Cal’s football program has a new layer of leadership around Ron Rivera.
Chancellor Rich Lyons told staff in a Wednesday email that Rivera, already the Bears’ general manager, will now also carry the title of athletic director for football, according to an email obtained by Cal Bears on SI. Rivera’s contract has also been extended into a third year through March 2028, as previously reported.
“In recognition of Ron’s leadership of, contributions to, and impact on our football program, I have also decided to change his title to General Manager and Athletic Director for Football,” Lyons wrote to staff members.
Rivera, 64, was hired in the spring of 2025 to oversee the program after a career that included All-America honors at Cal and an NFL head coaching run. He spent last season working alongside former coach Justin Wilcox before Wilcox was dismissed late in the year after the Bears’ Big Game loss at Stanford. Cal finished 7-6, ending the season with a 35-31 defeat to Hawaii in the Hawaii Bowl.
Rivera then turned around and hired Oregon defensive coordinator and Cal alum Tosh Lupoi as the Bears’ head coach. Lupoi quickly kept quarterback Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele in Berkeley after his promising freshman season, and he has since built strong off-season momentum through recruiting.
Rivera discussed Lupoi’s early progress as a first-time head coach during spring practice in the video above.
Lyons also confirmed one-year extensions for co-athletic directors Jay Larson and Jenny Simon-O’Neill, who were introduced on July 2 of last year after replacing Jim Knowlton. The pair oversees Cal’s other 29 sports, with football excluded from their portfolio.
Lyons said he is pleased with what Larson and Simon-O’Neill have done since taking over.
“Throughout the course of the previous year, they have ably handled a wide array of challenges and opportunities during an era of dramatic change in the intercollegiate landscape,” Lyons wrote.
“I also appreciate all that they are contributing to our ongoing efforts to launch a new era of excellence for Cal Athletics.”
Larson and Simon-O’Neill are also leading the rollout of Strawberry Creek Studios, Cal’s effort to modernize the athletic department’s structure and boost both storytelling and revenue generation.
Elsewhere in the department, Cal men’s basketball is coming off a 22-win season under third-year coach Mark Madsen, its best in a decade, and finished with an NIT berth. The women’s team won 21 games and played in the NCAA’s WBIT a year after reaching the NCAA tournament.
Cal football opens its 2026 schedule on Sept. 5 with a 7:30 p.m. game against longtime former Pac-12 rival UCLA at Memorial Stadium in Berkeley.
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The first taste of pro basketball for two former Cal guards came in the NBA summer league, where Chris Bell and John Camden found themselves trying to turn undrafted status into something more durable. Camden was on the Washington Wizards roster but did not get on the floor in the opener, while Bell got a brief run for the New Orleans Pelicans and came away without a point.
Both players at least have a path to keep pushing, since each signed a deal that can carry them into preseason training camp. For Bell and Camden, that means the summer league is less about immediate headlines than about earning another look, and the next few weeks will go a long way toward showing whether either can keep alive a route to a regular-season roster. [Read more 🡒]
Ron Rivera Is Officially Tied To Cal Football's Defining Stretch
Ron Riveras role in Cal football has been locked in a little longer, with the school extending its general manager and athletic director through March 2028. The move keeps Rivera tied to the programs most consequential stretch as the Bears try to stabilize the football operation and build on the momentum he has helped create since taking over the top personnel job.
The extension also comes with a salary structure that underscores how central the position has become, while co-athletic directors Jay Larson and Jenny Simon-ONeill were each given one-year extensions to continue overseeing Cals other sports. Riveras new deal arrives after a busy run of football decisions and amid a broader push to keep the program moving forward on the roster and recruiting front. [Read more 🡒]
