Stanford Cardinal 4-2 overall • 2-1 Pac-12 Date Opponent Time • Result October 18, 2018 • 6 p.m. PT 8.31 San Diego State...... W, 31-10 Sun Devil Stadium (53,599) • Tempe, Ariz. 9.8 #17/12 USC*...... W, 17-3 ESPN • Dave Flemming, Brock Huard and Laura Rutledge 9.15 UC Davis...... W, 30-10 KNBR 680 AM • Scott Reiss ’93, Todd Husak ’00 and John Platz ’84 9.22 at #20/19 Oregon*...... W, 38-31 (OT) #RV/24 Stanford Cardinal (4-2, 2-1) KZSU 90.1 FM 9.29 at #8/8 Notre Dame...... L, 17-38 vs. 10.6 Utah*...... L, 21-40 Arizona State Sun Devils (3-3, 1-2) Director of Athletic Communications • Alan George 10.18 at Arizona State*...... 6 p.m. [email protected] • 574.340.3977 • @treeSIDjorge 10.27 Washington State*...... TBA GoStanford.com 11.3 at Washington*...... TBA Twitter • @StanfordFBall Assistant Director • Eric Dolan 11.10 Oregon State*...... TBA Instagram • @StanfordFBall [email protected] • 585.260.8322 • @EJDolan 11.17 at Cal*...... TBA Snapchat • StanfordFBall 11.24 at UCLA*...... TBA Facebook • StanfordFootball * Pac-12 contest • All times PT In-game notes • @GoStanfordNotes

12 • Twelve days after its last outing, Stanford travels to Arizona State for a Thursday night Pac-12 Conference game against the Sun Devils.

.757 • Head coach David Shaw is 22-7 (.757) in October.

.714 • Stanford is 10-4 (.714) under head coach David Shaw when coming off a bye week.

.600 • Stanford is 3-2 (.600) under Shaw when playing on Thursday.

.783 • Stanford is 18-5 (.783) under Shaw when coming off a loss.

301 • No player in Stanford history ever had the type of day that senior running back Bryce Love did in 2017 when he set a single-game school record for 301 yards rushing and three to help the Cardinal beat Arizona State, 34-24. Love’s total gave him 1,088 yards overall, the third FBS player since 2004 to eclipse the 1,000-yard mark in his team’s first five games.

2011 • Since Shaw’s first season in 2011, Stanford’s ... • 77 wins represent the winningest stretch in program history • 77 wins ranks sixth nationally • .762 winning pct. ranks eighth nationally • .675 road winning pct. ranks 12th nationally • .773 conference winning pct. is the best of any Pac-12 program • 51 conference wins are the most of any Pac-12 program

89 • Stanford’s 89 wins this decade rank fifth nationally and the most of any private school, ahead of TCU (78), USC (77) and Notre Dame (76).

51 • With a Sept. 22 victory over Oregon, head coach David Shaw earned his 51st Pac-12 win, tying him with Washington’s James Phelan (1930-41) at 15th for most conference victories. Shaw needed only 65 games to achieve 50 conference wins, tied for second-fastest in Pac-12 history (USC’s Pete Carroll reached the 50-win mark through 60 league games).

34 • Sure-handed senior wide receiver Trenton Irwin has at least one reception in 34 consecutive games, a streak that ranks eighth nationally.

2.0 • Sophomore cornerback Paulson Adebo ranks third nationally -- and first among Pac-12 players -- with 2.0 passes defended/game.

8 • Senior wide receiver JJ Arcega-Whiteside ranks third nationally -- and first among Pac-12 players -- with eight receiving touchdowns. Dating to the 2017 regular season finale against Notre Dame, Arcega- Whitside has 12 receiving scores over the past nine games.

14.13 • Junior quarterback K.J. Costello ranks 17th nationally -- and third among Pac-12 players -- with 14.13 yards/completion. Costello is third among Pac-12 quarterbacks with 8.85 yards/attempt.

.857 • Junior kicker Jet Toner’s .857 field goal percentage ranks second among Pac-12 players.

0.58 • Fifth-year senior outside linebacker Joey Alfieri ranks sixth among Pac-12 defenders with 0.58 sacks/game.

