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UH, Cal settle in and prepare for their Australian season opener

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hawaii’s Marcus Kemp, left, Steven Lakalaka and Makani Kema-Kaleiwahea posed for photos near the Sydney Opera House on Monday.

A chartered Boeing 777 touched down at Sydney airport on Monday morning, delivering the California Golden Bears and team officials Down Under for their much-anticipated opening college football game of the season on Friday (Hawaii time) against Hawaii.

The 14-hour flight left San Francisco just after midnight Saturday night. The 100-plus players and coach Sonny Dykes missed the remainder of Sunday when they crossed the International Date Line in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.

The Golden Bears will pick up that time when they return to the U.S. after the game, arriving back in California earlier in the day than their time of departure from Sydney, due to the 17-hour time difference in their favor.

Organizers say Saturday’s midday game — prime time Friday night in the U.S. — at Sydney’s Olympic stadium is expected to attract a crowd of more than 65,000.

Hawaii had less time in the air, 101⁄2 hours from Honolulu. Former Rainbow Warrior quarterback Nick Rolovich, making his debut as head coach, and his team arrived Sunday. It will be the seventh straight year that Hawaii has opened against a Pac-12 opponent, and Hawaii is 2-4 in that span.

Hawaii has had six Australians on its roster in the past, and this year’s squad includes Sydney native and first-year defensive lineman Max Hendrie.

Dykes planned to keep the players up Monday to get them used to the time difference, and what better way than to schedule a practice within three hours of their arrival.

The rest of the week will include a public reception today at the Opera House and morning meetings followed by noon practices most days, leaving the players free time in the afternoon and evening. There will be a Cal team trip to the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

“This is my senior year and I’m here to win a football game,” quarterback Davis Webb said before the team left California. “That’s the way I’m approaching it. I’ll walk around Sydney, see the culture and embrace it and maybe eat lamb because everybody talks about that.”

Webb, who Dykes has already named as starting quarterback, is one of the key Cal additions this year, replacing Jared Goff, the No. 1 overall NFL Draft pick by the Los Angeles Rams.

A graduate transfer from Texas Tech, Webb played in 23 games with 14 starts over three seasons, with career totals of 5,557 yards and 46 touchdowns. He’s enrolled in Cal’s public health masters program.

Dykes says he and the team are embracing the trip. Some of the players had never left the U.S., so organizing passports was among the preparations needed for the season opener.

“When you have an opportunity as an 18-year-old to go across the world to a different continent, see a completely different culture, explore a place you might never have had an opportunity to explore, just the impact that can have on your life is great,” Dykes said before leaving. “The value of that, you can’t determine that.”

The game, with Cal designated as the home team, will be the first college football game played in Sydney and the first significant American football game played in Australia since 1999. Then, the Denver Broncos beat the San Diego Chargers 20-17 on Jason Elam’s 30-yard field goal on the final play of the game in the preseason American Bowl. Also played at the Olympic stadium, that game attracted more than 73,000 spectators.

It is the first college football game to be played in Australia since Brigham Young defeated Colorado State in 1987 in Melbourne. A crowd of 7,652 watched BYU’s 30-26 win at the 32,000-seat Princes Park stadium, far fewer than the 20,000 organizers had hoped.

9 responses to “UH, Cal settle in and prepare for their Australian season opener”

  1. Kriya says:

    Who is paying for this unnecessary very expensive trip for one hundred or more people to go throw a ball around on in another hemisphere? Is this why they are raising tuition? Is this why there is hundreds of millions of dollars in unfunded maintenance on buildings on UH campuses all across the state?

    • roughrider says:

      Before you spit up your breakfast, thought you should read this:

      The University of Hawaii will receive a $750,000 guarantee to play Cal in the inaugural Sydney College Football Cup Aug. 27 in Australia, according to terms of the contract.

      In addition, the promoter, TLA Worldwide of Australia, will cover all UH travel and accommodation costs for a 200-member Rainbow Warrior party, according to a copy of the agreement released by UH.

    • HIE says:

      Talk about ignoramous!! It’s been reported NUMEROUS TIMES that all travel costs and travel-related expenses are paid in full by the promoter of the game. UH is MAKING MONEY on this trip. Call 911 if you need assistance getting your head out of your okole!

  2. Blunt says:

    See the jackets? Our summer is their winter. Today’s temp is 45-60 degrees. Great football weather.

  3. WalkoffBalk says:

    Did they have some Vegamite sandwiches?

  4. TaiBow says:

    I hope this assessment of Hawaii by the Cal Bears writers on SB Nation proves to be incorrect:

    “Unless you are the world’s biggest Hawaii homer, it should be abundantly clear that this team (Hawaii) is deeply and fundamentally flawed. These receivers cannot catch the ball. These passes aren’t Jared Goff’s 50-yard long bombs that they can’t catch. Many of these are simple 2-yard, 5-yard, and 7-yard passes. Beyond straight drops, the receivers have a tendency to deflect balls into the waiting hands of linebackers and DBs. Defending this offense is as simple as sitting back and waiting for it to self-destruct. If our defenders want to hasten that self-destruction, they will find that gently touching the Hawaii receivers seems to dislodge the ball from their possession with tremendous ease. Given that the receivers have trouble gaining any kind of separation, no matter the route, breaking up passes is usually a simple task. Barring a miraculous turnaround by the new head coach, these problems that appeared so frequently last season should reappear this season.

    If our defense has trouble against this offense, we are entering a world of pain this season.”

    I hope the Warriors make the Bears eat their words!

    Go ‘Bows!

  5. google says:

    Football on TV Friday night. Which channel or station? What time is kick off?

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