Toothless Bears: Cal run over in surprising, overtime loss at Oregon State

nall-rolling

By Morris Phillips

At some point on Saturday night in Corvallis, unheralded running back Ryan Nall transformed into a state-of-the-art, runaway freight train.

Then, 221 yards and three touchdowns later, Nall’s metamorphosis reached a conclusion as the Oregon State sophomore suffered a leg injury and was carted off with 11 minutes remaining to play, and OSU leading Cal, 34-24.

While what transpired following Nall’s departure may have been dramatic, it didn’t affect the game’s outcome, a 47-44 overtime loss for the Bears, all of it placed at the feet of Cal’s porous run defense which made Nall a temporary superstar, and was so poor that a 17-point Bears’ rally to force overtime went for naught.

Coach Sonny Dykes wasn’t fooled by the final score, acknowledging his team’s defensive effort—especially before halftime and the first play after halftime—put the team in an impossible hole, even as Davis Webb and the offense rallied to force overtime.

“I told them guys, I didn’t think we deserved to win,” Dykes said.  “We sleepwalked through the first half, for sure.”

While OSU came in as decided underdogs, losers of 12 straight Pac-12 conference games, dating back to November 2014, and looking for their first FBS win under second-year coach Gary Andersen, the Bears came with a leaky run defense that more than leveled the playing field between the two teams, and belied the encouraging outing Cal enjoyed in beating ranked Utah last week.

Against Oregon State, the Bears allowed 474 yards rushing (almost half of that to Nall) and allowed OSU to convert 8 of their 12 third-down opportunities.  The 474 yards ranks at the biggest rushing total in Oregon State school history against a conference opponent, and goes a long way to explaining how Cal trailed 10-0 after a quarter, 17-10 at the half, and 34-17 after three quarters.

On the first play of the second half, Nall enjoyed his tour de force, an 80-yard run that increased OSU’s lead to 24-10.

“You can’t come out that flat versus any team.  Any given day, anybody can be beaten,” Cal linebacker Ray Davison said.

Offensively, the Bears were out of sorts as well with OSU having success disguising their defensive looks and forcing Cal stars, Webb and Chad Hansen to play tentatively.  Both Webb and Hansen had their least productive games of the season to date with Webb needing 44 pass attempts (completing 23) to reach 118 yards passing, and Hansen catching four of those for just 16 yards.

“We were just trying to find ways to mix up our looks a little bit and make it a little tough for them to figure it out,” OSU assistant Derrick Odum said.

Starting outside linebacker Titus Failauga missed the game for Oregon State, as did safety Jay Irvine.  Nickelback Dwayne Williams was lost to injury during the game, leaving OSU with backups at two spots in their secondary.  But Treston Decoud, nephew of former Cal standout Thomas Decoud, drew the tough assignment of slowing Hansen, and the Beavers somehow held up defensively.

With both stars held in check, Cal’s running game picked up the slack with Tre Watson and Khalfani Muhammad combing for 299 yards rushing and three touchdowns.  Both backs scored in Cal’s late rally to tie, with Muhammad scoring on a 50-yards run with 2:39 remaining to bring the Bears within, 41-38.

After being held in check for three quarters, Hansen also suffered an injury, leaving the field with eight minutes remaining in regulation, walking gingerly on his left leg.

After Nall departed for OSU, Darrell Garretson and Artavis Pierce picked up the slack running the ball.  Cal had to settle for a field goal on their only possession in overtime.  Following that, Garretson scored the game winner for Oregon State, racing into the end zone nearly untouched from 16 yards out.

The loss—on the heels of two Cal wins over Top 25 opponents—dropped the Bears into the middle of the pack in the Pac-12 North.  At 3-3 instead of 4-2, the Bears have a lot of work to do in order to become bowl eligible and/or be a factor in the conference race.  What’s certain is the Bears will have to display more energy against better opponents with Oregon and USC next up on their schedule after they take next weekend off.

Cal survives game’s final minutes and beats No. 18 Utah despite huge statistical disadvantage

AP photo: Cal’s James Looney stops Utah’s Zack Moss on the game’s final play.

 

By Morris Phillips

While Utah ran most of the plays and bludgeoned Cal with their running game throughout, the Bears made almost all the big plays, including the game-winning goal line stand at the end.

