Most memorable Cal BB play ever?

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CalVC2
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May have been discussed in the past but... we know what the most famous Cal FB play ever was, but what is the all time signature Cal BB play?

A couple of amazing Jason Kidd moments v Duke & LSU (but which play? Pretzel shot? Lamond Murray free throw that led to the George Ashley gem?) or perhaps this 2014 buzzer beater? What others come to mind?

bearister
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Can't come up with one yet, but I remember this play that sank J Kidd's Bears:

"Jan. 15, 1994: Arizona St. 63, Cal 60. ASU"s Stevin "Hedake" Smith, later convicted in a point- shaving scandal, sank a 42-foot, 3-pointer at the buzzer as the Sun Devils stunned the No. 19 Bears. Two days earlier, Jason Kidd led Cal to an upset at No. 6 Arizona." Montereyherald.com

*Maybe Hedake's life depended on that 42 footer dropping.
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ncbears
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I thought the pretzel shot was the prior game against LSU.
Adding to the nominations:
Chris Washington steal and bucket to put Cal ahead of UCLA to "stop the streak" - even more memorable because the broadcast basically missed it.
Richard Midgley's 3 point (basically buzzer beater) against NC State in the Tournament.

And, whomever it was at West Virginia who missed the free throw and the Bear who got the rebound to win the national championship in 1959.
graguna
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Kidd's pretzel shot against LSU
Big C
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I have seen all of the above either in person or on TV and the first one that came to mind was Cobbs' game winner.

Another play I absolutely loved was Matt Bradley's block on the Furd big man last season. If the stakes for that game had been higher, it would be among the finalists, IMO.
89Bear
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ncbears said:

I thought the pretzel shot was the prior game against LSU.
Adding to the nominations:
Chris Washington steal and bucket to put Cal ahead of UCLA to "stop the streak" - even more memorable because the broadcast basically missed it.
Richard Midgley's 3 point (basically buzzer beater) against NC State in the Tournament.

And, whomever it was at West Virginia who missed the free throw and the Bear who got the rebound to win the national championship in 1959.
I was thinking the fucla game as well.
These are all huge.
graguna
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Not consequential but breathtaking: Jaylen Brown's dunk toward the end of the game vs Oregon St.
BeachedBear
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the end of the fUCLA game is tops for me, followed closely by Jason Kidd inbounding the ball of an opponents butt to score a layup (can't recall the exact game or opponent - but it was absolutely awesome).
ncbears
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86 - Streak stops Here: Video starts with recap of Chris Washington and the emotional finish
HoopDreams
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thanks for posting. i don't think I've ever seen it before

amazing the energy from the fans in that game

crazy the fans were inches from the out of bounds

I haven't seen a Cal coach with that much emotion after a game. Not sure I've ever seen ANY coach with that much emotion after a game.


Big C
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ncbears said:

86 - Streak stops Here: Video starts with recap of Chris Washington and the emotional finish

Okay, THAT was worth 15 minutes of my time on this New Year's Eve! (not counting the minutes I replayed, looking for myself in the crowd)

I couldn't help being struck by the fans sitting RIGHT UP by the court, including the Straw Hat Band RIGHT at center court and even the visiting band being seated right down at floor level, behind the north basket. It's almost as if they thought the game ambience mattered more than "premium seating"!
Chapman_is_Gone
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Jason Kidd's curling layup as he sprawled out on the floor with about 1:20 remaining against Duke is the most important shot in the program's past 50 years.


Cal had blown an 18-point lead to two-time defending champion Duke, and trailed by 1 point with a little over a minute to play. Momentum seemingly was lost. Kidd's layup (and free throw on the foul) put Cal up by 2 and in the lead for good. Without that play, Cal likely loses and never makes the Sweet 16.

Kidd's pretzel shot a few days earlier against LSU was clutch, coming in the last 10 seconds of a tie NCAA tournament game, and was certainly more of a pure basketball play than a scramble off the floor. But the shot against Duke was by far more consequential as it allowed the Bears to make the all-important second week of the tournament, and it had far more visibility nationally coming against the nationally-beloved Blue Devils rather than against LSU.

