Opportunity AwaitsOpportunity Awaits
Men's Soccer

Opportunity Awaits

No. 7 Stanford (16-2-2, 7-1-2 Pac-12)
No. 1 Wake Forest (17-2-2, 6-0-2 ACC)
Saturday, Dec. 5 • 7 p.m. (ET)

Spry Stadium • Winston-Salem, N.C.
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Jeremy Gunn Brandon Vincent Ty Thompson

What's Next

In the quarterfinals for the first time since 2002, Pac-12 champion Stanford (16-2-2) heads to Winston-Salem, N.C. for a match with ACC champion Wake Forest (17-2-2) at Spry Stadium on Saturday, December 5 at 4 p.m. PT/ 7 p.m. ET. The game will be broadcast on ESPN3/WatchESPN.

History vs. Wake Forest

Stanford is 2-0 all-time against the Demon Deacons, but the two teams haven’t met in 20 years.

In the Cardinal’s last trip to the state of North Carolina, it swept a tournament at Wake Forest, beating Davidson, 1-0, on Sept. 2, 1995 and the Deacs, 1-0, on Sept. 4. Stanford and Wake Forest first met in a tournament at UNLV on Sept. 12, 1992, a 3-1 Cardinal win.

What Just Happened

Junior Jordan Morris’ second-half brace lifted the Cardinal to a 3-1 win against No. 14 Ohio State at Cagan Stadium in the round of 16 on Nov. 29. It was his second career multi-goal effort and first since Sept. 27, 2013 at UC Santa Barbara.

Corey Baird added an 88th-minute insurance goal to send Stanford one win away from its first College Cup in 13 years.

Two For Everyone

Morris’ two-goal haul came one week after freshman Amir Bashti scored twice off the bench to spur Stanford to a 3-1 victory over visiting Santa Clara in the second round on Nov. 22.

It was the first multi-goal game for a Stanford player in the postseason since Roger Levesque’s brace on November 30, 2001 in a 3-1 win over Portland in the third round of the NCAA Tournament.

Bashti is the first Stanford freshman to score in an NCAA Tournament match since December 13, 2002, when Chad Marshall’s header against Creighton in 108th minute sent Stanford to the College Cup final.

Tournament History

The Cardinal is 17-12-3 all-time in the NCAA tournament - 11-2-3 at home, 4-7-0 on the road and 2-3-0 at the College Cup.

Its stretch of three consecutive postseason berths is the second longest in Stanford history behind a six-year run from 1997 to 2002.

The Cardinal is one of eight teams remaining for the first time since 2002 and fifth overall.

Stanford NCAA Quarterfinal History
DateOpponentLocationResult
2002ClemsonStanford, Calif.W, 2-0
2001Saint LouisStanford, Calif.W, 1-0
2000SMUStanford, Calif.L, 2-1
1998VirginiaCharlottesville, Va.W, 3-0

Homecoming

Stanford will be venturing to North Carolina with three sons of the Tar Heel State in tow. Tomas Hilliard-Arce (Matthews, N.C.), Justin Kahl (Charlotte, N.C.) and Tanner Beason (Winston-Salem, N.C.) are all from the state where Stanford head coach Jeremy Gunn previously plied his trade.

Gunn came to California from Charlotte, where he led the 49er program for five seasons (2007-11) and built it into a national title contender, including a run to the championship of the 2011 College Cup.

During the five seasons at Charlotte, Gunn compiled a 64-26-14 record, including a 5-2 mark in the NCAA Tournament. The 49ers also won a pair Atlantic-10 Conference titles in 2010 and 2011.

Gunn faced Wake Forest twice as Charlotte’s head coach, winning both. The 49ers beat the No. 11 Demon Deacons, 2-0, at Charlotte on Sept. 14, 2001 and came out on top in Winston-Salem over No. 3 Wake Forest, 3-1, on Sept. 29, 2009.