Cal held on to beat No. 18 Utah, the Bears second win this season over a ranked opponent, despite a statistical disparity so unusually large, it was difficult for the game’s participants to explain what had just transpired.

From the Bears’ perspective, only one thing could explain their ability to protect a slim five-point in the final moments as Utah had six opportunities at a game-winning score from inside Cal’s 10-yard line: self-belief.

“The players just kept saying, ‘Coach, we got this.  We got it.  We got you,’” California coach Sonny Dykes said of much-maligned defense.  “They just kept telling me that over and over again.  Again, you’ve got to give them credit for believing in themselves.  Again, six cracks inside the 10, t0 not let Utah in the end zone just shows their character and how hard they work.”

While Davis Webb and the Bears’ offense clearly had this, coming up with four touchdown passes—all at least 24 yards in length, and two of those in the first quarter, spotting Cal a 14-0 lead—Dykes’ defense bent throughout the game, made malleable by the Utes’ powerful running game that kept the chains moving with 54 rush attempts.

But none of those 54 went for more than 13 yards, and on the game’s final play, the Utes’ Zach Moss ran for one yard and into the waiting arms of Cal’s James Looney, when he needed two to win the game.

In the final sequence, Utah’s six plays inside Cal’s 10-yard line amounted to almost nothing.  With Cal leading 28-23, and the Utes at Cal’s 9-yard line, Zack Moss ran for two yards, then Armand Shyne was stuffed for no gain.   Cal’s pass rush came up big on the next play, sacking quarterback Troy Williams for a four-yard loss.

On fourth down, Utah got a reprieve, drawing a pass interference penalty on Cal’s Marloshawn Franklin Jr. that set them up with a first down at Cal’s 2-yard line.  The referees then mistakenly charged the Utes with their second time out, one that Utah head coach Kyle Whittingham said he never asked for.

Then Moss tried the Bears’ run defense again, only to be stuffed for a one-yard gain.  After Utah’s third timeout, Williams threw too strong to Evan Moeai in the flat, an incomplete pass that left the Utes with a final shot with four seconds remaining.

But Moss was stuffed on that final play, touching a cathartic rush to the field for all those on the Cal sideline.

So how was Cal able to hold on in a game in which the Utes ran twice as many plays (97 to 49 for Cal) and held the ball for 41 of the 60 minutes?

The Bears made big plays, two of which came from their stars, Webb and the nation’s leading receiver, Chad Hansen.  The first came less than two minutes in, when Hansen slipped behind a Ute defender for a 40-yard pass play that put Cal up 7-0.

Two possessions later, Webb hooked up with fabulous freshman Demetris Robertson for a 39-yard pass play and the Bears led 14-0.

The next four Bears’ possessions resulted in three punts and a Webb interception.  That stretch into the third quarter allowed the Utah running game to get locked in, and they took a 17-14 lead on Shyne’s 1-yard run late in the third quarter.

But Webb and Hansen answered back, this time on a pretty timing pattern in the corner of the end zone and Cal led 21-17.

Robertson’s second touchdown catch saw the freshman get behind the defense on a 56-yard pass play and the Bears appeared to be in control, leading 28-17 with 9:03 remaining.  Robertson, the Bears’ highest-rated recruit, has performed as advertised, with five touchdowns in his first 15 receptions as a collegian.

But Utah wasn’t finished, scoring on their next possession to trim Cal’s lead to five.  After Cal couldn’t get a first down, the ensuing punt set up Utah for their final push which would come up a yard short.

The Bears hit the road next Saturday, traveling to Corvallis to face the Beavers.  Oregon State suffered through a rough afternoon on Saturday at Boulder, where they lost 47-6 to Colorado.

 

 

 

Injury-depleted Cal loses NCAA tournament opener to Hawaii

 

Cal deflated

By Morris Phillips

Life goes on. Coach Cuonzo Martin didn’t opt for descriptive or dramatic in dissecting Cal’s disappointing loss to Hawaii, instead Martin chalked it up to the fickle ways of college basketball on the game’s biggest stage.

That and the confident, gutsy play of the Rainbow Warriors.

