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2005-06 GOLDEN BEAR FACTS/ROSTER BEAR FACTS TABLE of CONTENTS Location: Berkeley, CA 94720 Founded: 1868 a Look at the Golden Bears
2005-06 GOLDEN BEAR FACTS/ROSTER BEAR FACTS TABLE OF CONTENTS Location: Berkeley, CA 94720 Founded: 1868 A Look at the Golden Bears ....................................................... 2-3 Enrollment: 33,000 Scouting Report .............................................................................. 4 Colors: Blue (282) & Gold (116) Golden Bear Notes ...................................................................... 5-8 Nickname: Golden Bears 2006 NCAA Tournament Bracket ................................................ 9 Chancellor: Dr. Robert Birgeneau Cal vs. NCAA Tournament Field ................................................ 10 Athletic Director: Sandy Barbour Arena: Walter A. Haas Jr. Pavilion (11,877) Cal in Postseason Play ............................................................ 11-13 Conference: Pacific-10 NCAA Tournament Records .................................................. 14-15 NCAA Tournament Appearances: 14 Head Coach Ben Braun ........................................................... 16-17 1946, ’57, ’58, ’59, ’60, ’90, ’93, ’94, ’96, ’97, 2001, ’02, ’03, ’06 Assistant Coaches ........................................................................ 18 NCAA Final Four Appearances: 3 2005-06 Player Profiles .......................................................... 19-32 1946 (4th), 1959 (1st), 1960 (2nd) Pacific-10 Standings & Honors .................................................... 33 2005-06 Record: 20-10 2005-06 Pac-10 Record/Finish: 12-6/3rd 2005-06 Cumulative Stats ........................................................... -
Top of Page Interview Information--Different Title
Oral History Center University of California The Bancroft Library Berkeley, California Bob Steiner Bob Steiner: Oral Histories on the Management of Intercollegiate Athletics at UC Berkeley: 1960 - 2014 Interviews conducted by John C. Cummins in 2013 Copyright © 2017 by The Regents of the University of California ii Since 1954 the Oral History Center of the Bancroft Library, formerly the Regional Oral History Office, has been interviewing leading participants in or well-placed witnesses to major events in the development of Northern California, the West, and the nation. Oral History is a method of collecting historical information through tape-recorded interviews between a narrator with firsthand knowledge of historically significant events and a well-informed interviewer, with the goal of preserving substantive additions to the historical record. The tape recording is transcribed, lightly edited for continuity and clarity, and reviewed by the interviewee. The corrected manuscript is bound with photographs and illustrative materials and placed in The Bancroft Library at the University of California, Berkeley, and in other research collections for scholarly use. Because it is primary material, oral history is not intended to present the final, verified, or complete narrative of events. It is a spoken account, offered by the interviewee in response to questioning, and as such it is reflective, partisan, deeply involved, and irreplaceable. ********************************* All uses of this manuscript are covered by a legal agreement between The Regents of the University of California and Bob Steiner dated January 27, 2016. The manuscript is thereby made available for research purposes. All literary rights in the manuscript, including the right to publish, are reserved to The Bancroft Library of the University of California, Berkeley. -
Western Savings
