USC’s new GM convinced Trojans are ‘sleeping giant’ of college football

Chad Bowden is convinced he can help make USC the “most aggressive” college football program in the NIL era, and he sees no potential conflict with Lincoln Riley. “We’re all in this together.” (USC Athletics)
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — When he lived in Los Angeles before, Chad Bowden worked at one point as a telemarketer. He was 18 at the time, making calls for a Google ad services company based out of the Flynt Building in Beverly Hills. Every day, hundreds of times per day, people on the other line would find colorful ways to share how unhappy they were to hear from him.
It was a thankless job. For a while, it wore him down emotionally. But “it was the greatest experience,” he says.
Turns out, as Bowden learned later, it was perfect training for a career in major college football.
“Because I’m so used to people telling me no,” Bowden says, “and trying to get them to say yes.
That conviction is part of the reason why Bowden has risen so quickly through the front-office ranks and why USC made him one of the highest-paid personnel directors in the nation in late January, plucking him for Notre Dame with a seven-figure salary.
But at USC, he hasn’t had to do much convincing in his first six weeks. Since his first conversations with coach Lincoln Riley and athletic director Jennifer Cohen, it was made clear to Bowden that they believed in his vision for what USC could become — and would provide the resources to make it happen.
Chad Bowden calls Jen Cohen the best AD in the country, and “a friggin’ animal.”
Bowden explained Cohen basically landed him with her initial video call, “the best two-hour conversation,” he said. “She’s a phenomenal recruiter, but she’s been even better since I’ve been here. She’s the best I’ve ever been around. The best!”
Those factors weren’t always in his full control at Notre Dame.
“I knew I was coming to USC when, in an hour’s time span, I spoke to Jen and Lincoln and had voiced my aspirations and what I believe college football is going to be and how aggressive I’d like to be in that new era,” Bowden said. “They shared a lot of the same thoughts as I did.”
“That’s a huge reason as to why I chose to leave a great situation. Because I felt like this was better.” Bowden also added that Cohen basically landed him for USC with her initial video call, “the best two-hour conversation,” he said. “She’s a phenomenal recruiter, but she’s been even better since I’ve been here. She’s the best I’ve ever been around. The best!”
His arrival at USC has since been heralded as one of the biggest moves of the college football offseason to date. But while Cohen and Riley have raved about their new general manager, no one seems happier about these new circumstances than Bowden.
Every morning, he says, he looks into his closet stocked with cardinal and gold apparel and has to pinch himself.
“I always felt like USC was the sleeping giant of college football,” Bowden said, “and I remember thinking if I ever got that opportunity, deep down, I’d want to take it because I know what this place can do.”
He’s been thrilled with Cohen, whom he called both “a friggin’ animal” and the “best [athletic director] in the country.” He’s overjoyed with Riley, whom he says “can do it all,” including grilling up a mean balsamic steak, one Bowden was still thinking about weeks later.
Where there were concerns in the past about USC having enough resources to compete with other blue bloods, Bowden says he has no such worry.
USC “won’t be slowed down” by the new era of revenue sharing, he assured. And its NIL approach would be among “the most aggressive” in the country.
“USC has everything,” he says. “There’s not one thing that this place doesn’t have. This is the place to be. There’s nothing. I keep hearing about, it’s hard or it’s tough or whatever. I’ve been to some different places. I walk around (here) every day and I’m like, ‘Man, this is incredible.’”
What USC football lacked was a vision — and the necessary infrastructure — to keep up in the incoming era of revenue-sharing in college football. But since Bowden’s arrival, USC has put a tremendous amount of trust in its new general manager to fill in those blanks.
That’s led naturally to questions about the dynamics around the new general manager role. Bowden “technically reports” to both Riley and Cohen. But he shrugged off any suggestion of a potential “power struggle”.
“We’re all in this together,” Bowden said. “I’ve always viewed it that way.”
Already, the plans Bowden laid out in those calls with Cohen and Riley are starting to come to fruition. Bowden has stocked the front office with rising star personnel staffers that he worked with at both Notre Dame and Cincinnati, three of which — Dre Brown, Max Stienecker and Weston Zernechel — Bowden said were general managers in their own right.
The focus since has almost entirely been on the recruiting trail, where in recent years, Riley has spent a lot of time chasing big-time prospects outside of the state, many of whom ended up flipping to local schools late in the process. But that approach has been scrapped since Bowden’s arrival, as USC now plans to focus most of its effort on recruiting Southern California.
