Tweets by @StanfordSports

RT @alexaphilippou: I wrote this 2 months ago but it seems even more fitting now, as @StanfordMSoccer plays in 1st College Cup since '02 ht…: 21 hours ago, StanfordDaily Sports
RT @dohyoungpark: It's official: No. 6 @StanfordFball will face No. 5 Iowa in the 102nd Rose Bowl Game presented by Northwestern Mutual. (J…: 5 days ago, StanfordDaily Sports

2014 Stanford football depth chart released

Stanford football released its depth chart on Monday morning for the Aug. 30 season opener against UC-Davis, with senior Kelsey Young and junior Blake Martinez slotted to start at running back and inside linebacker, respectively.

Young missed part of training camp with an ankle injury but returned late last week, and beat out junior Barry J. Sanders for the starting job. Sanders, fifth-year senior Ricky Seale “OR” senior Remound Wright are slotted as Young’s backups at tailback.

Junior inside linebacker Blake Martinez (above) will take over Shayne Skov's old spot, though he's expected to rotate with several others. (TRI NGUYEN/The Stanford Daily)

Junior inside linebacker Blake Martinez (above) will take over Shayne Skov’s old spot, though he’s expected to rotate with several others. (TRI NGUYEN/The Stanford Daily)

Martinez will take over Shayne Skov’s old inside linebacker spot, where he will play across from fifth-year senior A.J. Tarpley. The two primary backups at the position, sophomore Kevin Palma and junior Noor Davis, are expected to rotate heavily with Martinez.

The depth chart also confirmed that fifth-year senior Kyle Olugbode will take over at free safety.

Olugbode will be joined by senior strong safety Jordan Richards and senior corner Wayne Lyons in the starting secondary. Surprisingly, senior corner Ronnie Harris “OR” junior Alex Carter is listed as the starting left corner, meaning that Harris may unseat the returning starter. But as the depth chart did not list any nickelbacks, it’s hard to tell what the coaching staff has in mind as far as the secondary’s rotation goes.

All five members of Stanford’s starting offensive line are juniors: left tackle Andrus Peat, left guard Josh Garnett, center Graham Shuler, right guard Johnny Caspers and right tackle Kyle Murphy. Caspers was the only member of that group who was fighting for a starting job in camp, but head coach David Shaw announced on Friday that he had won the spot over senior Brendon Austin, who is now expected to play in an Ogre role.

To no surprise, senior Kevin Hogan will start at quarterback for Stanford for the third straight season, and classmate Evan Crower will back him up for the second consecutive year. No other passers were listed; sophomore Ryan Burns is believed to be the third quarterback and highly touted freshman Keller Chryst, who will almost certainly redshirt, does not appear on the depth chart.

Fifth-year senior fullback Lee Ward will be the Cardinal’s lead blocker, with senior Patrick Skov backing him up, as expected.

Though there is no word yet on whether he’s cleared to play against UC-Davis, senior Ty Montgomery is Stanford’s top receiver, with classmate Devon Cajuste lining up across the field. Michael Rector, Jordan Pratt (who recently returned from a minor injury) and Francis Owusu are listed as the backups.

Sophomore Eric Cotton is listed at the starting tight end spot, with classmate Austin Hooper backing him up. Shaw has already named Hooper the top “Y” tight end, so Cotton has presumably won the battle for the “F” position. Senior Charlie Hopkins is listed as the third tight end.

Fifth-year seniors Henry Anderson, David Parry and Blake Lueders will most likely start up front for the Cardinal defense, but junior Aziz Shittu, who broke through in the spring, is listed alongside Lueders at one defensive end starting spot and as Parry’s backup at nose tackle. The other backup defensive end is junior Luke Kaumatule, who returned to the position this offseason after spending some time at tight end.

Seniors James Vaughters and Kevin Anderson will start at outside linebacker, as expected. Former inside linebacker Joe Hemschoot is listed as one backup, while sophomore Peter Kalambayi, who had an impressive spring game, is the other.

Jordan Williamson will kick for Stanford for a fourth consecutive year, with fellow fifth-year senior Ben Rhyne starting at punter. Montgomery is the starting kick returner, and is listed along with Sanders at punt returner.

The only true freshman to appear on the two-deep was left tackle Casey Tucker, who is Peat’s primary backup.

Contact Joseph Beyda at jbeyda ‘at’ stanford.edu.

About Joseph Beyda

Joseph Beyda is the editor in chief of The Stanford Daily. Previously he has worked as the executive editor, webmaster, football editor, a sports desk editor, the paper's summer managing editor and a beat reporter for football, baseball and women's soccer. He co-authored The Daily's recent football book, "Rags to Roses," and covered the soccer team's national title run for the New York Times. Joseph is a senior from Cupertino, Calif. majoring in Electrical Engineering. To contact him, please email jbeyda "at" stanford.edu.
  • Z

    Couple of notes: It’s August 30, not September, and on this coming Saturday, not Monday. And according to the UC Davis media guides from last year “UC Davis” is supposed to be spelled with no punctuation of any sort.

    Other than that, great article! Looking forward to visiting Palo Alto for the game. Will be rooting for the Ags, but I have enormous respect for Stanford’s program and hope for a great game all around.

  • Candid One

    Another note: If you only visit Palo Alto, you won’t attend the game. Stanford and Palo Alto are geographically distinct. Stanford is unincorporated land. Fortunately, they’re immediately adjacent. Just cross El Camino Real, the PA City Limit, onto Stanford land. Stanford Stadium is immediately across that street from Palo Alto High School. There’s more to navigating life than grammar.

  • Candid One

    JB, recall David Shaw’s continual reminder that “starter” isn’t a big-deal designation on this team, especially with the persistent rotation at many positions. The current depth chart isn’t very informative, particularly for a game that will have more players see game time than the position listing implies.

    Later in the season, some positions that have a two-deep list will see three players in normal rotation. Opponent, game plan, game progress, and player development will influence each game differently. Recall that Kevin Hogan was third string behind Brett Nottingham for several 2012 games despite that he often played in packages. Of course, Hogan isn’t in doubt this season.

  • David Jaulus

    I’d love to see St1nford open up the offense’ I think the biggest adv1ntage this team has over previous squads is team speed. On the defensive side, I’d expect a big year from Luke. He was really solid once he moved back to D-end at the end of last season.