|
507 PACERS
508 HEAT
5/24/2013 8:30 PM(et)
|
+7
-7
181
|
+7
-7
180½
|
+7
-7
180½
|
+7
-7
180½
|
|
|
|
509 SPURS
510 GRIZZLIES
5/25/2013 9:00 PM(et)
|
-
pick
178
|
+5½
-5½
177½
|
+5
-5
178½
|
+5
-5
178½
|
|
|
|
903 TWINS
904 TIGERS
5/23/2013 7:08 PM(et)
|
+180
-180
9½p
|
+156
-166
9o
|
+160
-180
9o
|
+160
-180
9o
|
|
|
|
905 ORIOLES
906 BLUEJAYS
5/23/2013 7:07 PM(et)
|
+140
-140
9½p
|
+109
-119
9o
|
+110
-130
9o
|
+110
-130
9o
|
|
|
|
907 INDIANS
908 REDSOX
5/23/2013 7:10 PM(et)
|
+150
-150
9½u
|
+130
-140
9½o
|
+130
-150
9½p
|
+130
-150
9½p
|
|
|
|
909 ANGELS
910 ROYALS
5/23/2013 8:10 PM(et)
|
+150
-150
9p
|
+118
-128
8½p
|
+115
-135
9u
|
+115
-135
9u
|
|
|
|
451 RAVENS
452 BRONCOS
9/5/2013 8:30 PM(et)
|
+7
-7
|
+9
-9
49½
|
|
|
|
|
|
453 PATRIOTS
454 BILLS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
-5½
+5½
|
-7½
+7½
52½
|
|
|
|
|
|
455 TITANS
456 STEELERS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
+6
-6
|
+7
-7
43½
|
|
|
|
|
|
457 FALCONS
458 SAINTS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
+1½
-1½
|
+1½
-1½
54
|
|
|
|
|
|
459 BUCCANEERS
460 JETS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
+1½
-1½
|
-1
+1
41
|
|
|
|
|
|
461 CHIEFS
462 JAGUARS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
-
pick
|
-1½
+1½
39½
|
|
|
|
|
|
463 BENGALS
464 BEARS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
+3½
-3½
|
+3½
-3½
45
|
|
|
|
|
|
465 DOLPHINS
466 BROWNS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
-2
+2
|
-
pick
39½
|
|
|
|
|
|
467 SEAHAWKS
468 PANTHERS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
-4
+4
|
-3½
+3½
45
|
|
|
|
|
|
469 VIKINGS
470 LIONS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
+2½
-2½
|
+3
-3
47
|
|
|
|
|
|
471 RAIDERS
472 COLTS
9/8/2013 1:00 PM(et)
|
+8
-8
|
+7½
-7½
48½
|
|
|
|
|
|
473 CARDINALS
474 RAMS
9/8/2013 4:25 PM(et)
|
+5½
-5½
|
+5½
-5½
40
|
|
|
|
|
|
475 PACKERS
476 49ERS
9/8/2013 4:25 PM(et)
|
+4
-4
|
+5
-5
50
|
|
|
|
|
|
477 GIANTS
478 COWBOYS
9/8/2013 8:30 PM(et)
|
+2½
-2½
|
+3
-3
49
|
|
|
|
|
|
479 EAGLES
480 REDSKINS
9/9/2013 7:10 PM(et)
|
+5½
-5½
|
+5
-5
50½
|
|
|
|
|
|
481 TEXANS
482 CHARGERS
9/9/2013 10:20 PM(et)
|
-2½
+2½
|
-3
+3
46
|
|
|
|
|
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"With our second bye week of the season, we are taking advantage of the opportunity to work on fundamentals in practice, give our younger guys a chance to get in some extra work and allow some of our bumps and bruises to heal," coach Jeff Tedford said.
Cal was last in action on October 4th, notching a 24-14 win over Arizona State. The Bears will return to Berkeley for two straight home games following this weekend's tilt.
As for the Wildcats, they are coming off an immensely disappointing loss to Stanford last weekend. For much of the season, the Wildcats have looked fairly sharp on both sides of the ball. But against Stanford, they had major problems stopping the run, and they allowed a third-string quarterback to engineer a game-winning drive in the final minutes.
Over the years, the Cal-Arizona series has been nip and tuck, with the Golden Bears enjoying a slim 13-12-2 lead. Cal rolled to a 45-27 win over Arizona last year in Berkeley.
Cal's Jahvid Best leads the nation in all-purpose yardage (215.5 ypg), though he missed the Arizona State game with a dislocated left elbow. The team is hopeful the bye week provided enough rest for the sophomore to return to action this weekend. Nate Longshore, a two-year starter at quarterback, lost his job in training camp to Kevin Riley. But coach Tedford decided to go with Longshore against ASU, and the senior signal-caller came through with a big performance, throwing for 198 yards and three TDs. Following the game, coach Tedford said the offense had been starting slow, and he thought Longshore could provide an early spark.
"Nate played fine," Tedford said. "He threw three touchdown passes. I thought he managed the offense pretty well. He could have made a couple of other throws, but for the most part, I thought he did a pretty good job."
Like any offense, Tedford's clicks best when the quarterback makes smart decisions. The Bears enter this week averaging 39.4 ppg and rank 10th nationally in turnover margin (1.20).
Cal defensive end Cameron Jordan had a big day against ASU, collecting two sacks and a forced fumble. He helped the Bears limit Sun Devil quarterback Rudy Carpenter, who entered the game as the conference's leading passer, to just 165 yards through the air. Currently, Cal ranks ninth in the nation in pass efficiency defense. One guy who doesn't get enough attention has been punter Bryan Anger, who ranks seventh nationally with a 47.4 yard average. He booted a career-long 72-yarder in the final minutes against ASU, pinning the Sun Devils on their own four-yard line. It was one of three kicks that Anger dropped inside the 10, which paid huge dividends in the field position game.
The Wildcats had been very efficient in the red zone prior to settling for three field goals last weekend. Had they been able to punch one of those into the end zone, this would be a meeting of one-loss teams. But Arizona could only muster one offensive touchdown (Nate Ness scored on a 75-yard interception return in the second quarter). Mike Thomas, who entered the game as the Pac-10's leading receiver, finished with just 31 yards on four catches. Terrell Turner accounted for most of the production in the passing game, setting career-highs with 10 catches for 175 yards. Quarterback Willie Tuitama completed 22-of-34 passes for 259 yards, but the offense saw two fourth- quarter drives stall inside the Stanford five-yard line.
This week at practice, it was back to the drawing board for an Arizona defense that surrendered 286 rushing yards to Stanford. Two Cardinal players ran for the century mark and had a touchdown on the ground. Even taking that into account, the Wildcats are only allowing 261.5 yards per game, and they lead the nation in pass defense (124 ypg). They knocked Cardinal starting quarterback Tavita Pritchard out of the game late in the first half. Backup Jason Forcier fumbled twice and threw an interception before turning the reins over to third-stringer Alex Loukas, who ran for 32 back-breaking yards on Stanford's final drive. More than likely, there wasn't much of an advanced scouting report on Loukas. Still, the defense seemed to wear down with the game on the line, which won't sit well with coach Mike Stoops.
10/15/2008 11:02:46 AM