“Back when national championships were won here, when Rose Bowls were won here, you know, you look back at Pete Carroll’s classes — ‘02, ‘03, ‘04 — over 80% of the recruiting classes were from the state of California,” Bowden said. “History repeats itself. It always does. And if you look into the fine details of how programs are built and how the place was built and when success had happened, that was a key part of USC being on top. My plans and my vision is to bring that back and take care of the state.”
It’s an important time to start seriously recruiting the state, considering the wealth of talent in the 2026 class. Bowden said he believes it’s “the best class that California has had in two decades.”
With that in mind, he has spent the better part of the past 30 days dropping by local high schools and meeting with the sport’s local powerbrokers. He prefers to say he’s “enhancing” those local ties, rather than “restoring” them; though, it’s clear in recent years that they’d faded.
“We’re going to take care of those people and they’re going to know that we’re here,” Bowden said. “That’s not done over one call. That’s not a text message every day. It’s done through consistent communication and action.”
A new general manager and new vision won’t change a program overnight on their own either. But as Bowden sees it, USC is “a lot closer than people think.”
As for the remaining distance? Bowden seems content to carry USC himself.
“I’m gonna give every ounce of me to whatever is necessary for USC to win,” Bowden said. “Whatever this place needs, I’m gonna do it.”
latimes.com
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Chad Bowden and staff appears to have the juice to turn one of our weakest facets into one of our strongest. The confidence, the focus, and seems to square his shoulders to challenges he’s inheriting. He has some hurdles as we’ve discussed here with frustration over the last several years. We’ve had some pretty bad press nationally covering the usual topics like disinterest in defense ( I think solved), a soft program approach, game management issues, and of course LRs recruiting limits ( not focusing in CA, line positions, etc). Chad Bowden really needs some help here. We talk about… Read more »
The time seems to be now for USC football. We finally have more sincere momentum because of all the recent changes/upgrades in Trojan football for the better. What seemed like a gift from OU when Riley first came aboard turned out to be quite a sticky wicket that Jen Cohen has done all in her power to unravel. That woman is on her way to being USC’s best AD ever, if she isn’t already despite such a short time in her crucial role. If LR can now step up to the plate with all this extra help around him, and… Read more »
They say that under this new administration that they keep on hiring, they are going to bring in a lot of players this year because you can now have 105 people on scholarship as opposed to 85 previously. It’s supposed to be one of the biggest classes SC has ever had. Of course, you want to get the best players out there that want to come to SC. But in this situation, it’s important to have analysts who are really good at evaluating talent and seeing potential. They say that they are probably going to bring in 30 or 31… Read more »
As you point out, insightful “evaluation” is key. Star assignments are more like rough, easily visible evaluation signals. Going to combines, observing games, and watching miles of tape are great. Gotta do it. But we all quickly “see” the best players. They simply stand out. But the truth is, that’s only the tip of the iceberg. Nothing earth-shattering about my observation there. But finding out what type of person the prospect is and what makes him tick is the key that unlocks the physical talent and performance probabilities. Then comes putting him in the right spot on the field, something… Read more »
Agreed….the best players do stand out. But many players have reached their highest potential in their senior year of high school while others haven’t even come close to maturing as a high school senior. I remember when I was coaching, we had one kid that was about 3rd string and not playing much. Then I saw him do something on just one play and I said to myself that there is not another kid on this team that could have made that play as he did. I talked to our HC about it and he decided to move him up.… Read more »
When I was publishing SuperPrep, I spent a lot of time trying to uncover “sleepers” so I could bump up their rankings, individualize my product and make it more accurate. I would have hours and hours worth of conversations with recruiting coords, or highly regarded recruiting assts, and all we would talk about would be their “no name” or “sleeper” prospects. Everyone knows about the big names and they tend to stay high up on lists once they get there. That results in four and five-star players turning out to be busts because recruiting services end up overranking them. It’s… Read more »
SC is definitely going in the right direction
For 2026, 247 Sports has 29 five* and 379 four* players listed, 408 total. That’s a lotta tape and games to evaluate. So far SC has 11 commits, 1 five, 6 fours and 4 threes.
