calumnus said:
BearSD said:
calumnus said:
No, what was said is the 2024 and 2025 schedules are the easiest in (probably) our history and set up for 10 win seasons
Perhaps you think this roster has so much talent that it is "set up" to win 10 games this year, but the consensus around CFB is that this roster has 6-6 or 7-5 talent.
Look at P4 teams that are generally projected to win 10 games in 2025. Go position by position through any of those rosters and try to convince us that Cal's roster is equal.
The "consensus" last year was that SMU had G5 talent and would finish below us.
No. Cal was picked to finish 10th in the preseason poll. SMU was picked to finish 7th, and SMU was in the "others receiving votes" category in the preseason AP poll. They would have been ranked 29th if that poll went past 25.
You seem to be thinking that our Bears "would have" won 10 games, when what you really mean is that they could have won 10
if everything had gone right for Cal in every game and lots of things had gone wrong for the opponents. But that has never been the case. And if you start by wiping out Cal's coaching mistakes and bad breaks, you'd have to wipe out the opponents' as well. Opposing coaches also make mistakes, and opposing teams get bad breaks or dubious officials' calls that go against them. The Miami game is a good example. Their defensive coaching in the first half was poor. They let Mendoza roll right unpressured and throw for 10 or 15 yards over and over again. Then their QB threw a bad pass for a pick-six at the start of the 3rd quarter. Take away the pick-six and have Miami play defense in the first half as well as they did in the second, and Cal might have had 14 points at the end of the 3rd quarter instead of 35, and we wouldn't be talking about Cal blowing a big lead in the 4th quarter. Wake Forest also played very questionable defense against the Bears.
And, again using Miami as an example, when you stockpile talent like they have, the talent can often (not always) overcome their coaching mistakes, player mistakes, and bad breaks. Miami won 10 last season, but if we put them in your "everything goes right for us" scenario, they had enough talent to win all of their games. Their talent wins 10 games even with the coach screwing up sometimes and other times with the QB losing a close game with a crucial fumble. Cal could only muster 10 wins in a miracle scenario like yours where almost every break goes their way and neither coaching nor player mistakes cost them any games. But every team has bad breaks and almost every year loses at least a game or two they "could have" won if only a kicker had made a makeable FG or a QB didn't fumble in the 4th quarter. That's why every year there are only two or three teams out of 130 with fewer than two losses.
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Moreover, if our talent level isn't good enough, that is due to Wilcox and his staff being the poorest recruiters I have seen at Cal.
I cannot say for sure they are the poorest recruiters, because I have been a Cal fan for a long time and I remember other coaches whose recruiting was bad. But for sure the recruiting is behind that of the teams at the top of the ACC, and the results reflect that.