak, while Oregon extended its home streak to 37 games, also a school record.

The Bears will need to beat Arizona, UCLA or Oregon to catch the attention of the NCAA tournament committee along with beating lesser opponents remaining on their schedule.  But those opportunities are dwindling.  The Bears don’t see UCLA again, unless it’s in the conference tournament, while they have a trip to Arizona on February 11,  and Oregon visits Berkeley February 22.

The Bears play in Corvallis against struggling Oregon State on Saturday.

All swagged out–for a half: No. 4 UCLA runs past Cal at Pauley Pavilion

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California forward Don Coleman (14) goes to the basket against UCLA forward T.J. Leaf (22) UCLA guard Aaron Holiday (3) during an NCAA college basketball game in Los Angeles, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2017. UCLA beat California 81-71. (AP Photo/Michael Owen Baker)

By Morris Phillips

At the end of a mighty impressive half of basketball, UCLA’s Lonzo Ball turned toward the tunnel, pulled out his jersey, and casually ran ahead of his teammates, only looking up to reach a few, congratulory hands.

That Ball did this immediately after an unique, behind-the-back dribble into a cold-blooded, pull-up three from 26 feet at the buzzer to extend the Bruins’ lead to 20 said it all.

Yet, Ball said very little.

How could this freshman phenom–likely the most talented recruit to sign with the iconic program in the past decade–eschew a quick celebration with his teammates, or bother with a self-affirming yell after such a feat?

Well, welcome to the world of Lonzo Ball and the return to prominence of UCLA basketball.

Credit to Cal for not allowing the Hollywood stuff extend past halftime-the Bears methodically chipped away at UCLA’s lead, getting within five points with 46 seconds remaining–before succumbing 81-71 at Pauley Pavilion.

“We got careless offensively, the ball stopped moving, we got stagnant, and then we didn’t defend,” UCLA coach Steve Alford admitted. “In the first half, I thought that was as good of defense we have had any 20 minutes all year long, and then again we thought it was going to be easy and we shut it down in the second half.”

Those are valuable lessons to learn. You can’t do that in this league.”

Cal’s lessons to learn list was slightly lengthier than UCLA’s, starting with the double teams thrown at post presence Ivan Rabb again were effective in slowing down the Bears offensively.  The Bears shot just 39 percent for the game, and managed only seven assists on 27 made baskets.

“They really guarded Ivan in the post, and they were really good at switching, which took away the pick and roll,” guard Grant Mullins said. “From that, it just made us rely more on defense.”

“We were really stagnant, and we took a lot of bad shots,” Rabb said.  “I just didn’t have what it took in the first half. I just had to remind myself to keep pushing; I should have really done that at the beginning of the game.”

UCLA (15-1, 2-1) took control early, scoring on seven, consecutive possessions at one point to establish a double-digit lead.  A good chunk of Bryce Alford’s game-best 24 points came during this run as the Bruins proved unselfish offensively as advertised.

Alford had plenty of help, starting with freshman T.J. Leaf’s 17 points, 11 rebounds and Ball’s 14 points, seven assists.  Ball wasn’t perfect; he missed six shots from distance, only hitting his halftime buzzer beater from three. And he wasn’t completely quiet either, barking at his teammates when the score grew tight in the second half.

“Lonzo came in as a quiet guy on the court but loud in the locker room and off the court,” Bryce Alford said.  “On the court he just takes care of business. His development on talking more on the court is not something we need from him all the time. But when he does talk he does a great job with it.”

“They really came back with a couple minutes left and we just didn’t guard,” Ball said. “That’s the one thing we have to keep working on. We know our offense is going to be there and it did again tonight. It’s the defense they we need to keep working on.”

Cal (10-5, 1-2) allowed as many as 44 points in a first half for the first time this season. The Bears have dropped three of four games in a five-game stretch featuring four ranked opponents with No. 25 USC up on Sunday.

Mullins led Cal with 19 points, Rabb added 17 points and a career-best 20 rebounds.  Don Coleman had his best outing of his career to date with 15 points in 22 minutes off the bench. Cal’s edge on the glass was mitigated by 13 turnovers, and UCLA’s six, blocked shots.

NOTES: The Bruins have won two straight after dropping their only game of the season–at the buzzer at pre-season, conference favorite Oregon.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amidst the most difficult stretch of their season, the Cal Bears come up with a critical win over ASU

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By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY–Grant Mullins hadn’t been himself. The Ivy League graduate transfer gifted just one season in the Cal basketball program, left briefly to be with his family following the death of his grandmother in late November.  Upon his return, according to coach Cuonzo Martin, the aggressive, offensive dynamo was off his game.

That’s when the observant coach decided to take Mullins’ foot off the gas. Mullins was removed from the starting lineup for a few games, only to return to starting on Sunday night against Arizona State.

“I felt like it was the right thing to do to put him back in the lineup, because he didn’t lose his spot-he went home to be with his family. I didn’t think he was playing at the level and didn’t have his legs on him until now,” Martin said.

Martin’s hunch regarding Mullins proved spot on when Cal’s 21-4 run to end the ballgame broke open a close game in the Bears’ 81-65 win.

The win broke a two-game losing streak for Cal, in the midst of a daunting stretch of four Top 25-opponents in five games that concludes this weekend in Los Angeles.

Mullins and Ivan Rabb led Cal with 20 points each.  In a game where nearly 40 percent of the 117 combined shot attempts for both teams were from three-point range, the advantage would have appeared to go to the guard heavy, perimeter-oriented Sun Devils.

But instead, the nod went to Cal with Rabb and Mullins the biggest beneficiaries.  Mullins hit a season-best five threes on eight attempts, and Rabb, Cal’s accomplished post man, stepped away and buried both of his attempts from distance.