With Sam Darnold’s free-agent options expected to be thin, the NFL’s QB carousel is taking shape Charles Robinson (Yahoo Sports) — Matthew Stafford decided to compromise and stay put with the Los Angeles Rams. Now league sources are predicting a similar outcome with the Minnesota Vikings and Sam Darnold, who may be facing a weaker set of free agency options than anticipated. There is growing consensus that Darnold’s best option will be to work out a one- or two-year contract with the Vikings for $25 million to $30 million a season, giving the two sides an opportunity to either do… Read more »
USC men explode on UW 92-61 at Galen. They are now 15-15. This is their first win in six games. USC whipped up on the Huskies from deep, knocking down 15 of 26 from three-point range. The Trojans end the reg season at UCLA on Saturday (5 PM, Fox). The Bruins (21-9) beat USC 82-76 on Jan. 27 at Galen. The Bruins are 3-3 in their last six games. After beating 13-17 UW, USC will make the B1G Tournament if IOWA (15-14) loses to either No. 8 MICH ST on Thursday night or at NEB on Sunday. The top 15 teams… Read more »
There was plenty of buzz a few weeks ago when USC built out its new personnel staff. Chad Bowden shared some details about what that org chart looks like. Antonio Morales (The Athletic) — Assistant general manager Dre Brown, who was the director of player personnel at Illinois, will oversee the recruiting staff. Max Stienecker, who served as Wisconsin’s general manager last year, will be the executive director of player personnel and will work under Brown. Weston Zernechel, Addi Goodson, Skylar Phan and Aaron Amaama will also work on the recruiting side. Bowden brought Zaire Turner from Notre Dame, where… Read more »
Chad Bowden knows how to prevent what happened to USC recruiting last year Antonio Morales (The Athletic) — USC had a top-five recruiting class this time last year, too. Things fell apart during the summer, and the class finished 14th nationally. Bowden also lived through some high-profile flips during his time in Notre Dame’s personnel department — USC’s starting left tackle Elijah Paige is one of them. Bowden was asked how the program would try to prevent something like that from happening this cycle. “We’ll be very aggressive in recruiting guys that are committed,” Bowden said. “We’re going to be… Read more »
With most of this coming recruiting class from California, I feel better Bowman’s team & the coaches have a better chance to keep the recruits from bolting as NSD comes about. It also gives us the time to build relationships & trust with the players. I am counting on this making a big difference versus how it was the past two seasons.
The famous Pantry Restaurant in downtown L.A. closed last Sunday after being in business for over 100 years. Sad. I had a few great Pantry ham and cheese omelets back in my early ’70s USC days. RIP Pantry, a true legendary L.A. eatery!
Ate there once maybe 10 years ago or so. Great Ole Timey Cafe vibe.
Great place to wash away those fraternity party hangovers. ✌
Amen brother! Another example of stupid union leadership pushing their membership into a corner where it is win or die. The Pantry workers just died because ownership decided to close up. This is how Los Angeles and also California continues to implode. Sad.
Used to go there after staff meetings in downtown LA for Arthur Young & Co, CPAs from 1979-1984. Sometimes a group of us would not hit the place until after midnight, but the food was always good. It was a “go-to” place of mine, just like the original Tommy’s Burgers and El Tepeyak Cafe in East LA.
Ah, Tommy’s…. Two double chili cheese burgers and a bottled strawberry soda i grabbed from the big chest cooler. $2.25 was all it cost back then–amazing!
I think the unit cost at USC when I started school in 1970 was something like $67. Maybe just slightly more. Rent at the Sig House, which included meals, was about $130 a month I believe. That left a lot of money left over for local dives like The Vagabond, El Rey’s and Tommy’s, slightly more dollars to spend at El Cholo’s and the more expensive Moonshadows in Malibu on PCH which just burned down on Jan. 8.
Couple of my fraternity brothers would bartend at Moonshadows. Wouldn’t be surprised if you knew guys who did the same. Was sad to hear of it’s demise thanks to the Bass-Newsom fires.
When I started in ’76, I think the unit cost for undergrad had soared to $105!
The unit cost when I started in the Fall of 1973 was something like $76. I was fortunate enough to have earned some cash awards for my singing in high school that paid tuition for my first two years. I commuted from my hometown of Glendale, CA for both undergraduate and graduate school for a total of 6 years. My grandmother helped me with the last 4 years tuition and I worked part-time as an appliance repairman to pay for books, car gas and the trips to Tommy’s.
