Daejon’s dominance leads Stanford over Cal, 68-52

Stan Szeto-USA TODAY Sports

At this point, Jerod Haase barely blinks when asked about his team’s defensive prowess.

“Daejon [Davis] and Bryce [Wills] are as good of a tandem defensively as there is in college basketball,” said Haase, matter-of-factly. Cal’s top guards can certainly attest to that after tonight.

Matt Bradley and Kareem South entered the game leading the Golden Bears in scoring and shooting the ball at impressive clips. Thanks to Bryce, Daejon and friends, they combined to go 1-11 in the first half, and just 6-24 for the game. But that doesn’t even paint the full picture of how disruptive the defense was in this one.

Cal finished the night with 3 assists. No, that’s not a typo. Only one other power conference team (Pitt) has had that few in a game this season. Two of those three happened in the final seven minutes, when the game was out of reach. The Stanford defense also forced 18 turnovers, and turned Cal into an inefficient isolation team.

But as has often been the case, the Cardinal offense came out sluggish. They took nearly four minutes to make their first field goal, missing on their first 6 attempts. This came days after starting the Kansas contest with a 12 minute field goal drought. “It’s something that’s fixable,” said Haase. “I think we try too hard sometimes, and it’s counterproductive.” The Cardinal used an 11-0 run to take a 13-7 lead.

It was clear that Mark Fox wanted to take Tyrell Terry out of the game. The freshman guard entered as Stanford’s second leading scorer, and arguably its best playmaker. Cal threw a bevy of guards at him, face-guarding him 94 feet and doing their best to deny everything. They similarly over-played sharp-shooter Spencer Jones, and didn’t let him breathe on the perimeter. The two freshmen took just 3 shot attempts combined in the first period.

Of course, that opened things up for others, and Daejon Davis was more than happy to capitalize. “The way they were denying Ty, that meant one guy was out of the play,” said Davis. “If I get going downhill early, I can usually flip the switch and get to where I want to.”

He closed the half with a series of scores, but none bigger than the final one. After Cal traveled with some 18 seconds on the clock, Davis found his way into the teeth of the defense. He was swarmed by multiple help defenders, and found Jaiden Delaire all alone in the corner. The sophomore forward’s aim was true, and the three put Stanford up 32-21 at the break.

But Davis didn’t stop there. During one sequence, he bullied his way into the paint and converted an and-one over the Cal bigs. On the very next possession, he found Spencer Jones in the corner in semi-transition, and the freshman was money. Later in the half, he stole a skip pass and calmly led the break before dropping it off to Tyrell Terry for another three. The entire team got into the celebration, in an uncharacteristically demonstrative way. They led by as many as 21 before taking their foot off the gas.

“Coach has been pulling me aside in practice and giving me pointers, teaching me how to better read the offense that we run, and it’s helped a lot.” said Davis. Whatever Haase told him clicked. He finished the game with 20 points, 6 rebounds, 5 assists, and 3 steals.

Tyrell Terry added 14 hard-earned points, on just 6 shots from the field. Bryce Wills chipped in 10.

For Cal, Grant Anticevich was the lone bright spot. The much improved junior forward had 16 points and 10 rebounds on 6-11 shooting. Matt Bradley finished with 13, though much of that came in the waning minutes.

On a night where expected Pac-12 contenders Oregon and Washington both slipped up, Stanford took care of business. That wasn’t lost on them, but they aren’t looking ahead just yet. “Right now it just feels good to be 1-0,” said Haase.

They aren’t in action again until next week, when the Washington schools come to Maples.

Comments

If Stanford had a real offensive flow, they'd be a real contender

As it is, they should be a tournament team, which is a big step in the right direction.

The offense coaching is horrible.

When you have a 3-point shooter like Spencer Jones and Isaac White and no consistent or repeatable way to get him open, you’re doing it wrong. Right now, it seems Stanford has been surviving by finding one-on-one match-ups and exploiting them. But this seems to be more a result of the players than the coach. Sure, there are a couple of set plays, but this seems to be 5% of the offense, if that.

Now, maybe there is more to this offensive scheme that I’m not seeing, or maybe the kids aren’t executing it correctly, I’m not sure. But without Davis or Terry, this team can’t seem to create any open looks via the actual offensive scheme.

Defense

The defense is the real deal and might be enough to carry them to the tournament. If they can find some offensive consistency earlier in the game this might be our best team since Trent Johnson’s last team.

Cal's dichotomy

The Bear’s defense is better than its offense, as dichotomy currently shared by Stanford. Cal took away Ty Terry and Oscar da Silva until Daejon and Bryce became too threatening. Stanford’s quality defense took away Cal’s top 2 scorers, which is the reason that Grant Anticevich was open for his perimeter bombs. This was a defensive game but Stanford’s defense wasn’t the only decent one on the court.

Daejon’s quasi-sidekick role, with Terry’s arrival, has been a work in progress. Lest we forget, Davis was on the PAC-12 All-Freshman Team. Last year, he was Stanford’s #2 scorer, and its most reliable. Daejon’s absences from illness and injuries last year kept him sidelined enough to be the key factor in Stanford finishing below .500. Most of us have been waiting for Davis to come out of his shell this season, because the USF game and this game are samples of his performances last year. Many of us know that he’s top-5 in conference for steals, but how many of us are aware that Daejon Davis is also #9 in 3-pt. shooting? Ahead of Spencer Jones and Ty Terry! He’s been deferring too much.

Although it’s still way too early, Stanford is being seen as a bubble team for the Big Dance. Whether Stanford makes the tournament, this is a young, developing team; their chemistry is still emerging. How about Daejon’s no-look backward pass to a trailing Terry for a swishing 3-pointer?

Jaden Delaire is a promising work in progress; recall that, although he’s a soph, he left high school a year early. Recall that Bryce Wills is younger than Tyrell Terry, who looks and plays like a baby-faced assassin. James Keefe is a promising frosh 4-5, with juice. Spencer Jones has upside on defense, as well as a developing scorer with more than a knockdown skill. While Delaire and the frosh are still progressing, Wills and Davis and Da Silva are among the best defenders in the PAC-12. The unfortunate injury loss of veteran Kodye Pugh, and the medical retirement of big man Trevor Stanback, have left a vacuum of depth that will require the current roster to suck it up and excel anyway.

Question about Tyrell Terry

What do you guys think his ceiling his in terms of NBA? Advanced stats love him and his range, pull-up skill, and IQ look elite, with athleticism that might fare comparable against someone like Nico Mannion? Is his size really a disqualifier for him to be a high-level starter, because it seems like he has everything else, especially given his age.

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