Lodi News-Sentinel

» NO. 5 USC FENDS OFF CAL SURGE

- By Josh Dubow

BERKELEY — With Sam Darnold and Southern California’s usually potent offense struggling to finish drives, the defense kept getting the ball in good positions for the Trojans.

Fifth-ranked USC forced four of its six turnovers in the fourth quarter to set up a touchdown run by Stephen Carr and a TD pass by Darnold, and the Trojans won their 13th straight game by pulling away late for a 30-20 victory over California on Saturday.

“We preach it all the time,” defensive coordinato­r Clancy Pendergast said. “Turnovers are something we made a big emphasis on in the offseason. As much as we can, get our offense the ball back. The best place for us is on the sideline, so the more we can be over there the better.”

Jack Jones intercepte­d two passes, Josh Fatu and Christian Rector each forced fumbles on sacks and Chris Hawkins and Ykili Ross added picks to give USC (4-0, 2-0 Pac-12) its 14th straight win in the series against the Golden Bears (3-1, 0-1).

But this was one of the tightest matchups in years as the game was tied early in the fourth quarter before USC took over on the defensive end after Chase McGrath’s third field goal put the Trojans up 16-13.

“We came in at halftime, took a deep breath, made some changes and said, ‘Hey, let’s elevate our level of play,”’ coach Clay Helton said. “I thought everybody, the whole team, elevated our play in the second half.”

Fatu knocked the ball out of Ross Bowers’ hand and Uchenna Nwosu recovered the fumble at the 3. Carr ran it in two plays later from the 2 to make it 23-13. Ykili Ross then intercepte­d Bowers’ pass on the next possession, setting up Darnold’s 4-yard TD pass to Deontay Burnett that put away the game.

“It’s hard to win when you keep giving the other team the ball,” Bowers said.

Darnold threw for 223 yards and two touchdowns but also had an intercepti­on as Cal’s defense forced him out of the pocket numerous times.

“I felt a little bit of pressure,” Darnold said. “I think it’s mostly our fault for not connecting on some of those deep balls and taking advantage of those opportunit­ies when they come our way.”

Bryce Love runs for 263 yards to lead Stanford past UCLA

STANFORD — Bryce Love didn’t put up much of a fight to stay in and take a shot at Stanford’s school record for rushing.

The Pac-12’s top running back was even more hesitant to take credit for what he did to keep the Cardinal’s lengthy win streak against UCLA going.

Love rushed for a career-high 263 yards and a touchdown to pad his conference-leading total, third-string quarterbac­k K.J. Costello came off the bench and threw for two touchdowns and ran for another as Stanford beat UCLA 58-34 on Saturday.

“I try to take pride in seeing things before it happens, being able to read blocks and taking it to that second level of seeing blocks that haven’t really happened yet,” Love said. “Trying to set things up like that is big with me. I’m just taking what’s there.”

Cameron Scarlett scored three touchdowns and Jet Toner kicked three field goals to help the Cardinal (1-1 Pac-12, 2-2) win their 10th straight over the Bruins after losing starting quarterbac­k Keller Chryst to an injury in the first quarter.

Ryan Burns replaced Chryst for one series and made two other brief appearance­s but it was Costello who directed Stanford’s offense most of the night. The redshirt sophomore had a 9-yard touchdown run in the first half then had scoring throws of 15 yards and three yards in the second half, the first two of Costello’s career.

Costello finished 13 of 19 for 123 yards to outduel UCLA’s Josh Rosen.

 ?? WALLY SKALIJ/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? USC cornerback Jack Jones, right, returns an intercepti­on as Cal quarterbac­k Ross Bowers is knocked down by LB Cameron Smith on Saturday in Berkley.
WALLY SKALIJ/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE USC cornerback Jack Jones, right, returns an intercepti­on as Cal quarterbac­k Ross Bowers is knocked down by LB Cameron Smith on Saturday in Berkley.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States