Who is George Ashley?

sonofabear51
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Harmon at its finest!! I was behind the basket where Washington scored on that steal. The place totally erupted after that, but had already been deafening. I remember that January day very well. Lost my voice. Drank way too much. Had way too much fun. Cheers!!
Start Slowly and taper off
Chapman_is_Gone
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Big C said:

ncbears said:

86 - Streak stops Here: Video starts with recap of Chris Washington and the emotional finish

Okay, THAT was worth 15 minutes of my time on this New Year's Eve! (not counting the minutes I replayed, looking for myself in the crowd)

I couldn't help being struck by the fans sitting RIGHT UP by the court, including the Straw Hat Band RIGHT at center court and even the visiting band being seated right down at floor level, behind the north basket. It's almost as if they thought the game ambience mattered more than "premium seating"!
Thanks for posting, Big C. How awesome is it that at 5:15 of the clip, the Cal drummer has to pull his drum up and in just so there's enough room for the player to inbound the ball. Surely, thousands of life-long Cal fans were created at this game (and others like it), thanks in large part to that Harmon Gym environment.

Sadly, that environment is as extinct as the Dodo bird, gone forever due to poor administration decisions, bull**** ADA excuses, television, and the greedy pursuit of PSL money. Any Cal AD should be tied to a chair and forced to watch a clip like this one so they know what it used to be like. The current state of the program nauseates me. And each year they make the environment more sterile (e.g., see this year's railings along each end of the court).

HoopDreams
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Agree, that's my vote

Chapman_is_Gone said:

Jason Kidd's curling layup as he sprawled out on the floor with about 1:20 remaining against Duke is the most important shot in the program's past 50 years.


Cal had blown an 18-point lead to two-time defending champion Duke, and trailed by 1 point with a little over a minute to play. Momentum seemingly was lost. Kidd's layup (and free throw on the foul) put Cal up by 2 and in the lead for good. Without that play, Cal likely loses and never makes the Sweet 16.

Kidd's pretzel shot a few days earlier against LSU was clutch, coming in the last 10 seconds of a tie NCAA tournament game, and was certainly more of a pure basketball play than a scramble off the floor. But the shot against Duke was by far more consequential as it allowed the Bears to make the all-important second week of the tournament, and it had far more visibility nationally coming against the nationally-beloved Blue Devils rather than against LSU.

Who is George Ashley?


ducky23
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My top 3 moments (in no particular order)

- Keith smith baseline jumper to beat Villanova

- kidd flipping it backwards to murray to hit game tying 3 at the Mckale Center

- randy duck's 360 dunk at midnight madness

Honorable mention: randy duck talking S to the Arizona student section

You can probably tell from my favorite moments during what era of cal bball I was a young and impressionable kid
sonofabear51
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My 2nd best moment at Harmon, Keith Smith beating Villanova at the buzzer. I was under the opposite basket. But again, Harmon at its finest!!
Start Slowly and taper off
Big C
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Chapman_is_Gone said:

Big C said:

ncbears said:

86 - Streak stops Here: Video starts with recap of Chris Washington and the emotional finish

Okay, THAT was worth 15 minutes of my time on this New Year's Eve! (not counting the minutes I replayed, looking for myself in the crowd)

I couldn't help being struck by the fans sitting RIGHT UP by the court, including the Straw Hat Band RIGHT at center court and even the visiting band being seated right down at floor level, behind the north basket. It's almost as if they thought the game ambience mattered more than "premium seating"!
Thanks for posting, Big C. How awesome is it that at 5:15 of the clip, the Cal drummer has to pull his drum up and in just so there's enough room for the player to inbound the ball. Surely, thousands of life-long Cal fans were created at this game (and others like it), thanks in large part to that Harmon Gym environment.

Sadly, that environment is as extinct as the Dodo bird, gone forever due to poor administration decisions, bull**** ADA excuses, television, and the greedy pursuit of PSL money. Any Cal AD should be tied to a chair and forced to watch a clip like this one so they know what it used to be like. The current state of the program nauseates me. And each year they make the environment more sterile (e.g., see this year's railings along each end of the court).



Agree on all points...

Haas was "supposed to" have all the intimacies of Harmon, but twice the capacity (and it sort of did, at first), but they have systematically chipped away at it until it now has none of the charms of Harmon Gym. Sad.

