Cardinal Swats Away Pesky Hornets with Branches, 91-73; Avenges Football Team’s Loss

Stanford Cardinal guard Jared Bynum (1) dribbles against Sacramento State at Maples Pavilion in Palo Alto on Fri Nov 10, 2023 (photo from gostanford.com)

By Michael Roberson

STANFORD, Calif. — The Stanford Cardinal’s (2-0, 0-0 Pac-12) bark was too thick for the swarming Sacramento State Hornets (0-2, 0-0 Big West) 91-73, also preventing them from building a nest inside Maples.

The flying bugs from the California state capital actually scored the first basket of the game, and led twice early. However, the home team was determined to keep them from being in front the rest of the first half.

During the Hornets’ brief lead, they also went on a 7-0 run, but that was subdued by the Cardinal’s 10-0 run. Both teams were perfect from the charity stripe; however, that was a miniscule 4-4. Sac State made 3, while Stanford made the other.free throw.

Stanford Senior forward Spencer Jones got his shooting stroke in motion, after making 0 field goals in the last game. He made two jumpers from beyond the arc, and managed to tally10 points in the first half.

Jones wasn’t the only Cardinal player to reach double-figures in scoring. Fellow senior forward Brandon Angel chipped in 10 points himself within the first 20 minutes of the contest.

Sacramento State was led by junior guard Zee Hamoda (16) as he made four 3s and his senior teammate Brandon Betson (8) drilled two from beyond the line.

Even though the Hornets outrebounded the Cardinal and made more threes, Stanford shot 55% from the field and led by as much as 10 points in the half. They settled for an eight point advantage at intermission, 47-39.

In the second half Stanford’s lead got as large as 19 points. Although the Hornets kept in buzzing distance for a brief time in the final half, the Cardinal was fairly in control of the Northern California battle.

Jones added five more points to his total, but left the game with an apparent ailment. HC Jerod Haase said that his 16+ minutes limitation was for precautionary reasons and possible injury status was undetermined at press time.

Projected Freshman Sensation Andrej Stojakovic, son of former NBA star Peja, had a breakout game in game two of his college career. He garnered 12 points and grabbed 5 rebounds in just under 26 minutes of play. He also shot over 50% from the floor.

Brandon Angel added eight points (18) to his halftime total and junior forward Maxime Raynaud scored 14 points, 7 rebounds and blocked 2 shots.

Sacramento State was led in scoring by Hamoda (21) and Betson (17). They also had two other players eclipse double-digits, Duncan Powell (14) and Bowyn Beatty (10)

At the final horn, the Cardinal was on top by 18 points, 91-73. Stanford stayed consistent in the second half, by remaining perfect (5-5) from the free throw line and shooting just under 56% from the field for the whole game.

Stanford will next be in action Tuesday, November 14 at Maples hosting the Santa Clara Broncos at 6 pm PDT. Sac State heads back to the capital city to host Pacific Union on the same date at 6:30 pm PDT.

Note: Graduate transfer Jerod Bynum has recorded 17 assists and 1 turnover (17:1) in his two games as a Cardinal hooper.

He also explained that he always wanted to be a Stanford player, but it didn’t work out until now. In addition, he is excited to be a part of the last year of the Pac – 12.

Coach Haas does not think his win against Sac State will provide a sense of redemption for his fellow head coach (Troy Taylor) of the football team of whom suffered an upset loss to them (Former Team) earlier in the school year.

Stanford Cardinal basketball with Michael Roberson: Raynaud and Jones getting some good production

Stanford’s Spencer Jones (14) shoots against Arizona during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in the quarterfinal round of the Pac-12 tournament Thursday, March 10, 2022, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher)

On the Stanford Cardinal basketball podcast with Michael Roberson:

#1 Stanford Cardinal Maxime Raynaud led with 23 points, 23 rebounds, three blocks and two steals in the Cardinal win over Cal State Northridge on Monday night 88-79 in the season opener on the Hill.

#2 The Cardinal Michael Jones followed up Raynaud in scoring with 20 points, what was also convincing was Stanford scored the last 13 points of the game to put the kibosh on CSUN’s evening.

#3 Michael talk about Brandon Angel who scored 17 points, eight rebounds, and got three blocks for the Cardinal.

#4 Keonte Jones hit a three point shot at 2:59 left in the game that put Northridge up by four but after that the Northridge was 0-4 and the Cardinal scored the rest of the way for the win.

