A Bruin in a Bear’s Lair: Bill Walton in Berkeley, California

By Morris Phillips in collaboration with Michael Duca

(photo courtesy of Sports Illustrated)

I knew Bill Walton.

Actually, a lot of people knew Bill Walton, so me saying I knew him isn’t a great distinction. But it is a great distinction for Walton, arguably the greatest college basketball player ever, an NBA MVP, a two-time NBA Champion, and also an NBA Finals MVP.

If you were to make the argument that Bill Walton wasn’t the greatest college basketball player ever, and Lew Alcindor was, you would also have to admit that Walton was the more well-rounded player of the two. If not, your basketball IQ would be in question.

And one other thing: Bill Walton’s humanity was bigger than any of his accomplishments on the hardwood. Almost every single person that knew Bill Walton, knew him fondly. So in reality, the Bill Walton story is so big, it’s too big for one journalist to handle. The City of Berkeley, CA and the University of California–enemy territory for the UCLA alum–knew Bill Walton. So here’s the Walton story just from the vantage point of the well-known Northern California college town.

“He just defiantly competed for every moment in life to be the greatest it could possibly be,” Walton’s former Boston Celtics’ teammate Rick Carlisle said. “That’s the best way to describe it. What an amazing man.”

“What a journey he lived,” former Cal coach Ben Braun said in remembrance of Walton, who died Sunday from complications of a battle with colon cancer. “We lost a good one.”

Walton’s first visit to Harmon Gym came on March 3, 1972. Accurately listed at 6’11”, 210 lbs. he wasn’t fast, but he was quick in the painted area, decisive once he got the ball, and extremely confident in his play. As a sophomore, playing his 24th college game that night, he was in supreme control as UCLA cruised 85-71 over Cal.

His style of play? In those days, Bill Walton was completely healthy. He wouldn’t miss a game as a collegian until his senior year, when he missed three. For those not old enough to have seen him play in 1971 through 1974, a comparison to modern day basketball players might go like this. Take the activity, relentless energy and desire to grab every defensive rebound, like Sacramento’s Domantas Sabonis. Combine that with the court vision and playmaking of Larry Bird. And kick it all off with the humility and savoir faire of Len Bias. Yeah, now you’re talking about the youthful Walton.

Walton’s second visit to Berkeley’s Harmon Gym came on January 13, 1973, when he captured his 42nd consecutive collegiate game without loss, as the Bruins cruised again, 69-50, and remained ranked No. 1 nationally on their way to 1973 title.

In the championship game that year, Walton did the near impossible in making 21 of 22 shots in 33 minutes on the floor, as UCLA raced past Memphis State, 87-66 in St. Louis.

Walton’s senior year was troubled by UCLA’s standards as they saw their incredible win streak snapped at Notre Dame in January 1974. After losses at Oregon and Oregon State, the Bruins righted the ship the following weekend at Pauley Pavilion with resounding wins against Washington and Washington State. Next, Walton and UCLA came to Berkeley with a modest two-game win streak and won again at Harmon, 83-60, to improve to 21-3.

At this point, I would be remiss if I didn’t defer to well-known Cal basketball journalist Jeff Faraudo, who penned a story about Walton and his legendary college coach John Wooden. In 1960, Wooden could have ended up at Cal, but instead was tabbed to coach at UCLA. Faraudo wrote a “what if” piece that captured that moment, which all should read. Walton weighed in and was extremely enthusiastic.

“He would have done perfect in Berkeley,” Walton said. “If he had been there, they’d probably have a brand-new beautiful gym instead of playing in Harmon.”

The Big Redhead’s journey through the NBA, and professional basketball was terrific, then ultimately arduous. He did not cross paths with Berkeley during this period. Instead, he started in Portland, moved to San Diego, spent one season in Los Angeles, and relocated again to Boston. As a 24-year old, he led the Blazers to their first World title in 1977 in a titanic Finals matchup with Dr. J, Julius Erving and the 76ers. The next season, the Blazers started 50-10, and their back-to-back title push was in full bloom. But in that 60th game, Walton was hurt, playing 13 minutes and taking just three shots from the floor. The Blazers still prevailed to improve to 50-10, but February 28, 1978, was a true moment in time. It essentially marked the end of Walton’s career as an elite player.