“It’s tough for young guys to overcome, but for us as a staff, as men, this is life,” Martin said of the 77—66 NCAA first round loss in Spokane, Washington. “And like Jordan (Mathews) said, you deal with these things all the time. I would rather deal with them now than 15, 2o years down the road. So, it’s part of it. It’s no big deal. We still have to lace them up and play the game. I think Hawaii won the game tonight.”

While Hawaii built an early lead, and nursed it over the game’s final 30 minutes—with a few anxious moments midway through the second half—the Bears wilted, losing senior leader Tyrone Wallace and fired assistant coach Yann Hufnagel this week, then finding out just minutes before tip that they would be without Jabari Bird as well, felled by back spasms.

From the start, the Bears struggled to hold on to the ball and shoot it when they held on to it. Cal finished with 16 turnovers and 41 percent shooting, not nearly crisp enough play to overcome Hawaii’s 51 percent shooting for the game.   Seldom used reserves Brandon Chauca, Roger Moute a Bidias and Stephen Domingo gifted with additional playing time in the absence of Wallace and Bird, did little with it. Cal’s trio of reserves finished 0 for 11 from the field, 0 for 7 from beyond the arc.

Of course, with Cal down two perimeter threats, the Rainbow Warriors packed in their zone, leaving the Bears little opportunity to get to the basket. With that avenue taken away from Cal, their outside shooting failed them, hitting just 3 of 19 attempts.

Jordan Mathews, starting in place of Bird, led Cal with 23 points. Ivan Rabb added 13 points, 12 rebounds and Sam Singer added 12. The Bears finished their season 23-11 as one of five Pac-12 teams who failed to advance to the tournament’s second round.

Guard Quincy Smith led Hawaii with a career-best 19 points and center Stefan Jankovic added 16. The Rainbow Warriors won in the NCAA tournament for the first time, after losses each of its four other tourney berths.

“Well, I think Obama’s bracket is still intact,” Jankovic said. “I think he picked us. For the next round it won’t be because I think we’re going to be in upset city. But it’s great. I remember a couple years back watching Florida Gulf Coast and Dunk City and it’s just, the whole world watches, the whole world stops for two or three weeks or however long it is, and just to be part of that is really kind of special.”

Martin and the Cal players deflected all questions regarding the status of star freshman Rabb and Jaylen Brown going forward, as both players are projected to be lottery picks in the upcoming NBA draft. If they do depart, Brown will leave after slumping badly in the season’s final five games. On Friday, Brown was quiet again, finishing with four points on 1 of 6 shooting and seven turnovers.

The Bears entered the NCAA tournament with their highest seeding ever as No. 4. But they couldn’t overcome the personnel losses or foul trouble prompted by the game’s officials.   Forty-nine personal fouls were called in the game, 25 against Cal.

 

Cal vs. Hawaii in the NCAA tournament: Here’s what to know

By Morris Phillips

California will face Hawaii in their NCAA tournament opener on Friday at Spokane, WA. The fourth-seeded Bears could face fifth-seeded Maryland and top-seeded Kansas in successive rounds if they’re fortunate enough to advance.

So here’s what to know:

The Bears were seeded slightly higher than expected, with most prognosticators pegging them as a five, but seven Pac-12 teams qualified, and the conference’s elevated profile (over the Big Ten specifically) was obvious in the finished brackets. But it’s just as apparent that Cal is the lowest-regarded four seed, facing a potential matchup with a five in the Terrapins that they probably will be an underdog against. Also, if the teams are s-curved 1 through-16, then a regional semi matchup against overall number one-seed Kansas would be the fate of the lowest four seed.

“I thought it was a good seed,” Coach Cuonzo Martin said. “Obviously a very talented Hawaii team and also good to play in Spokane. We won’t have to do a lot of heavy traveling so that’s always good.”

“I feel like the sky’s the limit,” Tyrone Wallace said. “I think we’ve played some very good teams very tight until the end and so at this point in the season anybody can get hot. We just have to make shots because a game can go either way.”

In Hawaii, the Bears will see the Big West regular season and tourney champs, a team with size and the inside-outside combo of point guard Roderick Bobbitt and 6’11” Stefan Jankovic, the Big West player of the year. If Jankovic has difficulties against Cal’s more than capable front line, then Bobbitt will be the man for Cal to stop. Bobbitt, the Oakland native, shot 8 for 12 from the field and scored 32 points against Oklahoma in Hawaii’s narrow loss at home to the Sooners back in December.

