Insights from USC coach Lincoln Riley’s first week leading spring football
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — The first official practices of the Lincoln Riley era at USC are in the rearview mirror. So what have we learned about USC’s new regime through one week of spring football practice?
Williams’ Impact
Caleb Williams has seamlessly stepped into a leadership role. He might’ve taken a wrong turn into his first USC practice, but the Trojans’ new QB1 has looked completely at ease at the helm of his new offense. Teammates are already raving. His gravitational pull within the program is powerful.
“He’s a baller,” running back Austin Jones said. “He’s a leader. Most definitely, he’s an alpha.”
Those qualifications should come as no surprise after Williams smoothly took the reins from Spencer Rattler in the middle of the season as a freshman at Oklahoma. He’ll have the benefit of an entire spring and summer to establish himself at USC.
“He’s one of those guys who can walk into a room with people he doesn’t know and he’s kind of a chameleon, he can fit in in any place,” Riley said.
Higher Expectations
It’s far too early to say one way or another if Riley has changed the culture of USC football. That’s going to take a while. But judging by a week of comments from coaches and players about where the program stands at the start of spring, it’s clear the staff is pushing players to raise their own expectations.
Assistants were frank this week about how far their players have to go. Inside linebackers coach Brian Odom said his group was “nowhere near where it needs to be.” Others talked about players needing to adjust to a new mentality. Even with Williams, Riley said he’d identified “a lot of areas where he can improve as a player” and that the quarterback was “a long way from being the best player he can be.”
Raising expectations is only a first step. But it’s an important one.
Still Recruiting
Riley has added 13 transfers already, but USC is nowhere near done with the portal. With 20 players on their way out and those 13 coming aboard, Riley referred to his new team this week “as one of the most unique rosters in the history of this sport.”
If Riley continues raiding the portal as planned, it should be even more extraordinary by the fall.
The coach was clear this week that he’s expecting to add 10 or more additional transfers after the spring, while several others are likely to leave amid the fallout. It’s unclear where Riley plans to add, but quarterback and receiver are two positions he could hone in on.
USC has just two healthy scholarship quarterbacks this spring — “It’s not ideal,” Riley said — but could potentially get Mo Hasan back from a knee injury by fall. At receiver, assistant coach Dennis Simmons said USC “definitely needs to add talent.”
That’s probably also true on the offensive and defensive lines — and at linebacker, too. USC isn’t really in a position to turn down talent at this point.
Running Back Competition
Travis Dye has a prolific pedigree. But USC may not have a clear lead running back until fall. Spring reps at running back don’t mean much. Until it’s full contact, evaluating the backfield is impossible.
What we do know is that USC has more all-purpose talent now than it did at this point last season. That starts with Dye, who left Oregon for USC after Riley pitched him on “exposing everything I can do,” said Dye, who’s one of five Oregon backs to reach 3,000 rushing yards.
Both he and Austin Jones have shown early they are adept at catching passes out of the backfield; combined, they bring 150 career receptions to USC. That versatility should only be more of a weapon when five-star freshman Raleek Brown enters the mix this fall.
Riley’s approach at running back has varied over the years. Last season at Oklahoma, he used Kennedy Brooks as a three-down workhorse. This season, the backfield is shaping up for a more balanced approach.
USC added three transfers to help remake the receiver room, and so far all three have been fixtures in the two-deep to start spring.
Mario Williams is lightning quick. Brenden Rice is an impressive physical specimen. And Terrell Bynum falls somewhere in between. The question isn’t so much whether those new guys will play, but how many returners will factor in to the rotation.
Gary Bryant Jr. sets up for a play against BYU in Los Angeles Nov. 27. (Ashley Landis / AP)
Gary Bryant seems sure to carve out a role, while Tahj Washington has earned early praise. Freshman C.J. Williams clearly has the talent to make an impact. Kyle Ford, Michael Jackson III and Kyron Ware-Hudson will be fighting through the fall to get on the field.
That competition, Simmons said, “is as wide [open] as this field is.”
Room To Improve
Defensive end Korey Foreman and linebacker Raesjon Davis, the crown jewels of USC’s 2021 recruiting class, have a long way to go. They were two of the top 2021 prospects in the nation. But after disappointing freshman seasons at USC, both have glaring questions to answer as sophomores.
Neither has put his best foot forward yet. Foreman has been limited this spring with a knee injury, robbing him of crucial time to learn USC’s new defense. Davis has been healthy, but established this week that he’s “got some maturing to do,” according to linebackers coach Brian Odom.
USC desperately needs both players to develop ahead of next season. The jury is still out on whether they’ll live up to expectations.
Thin Up Front
USC only has 13 scholarship offensive linemen. That’s not ideal. Ty Buchanan‘s announcement Thursday that he was entering the transfer portal only exacerbated an already concerning depth problem up front. Of those 13, only eight or so are linemen USC would trust right now to play in a game.
That’s simply not enough depth to take into a season. With that in mind, the upcoming decision from five-star offensive tackle Josh Conerly Jr. looms large. A top-15 prospect, Conerly could make an immediate impact on a line with unanswered questions on the edges.
