No. 1 Stanford (3-0-0)
SMU (3-0-0) | Thurs. • 8 p.m. PT
Tulsa (0-1-1) | Sat. • 7 p.m. PT
Laird Q. Cagan Stadium • Stanford, Calif.
Tickets • SMU | Tulsa
Television • Pac-12 Networks (Thurs.) | Live Stream (Sat.)
Live Statistics • GoStanford.com
Complete Release (PDF)
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LOOKING AHEAD » No. 1 Stanford (3-0) continues its six-match homestand with games against SMU (3-0) and Tulsa (0-1-1) on Thursday and Saturday. Thursday's contest against the Mustangs starts at 8 p.m. and will air on Pac-12 Network and Pac-12 Bay Area with Troy Clardy and Christopher Sullivan on the call. Saturday's date with the Golden Hurricane begins and 7 p.m. and will be broadcast via a GoStanford.com live stream.
LOCKER ROOM TOUR & FREE YOUTH CLINIC » Stanford will open up its locker room for free tours prior to its Thursday night match with SMU from 5:45 - 6:15 p.m. On Saturday against Tulsa the program will host a free youth clinic for youth ages 5-12 from 5-6 p.m. on Maloney Field, directly behind the east side of Cagan Stadium adjacent to El Camino Real. Those interested in participating should email smsoccer@stanford.edu so the program can prepare stations and drills for the correct number of individuals.
STANFORD-SMU SERIES » Stanford owns a 4-2-1 all-time record against SMU, the last result being a double-overtime victory in Dallas on Sept. 13, 2015. Eric Verso's 108th-minute winner lifted Stanford to the 3-2 result, which was the fifth of an eight-match winning streak and 15-match unbeaten streak that highlighted Stanford's regular season before its first national championship. SMU does have a win on The Farm in an NCAA quarterfinal on Dec. 2, 2000, 2-1.
STANFORD-TULSA SERIES » The Cardinal has never beaten Tulsa and is 0-2-1 in three all-time meetings. The last match was a scoreless draw at SMU's Mi Cocina Classic on Sept. 3, 2004. Tulsa hosted the Golden Hurricane Classic and beat Stanford 2-0 on Sept. 18, 2003 and also won 3-1 in its only previous visit to The Farm on Sept. 27, 2002.
2016 REWIND » Stanford became the sixth program to win back-to-back national championships and the first to do it in a dozen years when it beat Wake Forest in penalties of the College Cup final following a scoreless 110 minutes. The Demon Deacons had match point in the fifth round of penalty kicks, but Andrew Epstein's fifth-round save prolonged the shootout. Stanford's redshirt junior keeper lunged to his left to stop Hayden Partain's championship-winning attempt and swing momentum back to the Cardinal. Sam Werner next put Stanford ahead, 5-4, with a shot up the middle, and Epstein followed with the save of his life, diving to his right to block the try of Wake's Brad Dunwell and secure back-to-back NCAA crowns for the Cardinal.
CARDINAL QUICK HITTERS »
- Stanford is one of six programs to win back-to-back national championships and was the first to do it in a dozen years. The Cardinal joined Indiana, Virginia, San Francisco, Saint Louis and Michigan State as the only collegiate soccer programs to win two consecutive championships.
- This season the Cardinal will attempt to become just the second program to win three straight NCAA titles (Virginia; 1991-94).
- Stanford on the 2016 title without allowing a goal throughout the entire tournament, becoming just the third program to ever do that (Wisconsin – 1995, San Francisco 1976).
- The Cardinal has an active shutout streak of 818:29 and has not allowed a goal in eight consecutive matches. That scoreless match number is tied for the 11th-longest in NCAA history.
- Stanford is the only school to return multiple 2016 All-Americans in 2017 (Hilliard-Arce/Langsdorf).
- The Cardinal returns nine of its 11 starters from a year ago, all of its goals scored and 91.7% of its assists (33-of-36).
