Homestand ContinuesHomestand Continues
Women's Soccer

Homestand Continues

No. 2 Stanford (3-0)
Wisconsin (1-1-2) | Thur. • 7 p.m. (PT)
Marquette (2-2) | Sun. • 1 p.m.
Laird Q. Cagan Stadium • Stanford, Calif.
Tickets • Wisconsin | Marquette
Complete Release (Notes PDF)
Television • Pac-12 Network (Thur.)Live Stream (Sun.)
Live StatisticsAvailable via GoStanford.com
Social • Facebook.com/StanfordWSoccer • Twitter.com/StanfordWSoccer • Instagram.com/StanfordWSoc • Snapchat »StanfordWSoccer

STANFORD, Calif. – No. 2 Stanford continues its nine-game homestand playing host to a pair of nonconference opponents this weekend.
 
The Cardinal (3-0) opens the weekend against Wisconsin on Thursday at 7 p.m. (PT), then takes on Marquette on Sunday at 1 p.m.
 
Stanford is coming off an impressive 1-0 overtime victory against No. 6 Florida in its home opener this past weekend. Jordan DiBiasi scored her second goal of the season in the 96th minute to propel the Cardinal past the Gators.
 
Five of DiBiasi's seven career goals have been game-winners and four of those five winning goals have come against teams ranked 16th or higher.

Stanford shutout a potent Florida attack and held its leading goal-scorer, Savannah Jordan, to one shot during the game. Maddie Bauer and Alana Cook anchored the defense and did well to limit offensive opportunities for the Gators. It was the first time Florida had been shut out since Aug. 23, 2015, a 1-0 overtime loss at Ohio State.
 
Jane Campbell earned her first shutout of the season and 31st of her career, tying her for third in Stanford program history. She is four shutouts shy of tying Nicole Barnhart (2000-04) for the all-time program record. Campbell was named the Pac-12 Goalkeeper of the Week for her standout play.
 
Stanford returns four of its top-five goal-scorers from a year ago, including DiBiasi, Kyra Carusa, Michelle Xiao and Andi Sullivan.
 
Thursday's game will be televised on the Pac-12 Network and Sunday's game will be streamed live online. Live statistics will be available for both games via GoStanford.com.

Jordan DiBiasi scored in overtime to propel Stanford to a 1-0 victory against No. 6 Florida last week.

Rankings
Stanford enters the third week of the 2016 season ranked No. 2 in the NSCAA Coaches Poll, No. 1 in the TopDrawerSoccer rankings and No. 1 in the Soccer America rankings. The Cardinal was selected to finish first in the Pac-12 for the second consecutive season in a vote by conference head coaches.
 
Stanford finished the 2015 season ranked No. 6 in the NSCAA/Continental Tire coaches' poll and TopDrawerSoccer rankings.
 
Impressive Defensive Streaks
Stanford has not allowed more than two goals in a match over its past 261 contests, not since a 4-0 loss to North Carolina on Sept. 11, 2005, in San Francisco. During that stretch, Stanford allowed two goals 26 times, which comes out to once every 10.03 matches.
 
Stanford hasn't allowed more than two goals in a match at home since Oct. 5, 1998, in a 3-2 overtime loss to BYU. The streak is older than freshman, Sam Tran, who was born Oct. 24, 1998.
 
Stanford hasn't allowed more than two at home in regulation since Oct. 10, 1997, in a 3-2 loss to USC. This streak is longer than five of the eight members of the freshman class.

Senior Maddie Bauer has started at center back in 70 of a possible 73 games during her career. (Photo by Lyndsay Radnege)

Stanford Defensive Notes
Senior Jane Campbell recorded her 31st career shutout in a 1-0 overtime victory against No. 6 Florida, tying her for third all-time in program history. She is four shy of the all-time record of 35 held by Nicole Barnhart ('04).
 
Jane Campbell's shutout streak of 803:18 during the 2014 season (Aug. 22-Sept. 26) is the 18th-longest by a goalkeeper in NCAA Division I history.
 
Stanford recorded nine consecutive shutouts in 2014 to set school records for consecutive shutouts and consecutive shutouts to open a season.
 
Young Goal-Scorers
Stanford's sophomore class has accounted for five of Stanford's six goals this season. Megan Turner (senior) is the only non-sophomore to register a goal.
 
Underclassmen accounted for 29 of Stanford's 43 goals in 2015. Freshmen led the team with 18 goals, followed by the sophomores (11), juniors (8) and seniors (5).
 
Campbell Career Active Rankings
Jane Campbell is in the top-five of multiple NCAA active career rankings categories, including shutouts (2nd, 31), minutes played (2nd, 6,040.85) and goals-against average (4th, 0.61).

Jane Campbell was named this week's Pac-12 Goalkeeper of the Week.

Thursday's Opponent, Wisconsin
Stanford has won each of the past two meetings against Wisconsin and the all-time series is tied, 2-2. The teams' most recent meeting was a 6-0 win for the Cardinal at home. Mariah Nogueira scored twice, while Christen Press, Courtney Verloo, Lindsay Taylor and Kelley O'Hara added a goal apiece.
 
The Badgers (1-1-2) earned a pair of draws in two matches this past weekend, finishing level with Milwaukee, 1-1, and Drake, 0-0. Wisconsin has produced two goals in four games, with Micaela Powers and Dani Rhodes scoring a goal apiece.
 
Sunday's Opponent, Marquette
Stanford is 1-0 all-time against the Golden Eagles, earning a 5-0 victory on Sept. 26, 2004. The Cardinal scored 14 minutes into the match and added four second-half goals to seal the victory.
 
Marquette picked up a pair of victories this past week, defeating Illinois State, 2-1, and Michigan, 2-1. Emily Hess leads the Golden Eagles with three points on a goal and an assist.
 
Senior Class
• Stanford's senior class of Jane Campbell, Maddie Bauer, Ryan Walker-Hartshorn, Siobhan Cox, Megan Turner and Stephanie Amack have a career record of 57-10-6 (.822).
 
Dominating at Both Ends of the Field
Stanford holds advantages against opponents in 2016 in goals (6-1), shots (54-15), shots on goal (22-6) and corner kicks (24-5).
 
Stanford outshot opponents 439-156 and held a 180-51 corner kick advantage in 2015.
 
The Cardinal did not allow a corner kick in seven-of-23 games in 2015.
 
Stanford did not permit a corner kick for a span of 348:34 minutes to start the 2015 season. The Cardinal registered 36 consecutive corner kicks and did not allow the opposition an opportunity until the fourth game of the season when No. 9 BYU earned a corner kick at 78:34.