The Rainbows are coached by first-year, first time head coach Eran Ganot, a former St. Mary’s assistant under Randy Bennett, who is well-versed in the Gael’s screen-and-roll based offense. The 33-year old Ganot would seem to be less experienced than Cal’s Martin, who won three NCAA games two seasons ago, but the youthful Hawaii coach was closely linked to St. Mary’s post-season success and the development of Matthew Dellavadova and others.

Cal enters the tournament healthy and rested, with their last game on Friday, giving them a full week of preparation for their opener in Spokane. Also, senior leader Wallace appears back on top of his game after scoring 26 points in the overtime loss to Utah.

The Bears will focus on getting their two freshman in the mindset of playing their best basketball yet, with 6’10” Ivan Rabb becoming a bigger factor offensively and Jaylen Brown needing to regain the shooting touch that propelled him to being named Pac-12 freshman of the year.

In a bit of a scheduling oddity, the Rainbow Warriors and the Bears have just one common opponent, UC Santa Barbara, as Hawaii played no Pac-12 teams and Cal played just one Big West team. Both teams defeated the Gauchos easily, as the Rainbows beat UCSB both home and away.

Hawaii is fiercely protecting that half-a-day of preparation that would have been lost had they returned home on Sunday after beating Long Beach State in the Big West tourney final on Saturday night. The Rainbows will remain in Anaheim for a few extra days, then fly to Spokane in advance of Friday’s opener.

The Bears could experience a long weekend in Spokane as a result of the new NCAA tourney television contract and the wall-to-wall game start times. The Bears open at 11am in Spokane on Friday, but if they advance, may not play until 5pm or after on Sunday.

Seeding is of note for both teams. Hawaii is making its first NCAA appearance since 2002, and its’ first as a member of the Big West. That conference switch paved the way for this being the lowest-seeded Hawaii team to qualify as the previous incarnation of the Rainbows played in the Mountain West, and wouldn’t have been seeded as low as 12th from that more prominent conference. The Bears are seeded fourth, their highest seeding in the history of the program.

Cal has lost just one of 13 meetings with Hawaii in basketball… The Bears are back in the NCAA tournament after two seasons without an appearance… Is Cal better off this time of year under Martin or former coach Mike Montgomery? In Montgomery’s six seasons in Berkeley, the Bears won a conference regular season crown, but had only two NCAA tournament wins. Martin won three NCAA games and made a Sweet 16 appearance in his only tournament appearance as a coach, in 2014 with Tennessee.

Scheduling couldn’t be more important than in college basketball, right behind coaching and personnel. For Cal, the key to losing 10 games, but earning a four seed was undeniably their sneaky tough home schedule in which they went 18-0 with 14 of those 18 opponents in the Top 100 in RPI. Why sneaky? Cal has a win over No. 48 USC among their eight Top 50 wins, and wins over UCSB (97), Arizona State (98, won both home and away) and UCLA (99) among their seven wins among teams ranked 51 to 100.

 

 

 

Utah survives final seconds of regulation, and gets past Cal in Pac-12 semis in overtime

Taylor creates
Utah guard Brandon Taylor (11) passes around California forward Ivan Rabb during overtime of an NCAA college basketball game in the semifinals of the Pac-12 men’s tournament Friday, March 11, 2016, in Las Vegas. Utah won 82-78 in overtime. (AP Photo/John Locher)

By Morris Phillips

Having leads against ranked opponents late hasn’t provided a comfort zone for the Cal Bears this season, and that scenario didn’t play out any differently Friday night in the Pac-12 tournament semifinals.

Cal led 70-68 with four seconds remaining only to see Lorenzo Bonam drive the length of the floor and score at the buzzer to send the game into overtime where the Utes took control and won 82-78.

“It’s okay to lose but we’re going to go down swinging. We’ve talked a lot about believing in ourselves and it was a fortunate play,” Utah Coach Larry Krystowiak said.

The Utes led just twice in the final 14 minutes of regulation, both in the final minute, only to see those leads disappear when Cal’s Jabari Bird came up with a pair of big baskets, the last an offensive rebound, putback and ensuing made free throw that put Cal up with 4.3 seconds remaining. But Bonam’s do or die drive to the hoop provided life for Utah that they ceased in overtime.

