logo
Cal athletic director Jim Knowlton announces his retirement

Cal athletic director Jim Knowlton announces his retirement

NBC Sports5 hours ago

BERKELEY, Calif. — California athletic director Jim Knowlton is retiring after seven years on the job.
Knowlton announced that he will step down officially on July 1.
Knowlton was in charge during a tumultuous time, dealing with COVID, the emergence of NIL and conference expansion that forced the Golden Bears to join the ACC after their longtime home in the Pac-12 fell apart.
Knowlton was named Cal's athletic director on May 21, 2018, and the Bears captured 10 national championships during his tenure and had more than 100 athletes compete at the two Summer Olympics during his tenure.
'It has been an incredible honor to serve at the University of California, Berkeley, the No. 1 public university in the country,' Knowlton said in a statement. 'The expectation of holistic excellence helps to drive everyone associated with the university, and our department is no exception. The combination of a world-class education, athletic excellence, an inclusive community, an awe-inspiring location and, most importantly, truly special people, make Cal a magnificent place to serve.'
The Bears didn't have as much success in the high-profile sports. The football program qualified for four bowl games in his seven seasons but hasn't had a winning record since 2019.
Knowlton hired two men's basketball coaches and neither one has had a winning season. He hired Mark Fox in 2019 and fired him after four seasons with a 38-87 record.
The program has shown some signs of improvement under Mark Madsen but has only a 27-38 record to show for it.
He also hired Charmin Smith to coach the women's basketball program in 2019. She had a losing record in each of her first four seasons before making progress the past two. The Bears went 19-15 in 2023-24 and then made the NCAA Tournament this past season, going 25-9 after losing in the first round.
UC Berkeley Chancellor Rich Lyons named current deputy athletic directors Jay Larson and Jenny Simon-O'Neill as the new co-directors of the program.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ohio State basketball welcomes in former players to work out with current roster
Ohio State basketball welcomes in former players to work out with current roster

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Ohio State basketball welcomes in former players to work out with current roster

Ohio State basketball welcomes in former players to work out with current roster One of the great things about being at Ohio State is all of the former athletes who have made it to the pros coming back to mingle and be around the program. And we're not just talking about football, though that's been where most of the traffic has come from through the most recent of years. Don't forget, despite this downturn in the OSU basketball program, the Buckeye hoopsters have a very good tradition themselves as well. You know a head coach really gets it when he invites those who used to don the Scarlet and Gray back to town to interact and work out with the current roster, and Jake Diebler fits that bill. In fact, Monday just so happened to be one of those days when Ohio State welcomed in some of those OSU legends to be a part of Vet camp. The current players got to play with, and be coached by the likes of Greg Oden, D'Angelo Russell, and E.J. Liddell. It was also a chance to see some of the newcomers interact with the current team and former players. Transfers Gabe Cupps, Christoph Tilly, and Brandon Noel were sweating it out alongside freshmen A'mare Bynum and Myles Herro. Germany product Mathieu Grujicic was also there, but things are still being worked out with his eligibility and visa, according to Eleven Warriors, so he was an innocent bystander. Ohio State is looking to get back to the NCAA Tournament after missing out three straight years. There is a good mix of veteran scorers and incoming talent, so the hope is that all of it comes together to make a run and get back to where the program belongs. Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes and opinion. Follow Phil Harrison on X.

Matt Eberflus denies neglecting Caleb Williams' development during his rookie season
Matt Eberflus denies neglecting Caleb Williams' development during his rookie season

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Matt Eberflus denies neglecting Caleb Williams' development during his rookie season

Matt Eberflus denies neglecting Caleb Williams' development during his rookie season By now, saying Caleb Williams' rookie season with the Chicago Bears was a disaster is the professional football equivalent of beating a dead horse. So much so that discussing how the Bears put their best prospect at the quarterback position in decades in a position to fail right away is like talking in circles. From this point forward, no one, Williams included, will gain anything productive from excavating the depths of this conversation any further. I assure you. Enter disgraced former Bears head coach Matt Eberflus, who really has to learn the concept of "digging up, stupid." In a recent conversation with Ed Werder on The Doomsday Podcast, Eberflus gave his side of the story on the infamous "scandal" regarding how the Bears' offensive coaches left Williams to his own devices when he had to watch film. According to Eberflus, Williams mischaracterized the Bears' apparent (but still quite plausible with all context at hand) atmosphere of development neglect with their rookie quarterback. Uh, sure, pal. Everyone totally believes this perspective, which notably came a month later (and without taking any accountability for leaving Williams high and dry), even though Eberflus has been employed as the Dallas Cowboys' defensive coordinator since late January: "In the development of the quarterback position and really all positions in my time at the Bears, we always had daily coached film sessions," Eberflus said. "That was through the entire year. That was what I observed and that's where it was. That's really all I have to say about it. That's where it is." What's rich about Eberflus' characterization of the situation is how it reveals he's still not listening to his now-former quarterback. Because, as Williams explained last month, he technically never said that coaches didn't watch film with him. In context, he meant Eberflus's staff's guidance with this all-important football teaching tool was lacking, leaving Williams to try and fill in the blanks without any markers to watch for. This is something you never want to do with a young quarterback still learning the ropes. That's an important distinction, and one Eberflus conveniently didn't address: "That was a funny one [the film excerpt quote] that came out," Williams clarified during Bears organized team activities. "It wasn't that I didn't know how to watch film, it was more or less the sense of learning ways to watch film and be more efficient, learning ways to pick up things better. That was a funny one that came out, in context, and how I was trying to portray it, it didn't get portrayed that way. It wasn't that I didn't know how to watch film, it was trying to figure out the best ways and more efficient ways so that I can watch more film." In essence, Eberflus's late response once again shows why he should've never been the steward for Williams' initial development. He's still refusing to take accountability for his mistakes. He's still hearing Williams say one thing, then letting it go right out the other ear. If I didn't know any better, Eberflus still sounds like the same self-absorbed lackey hellbent on prioritizing his self-preservation at all costs, which should usually be a career death sentence for anyone trying to coach anything professionally. With all things considered, I guess that's why Ben Johnson seems like such a perfect fit for the Bears. Well, if Eberflus wants to say anything to Williams' face, his Cowboys will visit Chicago in Week 3 of this upcoming season. Here's hoping that the bitter reunion is as awkward as this whole film saga has been.

