"We slipped on one ball and a guy had one shot," Cardinal coach Jeremy Gunn said. "I can't even remember Andrew [Thomas doing anything else the entire game. And yet we managed to hit a keeper in the face and miss chances even though we had enough to win it 5-1. Especially in the second half we thoroughly deserved to be winning the game never mind tying it up."

Ludwick made a turn to force Jimenez outside, but his inside foot slipped and the freshman fell to the turf. Jimenez used the space to fire his left-footed goal to the top left corner past a diving Andrew Thomas.

Camden Riley got a touch on it to Jonathan Jimenez, who was jostling with Cardinal defender Ryan Ludwick for position just above the box on the other half of the field.

Pacific (5-2-1) scored the winner in the 17th minute when Charles Brewah sent in a long ball from the right side.

The Stanford men's soccer team failed to capitalize on any of its scoring chances and Pacific took care of an early opportunity to beat the Cardinal 1-0 in a nonconference contest Thursday, ending Stanford's 21-game unbeaten streak.

Three minutes later Panchot had a chance from the center of the box, but his sweeping, right-footed kick sent the ball a foot over the crossbar.

In the 78th, it was redshirt senior Collin Liberty who came close to equalizing after Adam Mosharrafa headed it down to the top of the six. Gomez came off his line and Liberty's right-footed stab deflected off the goalkeeper's face and wide of the goal.

In the 63rd minute, Logan Panchot was the catalyst for a pair of chances. Zach Ryan headed in his cross wide and an ensuing loose ball in the box fell at Ryan's feet, but the striker's shot was saved by Pacific keeper Mateo Gomez.

Stanford managed 13 shots and put five on target and had its best flurries in the second half.

Pacific, which had five shots in the match, didn't manage another on frame after its goal until Cooper Riley tried from distance in the 86th minute. The Tigers' early tally, however, ended a Cardinal (3-1-3) stretch of seven consecutive clean sheets at home dating to last season.

"We've already tied three games," Gunn said. "We need wins. It's as simple as that. It's not going to get any easier."

The loss was Stanford's first since Sept. 23, 2017 at Saint Louis (2-0) and also its first home loss since Sept. 9, 2017 against Tulsa (2-0), snapping the program's home unbeaten streak at 12 matches.

"Tough to lose, but terrific day all-around," said Stanford men's coach Conrad Ray. "We are grateful to Menlo Country Club for hosting this great event. Wonderful competition and camaraderie and I hope we can do it again."

Cindy Oh from Cal birdied the par-4 first hole, but senior Isaiah Salinda from Stanford matched her to extend the match. Oh holed an 11-foot birdie putt at the par-4 18th to decide the outcome.

Each team won two matches and split two others, resulting in a 3-3 deadlock. By prior agreement between the coaches, it was decided the top squad from each school would play off for the crown.

The unique format pitted six mixed teams from each school in fourball competition and was a showcase for many of the top college players in the country, adding golf to the storied rivalry.

Stanford men see unbeaten soccer streak end at 21