“It’s a big part of my game now,” Rabb said.  “It makes them guard me on the outside–especially when we go small–it really opens the floor.  When I’m able to make that shot, it means we have five shooters on the court.”

With the game on the line and six minutes remaining, Cal trailed by one point as Rabb sat after picking up his fourth foul.  Nervous time no doubt for the Bears, but dunks by Kingsley Okoroh and Jabari Bird sparked Cal’s closing run in which they hit their final eight shot attempts.

“When Rabb went out with his fourth, I don’t think we capitalized on that the way we needed to with him not on the floor,” ASU coach Bobby Hurley said. “Couldn’t get a lead and then he came back in. They had a few plays that stood out.  I thought that Bird’s back cut and dunk, and Okoroh’s put up and dunk were momentum-shifting plays.  So we just didn’t handle the last several minutes the way you’d hope.”

Arizona State (8-7, 1-1) was limited to one made field goal over the game’s final 9:44, and they missed 17 of their 24 attempts from distance.  ASU leading scorer Tra Holder had 14 points, while Obinna Oleka led the Sun Devils with 18 and five rebounds.

For Cal (10-4, 1-1), Bird had 16, and Sam Singer 10 off the bench.  The Bears’ 11 made threes was one off their season high.

The Bears visit Pauley Pavilion Thursday for a date with one-loss UCLA, followed by a date with No. 25 USC.  Both the Bruins and Trojans are 14-1 with both losses coming this last weekend at Oregon.

HURLEY’S BIG COLLEGIATE FINALE TRUMPED BY CAL AND KIDD: Arizona State coach Hurley probably had enough of Cal even before Sunday’s loss as he saw his college career at Duke end at the hands of Todd Bozeman’s Bears in March 1993 in a second round NCAA tournament game in Rosemont, IL.

Hurley was spectacular that night finishing with 32 points, nine assists and one turnover as he tried to rally his Blue Devils from a big, early deficit.

But Cal prevailed behind 28 points from Lamond Murray.  Current NBA Bucks’ coach Jason Kidd, just a freshman matched against the two-time NCAA champion Hurley, had 11 points and 14 assists.  And current Stanford coach Jerod Haase contributed 13 points on three made threes for Cal.

The Bears would see their NCAA run end in a Sweet 16 loss to Kansas and former USF coach Rex Walters.

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.

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.

 

Rabb in foul trouble, no Bird–no problem: Cal gets past La Tech in overtime, 68-59

calbears.com photo: The Cal Bears Ivan Rabb throws down against Louisiana Tech’s defense at Haas Pavilion at UC Berkeley

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY–On Wednesday, with Ivan Rabb on the bench in foul trouble, Jabari Bird and Kameron Rooks in street clothes, and Louisiana Tech breathing down their collective necks in a close ballgame late, the Cal Bears passed with flying colors.

You don’t survive this kind of adversity without a bunch of characters, and Cal had them, from Kingsley Okoroh, in his lengthiest and best turn as a collegian, to steady Sam Singer, aggressive Grant Mullins and unshakeable Charlie Moore.  In those final seven minutes of regulation—without Rabb after he picked up his fourth foul until he returned for the final 2:36–the Bears would go from up five to down one twice, then tied again with 1:07 remaining.  But those four, unsung Bears and a couple of others, kept Cal afloat, taking all the shots even after Rabb returned for the final minutes and all of overtime.

Yes, Rabb was the leading scorer with a career-best 25 points, but his offensive contribution in the final 12 plus minutes of Cal’s 68-59 overtime victory was five makes out of six from the free throw line.  The pre-season All-American’s teammates did the rest.

“I told our guys I think this game made us a better team,” coach Cuonzo Martin said.  “Often times, you don’t see that level of athleticism, length and physicality on the floor–with speed.  Especially in the last maybe four minutes of the first half in transition they really got the best of us.  Our transition defense, we didn’t do a great job.”

Louisiana Tech was a handful in all aspects with one exception: they didn’t shoot well at all (27 percent), and went the final 4:18 of overtime without scoring.  Other than that, the Bulldogs competed, scratching their way back into the ballgame before halftime (as Martin described) and staying in it until overtime.  Tech had success defending the mercurial freshman, Moore and their 1-3-1 zone look utilized in the second half was effective.  And the Techsters didn’t budge with Rabb, taking the ball right at him, which eventually landed the 6’10” sophomore in foul trouble.

“They didn’t stop,” Rabb said.  “They didn’t let up at all and they continued to push us and we responded.  As long as we continue to respond when that pressure hits, that’s all that matters.”

The Bears won for the 24th consecutive time at home, a streak that’s currently the sixth best nationally, and a sure sign that this club has made itself comfortable at Haas Pavilion.  But good fortune has its place in the streak, and it cropped up Wednesday when Qiydar Davis left early for Louisiana Tech with what is being called a serious knee injury, and Jacobi Boykins and DaQuan Bracey nearly joined Davis on the bench when they had physical issues as well.

But Cal soldiered on as well, finding out that Rooks will miss more than a month after knee surgery, and Bird remains out indefinitely with his back spasms.  Bird would have been much needed against Tech with his length and shooting ability, but one after another, this group of Bears keep things together.

Okoroh was the biggest surprise, playing 40 minutes and fighting fatigue while coming up with nine points, 12 rebounds, five blocks and four assists.  The excitable Okoroh couldn’t stop talking afterwards, but his play talked plenty during the game, catching Martin’s attention.

“That’s 40 minutes and he didn’t foul out,” Martin said of Okoroh.  “And he does a great job keeping his hands high.  (In the off-season) he spent a lot of time playing defense without fouling, keeping his hands high, moving his feet and he does a great job.  And you don’t realize how big and physical he is until you’re up against him the whole night.”