Posted September 24, 2012 on
AP on Fox
PLAYERS:
Andrew Luck,
Stepfan Taylor,
Kasen Williams,
Josh Nunes,
Matt Barkley,
Shayne Skov,
Keith Price
TEAMS: Stanford Cardinal, Washington Huskies, USC Trojans, Portland State Vikings
TEAMS: Stanford Cardinal, Washington Huskies, USC Trojans, Portland State Vikings
The Stanford Cardinal could probably come up with an endless list of good things about their upset win over the nation's No. 2 team.
Perhaps the only downside was that they had nearly two weeks to think about it.
Eighth-ranked Stanford finally returns to the field Thursday night, facing a whole new set of expectations as it begins its road schedule by visiting Washington.
Soon after the Cardinal (3-0, 1-0 Pac-12) beat Southern California 21-14 on Sept. 15, coach David Shaw tried to downplay the victory.
That was a difficult task considering Stanford, which began the season ranked 21st, proved it's still a major force despite losing No. 1 overall draft pick Andrew Luck and several other NFL-caliber players.
"I don't want to treat it like a national holiday," Shaw said last week. "We won a football game. Great. We have another one (Thursday).
"We have talked about not being a flash in the pan," the coach said. "We don't want to be that team known for one victory. We want to be known for victory after victory. We want to be consistent, stacking wins on top of wins."
Stanford has piled up eight consecutive road victories dating to 2010 and three straight wins in Seattle, including a 41-0 blowout in its last trip there two years ago.
Stepfan Taylor ran for 104 yards and a pair of touchdowns in that game and added 138 yards on just 10 carries in a 65-21 home win over the Huskies last season.
"You never want to get embarrassed like that," Washington wide receiver Kasen Williams said. "You still have that bad taste in your mouth from years past. You want to get back at them someway, somehow and we've had to wait a full year to do it."
They'll still have to deal with Taylor, who launched himself into the Heisman Trophy conversation earlier this month. He carried 27 times for 153 yards and a touchdown against the Trojans, also catching five passes for 60 yards and another score.
Although quarterback Josh Nunes has stepped in admirably for Luck, Stanford's defense was even more impressive in shutting down one of the nation's top passers. The Cardinal held USC's vaunted offense to 280 yards, picking off Matt Barkley twice and sacking him four times without allowing a TD pass.
USC scored twice on the ground but totaled 26 rushing yards on 28 attempts against a Stanford run defense that leads the nation in allowing 41.7 yards per game.
"We've got a talented bunch," linebacker Shayne Skov said. "When we play together like that, it's so special."
Washington (2-1) didn't perform so well in its first test against an elite defense. The Huskies totaled 183 yards - 26 on the ground - in a 41-3 loss at No. 3 LSU on Sept. 8.
They had last weekend off after rebounding with a 52-13 win over Portland State on Sept. 15, but coach Steve Sarkisian is well aware of the challenge that awaits his team in its Pac-12 opener.
"Stanford has a unique style of football in their big personnel groupings with multiple tight ends and extra offensive linemen, and then their ability to play stout up front on the defensive side of the ball to keep the game close," Sarkisian said. "The moment you break down, they seem to take advantage of it."
Washington has lost four straight overall to Stanford as it prepares for a brutal first three weeks of conference play. After facing the Cardinal, the Huskies visit No. 2 Oregon, then host the 13th-ranked Trojans.
Stanford, Oregon and USC all beat Washington last year by a combined 139-55.
Keith Price figures to play a major role in determining whether the Huskies can do better in 2012. Only three of the quarterback's 33 touchdown passes in 2011 came against the three Pac-12 powers, with three of his 11 interceptions also coming in those games.
Price was 14 of 19 for 181 yards and three touchdowns against Portland State, but he couldn't get the offense going versus LSU the previous week, getting sacked four times and throwing an interception while completing 17 of 36 passes (47.2 percent).
The Tigers had little trouble running the ball on Washington, rolling up 242 yards and four TDs on 52 carries, and the Huskies are also trying to shore up a banged-up offensive line that has already allowed eight sacks.
"We've seen definite improvement there. But again, time will tell and we will find out Thursday," Sarkisian said. "They've got a great task ahead of them. Stanford's front is tremendous."
Original Story:
http://msn.foxsports.com/cfb/story/St...
THE BACKYARD
BEST OF MAXIM
AROUND THE WEB
RELATED ARTICLES
Stanford at Washington: Three Bold Predictions
Nobody needs to remind you how great Andrew Luck was in college. Certainly not me.If Stanford does lose to the unranked Washington Huskies on ESPN, then memories of Luck's greatness may echo throughout the fans.College football is different than the NFL in many ways. In particular, unlike the NFL, great players will move on in five years, usually less. Which is where great coaching...
No. 8 Stanford 1st road test comes at Washington
Preparing to face Washington a season ago, Stanford thought they would need the arm of Andrew Luck to dispatch of the Huskies.
Then Stepfan Taylor and his teammates started running - and never were stopped.
The eighth-ranked Cardinal (3-0, 1-0 Pac-12) head out on the road for the first time in 2012 on Thursday night when they travel to Washington (2-1, 0-0) looking to keep on running...
College Football Forum Discussions
| Latest Rumors | The Backyard | Going Viral |
|
|
Today's Best Stuff |
For BloggersJoin the Yardbarker Network for more promotion, traffic, and money. |
Company Info |
Help |
What is Yardbarker?Yardbarker is the largest network of sports blogs and pro athlete blogs on the web. This site is the hub of the Yardbarker Network, where our editors and algorithms curate the best sports content from our network and beyond. |










|
September 26, 2012


