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Bears Overwhelm Illinois 35-20 for Bowl Win
Garbers Is MVP - Throws 4 TD Passes, Rushes For Another
Redbox Bowl - December 30, 2019
SANTA CLARA – Included among the things the Cal football team earned tonight was the right to expect more. The Golden Bears used an efficient and balanced offense and limited Illinois to a singular second-half touchdown in a 35-20 shellacking of the Fighting Illini in the 2019 Redbox Bowl at Levi's Stadium. The win gave Cal (8-5) its second eight-win season in the past four years and a three-game winning streak to finish the year. After finishing second in the Pac-12 North and with every offensive starter returning in 2020 (and most key players back on defense), the Bears are already thinking where their next steps might take them. "It's an exciting time for us," said Cal head coach Justin Wilcox, who has improved the team's win total in each of his first three seasons in Berkeley. "We talked in the locker room about the 2020 team. The expectations should continue to rise. There's no reason why we can't expect more of ourselves." If quarterback Chase Garbers and the rest of the Cal offense continues to perform as it did against Illinois, bigger and better things seem inevitable. Garbers carved up the Fighting Illini defense, completing passes to nine different receivers and throwing four touchdown passes while rushing for another. He finished 21-for-31 for 272 yards. Garbers missed four games and parts of others this season because of injury, but the Bears went 7-0 when he played at least half the game. Cal is 12-2 in those games dating back to last year.
"We had a pretty good game plan going into the game," Garbers said. "We knew there would be a lot of opportunities out there. The receivers did a great job running the right routes and catching the ball. I just had to put the ball where it's supposed to be." Garbers was named the game's offensive MVP while running back Christopher Brown Jr. rushed for 120 yards and caught a 3-yard touchdown pass. The teams traded scores throughout the first half but the game turned after halftime. Cal held Illinois to a three-and-out on the first possession of the third quarter, including a strip-sack by defensive MVP Zeandae Johnson. The Fighting Illini recovered, but the Bears took over with excellent field position and scored on a seven-play drive that ended with a 2-yard touchdown pass from Garbers to tight end Gavin Reinwald to give Cal a 28-13 lead. The Bears followed up with a 12-play, 88-yard scoring drive, with Garbers finding Nikko Remigio on a 6-yard scoring pass. Cal led 35-13 with 11:06 to play. "Our offensive staff did a great job putting a game plan together and trying to dial it up," Wilcox said. "I thought the whole offense in general did a great job." It was an especially productive game by the Bears' tight ends, as Reinwald, Jake Tonges and Collin Moore combined for five catches for 71 yards and two touchdowns. Moore's 4-yard scoring catch in the first quarter was the first touchdown of his career.
All-American linebacker Evan Weaver finished with a game-high nine tackles to give him 182 for the season, the fifth-highest single-season total in NCAA history. While the Bears will miss Weaver and other key defenders such as safeties Ashtyn Davis and Jaylinn Hawkins moving forward, several impact players on the defensive side of the ball return in 2020, including Johnson, nose guard Brett Johnson, linebackers Kuony Deng, Cameron Goode, and defensive backs Camryn Bynum, Elijah Hicks, among others. "The stats go with it, but all I've really cared about this season is winning as many games as we could," Weaver said. "We fell short in a few of them, but I'm happy with eight wins. It's the most I've ever had in college. These guys will do a great job piggybacking off of that." The Bears open the 2020 season Aug. 29 at UNLV, and the team is well-aware their 2019 performance will result in increased attention from the outset. "It's a big, big win for our program for a lot of reasons," Wilcox said. "We have high expectations for ourselves moving forward. If you're not trying to win every game, what are you doing here? We can talk about it, but what it takes is a lot of hard work and investment by the people in the program."
#Cal#Go Bears#UC Berkeley#Cal Football#Bear Territory#Chase Garbers#Evan Weaver#Golden Bears#Cal Berkeley#Christopher Brown Jr#Justin Wilcox#Cal Bears#Zeandae Johnson#Nikko Remigio#Redbox Bowl#Jake Tonges#Collin Moore#Gavin Reinwald
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Modster, Defense Lift Bears Over Cougars
Quarterback Throws Three TD, Runs For Another In Win
BERKELEY - The Golden Bears finally got that elusive fifth win.