#5 Next up for the Cardinal, Sacramento State Hornets, the Hornets opened up their season against the Nevada Wolfpack on Tuesday and this is their second game. The Cardinal did show a good exhibition of offense in their game against Northridge last Monday.

Join Michael for the Stanford Cardinal podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cardinal were Bullish Against Visiting Matadors, Pushing through their Cloak and Sword, 88-79

The Stanford Cardinal guard Jared Bynum (1) and forward Maxime Raynaud (42) both finished in double digits against Cal State Northridge at Maples Pavilion in Palo Alto on Mon Nov 6, 2023 (@StanfordMBB photo)

By Michael Roberson

STANFORD, Calif. — The Stanford Cardinal (1-0, 0-0 Pac-12) Red Attack could not be avoided by the California State University – Northridge Matadors (0-1, 0-0 Big West), as they won a back and forth contest, 88-79.

Stanford got out to an early lead the first couple minutes of the game, but that was short-lived.  CSUN was in front through the bulk of the first half. 

Both teams had eight point leads, while the Matadors managed a 9-0 run and the Cardinal topped that with a 10-0 one of their own.  Although CSUN had the lead three times as long as Stanford, they managed to regain the lead before the end of the first 30 minutes of play.

Stanford senior Brandon Angel and junior Maxime Raynaud both were perfect from the field (4-4) in the first half, scoring 11 and 8 points respectively.  Newcomer and senior guard Jared Bynum also chipped in for his squad, tallying 7 points and 3 assists.

At recess, the home team had a five-point advantage, 43-38.  Stanford had to fight back and overcome the 3:1 ratio of not being the frontrunner, but they managed to take a slightly comfortable lead into the locker room.

Nearly three minutes into the second half, Stanford increased their lead to nine, and was looking to blow the game open.  However, the Matadors still had something under their muleta or cape.

CSUN fought back valiantly twice.  The first occasion they took a 63-62 lead near the midway point (9:43) of the second half.  Approximately four and a half minutes later they climbed the tree again to take a 2-point lead (73-71).

Now with about five minutes left in regulation, the Cardinal had to duplicate their late comeback in the first half leading at the whistle.  Stanford also performed a 13-0 run during the second stanza.

Senior Michael Jones was able to make that process come to fruition a little sooner (2:20) as his deep jumper put them up for good (80-79) and eventually added eight more to win by nine.  After 40 minutes of play, Stanford was the victor on the Farm. 88-79.

The Cardinal had ample contribution from the team.  Raynaud led the way with 23 points, 15 rebounds and 3 blocks.  The aforementioned Jones had 20 points and Angel blessed the team with 18 points and 7 rebounds.  The new guy Jared Bynum gave 13 points and dropped 7 assists, with 0 turnovers in his Cardinal debut.

Graduate senior De’Sean Allen-Eikens led the Matadors with 22 points and 8 rebounds.

The Cardinal are next in action back at Maples Friday, November 10 (6 pm PDT) hosting Sacramento State.  The Matadors travel to Moscow, Idaho Thursday November 9 (6 pm MST) to take on the Idaho Vandals.

Karty field goal lifts Cardinal past Washington State 10-7

Stanford Cardinal cornerback Tshawn Frausto-Ramos (bottom) Tobin Phillips defensive lineman (right) put the tackle on Washington State Cougars wide receiver Kyle Williams (2) at Martin Stadium in Pullman on Sat Nov 4, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Daniel Dullum

Saturday, November 4, 2023

Joshua Karty kicked a 31-yard field goal with 5:56 remaining in the fourth quarter, providing Stanford with a 10-7 Pac-12 football victory Saturday at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Wash,

The Cardinal (3-6 overall, 2-5 Pac 12) have a 41-31-1 edge in the series, which may or may not continue after this season due to the dissolution of the Pac-12 Conference. One year ago, the Cougars (4-5 overall, 1-5 Pac-12) defeated Stanford 52-14

Washington State opened the scoring with 6:18 left in the second quarter with a 9-yard touchdown pass from Cameron Ward to Josh Kelly.

Stanford tied the game at 7-7 on a 1-yard touchdown run by Justin Lamson with 2:55 remaining in the third quarter. Lamson led Cardinal ballcarriers with 54 rushing yards on 20 carries.

Ashton Daniels completed 15 of 31 passes for 115 yards, no touchdowns and one interceptions. He also carried nine times for 18 yards and was sacked once.

