Football predictions: Stanford vs. Washington State
This weekend, senior left tackle Kyle Murphy (right) and the Stanford offensive line will look to exploit a Washington State defense that gives up 5.06 yards per carry. (DAVID BERNAL/isiphotos.com)

Football predictions: Stanford vs. Washington State

No. 8 Stanford (6-1, 5-0 Pac-12) vs. Washington State (5-2, 3-1 Pac-12)

 

Michael Peterson: Stanford 49, Washington State 38

We’re about halfway through Pac-12 conference play and the Cougars still control their own destiny. That’s a huge accomplishment for Mike Leach and the improving Washington State program, and Stanford should not take the Cougars lightly. Washington State boasts the nation’s second-best passing offense and can score with the best of them. That being said, the Stanford offense is on a historically great pace — excluding the Northwestern game, the Cardinal score on average about 15 more points than the opposing defenses typically allow. Extend that statistic to the upcoming game and Stanford would be projected to score 46 points on Washington State. Though the Cougars’ offense will put Stanford’s still-young secondary to the test, it’s hard to imagine Stanford’s defense bending enough to allow the Cougars to outscore the Cardinal. A fired-up Martin Stadium helps Wazzu hang close early, but Stanford pulls away comfortably late to remain undefeated in conference play, avoiding the trick and coming away with the treat on Halloween night.

Vihan Lakshman: Washington State 55, Stanford 49

Raise your hand if you circled this game at the beginning of the year as a de facto Pac-12 North Championship.

After they both suffered inexplicable losses in Week 1, Stanford and Washington State have turned around their seasons to the point that this game is loaded with more consequences than even the most ardent homer would dare to predict. Martin Stadium, a place Mike Leach has described as “on the scale of Woodstock,” will be absolutely electric on a wet Halloween night. Moreover, the Cardinal have historically struggled in hostile environments of this magnitude and no one on this roster has seen game action in Pullman.

In what promises to be a shootout of epic proportions, Luke Falk throws for over 600 yards against a green Stanford defense while Christian McCaffrey again racks up 300 all-purpose yards. Ultimately, the Cougs’ defense feeds off the home crowd to pull off a late stop to seal the deal and allow Wazzu to take control of the North. Meanwhile, Leach may or may not emerge from the tunnel in a pirate costume.

Andrew Mather: Stanford 65, Washington State 64 (OT)

It’s easy to look at Luke Falk’s numbers this year and think that Washington State is still basically the same team as it was with Connor Halliday at the helm. That isn’t necessarily wrong – both teams have utilized an unmistakably Mike Leach offense – but it also doesn’t really tell the full story of the current squad. The Cougars are spreading the ball out much more effectively than they have in recent years, hitting a number of receivers effectively and even finding some success on the ground. Add that improved distribution to an experienced offensive line and an atmosphere that Leach thinks will compare favorably to Woodstock, and we might just have a classic on our hands. I see Stanford starting out a little stale the week after becoming the heir apparent to the Pac-12 title and, in its rush to catch up, opening up this game into a shootout for the ages. Wazzu ultimately falls short when Leach listens to his assistant and misses a two-point conversion in overtime, but not before it puts on a spectacular Halloween show and makes GameDay regret not making the trip.

Do-Hyoung Park: Stanford 56, Washington State 21

So Washington State is 5-2 right now with losses to Portland State and Cal but wins over Oregon and Arizona. Just how they drew it up, right? I love Mike Leach, I love his swashbuckling pirate antics and I love that glorious Washington State flag that’s graced the campus of every College GameDay for longer than I can remember. It’s great to see the Cougs doing well again. But there’s just no way they win this game. They rank last in the Pac-12 with 5.06 yards allowed per rush, which means, for all intents and purposes, that it’s going to turn into one of these games:

For as good as Washington State’s offense has been this season, there’s just nothing the team can do to stop Christian McCaffrey and the offensive line from having another 180-yard day on the ground. And I have much more faith in Stanford’s defense getting stops against the Air Raid (which the Cardinal have absolutely shut down over the last few years) than I do in Mike Leach’s philosophy of “the best defense is a good offense.” Give me 300 more all-purpose yards from McCaffrey, two deep touchdowns from Kevin Hogan and a glorious recurring cameo from our old pal:

popcorn-guy-at-washington-state-game-goes-viral

 

