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Dammit Taylor!

Coach Taylor did me no favors yesterday.

After 30 years together, my wife has finally allowed me to teach her the rules of football. It’s been a great way to distract me from what has mostly been a forgettable season. Distracting in that for such an intelligent person she has had a ridiculously hard time absorbing some real basics. So it requires a lot of attention. But we’ve been making progress…

Then the 3rd quarter happened. And the 2 QB sets. “Wait, isn’t 8 the backup QB? Why is he lined up where the receiver is supposed to be? Can both 14 and 8 throw passes? Was 8 trying to throw to 14 on that play? Why did the big guy 67 catch it instead then? Wait, he wasn’t allowed to catch it? Then why did he?”

And don’t get me started on the flea flickers and on-side kicks. Coach you’re killin me!

Sunday morning thoughts - Washington State

1. It sure is fun to win. There wasn't a lot of entertainment in that one but who cares? We won against a solid team on the road and showed exactly the knowing how to win/relearning how to win close games that has been so lacking in recent years. This is the best team Taylor has beaten and we did it while very much not firing on all cylinders. In the grand scheme, it strongly reinforces the sense we are on the right track, making four of the last six games we have played very respectably and giving us our first instance of back-to-back quality performances. [Based on newly updated Sagarin rankings, the final results of our games this season have been befitting the #84 (at Hawaii), #208 (at USC), #171 (Sacramento State), #41 (Arizona), #139 (Oregon), #42 (at Colorado), #194 (UCLA), #42 (Washington), and #36 (at Washington State) teams in the nation.] On the year, we have matched the number of wins from the last two seasons, an important psychological barrier that we now have a very legitimate shot at surpassing, and are up to #92 in Sagarin after being #87 last year and #89 in 2021. To be essentially on par with Shaw's teams and on an improving trajectory that quite plausibly could leapfrog those other teams by the end of the year - despite the gutting of the roster and bombing out of the program - feels like a major feat. We're on the right track.

2. To state the obvious, this was way on the extreme end of the spectrum in terms of a defense-dominated game. The 0.64 points per drive we allowed made the #67 points per drive offense look considerably worse than the dead last #133 offense in the country. 0.64 points per drive allowed is best defense in America territory. Arizona had similarly stifled the Cougs (by the way, what a good team Arizona is....awesome rebuilding job by Fisch) but generally that doesn't happen to Wazzu. The Cougs did the same thing to us. 0.91 points per drive made the #101 points per drive defense look like the #2 defense in the country. 0.91 points per drive is worst offense in America territory. This was a game that was a story of jaw-dropping defensive dominance and equally jaw-dropping offensive incompetence. That we found a way to win - and despite the offensive struggles to salt the game with a clinching drive to run out the clock - is the big story. In some respects Washington State outplayed us and we got pretty lucky - the Edwards interception falling in his lap, avoiding throwing an end zone interception, benefiting from a missed field goal (though we get a lot of credit for back to back sacks making it a tougher kick) - but we showed grit and resilience and made the plays we needed to have more points on the scoreboard at the end. Winning teams can do that. We haven't seen much of it in recent years. Progress.

3. I cannot say enough about the defense. Washington State has a slightly above average offense nationally and a slightly below average offense for the Pac-12 and, despite being such a competent opponent, last night ranks with the 2019 Northwestern game as our most dominant defensive performance of the last half decade (setting aside the Colgate joke of a game), whether you look at points, yards, or yards per play. But 2019 Northwestern was one of the worst offenses in the country while WSU is a solid offense. You have to go back to the 2015 Rose Bowl against Iowa to find a comparable defensive performance against a respectable offense but statistically this was even better than that, so you have to go all the way back to arguably the greatest defensive in Stanford history, the 2014 defense, to find dominance like this against an opponent like this. We showed that the defense is capable of an elite performance. That's thrilling.

4. On the flip side, it's hard to put into words how inept that offensive performance was. It was even more anemic than against Oregon (#12 in the country in yards per play allowed/#21 in points per drive allowed) despite Wazzu sucking at defense (#97 in yards per play allowed/#101 in points per drive allowed). This ranks with the 2021 Utah game, 2014 Notre Dame game, and 2012 Washington game as one of our worst offensive games of the last 15 years. However, those opponents were better at defense than this year's Cougs team. Last night is on the very shortest of lists for the worst offensive games in Stanford history. I went through 20 years of box scores to try to find one similar against a defense on Wazzu's pitiful 2023 level and I came up empty. If 2003 Teevens and 2006 Harris didn't have games this inept against a defense like this I am not sure it has ever happened in Stanford's history. I'm appalled by this offensive performance but guys need to flush it and it's a lot easier to move on when the overall result is good. Indeed, I should note that those other miserable offensive games from the last 15 years were all losses. It's so big for the offense to lay a stinker like this but see the defense has their back. Other times, like the Colorado game, the roles will be reversed. At least until we're much further in the rebuild we can be assured there will be ineptitude on both sides of the ball at times. To repeat myself, nonetheless finding a way to win is progress.