- Stanford has also won Pac-12 titles each of the past three seasons, its first conference three-peat since it won four straight University and Club Soccer League championships from 1919-23.
DEFENSE WINS » Stanford has an active shutout streak of 818:29 and has not allowed a goal in eight consecutive matches dating back to last season, its longest stretch in program history. Its eight-match streak is tied for the 11th-longest in NCAA history. One more shutout would move the Cardinal into a tie for seventh and two more into a tie for fourth. Stanford's shutout streak is the longest since Akron tied the NCAA record in 2010 by not allowing a goal in 11 straight. Trevor Long of Cal was the last person to score on the Cardinal when he did so at 55:01 of last year's regular-season finale in Berkeley. Stanford's postseason shutout streak is at seven consecutive matches, an NCAA record, and 732:17 of match time.
PAC-12 PLAYER OF THE WEEK » Following his three-goal performance in Stanford's wins over the weekend, Foster Langsdorf earned his second career weekly honor from the conference on Tuesday. Langsdorf, who put four of his six shots on target against Creighton and Northeastern, has five goals this season on just nine shots. He leads the nation in goals (5) and goals per game (1.67) and is second in points per game (3.33). He is 10th among active players in career goals (28) and 13th in points (62).
NCAA RANKS » The Cardinal is third nationally in assists per game (4.00), sixth in points per game (9.33), 11th in scoring offense (2.67), tied for first in shutout percentage (1.000) and goals against average (0.00).
SENIORS UP TOP » Forward Foster Langsdorf scored a career-high 15 goals for the Cardinal in 2016, tied for eighth in program history and the most for a Cardinal since Willie Guicci had 22 in 1981. The management science and engineering major finished fourth nationally in total goals, 10th in goals per game (0.65) and led the country in game-winning goals (8). Corey Baird led the Cardinal with six assists last season and his 26 in 67 career games rank seventh in Stanford history.
SOME OF STANFORD'S BEST » Stanford's senior forward tandem is among some of the school's all-time greats. Corey Baird's 26 career assists are seventh in the Cardinal record books and two shy of a three-way tie for fourth along with Todd Dunivant (1999-2002), Giancarlo Ferruzzi (1982-85) and Jorge Titinger (1980-83). His assist total also leads all active players. With 28 career scores, Langsdorf is one shy of tying Roger Levesque (1999-2002) and Jim Talluto (1989-92) for ninth in program history. No Stanford player has reach the 30-goal mark since Ferruzzi scored 32 in the early-to-mid 1980's.
GREAT START » This is the first time Stanford has started a season with three consecutive shutouts since 2004 (5) and its eight goals through three games are its most since 2002 (10).
CONSENSUS NO. 1 » Stanford tops every major national poll - United Soccer Coaches, Top Drawer Soccer, Soccer America and College Soccer News - after the first week of the season. The Cardinal was also the pick in the Pac-12 when the conference announced its preseason coaches poll. Stanford tallied 24 points and four first-place votes and was followed by UCLA, Washington, San Diego State, Oregon State and California.
WATCH LISTS » All-Americans Tomas Hilliard-Arce and Foster Langsdorf are two of 31 players on the 2017 MAC Hermann Trophy Watch List. The Cardinal is the only school in the country with multiple players recognized. Stanford also placed a league-best four on the All-Pac-12 preseason team in seniors Corey Baird, Hilliard-Arce, Langsdorf and Drew Skundrich. Hilliard-Arce was also voted to the Top Drawer Soccer Preseason Best XI first team, Langsdorf the second team, Skundrich the third team and Logan Panchot the freshman team. Stanford's four preseason honorees are tied with Virginia for the national lead.
GREAT UNDER GUNN » One of four coaches to win NCAA titles in both Division I and Division II, head coach Jeremy Gunn's teams are 68-23-16 (.710) in his five-plus seasons on The Farm. He owns a career record of 255-84-47 (.723) in 18-plus seasons, a mark which makes him the third winningest active coach at the Division I level (by percentage). With Stanford's 2016 NCAA title Gunn became the seventh coach in Division I history to win back-to-back national championships along with Jerry Yeagley, Bruce Arena, Steve Negoesco, Harry Keough, Gene Kenney and Bob Guelker.
