San Francisco Chronicle

Stanford season could end with Pasadena parlay

- Jake Curtis is a freelance writer. Jake Curtis

Stanford might have to beat UCLA twice over the next two weekends to get to the Rose Bowl, and it’s possible the Cardinal will play their next three games at the Rose Bowl. Here’s the deal: To win the Pac-12 North Division and earn a berth in the conference title game, Stanford probably has to beat UCLA at the Bruins’ home stadium, known as the Rose Bowl, in a 3:30 p.m. game Saturday. Then, to get to the game known as the Rose Bowl, Stanford would have to beat the Pac-12 South champion Bruins again in the Pac-12 championsh­ip game six days later, Nov. 30, at Stanford, which would earn the home field by virtue of a better conference record.

Oregon could make things easier for Stanford by losing to Oregon State in a noon game Saturday, because that would assure the Cardinal a berth in the Pac-12 title game even if Stanford loses to UCLA, which already has clinched the South title.

But if Stanford and Oregon both lose Saturday, the Cardinal would play the Pac-12 title game back in Pasadena, because UCLA would earn the home field based on its victory over the Cardinal. And if Stanford wins that conference-title game at the Rose Bowl, the Cardinal would return to Pasadena for a third straight game for the Rose Bowl game Jan. 1.

Somewhere in there is a joke about a rose by any other name … The ‘Johnny Football’ phenomenon: With Collin Klein throwing three intercepti­ons in Kansas State’s 52-24 loss at Baylor, Texas A&M quarterbac­k Johnny Manziel moved within range of becoming the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy.

A few things make his Heisman run particular­ly intriguing: 1Manziel and Marcus Mariota both verbally committed to Oregon on the same weekend in June 2010. Four months later, Manziel decommitte­d and committed to Texas A&M, but you have to wonder which one would be Oregon’s quarterbac­k now if Manziel had signed with the Ducks.

Nobody — not Manziel, not his family, not anyone at Texas A&M — knows exactly who came up with the nickname “Johnny Football.” It seemed to surface during the summer before his senior season at Tivy High School in Kerrville, Texas, and gained momentum when he committed to A&M. The fact that the nickname seemed to appear out of thin air adds to the mystique.

Although he is called a freshman, Manziel will be virtually a junior academical­ly on the day the Heisman Trophy is awarded.

He enrolled at Texas A&M in January 2010, and redshirted last season while attending classes. Texas A&M’s fall classes for 2012 end Dec. 4, four days before the Heisman Trophy presentati­on. Penalty problem? Next time a coach says penalties killed his team, just chuckle.

UCLA has more penalties and more penalty yardage than any other team in the country, and the Bruins (9-2) have clinched a berth in the Pac-12 title game and are ranked 15th in this week’s Associated Press poll.

Furthermor­e, all but one of the nation’s six most-penalized teams have a winning record, a group that includes Oregon (10-1), Utah State (9-2) and Louisiana Tech (9-2) as well as the Bruins.

The combined record of the 10 most-penalized teams is 74-37.

 ?? Dave Einsel / Associated Press ?? How Johnny Manziel came to be known as “Johnny Football’’ is unclear, but he’s trying to trademark the nickname.
Dave Einsel / Associated Press How Johnny Manziel came to be known as “Johnny Football’’ is unclear, but he’s trying to trademark the nickname.

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