It's a sterile, soulless world we live in now, but nobody can look up from their phones long enough to notice the difference.
CalVC2
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George Ashley was the Cal player on the bench who was captured right after Murray sank his final free throws to ice the game, releasing the emotion and joy of every Cal fan in the world. He was then captured in CBS' One Shining Moment montage at 1:08 here (but watch the whole thing as I think Cal got 3-4 clips in this video!)



You can watch Murray's free throws and Ashley here at the 1:22:45 mark. What a game!

Chapman_is_Gone
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Ok, thank you.
bearister
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Monty Buckley's high flying dunk against Furd. I swear he took off from the foul line. He did the chicken walk afterwards.

https://media.gettyimages.com/photos/-picture-id228451

In researching it I found this 10 year old thread:

Who is the best dunker in Cal History? | Bear Insider


https://bearinsider.com/forums/3/topics/3760
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blungld
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Big C said:

ncbears said:

86 - Streak stops Here: Video starts with recap of Chris Washington and the emotional finish

Okay, THAT was worth 15 minutes of my time on this New Year's Eve! (not counting the minutes I replayed, looking for myself in the crowd)

I couldn't help being struck by the fans sitting RIGHT UP by the court, including the Straw Hat Band RIGHT at center court and even the visiting band being seated right down at floor level, behind the north basket. It's almost as if they thought the game ambience mattered more than "premium seating"!
I have posted this many times, but those who never experienced Harmon, really missed out. Haas killed so much atmosphere. I was very disappointed at the time that more effort wasn't put into to preserving what was best about Harmon when they expanded and "modernized" Haas. It's not the same. A few games get described as "just as loud as Harmon"--but they aren't, and it isn't interesting that Harmon is still used as the barometer. And noise wasn't the only thing that defined that experience. It was special.
bearister
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…but you have to admit, a 12,000 seat facility packed with 1200 fans is intimidating due to the echo chamber effect alone.
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HoopDreams
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we did get Haas rocking in some big games (this was 5 years ago)...

BC Calfan
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This is going to be a bad post because I don't know the year, opponent or any specifics but…

I remember a huge Sean Marks dunk that brought the house down. I remember at the time that it was a weird dunk and since I saw it in person, it's difficult to explain even at the time. But he pretty much had a head of steam and elevated baseline and it "looked" like a 360 dunk but it couldn't have been, maybe a 270 Anyway it was damn impressive. Does anyone have a recollection of this?
rarebear_Cal
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When Joe Hagler held the ball for 7:40 against Bill Russell's USF Dons.
hoop97
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hoop97
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I think that was in Harmon vs Illinois
kelly09
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Darrell Imhoff's follow, put back 1959 against WVA. Nothing else is even close.
stu
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BeachedBear said:

the end of the fUCLA game is tops for me, followed closely by Jason Kidd inbounding the ball of an opponents butt to score a layup (can't recall the exact game or opponent - but it was absolutely awesome).
Years earlier Rickie Hawthorne couldn't find anyone open for an inbound pass so threw the ball off an opponent's back and went coast to coast for a layup.

My favorite Kidd play was very early in his Cal career. Someone threw a bad pass which Kidd ran to the sideline near midcourt to save. As he leaped into the seats he got one hand on the ball and threw a no-look pass to a teammate for an open layup. At that moment I was enlightened.
sonofabear51
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Another great moment for me was Ray Murray hitting 2 free throws during the 5 OT Oregon game. I think it was at the end of either 3 OT or 4OT, Oregon had called TO to ice him. He made both to tie it, and Cal ended up finally winning after 5 OT. Another example also of Harmon at its finest, and loudest. Think it was 1977, I was 17, this was before cell phones, Dad and I got home around midnight, and Mom was wondering *** we were. LOL

GO BEARS!!
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drizzlybear
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Harmon Gym was a magical place. I was not at Cal for the streak game (though I believe one of the drizzly brothers was). Thanks for posting that video. I love how the first thing you hear in the video is "EAT MY SHORTS!!"

I was there for the Villanova game, which was probably my favorite basketball spectator experience of my life (not including my own kids' games).