Two Of 15

Stanford’s All-American tandem of junior forward Jordan Morris and senior left back Brandon Vincent were named two of 15 semifinalists for the 2015 MAC Hermann Trophy on Dec. 1.

Morris and Creighton junior forward Fabian Herbers are the only holdovers from last season’s semifinal list and Stanford, Clemson and Creighton are the only schools with multiple semifinalists.

The Cardinal has never had a player win the MAC Hermann Trophy.

Far West Coach Of The Year

For the second consecutive season, Jeremy Gunn was named the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) Far West Region Coach of the Year.

Gunn took over the Cardinal in 2012 when the program was coming off a 6-10-2 finish and in four short years has catapulted Stanford among the nation’s elite. In four seasons on The Farm, Gunn is 48-20-10.

Postseason accolades are nothing new for Stanford’s head man. He was named the NSCAA National Coach of the Year in 2011 after leading Charlotte to the College Cup final.

King Of The Pac

Stanford finished its regular season 14-2-2 overall and 7-1-2 in league action, setting a school record for Pac-12 wins.

The Cardinal’s seven-point cushion at the top of the Pac-12 table is the third-largest margin in conference history, only surpassed by nine-point gaps for the champions in 2011 and 2003.

Leading The Pac

The Cardinal cleaned up when it came to the conference’s postseason awards announced on Nov. 17. Jordan Morris was named Pac-12 Player of the Year, Brandon Vincent was selected as the Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year and Jeremy Gunn earned Pac-12 Coach of the Year honors.

Morris is Stanford’s third-ever Pac-12 Player of the Year and first since 2001. Ryan Nelsen (2000) and Roger Levesque (2001) took home the award in the first two years of Pac-12 men’s soccer.

Vincent, the 2015 Pac-12 Men’s Soccer Scholar-Athlete of the Year, was also the Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year in 2014 and is the only person to ever win the award, which was instituted last season.

Gunn also received recognition from his peers as the conference’s best last season. His award in 2015 is the fifth time a Stanford coach has been awarded Pac-12 Coach of the Year. Gunn is the third head man in league history to win back-to-back coach of the year honors.

All-Pac-12

Eight of Stanford’s 11 starters received recognition on various All-Pac-12 squads. Morris, Vincent and Ty Thompson earned spots on the first team, while Corey Baird, Andrew Epstein, Tomas Hilliard-Arce, Foster Langsdorf and Eric Verso were named to the second team.

Fourteen Cardinal were also named to the league’s all-academic teams on Nov. 19, tying a school record previously achieved twice, in 2010 and 2007.

Sweep

The Stanford women’s soccer program claimed its outright Pac-12 title on Nov. 1. It’s the first time the Cardinal has swept the league’s soccer championships and the first time since 2008 (UCLA) that both the conference’s men’s and women’s soccer titles have been won by the same institution.

Pac-12 Championship Men's and Women's Soccer Sweeps
YearSchool
2015Stanford
2008UCLA
2005UCLA
2004UCLA*
2003UCLA
2000Washington

*UCLA's women were co-champions in 2004 along with Arizona.

What's At Stake

Stanford’s 16 overall wins are tied for fifth in team history (1978). Only four Cardinal sides have ever won 17 or more games.

Stanford Single-Season Wins
YearTotal
200119
200018
199818
200217
201516
197816

Home/Road

Stanford went 10-0-2 at home this season and is 19-1-6 in its last 26 matches at Cagan Stadium.

The Cardinal allowed just six goals at home in 2015 for a 0.48 goals against average.

Away from The Farm, Stanford went 6-2 this year, averaging 1.75 goals per game while holding its opponents to 1.00.

Confines Of Cagan

The Cardinal’s unbeaten mark at home was the fifth in program history (home/away designations date to 1985).

Stanford Unbeaten Seasons At Home
Year Record
201510-0-2
200110-0-1
19997-0-1
19976-0-1
19918-0-1

The Cardinal was one of seven teams in the nation to go without a loss at home in 2015, joining Radford (8-0-1), South Carolina (8-0-2), Coastal Carolina (7-0-2), Cal Poly (7-0-2), Loyola Chicago (5-0-2) and Missouri State (4-0-2).

