STANFORD, Calif. -- With a teammate in the hospital and time running
perilously short, Washington scored the last improbable touchdown in a fourth
quarter full of them.
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| Randy Fasani leads a furious fourth-quarter comeback, but Stanford falls just short. (AP) | |
Justin Robbins caught a 22-yard TD pass from Marques Tuiasosopo with 17
seconds left as the ninth-ranked Huskies blew an 18-point lead with six minutes
to play and then drove 80 yards in the closing seconds to beat Stanford 31-28
on Saturday.
A driving rain at Stanford Stadium made scoring difficult until the frenetic
final six minutes, when the teams combined for five touchdowns. The small,
soaked crowd -- equally divided between Washington and Stanford supporters --
might have got neck aches from watching the teams drive up and down the field.
But the Huskies' celebration of an amazing win was dampened by the loss of
safety Curtis Williams, who was removed from the field on a stretcher late in
the third quarter with a neck injury. Williams remained at Stanford Hospital on
Sunday in intensive care. An MRI on Saturday revealed Williams didn't have a broken neck, but he is undergoing further tests.
"Right now our thoughts are with Curtis Williams," Tuiasosopo said.
"We're happy with the win, of course, but our thoughts are elsewhere. We just
hope it's not too serious. It's an emotional time."
All season long, Washington and Stanford have been at their best in the
fourth quarter. The Cardiac Cardinal, who have beaten two teams in the closing
seconds at home already this year, were good again -- but Washington was even
better.
Tuiasosopo needed just three plays to erase nearly five minutes of amazing
football from Stanford quarterback Randy Fasani, who ran for two touchdowns and
passed for another in the final 5:32.
"I couldn't believe they made a comeback," said Fasani, who scored on a
2-yard bootleg with 53 seconds to play that put Stanford up 28-24. "I thought
it was the end of the game. They just had a great comeback, just like we did."
Washington (7-1, 4-1 Pac-10) came from behind for the sixth time in their
seven victories.
"Give all the credit to Marcus. Our two-minute offense is second to none,"
receiver Todd Elstrom said. "It's hard to come back from an injury like that,
but you try to play with some extra emotion."
The Cardinal (3-5, 2-3) put themselves in position for a remarkable comeback
by recovering three onside kicks -- one was negated by a penalty -- in the final
minutes and scoring three electrifying late touchdowns. Stanford had just 178
yards of total offense until racking up 170 more in its final three drives.
"It was devastating, but we're all men and we'll bounce back," Fasani
said. "Everybody said Washington was a good fourth quarter team, but we showed
we're good in the fourth, too."
Tuiasosopo, who got 80 of his 216 yards passing on the final drive, marched
the Huskies down the field with three long completions after scrambling out of
the pocket. The final touchdown came on a broken play as Tuiasosopo stumbled
toward the Stanford sideline and picked out Robbins all alone in the end zone.
"I told him the same thing I tell him every time," Washington coach Rick
Neuheisel said of his instructions to his quarterback. '"Use the field, use
your legs.' He made three perfect throws. He scrambled out and found Robbins
coming out of the back side.
"It was a tough day to play offense, given the weather, but we had enough
in the tank."
The victory kept Washington one game behind Oregon for the Pac-10 lead.
Stanford beat Texas and Southern Cal earlier this year on last-second scores
at home. Fasani, who was knocked out of both of Stanford's previous last-second
wins with knee injuries, stuck around for this one -- and he was phenomenal,
passing for 166 yards and rushing for 65.
Third-string tailback Willie Hurst had a 22-yard touchdown run with 5:57 to
play that put Washington up 24-6 and seemed to seal the game. But the fireworks
were only beginning.
Stanford scored its first touchdown of the game 34 seconds after Hurst's
run. A 60-yard pass to Luke Powell was followed by a 4-yard TD pass to DeRonnie
Pitts, who also caught a 2-point conversion pass from Fasani.
The Cardinal recovered two onside kicks -- the first was erased by an
offsides penalty - and Fasani led a 58-yard drive capped by Fasani's 4-yard TD
keeper with 2:33 left.
Stanford then recovered yet another onside kick at Washington's 48. Fasani,
looking more like an option quarterback than Tuiasosopo ever did on Saturday,
got Stanford to the Huskies 6 with 1:59 to play on a dangerous 30-yard scramble
through the heart of the Washington defense. He rushed for 6 more yards with a
minute to play and then scored the go-ahead TD on a naked bootleg.
Stanford lost for the fourth time in five games and has only a mathematical
chance of defending its Pac-10 title. The Cardinal must win their final three
games against UCLA, Arizona State and California even to qualify for a bowl.
Hurst had 96 yards rushing and two TDs, while Rich Alexis added 56 yards and
another score. Elstrom had six catches for 94 yards, while Pitts caught eight
passes -- including the 200th of his career -- for 71 yards.
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