While Walton’s career was faltering because of injuries, his bank account naturally grew. And during the following six seasons, in which he would miss three of them in their entirety while playing for his hometown San Diego Clippers, his passions outside the game took off. One of those passions was the Greatful Dead, the legendary rock group, which captured Bill’s soul and his attendance at many of their shows.

While I can’t say when, what show, or what setlist, just know that Bill Walton saw the Greatful Dead numerous times at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre. I only went once to see the Dead at the Greek, and he wasn’t there that afternoon. I wish he was.

Boston, MA was the site of Walton’s rebirth. Now, 34, and a decade removed from his glory moments, the storied Celtics sensed an opening: a place for a great player to help a great team. Walton was signed with one objective in mind, which was to bring another title to the rafters at the Garden. And Coach K.C. Jones was given the guy with which he could save critical minutes from Larry Bird and Kevin McHale, his workhorses. The plan was executed flawlessly.

In Game 1 of the Finals against the Houston Rockets, Walton was a winner, contributing 18 minutes off the bench, and a flawless shooter, finishing 5 of 5 from the floor, eight rebounds, three assists and a block in the pivotal game of a series that would be decided rather quickly. He was–even for one last moment in time–Bill Walton.

For the series, Walton would play 117 minutes and grab 48 rebounds total. It was not pretty. He played on feet that he treated gingerly, he often had a bend in his legs, when he previously always played straight up, and grimaced frequently during play. I saw it on TV. He gutted it out, and the Celtics used him masterfully, saving him, essentially for the one moment of the season when he could make the biggest impact.

“It’s a legend lost, ” said Dallas Mavericks coach Jason Kidd, who had those “crystal green eyes.”

Walton played one more season for the Celtics and retired. The plan to have him be the guy to get the Celtics over the top a second time failed. Walton played just 24 minutes and scored six points in his final six games as the Celtics fell to the Lakers in the Finals in six games. His tired body was broken, and it was time to move on.

Broadcasting came next for Bill Walton, and “Redwood” was the best thing–refreshing, irreverent, passionate–from the start. First with ABC, ESPN and then finally with the Pac-12 Network, he frustrated viewers that didn’t get it, and blew away those that did get it with his endless stories, tangents, set asides, frequent switches, sometimes within one dead-ball break in a broadcast.

Roxy Bernstein, the Cal grad, and the former voice of California Golden Bears basketball was Walton’s biggest co-star, along with the often-confounded Dave Pasch. While Pasch would often have moments (early on) where his composure was tested during broadcasts with Walton, things were more seamless with Bernstein. The jokes hit closer to velvet smooth, and the transitions were elite as the two men took viewers on a journey with each two-hour performance.

What was immediately noticeable was that Bernstein adored Walton. What wasn’t always clear was that Walton loved Bernstein too, even as he was testing every fiber of his play-by-play expertise. The two grew close. It was undeniable as they gained more experience together. And when their later broadcasts hit the air, their chemistry was tight, even in the game’s opening tease, as both would smile ear-to-ear.

Walton welcomed the circus-like environment he created before and after games. Engaging as many people as could as the support staff packed up equipment around him, his mid-court perch became his office, as he counseled players, engaged coaches, and answered to journalists like me.

When Jaylen Brown made the last-minute decision in his recruitment to join coach Cuonzo Martin and the Bears from his far-away hometown of Atlanta, Walton took to the whip smart youngster immediately. They talked before games, sometimes while Brown’s teammates warmed up. They talked after games too, when Brown would challenge himself, and come back out of the locker room to get up extra shots by himself in a now-empty Haas Pavilion. Walton had discovered a star, essentially before he became one. They grew close, and Walton talked about the young man often during the broadcasts.

“I would talk to him before every game,” Brown said. “He was proud of me.

“My family loves Bill Walton.”

The last time I spoke to Walton was at Pac-12 Media Days. He was alone, on the rooftop lunch area, sitting on a table with donuts in the colors of each of the 12 schools next to him. He was visibly tired, having likely had 100 conversations in 75-minute cram session during the lunch break.

“Bill, get away from those donuts. Does your doctor let you eat that stuff?” I asked.

He was little slumped, but looked up at me, and said, “Dr. Leary is my doctor.”

“He grabbed every defensive rebound. He was like a coach on the floor,” said Cal coach Ben Braun, who made it clear that he would have done anything to recruit Walton away from television to join his coaching staff at Cal.

