What’s next for Caleb Williams? QB reflects on lessons from USC’s hugely disappointing season…
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — It’s only been two days since USC’s disappointing season came to a crushing conclusion against its crosstown rival, but Caleb Williams is already back under the lights. Cameras are rolling. A crowd is chanting his name. Ca-leb! Ca-leb! Ca-leb!
It’s the sort of scene USC’s star quarterback has grown increasingly familiar with through his second — and presumably last — season in L.A. as his exposure and expectations skyrocketed, a potent combination made all the more volatile by the Trojans’ second-half tailspin. Losing five of his last six games only ratcheted up the attention around the quarterback, challenging him in ways he’d never been challenged before.
By the end, as an ovation greeted him in the Coliseum tunnel after the loss to UCLA, Williams looked emotionally spent, worn down by an exhausting level of losing he’d otherwise never experienced.
A couple of days later and a couple of miles down Vermont Avenue, Williams seems, at least for the moment, like he’s rejuvenated. He smiles as a crowd of kids, gathered at the Challengers Boys & Girls Club in South L.A., roar upon his arrival, hanging on his every word.
He was once a Boys & Girls Club kid himself, he tells the crowd. He’s been coming to this particular club periodically for the last two years, to lead an anti-bullying campaign and also help however else he can. Recently, his mom even dropped off Halloween candy for the kids, each bag inscribed with a greeting from Williams himself.
Today, he’s here on behalf of his foundation, Caleb Cares, as well as Dr. Pepper, to hand out a giant $50,000 check as part of Dr. Pepper’s Tuition Toss. His job — helping two girls to throw footballs into inflatable Dr. Pepper cans — seems to elicit genuine joy out of Williams, who hadn’t found much of that over the previous six weeks.
Soon after he hands out the first $50,000 tuition check to the winner, Kamari, he calls up the runner-up, Julieta, to tell her Caleb Cares plans to match Dr. Pepper’s contribution with another $50,000 in tuition for her. As he hands her a giant check of her own, her dismay turns immediately into stunned elation.
Putting disappointment behind him won’t be so simple for Williams, for whom the spotlight has proven particularly harsh of late. Not only did USC fall well short of the goals its quarterback had jotted down in his phone before the season — a Pac-12 title, a Playoff berth, a national title, a second Heisman — but in the process, Williams’ every move was carefully picked apart under a microscope, feeding perceptions from the darkest dregs of college sports fandom.
When a tearful postgame embrace with his mom was captured on TV cameras earlier this month, the conversation continued for nearly a week. Some of the criticism was of his own making: In October, he clapped back at a trolling Notre Dame fan, boldly declaring himself “a lion” and noting that “everybody wants to be in these two 12.5 shoes right here.” Then, after the loss to UCLA, in what’s likely to be his last home game at USC, Williams avoided the media altogether.
Williams says he has tried to take speculation in stride, but anyone could see it has, at times, rankled him. Even so, he still dazzled on the field. Those close to Williams eagerly point out that his numbers — 303 passing yards per game, 3.4 total touchdowns per game — haven’t changed much from his jaw-dropping Heisman campaign of 324 passing yards and 3.71 touchdowns per game.
But however you frame it, even Williams won’t hide from the fact that this last season was nothing like the one before. The losing hit him especially hard.
“I’m still learning things I need to get better at,” Williams says.
He’s tried not to linger too long on the discontent, instead now focusing on the little things as much as he can — one day, one task at time — even as big-picture questions loom about his NFL future.
For the time being, Williams plans to tune those out. He’ll consider his options over the coming days, weighing pros and cons using the same process he and his father used to determine his transfer to USC, and spending any spare time with his bulldog, Supa, who has often been his best source of emotional support this season.
It’s certainly been an emotionally taxing year for Williams, and that’s before the painful churn of the draft process. But after mulling it over for 48 hours, the quarterback suggested framing his disappointing 2023 campaign in a different way.
“This was one of my most important years of playing football so far,” Williams said.