To answer the question, I would agree that the pretzel shot may be the best play. And I love the plays and games people have mentioned. That said, it occurs to me how many amazing Cal plays I've seen in Seattle.
1. Sam Singer's shocking buzzer-beating 3 to stun the Huskies in ?? year. (Btw, it was at this game where the thing happened that I intentionally left out of the Jordan Mathews comments post I made on the free basketball board.)

2. Lamond Murray's baseline short-corner buzzer-beating game winner in '93 (or '94?). Kidd let the clock run down on the final possession of the game, he drove into the lane, drew all the defenders, and dished to Murray who drained the 12-footer on the left side baseline. I was actually seated (standing) a few rows up on that same baseline and I ran onto the court and jumped on the pile of players who had all dog-piled on Murray on the court. I did it instinctively, without thinking at all. I'm convinced the two security people whom I ran between must've turned opposite ways from each other right as i ran between them (when the game ends, they turn 180 degrees from watching the game to watching the crowd). I had a friend in the Bay Area call me that night to ask if that was me who jumped on the pile, that had seen it on tv. Very fun.

3. Probably the biggest play of these three in Seattle. Patrick Christopher's buzzer-beating game-winning 3 in
triple overtime to win a classic game between to excellent teams. I was with my older son (the one who recently played and chatted with Jordan Mathews in LA). He was a young guy at the time, maybe 9 yrs old. Our seats were in the rafters, and we were seated amidst nothing but Husky fans, who were seriously hating on my young son for screaming amidst the crowd silence whenever John Brockman was shooting free throws.

When the game ended, I started a Bear Territory chant from the rafters, and some fellow Cal fans from down by the court joined in (by chance was that any of you?). Very, very fun.

I also happened to take my youngest son down to Eugene (my only basketball game ever in Eugene, though I've been to every Cal football game in Eugene since 2000, including the time we danced with Missy Franklin and the women's swim team in a monsoon at Autzen) for the game in which Justin Cobbs hit a buzzer-beating game-winner nearly identical to the one he would hit shortly afterwards against Arizona.

Very fun memories.

PS If anyone knows how to get a clip of that Lamond Murray shot vs UW, please let me know.
RedlessWardrobe
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drizzlybear said:

Harmon Gym was a magical place. I was not at Cal for the streak game (though I believe one of the drizzly brothers was). Thanks for posting that video. I love how the first thing you hear in the video is "EAT MY SHORTS!!"

I was there for the Villanova game, which was probably my favorite basketball spectator experience of my life (not including my own kids' games).

To answer the question, I would agree that the pretzel shot may be the best play. And I love the plays and games people have mentioned. That said, it occurs to me how many amazing Cal plays I've seen in Seattle.
1. Sam Singer's shocking buzzer-beating 3 to stun the Huskies in ?? year. (Btw, it was at this game where the thing happened that I intentionally left out of the Jordan Mathews comments post I made on the free basketball board.)

2. Lamond Murray's baseline short-corner buzzer-beating game winner in '93 (or '94?). Kidd let the clock run down on the final possession of the game, he drove into the lane, drew all the defenders, and dished to Murray who drained the 12-footer on the left side baseline. I was actually seated (standing) a few rows up on that same baseline and I ran onto the court and jumped on the pile of players who had all dog-piled on Murray on the court. I did it instinctively, without thinking at all. I'm convinced the two security people whom I ran between must've turned opposite ways from each other right as i ran between them (when the game ends, they turn 180 degrees from watching the game to watching the crowd). I had a friend in the Bay Area call me that night to ask if that was me who jumped on the pile, that had seen it on tv. Very fun.

3. Probably the biggest play of these three in Seattle. Patrick Christopher's buzzer-beating game-winning 3 in
triple overtime to win a classic game between to excellent teams. I was with my older son (the one who recently played and chatted with Jordan Mathews in LA). He was a young guy at the time, maybe 9 yrs old. Our seats were in the rafters, and we were seated amidst nothing but Husky fans, who were seriously hating on my young son for screaming amidst the crowd silence whenever John Brockman was shooting free throws.

When the game ended, I started a Bear Territory chant from the rafters, and some fellow Cal fans from down by the court joined in (by chance was that any of you?). Very, very fun.