Sam Roush caught seven passes for 61 yards to lead the Cardinal, followed by Elic Ayomanor with four catches for 53 yards.

Tristan Sinclair paced the Cardinal defense with nine total tackles, four solo. Scotty Edwards added an interception and the defense also had three sacks.

Ward completed 24 of 40 passes for 241 yards and a touchdown. Djouvensky Schlenbaker was the top Cougars rusher with 34 yards on 13 attempts.

Lincoln Victor caught a game-high 12 passes for Washington State, gaining 66 yards. Kelly finished with four receptions for 82 yards.

Washington State outgained the Cardinal in total offense 245 yards to 217. Stanford had a slight edge in first downs 18-16.

Next week, the Cardinal travel to Corvallis, Ore., to face No. 16 Oregon State. Kickoff is at 2:30 p.m.

Stanford Cardinal podcast with Michael Roberson: Daniels looking to get some yardage against Washington State tonight

Stanford Cardinal wide receiver Eric Ayomanor makes a reception for a touchdown against the Washington Huskies at Stanford Stadium in Palo Alto on Sat Oct 28, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Stanford Cardinal podcast with Michael Roberson:

#1 How tough is it that the Stanford Cardinal (2-6) have their last two road games against the Washington State Cougars (4-4) tonight and Oregon State next week both on the road.

#2 These will be the last two Pac 12 road games that Stanford will have as the break of up of the Pac 12 starts next season. Stanford head coach Troy Taylor said it’s painful and disappointing that it’s ending this way.

#3 The Cougars were 4-0 in September but have cooled off immensely having lost four straight games all in the month of October.

#4 The Cougars have won the last six games against the Stanford. Last season the Cougars clobbered the Cardinal 52-14 at Stanford Stadium. The weather forecast for tonight in Pullman calls for rain.

#5 Michael, with the field being wet and the ball being wet as well how do you see the Cardinal quarterback Anthony Daniels getting a good grip on the ball for quick passes.

Join Michael Roberson for the Stanford Cardinal podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cardinal Tree Not Enough of an Obstacle for Undefeated Huskies’ Expedition Through the Bay, 42-33

Washington Huskies wide receiver Ja’Lynn Polk (2) makes the touchdown catch and Stanford Cardinal cornerback Zahran Manley (4) can only sit in the end zone and watch at Stanford Stadium on Sat Oct 28, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Michael Roberson

STANFORD, Calif. — The Stanford Cardinal (2-6, 1-5 Pac-12) could not slow down the #5 Washington Huskies (8-0, 5-0 Pac-12) aggressive trek South to California and up and down the Stanford Stadium field, 42-33.

Stanford opened the game on offense, but their initial drive did not lead to points.  Actually neither team did much for nearly nine minutes.

However, with a little more than six minutes left in the quarter, the visiting canines from the Great Northwest got on the scoreboard first.  Senior tight end Jack Westover scored on an unorthodox one yard rushing touchdown.  Washington went up 7-0, and held that advantage to the end of the15-minute block.

Quarter number two was a very active stanza.  The Cardinal scored within the first three minutes with a QB Keeper and scramble for a four yard touchdown by Ashton Daniels.  Stanford ties the game, 7-7.

Washington’s senior quarterback Michael Penix Jr. showed why he is a frontrunner for the 2023 Heisman Trophy award by tossing two touchdown passes within four minutes of each other.  The agile lefthander hit junior wide receiver Rome Odunze for a seven yard score, then launched a 92-yard bomb to sophomore WR Ja’Lynn Polk.  That quickly, the Huskies were up, 21-7.

The ever so reliable kicker for the Cardinal, Joshua Karty, converted two kicks with one minute left in the half.  The first 23 yards from the goalpost, and the second from 47.  At intermission, Washington 21, Stanford 13.

The second half had a similar start as the first half.  This time Washington’s first drive was ineffective, resulting in 0 points for their efforts.  They still had the temporary cushion of an eight-point lead,

Five minutes into the third quarter, Stanford sophomore QB threw a 39-yard TD pass to Elic Ayomanor.  The Cardinal failed to convert the two point try, which would have tied the game at 21.  Instead they trailed 21-19 at that point.

Penix was at it again, as he casted a ten yard score to Polk for a second time.  Now the Huskies increased their lead to nine, 28-19.