“I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t a little bit deflated, and then you assess the situation,” Krystowiak said. “Again, there’s 4.-something seconds left, and if you’re watching college hoops today, the kid hit the 60-foot, 3-point shot, he certainly didn’t think about giving up.”

Cal’s defense which defended Pac-12 Player of the Year Jakob Poeltl one-on-one for most of the game experienced success, holding the Utes to 40 percent shooting during regulation. But in overtime, Utah converted four of five shot attempts and took control.

On the other end, Utah had their hands full stopping Cal’s Tyrone Wallace, who led the Bears with 26 points. But in overtime, Wallace was quiet and the Bears missed nine of 12 shots, many from the perimeter.

The Bears conclude their season 23-10 and await Sunday’s NCAA tournament selections. The Utes advance to Saturday’s tourney final against top-seeded Oregon. Through the first 10 games of the Pac-12 tournament, the higher-seeded team has advanced each time, with Utah surviving two of the tournament’s three overtime contests.

Cal got 13 points each from Bird and Ivan Rabb and 12 from Conference Freshman of the Year, Jaylen Brown. But Brown missed 14 of his 17 shot attempts, including several down the stretch that could have lengthened Cal leads.

The two teams split their two regular season meetings, with both winning at home, setting up the semifinal meeting and dramatic conclusion.

“Both teams battled, both teams played hard, I just thought they made plays down the stretch,” Coach Cuonzo Martin said.

This time, Cal comes up big late in Pac-12 tourney win over OSU

Rabb runnin thangs

By Morris Phillips

In a Pac-12 tournament without a single upset, or much drama in regards to who’s in or out of the upcoming NCAA tournament, Oregon State and Cal did their best to keep the assembled on the edge of their seats.

In a game filled with great plays and scintillating performances, the Bears pulled away late, winning 76-68 over OSU to gain a spot in the tournament semifinals against Utah.   Cal survived the test of an Oregon State team that was attempting to solidify a first NCAA tournament appearance in more than 20 years.

“We knew this time of year it’s anybody’s game and we had to be locked in. Our guys did a good job down the stretch to get a win,” Coach Cuonzo Martin said.

Ivan Rabb led Cal with a career-best 21 points, 15 rebounds including six of the Bears’ final 14 points that came after the game was tied with 4:28 remaining.   Rabb delivered the biggest blow on an offensive rebound, putback and the ensuing free throw that put Cal up 70-63 with 1:22 remaining.

Jordan Matthews provided his own highlight moment, racing off a screen and delivering a catch-and-shoot corner three that increased Cal’s lead to 73-65 with 33 seconds left.

Oregon State fought from behind from the start as Cal established a 17-5 lead less than seven minutes in. Cal led by four at the half, but relinquished the lead twice in the second half right before their final push. OSU freshman Derrick Bruce led the Beavers’ second half surge, and came up with a game-high 25 points despite having never scored more than 11 in a game previously.

Bruce’s big night offset the absence of Tres Tinkle, OSU’s second-leading scorer who missed both Pac-12 tournament games due to a foot injury.

“If we don’t have him show up, it could have been ugly,” OSU coach Wayne Tinkle, father of Tres, said of Bruce.

In the battle within the battle, Cal’s preferred method of attack, the dribble drive met resistance from OSU’s active hands defense led by Gary Payton II. While Rabb thrived inside on post ups and second chance opportunities, Cal’s drivers, Jaylen Brown and Tyrone Wallace were stopped, missing a combing 13 of 15 shots from the field. But time after time Cal responded to OSU’s runs with a big shot or a contribution from Rabb.

Cal didn’t shoot particularly well (43 percent for the game) or dominate the glass. They also missed 13 free throws that kept the Beavers within hailing distance, but their dynamic freshman, Rabb and Brown spearheaded Cal’s advantage in blocks and steals (six blocks, eight steals).

Jabari Bird contributed 20 points to Cal’s effort, and Mathews had 17. The pair of sharpshooters combined to make eight 3-pointers.

