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Stanford Falls To Oregon At Home, 16-13

Kyle Matter and Michael Sgroi react as Stanford's final field goal attempt falls just short.

Kyle Matter and Michael Sgroi react as Stanford's final field goal attempt falls just short.

Oct. 23, 2004

Final Stats |  Quotes |  Notes

By JANIE McCAULEY
AP Sports Writer

STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - Terrence Whitehead ran for 131 yards and the go-ahead touchdown, and Oregon's defense got 10 sacks in a 16-13 win over Stanford on Saturday.

Mike Bellotti earned his 100th career victory in 15 years as a head coach at Oregon and Chico State, but it certainly meant less to him than the boost to his team's bowl chances that came with this win.

Stanford had a chance to force overtime after getting the ball back with 16 seconds left and completing two long passes, but Michael Sgroi's 49-yard field-goal attempt fell short as the clock expired.

Jared Siegel kicked three field goals for the Ducks (4-3, 3-1 Pac-10), including a 51-yarder, to become Oregon's career leader in field goals with 46, surpassing Gregg McCallum's 45 from 1988-91.

Oregon's Kellen Clemens was 22-for-33 for 275 yards, completing a 36-yard pass to Keith Allen on fourth-and-3 to set up Whitehead's 2-yard scoring run with 10:39 left.

Whitehead nearly cost Oregon the game with a fumble on the Ducks' next series, but the defense came up huge once again. After Haloti Ngata's 15-yard face-mask penalty gave Stanford first down at the 28, Oregon sacked T.C. Ostrander on consecutive plays to get the ball back.

Whitehead's big day didn't stop with his third 100-yard game of the season. He also had a 51-yard reception among his eight catches for 92 yards.

The Ducks' first trip to Stanford Stadium in seven years was quite a contrast from the last time the teams met in the Bay Area.

Oregon and Stanford combined for 107 points and 1,108 yards of total offense in the Cardinal's 58-49 victory on Sept. 27, 1997, Stanford's highest-scoring game in school history.

Both defenses performed well Saturday in the Cardinal's homecoming game, which drew only 33,250 on a rare rainy afternoon.

Ostrander, playing in place of injured starter Trent Edwards, threw his first career touchdown pass for the Cardinal (4-3, 2-2), hitting Patrick Danahy for a 2-yard score with 13:40 left. Ostrander was 18-for-29 for 236 yards.


 

 

Alex Smith had nine catches for 110 yards for the Cardinal, who lost Edwards to a bruised left shoulder and hand in the second quarter.

Oregon has won the last three meetings and four of the last five with Stanford, routing the Cardinal 35-0 last year and sending them to their fourth straight defeat.

Stanford's overmatched offensive line struggled to protect Edwards, who was sacked three times in the first half, including on back-to-back plays in the Cardinal's second offensive series. The Ducks pounded an offensive line that was missing starting center Brian Head because of a knee injury. Freshman Mikal Brewer replaced Head, giving the Cardinal a freshman and four sophomores on the line.

Edwards left the game following a hard hit by defensive tackle Robby Valenzuela and didn't return. Ryan Eklund briefly replaced him, then Ostrander took over.

Sgroi also missed a 38-yard field goal wide right with 11:01 left in the second quarter to end his streak of 10 straight field goals after missing his first three of the year. Sgroi booted a 28-yarder 2{ minutes earlier and hit a 43-yarder to tie it at 6 in the third quarter.

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