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Hogan outduels Kessler, Stanford powers past No. 6 USC

Everybody was expecting USC to win big on Saturday and snap the streak of closely-contested matchups between the Trojans and the Cardinal in California’s newest — and biggest — rivalry. Turns out they were right — only they got the team wrong.

Instead of a convincing victory for the Trojans, it was a big win for the unranked Cardinal (2-1, 1-0 Pac-12), who stormed the Coliseum, went blow-for-blow with the No. 6 Trojans (2-1, 0-1 Pac-12) for 60 minutes and shocked the nation with a shootout victory over preseason media darling USC.

“In the pregame talk, I had all the guys stand up who had played in Pac-12 title games, and that’s half the team,” said head coach David Shaw. “Our guys are used to playing in big games. We need to act like it and play like it.”

 (Sam Girvin)

Fifth-year senior Kevin Hogan (center) earned his first win against USC as the Cardinal’s starting quarterback in the team’s 41-31 victory over the Trojans at the Coliseum. (SAM GIRVIN/The Stanford Daily)

The message was clear: Even though the nation as a whole counted Stanford out after the season-opening loss to Northwestern and were quick to sing the praises of USC in the preseason, the Cardinal — not the Trojans — have been the team to beat in California over the last half-decade, and they came out and played like it on Saturday.

Not to say that makes the win any less significant in the big picture.

In the last 30 seasons, USC has only lost two games as a top-10 team to an unranked opponent at home: “The Biggest Upset Ever” in 2007 and on Saturday — both to Stanford.

Not only that, but it also marked redemption for two of the Cardinal’s key contributors: fifth-year senior quarterback Kevin Hogan, who beat USC for the first time as a starter, and senior kicker Conrad Ukropina, who struggled against USC two years ago but nailed a 46-yard kick to ice the game in the fourth quarter.

“The guys were celebrating after the game, but I reminded them we don’t get a trophy for this one,” Shaw said. “It’s a regular-season game against a conference opponent that we won on the road. That’s great.

“But we get back to work. We can’t do the highs and lows that anyone else does.”

Ukropina’s kick was the exclamation mark on an almost-perfect night in which Stanford’s offense looked unstoppable and harkened back to the days of 2009 and 2010. The offensive line was dominant, and Stanford could gain three yards on the ground at will. Hogan was never under significant pressure all game and made accurate, poised throws. And Stanford’s defense did just enough to hold on for dear life against a USC offense with more talent than it knew what to do with.

 (SAM GIRVIN)

Sophomore Christian McCaffrey (right) notched 249 all-purpose yards against USC, including 115 yards on 26 carries. (SAM GIRVIN/The Stanford Daily)

Although the Trojans took an early 21-10 lead on a dominant first drive and a pair of passing touchdowns from quarterback Cody Kessler, Hogan led two scoring drives of 84 and 78 yards in the last nine minutes of the half to give Stanford a 24-21 edge with a 17-yard touchdown pass to Devon Cajuste with 0:03 left on the clock.

From there, Stanford held the powerful Trojans to just 10 points in the second half and ran the ball down USC’s throat, punching the ball in twice more on two of senior running back Remound Wright’s three rushing touchdowns on the night. Ukropina’s kick with 2:27 left in the game gave Stanford a two-score lead that it would never relinquish.

“We talked about [the second half] at halftime,” Shaw said. “We’d get their best shot and they stopped us to open the second half and scored. Our guys knew it was coming. We batted down the hatches and got back to work and played great in the second half.”

Under the circumstances and the pressure, it’s quite possible that Hogan’s performance will go down as the best in his career. He outdueled Kessler, a Heisman favorite, with a sparkling 18-of-23 line for 279 yards and two touchdowns. He also surpassed Andrew Luck ‘12 for the most rushing yards by a quarterback in Stanford history and passed Jim Plunkett for No. 4 on Stanford’s all-purpose yards quarterback rankings.

“He was huge,” Shaw said. “Coming off a first game where we didn’t play well and second game where we didn’t start well, we knew we had to come out well against a good team and it starts with your quarterback.”

Hogan found nine different targets for two touchdowns through the air as well, including a career-high four catches by junior tight end Austin Hooper for 79 yards. He also averaged 12.1 yards per attempt, keeping the chains moving through a bevy of intermediate plays, with only one truly “big” play to speak of, a 41-yard completion to Francis Owusu to open the second quarter.

Stanford also imposed its will on the ground, complementing Hogan’s stellar day through the air with 115 yards on 26 carries from sophomore Christian McCaffrey as well as the three touchdowns from Wright. McCaffrey snapped a 16-game streak without a 100-yard rusher for the Cardinal, becoming the first Stanford runner to eclipse the mark since Tyler Gaffney in the 2013 Pac-12 Championship against Arizona State.

“We made sure we stuck to the game plan and executed,” Hogan said. “It’s a nice feeling to go out in the second half and run the clock out, playing our style, running between the tackles and wearing them down.”

