March 5, 2011
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BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -
California came out in a stingy man-to-man defense and went
after its archrival from the opening tipoff.
The Golden Bears were on a mission after being embarrassed in their Pac-10 opener at
Stanford more than two months ago.
Allen Crabbe scored 21 of his 24 points in the second half, Harper Kamp added 20
points and Cal beat its Bay Area rival 74-55 on Saturday for a fourth straight win.
"We talked about it a lot this week," Kamp said of that earlier defeat to the
Cardinal. "We were pretty sour about that loss. Looking at film and things like
that, being our first game, we were upset we weren't prepared for that intensity of
the Pac-10 level. We got burned for it and wanted to come out tonight and change
that."
Markhuri Sanders-Frison had 13 points and 13 rebounds after being honored before the
game at Haas Pavilion as the lone senior for defending Pac-10 champion Cal (17-13,
10-8 Pac-10).
Jeremy Green scored 19 points to lead Stanford (15-15, 7-11), which trailed by as
many as 18 in the first half and failed to pull off its first season sweep in the
rivalry since 2008. No other Stanford player scored more than seven points.
"I thought they outplayed us tonight, you can go down the line," Stanford coach
Johnny Dawkins said. "They played with a lot of energy and executed. They're a
different team for sure."
Crabbe, who also had nine rebounds and five assists, hit his team's first 3-pointer
of the game with 15:16 left after the Bears missed their first six tries from long
range.
Kamp scored five straight points during a 14-2 run that helped Cal pull away after
Green's 3-pointer with 16:04 left got the Cardinal within 37-28. Dawkins considered
that a key stretch _ and one in which Stanford gave up too many second-chance points
and baskets in transition.
The 6-foot-7, 265-pound Sanders-Frison shot just 4 for 12 but was an imposing
presence on both ends for the Bears _ and the student section chanted his name in
the closing minutes.
"I'm always playing every game like it's my last. Just enjoy it, man, that's my main
focus," Sanders-Frison said.
Cal will face Southern California in the Nos. 4-5 game at next week's Pac-10
tournament in Los Angeles after being picked in the preseason to finish seventh
under third-year coach Mike Montgomery. He spent 18 seasons coaching Stanford.
The Cardinal won the first meeting 82-68 on Jan. 2 in the conference opener for both
schools, ending a three-game skid in the series. But they never led in this one as
Cal came out inspired from the opening tipoff.
"There was a whole lot more at stake for us. As we looked at the league, if we won
this game, we thought we could get in as No. 4 all by ourselves," Montgomery said.
"We wanted to be the aggressor. ... The kids came to play."
The Bears shot 55.8 percent, outrebounded Stanford 38-26 and made 15 of 20 free
throws to just 9 for 19 by the cold-shooting Cardinal. Cal overcame 16 turnovers and
1 for 9 shooting from 3-point range.
Richard Solomon scored all six of his points on first-half dunks for Cal.
Stanford started the game 2 for 13 and Cal converted 8 of its initial 14 shots en
route to a 19-4 lead. Kamp scored six straight points early to get the Bears
rolling.
"We're just a gritty group of guys," Montgomery said. "We're not going to win any
glamour contests."
Stanford had five turnovers in the first 8 1/2 minutes, went 3:41 between its first
and second field goals and then another 5:51 before Green scored at the 8:23 mark.
The Cardinal missed their first six 3-point tries before Green connected with 5:13
left in the opening half.
Stanford trailed 33-21 at halftime, matching its third-lowest half of the season.
The Cardinal had won two in a row after a four-game losing streak, including a win
at Oregon on Feb. 26 and a non-conference home victory against Seattle University on
Tuesday.
"A lot of their young guys are stepping up and playing well," Green said. "They seem
like a more confident team. They defended well."
Stanford's 55 points were its fewest against Cal since Jan. 6, 2002, when Cal won, 68-54.