Daniels had an answer for his QB counterpart, as he reached paydirt on a two yard keeper.  The Cardinal got it back to a two point deficit, but were more than likely still lamenting and trailing due to the failed two point conversion.  At the end of third quarter, Washington 28, Stanford 26.

Within the first minute of the last quarter, Penix propelled a 24-yard touchdown to senior tight end Devin Culp.  Now with a nine point advantage again, it seemed like the visitors from the Evergreen State were about to secure another win and remain perfect on the season.  However, the Cardinal had something under their bark.

As Penix was driving his fellow sled dogs down the field for an apparent touchdown, his fifth, a completed pass turned into a disaster.  Rome Odunze was stripped of the ball by Cardinal sophomore Tavarua Tafiti, and Stanford recovered the fumble.

The home team took advantage of that gift and transformed it to seven points for them.  A pivotal juncture in the game where a possible 14-point turnaround occurred in Stanford’s favor.  Even with this newfound fortune, the Cardinal still trailed by two, 35-33.

Stanford tried an onside kick to absolve the missing two points, but Washington recovered the ball with still plenty of time left on the clock.  The Cardinal had to rely on the sturdy (Tree) defense again on this very crucial possession with six minutes left in regulation.

Michael Penix Jr. had the ball on the 50-yard line with all his All-American attributes, and it was looking dim for the Cardinal faithful.  As the probable prestigious trophy winner was attempting to score his fifth touchdown on the day again, he was picked off in the end zone by fifth year senior cornerback Zahran Manley.

With fifth minutes left and the ball, the Cardinal had to be in great spirits, with an absolutely advantageous opportunity to win the Pacific – 12 Battle.  Unfortunately that event did not come to fruition.  The Cardinal attempted to traverse down the field and had an excellent first down chance, but only had a dropped pass incompletion (3:20) to show for it.

The Huskies were eager to finally slam the barn door on the Farm on this drive.  With a little over a minute and a half left in the fourth, Washington did indeed slam the proverbial door.  Junior running back Dillon Johnson scurried for 13 yards and past the goal line for the last touchdown of the contest.  Washington was up by nine once again, 42-33.

Stanford did get the ball back, but turned it over on downs.  All that was left was for the Huskies to take collective “Knee,” maybe two Knees, since they have four legs.  At the final whistle, and 60 minutes of action, the still undefeated Washington Huskies win 42-33 over the Stanford Cardinal.

Stanford coincidentally next travels to the Northwest in Pullman, WA to take on the Washington State Cougars, Saturday, November 4 at 6PM PDT.  Washington stays in California, but heads South to Los Angeles, as they battle the Trojans of USC on the same date at 4:30 pm PDT (ABC).

NOTE: Ashton Daniels had another Outstanding game: 31-50 367 passing yards & a TD.  He also rushed for 85 yards and scored two rushing TDs.

Elic Ayomanor also continues to play well.  He had nine catches for 146 yards and a touchdown.

Heisman Watch:  Washington’s Michael Penix Jr. added to his already impressive resume, by this stat line: 21-38 369 yards passing, four TDs & an interception.

Cardinal Homecoming Spoiled by Visiting Bruins, 42-7; No Mojo from Previous PAC-12 Comeback Upset Win

The UCLA Bruins running back Carson Steele (33) breaks through the Stanford Cardinal defensive line for one of his three touchdowns at Stanford Stadium in Palo Alto on Sat Oct 21, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Michael Roberson

STANFORD, Calif. — The Stanford Cardinal (2-5, 1-4 Pac-12) hosted their Pacific – 12 Conference foe from southern California for Homecoming after an amazing victory eight days prior in Boulder, CO; however, the #25 UCLA Bruins (5-2, 2-2 Pac-12) did not care and disrupted the annual celebration on the Farm, 42-7.

Stanford got themselves into a familiar hole as they did last week in the Mile High State, being down big at the midway point of the game. This time a little less of a deficit, 21 points, compared to 29 last game. Essentially all the damage was done by one player.

The Cardinal kicked off to the Bruins to open the game. UCLA took full advantage of that gesture and capitalized on it during their first drive. They traversed 75 yards down the field to score the first points of the contest. Junior running back Carson Steele bursted through the defense for a two yard touchdown. UCLA led 7-0 within the first five minutes of the game.

Carson was not finished, as he scored again a little over three minutes later in the quarter. This time he scurried for eight yards before reaching paydirt. Halfway through period number one, UCLA was up 14-0.

