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Marshawn: Beast Mode

Posted by | October 26, 2007 at 7:20 am | In Marshawn, Players/Alumni | 1 Comment

Marshawn Lynch is making a big impact in the pros after his jump to the NFL’s Buffalo Bills. This week, he’s had some time in the spotlight.

He’s been nominated for the award a couple times this season — this time, Marshawn won the Rookie of the Week honor after his performance contributing to the Bills’ win over the Baltimore Ravens.

Meanwhile, fans, players, and sports radio in Buffalo (“Entering “Beast Mode” With Marshawn Lynch”) have a lot of praise for Marshawn’s overall efforts:

Anyone who’s watched Lynch run in his six games as a Bill has seen it. The 5-foot-11, 21-year old back out of Oakland has amassed 457 yards and four touchdowns behind a line that’s still trying to find its proverbial identity. Lynch has also hauled in 10 passes for 82 yards in addition to running the ball with a style both elusive and imposing, pumping his legs with a Roger Craig-like ferocity until the one, two, three or more would-be tacklers drag him down. . . .

It’s hard not to bristle when Bills fans do what they do, comparing their new hero to the beloved legends of old, but there’s a bit of No. 34 in No. 23. In a certain sense, Lynch typifies the back Bills fans would draw up, and not just as a hard-running, stubborn back with both flash and grit, but as a humble, quiet young man who speaks when he’s spoken to.

There’s talk that Marshawn is about to “bust out” as the Bills hit the softer section of their schedule:

Buffalo has faced four of the league’s top 10 run defenses thus far including the second-ranked Ravens and third-ranked Steelers. But all of that stiff competition looks to be serving the Bills run game well. Lynch had his second highest rushing output of the season last Sunday against the highest ranked run front they’ve faced this year (Baltimore) with 84 yards and a touchdown.

That’s why it stands to reason that the Bills ground attack has a good chance of breaking out with some big games in the weeks to come. Buffalo faces the 28th, 27th and 31st ranked run defenses over the next three weeks in the Jets, Bengals and Dolphins respectively.

The national media (here, Sports Illustrated) is taking notice as well:

The stats won’t show it, but Marshawn Lynch (27 carries, 84 yards) was a man against Baltimore.

Finally, he’s still hilarious as ever — check out this segment on “The Mayne Event” featuring Marshawn’s embrace of the city of Buffalo.

Reactions: UCLA 30, Cal 21

Posted by | October 21, 2007 at 5:12 pm | In Games | 6 Comments

Yesterday, Coach Jeff Tedford‘s losing record in Los Angeles advanced to 0-6.

I’m not ready to throw any coach or player under the bus, but changes must be made to salvage this season. The best way to describe the Bears on Saturday? Stubborn. That’s all.

Now, I don’t feel like repeating what has already been said:

Jason from EMFMV: “Wait Till Next Year (UCLA 30, Cal 21)”

4:00 PM: If you lose to a bad team, you are a bad team. Two conference losses in a row, and two games squandered. Lots of good excuses last week. This week? None. Cal can’t even beat this terrible UCLA team, a team coached by a moron. . . .

4:04 PM: Cal will fall to 5-2. Hey, is Steve Mariucci coaching? It’s got that feeling. Riding high at 5-0, and then… face plant.

4:07 PM: Game over. UCLA 30, Cal 21. Who needs to play in the Rose Bowl in 2008? Maybe the 50th attempt will be the charm.

Kevin from TBIOOF: “Game Over, Honeymoon Over”

Jeff Tedford did a remarkable job of being more conservative than Karl Dorrell. He flatly coached down to his competition. . . .

There is no excuse for losing this one. But we did.

For me, five remarkable years into the Tedford era, the honeymoon is over.

Ken from EMFMV: “UCLA debacle 1 of 5: I’m disgusted”

There is no excuse for the Bears losing to UCLA. To those who have said they have a newfound respect for UCLA, particularly their defense, one of two things is true. Either you had way too little respect for them or you don’t realize just how poor the Bears play-calling was. If I had to come up with a word for the Bears play-calling in the weak moments of the last two years it would be stubborn. Many pick the word conservative, but I think that is wholly inaccurate. . . .

