Tech Tough: Cal Women Come Up Short at Virginia Tech, Lose 87-84

By Morris Phillips

The Cal women’s dilemma regarding turnovers took on a new dimension on Sunday afternoon: while they found a way to hold on the ball, they couldn’t dislodge it from host Virginia Tech, gets stops or force enough missed shots.

A defense without teeth… on the road, on Tech’s Senior Day was not the recipe for a significant win. The Bears fell in their final road game of the season, 87-84 in a game where any defensive stop–even one of a possession or two–could have changed the outcome.

“I just think we didn’t defend well enough,” coach Charmin Smith said. “They shot the ball well. We had trouble guarding ball screen action and it’s just one of those games where we did a lot of things right offensively but couldn’t prevent them from scoring. It’s frustrating and disappointing. We had opportunities and we couldn’t capitalize.”

The Hokies shot 55 percent from the floor, and committed just five turnovers in 40 minutes, a new school-record low. Still Cal never wavered or went away, and Ioanna Krimili’s made basket would have tied the game with 13 seconds remaining would have tied the game had her foot not been on the 3-point line.

With the game tied at 69 with 5:39 remaining, Carleigh Wenzel’s short jump shot gave Tech a lead they wouldn’t relinquish down the stretch. Cal shot 53 percent from the floor in the fourth quarter, along with 7 for 7 shooting from the foul line but could never get even or gain a lead after Wenzel’s make.

Wenzel and Mathilda Ekh led the Hokies with 19 points each, and Carys Baker added 14. The Bears put four starters in double figures, led by Marta Suarez with 20 and Krimili with 19. Michelle Onyiah fouled out in the final seconds of the third quarter and played just 13 minutes and scored 8 points.

More than 6,000 attended the game, Tech’s final home game of the season after their disappointing overtime loss to Stanford on Thursday. The Hokies were no doubt motivated by that loss and a soft NCAA bubble that seemingly has them as the only team in America that is neither in or out of March Madness. One thing seems certain: Virginia Tech (17-10, 8-8) is the only unresolved Power 4 team, and that alone had them poised for a big performance, and they delivered.

Cal Women Rebound, Beat Wake Forest 67-55 To Improve To 17-3

By Morris Phillips

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.–The only women’s basketball coach in the Atlantic Coast Conference with a career losing record left Lawrence Joel Coliseum a winner on Sunday afternoon, another sign that things are changing quickly for Charmin Smith.

Smith’s Golden Bears racked up a tidy 67-55 win over Wake Forest that solidifies their position among the ACC’s elite, a small group of teams that have multiple weekend aspirations for the upcoming NCAA Tournament. A lopsided loss on Thursday to Duke didn’t help Cal’s hopes, but the quick bounce back against the Demon Deacons did. The team’s play at both ends was exactly what was needed to right the ship.

“I feel like we all knew we got our butts kicked, and we were all eager to have a chance to do it better,” Smith said. “I don’t think you have to say much when you when you get beat the way that we did (at Duke). Everybody knew that it wasn’t our best performance and we had to clean up a lot.”

Cal’s defensive hiccups came early when they struggled to cover Wake Forest in the paint. That kept the game close until the second quarter when Cal pulled away with a mix of starters and reserves. Ioanna Krimili and Lulu Twidale combined for five threes in the second quarter, and Cal led comfortably at halftime, 32-24.

“When we shoot the three-ball well, we’re really hard team to beat, and Ioanna did a great job of knocking down shots when we really needed it,” Smith said.

Wake Forest, desperate to get their initial conference win, played well initially but saw their energy drained by missed shots. The hosts shot 32 percent from the floor and missed 16 3-point attempts. The rebounding disparity was a bigger issue for Wake as Cal controlled the glass, 45-26.

Marta Suarez came up with a personal bounce back performance after she was plagued by turnovers against Duke. The senior led Cal with 16 points, nine rebounds and five assists.

Cal returns to the Bay for Thursday’s rematch with Stanford in Palo Alto. The Cardinal fell to 10-7 with an uneventful loss at Duke.

Cal Women Shoot Up No. 21 N.C. State In 78-71 Win

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY, CA–By the time Kayla Williams went washing machine, and put N.C. State defender Zoe Brooks into a spin cycle at the elbow before finishing over fast closing  post Tilda Trygger, the Golden Bears shot making display was already in full effect.

Coach Wes Moore hinted to Thursday’s game as being a continuation of his opponent film study that clearly demonstrated Cal’s basketball team as exceptional shooters. The game validated Cal, and the show started early and continued late.