Not everyone is excited about Alabama vs. Clemson in ACC/SEC Challenge
Not everyone is excited about Alabama vs. Clemson in ACC/SEC Challenge

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Not everyone is excited about Alabama vs. Clemson in ACC/SEC Challenge

Not everyone is excited about Alabama vs. Clemson in ACC/SEC Challenge It should be @patkelsey and @LouisvilleMBB coming to Tuscaloosa for the first time in 25 years instead of a third year of @ClemsonMBB on the schedule in some fashion. Louisville is the better matchup but whatever. — Morgan Crabtree (@mcrabtree_KY) June 12, 2025 Alabama and Clemson will face off again in 2025. No, not in football. The Crimson Tide and Tigers still haven't met on the gridiron since Clemson's 44-16 bludgeoning of Alabama in the 2019 College Football Playoff National Championship at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California. On the basketball court, though, the two schools will meet for the third time in two years during the 2025 ACC/SEC Challenge. It was announced last week that Clemson will visit Coleman Coliseum as part of this year's annual event, marking the Tigers' second trip to Tuscaloosa since November 2023. Alabama lost that November game to the Tigers, 85-77, but won a rematch four months later in the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament in Los Angeles when it mattered most. The Crimson Tide hit 16 3-pointers with Mark Sears scoring 23 points to lead Alabama to its first ever Final Four. Last season, Alabama reached the Sweet 16 again for the fourth time in five years under Nate Oats. Clemson made the NCAA Tournament under veteran coach Brad Brownell again, too, but the Tigers fell in a first-round upset to No. 12 seed McNeese State. There should probably be more hype for Alabama vs. Clemson, given that both programs have been on the rise under their respective head coaches. But a few Alabama fans took to social media to do some grumbling when Clemson was revealed as the Crimson Tide's opponent for the ACC/SEC Challenge. One user wrote: "Of all the games to give us," another user complained. The fans aren't the only ones who seem to lack some excitement for this game. CBS Sports' David Cobb recently ranked all 16 matchups for the 2025 ACC/SEC Challenge. Alabama vs. Clemson was squarely in the middle at No. 8, in large part due to the Tigers having lost every starter from its 27-win team a season ago that went 18-2 in the ACC and upset No. 2 Duke. Cobb predicted Alabama to beat Clemson and said of the matchup: "Alabama lost Mark Sears but still has ample backcourt talent, headlined by sophomore star Labaron Philon and a much-improved Aden Holoway. Clemson has established itself as one of the ACC's steadiest programs under Brad Brownell. But that steadiness will be tested amid a significant roster overhaul that leaves the Tigers relying heavily on a transfer class that does not appear overwhelmingly talented." Florida vs Duke was ranked by CBS Sports as the best matchup from this year's ACC/SEC Challenge schedule. The defending national champion Gators will face the Blue Devils at Cameron Indoor Stadium in a battle of two Final Four participants this past season. ACC/SEC Challenge matchup games ranked from best to worst 1. Florida at Duke 2. Louisville at Arkansas 3. North Carolina at Kentucky 4. NC State at Auburn 5. Missouri at Notre Dame 6. Tennessee at Syracuse 7. SMU at Vanderbilt 8. Alabama at Clemson 9. Virginia at Texas 10. Oklahoma at Wake Forest 11. Miami at Ole Miss 12. Texas A&M at Pitt 13. Mississippi State at Georgia Tech 14. Georgia at Florida State 15. LSU at Boston College 16. Virginia Tech at South Carolina Dates and start times have not been announced for this year's ACC/SEC Challenge. Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama Crimson Tide news, notes and opinion.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store