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Monday, March 08, 2010  |  17 Comment(s)  |   Email   |  Print

The Team Everyone Else is Chasing

By Alex Goff

The University of California Golden Bears didn’t play this weekend, but they weren’t idle, as the coaching staff put them through a set of team-building activities.

And to many others in college rugby, the idea of the Bears becoming any more close as a team has got to get them worried, because Cal has not looked challenged in any game they’ve played so far – not even against mighty UBC.
 

Above, Dustin Muhn gallops on against SD State, below, the backs are moving, but the forwards are still a work in progress. Bottom, Keegan Engelbrecht has been almost automatic with the boot. Ed Hagerty photos.

Head coach Jack Clark, however, is quick to put the kibosh on any thoughts of Cal being a finished product.

“We’ve been uneven,” Clark told RUGBYMag.com. “We show signs of playing some pretty good rugby in patches and then we’ve been pretty ordinary. There’ve been games where if you weren’t there and you didn’t study the tape, you’d think we did OK. Against San Diego State and UBC the scoreline may have looked like that’s a team headed in the right direction. But on further analysis of those performances, we still have a long way to go.”

It’s a common to hear Clark say it’s not about the score, but reaching certain benchmarks. But usually, too, scores follow performances. Against San Diego State, for example, Cal had the game in hand early, but were outscored in the second half.

“It’s about the performance not about how many points we scored in one half or the other,” said Clark. “Look, we’re a pretty athletic team. We can score long-range tries, out forward groups are good if you give them a beachhead in close. We can score tries in different ways. All the good teams can kick the ball, all the good teams can score, all can score primary phase tries with their backline and the good teams can all play in fractured play to some degree. We have a bit of competency in all of those areas but it’s about drilling down further and looking at our performance in some detail. We haven’t been able to put it together from all 15, even from an effort level. I think we’ve been caught out on effort and caught out on learning the same lessons over and over again.”

Still they’ve been better than their opposition, and Clark isn’t fretting, saying that all teams improve over the spring and his will be no different.

And they have talent to spare, especially in the backs where Blaine Scully has 11 tries, Dustin Muhn ten and Colin Hawley nine. Flanker Jason Law has touched down seven times. The team’s the co-captains - Keegan Engelbrecht, Hawley and Eric Fry - have been leading well and playing to expectations. Engelbrecht has been outstanding with his goalkicking, scoring 132 points so far. Center/wing Scully, said Clark, “is having an outstanding year. He’s been a real threat on the field.”

The Cal backs have been very good and, their coach said, perhaps a little further ahead than the forwards.

“We have fewer proven players in the forwards,” Clark said. “We’re doing OK there but we’re not dominant by any stretch of imagination.”

After this off weekend, Cal gets into it. They play a makeup game with Chico State on Saturday, followed by Homecoming against St. Mary’s a week later in a game that will decide who wins Northern California. Four days later the Bears will be in Vancouver to play the return match against UBC, followed a day later by Pacific Northwest champions Central Washington. And suddenly, it’s on to the playoffs, just like that.

A compeltely new starting lineup will face Central Washington, and that's all been part of the Clark modus operandi. He will field a team of only freshmen and sophomores, or maybe a 2nd XV, but won't say so - simply putting them on the field as Cal.

"Training volumes are so much more significant than game volumes," said Clark. "Training is where we truly build depth. No one holds bag more than anyone else. All players being coached. But competition plays a part as well. What we try to do with the reserves is to give them as many opportunites as is practical to play as Cal, not just as the second match of the day, but go out and represent Cal. The parents come out in force to see their son be a starter. The boys take on the pride of representing the program. It provides everybody a little bit of authorship to the team, and it improves the development of the players."

But as the games get more important, the competition for starting places becomes tougher.

“The next stretch the right challenge for our team,” said Clark. “We’ll up our training. The volume and intensity will increase in April and we’ll back off matches. This team is an awfully fun team to work with. They’re way into it, they’re trying hard, but they don’t know what they don’t know. However the guys are very level-headed and clear about their own abilities and our collective abilities. Overall, we’re improving.”

Which, as we said, can’t be good news for anyone else.
 

