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Football

Next Up: Washington State

Stanford Cardinal (3-1 • 2-1 Pac-12)
Washington State Cougars (2-2 • 1-0 Pac-12)

October 8, 2016 • 7:30 p.m. PT
Stanford Stadium (50,424) • Stanford, Calif.

  Game Notes Depth Chart Live Stats Tickets

TelevisionLive national broadcast on ESPN with Mark Jones (play-by-play), Rod Gilmore (analyst) and Quint Kessenich (sideline).

RadioLive coverage on Stanford's flagship station -- KNBR 1050 AM -- with Scott Reiss '93 (play-by-play), Todd Husak '00 (analyst) and John Platz '84 (sideline). The broadcast begins one hour before kickoff with the Cardinal Tailgate Show and concludes with the postgame Cardinal Locker Room Report. The game can be heard on Stanford student radio -- KZSU 90.1 FM -- and online at kzsulive.stanford.edu. Sirius Satellite Radio (channel 113) and XM Satellite Radio (channel 196) will carry a national broadcast.

PollsStanford (15th - AP, 15th - USA Today) • Washington State (NR - AP, NR - USA Today)

On the WebGoStanford.com WSUcougars.com Pac-12.com#GoStanford

Notes

  • After splitting a two-game road trip, No. 15 Stanford returns home for a Pac-12 North Division matchup with Washington State. The contest Saturday evening begins at 7:30 p.m. PT and will be televised nationally on ESPN.
  • Stanford is ranked 15th in both the AP and USA Today polls. Dating to Sept. 20, 2015, Stanford has been ranked by the AP in 19 consecutive weeks.
  • The Cardinal is 48-6 at Stanford Stadium since 2008 and has not dropped an October home game since 2007.
  • Stanford is 50-6 this decade in games played on California soil.
  • Stanford's seven-game winning streak is the longest since rattling off eight straight in 2015.
  • Stanford has won eight straight against Washington State, and a ninth victory would mark the longest winning streak for either team in the series. The Cardinal has won four straight over the Cougars at Stanford Stadium. The Cardinal and Cougars have met in every season since 1995.
  • In four games against Mike Leach's Cougars, the Cardinal has limited Washington State to 95 yards rushing on 71 attempts (1.3 yards/carry). Washington State quarterbacks have been sacked 19 times in those four contests. The Cardinal has twice faced Washington State at Stanford Stadium under David Shaw while limiting the Cougars to minus-44 yards rushing.
  • Stanford only once has dropped consecutive games under head coach David Shaw, but never in consecutive weeks (there was a bye week between 2014 defeats to Oregon and Utah).
  • The Cardinal has averaged 34.1 points after losses under Shaw, with an average margin of victory of 23.8 points.
  • Head coach David Shaw is undefeated against six Pac-12 opponents, including Washington State. Under Shaw, the Cardinal also has not lost to Arizona, Cal, Colorado, Oregon State and UCLA.
  • Under head coach David Shaw, Stanford is 32-4 at home, 38-10 vs. Pac-12 opponents (regular season), 17-4 in October, 13-1 coming off a loss, 37-5 vs. unranked opponents, 30-8 when ranked higher, 32-9 in night games and 18-5 on ESPN.
  • For the first time in the 56-year history of the conference preseason poll, Stanford was chosen as the favorite to win the Pac-12 Conference title. The media poll has correctly selected the conference champion in 29 of 55 previous polls, but only twice in the last nine polls. The Cardinal was not picked to win as much as the Pac-12 North Division in any of its three recent championship seasons (2012, 2013, 2015).
  • Stanford has won at least 11 games four times in five seasons under head coach David Shaw. From 1891-2010, the program recorded four 10-win seasons.
  • Stanford's ongoing streak of seven consecutive winning seasons is the longest in program history since an 11-season streak from 1968-78 under John Ralston, Jack Christiansen and Bill Walsh. The program's longest streak (not including the rugby years) is 13, from 1923-35 under coaches Andrew Kerr, Pop Warner, and Tiny Thornhill.
  • The Cardinal returns 48 letterwinners (20 offense, 24 defense, four specialists) and 14 starters (five offense, six defense, three specialists) from last season's Pac-12 championship team that finished 12-2 and won the Rose Bowl Game against Iowa. Only 24.5 percent of this year's Stanford roster is composed of fourth- and fifth-year seniors. Underclassmen make up 75.5 percent of the 2016 roster.
  • Stanford's 2016 roster includes student-athletes from 29 states, Canada and Austria.
  • Stanford requires students to declare a major before their junior year. Among the team's upperclassmen, 15 majors are represented. Eight Cardinal are engineering majors. Majors among Cardinal student-athletes include: architectural design, biomechanical engineering, civil engineering, communication, computer science, Earth systems, economics, human biology, Japanese, management science and engineering, philosophy, psychology, public policy, science, technology and society, and urban studies.
  • Situated in the heart of Silicon Valley, Stanford's student-athletes are afforded the opportunity to experience the latest in cutting-edge technology, as the origins of some of the greatest hi-tech breakthroughs and most dynamic companies can trace their roots back to The Farm.
  • STRIVR Labs co-founder and former Cardinal kicker Derek Belch has created a truly immersive, fully customizable virtual reality experience specifically for football teams. The platform has already changed the way Stanford's student-athletes prepare, and high school, college, and NFL teams are close behind.
  • With the help of the Cardinal football team, a group of Stanford doctors and neuroscientists have been working to quantify the head trauma that players sustain during a game. The researchers developed custom mouth guards equipped with accelerometers and gyrometers that measure linear and rotational acceleration -- essentially, how violently the head gets whipped around during a game. The data from the sensors, which the scientists pull from the mouth guards after games and practices throughout the season, provides critical baseline data of how many jarring hits players typically experience.
  • Temperature-regulation research of Stanford biologists H. Craig Heller and Dennis Grahn led to a device that rapidly cools body temperature and greatly improves exercise recovery. This is the sort of claim you see in spam email subject lines, not in discussions of mammalian thermoregulation. By taking advantage of specialized heat-transfer veins in the palms of hands, "the glove" can rapidly cool athletes' core temperatures -- and dramatically improve exercise recovery and performance.
  • The program partnered with APTUS Sports to maximize athletic and academic development. Prior to the season, each player completed 10 game-like exercises in 30 minutes on a special tablet that assessed how quickly and accurately they learn, react and adjust. APTUS analyzed individual, group and team data, and reported the findings to the coaching staff.
  • In 2012, Stanford became the first college program to use iPad playbooks, saving countless trees, dollars and man-hours.