SC has lost a number of players through de-commitment but that might be a good thing.Some of those players are just mercenaries. They are in it for the money and not much else. Bear Alexander certainly was. Losing him was good for the program. Players want to get good money for their services and that is understandable. But when the player is in it just for the money, you’re probably going to waste time developing him only to have him go somewhere else next year.The time you spent with him is wasted if you never get the benefits of it… Read more »
007 have you ever taken a job because you needed the money? Some of these guys have families who need support, wife, kids, parents, siblings, grandparents. The pressure for them to make some quick money might be intense. The trouble is if they go for the short term quick bucks, in 4 years they may find themselves with no money, no degree and no career.
I am with Parcel on this one. Guys that come only for the money usually are more trouble than they are worth. Bear was an enormous Knucklehead, and a locker room cancer.He left behind a big stench. These players deserve to be paid their market values, but money shouldn’t be the only consideration. With Bowden making the calls, I am confident we will avoid the Bear Alexander of the future, and concentrate on guys that want to be hear, and get paid. Let the fools that played for 4 high schools in 4 years go to Oregon, Miami, etc.
“Bear was an enormous Knucklehead, and a locker room cancer. He left behind a big stench.”
Good call. He simply quit on the USC team when we needed him most and refused to play.
I wonder how he’ll do at ORE? I have no idea, but I’m glad he’s their problem and not ours. Addition by subtraction.
“Hmmm. I’m not sure I want to go in now.”

I wouldn’t want those guys on my team either. As you said, that’s up to Bowden to weed those guys out. I just try to understand the players side who may have immediate responsibilities weighing on him.
I guess that all depends on the player and the money he needs to live comfortably and the key word there is comfortably. If they are offering me $600,000 to play for a team I grew up loving which is close to home and in great weather and another team on the other side of the country offers me $700,000…..I’m a simple man……I live a simple life…..It doesn’t take that much to make me comfortable. And as you produce, that amount will go up. Now, if you want to live like the Sultan of Dubar then maybe you should go… Read more »
Ha! “The Sultan of Dubai!” Hilarious, P7!
The Athletic’s Stewart Mandel chimes in on spring game cancellations Q — With teams seeming to do away with spring games, or at least heading in that direction, why couldn’t they do closed-door spring games? I get coaches don’t want to lose players to the portal but wouldn’t it still benefit the players and staff to get a live game in? Mandel — Most teams hold scrimmages during the spring that the public never sees, and coaches will tell you they’re far more useful than the spring game. The spring game is primarily for the fans. Which is why I… Read more »
I don’t care that there is no Spring Game, never went to them. If it increases the chance USC loses some talent by having it, let it go. The most important goal in college football now is making the top 12 or soon to be 14 or 16. That will get you fan support. Why play a difficult game out of conference if you don’t have to especially late in the season?
Why play a tougher game late in the season? For the fans, that’s why. We’re the ones who make the game popular. I agree with Stewart, but not because he wants the spring game. I don’t care a lick about those watered-down, 3/4 speed competitions either. Plus, USC never could get anywhere near the amazing attendance like other big-time programs can. California just doesn’t work like that. But as far as scheduling goes, NEB one-sidedly pulling out of the TENN series is a great example of the wrong direction. Those games would have been great matchups. And the fact that… Read more »
So I’m guessing your great schedule would be open with Texas, then travel to Clemson and finish the regular season with Oregon on the road, UCLA and then ND, even if that meant key injuries and getting knocked out of the playoffs. I would keep ND but always play it in mid October. You don’t have to play Missouri St or Georgia Southern. instead play a low end Big 12 or ACC. Getting to the conference championship game and then the playoffs, healthy, is the most important thing.
Over-exaggeration will get you everywhere GT. TEXAS followed by CLEM as openers? That’s where you lost me. Very cute though. But leading with MO ST and GA SO is overdoing it a bit IMO. What a bore. We always criticize ALA for doing this stuff. Why us? Just because we play ND every year shouldn’t mean we can never throw in another out-of-conference big-timer. Isn’t that giving too much power to the Irish? I think so. Sometimes, ND isn’t even any good. Pete Carroll frequently beat them by over 30 points and only lost once to them. You just have… Read more »
I may have to take my GaSo alumna daughter to that early game at SC. She is such a loudmouth and swears like a sailor (gosh I wonder where she got that?), I ‘m afraid that she will embarass the family up there in those hi-roller seats under the press box where my Dad has tickets. Probably will need to go…. Hope we crush Gentlemen Clay….
