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BRIGHT SPOT: Junior safety
Oshiomogho Atogwe nabs UCLA’s Maurice Drew.
gonzalesphoto.com |
sophomore cornerback T.J.
Rushing snatched a snippet of hopefulness from the Big
Loss to Cal on November 22. “We’ll bounce
back,” he told reporters after the Cardinal fumbled
its last chance at a bowl game, losing to the Golden
Bears 28-16. “That’s what the game is about.”
The voice of youth did its darnedest to drown out the
naysayers, but the Cardinal’s final game—a
57-7 rout by Notre Dame on November 29—spoke louder:
four wins + seven losses = a season that felt like a
stomach-churning ride on Great America’s Invertigo
coaster. Anticipation began a slow climb with early
wins over San Jose State, 31-10, and Brigham Young University,
18-14. Then came the first descent: four consecutive
losses, to Washington, 28-17, the University of Southern
California, 44-21, Washington State, 24-14, and Oregon,
35-0. The Cardinal’s upset of UCLA, 21-14, and
defeat of Arizona State, 38-27, raised hopes before
the Oregon State Beavers sent them plummeting again
with a 43-3 drubbing. After that loss, campus critics
complained that the Cardinal was outscored 78-3 by the
state of Oregon this year.
The defeat at the hands of the Fighting Irish was worse—in
fact, the worst home loss ever. Although both schools
went onto the field with 4-6 records, Notre Dame took
charge with three touchdowns in the first quarter and
never lost the momentum. By halftime, the Irish were
leading 34-0 and Cardinal fans already were leaving
the stadium. “I’m embarrassed we played
the way we did,” head coach Buddy Teevens said
after the game. “I thought we were ready to go.
It’s my responsibility.” For Teevens, who
had compiled a 2-9 record in his rookie year, this year’s
4-7 showing was an improvement. But he acknowledged
that “to go out like that, yes, it’s disappointing.”
The final game of the 109th season marked the first
return visit of Tyrone Willingham, who led the Cardinal
from 1995 to 2001, taking the team to the Rose Bowl
in 2000. Stanford seniors lined up to shake hands with
him after the game. Quarterback Chris Lewis, who was
last in line, and Willingham hugged for a long moment
before parting in tears.
The Cardinal played a tough schedule that included
eight 2002 bowl teams, and there were some bright spots
on defense. The squad held opponents to under 100 yards
rushing in five games, and the UCLA upset was fueled
by eight sacks, an effective blitzing scheme and a 90-yard
punt return by senior Luke Powell.
Stanford was one of the youngest teams in the nation,
with a true freshman class of 30 and a redshirt freshman
class of 17—almost half of the 96-member squad.
The young guys made significant contributions, led by
redshirt freshman Trent Edwards, who was named starting
quarterback after the season opener and started four
games before suffering a shoulder injury against WSU
and a thigh injury against Cal. In eight games, Edwards
completed 77 of 170 pass attempts for 750 yards and
four touchdowns. Freshman wide receiver Mark Bradford,
who played in all 11 games and started the last seven,
had 37 catches for 587 yards and three touchdowns, while
freshman running back David Marrero carried the ball
37 times for 115 net yards.
The team’s youth may be this season’s silver
lining. The Cardinal does graduate several stars: Powell,
left tackle Kirk Chambers, who started 45 consecutive
games, and punter Eric Johnson, who set single-season
school records for number of punts (86) and yardage
(3,687). But this year, Stanford doubled last season’s
win total. Maybe an eight-win season is up next.
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