C-10 PMSS-HBtAlO OCTOIM 4, 1M7 and rebounding in the three games we played them in ..Battle for OF Hawaii. (Continued from Page C-9) Kolff But we have great quick- 4. Morningside defeated Inglewood, Van Breda is*, especially from our 27-20; (North Torrance) guards on defense, and we 5. Bellflower defeated Mayfalr, 28-7; (Lynwood) iave some outstanding shoot ers. There is no question that 6. Orange defeated Bolsa Grande, Evaluates Lakers Elgin Baylor and Jerry West 46-13; (El Modem) and Archie Clark are among 7. Pomona defeated Fontana, 22-7; v (Garey) B) BILL van BREDA KOLFF with the things these guys can he best in the game. Last sea 8. San Marcos lost to Santa Barbara, Laker Basketball Coach do with the ball; I've been son Darrall Imhoff really 27-0; (L. B. Poly) Each fall, as speculation be-just that dismayed with the sine on as a shooter, and 1 8. Tustin defeated Huntington Beach, gins the potential rookie stars passes they try and the way hink our three rookies John 25-13; (Foothill) of the season ahead, you fre- some stand around waiting for «r!'etzel, Dennis Hamilton and 10. Upland lost to Alia Loma, 18-12; (Claremont) quently hear concern over the the ball. nderson are all going "difficult transition from col AAAA DIVISION It would be very difficult :o be fine scorers. (Marina) lege to professional basket the West 1. Anaheim defeated Badlands, 21-0: for me to "evaluate" 'thoThe most pleasant surprise, 2. El Rancho defeated La Mirada, 39-0; (Monrovia) ball." ern Division race. -
Press = Herald
South ......... 46 West .... ... 62 Montgomery . 73 Torrance . '.". 82 Morningside . ITTTforth ........ 94 Redondo. ; .. 44 Aviation .. ... .54 Murphy ...... 35 Leuzinger ..... 70 Rolling Hills. 46 Hawthorne ... 56 Sweep to Victory A \ * HB » Kaw'-i *HH South North B reezes ^ ^ $t e#&?|tt8uj[ ^^H V Wins To 7th TFriumph By HENR V BURKE Pair Press-Herald Sports Editor In comparison with We Patent pending. dnesday's last second 4847 Wait for the final two sec win over Redondo, North 1High returned to its restyi- ffSPORTSB ished gym Friday night to " show up" Hawthorne, 94-56. ^^^^^HHBH^HHj^^l^^; ' ^^^iMlllL^L^L^L^LI onds and shoot from any where on the court. It will Coach Skip Enger's Saxons iupped their Bay League ree jeat Redondo every time. A-4 FEBRUARY 5, 1967 ord to 7-0 and set the stage fer Wednesday's showdown South used a 25-foot shot with second place Mira Costa. >y Chuck Fernandes to bea Micohi came away from a by seven with three minutes he Seahawks in their Bay 60-37 win over Inglewood Fri to go, Sims went outside the League game Friday night, day with a 6-1 record. key to direct a down-slow Tomas Leads West 46-44. North's Dan Hanson, who game. The Saxons went on It was the third straight scored only 4 points against defense and forced Redondo oss for defending champion Hawthorne, connected on a into a series of game decid ledondo. The team lost to 20-foot goal as the buzzer ing turnovers. tfira Costa in overtime las sounded to beat Redondo The margin was 3 point* To 62-54 Victory iYiday and dropped a 48-4' Wednesday. -
Storm May Bring Snow to Valley Floor
Mendo women Rotarians plan ON THE MARKET fall to Solano Super Bowl bash Guide to local real estate .............Page A-6 ............Page A-3 ......................................Inside INSIDE Mendocino County’s Obituaries The Ukiah local newspaper ..........Page 2 Tomorrow: Rain High 45º Low 41º 7 58551 69301 0 FRIDAY Jan. 25, 2008 50 cents tax included DAILY JOURNAL ukiahdailyjournal.com 38 pages, Volume 149 Number 251 email: [email protected] Storm may bring snow to valley floor By ZACK SAMPSEL but with low pressure systems from and BEN BROWN Local agriculture not expected to sustain damage the Gulf of Alaska moving in one The Daily Journal after another the cycle remains the A second round of winter storms the valley floor, but the weather is not the county will experience scattered ing routine for some Mendocino same each day. lining up to hit Mendocino County expected to be a threat to agriculture. showers today with more mountain County residents. The previous low pressure system today is expected to bring more rain, According to reports from the snow to the north in higher eleva- Slight afternoon warmups have cold temperatures and snow as low as National Weather Service, most of tions, which has been the early-morn- helped to make midday travel easier, See STORM, Page A-12 GRACE HUDSON MUSEUM READIES NEW EXHIBIT Kucinich’s wife cancels planned stop in Hopland By ROB BURGESS The Daily Journal Hey, guess what? Kucinich quits Elizabeth Kucinich is coming to Mendocino campaign for County. Wait. Hold on. No, White House actually she isn’t. Associated In what should be a Press familiar tale to perennial- Democrat ly disappointed support- Dennis Kuci- ers of Democratic presi- nich is aban- dential aspirant Rep. -
