By Morris Phillips
BERKELEY–When the prickly UC Davis Aggies made Division I-quality plays on Saturday afternoon, the Cal Bears were made to wince. When the Aggies reverted to their FBS status, the Bears proved resilient and pounced.
Not exactly what Coach Justin Wilcox wanted, but that initial pattern gave way to a dominant second half, and Cal cruised 31-13 over UC Davis in the season opener for both teams.
Wilcox never pretends to be satisfied, but after the totality of the 60 minutes in the last day of August opener, he wasn’t mad.
“It’s really a tale of two halves,” he said. “To be up a point at half, we were fortunate.”
Coach Tim Plough, a prized offensive assistant for Wilcox before assuming the head job at Davis, had his team prepared. They ran a whopping 52 offensive plays before halftime (but passed for only 221 yards in total) and made the atmosphere inside Memorial Stadium uneasy. Quarterback Miles Hastings simply took what Cal offered underneath, and the Bears were limited to 9:06 of possession time before the break.
“We never had any rhythm,” Wilcox said. “One of the keys for us is getting that first first down.”
Along with the lengthy possessions that unnerved Cal’s defense, Aggie Kavir Bains put a textbook lick on ball carrier Kadarius Calloway. That left the ball bouncing free inside Cal’s 5 yard-line, and Porter Connors skipped into the end zone with the scoop to trim Cal’s lead to 7-6.
But it was Nohl Williams’ momentum-turning, 80-yard kickoff that put Cal up 14-13 at half and put the home team in position to restore order.
Cal’s offensive line didn’t offer Fernando Mendoza enough time in the first, nor did they free leading rusher Jadyn Ott. The pre-season All-ACC runner had his afternoon end in the second quarter when he suffered an apparent ankle injury. But the Bears’ blocking was cohesive in a second half in which the Bears fashioned lengthy drives and relied on Jaivian Thomas and Byron Cardwell to run and break tackles as they outscored the visitors, 17-0.
“We’re the better team. We’re a well-oiled offense. We’re going to go and get this done,” Mendoza said in describing the Bears’ attitude to start the second half. “We’re going to go and do tempo, and we’re going to score. That’s what our offense thrives off of.”
The Bears’ aspirations to be a surprise, bowl-eligible team in their first season in the travel-happy Power 4 conference will demand them to survive visits to Florida State, SMU and Pittsburgh while hosting Miami, North Carolina State and Syracuse. Losing to California system school UC Davis for the first time in 12 meetings would not have been wise, and ultimately, the Bears were smarter than that.
In their premiere non-conference matchup with Auburn next Saturday, Cal gets its first shot at grabbing national attention in a rematch that narrowly went to the Tigers last season in Berkeley. This time, the heat, the travel, and Auburn’s speed and depth will make for a tougher test.
Ott’s availability will be monitored throughout the week after the speedy back became only the eighth Cal runner to reach 22 rushing touchdowns in his career. Ott’s 1-yard run midway through the first quarter was the initial score of the season and gave Cal an early 7-0 lead.
Ryan Coe, in his first game as a Cal Bear, kicked a 25-yard field goal and converted three extra points. Wilcox singled out his new kicker as “the kicker,” likely alluding to the Bears’ issues with the kicking game last season that jeopardized a couple of games.
Saturday’s game at Auburn starts at 2:30pm locally, and it precedes a home game against San Diego State and their initial ACC road trip to Tallahassee to face Florida State.