The higher-seeded teams advanced for the second straight day in Las Vegas, placing Oregon and Arizona in the tournament’s first semi on Friday at 6pm. The Bears and Utes will face off in the nightcap, expected to start at 8:30pm.

The Bears improved to 23-9 on the season and are projected to be a No. 5 or No. 6 seed in the NCAA tournament. OSU finishes their season 19-12 with five Top 50 wins including wins over each of the top three teams in the Pac-12 (Cal, Oregon and Utah). The Beavers are still hopeful of a bid but could be left out with several key upsets in other conference tournaments.

 

 

 

Arizona surges late, beats Cal to end the Bears’ conference title hopes

York celebrates

By Morris Phillips

For the Cal Bears, it was everything but the finish at Arizona’s imposing McKale Center.

The Bears led 61-53 with 1:52 remaining, when the Wildcats and senior guard Gabe York took over, scoring the final 11 points of the game to shock Cal, 64-61 as York buried two big 3-pointers.

The Bears’ first loss in over a month brought to the end their hopes to share the Pac-12 regular season title. Cal needs a win Saturday at Arizona State to clinch a top-four finish in the league, and a bye in the upcoming Pac-12 tournament in Las Vegas.

“The finish tonight was one of the great finishes that I’ve been a part of,” Arizona Coach Sean Miller said. “Karma has a funny way of coming back around. I’ve listened or heard the different quotes that different people are saying that at the end of the game that Gabe hasn’t necessarily come through. That maybe you need to give the ball to somebody else, etcetera. He looked pretty good at the end of the game tonight.”

While Cal’s February was flawless, Arizona’s was filled with questions about their declining play and losses that took them out of the chase for the conference title. York heard much of the criticism as he failed to come through in a couple of high profile, late game situations. What criticism didn’t come York’s way was heaped on forward senior Ryan Anderson, but both came up big on Thursday.

Anderson finished with 18 points and 10 rebounds, and York compiled all of his 19 points after halftime. York hit three 3-pointers in the final 2:36 even as the Bears knew the ball would be in his hands.

“We have to get him off the line,” Cal coach Cuonzo Martin said. “If anything, make him drive the ball, but he can’t catch and shoot a 3-pointer.”

The loss mirrored Cal’s late game struggles at Virginia in December, as the youthful Bears showed they need additional growth in late-game situations. But for the first 38 minutes, Cal looked like the better team they’ve been for the last month.

The Bears got big performances from post players Kingsley Okoroh and Kameron Rooks, who combined for 10 points and 11 rebounds. Ivan Rabb was just as effective with 15 points and 13 rebounds, but the Bears perimeter players struggled as Tyrone Wallace, Jabari Bird and Jordan Mathews combined to miss 24 of their 34 shot attempts.

“We played tremendous defense,” Miller said. “If you look at Cal’s numbers, other than their offensive rebounding, if we would have done a better job there we would have won the game by a different margin, maybe in a different way. They certainly beat us up around the glass, but our numbers, our perimeter defense showed up tonight. That was also a big part of why we won.”

Freshman Jaylen Brown immediately declared his desire and readiness to face the Wildcats after Sunday’s win over USC capped Cal’s perfect home schedule. But on Thursday, the mercurial freshman had his worst game of the season, playing just 15 minutes, and scoring five points, before fouling out. Brown missed seven of his nine attempts from the floor.

Cal faces ASU on Saturday in the regular season finale. The Sun Devils, coached by former Sacramento King and Duke star Bobby Hurley, won on Thursday, beating Stanford 74-64 in Tempe. ASU softened Stanford by grabbing 15 offensive rebounds that may not be available when they face the Bears.

Cal cruises over USC, finishes home schedule undefeated

By Morris Phillips

If you’re an unrepentant sports cynic, the Warriors aren’t so much talented as they’re the right team at the exact time when shooting all of sudden became incredibly important.  And the Cal Bears?  If it weren’t for the demanding Pac-12 Network and its myriad of game times, the conference would be like most others where the road team actually has a chance.

Under those circumstances, the youthful, but talented Bears wouldn’t have capped a perfect home season on Sunday by cruising past USC, 87-65.  Instead, they would have stubbed their collective toes at some point, and dropped one of their 18 contests at noisy Haas Pavilion.