About The Daily Sports Staff

The Daily Sports Staff is the collective moniker of an overworked, beleaguered, underpaid collection of sportswriters that feel comfortable enough with their own self-identities to give up any sense of individualism for the good of the sports section. To contact The Daily Sports Staff, send an email to dpark027 'at' stanford.edu to reach Do-Hyoung Park or to jwallach 'at' stanford.edu to reach Jordan Wallach, keepers of the souls of those sportswriters.
  • chuck howard

    This will be anyone’s game and a great one at that. Go Cardinal!

  • ByProduct

    With Stanford’s young secondary and Wazzu’s veteran offensive line I don’t see how the Cardinal will be able to keep up. WSU 55, Stanford 31.

  • Michael Lindenberger

    Really? WSU hasn’t put up that many points against ANYONE all year! And, they average far fewer. Yes, Stanford’s secondary is young and I do think Stanford will give up more points than is typical on Saturday. But no where in the ballpark of 55. Moreover, I think if anyone gives up that type of total, it will be WSU’s defense. Tough game to predict but I’ll go with Stanford 45, WSU 31

  • Puma_01

    52-17 with 10 of Wazzu’s points being scored in the 4th quarter against Stanford’s 2nd string defense.

  • ADPATERSON79

    OK, Vihan put down the bong. Step away from the hash pipe and look at who the Cougars have played. DH Park is clearly the guru in this crowd. Wind and rain in the Palouse will favor our NFL-caliber Tunnel Workers Union and McCaffrey running the rock, who played in this weather in Colorado during high school. As sharp as QB Falk is, passes will be dropped, even by their very good wideouts. Yes, some of our DBs will be sliding around, but I think their subpar O-Line and lack of decent rushing attack is going to be the story of this game. Falk will have 3 seconds to throw and then Kalambayi, Thomas, or Aziz Shittu will be making him eat his chinstrap as the lights go out. Wicks, their leading RB, barely has more than 300 yards. McCaff is near 1,000 against MUCH better competition. If we get turnovers in the slop, the score could get ridiculous as WSU is forced to throw every down — when they get the ball.

  • Candid One

    Don’t know how many sports wonks pay enough attention to the reality of David Shaw’s anti-“pedal to the metal” penchant. Stanford will rarely run-up the score on the hapless opponents. Some teams, like Wazzu–and OSU, have QBs who are too much of a threat to warrant disregard. I mention OSU because Blake Martinez stayed in the game for the 4th Quarter out of concern for young Seth Collins, who pulled the Beavs to within 35-24 in that quarter. Against UCLA, the game was enough in-hand for Shaw to play the 3rd string defense for the 4th quarter, when young Josh Rosen scored 15 points to close within 56-35.

    David Shaw is the reason for misrepresentative final scores…he has a neurotic penchant for backing off. That’s how some teams are able to shrink the spread as if to indicate a tougher game. What this portends is that SEC-oriented analysts will mistakenly compare Stanford’s results to no-mercy teams. Unfortunately, some Stanford games have had the defensive starters back-off because they sensed that the coaches had that mindset and such games became more tense than they might have been otherwise.

    Either way, it’s a trait that leads to mis-assessment of Stanford’s stats. Either way, Luke Falk won’t be given a Josh Rosen opportunity…not in this lifetime. This will be the best passing attack that Stanford will face this season. None of Stanford’s coaches, especially Duane Akina, are sleeping on this game. Shaw, Bloomgren, and Hogan know that they’ll need to use ToP to keep Falk and company as spectators.

  • Jeff

    ADP — Vihan has picked Stanford’s opponent to win in every Pac-12 game so far this season — yes, even Oregon State. I think I see a pattern. Park’s score will be closer to reality. I put it at 45-24. 28-10 at the half; 45-17 after 3 quarters. Stanford ToP is 38 minutes; Falk gets to throw fewer than 50 times and struggles in the rain and against a tighter, more disciplined defense. McCaffrey again gets 300 all-purpose yards and runs for 190 yards. He will not play in the 4th quarter.