Sophomore Nico Hoerner tied a career high with four hits and was a triple shy of the cycle as Stanford clinched the series at No. 25 Oregon with an 8-5 win on Saturday afternoon at PK Park.

The Cardinal (22-6) added nine All-American accolades – Akash Modi: all-around, pommel horse, vault, parallel bars and high bar. Robert Neff added honors in the all-around, parallel bars and high bar while Andrew Misiolek claimed his first All-American honor on pommel horse.

Modi finished his career claiming the Nissen-Emery Award as well as adding two more NCAA titles as he added his second all-around title (87.900) and second parallel bars title (15.300). Teammate Robert Neff claimed his first NCAA title on high bar (14.850).

Akash Modi and Robert Neff claimed NCAA titles in the all-around, parallel bars and high bar while three different Cardinal garnered nine All-American accolades as the No. 2 Stanford men's gymnastics team took fourth at the NCAA championships.

Hoerner had Stanford's response. He led off the next half inning with a double. Quinn Brodey got him to third with a single, and Hoerner scored on a ground out from Daniel Bakst to put the Cardinal back up one, 3-2.

Oregon answered with a solo shot in the first, and tied the game with a single and double in the second.

The Cardinal got on the board in its first ups for the second straight day. Matt Winaker walked and Hoerner singled up the middle to start the game. Two outs later, it was up to junior Mikey Diekroeger, who brought both runs home with a double into the left centerfield gap.

Stanford (22-12, 7-7 Pac-12) won for the fourth time in five games and improved to 7-2 in its last nine contests. The Cardinal has won six straight over Oregon (23-12, 6-8) and is looking for its first sweep since winning the last three over the Ducks in 2016.

Hoerner singled and scored in the first, doubled and scored in the third, hit his first career home run in the fifth, and singled and scored in the seventh. He finished 4-for-5 with four runs and an RBI.

Oregon scored one in the home half to make it 8-3, but West Linn, Oregon, native Will Matthiessen came on in relief and stranded two Ducks. Matthiessen pitched into the ninth in front of some hometown fans, and gave way to senior Tyler Thorne. Thorne entered with two on, two out and a four-run lead, and sealed the series with a strikeout.

The Cardinal blew the game open with four runs in the top of the seventh. Sophomore Brandon Wulff led off with a double to right center and scored on a single from Winaker. Freshman catcher Maverick Handley scored on a wild pitch, Brodey knocked in another run with a sacrifice fly, and Duke Kinamon capped the scoring with an RBI single.

After back-to-back singles by Teaghan Cowles and Kristina Inouye, Whitney Burks hit an RBI-single down the right-field line to close the gap to, 4-3.

Stanford battled back, cutting into the Beavers' advantage in the following inning with a pair of runs on four hits. Sorenson homered to left field with one out to cut the deficit to, 4-2. It was Sorenson's second home run of the season.

With the score tied 1-1, the Beavers (24-18, 6-8 Pac-12) drew a pair of walks to lead off the fifth inning, Arriola connected on a 1-1 pitch that cleared the left field wall by inches to give Oregon State a 4-1 lead.

Next week, the Cardinal will compete in the second annual Pac-12 Conference Beach Volleyball Championships and Pac-12 Pairs Championships in Tucson on April 27-29.

"Beach volleyball venues have such individual character depending on the climate and sand depth, and it's important that our players have a much better understanding heading into the conference championships next week," added Fuller.

The Sun Devils clinched the dual with a win at the No. 2 position -- Stanford's pair of Ivana Vanjak and Payton Chang lost, 21-13, 22-20. Top pair Kathryn Plummer and Jenna Gray lost, 21-15, 29-17, to make the score 4-0. No. 3 pair Morgan Hentz and Caitlin Keefe were the only pair to force a third set for the Cardinal, but lost by a score of 21-18, 18-21, 15-13 to make the final score 5-0.

The Cardinal's (21-8 overall, 3-5 Pac-12) No. 4 pair of Catherine Raquel and Shannon Richardson lost a 21-13, 21-6 decision to give Arizona State a 1-0 lead. The Sun Devils (15-14, 3-2) doubled their lead by beating Chelsea Red-Horse Mohl and Kat Anderson in the No. 5 match by a score of 21-19, 21-14.

"It was a really valuable weekend for the team to compete in the heat of Arizona and gain some familiarity with the facilities for the Pac-12 Championships," said first-year head coach Andrew Fuller. "Both Arizona and Arizona State played well and we're excited to carry the experience into next week."

Next up for both teams are the Pac-12 Championships, which get underway Wednesday in Ojai, California.

The Golden Bears (18-6, 5-1 Pac-12) captured the doubles point for a 1-0 lead, but the Cardinal had been in this spot before. Stanford defeated California 4-3 in the earlier meeting on March 7 despite losing doubles.

Stanford honored its six seniors, Jackovich, Sophia Monaghan, Neushul, Cassidy Papa, Steffens and Gabby Stone, in a pre-game ceremony to commemorate their time on The Farm. Head coach John Tanner subbed out the seniors following Neushul's goal at the 6:00 mark of the fourth quarter for one final round of applause from the fans. The group has played a key role in helping the Cardinal to national championships in 2014 and 2015.

Stanford scored the last two goals of the third period to make it seven goals for the quarter and 14-3 lead heading into the fourth thanks to cage-rattlers from Neushul and Madison Berggren. The Cardinal then shut out the Spartans in the fourth while burying three in the San Jose State net, two from Neushul and one from Hannah Shabb.

Stanford extended its scoring run to 9-0 by putting away the first five goals of the third quarter en route to a 12-1 lead, capped off by Steffens' last goal with 3:20 remaining. San Jose State answered back with goals from Jennifer Liu and Dania Momen.

The Cardinal kept the Spartans scoreless in the second frame while getting two goals from Raney and one from Jackovich to take a 7-1 advantage at halftime.

Steffens' first two goals came within the first 90 seconds of the game, while Raney tacked on another to give Stanford a 3-0 lead with 4:47 left in the first quarter. San Jose State pulled within 3-1 on a goal from Klaudia Paradi with 4:17 remaining the period, but Katie Dudley answered back at the 2:08 mark to give Stanford a 4-1 lead heading into the second quarter.

Junior Jordan Raney matched Nueshul with four goals for the Cardinal (18-2, 5-1 MPSF), which will head to next weekend's MPSF Tournament as the No. 2 seed following UCLA's win over USC.

Stanford's seniors accounted for eight goals on Saturday. Maggie Steffens scored the first two goals of the game and finished with three, while Dani Jackovich added a second-quarter strike for the other senior tally of the afternoon

Caroline Lampl pulled out her first three-setter of the season at No. 5 to make it 3-3, before Arbuthnott capped the match next door.

Stanford captured the doubles point for a 1-0 lead before California took control early in singles play. Denise Starr and Karla Popovic collected a pair of wins at the top of the lineup, giving the Golden Bears a 2-1 advantage.

Saturday's contest was the latest in a long line of Stanford-Cal thrillers. It ended as most others have, with the Cardinal having now won 12 of the last 17 meetings against the Golden Bears (15-4, 8-2 Pac-12).

Stanford (18-2, 10-0 Pac-12) has locked up the No. 1 seed in next week's Pac-12 Championships. While the dual-match format is new, the Cardinal will attempt to repeat as conference champions when tournament play gets underway Wednesday.

Cardinal corner: Men's gymnastics place fourth at NCAA championships