Streaking

Stanford’s 2-1 loss at Washington on November 2 was its first since a season-opening setback at UC Santa Barbara on August 28, a span of 66 days.

Stanford Unbeaten Streaks
Year(s) Length
1996-9720
201515
200111
1980-8111
200110
1980-8110

The defeat snapped Stanford’s 15-match unbeaten streak, the second-longest run in program history, and the program’s 16-match unbeaten streak in conference play, a run which is tied for 17th in NCAA history.

10+ In Three Straight

In just his fourth year at the helm, Jeremy Gunn has already led Stanford to three straight seasons of 10 or more wins, becoming the third coach in program history to accomplish the feat along with Bobby Clark (1996-2000) and Nelson Lodge (1978-83).

Staying Ahead

Always Willing To Help

Stanford is 11th nationally in assists per game (2.05) and 10th in total assists (41) thanks largely to Eric Verso and Corey Baird.

Verso is third nationally in total assists (12) and fifth in assists per game (0.60).

Baird’s nine assists are 20th in the country and his 0.45 assists per game average is 26th.

Stanford and SMU are the only teams in the nation that have two different players with at least nine assists.

More Verso

Verso is one of just 19 players in the country with 10 or more assists. He is just the ninth Stanford player since 1980 to reach that number, the fourth since 1985 and the first since 2002.

No Cardinal had reached double digits in assists since Roger Levesque (13) and Todd Dunivant (11) in 2002.

Stanford Players With 10+ Assists Since 1980
PlayerYearAssists
Ted Rafalovich198117
Ted Rafalovich198016
Roger Levesque200213
Eric Verso201512
Jorge Titinger198212
Todd Dunivant200211
Walter Kingson198311
Matt Moses200010
Giancarlo Ferruzzi198410

Verso is tied for seventh in Stanford single-season history in assists and his 18 career assists are tied with Matt Moses (1998, 2000-01) for 10th all-time.

Morris Magic

The Cardinal welcomed back striker Jordan Morris for its tournament run. The junior missed Stanford’s regular-season finale while with the U.S. Men’s National Team for its first two matches of the 2018 World Cup Qualifying campaign and earlier this season missed four other games while helping the U-23s with Olympic qualifying and playing with the USMNT in a friendly against Brazil.

Stanford is 7-0-2 in the past two years when Morris has been gone with U.S. Soccer.

More Morris

A MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist, Morris has a career-high 10 goals in 15 appearances for Stanford in 2015. In his last 11 games with the Cardinal, the junior has nine goals, three assists and 21 points.

He is ninth in the country in game-winning goals (5), 15th in goals per game (0.67) and 14th in points per game (1.53).

Earlier this season, Morris slotted one past the keeper in five straight collegiate matches, becoming just the second Cardinal to do that since 1987. (Darren Fernandez; September 21 – October 3, 2002).

When It Matters Most

Morris is the first Stanford player with five winners in a season since All-American and current Washington head coach, Jamie Clark, had the same number in 1998.

He is the first Pac-12 player with that many since 2011, when Brent Richards (Washington) and Chandler Hoffman (UCLA) each had five.

More Than Just Soccer

Morris, a Type 1 diabetic, also lent his support to Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation’s (JDRF) “T1D Looks Like Me Campaign” for National Diabetes Awareness Month (NDAM) in November. Among a number of different pieces to the awareness push, Morris was featured in a Times Square display ad the first week of the month.

Times Square treatment. #GoStanford #NDAM #JDRF #T1DLooksLikeMe

A photo posted by Stanford Men's Soccer (@stanfordmenssoccer) on Nov 4, 2015 at 2:19pm PST

Getting Defensive

Stanford is among the nation’s defensive leaders, ranking 11th in team goals against average (0.67).