‘How is your life?

Is THIS the life you want?

Are you living like you talk?

Are you dreaming as if you’re going to the top?

Are you passionate?

Do you love what you do?

Do you love who you are?

Do you love your “team”?

Seems like all of life has been just a dream.

But without loving that dream, it’ll never come true.

And when you learn the ultimate lessons in life…like

tolerance…patience…perspective and relativity, you’ve got a CHANCE.

Good luck everyone…thank you for your patience and kindness.

And may the four winds, blow you safely home.”

Bill Walton

1952-2024

Cal suffers blowout loss to No. 16 Utah 34-14

Photo credit: @CalFootball

By Mary Anne

The California Golden Bears faced the No. 16 Utah Utes on Saturday. The Golden Bears were battle ready and got off to a fast start, but suffered a blowout loss to the Utes 34-14 at Rice-Eccles Stadium. Cal fell to 3-4, while Utah improved to 5-1.

The Golden Bears scored first. Golden Bears quarterback Fernando Mendoza threw a touchdown pass to Jaydn Ott for a 48-yard passing touchdown. Mateen Bhaghani kicked an extra point for a 7-0 lead at 5:41 of the first quarter.

The Golden Bears led 7-0 at the end of the first quarter.

The Utes took the go-ahead lead in the second quarter. Ja’Quinden Jackson ran for a three-yard rushing touchdown. Cole Becker kicked an extra point to tie the game 7-7 at 7:56. Sione Vaki ran for a one-yard rushing touchdown. Becker kicked an extra point to give the Utes a 14-7 lead with just 26 seconds left in the second.

The Golden Bears trailed the Utes 14-7 at the end of the first half.

The Utes poured in the points to start the second half. Cole Becker kicked a 23-yard field goal to extend the Utes’ lead to 17-7 at 10:35 of the third quarter. Bryson Barnes ran for a four-yard rushing touchdown. Becker kicked an extra point to expand the Utes’ lead to 24-7 with 9:11 left in the third.

The Golden Bears responded to make it a ten-point game. Golden Bears quarterback Fernando Mendoza threw a touchdown pass to Taj Davis, who ran for a 24-yard rushing touchdown. Mateen Bhaghani kicked an extra point to cut the Utes’ lead to 24-14 with 4:21 left in the third.

The Golden Bears trailed the Utes 24-14 through three quarters.

The Utes scored twice in the fourth quarter. Sione Vaki ran for a 72-yard rushing touchdown. Cole Becker kicked an extra point for a 31-14 lead with 6:51 left in the fourth. Becker capped off the scoring with a 38-yard field goal to make it a 34-14 game with 1:57 left in the fourth.

The Golden Bears lost to the Utes 34-14.

Notes
Find out this week’s Cal captains here.

Get to know the Cal starting quarterback Fernando Mendoza here.

Up Next
The Golden Bears have a bye week before hosting the No. 10 USC Trojans on Saturday, October 28, at TBD.

Cal’s Season Ends: Bears outclassed by WSU 69-52 in Pac-12 tourney opener

photo by Cal Bears basketball

By Morris Phillips

Three wins and a 16-game losing streak to end the season will be the legacy of the 2023 Cal men’s basketball team.

The Bears fell 69-52 in Las Vegas in their opening round matchup against Washington State on Wednesday afternoon, ending a dreary season that marks the program’s unprecedented, sixth consecutive losing campaign.

The immediate focus falls on head coach Mark Fox, who is responsible for the most recent four seasons, none better than his first when Cal finished 14-18.

“We understand that there’s an expectation to be successful, and we didn’t do that this year, but most people who are sitting where you’re sitting now are never on the inside. They don’t know the things that we have to deal with that adminstrators and coaches and players do,” Fox said.

The expectation is that Fox will not be retained, and athletic director Jim Knowlton will move on to Tim Miles or Joe Pasternack, the two names most prominent in the coaching rumors.

The Bears didn’t receive any break in the matchups with WSU coming in on a six-game win streak. The Cougars didn’t shoot it well early, but Cal afforded them a 13-2 run before halftime, part of a 35-21 edge at the break.

The Bears again played at their plodding pace, a nod to their persistent injury issues in the backcourt. Their point total of 52 actually fell below their season average of 58.5, the lowest offensive output in 363-member Division I.

