No. 13 Arizona State gave Stanford a taste of the new normal in Pac-12 play this season, defeating the No. 11 Cardinal 60-57 Monday at Maples Pavilion.

It wasn’t pretty for a school trying to win its 15th consecutive league title.

The Sun Devils outrebounded Stanford by a whopping 44-22 — including 20 offensive boards — en route to their 13th consecutive victory. ASU (17-1, 6-0 Pac-12) remained tied with Oregon State in first place in the conference in front of a crowd of 3,546.

“When you give up 20 offensive rebounds, that’s a statement by them,” Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer said.

Try as it might, the Cardinal (13-5, 5-1) couldn’t overcome a 17-point halftime deficit against the first Pac-12 team to sweep the Bay Area schools on the road since USC in 2001.

As a result, Stanford already has the most defeats in a season since 2009 when it reached the Final Four. With a rugged league schedule ahead, the Cardinal might add to the total before it’s over.

VanDerveer went to a two-post lineup in the second half in an effort to match the Sun Devils’ physical dominance underneath the basket. But the Cardinal’s inexperienced forwards couldn’t make up the deficiency.

“We have play an A game the whole game against a team like that,” VanDerveer said. “We have to match people’s physicality.”

The Sun Devils won at Stanford for only the second time in 33 meetings, and ended a 16-game losing streak against Stanford. The last time ASU won at Stanford was 1984 when Sun Devils coach Charli Thorne Turner played for VanDerveer.

“About time,” she said of the streak-busting triumph. “This team responds so well to a challenge.”

Stanford never led, and got no closer than one point with 4:49 left. Yet, it had a chance at the end because of senior guard Amber Orrange.

After a torrid second-half rally, Orrange scored an off-balance layup with 12.3 seconds left to make it 57-55, ASU. The Texan made another layup with 7 seconds to play to keep it a two-point margin.

But Orrange missed a desperation half-court heave at the end after the Sun Devils made one of two free throws.

Arizona State guard Promise Amukamara led all scorers with 17 points, and added seven rebounds. Center Quinn Dornstauder and forward Sophie Brunner each added eight rebounds as the Sun Devils outscored Stanford 18-2 in second chance baskets.

Taylor Greenfield, Lili Thompson and Orrange scored 12 apiece for Stanford, but the Cardinal made only three of 13 from 3-point range.