Scarlett and Stanford D shine in Sun Bowl

Photo by Jorge Salgado/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

“The world is both beautiful and merciless at all times, and what you chose to embrace, is essentially what you become.” In that sense, I see this season for Stanford Football as a victory of determination. In spite of the critical injuries to the offensive and defensive lines, and the several key players who chose not to participate in the ’18 Sun Bowl for “NFL reasons”, the Cardinal still finished the season by winning their last four games, including a gritty 14-13 Bowl win over some tough young men from the University of Pittsburgh.

On that level, Stanford senior running back and jack-of-all-trades special teamer Cameron Scarlett (22 carries / 94 yards / 2 TD’s / 4.3 YPC / 111 all-purpose yards) being named the 2018 Sun Bowl’s Most Valuable Player, was a humble Disney ending in and of itself.

Scarlett, who has played behind both Bryce Love and Christian McCaffrey these past four years, has quietly been willing to do whatever the team needed of him throughout his time on The Farm. So, him earning MVP honors in a Bowl game is certainly a cool story.

Equal to the heart that Scarlett played with, the Stanford defense repeatedly made stands to cover for the poor offensive showing overall. Senior linebackers Bobby Okereke (6 tackles / 2 TFL / 2 PD / 1 sack), Sean Barton (8 tackles / 1 TFL / 1 PD), and Casey Toohill (7 tackles / 1 QBH / 1 TFL) were the tip of the spear against Pitt, and though they allowed a few sustained drives, they manned up when it mattered most in the red-zone. Junior linebacker Jordan Fox (5 tackles / 1 sack / 1 TFL / 1 QBH) also played well against the Panthers.

Cardinal super sophomore All-American cornerback Paulson Adebo (5 tackles / 2 PD / 1 TFL) was involved with a couple of questionable penalty calls, but otherwise shut down his side of the field, as Stanford fans have become accustomed to. He is as good a player on the outside as anyone in the country, and the scary thing is, he is only going to get better.

Also in the secondary for The Card, senior cornerback Alijah Holder (6 tackles / 2 PD), and safeties senior Frank Buncom (5 tackles / 1 PD) and junior Malik Antoine (7 tackles / 1 PD) each positively impacted the Bowl victory for their side.

Up front, freshman defensive end Thomas Booker (6 tackles / 2 QBH / 1 TFL) showed flashes of his true potential, and that is a good sign of things to come for Stanford. Booker, a 6’4” 282 lbs. frosh DE from Maryland, could be an absolute monster in the years ahead for Coach Shaw on The Farm.

While Stanford’s 2018 Sun Bowl win was not junior quarterback K.J. Costello’s (6 for 17 passing / 105 yards) finest hour, big things are expected for him in 2019. Having thrown for the third most passing yards in school history this season, he is a proven winner, who gives Stanford stability and leadership on offense going in to next year.

One of the leaders they will be losing to the Pro ranks, senior wide receiver J.J. Arcega-Whiteside (3 receptions / 90 yards / 30.0 YPR), accounted for the vast majority of Stanford’s air attack with his three big plays. JAW$ finishes with 14 receiving TD’s on the year, and is tied with legend James Lofton (’78) for most touchdown catches in a season in school history.

Regardless of all the great players Stanford has moving on to the NFL, I still see The Card in another Rose Bowl hunt next season, as David Shaw’s program is fully accustomed to the professional turnover amidst the college game. That said, it’s a funny shaped ball, and it bounces strange directions with strange regularity. So, only time, and the Football Gods will tell.

Win or lose, ROLL RED.

Comments

I didn't know we were Bama

Who says "Roll Red"?

Only Max

But he says it with gusto and sincerity

It’s become semi-endearing.

Definitely his trademark

Not sure it will catch on, though.

Vintage Shaw football.

In that sense, I see this season for Stanford Football as a victory of determination.

I have to agree with this observation. Or at least I agree this is a valid observation. I choose to view the Sun Bowl victory as a testament to the ethos of Stanford. Down five starters, and despite KJ only completing 35% of his passes, Shaw, staff, and team, gutted out a victory.

Scarlett, who has played behind both Bryce Love and Christian McCaffrey these past four years, has quietly been willing to do whatever the team needed of him throughout his time on The Farm.

I love that observation. Scarlett has played behind two Heisman contenders (and one who should have legitimately won it.) and when called upon to do his part, he stepped up. Players like Scarlett are forgotten over time, but they are nonetheless deserving of appreciation and admiration.

I loved this victory. It reminds me that Shaw is legit. KJ was pitiful in this game and Shaw had the wherewith-all to go back to the run game and dial up a play-calling that delivered a 100 yard rusher which, imo, was critical to the victory. I also loved that Stanford’s defense showed up. From my uninformed observation, we tend to run an straight up defense and despite giving up 200 yards on the ground, we held Pitt to 13 points. Sure, we got lucky that one of their top running backs got injured, and they got lucky that five of our starters sat out the game. So I was delighted to see Shaw resort to the ground and pound. I loved that reverse that no one predicted and that a coach told Williams to go down in bouds after getting the first.

On a side note, I loved seeing Urban Meyer pull a Shaw on UW. Up by 20+ points in the 4th, Ohio St. "turtled up" and made UW prove it could score 25 points in one quarter after only having scored 3. Stanford "fans" would have attacked Shaw without mercy had we given up 20 points in the 4th. Urban Meyer showed us that is what smart coaches do and fans that decry this approach have no clue about football.

Scarlett Leaving?

Did Scarlett announce he’s not coming back? He’s got one more year of eligibility, so I sure hope that wasn’t his last game in a Cardinal uniform.

An ugly victory

But the ugliest victory is better than the most beautiful loss. Go Cardinal!

Anyone want to comment on where they think the team will be coming into next year? Is it just me, or is there a TON of transition with guys leaving?

I was absolutely wrong about Mr. Scarlett's eligibility, and I apologize for being uninformed. He is a redshirt senior, so he does have one more year as a leader within this program.

The changes have been made in my article here to reflect as much.

Cheers, and Go Stanford.

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