Cal’s offense prone to air it out with a heavy dose of Jaydn Ott

California true freshman Jaydn Ott is proving himself to be the real deal in Berkeley.

With the vast majority of the opponent offensive previews, the quarterback is highlighted and we will get to California’s senior transfer from Purdue in Jack Plummer. But with the California Golden Bears, it’s true freshman Jaydn Ott that has been the engine that runs the offense in Berkeley.

There aren’t many running backs in the country that can rush for 274 yards as Ott did in the game against Arizona. That’s a high bar to set and obviously, the Golden Bear tailback hasn’t had quite the same performance since, but he showed the explosiveness that he’s capable of and the Ducks will try to make sure Ott doesn’t reach the century mark or score.

[lawrence-related id=32113]

According to Oregon coach Dan Lanning, Ott’s talents jump out of the television screen when watching the video.

“(It’s) just how hard he runs. I think he’s been freshman player of the week for three weeks,” Lanning said. “He does a good job running the ball. He runs with great physicality and effort and that shows up.”

Overall, the 6-foot, 205-pounder from Chino, Calif. averages nearly 90 yards a game and has found the end zone five times.

At quarterback, Plummer left Purdue in search of more consistent playing time and he’s found that in the Bay Area. Plummer didn’t exactly blow up the stat sheet with the Boilermakers. He averaged 162 yards in the air in the 21 games (13 starts) in his four seasons in West Lafayette, Ind. where he threw for 26 touchdowns, but he was picked off 10 times.

[lawrence-related id=32454]

His career has taken a big upswing in the Bay Area, however. All of his numbers have gone up with the Bears. In their seven games so far, Plummer is completing 61 percent of his passes while averaging 251 yards, thrown for 12 touchdowns, and just three interceptions.

“I think he’s a really accurate quarterback. He does a good job of getting the ball downfield and I don’t think there aren’t a lot of throws that he can’t make,” Lanning said. “He does a good job of that. Probably more elusive than people give him credit for. He does a good job in the pocket but he’s got good wideouts and he’s done a good job delivering the ball accurately.”

Plummer’s favorite target has been Michael Sturdivant, a 6-3, 205-pound redshirt freshman. He has 36 receptions and averages 64 yards a game and has scored five touchdowns.

There have been some changes along the Cal offensive line since Game 4. Prior to the Arizona game, coach Justin Wilcox benched four out of the five linemen with Ben Coleman the only player staying in the lineup.

Whether is was due to the changes or Arizona’s porous defense, it paid dividends with the Golden Bears scoring seven touchdowns, 49 points, 354 yards rushing, and 599 yards of total offense against the Wildcats.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01f27mq9z7hjgk6vc6 player_id=none image=https://duckswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Tale of the Tape: Starting Quarterbacks – Drew Pyne vs. Jack Plummer

How confident are you in the new Irish starter?

By now, you’ve no doubt heard that [autotag]Tyler Buchner[/autotag] is out for the season with a shoulder strain. Buchner suffered the injury during the fourth quarter of the loss to Marshall and was replaced by [autotag]Drew Pyne[/autotag]. Starting with the upcoming game against California, Pyne becomes the top quarterback on the depth chart. Pyne has seen limited game action since coming to the Irish, so we’re about to find out what he’s really made off as he’s thrust into a role under circumstances no one expected.

The Bears will come into South Bend with a more established quarterback in Jack Plummer. Irish fans will see a similarity to [autotag]Jack Coan[/autotag] in that he was born to pass and not run. That might make Irish fans jealous because before his injury, Buchner’s running didn’t make up for his short passing much. If anything, Plummer will show the Irish the type of quarterback they’ve been missing in what’s quickly becoming a disappointing year.

Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Notre Dame vs. Purdue: Fourth Quarter Analysis

The Irish improve to 3-0 with a very solid fourth quarter

Geoffrey Clark has tapped out, so I’ll be taking us home on the quarter analysis. I’m going to do it a bit differently, just going to take you through my thought’s drive by dive. So here we go.