253 • Senior inside linebacker Ryan Beecher was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma on Dec. 21, 2017. His final chemotherapy session came on June 4, 2018, and he returned to action in Stanford’s season opener against San Diego State on Aug. 31, 2018, a span of 253 days after his diagnosis. Series History

Series: Stanford trails, 14-17 (.452) At Arizona State: 5-11 (.313) First meeting: 1978 at Arizona State - Stanford 21, Arizona State 14 Last meeting: 2017 at Stanford - Stanford 34, Arizona State 24 Last Stanford win: 2017 at Stanford - Stanford 34, Arizona State 24 Last Arizona State win: 2014 at Arizona State – Stanford 10, Arizona State 26 Longest Stanford win streak: 4 (2009-2013) Longest Arizona State win streak: 5 (1981-1985) Largest Stanford victory: 51-28 (2001 at Stanford) Largest Arizona State victory: 65-24 (2002 at Arizona State) Series streak: Stanford – W1

1981 • In one of the of the greatest offensive shootouts in program history, Stanford rolled up a school-record 693 yards in total offense, but dropped a wild, 62-36, game to the Sun Devils at Stanford Stadium. The two teams combined to break five NCAA and 11 Pac-10 records in the game, including NCAA marks for combined total offense (1,436 yards and passing yardage by two teams (1,092). John Elway completed 10-of-17 passes for 270 yards and three touchdowns before leaving the game with 8:10 left in the second quarter due to a concussion and sprained index finger. Backup Steve Cottrell came off the bench to complete 21 passes for 311 yards. Darrin Nelson set a Stanford-record for receiving yardage with 237 yards on nine catches.

1989 • Brian Johnson hooked up with Jon Pickney for an 83-yard pass in the third quarter, but Stanford fell in Tempe to the Sun Devils, 30-22. The reception ranked as the seventh longest in school history.

1993 • Ethan Allen broke loose for an 82-yard touchdown run down the left sideline in the second quarter, which went down as the sixth-longest run in program history. Stanford went on to lose, 38-30.

1994 • Damon Dunn returned a second-quarter kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown to become the second player in school history to return a kickoff 100 yards for a score, joining Bob Bryan, who accomplished the feat against USF in 1950. At the end of the day, Jon Baker’s 38-yard field goal with 0:06 remaining gave Arizona State a 36-35 victory.

1999 • Todd Husak threw four touchdown passes in a 50-30 victory over the Sun Devils in Tempe.

2001 • Randy Fasani threw four touchdown passes in a 51-28 Cardinal triumph at Stanford Stadium.

2005 • Mark Bradford caught nine passes for 185 yards and two touchdowns during a 45-35 win for the home team in Stanford Stadium. The receiving performance was the 10th-best in school history.

2009 • Andrew Luck completed 17 of 28 passes for 236 yards while rushed for 127 yards on 25 carries to pace Stanford to a 33-14 victory, ending the Sun Devils four-game winning streak in the series. Stanford collected 473 yards of offense and held the Sun Devils to 290 yards.

2010 • Andrew Luck threw for 292 yards and engineered a long fourth-quarter scoring drive to set up Owen Marecic’s second one-yard touchdown dive, lifting Stanford to a defense-dominated 17-13 win over Arizona State. Luck guided Stanford 85 yards in 10 plays to set up Marecic’s bulldozing touchdown run with just over five minutes left. The defense came back out and held, and the offense was able to grind away the final four minutes to give the Cardinal its first win in Tempe since 1999.

2013 • In the regular season matchup, Tyler Gaffney ran for 95 yards and two touchdowns, Anthony Wilkerson added 68 yards and another score, and No. 5 Stanford started strong and struggled late in a 42-28 victory over No. 23 Arizona State. Stanford led 29-0 at halftime and 39-7 through three quarters. The Cardinal scored twice in the air and three times on the ground, forced two interceptions, blocked two punts, tallied 10 tackles for loss and recorded three sacks. Later in the season, Gaffney ripped off 138 yards and three touchdowns on the ground, including a 69-yard scamper on the game’s third play from scrimmage, sending Stanford to a fourth straight BCS bowl game after a 38-14 win at Arizona State in the Pac-12 title game. Kevin Hogan threw for 102 yards during a 99-yard scoring drive in the fourth quarter to put the game out of reach.

2014 • No. 17 Arizona State raced past No. 23 Stanford, 26-10, as the Sun Devils scored the most points allowed by the nation’s top-rated defense through the season’s first seven games. The Cardinal was shut out in the opening 30 minutes for the first time in 87 games while managing 288 total yards. Stanford finally found a spark on offense early in the third quarter, moving 63 yards in five plays for Patrick Skov’s 1-yard touchdown run that cut it to 20-10. The Cardinal would get no closer.