According to USC Coach Andy Enfield that’s in part why his Trojans disappeared Sunday just before halftime, unable to make a shot in a game that Cal quickly turned into their own.  Tied at 26, the Trojans missed seven consecutive shots and three free throws and found themselves down 14 at halftime, just that quick.

“Out of all the Pac-12 games this weekend, not a single road team won a game,” Enfield said.  “This league is very difficult to win on the road, especially when you’re spending long nights in hotels.  You go on the road for five days, and now we have to fly back and have our guys in class by 8 a.m. tomorrow morning.  So I think the road is harder in our league, especially with these longer road trips.  We’re 15-1 at home, and there were points when Cal struggled on the road, as well.”

Could Cal be a house of cards, ready to tumble at a drop of a hat?  With seven consecutive wins in which they’ve averaged 80 points and won by double digits in six of the seven contests, that’s hard to substantiate.  In fact, they look like a potential league champion, keeping with their status of being one game behind league-leading Oregon with two games to play.

“We’re like a well-oiled machine right now,” Tyrone Wallace said.”We’re playing really well and everybody’s contributing.  When everybody does their job I think you’re seeing what we could be.”

But now they’ll have to go on the road to prove their legitimacy.  Cal (21-8, 11-5) trails the Ducks and second-place Utah.  If they win twice in Arizona, the Bears would likely share the regular season title with one or both of the other teams.  But if they lose twice, they could finish fifth, all but wiping out all of the progress they achieved in their win streak.  The Bears appear greatly improved, but are they?

Enfield’s contention that Pac-12 road wins are hard to come by holds water.  But finishing undefeated for an entire home schedule is a rare feat, even in the still brief Pac-12 Network era, just completing its fourth year.

In those four seasons, Arizona finished undefeated at home in each of the last two seasons, both culminating in Elite Eight appearances for the Wildcats.  Those teams are joined by Cal and Oregon, who achieved the feat this season.   Both the Ducks and Bears have generated plenty of praise nationally, and not just for their play at home.

Besides, the Bears have grown more cohesive, especially offensively, over the length of the season.  Five Bears finished in double figures on Sunday, led by Jaylen Brown and Ivan Rabb with 18 points each.  Of the five, four made at least half their shots from the field.   A gaggle of crowd pleasing dunks and drives gave spice to Cal’s output, including Brown’s coast-to-coast drive in the final four seconds of the first half that put Cal up 44-30.

Defensively, the same paths to the hoop the Bears were enjoying, weren’t available to the Trojans.  USC’s youthful posts, Bennie Boatwright and Chimezie Metu, failed to convert even once, combing to shoot 0 for 13.  Once again, Cal’s size and rim protection bothered their opponent to the degree that it sent them home losers.

“On Thursday (at Stanford) we had four starters go 0 for 13 in the first half, and tonight we had two starters who were 0 for 13 all game,” Enfield said.  “It’s hard to stay with good teams, especially on the road when they have the crowd behind them and they’re playing well.”

 

Cal smashes UCLA, needs one more win for perfect season at Haas Pavilion

Ty strips
UCLA’s Aaron Holiday, right, shoots over California’s Tyrone Wallace during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Thursday, Feb. 25, 2016, in Berkeley, Calif. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

 

By Morris Phillips

Going undefeated for an entire season at home? Beating every conference opponent in the same season? Accomplishing both just weeks after the season hung in the balance?

Yeah, those are big feats the Cal Bears are pursuing this weekend. But Coach Cuonzo Martin would prefer all the dramatic antidotes and nervous anticipation would stay outside the gym and away from his Bears. With Cal riding a six-game win streak and chasing a Pac-12 regular season title, Cuonzo is determined to play it cool.

“I can’t control what they read, because they get information from the TV and their phones and I can’t control that,” Martin said when asked what preparations would be like for Sunday’s home finale against USC. “But my job is to make sure they understand the task at hand. And the most important thing is winning the basketball game and protecting our home court. And whatever happens after that—history is what it is. But we have to make sure we protect our home court.”

Cal was on task Thursday, whipping UCLA 75-63, leading from start to finish in front of a noisy, sold out Haas Pavilion crowd. Only poor free throw shooting kept the Bears from again topping 80 points, and doing so without any significant drop off on the defensive end. The Bruins fell behind 13-1 just minutes in and shot a chilly 33 percent in the opening 20 minutes.

