Farm Report
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SPORTS: BASKETBALL Young Squad in a Hurry |
Expectations were lower this year. With four of last season's five starters gone, the team started at No. 13 in the Associated Press preseason poll. But senior Mark Madsen and a crew of other players soon gave the pundits pause. By early December, they had swept through five teams, including perennial powerhouse Duke (then No. 10) in a nationally televised game at Madison Square Garden and No. 2 Auburn. All of a sudden, the Cardinal had vaulted to No. 3 on the AP list. The team has shown it can handle the pressure. In the game against Duke, Madsen pulled a hamstring at the end of regulation, but the team went on to eke out an 80-79 win in overtime without its leader. Facing Auburn, the men blew a nine-point lead but bounced back to win, 67-58. "The kids had enough mental toughness to come out of it," says coach Mike Montgomery. And then there's freshman phenom Casey Jacobsen -- dubbed a "scoring machine" by the San Francisco Chronicle. With just five Stanford games under his belt, Jacobsen was already averaging 11 points and 3.4 rebounds a game. Others to watch: twins Jarron and Jason Collins. The men's team isn't the only one bucking expectations. Stanford's women entered the season without a spot in the top 25 rankings for the first time in the 1990s. But the Cardinal upset No. 6 Iowa State, 95-82, and gave No. 5 Tennessee a scare before losing, 79-73. It's too early to say if the men and the women can carry the early momentum into the Pac-10 season -- and into the all- important NCAA tournament in March. Neither team has been picked to win its conference. But this year, surprise may be the Cardinal's secret weapon. |