After starting the season 4-0, beating ranked teams on the road and finally being ranked as high as #15 themselves, things came crashing back down to Earth when starting QB Chase Garbers - the only quarterback the Bears had known for the previous 15 games - went down with an injury. Suddenly Cal’s dominant defense did not have the offensive component to accompany it.
The Bears had other injuries, particularly to their experienced offensive line. They also lost their backup QB, Devon Modster, for a time and had to start a true freshman (shades of a year ago). And while they played surprisingly well - almost beating the Ducks in Eugene and some other frustratingly close contests - they still lost their next four games. Evan Weaver preferred the experience Saturday much more than in previous weeks. Weaver led another impressive performance against Washington State's vaunted offense, and Modster returned from his injury with four touchdowns as the Cal football team upended the Cougars 33-20 at California Memorial Stadium. "It feels pretty good to sit up here not all cranky and angry," said Weaver, who had 10 tackles for his 15th double-digit total in the past 16 games. "It's a pretty good time to be on the winning side. It's awesome to get a win." Saturday's victory snapped the bitter losing streak for the Bears (5-4, 2-4 Pac-12) and moved them within one win of qualifying for a bowl game for the second consecutive season.
Modster threw three touchdown passes and ran for another as Cal scored the most points in a game this season. His 13-yard scoring run with 2:26 to play put the Bears up 33-14. He had already thrown a 9-yard scoring pass to tight end Gavin Reinwald, a 13-yard touchdown toss to running back Christopher Brown Jr. and a spectacular 52-yard catch-and-run to wide receiver Makai Polk for another score. Modster finished 16-for-24 for 230 yards and no interceptions for a passer rating of 188.4. "I'd say average," Modster said when asked to assess his performance. "I missed a couple of throws that I should have made. But I think it was a great team win. The offensive line played fantastic and the receivers made plays." Cal's return to the win column coincided with a healthier roster. Center Michael Saffell was back on the field after missing the previous two games because of injury as was wide receiver Kekoa Crawford. And Modster, who was injured against Oregon State and didn't play in the Bears' previous game at Utah, looked sharp in his comeback. "I love the fact that (Modster) thinks that way," Cal coach Justin Wilcox said. "He's a competitive guy. I think probably he's thinking about a few plays where we had some home runs that we didn't quite connect on and one that we dropped. But I'm proud of how he handled it and competed. He practiced with a chip on his shoulder last week and this week, and it showed up."
In three games against the Cougars since Wilcox became Cal's head coach, the Bears have held the Cougars to an average of 14 points per game. And that number became inflated when Washington State scored an insignificant touchdown with five seconds remaining. Still, Cal still held the Cougars well under their scoring average of 41.8 points per game, continuing a trend of holding WSU well below their season average. In the previous two games before Saturday, Cal held the Cougars to an average of 11 points per game – 24.8 points per game less than their average against all other teams during the same period.
Weaver led the defensive effort and moved into ninth place on Cal's single-season tackles list with 137 (he already is tied for second on the all-time list with 159 last season). Safety Jaylinn Hawkins recorded an interception and forced fumble and nickelback Josh Drayden had a career night six solo tackles. "(WSU's offense) correlates with our defense very well," Weaver said. "We had dudes who can cover and a D-line that can rush. To have guys like that all over the field is perfect." The Bears' defense limited Washington State to 423 total yards, 81 of which came on their final drive when Cal enjoyed a significant lead, and only 16 rushing yards. The Cougars entered the game ranked sixth in total offense at 521.9 yards per game. "We came into the game hungry," Polk said. "We're trying to get to a bowl game. We knew if we won this one, we'd be one win away from a bowl game. That was our motivation going into the game."
#Cal#Go Bears#UC Berkeley#Bear Territory#Cal Football#Evan Weaver#Devon Modster#Cal Bears#Gavin Reinwald#Jaylinn Hawkins#Golden Bears#Christopher Brown Jr#Josh Drayden#Cal Berkeley#Justin Wilcox#Chase Garbers#Makai Polk#Kekoa Crawford#Michael Saffell
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