Stanford doesn't get a shot at running out the clock
UCLA FOOTBALL
UCLA holds the Cardinal to a field goal on a crucial fourth-quarter possession.
This was familiar . . . disturbingly familiar for UCLA .
Stanford had the ball and the lead with the clock ticking down in the fourth quarter. The Cardinal seemed content to hammer away at the Bruins' defense.
The situation played out painfully a month ago, when Fresno State held the ball for the last nine minutes in a 36-31 victory. But this time, the UCLA defense altered the ending.
The Bruins stopped Toby Gerhart a yard short of a first down, holding the Cardinal to a field goal. UCLA had a little more than two minutes left, which quarterback Kevin Craft used to take the Bruins on a touchdown drive for a 23-20 victory.
Asked if he thought about the Fresno game, defensive coordinator DeWayne Walker said, "You always have that in the back of your mind. I had to fight those demons so you don't think that way. It shows we're growing up."
Stanford, leading 17-16, took possession at its own 20 with 7:29 left. The Cardinal used Gerhart almost exclusively in moving to the UCLA 17, where it faced third-and-seven. Gerhart gained six, stopped by a gang led by linebacker Reggie Carter.
"I kept thinking, 'We've got to get them off the field,' " Carter said. "We couldn't let them keep the ball the rest of the game like Fresno."
Locked in
The Bruins, gave up 323 yards rushing to Oregon and fared only slightly better against Stanford, which gained 250 yards on the ground.
But unlike the Oregon game, the Bruins had fewer missed tackles, particularly from strong safety Bret Lockett.
Lockett nearly lost his job after the Oregon game. Walker was planning to use Glenn Love some, but the switch never came.
"I felt like Lockett, he was getting it done," Walker said. "If he would have played bad today, I would have yanked him. As long as he was playing pretty efficient, I thought it was good for his confidence."
Lockett finished with three tackles and forced a fumble.
"I had a mind-set this week that I was going to execute and not mess up like I did last week," Lockett said. "I took that real personally."
Missing the point
At least Stanford scored.
The Cardinal had been shut out in its last two Rose Bowl games, but Stanford arrived this time optimistic that with a 3-1 Pacific 10 Conference record and the momentum of last week's last-second, 24-23 win over Arizona that not only would there be points but also a victory.
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