Lodi News-Sentinel

Cal fires coach Dykes after four seasons

- By Josh Dubow

BERKELEY — More than six weeks after coach Sonny Dykes finished his fourth season at California, he was called into a meeting Sunday with athletic director Mike Williams and promptly fired.

Williams said the decision wasn’t about one winning record in four seasons and was made in spite of dramatic improvemen­t in academics under Dykes.

“We’re not connecting this in any way to on-field performanc­e,” Williams said. “I’m very pleased with what Sonny has done with the culture of the football program and with the academic performanc­e of our studentath­letes.”

Without giving specific details for why he made his decision, Williams repeatedly talked about wanting a coach committed to the program after Dykes flirted with job openings at Houston, Missouri and Baylor in recent years and wanting a program that excited the fan base.

After evaluating all of that, Williams made his decision at the unusually late time, leading Cal to start a coaching search just a few weeks before national signing day.

Fox Sports first reported Dykes had been fired.

Dykes left Louisiana Tech to replace Jeff Tedford and took over the struggling Cal program in 2013, but could never get the Bears turned around. They went 8-5 in 2015, but then slid back to 5-7 this season.

While rival Stanford has built a powerhouse in recent years despite high academic standards, Cal has not been to the Rose Bowl since the 1958 season.

“With all of our programs, we have success in the classroom, we have tremendous academic accomplish­ment and we win championsh­ips,” Williams said. “That’s the standard for football also.”

Dykes and the administra­tion seemed to be at odds after that 2015 season during a prolonged negotiatio­n of a contract extension. The deal was finally worked out and Dykes’ deal was extended through the 2019 season. Cal owes Dykes more than $5 million under terms of the deal finalized in March because he was fired without cause, although that will be off-set by money he earns at any job he gets during the next three seasons.

Williams said he believes this move will help the financiall­y struggling program reach long-term sustainabi­lity.

“In order to do this, we need to continue to invest in football,” he said. “The football investment is critical. We believe this change will re-invigorate the program, stimulate lagging ticket sales and renewals and energize our donor base.”

Dykes finished his tenure with a 1930 record, including 10-26 in the Pac-12 as the Bears struggled to sell out games at its remodeled stadium.

Dykes said he was “surprised and disappoint­ed” by the move and called Cal a special place.

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