“I’ve never been in this situation, where I’m 7-5 and there are no playoff hopes at the end of the season. I’m dealing with it emotionally, dealing with it spiritually and physically. It’s been one of the most important years I think I’ve had. It’s tricky. I’ve had to have talks with [USC coach] Lincoln [Riley] — because obviously, I haven’t been through it — or with my family members or people like that, just how to deal with this and lead, how to stay the same person I was before the season or after our first loss or second loss. So it was different. It was a learning process.”
Among the lessons Williams has tried to internalize, he says, is how to maintain better control of his emotions. Though, as he explains himself, it seems he’s still torn on what to take from his experience.
On one hand, staying true to himself is “what’s most important,” Williams says, and that means wearing his passion — or heartbreak — on his sleeve. On the other, he seems to understand the subtext that soon enough he’ll be the face of an NFL franchise, one with an owner who might be conscious of his quarterback crying in plain view after a difficult defeat.
“There’s a time and a place for everything,” Williams says. “But I’m far from ashamed about showing my emotion after any of the losses this year. It shows truth. It shows care. All that. I’m getting better at it, showing it in the right place and the right time. But if I won a national championship or a Super Bowl years down the line — if I was winning, nobody would be saying anything.”
But that wasn’t how this season went for Williams, and there’s little reason to think another at USC would leave him better positioned for his future, no matter how much he’s hinted at that possibility.
His father, Carl, already started a firestorm when he suggested to GQ in September that Williams had “two shots at the apple” and might return to school “if there’s not a good situation” waiting for him in the NFL. Carl Williams has done plenty of due diligence on the matter since, taking meetings and speaking to whomever he could, across different sports, about how to maximize his son’s leverage. But no one around Williams seems to consider that a likely outcome any longer.
“Carl isn’t out there to beat the system,” said a person close to the family but unauthorized to speak publicly.
Williams, for the record, told The Times it’s still “a game-time decision” whether he declares for the NFL.
“There’s a time and a place for everything. But I’m far from ashamed about showing my emotion after any of the losses this year. It shows truth. It shows care.” — Caleb Williams on maintaining better control of his emotions
Sean Lewis just doubled his salary as Colorado’s OC by taking the SDSU HC job. He will be making $1.7 million next year.
I am sure he will love the weather more than Colorado.
MAN ….. The Internet is ALL OVER THE PLACE on USC Predicting which Bowl SC will land in .So to me I’ll just wait till it is announced….. Fight On !!!!! ( Just from reading multiple articles on the subject to me it is 40% Sun Bowl…..40% Las Vegas Bowl …20% Holiday Bowl ).
Colin Cowherd on Caleb Williams and his uncharted territory “He made more this year than half of or 70% of the L.A. Rams. He is the first and highest-paid NIL star at quarterback, five million bucks a year or more, while in college. Does he go to his college coaches for advice? What advice could they give him? They’ve never had a five-million-dollar college QB. “L.A.s a glitzy town. He made more money than 15 of 16 USC coaches, and all the players knew it. He’s the fifth highest-paid person on USC’s campus, and that includes the president. Where do… Read more »
I hope and pray that his mother and father, particularly dad, provides no -nonsense, wise advice for the young man and Caleb is able and willing to shut out all the clap trap noise that he is going to be subject to.
Ask Bronny James. He makes more than twice what you make and he hasn’t played a game for USC!
Bronny makes his money from social media. Caleb makes his money from endorsements. Not totally sure they are same, but both kids have lots and lots of money. When I was their age, I was excited to have enough money to buy a pizza.
Here’s the bio of current NEB DC/assoc HC Tony White from Huskers.com. White is widely speculated as a possible DC candidate for USC. Huskers.com — Tony White is in his first season as Nebraska’s defensive coordinator in 2023. White came to NU after coordinating the defense at Syracuse. In his 17th season of coaching, White boasts previous Power Five experience at Syracuse, Arizona State and UCLA. White is in his fourth season as a defensive coordinator in 2023, and he held the title of defensive coordinator and defensive passing game coordinator at Arizona State and recruiting coordinator at San… Read more »
Nebraska is 8th in Rushing Defense, 14th in Total Defense, 41st in Passing Yards Allowed. Bet Caleb would have liked that defense on his team! Sure beats USC’s 120th Total Defense, 116th Passing Yards Allowed, and 114th Rushing Defense!