Virginia transfer Bobby Haskins was supposed to help, but he’s been limited to start spring with a foot injury.
Tuipulotu Leads
Tuli Tuipulotu is leading the way on USC’s defensive line. Shaun Nua spent last season coaching Aidan Hutchinson and David Ojabo at Michigan, two top talents in the upcoming draft. Asked if any of his new USC defensive linemen shared a similar mentality to either of those two, he didn’t hesitate.
“Tuli, right now,” Nua said.
It’s no surprise that Tuipulotu would stand out early in spring. The only question now is how Nua and defensive coordinator Alex Grinch plan to deploy him.
“He’ll be everywhere,” Nua said. “He can play everything, seriously.”
Bullock’s Progress
Calen Bullock is the only returning starter in USC’s secondary, but he’s nowhere near a finished product. A silver lining in a dark season, Bullock established himself as a future standout as a freshman. But Grinch hasn’t let the young safety rest on those laurels.
“You’re seeing a guy that has a little bit of confidence going into his second year, which you would expect for a guy like that.” Grinch said. “You see some speed elements, a guy that can run the show on the back end and make some communications that way. Still a young player.
“What’s he got to fix? He’s got to become a bigger athlete. The sport demands that of you. So he’s one of those guys that has to put on some weight, put on some muscle. He’s got to look like a second-year guy. The things that made him a good player, give him credit for that as a freshman. OK, well, as a sophomore, the evaluation changes.”
The rest of USC’s secondary should be completely different. The Trojans brought in transfer cornerbacks Mekhi Blackmon and Latrell McCutchin, and signed three defensive backs in its 2022 class, including the state’s top prospect, Mater Dei High cornerback Domani Jackson.
Answers At Kicker
Alex Stadthaus is likely to be USC’s kicker. Previously a walk-on, Stadthaus entered the transfer portal in December when he wasn’t sure if he could afford to forge on at USC without a scholarship.
But Riley came through, offering him one. Stadthaus, in turn, took his name out of the portal, making him the likeliest candidate to kick for USC this fall.
The Trojans also will be breaking in a new punter with Australian freshman Atticus Bertrams. They’ll do so, too, without the help of a full-time special teams coach.
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Colin Cowherd
@ColinCowherd
Sources tell me @LincolnRiley
first USC practice was flawless. One observer noted “Some are calling it the greatest practice ever on a college campus”.
I know Colin’s a friend of the program, but I am sensing a bit of sarcasm here. Obviously a practice in shorts and shoulder pads is not going to seriously earn that distinction. I think the commentary here is more, “pump the breaks on the hype machine.” Let’s not set LR up for failure. Psychologically, these spring practices are critical to reset the program culture and get these players used to new systems on both sides of the ball. But that doesn’t make them great practices. And if Colin was seriously crediting the “observer” and the people he has heard… Read more »
Colin Cowherd
@ColinCowherd
Sources tell me @LincolnRiley
first USC practice was flawless. One observer noted “Some are calling it the greatest practice ever on a college campus”.
Even the media love USC now.
When you have a HC & staff that will accept only a certain level of execution on the playing field, you know this Trojan program is building itself back up to top-10 top- 5 and ultimately top-3 every year, we’ll this is where the West Coast Flagship Football Program belongs!
In case you didn’t remember! USC, the Pac-12’s historic football power, is opening the 2024 season on Aug 31 against LSU on ESPN/ABC in the Vegas Kickoff Classic at Allegiant Stadium. USC and LSU have played only twice, splitting games in 1979 and 1984, and the Tigers will be making their first-ever appearance in Nevada. I was at the insanely loud (Tiger fans always chanting “We’re #1!) and raucous ’79 game in Baton Rouge won by USC 17-12. The LSU fans were super crazy and many were inebriated after drinking all day (along with many of us Trojan diehards as… Read more »
What does “nonce is incorrect” mean and if I log out and back in it becomes correct? Scratching my head over that one.
The 2022 NFL Draft is just a month away. To celebrate, The Athletic’s NFL reporters gathered for a virtual mock draft with each of them representing the team they cover. 11. Washington Commanders: Drake London, WR, USC Ben Standig: Washington would ideally trade down from this spot. With Pittsburgh quarterback Kenny Pickett still on the board, I have to think that chance exists in a real-world setting with a few QB-needy teams picking later in the first. That said, grabbing the 6-foot-4 London absolutely works for an offense lacking consistent production opposite Terry McLaurin. London wildly impressed in eight games for the Trojans —… Read more »
I wish I had the confidence the coaches have that they can solve the Oline group using the portal. I don’t keep tabs on the portal, but seems to me not many first string players will be available after Spring practice. I hope the leftovers we have can be trained up.
My biggest question has been who is going to coach special teams. They are so important to the overall team and LR hasn’t even named a ST coach.
Don’t take this to the bank, but I don’t think LR has a designated ST coach. When he was hired and started naming his coaches I remember one report that stated every coach would be involved.
Coaching by committee for ST. Perhaps a good idea, and to me it sounds like something the Cat would never think of. But then most things were beyond his imagination.