Finally a little bit of Chris Tyree as Jack Coan finds him on the left sideline for a nice 19-yard gain. Tommy Rees tries to say with the “hot hand” and Tyree gains just 5-yards on his next two carries. Coan finds Avery Davis on 3rd and 5 for 11-yards and a first down. They’ve had a great connection today, unfortunately the only one for the Irish offense. Coan takes a sack on second down, then after a timeout and bad throw to no one on 3rd down. Two trips to the redzone and no touchdowns but Jonathan Doerer barely makes a 30-yard field goal to extend the lead to 20-13. The Irish need to be better inside the 20, field goals don’t win you games.

Special teams has been solid today, the Irish stop the Purdue kick returner Marcellus Mooreat the 20-yard line. It’s been a bad go for the Boilers in the second half on special teams. Time for the defense to step up, the defensive line needs to get pressure on Jack Plummer. Now. Back-to-back incompletions bring up third down and the line gives me what I asked for. Isaiah Foskey and Myron Tagovailoa-Amosa sack Plummer on 3rd down. Massive series for the Irish then you add on a bad punt and great field position for the Irish on Purdue’s 39-yard line.

Need a score here, not a field goal, but to find the endzone. Coan goes deep to Braden Lenzy for the jugular, and it bounces off Lenzy’s hands. The Irish needed that, then on second down Coan is sacked. The Lenzy drop is looming larger now. Coan gets a few yards back on a check down to Williams that sets up a 4th and 9. I hate the punt there but Doerer barely made the last kick and it’s a once score game late. Kyle Hamilton with a huge play grabbing the ball at the 1-yard line after a great Jay Bramblett punt.

Odd move for Purdue as they bring in another quarterback Aiden O’Connell for his first snaps of the game. I don’t know about this move by Jeff Brohm on the 1-yard line. The gamble pays off as O’Connell finds Mershawn Rice for a 27-yard gain. Why Brohm did’t make this change earlier confuses me. Cam Hart makes a great play on the ball, setting up a 3rd and 5. O’Connell tests Hart against David Bell and it’s an incomplete pass. Very well could have seen a pass interference call there. Kyren Williams once again shows why he’s back returning punts, another good one for 23-yards sets up the next Irish drive almost at midfield. Great field position, and it’s clear the Irish are winning the special teams portion of the game.

So, Williams just took over. A fantastic 51-yard run where it looked like he was bottled up, broke a few tackles and was off to paydirt. Huge play as it gives the Irish some breathing room. Massive.

This drive could end the game here and after two incomplete passes it looked like it. O’Connell finds Bell on 3rd down for the first, but Hamilton hits him hard and he’s down. The game has stopped and a somber mood has entered this game. Head and neck injuries are scary, you hate to see this and hopefully Bell is fine. Tough to watch these kind of injuries. They review the play and call it incomplete, tough to get your mind back onto the game after that. Fourth-and-eight and O’Connell slowly scrambles and barely get the 8-yards. Finds Jackson Anthrop to move the chains again, why didn’t Purdue make this change earlier? Thank you Jeff Brohm. Purdue keeps driving and not giving up. Hat’s off to them for not folding late in this one but Hamilton comes up in the clutch once again, picking off O’Connell in the end zone. That should be game.

Kyren Williams and Kyle Hamilton stepped up when the Irish needed them to. The two best players on the team did what they do, make plays. Williams didn’t quite make it over the 100-yard mark for the first time this year, but he had over 130-yards from scrimmage along with two scores. Hamilton had the game-sealing pick, a few tackles for loss and an overall dominant game again. They’re both so damn impressive. Solid win for the Irish today, 1-0 every week so far.

Tale of the Tape: Starting Quarterbacks – Jack Coan vs. Jack Plummer

We’re just about even here.

Fans tuning into Saturday’s game between Notre Dame and Purdue will have a pair of Jacks as their opening hand at quarterback. Despite some calls for Tyler Buchner to start for the Irish, Brian Kelly is sticking with Jack Coan for now. So far, Coan has done nothing to dispel the notion that he’s all aerial and nonexistent on the ground. The good news is he has the arm to counter an opponent who is just as productive at passing, and he’ll need that in this game.

The Boilermakers’ Jack Plummer is a clone of Coan in that he also is a great passer but not known for running. If he has advantages anywhere thus far, they come from a slightly higher pass completion and no interceptions thrown yet. Given everything, however, this might as even a quarterback matchup that the Irish will face all year. To pull off the win, they might have to look in other directions.