Monty Bowser led Cal with a career-best 19 points, but the 43-29 edge for WSU on the glass put the 12th-seeded Bears at an impossible disadvantage.

TJ Bamba led Washington State with 17 points, and three other WSU starters finished with 10 points. The Cougars will face Oregon on Thursday in the tournament’s quarterfinal round.

Cal Competes: Regular season concludes with painful 69-66 loss at Oregon State

By Morris Phillips

Cal’s 15 consecutive losses haven’t often been competitive or engaging. That wasn’t the case on Saturday in Corvallis, where the Bears built a substantial lead that held up throughout the game’s first 27 minutes.

The Bears led by as many as 16 points and took their final lead with 29 seconds remaining. But the visitors came up empty on their final, two possessions in a 69-66 loss to Oregon State.

“A heartbreaking loss,” Cal coach Mark Fox said. “I feel awful for everybody because they did everything we asked them to do.”

Oregon State snapped a four-game losing streak but had to dig deep to prevail. The Beavers trailed 32-16 late in the first half.

“It was all Cal,” coach Wayne Tinkle said. “They were focused, and I think they knocked us back and caused a little cloudiness early.”

The loss mattered little in regards to Cal’s seeding for the conference tournament that begins Wednesday in Las Vegas. The Bears will open the tournament against Arizona State or red-hot Washington State as the 12th seed.

The game was physical throughout and whistle-filled. That allowed the hosts to recover with 24 of 29 shooting from the foul line that brought them even with 13 minutes remaining. The game became a see-saw affair at that point, with both teams afforded opportunities to seize control. Oregon State’s biggest lead of 64-61 with 2:03 remaining was immediately wiped out as Cal scored five of the next six points, capped by Grant Newell’s jumper with 29 seconds left.

Michael Rataj scored to put OSU in front with 15 seconds left, and Cal saw the same game lost as Sam Alajiki stepped out of bounds with nine seconds remaining and Joel Brown, who led Cal with 22 points, missed a wild 3-pointer at the final buzzer.

Glenn Taylor Jr. paced OSU with 28 points, and Jordan Pope added 17.

Cal falls to Washington State 63-57 but remains optimistic in the season’s final days

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY, CA–A streak-ending win on Senior Night wasn’t achievable for the Cal Bears.

But that wasn’t the punchline to season-concluding joke. The 3-26 hosts competed hard until seven minutes remained before they ran out of gas in a 63-57 loss to Washington State.

“Obviously, we didn’t get the win, but we made a lot of strides, and going forward we’ve got two games next week,” senior Joel Brown said. “I think there’s a lot of energy and positivity that we can grab from this.”

Cal fell for the 13th consecutive time since January 6 and need a win in their final, three games to avoid setting a new, program-worst season record.

Two regular season games remain at Oregon and Oregon State and an opening round contest in the Pac-12 Tournament in Las Vegas. Optimism within the team remains with hopes they can win at least once more.

“For the whole team it’s a tough situation with the record, but I’ve learned a lot just looking myself in the mirror and just understanding, I’m playing basketball . . . this is what I love doing,” Brown said.

When asked if he had any discussions regarding his future with Cal, coach Mark Fox said he had not, while saying he and Athletic Director Jim Knowlton speak frequently, and Fox considers Knowlton to be an ally.

Fox fell to 38-84 in his four seasons in Berkeley, and it’s widely assumed he won’t be retained.

The Bears trailed 29-26 at halftime and were within 46-44 with 7:24 remaining when they could get no closer. A 7-0 run for the Cougars created separation and put the visitors in position for a fifth straight win.

Mohamed Gueye led WSU with 20 points and 10 rebounds, and TJ Bamba added 19. Brown led Cal with 13 points, nine rebounds, and Kuany Kuany added 11.

Plodding Bears can’t shoot it or hold on to it in 65-56 loss to Washington

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY, CA–Can’t shoot straight or pass accurately? You’re in trouble, especially in the Pac-12 Conference, where opposing defenses feed off that level of disfunction.

The Cal Bears started competitively for a change and kept within range for 35 minutes, but 31 percent shooting and 15 turnovers weren’t going to cut it against visiting Washington.

Cal fell to UW, 65-56, their 12th straight loss since they last won against Stanford on January 6.