Clay Helton seems to be at least a semi-hit in Statesboro, GA.
The Eagles gave Helton (20-19 over three seasons) a five-year contract extension in Feb, so he’s set now through 2029 and is making $1 mil a year.
Remember how we called him The Cat? Nine lives baby!
The 52-year-old Helton has led the Eagles to three bowl games in three years.
He has notable victories over Nebraska, App State, James Madison, and Marshall.
Yeah, mostly messing with ya. You are right the MO ST and GA SO openers is a bit much. The season really won’t start till mid to late September.
This debate about non conference schedule will continue I’m sure. I did think of something over night in your favor. If a team has a big game coming out of the gate that may light a fire under everyone in fall camp. But, if you have cupcakes till late September, fall camp may be a little lackluster.
USC’s Lindsay Gottlieb named Big Ten Coach of the Year Gottlieb has earned what she deserves, and the postseason has just started. Ahmad Akkaoui (247sports) — She has led the program to three straight 20-win seasons for the first time in three decades. Former Trojans coach Marianne Stanley won 23 games in 1991-92 and 22 games in 1992-93 before legend Cheryl Miller took over as head coach and led the team to 26 wins in 1993-94. All three teams made it to the Sweet Sixteen and two made it to the Elite Eight. Gottlieb has a chance to lead the team… Read more »
Bowden says it and I thought it these past two years after seeing LRs results in recruiting: USC won championships through Jones, McKay, Robinson & Carroll with mostly California athletes. And somehow it didn’t register in LRs brain who came in here determined to recruit players outside the State. We cannot blame Helton for this gaffe in ignoring California athletes. This was all LRs doing. He and he alone alienated local pipelines.
Jen Cohen, Chad Bowden and D’Anton Lynn all massively fill the gaps in LR’s coaching talent platform. He’s very good in some areas, very poor in others.
Cohen fully understands this and has done all she can do to help LR overcome his recent extremely tough times at USC by adding numerous experienced well-regarded people to redirect USC football and become a much more aggressive, dynamic program.
As was illustrated by Bowden’s recent statements, everyone’s all on the same page now, and that’s to aggressively remake USC into the elite football power we grew up following.
Music to my ears!
Yes, this is great news. However, I can’t help but to think about how SC is paying some $10mm a year for LR, and now we have to bolster recruiting and add employees as he hasn’t been very good at it? Huh?
This wouldn’t happen in a large public company. You carry the load or you are out!
In this case…..the program carries the load and then he is out.
There in the beginning of the NIL USC took a back seat to recruiting players using money to get them committed. Remember how many So Cal players visited USC and strung them along, only to sign with the school with the money bags available. Riley of course was slow in coming around, but then USC was slow in providing the financial means to compete for the 4 and 5 star So Cal players. All of a sudden USC now has the money, is using it to compete, and players are interested in coming, the 2026 class was turning this way… Read more »
To say that Riley was “slow in coming around” is the understatement of the year. Riley’s total worthwhile on-the-field accomplishments at USC in three full seasons amount to one thing — he brought along Heisman winner Caleb Williams. That’s it. When Caleb wasn’t on the field in 2022, USC couldn’t play worth a lick. The last two years saw Riley’s stock drop faster than overvalued public companies during recessionary uncertain global times. And to suggest that USC just lost players because of money isn’t true. USC got outrecruited many times because we had a noticeable lack of strong recruiters, an… Read more »
Like many on here say, he is just about out of excuses and I tend to agree. I am always the optimist with the highest expectations. It would really be great to see a coach of Riley’s caliber become the HC we all want him to be. Lets hope he continues to grow up like all us old farts on here.😂
In her sophomore campaign, JuJu Watkins has helped USC win the Big Ten regular-season championship and claim eight straight victories over AP-ranked opponents. This season, she became the first basketball player at the Division I collegiate, WNBA and NBA levels since 2000 to score 38 points, 11 rebounds, eight blocks and five assists in a single game. Watkins ranks 11th all-time at USC in career scoring with 1,604 points and was the fastest Trojan to score 1,000 career points in program history.