The Bears should have won this one in a walk… but our coaches insisted otherwise, not because they were conservative, but because they were stubborn.

Unbelievable. Tragic. Disgusting.

Avinash from Bears Necessity: “Well, That Wasn’t Fun”

I can’t say I was surprised. The defense had been teetering like a house of cards for the past two games, and this time it fell apart (there were individual standouts, but the collective effort was gone). The playcalling was…questionable. Very questionable–so conservative it made Pat Robertson blush. I love Tedford, but two runs on 1st and 10 at the UCLA 35 when our field goal kicker looks more shaky than Byung-Hyun Kim?

Last week left me disgusted and bitter; this week just leaves me cold. All the doubters were right–place the Bears against a physical ground game and a fast defense, and they will be exposed. Oregon State opened the seal, UCLA busted it open.

Hydrotech from CA Golden Blogs: “UCLA Post-Game Thoughts”

*Cal’s run defense. Alright, plain and simple it sucked. Surpringly the stats say they only averaged 4.1 yards per carry. I thought it would have been more. … Poor tackling. Lots and lots of “hitting” and not wrapping up the ball carrier. . . .

*Our inability to run the ball. Yeah, we couldn’t run worth crap. Cal had a 2.2 yard rush average. Forsett had a 3 yard average which is sub-par for college football. This inability to run falls on the shoulders of the Cal OL, TEs, and FB. These guys just got out played. . . .

*Turnovers. Once again we lost the turnover battle and the game. Officially we had 4 turnovers and UCLA had 2. I suppose you could say we only had 3 since Longshore’s last INT was sort of a jump ball desperation pass. Nevertheless, the other turnovers are unacceptable. . . .

*Field Goal kicking. One of the most overlooked scorers on a football team is the field goal kicker. I think a lot of fans don’t realize the importance of having an excellent kicker. … Instead of us trying to make comeback, it would have been UCLA. . . .

While I do concede that [Coach Tedford]’s probably lost some games he shouldn’t have, he’s still a great coach. He may have yet to prove that he’s an excellent coach but he’s great. I don’t think it’s time to turn on him and just hope other Cal fans are reasonable in their criticism and don’t just let their emotions cloud their judgment.

Quotes from the team:

Worrell Williams: “We just have to keep fighting and never quit,” he said. “We don’t have anything else to play for but pride. Obviously, the national championship is out of the picture. The Rose Bowl is out of the picture. But we still have to suit up and play.”

DeSean Jackson: “We have to change some things up. I have a lot of confidence in coach (Jeff) Tedford, and we have a lot of playmakers on this team. We can’t wait until the last minute to start rushing around and trying to make plays. We’ve got to start knocking people out right away.”

There’s a lot of season left, but can Cal turn it around? We will see when the Bears visit ASU (#4 BCS, #7 AP) on Saturday. Let’s hope that the team, coaching staff, and fans stay strong despite these disappointing times.

The media on UCLA

Posted by | October 20, 2007 at 2:08 am | In Uncategorized | No Comments

Cal helmetUCLA helmet

ESPN: “Top 25 Overview”

Hard to believe, considering it lost to Notre Dame, but UCLA is ahead of Cal in the Pac-10 standings. The Golden Bears are looking to rebound after suffering their first loss of the season, while UCLA hopes to start the second half of its season on the right foot.

USA Today: “Weekend Preview”

No. 9 California can get itself right back into the Pac-10 title discussion with a win at conference co-leader UCLA, which has played its two worst games against non-conference opponents. The Bruins got a week off to heal, which could enable QB Patrick Cowan (knee) to return. If he has full mobility, he should help RB Kahlil Bell find rushing lanes, but LB Anthony Felder and the Cal defense will be in no mood to give any ground.

The Golden Bears could also get their signal-caller, Nate Longshore (ankle), back, but freshman Kevin Riley will be ready if needed. Cal will need a big game from RB Justin Forsett to neutralize the rush from UCLA DE Bruce Davis.

Bruce Feldman: “Week 8 picks”

Cal 28, UCLA 17: The Golden Bears do not have much of a defense, but their stellar trio of receivers and speedy backs should be too much for a UCLA team still trying to find itself. The Bruins should be able to move the ball, but I think they just don’t have enough playmakers to beat the Bears in a game of big plays.