One of the confounding aspects of Cal’s worst-ever season (along with the fact that they likely won’t win five games, which is hard to do when they, like all Power 5 schools, have a stranglehold on how they schedule, and who they play) is they continue to compile high turnover numbers despite playing at one of the slowest paces in 363-member Division I.

It makes sense that Cal plays slow. They’ve been decimated by injuries at the ball handling positions and again played without guard DeJuan Clayton on Thursday.

It doesn’t make sense that they regularly register double-figure turnovers at this stage of the season. But Pac-12 opponents sense Cal’s lack of organization and hunt the basketball as much as they successfully keep the Bears from scoring.

Again, on Thursday, the formula worked.

“We kept the score, the pace of the game where we wanted it,” coach Mark Fox said. “(It’s) just unfortunate that we didn’t make more shots.”

The Bears also missed seven free throws and fell behind by 18 points at one juncture. That preceded a 15-3 run that brought them within 52-46. But Cal would get no closer. The Huskies responded with a pair of free throws and a Keion Brooks Jr. dunk to push their lead back to ten.

“They’re at home. They’re fighting, but our guys, at the end of the day, found a way to win,” UW coach Mike Hopkins said. “We made some foul shots down the stretch and got the stops we needed.”

Brooks led UW with a game-best 24 points and 11 rebounds.

“They came out and fought hard,” Brooks said of Cal. “They were physical. We knew they were going to do that. Those are the type of games that you get up for because you know it’s going to be a little back and forth. But credit to them, we got up big and they didn’t go away.”

The Bears’ final home came comes on Saturday at 2:00pm against Washington State at Haas Pavilion.

UCLA Overwhelms Cal 78-43: Bears’ losing skid hits 11

By Morris Phillips

UCLA coach Mick Cronin made his point at halftime of the Bruins’ game versus Stanford on Thursday: respect the opponent and be ready from the opening tap.

It was a message Cronin didn’t have to repeat prior to or during the Bruins meeting with Cal on Saturday.

Instead, the hyper alert Bruins displayed their readiness by holding the visiting Bears to 15 points before halftime. That’s the fewest a Cronin-coached UCLA team has allowed in any half of a game.

Message delivered by the Bruins and received by the downtrodden visiting Bears.

“They’re great defensively,” coach Mark Fox admitted. “You have to give them credit.”

Cal trailed by 23 points at the break, and their 22 percent shooting for the game gave them no chance for a recovery. The Bears have dropped 11 consecutive games since beating Stanford on January 6.

Were there any surprises in Saturday’s matchup between the nation’s number two ranked defense and the painfully-slow, 296th ranked offense? Well, maybe how few minutes were afforded hyped-up UCLA walk-on Russell Stong, who didn’t make his entrance until fewer than two minutes remained.

UCLA (23-4, 14-2) led by Jamie Jaquez Jr. with 20 points and Amari Bailey with 16. The Bruins continued their cruise to their anticipated showdown with Arizona in two weeks by winning their 23 consecutive game at Pauley Pavilion.

The Bears, led by Kuany Kuany’s 14 points, did themselves no favors by starting the game with a 12-0 deficit after trailing 13-0 at USC on Thursday.

The Bears (3-24, 2-14) return to Berkeley next week for their final, two home games against Washington and Washington State.

Stuck In L.A. Traffic: Cal starts slow, runs out of gas in 97-60 loss to USC

By Morris Phillips

The baskets at USC’s Galen Center aren’t usually this big or forgiving.

But the circumstances were aligned on Thursday night as the Trojans were desperate to boost their NCAA Tournament aspirations at the expense of frustrated Cal riding a nine-game losing streak. The hosts took full advantage by shooting 58 percent from the floor in a 97-60 rout of the defenseless Bears.

“We weren’t ready to play defensively,” coach Mark Fox said. “I was certainly disappointed in that.”

Cal fell behind 13-0, trailed 50-23 at the break, and were behind by as many as 40 in the second half. USC poured it on with four double-digit scorers led by Drew Peterson with 30 points.

The Bears might have made do with 60 points scored, which is robust for them, but not with 15 turnovers and allowing the opposition to hit 12 3-pointers. Combined with the painful, slow start, Fox was adamant that his team get the message in order to gain consistency and competitiveness in the long run.

“We have to own our mistakes,” Fox said. “We have to learn from it. We have to grow.”

