Trojans conquered again
Published 12:01 am Sunday, November 15, 2009
LOS ANGELES — While Toby Gerhart rampaged through the Southern California defense in an awfully quiet Coliseum, the star tailback and his Cardinal teammates flattened a bunch of recent college football certainties as well.
USC’s streaks of seven straight BCS bowls, 11-win seasons and top-four AP poll finishes? Those are all finished.
The Trojans’ Pac-10 dominance over the past seven years? It’s all but over after Stanford paved the way for a new West Coast champion.
Gerhart took time on the Coliseum field to savor the moment after rushing for 178 yards and three touchdowns in No. 25 Stanford’s 55-21 victory Saturday over the 11th-ranked Trojans, who allowed the most points in school history.
“To do that against a storied program, a perennial power, it’s the greatest feeling in the world,” said the Pac-10 rushing leader, whose Heisman Trophy hopes are gaining momentum. “It was just will. The offensive line just moved people. We got after them and got downhill, and it was just a good offensive day.”
How good? The loss was the Trojans’ worst since a 51-0 defeat at home against Notre Dame in 1966. Coach Pete Carroll lost in November for the first time at USC after 28 straight victories. And for the second time in three weekends, Carroll endured the worst loss of his nine seasons.
“I’m not sure I have the right words to describe being humbled like this,” Carroll said. “I don’t really know where to put it. … We have fallen apart and given our opponents the opportunity to do whatever they want, but you have to give Stanford a lot of credit.”
Andrew Luck threw two touchdown passes and ran for another score for the Cardinal, who followed up their surprising rout of Oregon last week with a strong start and a big finish at the Coliseum. The Trojans haven’t lost to any other opponent at home since 2001, going 47-2.
“It’s just an overwhelming feeling now,” Luck said.
Richard Sherman returned an interception 42 yards for a score with 11:41 to play, part of a 27-point fourth quarter for the Cardinal. After the postgame handshsake, the Cardinal raised their helmets and raced to their cheering section for their second celebration at the Coliseum in three years.
Stanford’s 24-23 victory as a 41-point underdog in 2007 was a major shocker, yet this win barely even qualified as an upset. That might be the most incredible thing of all about the Trojans’ downward slide, which will end with a minor bowl berth — and with more than two losses — for the first time since 2001.
“We came out there, and there was something wrong,” USC safety Taylor Mays said. “It is very disappointing. It’s almost sickening. To be a senior and leave a legacy like this, it’s sickening.”
Luck soundly outplayed fellow freshman quarterback Matt Barkley, while Gerhart steamrolled the once-vaunted USC defense. Stanford piled it on late, scoring four touchdowns in the fourth quarter after leading 28-21.
And the Cardinal did it on USC’s homecoming, no less, in front of 90,071 somnolent fans.
“We were just consistent,” Luck said. “Starting fast in both halves really helped us. Once we got rolling, we kept doing good things. “
Two weeks after USC’s 47-20 loss at Oregon, the Trojans’ defense was again embarrassed, giving up 469 yards.
Barkley went 21-for-31 for 196 yards with three interceptions in his third straight unimpressive game for the Trojans. Carroll has stuck with the freshman all season, but Barkley made turnovers on USC’s first two drives to put the Trojans in an early 14-0 hole.
“This isn’t what we grew up watching,” Barkley said. “I’m not used to this. … I don’t know what to think right now.”