THREE SEASONS OF SUCCESS » The nation's most successful collegiate soccer program over the past three seasons, Stanford is 49-8-11 and leads the nation in winning percentage since 2014 (.801), has won back-to-back national championships and three consecutive Pac-12 titles.
CONFINES OF CAGAN » Stanford went 9-1-2 at home in 2016, 19th in the country in percentage (.833) and tied for fifth in wins. The Cardinal has posted a 29-2-6 (.865) record at home since 2014 with a goals against average of 0.49.
WHAT'S BACK, WHAT'S NOT » Unlike last season, when Stanford was forced to replace nearly have of its lineup, nine of 11 starters return in 2017, including two All-Americans, three all-region performers and five All-Pac-12 players. Goalkeeper Andrew Epstein, who finished his superb career with a 46-8-11 record and a NCAA-record 0.34 postseason goals against average, graduated from Stanford with his degree in electrical engineering and is readying to begin work in Benin with the Peace Corps. Brian Nana-Sinkam became the Cardinal's eighth first-round selection when he was chosen with the 22nd overall pick by the Seattle Sounders in January's MLS SuperDraft and is currently playing with Sounders FC2.
ALL-AMERICANS BACK » Thirteen schools return at least one All-American in 2017, but Stanford is the only team in the country returning multiple in Tomas Hilliard-Arce and Foster Langsdorf. Since their arrival on campus in 2014, Stanford is the winningest program in the country by percentage with an overall record of 49-8-11 (.801) and has won back-to-back national championships and three consecutive Pac-12 titles.
TOP CLASS » Along with its 13 retuning letterwinners, the Cardinal welcomes the nation's consensus No. 1 recruiting class as freshmen this fall, including four of the nation's top 20 players according to Top Drawer Soccer. Logan Panchot, Charlie Wehan, Arda Bulut and Carson Vom Steeg all made their debuts in Stanford's opener at San Jose State. Panchot earned the start at right back while Adam Mosharrafa, who played in that spot last season, slid over to occupy Brian Nana-Sinkam's old position at center back alonside Tomas Hilliard-Arce.
FIRST TIME IN A LONG TIME » For the first time since 2013, someone other than Andrew Epstein is between the pipes for the Cardinal. Redshirt senior Nico Corti has taken over for Stanford's All-American keeper and has recorded three shutouts in his first three career starts this season. He's one of eight players in the country yet to allow a goal in 2017 and his trio of shutouts are fourth nationally. Entering the year, Corti hadn't allowed a goal in 76 career minutes. He was a part of seven shutouts as a substitute from 2014-16.
TREE-PEAT » Stanford finished its regular season 11-3-4 overall and 8-1-1 in league action last season, setting a school record for Pac-12 wins. Its 2016 conference title sits on the mantle alongside championships from 2015, 2014 and 2001 and the Cardinal is the second Pac-12 school to win three in a row. UCLA won four consecutive conference crowns from 2002-05. Stanford's Pac-12 record during its three-year run of dominance is 21-3-6.
IT'S HOW YOU FINISH » Stanford, which started its 2016 season 0-1-3, averaged 0.75 goals and gave up 0.83 per game in those four matches, finished the year 15-2-2 in its last 19, averaging 1.84 goals per game and with a goals against average of 0.53. On the year, Stanford was 39th nationally in scoring offense (1.65 goals per game) and fourth in team goals against average (0.56).
SCORE TWICE AND WIN » Stanford has scored two or more goals in 55 of Jeremy Gunn's 107 matches as Stanford's head coach and is 49-0-6 in those games. The Cardinal hasn't lost when scoring at least two goals since Nov. 11, 2010, when it fell 3-2 at Cal.