Cal (3-23, 2-12) was led by Monte Bowser with 13 points. ND Okafor and Kuany Kuany each contributed 11 points. The Bears continue their swing through Los Angeles on Saturday night at UCLA.

Several Pac-12 teams have NCAA Tournament hopes and know that a loss to Cal would be incredibly damaging to their resumes. Cal will get similar treatment from Oregon in two weeks in Berkeley, which makes it more difficult for them to sneak up on a lackadaisical opponent. Beating UCLA, which is hopeful for a No. 1 seed in the West Region could be just as difficult.

How daunting are Cal’s circumstances this weekend? USC is riding a 13-game win streak at the Galen Center after winning Thursday, and UCLA has won all 13 of their games this season at Pauley Pavilion.

Underwhelming In Overtime: Cal’s spirited effort short-circuits late in 70-62 loss to ASU

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY, CA–Foul trouble and poor shooting didn’t doom the Cal Bears, but the fatigue they carried into overtime certainly did.

Arizona State picked it up in the extra, five minutes, and escaped with a critical, 70-62 road win. The Sun Devils, who went from ice cold during a lengthy stretch in the second half to red hot in overtime, made it work with their incredible effort on the glass.

Coach Mark Fox felt the ASU rebounding was the deciding factor in what was otherwise a statistically even ballgame.

“I felt like defensively they were terrific,” Fox said of his Bears. “We just didn’t rebound it well. Gave up 20 offensive rebounds, and that’s probably the difference in the game.”

The visitors snagged 56 rebounds, a total they hadn’t reached since February 1996 in Pac-12 competition. That big advantage helped them survive 33 percent shooting and a stretch where they made just one of their 20 shots.

Reserves Grant Newell and Monty Bowser kept Cal in it with 14 points a piece, but foul trouble ultimately wore the hosts down as starters Lars Thiemann and Kuany Kuany played limited minutes.

“We don’t have any depth, and everyone knows we don’t have any depth,” Fox said. “Tonight, it showed in the overtime. We wore down a bit.”

Desmond Cambridge led ASU with 24 points, and DJ Horne added 12. As productive as they were spoaradic, those two typified the Sun Devils’ ragged play with 21 missed shots between them. But in the end, the visitors kept their NCAA Tournament aspirations alive with an unlikely Bay Area sweep.

“I don’t know if I want to be in a close game with (Cal) because we could get tight, just thinking about their record. I don’t think that happened. Our guys were pretty clutch down the stretch,” ASU coach Bob Hurley said.

The Bears have dropped nine straight and played in front of another small, disappointing crowd at Haas Pavilion. Given that, a trip to Los Angeles to face USC and UCLA might be the best medicine for Cal after their 22nd loss of the season.

Bears Bow Quietly: Cal dumped by Arizona 85-62 at Haas Pavilion

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY, CA–A quiet evening inside Haas Pavilion resulted in a 13th consecutive loss to Arizona, a clear sign that things aren’t right within the Cal basketball program.

But they did display enough resolve to avoid a fifth, consecutive game with fewer than 50 points. They didn’t, however, come up with enough resistance for Arizona’s Oumar Ballo and Azoulas Tubelis, who ruled the paint and scored at will.

“We started poorly and dug ourselves our hole,” coach Mark Fox said. “We just weren’t big enough, physical enough to get some things done in there.”

The Bears missed their first seven shot attempts and faced an early double-digit deficit before settling in and competing. But that just got the hosts to halftime, trailing 42-30.

At that juncture, the Wildcats took off, leading by as much as 25 points and cruising to their 22nd win of the season.

Tubelis led the visitors with 23 points, 14 rebounds, and Ballo contributed 14 points, nine rebounds giving the Cats a decisive, 46-30 edge on the glass.

Cal again operated with a guard-deficient starting lineup without the injured Devin Askew. That placed 6’9″, Kuany Kuany in Cal’s starting backcourt but his presence did little to disrupt the Arizona pace and nationally heralded, transition attack.

Arizona finished with 50 percent shooting from the floor and 11 made threes as they slightly outpaced their conference-leading 83 points per game.

Cal was led by Sam Alajiki with 12 points and Lars Thiemann with 10. The Bears have dropped eight straight contests and are in the midst of a fifth 20-game losing season in the last six.

The biggest negative within the Cal program may have been the game’s attendance with the announced crowd at 3,289.