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2009, The National Football league called NFL.
Saturday, 17 October 2009
Time:07:30 PM ET
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Stanford Team Report
A lot questions need to be answered by Stanford in its Oct. 17 road game against Arizona after the Cardinal’s one-sided loss to Oregon State on Oct. 10.
Can the Cardinal, built on the emotional leadership of Jim Harbaugh, bounce back from a disheartening loss? The Cardinal has not had a winning season since 2001, and the negative feeling could start creeping in if Arizona jumps out to an early lead.
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Getting an early lead is important for another reason.
Stanford showed against Oregon State that it is not built to come from behind. The physical running game centering on Toby Gerhart is the focus of the offense, and that is less of a factor when the Cardinal is down by 10 points or more. Redshirt freshman quarterback Andrew Luck may not be ready to win games with his passing, although he is a fast learner and could take a major leap forward in any of the next few games.
Arizona’s defense, which looked to be its strong suit in the first two games, has yielded a lot of points in its two Pac-10 games, but it is still tough against the run.
Can Stanford win on the road? Arizona is a team that seems to be at the same level as Stanford talent-wise, but Stanford has not played well on the road this season or in the recent past. Stanford’s decisive road loss at Oregon State was the most recent example. If the Cardinal lays another egg in Tucson, it may prove Stanford cannot get it together on the road, a sign the Cardinal has not yet turned the corner.
The biggest question is the Cardinal’s defense. It was a concern in preseason, but had managed to get by against the weaker Pac-10 teams. Stanford’s defense got exposed against Oregon State, which did anything it wanted to on offense. Arizona’s offense is better than expected, having scored more than 30 points in both its Pac-10 games, and with Nick Foles at quarterback, the Wildcats seem to have the kind of offensive balance that ruined the Cardinal against the Beavers.
The schedule continues to get more difficult for the Cardinal, who built its 3-0 conference start against weaker teams, with two of the wins at Stanford. A loss to Arizona, which is 2-0 at home, would not only continue the downward momentum but would cast doubt on whether the Cardinal can land any bowl berth.
A victory at Arizona might rekindle talk of a Rose Bowl berth for Stanford, with a winnable home game against Arizona State coming up in its next game. Simply staying close would be enough for the Cardinal to retain belief in itself. Another lopsided loss might send the Cardinal spiraling downward.
NOTES, QUOTES
• A win against Arizona would make Stanford 5-2, which would be its best record after seven games since 2001, when it also started 5-2 and ended up 9-3, the Cardinal last winning season.
• Stanford has lost 10 of its last 12 road games, but four of those losses have been by seven points or less.
• After the Arizona game, Stanford’s next two games and four of its final five games are at home, where the Cardinal has won three in a row and eight of its last nine.
• Stanford ranks first in the Pac-10 in rushing offense, but it is also first in passing efficiency and has yielded the fewest sacks. The Cardinal has also attempted fewer passes per game than any other Pac-10 team.
Series History: Arizona leads 13-11 (last meeting 2008, 24-23 Stanford)
Scouting The Offense: Toby Gerhart and the Cardinal’s running game are still the focus of the attack, and that has been a successful formula when the Cardinal gets an early lead. But against Oregon State, the Cardinal showed it has trouble playing from behind. Redshirt freshman QB Andrew Luck has been efficient when the game is close and the running game is working, but he was unable to bring the Cardinal from behind when Stanford had to rely on a passing game. Luck figures to get better as the season goes along, and it remains to be seen whether he can carry the load in a road game if the Cardinal gets behind
Quote To Note: “We got our butts beat. You’ve got to come off the bus ready to play. You can’t get off to a slow start.”—Stanford coach Jim Harbaugh, on his team’s loss to Oregon State, when the Cardinal found itself behind 14-0 early in the game, taking the Cardinal’s running game out of the picture.
Arizona Team Report
Arizona’s painful loss at Washington was still a topic of discussion early in the week, but there is also a big opportunity right in front of the Wildcats.
Arizona (3-2 overall, 1-1 Pac-10) begin a three-game homestand this Saturday, starting with Stanford. UCLA (Oct. 24) and Washington State (Nov. 7). The Wildcats, who haven’t been home since Sept. 12, are slight favorites this week and should be favored throughout the homestand.
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“It’s going to nice to be at home for the next month,” coach Mike Stoops said.
It might be, but first Arizona has to get over the emotional aftermath of the 36-33 loss at Washington. The UA was in control most of the game, had a big advantage in yards and had a 12-point lead when Washington took over with about four minutes left.
The Huskies, aided by a short kickoff and a personal foul penalty on Arizona, scored quickly on a 25-yard pass … and then came up with one of the plays of the college football season.
A low pass deflected off the shoe of receiver Delashaun Dean—although Dean and fans armed with magnified still shots of the plays argued the ball hit the turf—and into the arms of Washington linebacker Mason Foster, who returned the interception for the game-winning points.
That kind of play might be hard to shake off.
“It was just a freak play,” Stoops said Monday. “I don’t think this is going to deter us from what we’re doing.”
If it doesn’t, Arizona could be in fine shape by the end of its homestand.
NOTES, QUOTES
• Starting DT Earl Mitchell figures to be back in the lineup this week against Stanford after suffering a bizarre injury in the morning of Oct. 6 before the team left for its game at Washington. Mitchell was in a hallway in McKale Center when someone called his name, he glanced away and had started to turn his head back when a door opened and smacked him in the head. The edge of the metal door opened a cut above his eye, and the coaches feared a possible head injury. Stoops called it a minor concussion, and that he is “day to day.”
Mitchell didn’t travel with the team to Seattle.
“It was pretty much just a freak accident,” he said. “It’s crazy. Real unfortunate. The thing is, it could have happened to anybody.”
• Arizona is one of three FBS teams (Virginia and Nevada are the others) that has yet to make a stop in the red zone. Opponents have 13 for 13 against UA after driving inside the 20—11 touchdowns and two field goals. The good news out of that is that opponents have had only 13 red-zone chances in five games.
Series History: Arizona leads Stanford 13-11 (last meeting, 2008, 24-23 Stanford).
Quote To Note: “Obviously, we’re disappointed. I think our kids will be excited to be back home and playing a heck of a Stanford team. As good as some of the wins are, or as bad as some of the losses are, you have to come back and put that behind you because you