STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Colby Parkinson caught all four of K.J. Costello's touchdown passes and Stanford beat Oregon State 48-17 Saturday night.
Bryce Love scored a touchdown and rushed for 90 yards. Cameron Scarlett also scored for the Cardinal (6-4, 4-3 Pac-12) with a career-long touchdown run of 41 yards. Dorian Maddox scored on a 1-yard run, his first career touchdown.
Jake Luton passed for 205 yards and touchdowns of 63 yards to Trevon Bradford and 7 yards to Noah Togiai. Jermar Jefferson rushed for 109 yards for Oregon State (2-8, 1-6). Bradford finished with five receptions for 120 yards.
Last year the teams combined for 486 total yards in Stanford's 15-14 win. The teams had 632 by halftime on Saturday.
Costello threw for 342 yards and touchdown passes of 28, 9, 75 and 5 yards. He's thrown four touchdowns in three games this season, the most since Andrew Luck did in 2011. Parkinson finished with six catches and 166 yards.
4?? for 8??4?? ??@CJ51 is doing BIG things.
— Stanford Football (@StanfordFball) November 11, 2018
??: @Pac12Network #GoStanford pic.twitter.com/NKZ0Pkwdet
Parkinson became integral to Stanford's offense after top receiver JJ Arcega-Whiteside suffered an injury in the first quarter of last week's loss at Washington.
Jordan Choukair kicked a 40-yard field goal for the Beavers on the final play of the first half.
Love, who did not play after a brief appearance in the third quarter, finished off a 5-play, 75-yard drive with a 28-yard run that brought comparisons from last year when he set a school rushing record.
HE GONE. 28-yard burst & @Blovee_20 scores the first TD of the night for the Cardinal ??
— Stanford Football (@StanfordFball) November 11, 2018
??: @Pac12Network #GoStanford pic.twitter.com/cGs538jUTa
The Cardinal broke it open in the second quarter, scoring the first three touchdowns, all passes to Parkinson, and taking a 34-7 advantage before the Beavers closed within 34-17 by halftime.
.@kj_costello is the third Cardinal with six 300-yard passing games in a season joining @johnelway (six in 1982) and Steve Stenstrom (eight in 1993).#GoStanford pic.twitter.com/EdbeYtlp0l
— Stanford Football (@StanfordFball) November 11, 2018