Not quite a blowout, though far from a
scare, No. 12 Notre Dame had a comfortable day against winless
Stanford.
Brady Quinn threw for three touchdowns, Darius Walker ran for a
season-high 153 yards and a touchdown and the Notre Dame defence
played its best game of the season in a 31-10 win over the Cardinal
on Saturday.
``I'm content with this game,'' Irish coach Charlie Weis said.
``First of all, the defence goes out there and gives them a long
drive and basically shuts them down the rest of the day. That's a
good thing. The offence I thought was fairly meticulous. It's not
about scoring 50 points; it's about how you feel about how you're
playing.''
Weis, who threatened the Irish with a long, hard bye week if they
didn't play well against Stanford _ which nearly upset the Irish
last season _ was pleased that Quinn was 27 of 37 passing for 232
yards, that the Irish rushed for 204 yards, converted on seven of 13
third downs and didn't have a turnover.
``You can sign me up for that most weeks,'' he said.
Despite being held to 226 yards total offence and the Cardinal
being held to a field goal on first-and-goal from the 4 early in the
game, Stanford coach Walt Harris found reason for hope.
``We have a lot of work to do, but we made some improvements, I
thought, offensively at times,'' Harris said. ``Defensively, I think
it still continues to get a little better. Special teams was
better.''
The Irish, who won their first eight games in 2002, are off to
their second best start since also starting the 1998 season 5-1.
Stanford (0-6) is off to its worst start since losing its first six
games in 1983 en route to a 1-10 season.
``It's extremely frustrating,'' Stanford quarterback Trent
Edwards said.
Quinn completed TD passes to Jeff Samardzija, Rhema McKnight and
John Carlson. It was the fourth time this season Quinn has thrown at
least three TD passes and the 12th time in his career.
``There aren't that many quarterbacks that can play the game the
way he plays the game,'' Weis said.
It was the second straight 100-yard game for Walker and his
second best game rushing. Walker, who also had six catches for 45
yards, rushed for 186 yards on 35 carries against Stanford last
season. The Irish finished with a season-high 204 yards rushing
against the Cardinal defence, which entered the game last in the
nation in rushing defence at 282.8 yards a game.
The Irish defence, which entered the game ranked 92nd in the
nation, held Stanford to a field goal through three quarters before
finally getting beat on a 57-yard halfback pass from Anthony Kimble
to Kelton Lynn 33 seconds into the fourth quarter _ the longest play
of the season for the Cardinal.
But the Irish defence played solidly, holding the Cardinal to 72
yards rushing and 226 yards total offence _ the fewest yards allowed
by the Irish this season. They held the Cardinal to three-and-out on
three straight possessions in the first half and sacked Trent
Edwards five times _ three by defensive end Victor Abiamiri, who had
four sacks against the Cardinal last season.
``He turns into a pass rushing demon when we go against them,''
Weis said.
The Irish, who needed a last-minute touchdown a year ago to beat
Stanford, took control late in the second quarter. They drove 68
yards in 2:26 to go ahead 14-3 on a 15-yard pass from Quinn to
McKnight with 29 seconds left in the first half. Quinn was 5-of-6
passing on the drive for 32 yards, completing a 15-yard TD pass to
McKnight. McKnight caught the ball at the 7, cut inside cornerback
Brandon Harrison and ran untouched to the end zone. It was his fifth
straight game with a touchdown.
The Irish then went ahead 21-3 by scoring on their first
possession of the second half. Walker scored on a 32-yard run, his
longest run of the season. Walker accounted for 65 yards on the
76-yard drive, with a 14-yard catch on a swing pass and 51 yards on
three runs.
The Irish added a 35-yard field goal by Carl Gioia and a
one-handed TD catch by Carlson.
``That was phenomenal,'' Weis said. ``I thought the ball was
overthrown, to tell you the truth. Of course when he came to the
sidelines I said, 'Two hands, please.'''
It was one of the few complaints Weis had, aside from Stanford's
long touchdown. But the Irish know they played well enough to keep
Weis happy.
``It really feels good winning a game and then having a bye
week,'' Walker said. ``We've got two weeks before we play again, so
it's going to be nice next week.''
© The Canadian Press, 2007