Ask the Coach
STANFORD, Calif. - There was no breathtaking finish for Stanford or
Arizona State this week. The Cardinal knocked the breath out of the Sun Devils
long before the final gun.
Kerry Carter rushed for 103 yards and a score and also threw a touchdown
pass as Stanford snapped a three-game losing streak by routing the
injury-ravaged Sun Devils 29-7 on Saturday.
DeRonnie Pitts caught five passes to become the Pac-10's second-leading
career receiver as Stanford (4-6, 3-4 Pac-10), the defending conference champs
who were eliminated from bowl contention last week, won for just the second
time in eight weeks.
"The close ones wear on you a bit," Stanford coach Tyrone Willingham said.
"It was nice to have a bigger win, because you get a chance to involve the
whole team."
The Cardinal won two games and lost another in the final seconds at Stanford
Stadium this year, while Arizona State looked exhausted after playing an
NCAA-record three straight overtime games.
"The toll of the last three weeks particularly has caught up with us,"
Arizona State coach Bruce Snyder said.
Stanford enters next week's season-ending Big Game against California off
its most complete, convincing victory of the year. It was especially satisfying
for the Cardinal because they won with none of the last-second dramatics that
have defined their season.
Carter and quarterback Chris Lewis, who relieved starter Randy Fasani and
led Stanford to a victory for the third time this year, headlined a balanced
attack for the Cardinal, who also scored on a 51-yard punt return by Luke
Powell.
Lewis was 13-of-24 for 124 yards in relief of Fasani, who re-aggravated a
toe injury in the first half. But Carter made the game's most memorable pass
when he tossed a 26-yard halfback option to a wide-open Ryan Wells in the third
quarter.
"I've thrown a lot better balls than that in practice," said Carter, who
took ribbing from his teammates for a wobbly spiral. "I was just happy to get
it there."
The Sun Devils (5-5, 2-5) lost their third straight with a dismal offensive
performance in which they managed just 174 total yards. They must beat Arizona
on Nov. 24 to become bowl-eligible.
"Our team looked heavy-legged," said Snyder, whose job might be on the
line in his team's next game. "The spirit of a team that's fresh just wasn't
there."
After nine straight weeks of football and five overtime periods in the last
three weeks, Arizona State simply appeared to be out of competitive energy and
healthy bodies. The Sun Devils ended the game with fourth-string quarterback
Matt Cooper handing off to third-string tailback Davaren Hightower in a failed
comeback attempt.
"Nobody ever stepped up and did something big," said tight end Todd Heap,
who had five receptions for 38 yards and caught a pass in his 25th consecutive
game. "We just came out flat and never got it going. ... When you get that
down feeling, somebody's got to turn the switch. Something has to happen."
The Sun Devils, who have already lost starting quarterback Ryan Kealy and
starting tailback Delvon Flowers this season, lost Kealy's backup, Jeff Krohn,
to a mild concussion midway through the first half. Krohn's backup, Griffin
Goodman, threw a critical interception and was 7-of-19 before being benched.
ASU tailback Tom Pace fought off ankle and shoulder injuries to play, but he
managed just 25 yards on 10 carries. Hightower also struggled, and Arizona
State's only points came on Krohn's 37-yard TD pass to Richard Williams in the
first quarter.
Arizona State also had two terrible snaps by long snappers B.J. Miller and
Jay Breckenridge, but they only cost the Sun Devils two points.
Miller snapped the ball several feet over punter Nick Murphy's head into the
end zone for a safety in the first quarter, while Breckenridge's errant snap to
Miller in the third quarter gave the Cardinal prime field position - but Mike
Biselli's 25-yard field goal attempt was blocked.
Stanford went up 16-7 late in the first half on Powell's first career punt
return for a touchdown. Powell went straight up the sideline for the Cardinal's
first score on a punt return in three years.
Carter's 18-yard run to the Arizona State 1 set up his 1-yard TD plunge to
put Stanford up 23-7 midway through the third quarter.
Stanford safety Aaron Focht intercepted Goodman's pass on the Sun Devils'
next drive, and Carter hit Wells for an easy score on the Cardinal's next play.
Pitts, who has 224 career catches, passed Arizona's Dennis Northcutt and
Stanford's Darrin Nelson. He trails only former teammate Troy Walters (248) in
conference history.
The Sun Devils' three-game winning streak at Stanford Stadium was snapped.
Luckily, Arizona State gets a bye week before its showdown with the Wildcats.
"A lot of our guys are banged up," Heap said. "(The bye) will help some
of the guys heal and get ready, and we'll have everybody back to full strength
for the next game."
By GREG BEACHAM
AP Sports Writer