College Football News: “Pac 10 Fearless Predictions”

The Pac-10 game of the week pits two of the five programs that have separated from the rest of the field in the hunt for a spot in the Rose Bowl. And two teams that have been saddled recently with injuries at the quarterback position. …

With or without Longshore, the Bears will be able to move the ball through the air on a UCLA pass defense that’s allowing 242 yards a game. Before making a mental mistake at the end of last week’s loss, Riley actually played well … and has a dynamic receiving corps that’ll burn a questionable Bruins secondary. A Cal line that’s permitted the fewest sacks in the Pac-10 will neutralize DE Bruce Davis and a very aggressive UCLA pass rush. …

Save for the Utah debacle in Week 3, the Bruins defense has been rock solid all year, holding opponents to an average of 23 points and 324 yards a game, while consistently making plays for negative yards. … a UCLA rush defense that’s No. 10 in the country at only 81 yards a game. …

Cal will rebound from last week’s loss against a UCLA team that’s way too inconsistent and struggling with quarterback issues of its own. The Bears will click on a couple of deep balls from either Riley or Longshore to pull away from the Bruins. CFN Prediction: California 34 … UCLA 21

ESPN’s “College Football Live” (TV):

Another odd conference leader: UCLA has been ugly at times [but] they haven’t lost a Pac-10 game yet. …

UCLA has been real inconsistent and I think that Cal’s looking for a little bit of redemption. I’d like to see Kevin Riley get in there and be able make up for that terrible terrible decision at the end of the game last week. You’d like to see him get in there. And this is a very talented Cal team… one of those teams, really, if we see some losses up there at the top like we were discussing earlier … [if] we see some losses up there at the top this is the kind of team that could sneak in with that one loss to the national champion picture.  [/jyu]

Cal-UCLA TV coverage

Posted by | October 19, 2007 at 12:57 pm | In Games | 4 Comments

2007-10-20 ABC Coverage Map

Here is the ABC coverage map for the UCLA game, if you won’t be at the Rose Bowl tomorrow. Note that the match-up will not be broadcast in HD, just like the Oregon game.

Personnel news: Mack, Schneider, QB

Posted by | October 19, 2007 at 8:59 am | In Players/Alumni | No Comments

C Alex Mack has been named a semifinalist for the Rotary Lombardi Award.

PK Tom Schneider is out for the season with a torn leg muscle, and he will petition for a sixth year of eligibility. He was injured during warm-ups before the Tennessee game. While backup Jordan Kay has done well in Schneider’s absence, this is a big loss on special teams.


Photo: Daily Californian

QB Nate Longshore is still not 100% and is still a “gametime decision” for Saturday. CC Times’ Jon Okanes thinks it’s only a 50-50 chance that he’ll start at UCLA. Backup Kevin Riley has been splitting snaps with him in practice this week and should be ready to go if needed after performing last Saturday.

Additional injury updates:

  • WR Robert Jordan, TE Cameron Morrah are expected to play despite shoulder injuries last Saturday.
  • DB Marcus Ezeff (quad) is still doubtful for Saturday unless Coach Bob Gregory thinks “he has to play.”
  • DE Rulon Davis is still out for a few more games with a foot injury.

Cal falls to Oregon State

Posted by | October 13, 2007 at 7:43 pm | In Games | 24 Comments

The Bears experienced a heartbreaking loss today after an ugly and aggravating battle with Oregon State. Despite an opportunity to be the #1-ranked team in the nation after LSU’s loss to Kentucky, Cal fell to the Beavers 31-28.

Fans might be tempted to point blame at a backup quarterback (how could he run with seconds left? why didn’t he spike the ball?) and a true freshman (how could you fumble on that crucial return?) for their mistakes.

However, they played hard and showed great promise, and this loss shouldn’t be on their shoulders. Everything just seemed to go wrong, and painful turnovers spelled the end of the Bears. The Pac-10 officiating (horrible as usual) didn’t help either.

Now what? There is hope amidst the anger and frustration. The Rose Bowl is still very much in sight as we look forward. What do you think? GO BEARS.

P.S. Lavelle Hawkins is a stud.

