Evans Hall: Forgettable Mediocrity of Cal Football
The deep mediocrity of the program in the face of new schemes, coaches, and players
Cal football enters a season with some changes on the field with a great spring and fall camp where some under the radar player is practicing with the 1s. We carry some hope after beating some pre-season good OOC teams, take a pause when we struggle against an FCS opponent only to win. The schedule looks tough but there are times where we think about a coin-flip play that changes the momentum of a season, only to lose to a team we should beat and have the entire season hinge on winning the Big Game.
That above can be used to describe nearly every Wilcox season since 2017. I was appalled by the team’s play against Syracuse, the lack of passion, scheming, focus, and general execution by the coaching staff down to the play on the field.
Syracuse isn’t a conventionally good football team. They sport the luckiest win % accounting for Postgame Win Expectancies (that is taking into account their and their opponent’s performance they should’ve won 3 games not 6 going into the Cal game). It is just Cal is so deeply mediocre that being high variance with some luck is enough to have the entire Cal football team look like it did.
Cal Runing Nowhere, on the Median
Cal had 166 yards on the ground for an average of 7.2 YPC, but removing the 75 yard TD by the JET and 53 run by Ott we’re down to a 91 yards and a paltry 4.3 YPC against a defense that gave up 5.5 YPC before the game. Looking at the chart above we can see that besides the 2 big runs, on early downs we barely made any movement forwards. This is most start on 2nd downs where of the 8 carries on those downs we had 4 of them gain 0 yards. On 1st down we had several runs for negative yards.
How do you eat a Golden Bear? 1 Efficient Play at a Time
Note how often Syracuse was able to not take a negative play on early downs. Most of early down passing and rushing allowed McCord and co. to stay on a positive game script with a smattering of explosive plays through the air and ground. On tape and spreadsheet the Syracuse orange was able to stay on schedule and keep converting when needed and move the ball down the field even if it’s just a handful of yards.
We Have Been There Before
In a 8 year tenure of a HC, you’d expect that a person retained for that long is able to point towards a couple of exceptional years where the team they lead and build make a jump outside of the median performance, showing the true ceiling of the program. However, in the case of the Wilcox tenure there is not single year where we can say we had out of the ordinary performance. Every year intersects every quadrant of “good offense/bad offense” and “good defense/bad defense” spectrum. 2024 is all over the place, same way 2023, 22, 21, 20, 19, 18, 17 have been. Just seized by the gravity of mediocrity, never leaving unless it’s by being beat by 2023 UW.
Offense is Forgattably Mediocre
Not a single year did Cal anything better than an average offense in the P5 world, but we certainty had a run of poor offenses that were either inert or unmovable.
4 OCs, 5 QBs, 8 sets of 11 starters, over a 100 players who played a snap for the offense. And all we can show is this. This is what I mean by the forgettable mediocrity, nothing memorable besides individual moments, or super-star players’ moments. But as a whole, you can replace any of these (especially post-Covid) year’s offenses with one another and have more or less the same offense.
Under Justin Wilcox we have never had a good offensive line. He always makes defense a priority in recruiting and from the portal. But even his defense is underperforming this year and last year. We have good skill players on offense, but with no offensive line to block we don't go anywhere. I can't say for sure, but I don't think Wilcox is a good motivator. Look at the beginning of the season when expectations were high. We beat Auburn raising expectations, but look what a team Auburn has turned out to be. We got GameDay and expectations were high. The players were probably fired up on their own from all the hype. We scored a lot of points but tired out by the 4th quarter. Maybe the conditioning program is at fault also. I think one thing that could be done to improve our record is replace the artificial turf with real grass. This would cost far less than buying out Wilcox, which unfortunately is probably not possible. We have had far more injuries since switching to artificial than when we played and practiced on natural grass. The first year after switching to artificial turf our injuries soared.
Ugh.
Thanks Piotr!