Stanford found themselves committing several penalties during the 15-minute timeframe; however, as the Bruins attempted to score for the third time in the quarter, the Cardinal D (Tree) stood tall. As senior kicker R.J. Lopez attempted a 40-yard field goal to put the Bruins up by 17, but the Cardinal’s senior defensive tackle, Anthony Franklin, blocked the kick, forcing it to miss wide left. After one, UCLA managed to keep their 14-0 advantage.

After nearly 2/3 of the second quarter elapsed, you know who was in the endzone again. Yes, Steele scored for the third time in the first half. He bolted in for a three yard touchdown this go around, and the Bruins took a commanding 21-point lead into the locker room. At the end of 30 minutes of play, UCLA 21, Stanford 0.

As the second half got underway, Stanford was in a similar predicament they were in during their game against Colorado; however, the Bruins were not willing participants for a dramatic comeback against them. as the Buffaloes were and did let happen at home.

Late in the third quarter, UCLA managed to score twice again within two minutes of each other, surprisingly, neither by Carson Steele. Redshirt junior QB Ethan Garbers tossed two touchdown passes to redshirt sophomore WR J. Michael Sturdivant (8) and also R-SO TE Moliki Matavao (20) respectively. 35-0, UCLA,

With more than three minutes left in the third, the Cardinal gave the Homecoming crowd of 30,225 – although a great deal were Bruins’ fans – something to really cheer for, with a 20-yard touchdown connection with QB Ashton Daniels and freshman WR Tiger Bachmeier, getting Stanford off of the Goose Egg. 35-7 UCLA, after 45 minutes of action.

The Final quarter had the Bruins scoring in less than a minute into the stanza, as sophomore running back T.J. Harden scampered for a 22-yard “house call.” While UCLA was up 42-7, Lopez attempted to increase the already overwhelming lead by three more, but missed (42) again, salvaging some solace for the Stanford faithful.

Despite the miscues, UCLA scored enough (42-7) to secure their fifth win overall and second inside the conference. The Cardinal lost by 35 points on Homecoming Saturday.

Stanford will stay on the Farm and host the Washington State Cougars, Saturday, October 28 4pm PDT on FS1. The Bruins head back to Los Angeles to host the aforementioned Colorado Buffaloes on the same date, but at 4:30 PDT and on ABC.

Note: QB Ashton Daniels threw for 268 yards, with a touchdown pass and an interception. Wide receivers Elic Ayomanor (90) and Tiger Bachmeier (75 & touchdown) both had eight catches on double-digit targets.

UCLA’s Carson Steele scored three touchdowns on his 21st birthday in the Bay.

Stanford Cardinal podcast with Michael Roberson: Can Cardinal keep it going against UCLA on Saturday night?

Stanford Cardinal safety Alaka’i Gilman (left) picks off a pass intended for the Colorado Buffaloes Travis Hunter (12) during overtime in Boulder Col on Sat Oct 14, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Stanford Cardinal podcast with Michael Roberson:

#1 Michael, what was it like for Colorado head coach Deion Sanders to have had an uneasy feeling at the half up 29-0 to the Stanford Cardinal last Saturday at Folsom Field in Boulder.

#2 It was not the largest collapse in Colorado history but none the less it had to be a huge disappointment for Sanders who was almost certain that this game was their best chance to get in the win column after losing three straight games.

#3 On the other hand for Stanford head coach Troy Taylor it was for Stanford the largest comeback in the school’s history as Stanford pulled it off with a three point 46-43 win.

#4 The game went two overtimes and Stanford kicker Joshua Karty kicked a game winning 31 yard field goal after booting a tying field goal in the regulation stanza of the game.

#5 The Cardinal hope to keep it going as they face the UCLA Bruins (4-2). The Cardinal will need that same type of offense against the Bruins as they had going against the Buffaloes last week. Kick off at Stanford Stadium is at 7:30pm PT.

Michael Roberson does the Stanford Cardinal podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Stanford Cardinal podcast with Michael Roberson: Cardinal comeback dims the lights for Buffaloes Neon Deion

Stanford Cardinal kicker Joshua Karty (43) is mobbed by his teammates after booting a 31 yard game winning field goal in the second overtime against the Colorado Buffaloes in Boulder Col on Fri Oct 13, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Stanford Cardinal podcast with Michael Roberson:

#1 Michael, how discouraging does it have to be for Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders after holding a 29 point lead only to watch it get whittled away in double overtime and lose by a field goal?

