Marin Independent Journal

Reducing mistakes a big key for Cal ahead of OSU

Bears to play 5 straight against Top-25 teams

- By Jeff Faraudo

Cal coach Justin Wilcox, whose team faces 15th-ranked Oregon State on Saturday night at Memorial Stadium, isn’t waiting for the Bears to deliver a perfect performanc­e.

“I’ve been coaching or playing for quite a while now and I’ve yet to see that game,” he said.

But if the Bears (3-2, 1-1 Pac-12) hope to prevail against the Beavers (4-1, 1-1) in the first of five straight games against Top-25 opponents they will need to reduce the number of self-inflicted wounds.

Those have popped up everywhere during the first five games, although the Bears hope they have resolved kicking-game shortcomin­gs after a successful debut last week by Mateen Bhathani.

Elsewhere, there were mistakes that could have been costly against an opponent better than Arizona State (1-4, 0-2).

On offense, two penalties wiped out runs of 32 and 16 yards by quarterbac­k Sam Jackson V.

And on defense, blown assignment­s on three plays — mental, not physical mistakes — allowed the Sun Devils gains of 66, 52 and 30 yards. That’s 148 yards on three snaps; ASU averaged 3.9 yards on its remaining 69 plays.

Wilcox, referring to those as “controllab­le mistakes,” said fixing the problem is simple but not easy. “It’s a matter of us doing our job,” he said.

WEEKLY QB QUESTION» Sophomore Sam Jackson V started and played the entire game last week in the Bears’ 24-21 win over Arizona State, the first Cal quarterbac­k to pitch a complete game this season.

Part of the reason for that may have been because Ben Finley was held out of more than one practice last week

after getting banged up at Washington. Finley is available to face Oregon State, but Wilcox was not tipping his hand on a starter during his weekly news conference.

“Well, I don’t know,” Wilcox said with a laugh. “I do know. We have a plan, and maybe we’ll talk about it later in the week, maybe we won’t.”

Jackson was just 12 for 29 for 130 yards with a touchdown against ASU.

WHEN MORE IS LESS » Cal ranks second nationally in offensive plays per game at 79.8, just behind Penn State at 80.6. And while coaches typically appreciate controllin­g the ball, Cal offensive coordinato­r Jake Spavital says he’d swap a few snaps for more explosiven­ess.

He cites as an example the Bears’ 18-play, 74-yard drive late in the ASU game with Cal nursing a threepoint

lead, which ended without a point when Jaydn Ott was stopped on fourthand-goal from inside the 1.

“If you look at that 18-play drive, we were just hammering the ball,” he said. “It’s showing that we’re moving the ball but we’re not being explosive. That’s where the pass game’s got to come into play.”

Cal is second in the Pac12 and 12th nationally in rushing offense at 212.6 yards per game but just 10th in the conference and 89th in passing at 217.8. RETURNING HOME » Tight end Jermaine Terry II played two seasons for Cal before transferri­ng to Oregon State in the offseason. The Richmond native and former four-star prospect at Kennedy High told the Oregonian this week that he’s looking forward to a trip home to play in front of family and friends, but holds no ill will toward the Bears.

“I enjoyed my time there. I don’t regret any bit of it. I definitely was

able to grow as a man, as a player, as a person,” Terry said. “I just felt the time was right for me, to go somewhere wanting to grow as a player, as a student. It was nothing against those guys at all.”

TEDFORD SALUTES EX-BEAR » Vei Moala, who played three seasons (2011-13) along the defensive line for Cal, died last week at the age of 30, following an illness. Moala was a five-star prospect out of Grant High in Sacramento, one of the nation’s top recruits in the fall of 2010.

Former Cal coach Jeff Tedford, whose Fresno State is 5-0 and ranked No. 24 in the AP Top-25, said he was saddened to hear the news about Moala.

“He was a big, physical, imposing figure, a guy I loved being around every day,” Tedford said in a phone interview. “Seemed like he was always happy, always had a smile on his face. I was always really happy he was part of our program.”

 ?? KEITH BIRMINGHAM — SCNG, FILE ?? USC’s Kyle Ford (81) drops a pass against Cal’s Tyson McWilliams (11) in Los Angeles on Nov. 5.
KEITH BIRMINGHAM — SCNG, FILE USC’s Kyle Ford (81) drops a pass against Cal’s Tyson McWilliams (11) in Los Angeles on Nov. 5.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States