2017 • On a record-setting day for Bryce Love, Stanford coach David Shaw had a difficult time deciding which of the junior running back’s runs was his favorite. There was the 61-yard touchdown in the first quarter on Love’s second carry of the afternoon, followed up not long after by a 43-yard score in the second. Or the 59-yard burst through the middle in the third. No player in Stanford history has ever had the type of day that Love did when he set a single-game school record for 301 yards rushing and three touchdowns to help the Cardinal beat Arizona State, 34-24. Love’s total gave him 1,088 yards overall, the third player since 2004 to eclipse the 1,000-yard mark in his team’s first five games.

2 Offense

96 • Stanford’s offense returned over 96 pct. of its total scoring from 2017 (435 of 453 points).

19,341 • Stanford has rushed for 19,341 yards since 2011, 20th-best nationally. That’s over 13.6 trips across the Golden Gate Bridge.

154 • Stanford has scored in 154 consecutive games, dating to Nov. 11, 2006.

19 • Stanford has won 19 of its past 22 games when scoring first. Stanford has won five of the past seven regular season games when its opponent scored first.

200 • Stanford has rushed for 200 or more yards in nine of its past 27 games (9-0 in those games).

73 • Stanford has recorded at least one rushing touchdown 73 times in its past 82 games. Stanford has won 34 of its past 42 games when recording at least one rushing touchdown.

48 • Stanford has 48 rushing touchdowns in its past 24 games.

1.95 • Stanford has 197 rushing touchdowns in David Shaw’s 101 games as head coach, an average of 1.95/game.

32:14 • At 32:14, Stanford’s average time of possession per game since 2011 ranks seventh nationally. The average millennial spends over 32 minutes a day on Instagram.

1,000 • Senior wide receivers Trenton Irwin (1,337) and JJ Arcega-Whiteside (1,701) each have over 1,000 career receiving yards.

3 • Three Cardinal -- Trenton Irwin (100), JJ Arcega-Whiteside (103) and Kaden Smith (120) -- had 100 or more yards receiving against Utah (Oct. 6), a first for Stanford since Oct. 10, 1998 (vs. Oregon State).

120 • Junior Kaden Smith’s career-high 120 yards receiving against Utah (Oct. 6) were the most by a Stanford tight end since Zach Ertz’s 134 vs. Cal in 2012.

18.0 • With 18.0 yards/reception, Arcega-Whiteside ranks sixth nationally.

6 • Arcega-Whiteside had six touchdown receptions over a two-game stretch from the 2017 bowl game to the 2018 opener (three vs. TCU, three vs. San Diego State). That tied Ken Margerum for the most receiving touchdowns in consecutive Stanford games, set in 1980 with quarterback John Elway on the delivering end (two at Washington State, four vs. Oregon State).

226 • Arcega-Whiteside’s 226 receiving yards against San Diego State were the third-most in program history. It was the fifth time a Cardinal receiver eclipsed 200 yards receiving.

2 • Arcega-Whiteside has at least two catches in 18 straight games.

9 • Arcega-Whiteside’s nine receiving touchdowns in 2017 were the most since Ty Montgomery’s 10 in 2013. With 22 career receiving scores, Arcega-Whiteside is fourth on the program’s all-time list.

44.8 • Arcega-Whiteside’s 48.4 pct. catch rate on deep passes (20+ yards) was the third-highest nationally among wide receivers in 2017.

10 • Junior quarterback K.J. Costello’s 10 touchdown passes were second-most by any quarterback in the Shaw era through the season’s first four games (Andrew Luck had 11 in 2011, Kevin Hogan had eight in 2014).

2,833 • Stanford’s 2,833 rushing yards in 2017 ranked fourth in program history.

5.902 • Stanford’s 5.902 rushing yards/attempt in 2017 ranked first in program history.

32.4 • Stanford’s 32.4 points/game in 2017 ranked eighth in program history.

30 • Stanford has averaged 30 or more points in four of head coach David Shaw’s nine seasons.

58 • Stanford’s 58 points scored against UCLA in 2017 was the 19th-highest output in program history.

405 • Stanford’s 405 rushing yards against UCLA in 2017 was the fourth-highest total in program history.

656 • Stanford’s 656 total yards against Rice in 2017 were the seventh-most in program history.

2,507 • Senior Cameron Scarlett and senior Bryce Love combined for 2,507 rushing yards in 2017, as the top rushing tandem in program history returns for the 2018 campaign.

