Saturday, October 06, 2007

AP: Cardinal scores in final minute to stun USC 24-23

Note from blogger: Congrats to the hated Cardinal.  For the first time in my life I was truly rooting for them, and it was an incredibly exciting game.  If you did not see it, watch it on replay.  The shots of the USC fans at game end were priceless.

 

By JOHN NADEL

In what's been the year of the upset in college football, Stanford's stunner just might top them all.  Tavita Pritchard threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to Mark Bradford on fourth-and-goal with 49 seconds remaining Saturday night, giving the 41-point underdog Cardinal a 24-23 victory over No. 2 Southern California.   A leaping Bradford caught the ball over cornerback Mozique McCurtis in the corner of the end zone, leaving the crowd of 85,125 at the Los Angeles Coliseum in stunned silence. Bo McNally's interception thwarted USC's final chance. In a season that started with Appalachian State's improbable victory over Michigan at the Big House, and a week after half the top 10 went down, the Cardinal are now the upset kings—at least for now. The way things have been going, that could change next week.  Making his first career start, Pritchard had to convert on fourth-and-20 four plays before the winning TD, and because he couldn't hear his coach calling in the play, he was on his own.  "I think it was similar if I heard him right," Pritchard said. "I saw the coverage I wanted and Sherm came through."  Sherm is Richard Sherman, who caught the critical fourth-and-20 pass over the middle before being leveled at the 9—just past the first-down marker.  First-year Stanford coach Jim Harbaugh said Pritchard called the right play—no surprise considering it worked.   “I knew he'd come through," Harbaugh said  of Pritchard, a 6-foot-4, 200-pound sophomore from Tacoma, Wash., who entered the game having thrown three passes. "From the beginning of the week, he had a bounce in his step. He had a gleam in his eye from Sunday on. We have found a true warrior."

The Cardinal (2-4, 1-3 Pac-10) scored 17 points in the fourth quarter and moved 45 yards in 11 plays for the winning touchdown after USC's John David Booty threw the third of his four interceptions. Wopamo Osaisai's 18-yard return gave Stanford the ball with 2:50 remaining.  "It hasn't set in yet," a jubilant Pritchard said. "I'm beside myself—I don't know what to do. Our defense kept us in the game all night. It gave me a chance to get untracked."  Pritchard, filling in for T.C. Ostrander, completed 11 of 30 for 149 yards and the winning TD. The numbers weren't great, but he was awfully good when it counted most.  Ostrander didn't play after suffering a seizure in a restaurant last Sunday. He's OK, but might have trouble getting his job back from Pritchard, a nephew of former Washington State quarterback Jack Thompson.  In the days leading up to the game, Harbaugh stuck to his preseason assessment that USC might be the greatest college football team ever. In the end, the Trojans weren't the best team in the Coliseum.  "Jimmy had them ready to play," USC coach Pete Carroll said. "To give it up like this is a shame, it is crushing to me. Give credit to Stanford. They did a heck of a job and we made a ton of mistakes. We need to find ways to make plays and go back and find the right combinations.  "I never thought we'd lose tonight, even after they scored."

USC might also have to turn to a backup quarterback. Booty cracked the middle finger on his throwing hand when he hit it on a helmet in the second quarter.  "He fought through it and was doing all right," Carroll said. "We could have made a change but we went with our guy. I don't know about next week."  The Trojans (4-1, 2-1) dropped from No. 1 to No. 2 in the AP Top 25 after barely holding on for a 27-24 victory over underdog Washington in Seattle last weekend. They'll drop a lot more this week after losing to a team that had been outscored 141-51 in Pac-10 play.  USC's 35-game winning streak at the Coliseum is over. The Trojans hadn't lost at home since Stanford beat them 21-16 on Sept. 29, 2001, in their first year under Carroll.  The Trojans rolled up 459 yards to just 235 for Stanford. But USC's five turnovers and Pannel Egboh's block of USC kicker David Buehler's PAT attempt early in the game proved decisive.  Booty went 24-of-40 for 364 yards, but in the end, that wasn't enough. Patrick Turner caught nine passes for 83 yards and Fred Davis had five receptions for 152 yards. USC netted only 95 yards rushing.  The Cardinal trimmed USC's lead to 16-14 on the first play of the fourth quarter when Anthony Kimble scored on a 1-yard run, capping a 75-yard drive.  Booty threw a 47-yard touchdown pass to freshman Ronald Johnson less than four minutes later to give the Trojans some room. But it wouldn't last. Derek Belch, whose conversion provided the margin of victory, kicked a 26-yard field goal with 5:43 remaining to put the Cardinal within striking range.  The Trojans finally put together a cohesive drive the fifth time they had the ball, moving 64 yards on eight plays and taking a 9-0 lead on Chauncey Washington's 1-yard run.  USC threatened again on its next possession, but Nick Sanchez tackled Washington short of the goal line on a fourth-and-goal play with 8 seconds left in the half. In hindsight, a chip-shot field goal would have helped.  It appeared Booty and intended receiver Stanley Havili weren't on the same page on third-and-1 when safety Austin Yancy made his first career interception and ran 31 yards for a touchdown early in the third quarter to make it 9-7.  USC turned the ball over on its next two possessions before Booty and Davis hooked up on a 63-yard scoring play on third-and-2 late in the quarter, giving the Trojans a 16-7 lead.  It wouldn't hold up.  "After tonight, we don't care who we play," Stanford linebacker Clinton Snyder said. "We now know the only people who can beat us is us. This was a huge step for us to show our program is back."

3 comments:

Hugo Schwyzer said...

If only Florida could have held on, we might have been #1 tomorrow... but no matter, we'll get there the right way, on the field. Yes, I'm happy for the Indians -- may they not have another win this season. They earned it, and wiping the smirk off Trojan faces was indeed sweet.

Harbaugh will be a worthy foil for Tedford, and that's not such a bad thing.

md said...

As weird as it sounds, I actually think SC losing a really BAD thing for the Bears. We needed them to go undefeated until they played us. That way if we win, we go big. If we lose, we still have a shot at the Rose Bowl. Now, the pac might only get 1 BCS game...

Anonymous said...

md, it is NOT wierd to say this. It is wierd for so-called bear fans to celebrate a cardinal victory, and to fail to appreciate what this means for our season.

And hugo must be smoking something, though a bit of wishful thinking is understandable (I was pulling for the FL upset in the biggest way). If LSU had lost, OSU would have been #1 and we would be lucky to be #2. And the power of the Pac-10 would have taken a huge hit. Even undefeated, we could have gotten jumped.

--D