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 3, 1997 KRAFT NAMED WCHA
UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA JEW§ Bierman Field Athletic Building 516 15th Avenue Southeast Minneapolis. MN 55455 (612) 625-4090 Fax 625-0359 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 3, 1997 KRAFT NAMED WCHA OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK University of Minnesota junior wing Ryan Kraft has been named WCHA Offensive Player of the Week his efforts in last weekend's league sweep over Wisconsin giving the Golden Gophers a share of the 1996-97 WCHA Championship. Kraft, who was honored for a league-high third time this season as WCHA Offensive Player of the Week, helped Minnesota stake a claim to the title with a 4-3 win on Friday followed by a 7-3 win Saturday. It marks the 1Oth time overall in 1996-97 that a Golden Gopher hockey student athlete has been cited for league player of the week honors. Kraft, from Moorhead. Minn., scored five goals last weekend including a third-period hat trick as part of a six-goal frame in Saturday's title-clinching win. Kraft's six-point weekend brings his season totals to 24-18--42 on the season. He has totals of 10-7--17 in the team's last six home games, and finished fifth in the league in scoring. Kraft's final goal Saturday gives him 50 career goals and 125 career points in 121 games at the U of M, and the hat trick Saturday was the fourth of his career. Two of Kraft's career hat tricks have come agrunst the University of Alaska-Anchorage Seawolves, this weekend's WCHA First Round playoff opponent at Mariucci Arena. -
History All-Time Coaching Records All-Time Coaching Records
HISTORY ALL-TIME COACHING RECORDS ALL-TIME COACHING RECORDS REGULAR SEASON PLAYOFFS REGULAR SEASON PLAYOFFS CHARLES ECKMAN HERB BROWN SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT LEADERSHIP 1957-58 9-16 .360 1975-76 19-21 .475 4-5 .444 TOTALS 9-16 .360 1976-77 44-38 .537 1-2 .333 1977-78 9-15 .375 RED ROCHA TOTALS 72-74 .493 5-7 .417 SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT 1957-58 24-23 .511 3-4 .429 BOB KAUFFMAN 1958-59 28-44 .389 1-2 .333 SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT 1959-60 13-21 .382 1977-78 29-29 .500 TOTALS 65-88 .425 4-6 .400 TOTALS 29-29 .500 DICK MCGUIRE DICK VITALE SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT PLAYERS 1959-60 17-24 .414 0-2 .000 1978-79 30-52 .366 1960-61 34-45 .430 2-3 .400 1979-80 4-8 .333 1961-62 37-43 .463 5-5 .500 TOTALS 34-60 .362 1962-63 34-46 .425 1-3 .250 RICHIE ADUBATO TOTALS 122-158 .436 8-13 .381 SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT CHARLES WOLF 1979-80 12-58 .171 SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT TOTALS 12-58 .171 1963-64 23-57 .288 1964-65 2-9 .182 SCOTTY ROBERTSON REVIEW 18-19 TOTALS 25-66 .274 SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT 1980-81 21-61 .256 DAVE DEBUSSCHERE 1981-82 39-43 .476 SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT 1982-83 37-45 .451 1964-65 29-40 .420 TOTALS 97-149 .394 1965-66 22-58 .275 1966-67 28-45 .384 CHUCK DALY TOTALS 79-143 .356 SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT 1983-84 49-33 .598 2-3 .400 DONNIE BUTCHER 1984-85 46-36 .561 5-4 .556 SEASON W-L PCT W-L PCT 1985-86 46-36 .561 1-3 .250 RE 1966-67 2-6 .250 1986-87 52-30 .634 10-5 .667 1967-68 40-42 .488 2-4 .333 1987-88 54-28 .659 14-9 .609 CORDS 1968-69 10-12 .455 1988-89 63-19 .768 15-2 .882 TOTALS 52-60 .464 2-4 .333 -
2004 ARIZONA STATE MEN's BASKETBALL March 2, 2004