I also happened to take my youngest son down to Eugene (my only basketball game ever in Eugene, though I've been to every Cal football game in Eugene since 2000, including the time we danced with Missy Franklin and the women's swim team in a monsoon at Autzen) for the game in which Justin Cobbs hit a buzzer-beating game-winner nearly identical to the one he would hit shortly afterwards against Arizona.

Very fun memories.

PS If anyone knows how to get a clip of that Lamond Murray shot vs UW, please let me know.
I might be wrong but I thought Lamond's shot came off of an inbound pass on the baseline with 2 seconds left in that Washington game. And while we talk about the Villanova game, Smith's shot to end it was great but I still remember Roy Fisher's monster slam earlier in the game. Up to that point that was the greatest slam dunk I can remember in Cal hoops.
drizzlybear
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RedlessWardrobe said:

drizzlybear said:

Harmon Gym was a magical place. I was not at Cal for the streak game (though I believe one of the drizzly brothers was). Thanks for posting that video. I love how the first thing you hear in the video is "EAT MY SHORTS!!"

I was there for the Villanova game, which was probably my favorite basketball spectator experience of my life (not including my own kids' games).

To answer the question, I would agree that the pretzel shot may be the best play. And I love the plays and games people have mentioned. That said, it occurs to me how many amazing Cal plays I've seen in Seattle.
1. Sam Singer's shocking buzzer-beating 3 to stun the Huskies in ?? year. (Btw, it was at this game where the thing happened that I intentionally left out of the Jordan Mathews comments post I made on the free basketball board.)

2. Lamond Murray's baseline short-corner buzzer-beating game winner in '93 (or '94?). Kidd let the clock run down on the final possession of the game, he drove into the lane, drew all the defenders, and dished to Murray who drained the 12-footer on the left side baseline. I was actually seated (standing) a few rows up on that same baseline and I ran onto the court and jumped on the pile of players who had all dog-piled on Murray on the court. I did it instinctively, without thinking at all. I'm convinced the two security people whom I ran between must've turned opposite ways from each other right as i ran between them (when the game ends, they turn 180 degrees from watching the game to watching the crowd). I had a friend in the Bay Area call me that night to ask if that was me who jumped on the pile, that had seen it on tv. Very fun.

3. Probably the biggest play of these three in Seattle. Patrick Christopher's buzzer-beating game-winning 3 in
triple overtime to win a classic game between to excellent teams. I was with my older son (the one who recently played and chatted with Jordan Mathews in LA). He was a young guy at the time, maybe 9 yrs old. Our seats were in the rafters, and we were seated amidst nothing but Husky fans, who were seriously hating on my young son for screaming amidst the crowd silence whenever John Brockman was shooting free throws.

When the game ended, I started a Bear Territory chant from the rafters, and some fellow Cal fans from down by the court joined in (by chance was that any of you?). Very, very fun.

I also happened to take my youngest son down to Eugene (my only basketball game ever in Eugene, though I've been to every Cal football game in Eugene since 2000, including the time we danced with Missy Franklin and the women's swim team in a monsoon at Autzen) for the game in which Justin Cobbs hit a buzzer-beating game-winner nearly identical to the one he would hit shortly afterwards against Arizona.

Very fun memories.

PS If anyone knows how to get a clip of that Lamond Murray shot vs UW, please let me know.
I might be wrong but I thought Lamond's shot came off of an inbound pass on the baseline with 2 seconds left in that Washington game. And while we talk about the Villanova game, Smith's shot to end it was great but I still remember Roy Fisher's monster slam earlier in the game. Up to that point that was the greatest slam dunk I can remember in Cal hoops.

When I googled the play, to see if I could find a clip of it, I found a post on BI where the person said said it was off an in-bound play. I have a very strong recollection of it the way I described it. But certainly much time has passed and it's possible my memory of it is mistaken. I'm going to look harder to see if I can find it.
socaltownie
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CalVC2 said:

May have been discussed in the past but... we know what the most famous Cal FB play ever was, but what is the all time signature Cal BB play?

A couple of amazing Jason Kidd moments v Duke & LSU (but which play? Pretzel shot? Lamond Murray free throw that led to the George Ashley gem?) or perhaps this 2014 buzzer beater? What others come to mind?


SCT Jr. and myself were in the house the night of the 2014 buzzer beater and his first choice for schools is Cal so I am going with that ;-)
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