3 Defense • Special Teams

106 • The Cardinal has at least one tackle for loss in each of its past 106 contests.

305 • Stanford leads the nation with 305 sacks since 2011.

30 • Stanford has allowed fewer than 30 points 68 times in its past 79 games.

200 • Stanford has allowed 200 or more rushing yards only 16 times under head coach David Shaw.

121.3 • Stanford has allowed only 121.3 rushing yards/game since 2011, a figure that ranks fourth nationally.

352.3 • Stanford has allowed only 352.3 scrimmage yards/game since 2011, a figure that ranks 19th nationally.

15 • Stanford has forced at least one turnover in 15 of the past 16 games (the Cardinal is 45-6 under head coach David Shaw when winning the turnover battle).

1 • Stanford’s defense has at least one takeaway in 32 of the past 38 games (24 forced fumbles, 38 interceptions).

1 • Stanford has at least one sack in 86 of its past 94 games.

167:38 • Stanford went 167:38 without allowing an offensive touchdown during the season’s first three games (first quarter of the season opener against San Diego State and the final play of the season’s third game against UC Davis).

3 • Stanford held USC to three points during a Sept. 8 win. The Cardinal surrendered fewer than the three points against USC only four times previously: 16-0 victory in 1905 (first meeting between the programs), 16-0 win in 1934, 3-0 triumph in 1935, and a 13-0 blanking in 1941. USC had not been held to three points or fewer since Nov. 1, 1997, when the Trojans were blanked, 27-0, at Washington.

2 • Two of the top pass-breakup performances by a Cardinal defense under head coach David Shaw have been registered in the 2018 season’s first three games. Stanford had 11 against USC on Sept. 8, the most by any team under Shaw, and 10 against UC Davis, tying for second under Shaw.

12 • Sophomore Paulson Adebo ranks fourth nationally with 12 passes defended, the most by a Cardinal since Jordan Richards’ 12 in 2012. In the past 10 years, no defensive back has more passes defended in a season than Houston’s William Jackson III, who had 28 in 2015.

5 • Fifth-year senior inside linebacker Bobby Okereke has five or more tackles in 17 of the past 19 games.

94 • Okereke’s 94 tackles last season were tops among Cardinal returners, and the most by any returning player since 2008.

16 • Fifth-year cornerback Alijah Holder was targeted a whopping 16 times against UC Davis (Sept. 15), yet allowed only a long reception of 14 yards.

241 • Stanford has made 241 consecutive extra-point attempts, the second-longest streak in the nation (Auburn is first with 247). The streak dates to Stanford’s matchup at Oregon State on Oct. 26, 2013. During the streak: junior kicker Jet Toner – 68-68, Conrad Ukropina – 108-108, Jordan Williamson – 60-60.

117 • Toner’s 117 points in 2017 ranked fifth on Stanford’s single-season scoring list.

21 • Toner’s 21 field goals made in 2017 were the second-most in program history. Only three returning kickers had more field goals than Toner last season.

1.000 • Toner’s perfect 1.000 extra-point pct. in 2017 was the 13th in program history. Toner is one of three Cardinal ever with a 1.000 career extra-point pct.

44.6 • Senior Jake Bailey’s 44.6 career punting average ranks first in program history. Bailey posted the second-best punting season in school history last year, averaging 45.4 yards/punt. He led the Pac-12 and ranked seventh nationally.

39 • Senior Cameron Scarlett returned a school-record 39 kickoffs in 2017, and ranked first nationally with 12 kickoff returns of 30 or more yards.

2 • Stanford has allowed only two kickoff returns (27 yarder vs. San Diego State, 12-yarder at Notre Dame) on the season.

20 • Over the past five years, Stanford and Kansas State are the only two Power 5 teams to have 20 pct. of their kickoffs result in field position past their own 35-yard line.

30 • Stanford has not surrendered a kickoff return of 30 yards or more in its past 21 games, dating to a 2016 contest at Oregon. In seven of 14 games last season, Stanford did not surrender a single kickoff return yard.