A few links of note:

The media on Oregon State

Posted by | October 13, 2007 at 10:19 am | In Games | 2 Comments

ESPN‘s “Top 25 Overview”:


College GameDay talks Cal -- beginning when there's 4:43 remaining and at the end of the clip

After a bye week, Cal comes into this week’s game against Oregon State with its highest ranking in over 50 years. The Bears will have to keep their guard up as the Beavers have had success at Cal, winning their last three games in Berkeley

Bruce Feldman: “Week 7 Picks”

Cal 44, Oregon State 23: The Bears are very explosive, although I doubt they have the kind of defense that can win a national title. Still, OSU will be too one-dimensional to pose much of a threat.

SF Chronicle: “Beavers rely on speedy defense”

[Yvenson] Bernard is averaging more than 100 yards a game again this season and had the best day of his career two years ago against Cal, when he rushed for 194 yards in a 23-20 upset of the then No. 18 Bears in Berkeley. Two years before that, in 2003, the Beavers upset Cal in Berkeley one week after the Bears had handed eventual co-national champ USC its only loss of the season.

In 2004, Oregon State had defending national champion and No. 3-ranked LSU all but beaten in Baton Rouge, but three missed extra points, including one in overtime, sent the Beavers to a 22-21 defeat. Last year, Oregon State, then 4-3, finished off a major upset, ending USC’s 38-game regular-season winning streak when Van Orsow knocked down John David Booty‘s two-point conversion pass for a 33-31 victory over the No. 3 Trojans.

Riley and Van Orsow use words like “confidence” and “opportunity” to explain Oregon State’s upset binge, and to get another one Saturday, the Beavers will need a solid game from sophomore quarterback Sean Canfield.

Contra Costa Times: “Bears and Beavers defenders want to bring the heat”

Both teams have reasons to believe defense can make an impact in today’s game at Memorial Stadium. The Beavers (3-3, 1-2 Pac-10) are tied for second nationally with 26 sacks, and with the uncertainty about Cal’s quarterback situation, they may be relishing the chance to bring the heat even more.

The Bears, meanwhile, can’t wait to make some plays against Oregon State’s Sean Canfield, who has thrown 13 interceptions, more than any quarterback in the land. “It has us licking our chops a little bit,” Cal linebacker Worrell Williams said. “If we can put a little pressure on him, get him in a bad situation, he might give one of those to us.”

This is not the game the Bears (5-0, 2-0) wanted to go into unsure about the availability of quarterback Nate Longshore, who is trying to recover from a sprained left ankle he suffered in Cal’s last game at Oregon on Sept. 29. The Bears had thought the bye week had come at just the right time and Longshore would be a sure thing by today. But coach Jeff Tedford is calling Longshore’s status a game-time decision. …

OSU is without wide receiver Sammie Stroughter (kidney) … Canfield, meanwhile, has thrown at least two interceptions in four of the Beavers’ six games, including five in a 44-32 loss to Arizona State.

Seattle Post-Intelligencer: “Pac-10 Notebook”

Oregon State started 2-3 last season… before rolling up victories in eight of its final nine games. So perhaps the Beavers are in for the same reversal of fortune this year. And haven’t they won three consecutive games at California? …

Oregon State “leads” the nation with 23 turnovers, in large part because Canfield “leads” the nation with 13 interceptions. It was considered a minor victory when he had only two against the Wildcats, but that number may have been low because the offense played conservatively in the second half and gained only 44 yards. …

While Canfield can’t make mistakes against Cal if the Beavers hope to pull off the upset, the more intriguing matchup may be the Bears’ offensive line against the Beavers’ aggressive front. Cal has given up only four sacks in five games. The Beavers average 4.33 sacks per game, second in the nation.

The Oregonian: “Swallow up the run”

…[T]he Bears weren’t overpowering in their last game, gaining just 115 net yards on the ground in a 31-24 win at Oregon. While the Ducks’ run defense is suspect, the Beavers’ run defense is the stingiest in the country, allowing 43.3 yards per game. Meanwhile, the Beavers’ pass rush has accounted for 25 sacks, No. 1 in the Pac-10 and tied for second among all Football Bowl Subdivision teams.