#2 Stanford Cardinal receiver Elic Ayomanor chalk up a school record 294 yards receiving.

#3 Ayomanor had himself an evening in Colorado catching three touchdowns and 13 receptions. Can this be for Ayomanor and the Cardinal a page turning moment in their season?

#4 With the score tied in the second overtime 43-43 Stanford kicker Joshua Karty kicked a 31 yard field goal for the game winner. Karty in regulation kicked a tying field goal against the Buffaloes.

#5 It doesn’t get easier for Stanford for their next game on Sat Oct 21st against the UCLA Bruins who are rolling with a 4-1 record. The Bruins defeated Washington State in their last contest 25-17 on Sat Sep 23rd. The Bruins had a bye on Sep 30 before meeting up with Washington State. Michael how do you see this match up between the Cardinal and Bruins for next week Saturday on the farm at Stanford.

Michael Roberson is a Stanford Cardinal beat writer and a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cardinal overcome 29-point deficit, beat Buffs 46-43 in double OT

Stanford Cardinal kicker Joshua Karty boots a second overtime field goal to give the Cardinal a three point win over the Colorado Buffaloes in Boulder Colo on Fri Oct 13, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Daniel Dullum

Friday, October 13, 2023

After spotting Colorado a huge early first-half lead, Stanford’s offense caught fire in the second half, eventually using a Joshua Karty field goal in the second overtime to upend the Buffaloes 46-43 Friday night in Boulder, Colo. 

Karty’s 31-yard field goal ended the game after each team scored in the first extra period. Karty earlier booted a 46-yard field goal as time expired in the fourth quarter, sending the game into overtime. 

Colorado (4-4 overall, 1-4 Pac-12) broke the 36-36 deadlock on its first possession in overtime, when Shedeur Sanders threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to J Antonio. The Cardinal (2-4 overall, 1-3 Pac-12) responded with a 30-yard scoring strike from Ashton Daniels to Elic Ayomanor.

This was the final Pac-12 football meeting between the two schools, as Colorado is headed to the Big 12 and Stanford will join the ACC next season.

Daniels completed 27 of 45 passes for 396 yards, four touchdowns and no interceptions. He was also the Cardinal’s top rusher, gaining 39 yards on 16 carries. Ayomanor caught 13 passes for 294 yards and two touchdowns.

Shedeur Sanders, son of Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders, completed 33 of 48 passes for 400 yards and five touchdowns, with one interception, and was sacked four times. He also led Colorado ballcarriers with 37 rushing yards on 13 attempts. Travis Hunter caught 13 passes for 140 yards and two scores.

The Buffaloes outgained Stanford in total offense 532 yards to 523.

Colorado opened the scoring at 10:25 of the first quarter, when S Sanders completed a 9-yard touchdown pass to Xavier Weaver. The Buffaloes made it 14-0 nearly seven minutes later when Sanders found Hunter open for a 24-yard scoring strike.

With 8:42 left in the second quarter, Colorado made it 22-0 on Weaver’s second TD reception from Shedeur Sanders, a 39-yard scoring play followed by a 2-point conversion run by Caleb Fauria. 

The Buffs took a 29-0 lead into the locker room after Weaver’s 14-yard touchdown run on a reverse with just under 3 minutes to play in the second quarter, 

Stanford finally got on the board with 9:01 remaining in the third quarter, eventually scoring 26 unanswered points. Bryce Farrell ran in from 2 yards out, but a PAT pass was incomplete. The Cardinal cut their deficit to 29-12 less than three minutes later on a 97-yard pass from Daniels to Ayomanor. Again, Stanford missed the 2-point conversion with an incomplete pass.

The Cardinal completed their third-quarter rally with a 60-yard scoring pass from Daniels to Ayomanor at 4:45, pulling Stanford to within 29-19. The Cardinal continued to roll with a 1-yard touchdown by Justin Lamson as Colorado’s lead had shrunk to 29-26 with 12-29 to play.

Colorado interrupted the Cardinal rally on the ensuing possession, as S Sanders completed a 16-yard TD pass to Hunter, putting the Buffaloes up 36-26. The Cardinal responded with Daniels’ 3-yard touchdown pass to Ferrell with 5:06 left in regulation.

Next week, the Cardinal return to Stanford Stadium to host UCLA for Homecoming. Kickoff is scheduled for 7:30 p.m.