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Cal's
kicker and punter took different paths-One makes the crowd gasp in wonder. The other
has the coaches gasping in alarm.
October 16, 2008
Punter Bryan Anger and kicker Giorgio Tavecchio,
a Diablo FC alumnus who played in the State Cup
championship game for Diablo FC 89 this May,
have clearly different styles and have traveled
distinctly contrasting roads. Somehow, the
varied tales of the legs converged in Berkeley,
and the freshmen are making huge impacts for No.
25 Cal.
Tavecchio is the 5-8, 165-pounder who got more
interest from college soccer clubs than from
football coaches while attending Campolindo High
in Moraga. His first collegiate kick had coach
Jeff Tedford and special teams coordinator Pete
Alamar flailing their arms in windmill motions
as the play clock counted down. Giorgio was a
long-time member of Diablo FC 89 (aka DVSC Black
Pearl 89) for coach Marquis White before
attending Cal this fall.
Anger is the 6-foot-4, 196-pounder who was
recruited by dozens of Division I football
programs during an All-America career at
Camarillo High (Ventura County). His practice
punts make teammates halt drills and spectators
lose their breath as the ball rockets toward the
clouds.
Though he kicked in three of the Bears' five
games with a sprained right kicking leg, Anger
is No. 9 in the nation, averaging 45.1 yards a
punt. Tavecchio appeared to shore up a
seasonlong problem on kickoffs last game, when
he knocked four of five kicks inside the 8-yard
line and Arizona State averaged 20.0 yards a
return.
Before his junior year of high school, Anger
started place-kicking lessons with Chris Sailer,
a two-time All-American at UCLA. Near the end of
the first lesson, Anger decided to punt a few
balls.
"He watched a couple, tweaked a couple of things
and then made a statement that changed my life,"
Anger said. Sailer "said, 'OK, you need to stop
kicking. Punting is your future.' "
The life-changing prediction was fulfilled
almost immediately. By the midpoint of his
junior season, Anger was rushing home to see
what schools had sent letters, which coaches had
called and what reporters wanted to discuss his
abundance of scholarship offers.
"It was kind of hectic at times, but it was
fun," Anger said. "The recruiting process just
swept me away."
Now, it's Anger doing the mind-boggling. During
spring practice, Anger was kicking the ball so
far that Alamar threw him out of the drill in
exchange for a Jugs machine so the punt
returners actually had a chance to field punts.
Most recently, Anger pinned Arizona State inside
its own 10-yard line three times, including a
72-yarder.
"You hear the oohs and ahhs, and, even our
players in practice, they're amazed," Tedford
said. "We showed tape of that 72-yarder the
other day, and the whole team was kind of
electric with this 'wow-type' thing."
Anger, a quiet and ultra-modest guy, is 0.2
yards a punt off Cal's season-best mark, which
was set by Scott Tabor in 1987. Anger has kicked
24 balls of at least 50 yards, pinned 10 inside
an opponent's 20-yard line and already has a
Pac-10 Player of the Week award.
"I don't think there's any doubt that he'll be
an All-America punter," Tedford said. "There's
no question in my mind that he's as good a
punter as I've ever been around."
Tavecchio was born in Milan, Italy, still speaks
with an accent and is referred to affectionately
as "Salami." He verbally committed to play
soccer at UC Davis, changing his mind a month
later when he got his one-and-only walk-on offer
to play football at Cal.
"It's funny because if you're not a guy who's on
the kicking-camp circuit, you don't necessarily
get noticed," Alamar said. "Giorgio was an
elite-level soccer player and a football player,
so he wasn't going to all the camps and the
combines."
None of that has curtailed Tavecchio's
confidence. He arrived at Cal practice three
days before the season-opener against Michigan
State and managed to win the job.
A tight end, who has nearly 10 inches and 100
pounds on Tavecchio, jokingly tried to boot the
kicker from a meeting for being a "non-football
player." Tavecchio didn't back down, shouting,
"What of it?" while standing in designer jeans
and fancy dress shoes.
"When they joke with you, that means you're part
of the team," Tavecchio said. "I had no idea I
was going to compete to play right away, but I'm
doing everything I can to be my best for the
team and I think they've accepted me."
Tavecchio understands that the jokes will
continue until he proves to be consistent. He
also realizes that Anger, a scholarship player
who led his high school in receiving as a
senior, will never have to put up with the same
types of quips.
"Hey, I know my place," Tavecchio said. "One
day, I'm going to be on couch and watching TV
with my wife and kids. I'll say, 'I played with
Bryan Anger,' and they probably won't believe
it."
By Rusty Simmons, Chronicle Staff Writer
Reprinted from San Francisco Chronicle
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