ARIZONA STATE 2003-2004 SCHEDULE/RESULTS Date Opp. ..................... Score/Time 11/22 Ark.-Little Rock (FSAZ) ... W, 89-72 11/24 Cal St. Fullerton ........W, 83-76 2004 ARIZONA STATE MEN’S BASKETBALL March 2, 2004 11/29 UC Riverside (FSAZ) .. W, 77-68 ********************************************************************************************************************** 12/3 @Nebraska................. L, 60-66 SUN DEVILS (10-16; 4-13) CONCLUDE SEASON IN TUCSON 12/9 Temple (FSN)............W, 70-66 Ike Diogu leading Pac-10 in points (22.9) and minutes (36.9) per game @Phoenix/America West Arena 12/17 @Northwestern (FSAZ)... L, 61-63 Sun., Mar. 7-@ #22 Arizona (18-8; 10-7) 2 p.m. MST Tucson, Ariz./CBS (KPHO-5) 12/22 McNeese State .........W, 81-61 All games on radio in Phoenix on ESPN 860 AM. 12/29 San Diego (AZTV) ********************************************************************************************************************** ASU Holiday Trn............ W, 89-70 SUN DEVILS FINISH IN TUCSON: The Arizona State men's basketball team (10-16 and 4-13 in the Pac- 12/30 Western Michigan (AZTV) 10), finishes its season on Sunday, March 7, with a 2 p.m. contest against Arizona which will be broadcast ASU Holiday Trn.........L, 76-81 by CBS (KPHO-5 in Phoenix), with Ian Eagle and Jim Spanarkel calling the action. UA leads the series 1/3 #4 Arizona (FSN)........L, 74-93 against ASU 131-73, with ASU's last win an 88-72 victory over the 10th-ranked Wildcats on Jan. 23, 2002, its 1/8 #4 Stanford (FSN)......L, 62-63 biggest margin of victory vs. UA since 1982. Only two current Sun Devils (Jason Braxton and Kenny Crandall) 1/10 California (FSN) .........L, 62-74 played in that game. -
127-144 History
Two Sun Devils greats, as 2005 Pac-10 Hall of Honor inductee Joe Caldwell, with his gold medal from the 1964 Olympics, sits next to 2005 NBA Lottery pick and 2005 Pac-10 Player of the Year Ike Diogu. YEAR-BY-YEAR 1912-2007 Overall Conference Overall Conference Year Coach W L Pct. W L Pct. Place Year Coach W L Pct. W L Pct. Place 1912 C.W. Adams 8 2 .800 7 1 .873 (H) 1960 Ned Wulk 16 7 .696 7 3 .700 T2nd (B) 1913 C.W. Adams 3 3 .500 2 2 .500 (H) 1961 Ned Wulk (NCAA) 23 6 .793 9 1 .900 T1st (B) 1914 G.W. Henry 6 5 .545 5 3 .625 (H) 1962 Ned Wulk (NCAA) 23 4 .852 10 0 1.000 1st (B) 1915 George Schaeffer 2 2 .500 1 1 .500 (H) 1963 Ned Wulk (NCAA) 26 3 .897 9 1 .900 1st (W) 1916 (No Team) 1964 Ned Wulk (NCAA) 16 11 .593 7 3 .700 T1st (W) 1917 George Schaeffer 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 (H) 1965 Ned Wulk 13 14 .481 4 6 .400 5th (W) 1918 George Cooper 14 4 .778 12 4 .750 (H) 1966 Ned Wulk 12 14 .461 3 7 .300 6th (W) 1919 George Cooper 3 4 .429 3 3 .500 (H) 1967 Ned Wulk 5 21 .192 1 9 .100 6th (W) 1920 George Cooper 5 3 .625 4 2 .667 (H) 1968 Ned Wulk 11 17 .393 4 6 .400 T4th (W) 1921 George Cooper 11 3 .786 8 2 .800 (H) 1969 Ned Wulk 11 15 .423 4 6 .400 T5th (W) 1922 George Cooper 10 1 .909 9 1 .900 (H) 1970 Ned Wulk 4 22 .154 2 12 .143 8th (W) 1923 Ernest Willis 8 4 .667 4 0 1.000 1st (J) 1971 Ned Wulk 16 10 .615 8 6 .571 4th (W) 1924 Aaron McCreary 3 9 .250 1 4 .200 4th (J) 1972 Ned Wulk 18 8 .692 9 5 .643 T2nd (W) 1925 Aaron McCreary 11 6 .647 9 5 .643 1st (J) 1973 Ned Wulk (NCAA) 19 9 .679 10 4 .714 1st (W) 1926 Aaron McCreary 9 3 .750 4 1 .800 1st -
Hawks Top Celtics for 2D Time - the Bos…
1/10/2010 Hawks top Celtics for 2d time - The Bos… THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING HAWKS 93, CELTICS 85 Hawks top Celtics for 2d time By Frank Dell’Apa, Globe Staff | January 9, 2010 ATLANTA - The Celtics have hit a Southern cold snap on this road trip, understandably becoming susceptible to the flu bug. They also are becoming allergic to the Atlanta Hawks, who took a 93-85 win over the Celtics last night. The Celtics (25-9) fell behind by as many as 15 points in the third quarter, then rallied within 2 in the final quarter before fading again. The Hawks (23-12), who have now won both meetings with the Celtics this season, did it this time with some clutch fourth-quarter shooting by Jamal Crawford. “I thought they were more physical, I thought they attacked,’’ Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. “We’re supposed to be the physical team, we haven’t been against them. They’ve been far more physical than us. We have a great spirit on this team and I don’t think we had that [last] night. It happens. I thought . on the floor, we were awful - very little talking. And then a lot of excuse-making. That happens and it won’t be the last time. But that’s twice now Atlanta has been the better team.’’ Crawford took over in the final quarter, making his first four shots, a 4-point play providing a 78-67 lead with 7:13 remaining. After Kendrick Perkins’s in-bounds 3-point play, Crawford finally missed and the Celtics got two Ray Allen foul shots in transition. -
NCAA Men's Final Four Records (The Final Four)
The Final Four Championship Results ............................... 8 Final Four Game Records.......................... 9 Championship Game Records ............... 12 Semifinal Game Records ........................... 14 Final Four Two-Game Records ............... 17 Final Four Cumulative Records .............. 18 8 CHAMPIONSHIP RESULts Championship Results Year Champion Score Runner-Up Third Place Fourth Place 1939 Oregon 46-33 Ohio St. † Oklahoma † Villanova 1940 Indiana 60-42 Kansas † Duquesne † Southern California 1941 Wisconsin 39-34 Washington St. † Pittsburgh † Arkansas 1942 Stanford 53-38 Dartmouth † Colorado † Kentucky 1943 Wyoming 46-34 Georgetown † Texas † DePaul 1944 Utah 42-40 + Dartmouth † Iowa St. † Ohio St. 1945 Oklahoma St. 49-45 New York U. † Arkansas † Ohio St. 1946 Oklahoma St. 43-40 North Carolina Ohio St. California 1947 Holy Cross 58-47 Oklahoma Texas CCNY 1948 Kentucky 58-42 Baylor Holy Cross Kansas St. 1949 Kentucky 46-36 Oklahoma St. Illinois Oregon St. 1950 CCNY 71-68 Bradley North Carolina St. Baylor 1951 Kentucky 68-58 Kansas St. Illinois Oklahoma St. 1952 Kansas 80-63 St. John’s (NY) Illinois Santa Clara 1953 Indiana 69-68 Kansas Washington LSU 1954 La Salle 92-76 Bradley Penn St. Southern California 1955 San Francisco 77-63 La Salle Colorado Iowa 1956 San Francisco 83-71 Iowa Temple SMU 1957 North Carolina 54-53 ‡ Kansas San Francisco Michigan St. hotos 1958 Kentucky 84-72 Seattle Temple Kansas St. P AA 1959 California 71-70 West Virginia Cincinnati Louisville C N 1960 Ohio St. 75-55 California Cincinnati New York U. 1961 Cincinnati 70-65 + Ohio St. * St. Joseph’s Utah cKee/ 1962 Cincinnati 71-59 Ohio St. Wake Forest UCLA M 1963 Loyola (IL) 60-58 + Cincinnati Duke Oregon St. -
O B S E R V E R the Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary’S VOL
WINDY Featured Flicks Thursday Scene examines the year’s most successful movies and predicts their HIGH 44° chances for Oscar victory. FEBRUARY 14, LOW 33° Scene ♦ page 14-15 2 0 0 2 O b s e r v e r The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s VOL. XXXV NO. 89 HTTP://OBSERVER.N D.EDU S t u d e n t S e n a te One vote prevents raised activity fee Life Council for further consid By ERIN LaRUFFA eration. Associate News Editor The senate originally dis cussed the resolution at its The Student Senate rejected meeting on Feb. 6, but sena by a vote of 14 to 13 a resolu tors tabled the motion so that tion to increase the student they could get feedback from activities fee. their hall councils. The vote between the 26 “I talked it over with my senators dorm, and most of the guys ... ended in a See Also would rather increase it on a 13-13 tie. “Leaders probe [year by year] basis,” said The tie Fisher senator Greg Celio. He meant that Food Services on added that the students he dis student body campus dining” cussed the resolution with vice presi would also prefer to see cam d e n t B rian page 8 pus organizations allocated less money so that a club who chairs the senate, had to would have to improve its pro vote. In voting against the res gramming in order to receive olution, Moscona said that he more funds. wanted a senate committee to Cavanaugh senator Lindsay look into the issue further to Zika agreed, explaining that settle questions several sena students at her hall council tors had raised.