Then Cal finished UCLA with a crisp, offensive show after halftime as the Bears shot 53 percent and scored 42 points to close it out.   Jabari Bird hit five 3-pointers and led Cal with 20 points.

The Bears (20-8, 10-5) moved within a game of first place Oregon with three games remaining. Cal also trails Utah by ½ game with the Utes set to face Arizona on Saturday in a conference showdown. If Cal can win out, and beat Arizona a second time, the Bears would at the very least finish in second place alone if not win the Pac-12 outright.

“It would be historical,” Bird said. “No Cal team has done that here for a long time and it would definitely be big for us to get that done in front of a home crowd.”

For the first time in many seasons, the Bruins and Bears had only Thursday’s meeting to sharpen their claws, as the teams don’t meet this year in Los Angeles. The Bears made their statement to their longtime rivals early on the scoreboard, but also in simply being the more athletic and skilled team, which marked a clear delineation from the schools’ previous histories.

Even Bill Walton, the UCLA great turned broadcaster, gave a rousing speech in the Bears’ locker room before the game.

Sounds crazy, right? Not to Cal’s Brown who credited Walton’s speech for his scorching start Thursday. Brown scored eight of Cal’s first 13 points.

“He gives the best motivational speeches I’ve ever heard,” Brown said. “He just got me so pumped up for this game. I think coming out I scored like eight in a row.”

Brown finished with 16 points, Tyrone Wallace had 14 and Ivan Rabb finished with 10. The Bruins were led by Brice Alford and Tony Parker, both with 15 points.

UCLA (15-13, 6-9) dropped its sixth game in its last nine all but insuring the Bruins will need a flawless regular season finish as well as a deep Pac-12 tournament run to get NCAA tournament consideration.

“There’s still hope,” Coach Steve Alford said.

The Bears have beaten every Pac-12 opponent this season with the exception of USC. The Trojans have dropped four of five, including a 20-point loss at Stanford on Thursday. After the Trojans, the Bears will finish in Arizona, where they will have the opportunity to beat Arizona and Arizona State for the second time and possibly finish 13-5 in conference.

 

 

Bears become the new road warriors in 80-62 win at Washington State

Rabb at work

By Morris Phillips

After a Sunday evening meeting of the hapless and the hopeless, the Cal Bears departed with smiles on their faces, not to mention an opportunity to make some school history in the coming weeks.

The Bears made it five straight, and back-to-back road wins, by besting Washington State in Pullman, 80-62. The Bears led from beginning to end, belying their season struggles on the road in an emphatic manner.

Jabari Bird’s 3-pointer less than four minutes in gave the Bears their first double-digit lead at 12-2. The Bears led by nine at halftime, and by as many as 23 in the second half.

Cal moved into fourth place in the Pac-12 with the win, and USC’s loss to Utah earlier in the day. The Bears are just a game behind conference co-leaders Oregon and Arizona with four regular season remaining.

The Bears entered the weekend losers of all five of their Pac-12 road games, but came up with a pair of crucial wins over the Washington schools to re-enter the race for the conference regular season crown. Cal also solidified its hold on an NCAA tournament birth as the Pac-12’s top six schools are likely to qualify.

Tyrone Wallace came up with 15 of his team-best 17 points in a short, second half burst in which he hit three 3-pointers. Cal’s senior leader hadn’t come up with a breakout game in his three games back since being felled by a broken finger. But his big performance Sunday caught the eye of Coach Cuonzo Martin.

“He’s a talented basketball player, so I’m not surprised,” Martin said. “When his 3-ball his falling, it could be a long night for you.”

Cal (19-8, 9-5) also enjoyed double figure scoring from Ivan Rabb (15 points) and Bird (13).  Rabb was a perfect 5 for 5 from the field.  Que Johnson led WSU with 17 points.

While the Bears overcame their road woes, the Cougars (9-18, 1-14) overcame very little. WSU’s loss was their 13th in a row, and they clinched at least a tie for last place in the conference with three games remaining, all of them away from Pullman.

The Bears return to Berkeley to face UCLA on Thursday in their final pursuit of a perfect record at Haas Pavilion this season. The Bears are currently 16-0 at home.