Oregon State (14-8, 6-4) entered the game in lone second place in conference play, coming off an impressive road trip against the mountain schools. With the way the Pac-12 has been this year, we should’ve known they’d lose this one; it was too good to be true.
Stanford (12-10, 5-5) led wire to wire. Unlike so many games where they’ve been slow out of the gate, they found themselves up double digits in the blink of an eye. The Cardinal had it going from deep early, as they made 6 of their first 9 three point attempts. Daejon Davis hit all three of his offerings from distance.
Oregon State had no answer for Oscar da Silva. Jerod Haase has often lamented that the German sophomore is too passive offensively. That was not the case tonight, as he fearlessly attacked the Beaver defense and nation’s leading shot blocker, Kylor Kelley. He had 17 points before the break.
A late 6-0 run put Stanford up as much as 19 before the halftime horn. But with Daejon Davis and Josh Sharma sitting with foul trouble, the Beavers mounted a late charge to cut it to 48-35.
The Beavers came out of the locker room with renewed vigor, but they couldn’t get the margin any closer than 9 points. When they appeared poised to make an early charge, Josh Sharma ripped off a personal 6-0 run to push it back up to 15.
With 17:38 to go, Stanford suffered a scary moment. Oregon State star Tres Tinkle drove the baseline, knocking heads with Daejon Davis. The Stanford point guard picked up the personal foul, then was unable to pick himself up from the hardwood. He went back to the locker room and did not reemerge.
In Davis’ stead, much of the ball handling duties fell on freshmen Bryce Wills and Cormac Ryan. Wills promptly proceeded to get called for three charging fouls. Ryan, however, was more of a steadying influence. His return to the court was crucial tonight, even if the stat sheet didn’t show it.
Oregon State kept the game in reach for much of it. But in the late minutes, Stanford played lockdown defense, forcing 12 straight Beaver misses. Josh Sharma’s play was spectacular, and Marcus Sheffield added 8 late points to end any hopes of a comeback.
Oscar da Silva had a career high 23 for Stanford, to go with 9 rebounds and 7 assists. It was arguably his best game in a Stanford uniform. Josh Sharma contributed 20 points and 8 boards. Daejon Davis had 11 points in just 13 minutes, and KZ Okpala added 10, albeit on 2-9 shooting.
The Beavers were led by Tres Tinkle’s 16. Tinkle entered the game as the conference’s leading scorer. Stephen Thompson Jr scored 15, and his brother Ethan chipped in 14.
Stanford heads to Eugene to play Oregon on Sunday. At 5-5, the conference is still their oyster.
Comments
When da Silva scores, Stanford is hard to beat
Oscar picked up a lot of scoring slack for KZ last night, as KZ was uncomfortable versus the OSU defense and took it to trouble time and time again. With Daejon hurt (he did come back to the bench, by the way, so it’s not true that he didn’t reemerge from the locker room), Cormac Ryan played 33 valuable minutes off the bench. He didn’t score much (6 points), and he didn’t hand out many assists (just 1), but he did gather 7 boards and handled the ball through the OSU backcourt pressure with just 1 turnover. Stanford needed his ballhandling and he was steady in that regard.
By worldblee on 02.08.19 9:41am
Mike Montgomery does not like Stanford.
Every time I’ve watched him do a Stanford game shows zero love for Stanford. That OSU game, the refs were making horrible calls. At one point, Wyllis was up in the air and Josh Tinkle moved under him and they called a charge! Montgomery acted like that was the right call. Later Sharma goes straight up and the OSU player jumps into him and MM insisted it was a bad no call.
I don’t know what happened with MM and Stanford, other than he left Stanford for multi-million dollar contract with Golden State. But the guy is just unpleasant.
By Blackjoy on 02.08.19 9:00pm