Although the defense allowed 31 points and 427 yards to USC’s offense as well as two touchdowns to one receiver for the first time in the David Shaw era (Steven Mitchell, Jr. had two), Stanford’s defense buckled down on big third-down and fourth-down stops when it needed to, especially down the stretch, and forced a turnover on downs with 0:04 left in the game to officially seal the big upset.

Special credit goes to fifth-year senior cornerback Ronnie Harris and freshman nickelback Quenton Meeks, who did a fantastic job in space against USC’s speedy playmakers, and to the defensive line, where only three players rotated all game against USC’s tempo and held firm.

“We came in and said everyone has to do his job,” said fifth-year senior linebacker Kevin Anderson. “We don’t like giving up 31 points to anyone, so we need to go back to work and improve.”

But at least for one day, Stanford doesn’t need to worry about improvement, because Stanford is once again the king of California — and on Saturday, they came, they saw and they certainly conquered.

Contact Do-Hyoung Park at dhpark ‘at’ stanford.edu.

 (Sam Girvin)

Stanford’s victory over No. 6 USC marks the fourth time in which the Cardinal have defeated an opponent as double-digit underdogs. Two such wins have come against Oregon, while the other two have come against the Trojans. (SAM GIRVIN/The Stanford Daily)

 

About Do-Hyoung Park

Do-Hyoung Park '16 is a Managing Editor of Staff Development, lead football writer and copy editor at The Stanford Daily. He also writes about Stanford football for Sports Illustrated's new college football site, Campus Rush. In his three years, he has written primarily football, baseball, soccer, tennis, swimming and water polo, and has covered a Rose Bowl, a Super Regional run and three national championships. Do-Hyoung is a senior that is obnoxiously proud of being from Saint Paul, Minnesota studying chemical engineering and computer science. To contact him, please email him at dpark027 'at' stanford.edu.
  • ADPaterson

    Ahem…. Not “everyone was expecting a USC win”, as recorded by this editor on these pages with reasons why — not just RaRa [“Go*Stanford”, zero analysis]. The Blunt Skulls can be subdued… AS WE HAVE SHOWN 4 OF THE LAST 5 TRIPS to the Coliseum; again as pointed out by this editor. Why was it a SURPRISE !? Why do young Stanford minds struggle with accepting success? You have only known Superior Stanford football ! You did not live through the post-Elway years. Even with Elway — we never went to a bowl game. The Big Play in 1982 cost us bowl eligibility ! Aloha Bowl reps were in our locker room when the fateful (illegal) rugby kickoff return by Grungy Bears was underway.

    Look, we should have been prepared for early road start. Turns out NORW is now rated #17, and will finish 9-3 or better (they don’t play OHST or MIST this year….). If NORW beats NEBR and WISC, they go to B1GTEN(no, 14) champ game. Go Wildcats !

    The weapons we have this year are better than Luck had to throw to. If the Defense gels further, we can beat anyone we play. Consider: Yes, the schedule is TOUGH — so is getting into Stanford. But, if we run the table and take the Pac12 crown we are in the Playoff with one loss; it’s a tougher schedule than any other candidate for Playoff — Ya follow?. Short of that, certainly a better bowl [Holiday, Alamo] than the FFarms ice capades. If we beat Our Lady at the end [NDAM will be in the Top Ten], then with two losses we could get Fiesta Bowl, if we beat Oregon and UCLA. There is no space on the bus for Eeyore at Pooh Corner. Here’s what us alums are saying out there:
    https://www.facebook.com/groups/Stanfordclassof79/

  • ADPaterson

    Undefeated teams in Pac12: UCLA, ZONA, UTAH.. CAL (!)
    [and NORW, honorary member]
    While we are slapping the Beavers in Corvallis… Meaty sched next week:
    CAL(3-0)@WASH(2-1); UTAH(3-0)@OREG(2-1); UCLA(3-0)@ZONA(3-0). Intriguing.
    AND… USC(2-1)@AZST(2-1) – Trojans on road to Devils who beat them on a “Hail Lucifer” in 2014.
    By Sept 30, Pac12 may have only one undefeated team: UCLA.or ZONA — one of them loses.

  • Candid One

    Nice job, Do. But as so many sports reporters have done, you let the TWU off the hook. In the NW game–after the first Stanford offensive series (FG), Stanford’s offensive line was getting beat. NW’s defense is one of the best in the B1G–and that wasn’t an aberration. Clearly, NW got over its “deer-in-the-headlights” mode after that first score. However, the TWU was not mentally ready for what it awoke. For Hogan–or Shaw–to succeed in the face of its offensive line’s inability to win at the line of scrimmage is a flagrant non sequitur.

    By the same standard, Hogan and Shaw look good in the aftermath of the TWU’s winning of the line of scrimmage–enough for plays and QB execution to work. Go figure!

    Who were those masked men who replaced the TWU of the NW game for this road game at USC? Wherever they came from, give them football scholarships–and nerd glasses!