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Reader Comments

factchecker @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 5:00 PM Flag Inappropriate
Agreed Manley66. However, there will always be teams which take developing "infrastructure" more seriously than others. What's equal about this is, building a supporter base, campus reputation and team culture is free, accept for the work I assume. Here's to sport as theater, well said.

manley66 @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 3:51 PM Flag Inappropriate
Yankess as in dynasty. Equal as in if every school had the same infrastructure. Everyone loves to see a giant fall. It makes for great theater and sport.

factchecker @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 3:09 PM Flag Inappropriate
"equal"? Equal hard-work, equal standards or equal socialism? If Cal offered rugby scholarships (they don't) and no one else did, your Yankee analogy would work. Good and bad guys, lets make a list. Where is last yrs Final 4: BYU, Army, Cal & SDSU? Are all the good teams to be disliked?

manley66 @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 2:36 PM Flag Inappropriate
Cal just has a ridiculous head start on the rest of college rugby. IF all things were equal, Cal would see more programs challenging the the thrown. We are already seeing other programs making huge strides. Cal just reminds me of the Yankees and I love to watch them lose. We always need bad guys...

mullane @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 2:22 PM Flag Inappropriate
Hmm, Ive only seen Cal & BYU play once each this season (LVI) but Cal looked like the much more complete team. Cal completely dominated SD State in every aspect of the game in the 1st half. I say Cal wins nationals fairly easy this year. . .

William Adam A. @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 2:00 PM Flag Inappropriate
My comment was towards college coaches who r fulltime & dont produce a 1/4 of what JC does. take a look at the psu men for ex. Lost to delaware & kutztown & has produced only 3 national team players the last decade. They have every advantage Cal has besides the most important. A good head man.

factchecker @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 12:54 PM Flag Inappropriate
With due respect for the RugbyMag rankings, I think it is Cal (and others) who are "chasing" the defending National Champions BYU. Who looked big...big and talented, mature, or shall we say experienced, on TV vs Utah. However, it was Utah with the 21 yr old freshman, not even a mission to blame.

ktrain @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 12:28 PM Flag Inappropriate
If you want to stop chasing Cal (Men) or Penn State (Women) you better be in it for the long haul. Being a good coach is as much about political acumen, networking skills and developing clubs off the field as it is about rugby. It's also about walking away if necessary.

joe sweeney @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 11:21 AM Flag Inappropriate
I didn't think there was any attack on Cal; My point was that regardless of current position of a club, there may be aspects of Cal that that club may look to emulate - for example the long, long term project Clark has pursued to develop his relationship with university & alumni applies to any team.

factchecker @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 11:11 AM Flag Inappropriate
SoCal17, If its true they have "their pick of ALL THE TOP players" and 85% of their team comes from local cali kids, what are you saying? There are very few top players in 49 states? I think not. Where do 90% of the USA age-grader's play, year after year? Not at Cal. Its more than good players.

SoCal7s @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 10:53 AM Flag Inappropriate
...all get to just hop out of bed and play rugby...we (and most college clubs I know) are in a constant fight for fields and money AND athletic players who know the rules...more power to Cal but they are playing a different game. We played ARMY who were in a similar boat, no hate here, reality!

SoCal7s @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 10:50 AM Flag Inappropriate
I don't think anyone has attacked Cal here. I was a player/coach for a little D2 school that was getting run off campus by the AD, even though he was a personal friend of mine...our best athletes had to come from somewhere, mostly varsity dropouts and the AD was punishing those guys. We don't...

joe sweeney @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 9:57 AM Flag Inappropriate
No doubt Clark benefits from the best high school league in the country in his backyard & from having developed a great relationship with his alumni & UCal that gives his program unparalleled support. But we can either complain or emulate those things that he does well and will work for our clubs.

manley66 @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 2:09 AM Flag Inappropriate
Cal rugby is established. They have what they have because it has been in development for 127 years. Cal's success can also be attributed to the depth of high school rugby in NorCal. So yeah, "chasing" is a little bit of an understatement.

william adam a. @ Tuesday, March 09 2010 1:15 AM Flag Inappropriate
relax. I wasnt talking about results but quality of leadership. if a coach is doing what you describe then they are being what they should be for their program. Besides, my comments were aimed at the few coaches in this country who are actually paid full time to run a program. a few are stealing

SoCal7s @ Monday, March 08 2010 11:22 PM Flag Inappropriate
If every coach had their pick of ALL THE TOP players instead of having to pick them up at 7am and teach 'em til kickoff, just to have 15 each Saturday...perhaps they'd stop stealing those paychecks and just coach 'em up. CAL is 'pristine conditions' few can honestly compare...that's reality bub!

William Adam A. @ Monday, March 08 2010 10:50 PM Flag Inappropriate
If you are a coach who gets a paid check for being a coach, and you do not strive to be everything Jack Clark is for the Cal program then you are flat out stealing money and should be ashamed.

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