Nation's Top Defenses
Team GAA
Loyola Chicago0.39
Denver0.40
St. Francis Brooklyn0.40
Western Michigan0.50
Wake Forest0.51
Washington0.63
SIUE0.64
Kentucky0.66
Coastal Carolina0.66
Dartmouth0.67
Stanford0.67

Continuity has led to Andrew Epstein only being called upon for 52 saves thus far and as a team the Cardinal has made 53, an average of 2.65 per game which is the 16th fewest in the country.

Epstein’s 0.682 goals against average is 15th in the NCAA.

Getting Defensive II

Stanford has allowed only 14 goals through its first 20 matches, its stingiest defensive effort since it let in 13 through the first 20 games of 2002.

Only six Cardinal teams have ever finished a season with a goals against average below 0.70 and not since 2002 (0.61). Earlier this year, the Cardinal put together a shutout streak of 469:38, the program’s longest since 2007 (575:51).

Stanford Single-Season GAA
YearTotal
20000.44
20010.56
19980.56
19850.59
20020.61
19970.66
20150.67

Stanford’s nine shutouts this season is its most since 2009 (9).

Andrew Epstein’s seven solo shutouts are tied for ninth in Cardinal single-season history with Craig Ueland (1977) and Willie Burkhardt (1983).

You Have To Score, Too

Stanford’s offensive output also harkens back to its last College Cup runs more than a decade ago. The Cardinal has scored 37 goals this season and averages 1.85 per game its best marks in total goals since 2002 (45) and goals per game since 2001 (2.55).

That 2001 campaign was also the last time Stanford has had more three-goal performances. This year, the Cardinal is 7-0 when it scores three times. In 2001, Stanford scored at least three 13 times, winning all 13.

Spreading It Around

Stanford doesn’t rely solely on Morris. It boasts three players with at least five goals in Morris (10), Foster Langsdorf (6) and Vincent (5).

The Cardinal hasn’t had that since 2002, when six players scored at least five - Darren Fernandez (9), Johanes Maliza (8), Roger Levesque (7), Matt Janusz (5), James Twellman (5) and Mike Wilson (5).

That 2001 campaign was also the last time Stanford has had more three-goal performances. This year, the Cardinal is 7-0 when it scores three times. In 2001, Stanford scored at least three 13 times, winning all 13.

Returning All-Americans

Stanford is the only team in the country that welcomed back multiple NSCAA/Continental Tire First Team All-Americans this season in Morris and Brandon Vincent.

All CLASS

On October 26, Brandon Vincent was named one of 10 men’s soccer Senior CLASS Award finalists for his accomplishments in the classroom and community, and on the field.

Academically, the senior owns a 3.3 GPA and has twice been a Pac-12 all-academic selection. One of 23 Stanford student-athletes majoring in economics, Vincent will graduate two quarters early, finishing his studies at the end of the fall session.

Academic All-Americans

Andrew Epstein and Eric Verso were named to the 2015 Academic All-America® Division I third team as selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) on Nov. 24.

The two are the fifth and sixth CoSIDA Academic All-Americans in Stanford history and the first since 2010, when Bobby Warshaw and Dominique Yahyavi both landed on the second team.

Epstein and Verso, along with Drew Skundrich and Ty Thompson, were also CoSIDA Academic All-District 8 selections.

Destination Stanford

Sir Alex Ferguson made his second visit to campus in the last four months this past week, discussing his reflections and insights on leadership and management at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business on Monday, Oct. 19.

1,750 career coaching victories in this photo. 1,239 of them from the great Sir Alex Ferguson. #GoStanford

A photo posted by Stanford Men's Soccer (@stanfordmenssoccer) on Oct 20, 2015 at 4:07pm PDT

In late July, Ferguson and Manchester United used Cagan Stadium for training during their United States tour. The visit continued a trend of top national sides and clubs utilizing the unparalleled facilities and environment of Stanford for training. The USMNT visited campus for camp before the 2014 FIFA World Cup and within the past two years Stanford has also hosted Italian giant Juventus and English side Norwich City.