4 CoSIDA Academic All-America candidate Bryce Love

1 • In 2017, senior Bryce Love ranked first among Power 5 running backs in: • Rushing yards - 2,118 • Rushing yards/game - 162.9 • Rushing yards/attempt - 8.05 [FBS record] (min. 215 attempts) • 100-yard rushing games - 12 • 20-yard rushes - 30 • 30-yard rushes - 24 • 40-yard rushes - 15 • 50-yard rushes - 13 [FBS record] • 60-yard rushes - 7 • Consecutive games with a 30-yard rush - 13 [FBS record] • Consecutive games with a 50-yard rush - 11 (Nov. 26, 2016 - Nov. 4, 2017) [FBS record] • Consecutive games with a touchdown - 12 (Nov. 26, 2016 - Nov. 18, 2017) • Consecutive games with a rushing touchdown - 11 (Aug. 26 - Nov. 18, 2017)

3,454 • Love ranks fourth nationally among active players with 3,54 yards rushing.

3,979 • Love ranks eighth nationally among active players with 3,876 all-purpose yards, a figure that ranks 11th in Stanford history (Toby Gerhart is 10th with 3,917 yards).

50 • Love has at least one rush of 50 or more yards in 14 of his past 19 games.

16 • Stanford has won 16 of 22 games in which Love has found the end zone.

41.6 • Love is averaging over 41.6 yards/scoring play during his career: 93-yard catch, 47-yard run, 48-yard run, 7-yard run, 56-yard run, 50-yard run, 49-yard catch, 10-yard run, 75-yard run, 51-yard run, 53- yard run, 69-yard run, 61-yard run, 43-yard run, 59-yard run, 68-yard run, 5-yard run, 67-yard run, 52-yard run, 1-yard run, 13-yard run, 9-yard run, 57-yard run, 9-yard run, 15-yard run, 69-yard run, 9-yard run, 22-yard run, 39-yard run.

2,118 • Love’s 2,118 yards last season were the most for an FBS player who returned to school the following year. Only one other player who reached 2,000 yards in a season and was eligible for the NFL draft decided to stay in school -- Northwestern’s Damien Anderson following the 2000 season. Christian McCaffrey in 2015 and Iowa State’s Troy Davis in 1995 both rushed for 2,000 yards and returned, but were not draft-eligible. Davis is the only player to appear twice on the NCAA’s official list of 2,000-yard rushing seasons in the FBS.

4 • Only four players have gone from runner-up one year to winner the next: Herschel Walker (1982), O.J. Simpson (1968) Glenn Davis (1946) and Tom Harmon (1940).

3 • With Love returning to The Farm for 2018, the past three Heisman Trophy runner-ups that returned to school the following season all attended Stanford -- Christian McCaffrey in 2016 and Andrew Luck in 2011 ( both ended up as top-8 picks in the NFL Draft). Love joins Toby Gerhart, Luck and McCaffrey as Stanford’s Heisman finalists since 2009 – his 2017 finalist nod marked the second time a Cardinal teammate from the same backfield of a previous finalist earned the recognition (Gerhart and Luck played together in 2009, Love and McCaffrey were on the same team in 2015 and 2016).

50 • Love recorded a rushing touchdown of 50 or more yards 11 times in 2017. Over the past five seasons, only one team had that many 50-yard rushing touchdowns in a season (New Mexico had 11 in 2016).

5.71 • After injuring his ankle last season on Oct. 14, Love averaged 5.71 yards/rush. That’s a better rushing average than 118 of the 130 FBS programs. During that stretch, five of Stanford’s six games were against teams ranked by the AP.

30 • In 2017, Love had a rush of at least 30 yards in each game: 62 vs. Rice, 75 vs. USC, 53 vs. San Diego State, 69 vs. UCLA, 61 vs. Arizona State, 68 vs. Utah, 67 vs. Oregon, 52 vs. Washington State, 35 vs. Washington, 57 vs. Cal, 31 vs. Notre Dame, 52 vs. USC, 69 vs. TCU.

24 • Love had 24 rushes that gained at least 30 yards in 2017. Wisconsin’s Melvin Gordon (21) is the only other player in the past eight seasons to have more than 16 in a season.

1,405 • Love had 1,405 yards gained on breakaway runs (15 yards or more) in 2017, the most among any returning FBS running back.

4.28 • Love averaged 4.28 yards after contact/attempt in 2017, the most of any returning Pac-12 running back.

301 • Love’s 301 yards rushing against Arizona State (Sept. 30) in 2017 were the most by any Cardinal, eclipsing Christian McCaffrey’s school-record 284 at Cal in 2016. Love broke 12 tackles and notched 175 yards after contact against the Sun Devils. The 301 yards was the eighth-best single-game total in Pac-12 history.

