When
Andrew Luck returns to
Stanford in the summer, he likes to
tease strength coach
Shannon Turley about making sure the
Cardinal program remains a meritocracy. For those of us who
didn’t score high enough on the
SAT verbal,
Luck essentially
means that the essence of the Stanford program is rooted in the
belief that opportunities should be earned as opposed to
gifted. In short, production trumps hype.
So it’s notable that on sophomore tailback
Christian
McCaffrey’s first summer workout in
2014, Stanford veterans saw
his speed and explosiveness and began chirping, “
Heisman!
Heisman!”
At 6-foot and just a shade over
200 pounds, McCaffrey doesn’t
scare anyone coming off the bus. But his Stanford teammates
were impressed enough at their first glance of his speed and
agility that their initial observation is beginning to look
more like a prediction.
As No. 15 Stanford eviscerated
No. 18 UCLA 56–35 on Thursday
night to solidify itself as a
Pac-12 favorite and
College
Football Playoff contender, that premonition began to look like
a reality. McCaffrey delivered one of the most dominating
singular performances in recent college football history, a
performance that evoked the brilliance of players like
Reggie
Bush,
Percy Harvin or
LaMichael James.
“He's a big back” Stanford coach
David Shaw said, “in a little
body.”
McCaffrey’s
369 total yards were the most of any player in the
FBS this year. They included a 96-yard kickoff return, a
Wildcat touchdown run for 70 yards and a total of four scores.
(It could have been five if he didn’t get caught on the four-
yard line on the kick return). McCaffrey took pitches to the
corner, ran with his shoulders squared between the tackles and
was so dominant that virtually the entire stadium emptied by
the end of the third quarter. He finished the night with 243
yards on 25 carries, a cool 9.7 yards per hand off.
“This is just one of those phenomenal performances when you
look back and say, ‘
Wow,’”
Shaw told
SI.com after the game.
The only thing McCaffrey didn’t do was deliver the most
memorable highlight of the night.
Receiver Francis Owusu took
those honors by hauling in a 41-yard touchdown pass from
Kevin
Hogan by pinning the ball on the back of Jaleel Wadood. Owusu
essentially leapt up, bear-hugged Wadood and caught the ball by
holding it against Wadood’s spine while falling to the ground.
It was so remarkable that Shaw broke a lifetime of sideline
stoicism by reacting like an overzealous walk-on.
“I was just shocked,” Shaw said. “I still am. I still want to
go back and see it again. It doesn't make any sense to me.”
Owusu delivered a remarkable moment, but McCaffrey just kept on
making history, all without stepping on the field in the fourth
quarter. He broke
Toby Gerhardt’s school rushing record (223
yards) with a minute remaining in the third quarter. And
remember, Gerhardt ended up as a
Heisman Trophy finalist that
year.
McCaffrey overtook
San Jose State’s
Tyler Ervin for the
No. 1
spot in all-purpose yards, and he has likely stiff-armed his
way up a few Heisman lists with his performance.
Credit good
genes, as his father, Ed, was an
NFL All-Pro and his mom,
Lisa,
was a soccer star at Stanford who once joked to SI, “That’s why
Ed and I got together, so we could breed fast white guys.”
That looks like a pretty prescient plan. Aiding Christian
McCaffrey’s nascent Heisman campaign is the sudden surge of his
team’s national relevance. On Sept. 5, when Stanford
sleepwalked through a 16–6 loss at Northwestern, the Cardinal
looked so sluggish and unimaginative on offense that even the
most innovative code junkie in
Silicon Valley couldn’t have
written a scenario in which they’d return to the national
conversation. But as a chill enters the October air, Stanford
resonates the as the Pac-12’s best chance to get a team in the
College Football Playoff this season. (You can argue
Utah, but
Stanford would be favored on a neutral field if they played
next week. And, don’t forget, the Pac-12 title game will be
nearby at
Levi’s Stadium).
Suddenly, petite
Stanford Stadium (50,
000) will become one of
the most important places in college football in the next six
weeks. Stanford hosts
Washington,
Oregon,
California and
Notre
Dame and has road games at
Washington State and
Colorado. Even
for those who guzzled that extra glass of chardonnay in the
ultra-civilized pre-game tailgate here, that stretch looks
manageable.
- published: 16 Oct 2015
- views: 454