Ioanna Krimili struck first with a floater in the game’s first 13 seconds. Then Lulu Twidale buried a three as soon as Kayla Williams’ pass arrived on a rope. Marta Suarez casually dropped a three. The Haas Pavilion crowd, minus a few friends, perked up fast and got loud.

The No. 24 Golden Bears would limp through the remainder of the opening quarter, then suddenly seize control early in the second. Suarez’s three 3-pointers in less than a minute neatly erased the visitors’ lead, put Cal in the driver’s seat, and frustrated Moore, who abruptly called a timeout.

“They’re a very explosive offensive team,” Moore said. “We knew that coming in. Four starters shoot over 40 percent from three. I thought (Michelle Onyiah) really did a nice job for them tonight as well. So they had a great balanced attack.”

In the first, authentic big game at Haas since 2018, Cal showed out. Coach Charmin Smith knew it and expressed joyous relief.

“I’m just really proud of this team. I think this was a great program win,” Smith said. “Those (N.C. State) guards have been to a Final Four.”

“That’s what we do. That’s what we say. We make threes in tough moments. I was just feeling it,” Suarez said.

“Having shooters all around the floor, it creates a lot of space for everybody, so that was what coach kind of mentioned.”

On a night where the referees effectively kept both teams away from the free throw line (only 16 free throws were attempted in the game), shooting was the key to victory. Both teams displayed Top 25 shot making, but Cal had the ball in Williams’ hands, and she was either efficient or spectacular all night.

For the entire 40 minutes without a substitution, Williams probed, attacked, and dechipered. Each time down the floor, and with the ball in her hands, she broke the Wolfpack defense and found her teammates. When the defense relaxed, she got to the basket with a series of jaw-dropping finishes.

“I thought Williams killed us off the bounce,” Moore admitted.

Suarez led Cal with 17 points. Krimili, Onyiah, and Williams each added 15. Twidale contributed 11, and Gabrielle Obigor and Jayda Noble provided critical play off the bench.

N.C. State’s unflappable duo of Saniya Rivers and Aziaha James combined for 33 points, but they missed 19 shots, and couldn’t string together a flurry of buckets that would have surely given the hosts pause.

Cal (15-2, 3-1) hosts Florida State on Sunday at 2 p.m. The game provides Cal an opportunity to remain connected to league-leader Notre Dame, the only conference team that’s undefeated in league play. The Bears visit the Irish on February 9.

Mustang Must: Cal Women rebound with 81-66 win at SMU

Cal Bears forward Marta Suarez led with 19 points against the SMU Mustangs in Dallas on Sun Jan 5, 2025 (Cal Bears photo)

By Morris Phillips

There’s nothing like weekend travel in the ACC. The Golden Bears know that after experiencing 48 hours of idled frustration following an unanticipated loss at Clemson. In this case, a rough Friday and Saturday prior to a triumphant Sunday afternoon at SMU in Dallas.

It wasn’t easy excursion, but it was productive.

The Bears relied on great shooting, including 10 made threes to get past Clemson. Five of those threes fell in the third quarter when Cal extended a four-point halftime lead to 64-51 after three quarters. Marta Suarez was the most aggressive shooter with 19 points on 9 of 12 from the floor.

“That’s a really good team,” SMU coach Toyelle Wilson said of Cal. “They’re Top 20 for a reason. They can shoot the ball, they can get downhill. They’re physical. Charmin has done a great job with that program. 

“But it wasn’t our day, and the girls know: we’re going to have to take some bumps and bruises to get through this ACC conference. Today was a good day for us to learn a lot.”

Cal returned to physical play with 40 rebounds and a healthy edge on the glass, along with 36 points in the paint. The referees weren’t all plussed, and they assessed fouls to Michelle Onyiah and Suarez that limited both players’ minutes.

Kayla Williams impressed legendary North Carolina All-American point guard Ivory Latta, who said, “she’s so poised. She really controls that offense.”

Williams killed with efficiency. She had 17 points, seven assists, and five assists. The visitors followed Williams’ lead: after squandering a pair of second quarter leads, the Bears led the entire second half, briefly by as many as 19 points.

Nya Robertson led the Mustangs with 22 points, but she needed 20 shots to get there. Chantae Embry had 12 points, and Ella Brow added 10.

The Bears (14-2, 3-1) return to Berkeley on Thursday to meet ranked opponent North Carolina State at Haas Pavilion.