1,088 • Through 2017’s first five games, Love’s 1,088 rushing yards were the fourth-most by any player in FBS history -- Garrett Wolfe (1,181 in 2006), Marcus Allen (1,136 in 1981), Byron Hanspard (1,112 in 1996).

5 Program • Athletics • University

1 • Stanford has defeated at least one top-20 opponent on the road in seven of eight seasons under head coach David Shaw. Stanford had only one top-20 road win in the nine seasons prior to the start of Shaw’s tenure in 2011 (at No. 2 USC on Oct. 6, 2007).

13 • Shaw is one of 13 African-American FBS head coaches.

22 • Shaw is one of 22 head coaches currently coaching at their alma mater.

17 • Stanford overcame a 17-point deficit to post a 38-31 overtime win at Oregon (Sept. 22). It was the second-largest comeback win for the Cardinal since 1996 (trailed 21-0 in a 35-21 win at USC in 1999). Stanford has overcame a double-digit deficit in a winning effort 20 times since 1996, and six times under head coach David Shaw.

5 • Five Cardinal have completed work for their undergraduate degree: fifth-year senior Alameen Murphy, fifth-year senior Bobby Okereke, fifth-year senior Alijah Holder, fifth-year senior Isaiah Brandt-Sims and fifth-year senior Brandon Fanaika.

30 • Stanford’s 2018 roster includes student-athletes from 30 different states and one foreign country.

29 • Stanford’s 29 fourth- and fifth-year seniors are the most of any Pac-12 program.

7 • Stanford is one of seven schools to earn Division I Academic Progress Rate (APR) Public Recognition Award each of the past four seasons.

2 • Former Cardinal John Elway (Denver Broncos) and John Lynch () are NFL general managers. The other two schools with two NFL general managers? Connecticut and John Carroll.

42 • Stanford, which sponsors 36 varsity sports, has won at least one NCAA team title in each of the past 42 academic years, representing the longest streak in NCAA history.

142 • Stanford claimed five national team championships during the last academic year, increasing its overall total to 142, including 117 NCAA titles.

117 • The Cardinal leads the NCAA with 117 team titles.

24 • Stanford won the 2017-18 Division I Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup, extending its streak to 24 years of capturing the award presented to the most successful intercollegiate athletic department in the nation.

6 • Stanford is one of six programs with at least one national championship in football, baseball and men’s basketball. It is the only program with at least one national championship in football, baseball, men’s basketball and women’s basketball.

30 • The Stanford Concussion and Brain Performance Center is at the forefront of concussion and traumatic brain injury research, and is incorporating state of the art eye-tracking tests -- EYE-SYNC -- in all of its studies. The EYE-SYNC test is administered with customized eye tracking technology, called Dynamic Visual Synchronization Goggles. The eye tracking test lasts 30 seconds, and the results show the ability to focus -- a key problem after a concussion.

17 • Stanford requires students to declare a major before their junior year. Among the team’s upperclassmen, 17 majors are represented. Majors are: aeronautics and astronautics, communication, computer science, economics, history, human biology, international relations, Japanese, mechanical engineering, media studies, management science and engineering, political science, product design, psychology, sociology, symbolic systems, and science, technology and society.

2,040 • Of the 47,450 applicants -- the largest application pool in school history -- for Stanford’s class of 2022, only 2,040 were admitted. The admitted students came from all 50 states and 63 countries.

625 • There are more than 625 registered student organizations at Stanford.

13,000 • There are an estimated 13,000 bikes at Stanford daily.

96 • Stanford’s 8,180-acre campus is large enough to contain 96 Disneylands.

5 • The top five undergraduate majors at Stanford include: computer science, engineering, human biology, management science and engineering, and mechanical engineering.

24.8 • As of 2017, Stanford’s endowment eclipsed 24.8 billion.

17 • The Stanford community includes 17 Nobel laureates.

31 • Stanford faculty have won the Nobel Prize 31 times since the university’s founding.

4 • Stanford’s faculty includes four Pulitzer Prize winners.

2 • Stanford’s faculty includes two Presidential Medal of Freedom winners.

97 • About 97 percent of all eligible undergraduates live in campus housing.

700 • There are about 700 buildings on Stanford’s campus that incorporate approximately 15.4 million square feet.

1.1 • Stanford’s inner campus includes about 1.1 million square feet of shrubs, 143,000 linear feet of groundcovers, 43,000 trees, 25 fountains and more than 800 different species of plants.

150 • The 700-acre Stanford Research Park, created in 1951, is home to over 150 companies.

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