5. We have seen enough to hold out hope that the last three games will reinforce, or even build on, the case that we are improving. So I should probably wait until the end of the month to assess the overall season stats. But I can't resist. On offense, we have a miserable 5.05 yards per play (#110). That's worse than the last two years under Shaw. [For those wondering, no, this is not historically bad.....we had fewer yards per play every single year between 2002 and 2007 and in 2003 managed 3.84 (!!!!).] Yet we are scoring right on our average from last year and ahead of the average from 2021. My read is that this supports something others have commented on from subjective impressions, which is that Taylor's scheme and play calling can squeeze more blood from this turnip than Shaw could. With talent so much worse that it's practically inevitable the offense will have a harder time succeeding, Taylor is managing similar results. That's a sign of good coaching. [I also think it's probable Taylor is leaving points on the board by not relying on Karty more, so the favorable comparison to Shawfense could arguably be even more pronounced.] On defense, we have an even more miserable 6.32 yards per play allowed (#124 even after last night's masterpiece). However, what I am noticing is progress over the Lance Anderson dumpster fire. We now have fewer yards per play allowed than in any season since 2019 and may end up better than the 2019 defense too if we can continue to improve. That's how bad the Anderson defense was. I think it's reasonable to discern progress in coaching on both sides of the ball. Special teams has taken a colossal step back (#83 in FEI even before accounting for yesterday's pretty bad special teams day, which compares to #8, #11, #54, #20, and #3 in our last five full seasons) so we should not overstate the case on improvement, but I'm seeing improvement overall.

How the Ivies sneak in the ultra-rich


Don't know if Stanford does this exact thing, but with the known very small numbers of transfers each year I doubt it. But we know there is a list.

Basketball MBB Season opener vs. CSUN tonight at 8 PM (Game Hub)

CSUN was a 7-25 team last year and lost some of their best players to the transfer portal. They have a new coach, Andy Newman, who promises to bring a up-tempo approach. Most of the key players are tranfers (there are only four returnees) and there is not a lot of size, so what we see will be anybody's guess. Stanford is a 22 point favorite.

TV is Pac-12 Bay Area

vs Wazzu... totally blind ref misses blatant holding in Ward's mis-attributed 'amazing' pass

fat schlub of a ref looking right at Wazzu center #77 jumping all over/pulling down Franklin who was just about to tackle Wade, thus allowing that 'miracle Wade pass to be made... no call!

After halftime just before start of Pac12network's coverage of 2nd half, they showed a repeat video clip of 1st half's of Ward's so called 'amazing' pass... and if you stop freeze that clip blatantly clear that Franklin was held and taken down by #77, Wazzu's center, just as Franklin was about to grab Wade. Our Football office needs to get and isolate that clip and send it into Pac12 referee office. That ref either blind or needs to be fired as a total incompetent.

2023 Golf Season Coming to an End

During the fall, we had lots of players in the various team formats- the Solheim, Junior Solheim, Junior Ryder Cup and the Walker Cup. Alas, we didn't have any players on the Ryder Cup team. Europe swept all of the team events. The US prevailed in the Walker Cup with the US facing a team from Great Britain and Ireland.
On the Solheim (US vs. European Women), Andrea Lee and Rose Zhang were on the US Team. Rose had a record of 0-3-1 and Andrea had a record of 1-2-1. No one on the Euro team.
In the Junior Solheim, we had two Stanford commits, Leigh Chien on the US team and Nora Sundberg from Sweden on the Euro team. Nora is ranked #39 in WAGR and Leigh is #108. On the European Solheim Cup, she finished third in points to claim her spot.
On the Junior Ryder Cup, Leigh Chien and Nora Sundberg also were on their respective teams. The future Stanford teammates actually met in singles where they tied. Jay Leng, Jr. played for the US and is a Stanford commit.
In the Walker Cup, Barclay Brown played for the GB&I team and was 0-2-1, where the halve was in singles.
The Big Match against Cal is based on a mixed foursome, where there's a player from the women's team and the men's team. They lost 4-3 playing fourball (low player's score)

Stanford men played also played some team events and one stroke play tournament. In the Stephens Cup, they finished 6th out of 7 teams and shot a respectable -29 over three rounds. This week, they hosted the Cypress Point Classic which consisted of Foursome, Fourball and Single matches. They lost to ASU 2-1 in Foursomes, tied Illinois 1.5-1.5 in Fourball and got beat 5-1 in Singles. Stanford's best player, Michael Thorbjornsen has been out with a back stress injury since late summer. He had to give up his spots on the Walker Cup and the US Amateur. Seems like we've been seeing a lot injuries to our golf team. Ben, if you see this, can you ask about Michael's recovery?

On the women's side, they finished 3rd during stroke play at the Stephens Cup, which meant they would play for 3rd against South Carolina. They won 4-1 to capture 3rd.
They then played in the Stanford Intercollegiate where they finished 3rd out of 19 teams. Heck, Englemann and Ganne did not have their usual games with Rachel shooting +13!, Sadie a +6 and Megha +4. Stanford was led by Kelly Xu and Paula Martin Sampedro who finished 3rd and 7th.

The women are at the prestigious East Lake tournament this week which features the 8 2022 NCAA semi-final men's and women's teams. On day 1, Stanford finished first, which earned them the #1 seed and Sadie bounced back to take first place in individual stroke play. On day 2, they beat Texas A&M 3-2 to make to the finals against Wake Forest. With the match tied 2-2, Megha was dormie with two to play. She birdied the tough #17 and then won 18 to force extra holes. She won on the 4th extra hole.
Stanford is playing without Rachel in this tournament as she's representing the USA at the Pan American Games in Santiago this week.
The finals match will be shown on the Golf Channel at noon. This year, since the East Lake course is going through some renovation so it's being played at the Atlanta Athletic Club, Bobby Jone's home club. It's been the host of many major tournaments.
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