Those numbers tell Cal coach Jeff Tedford that Oregon State might be trouble in Saturday’s game, even though the unbeaten Bears are a two-touchdown favorite. “You watch these guys on tape, not only the rush defense but the pass rush, and they’re really, really good up front,” Tedford said. …

Last week, the Beavers suffocated the Arizona offense, sacking quarterback Willie Tuitama eight times. The Wildcats had a net of nine rushing yards in the game. … Stopping the run would be a good start if OSU wants to upset Cal.

Oregon StatesmanJournal: “Beavers have history of Berkeley wins; Canfield holds the key”

Another Cal rout? Another stunning Beaver upset? Here are some numbers that lead me to think the Beavers have a shot. OSU is giving up 43 yards per game on the ground, first in the nation. The Beavers also are second in the nation in sacks. Perfect! Shut down the run and then sack the snot out of quarterback Nate Longshore when he tries to pass. The only problem with that scenario is that the Bears’ speedy receivers will severely test a banged-up OSU secondary, and Beavers QB Sean Canfield still is putting the vise grips on coach Mike Riley’s mental health. If Canfield is interception-free, OSU has a shot. If he throws three, it could get ugly. I think it will be somewhere in between. Cal wins 31-17.

QB news, injury update, links

Posted by | October 11, 2007 at 10:22 pm | In DeSean, Players/Alumni, Ranks/Predictions | 3 Comments

QB Nate Longshore‘s availability (sprained left ankle) for the Oregon State match-up will be a gametime decision, according to Coach Jeff Tedford. Apparently, backup QB Kevin Riley has been taking about 75 percent of the first team snaps in practice and is looking pretty confident.

Regarding the other injuries: LB Zach Follett should be back in action on Saturday, FB Will Ta’ufo’ou (knee) is questionable, DB Marcus Ezeff (quad) who made the winning tackle of the Oregon game is a gametime decision, and DE Rulon Davis (foot) and PK Tom Schneider are still out.

Also, here are a few miscellaneous links of interest:

  • ESPN has a midseason review of the Pac-10, naming Cal the “biggest surprise” as a national title contender, RB Justin Forsett as the conference MVP, and Coach Tedford the conference’s coach of the year.
  • ESPN’s NFL draft guru Mel Kiper thinks Longshore is the #1 junior quarterback, WR/PR DeSean Jackson is an “obvious” first-round pick, and WR Lavelle Hawkins should be a third-rounder.
  • The Sacramento Bee has a feature on CB Syd’Quan Thompson and LB Worrell Williams — apparently, Marshawn isn’t the only mama’s boy.
  • The sports center lawsuit is finally wrapping up, and the lawyers made closing arguments earlier today.
  • DeSean was interviewed by KRON 4’s Gary Radnich yesterday — he is a confident, charismatic guy who seems to have really won Radnich over.

TV update: Oregon St (VS), UCLA (ABC)

Posted by | October 8, 2007 at 10:40 am | In Games | 1 Comment

Today, ABC announced that it will televise the Cal-UCLA game on Oct. 20 with a 12:30pm kickoff. The game should have regional coverage similar to the Oregon game.

And, if you missed the news last week, the Oregon State game will be televised by Versus on Saturday at 4pm.

Cal rises to #2, USC falls

Posted by | October 7, 2007 at 2:56 pm | In Ranks/Predictions | 3 Comments

#2

Despite the bye week, Cal has risen to #2 in all polls (AP, USA Today/Coaches, Harris) after USC’s meltdown loss to Stanford yesterday. The Bears are maintaining a narrow margin of only a few points over #3 Ohio State (who beat then-#23 Purdue pretty convincingly) in all of the polls.

In other news around the conference, UCLA was humiliated by a horrible Notre Dame squad and Arizona State escaped with a close victory over Washington State.

What does this all mean? Cal will be in the national championship game in January if the Bears keep winning — and the results of weekend give me confidence that success on the road there is becoming a likely reality. USC showed vulnerability in a stunning loss to a terrible team, while UCLA and Arizona State (two of the tough road games ahead) both appear very beatable. Even if Cal suffers a loss in the difficult remainder of the season, the hopes of a BCS game for the Bears are looking bright.

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