He seems like a solid hire. Nothing splashy but should help to make our D better based on his track record. We’ll even look past that he went to UCLA. Waiting to hear if it becomes official.
Pass. I strongly prefer a candidate with SEC or B1G experience. ACC/
P12 experience does not convince me because in general, the trench line talent level faced is not comparable (I know, Clemson is the exception, but the rest of the ACC has not been national champion level talent during Clemson’s run, so a DC from the ACC/P12 has not had to weekly face highly talented offenses).
One year in the B1G is not sufficient for me.
USC should be able to do better.
B1G offenses are a joke. Pac12 is so much more difficult to have a successful defense. Michigan and Ohio St are great, Penn St is good, all the rest are not good.
No argument there, but the last 2 times we played a B1G team in a bowl game, we were steam rolled, and our current D is worse than it was then. I suspect the differences are more in the skill positions, not the trenches, and that even mediocre B1G teams’ offensive lines would have their way with our defensive line. Their QB play is not as good as the P12, but their run games are better. Until we can build a D that stuffs the run consistently, we will never advance, so give me a DC who knows how to… Read more »
I won’t pretend to know for sure. I saw the little blurb from Meyer on his D. Seems like it is very solid. I just want to see us play normal football and not have to score 45 to win. It will be nice to score 45 and be up by 3 scores. like you, I would like to see us bigger and better up front on both sides of the ball. It’s always nice when you can stop the run and even better when you can run and they can’t stop it. Michigan is a great example of that.… Read more »
Truth.
Teams that just can’t stop the run, like the pitiful USC D for the last two years, are in big trouble against every team any good regardless of conference, team colors, mascot names, fight songs, unfriendly crowds, or where the games are played in whatever weather. “Soft” USC will be constantly tested against the run by every team until the Trojans show they finally have a good scheme, better players and coaches, and a pulse at LB and in the trenches on D. One thing I won’t be doing any longer while following Lincoln Riley at USC is believing anything… Read more »
Allen, you have described from your lack of believing anything LR utters post game…
Has in just one year the ‘Miracle of Muleshoe’ has fallen to the level of Helton.
We all need to wonder, how much lower his reputation will fall after next years Mauling in the B1G.
The Miracle of Muleshoe (pop 5158 in 2015) in HS, hangs in his parent’s home… Ryan Kartje (LAT) — “The rapid rise of Lincoln Riley, from small-town quarterback to one of the most promising football minds in America, is rooted deep in this arid soil. Ask anyone in Muleshoe about Lincoln, whose first name is enough around these parts, and they swell with pride. Lincoln, they’ll tell you, could’ve been anything. A rocket scientist. A doctor. Maybe even an astronaut. But he chose football, and his immediate success — with three College Football Playoff semifinal appearances in his first three years… Read more »
ON3 reports the new DC will be Tony White from Nebraska. Totally unofficial as of yet as USC has not made the announcement.
This is based on a phone call to Marc Kulkin at ON3 in the middle of the night from a players family.
I saw that as well. No idea if he is going to be great, but 100% confident he is not grinch. That alone is an instant huge upgrade.
It is so unofficial I am a little skeptical right now. He is a solid DC, just not the big splash everyone was looking for.
Steve,
sounds like you and I are reading same stuff. Twitter is silly. People trying to be the first to break news who have zero sources. I’ve read White, Scalley, and surprise candidate announced today. Oooh the surprise candidate sounds great! Maybe it’s Grinch? That would shock us all.
I assume we will all know soon as portal window opens up in a few days and they want to be settled in with a guy to hit the ground running.
still, barring Grinch returning it will be an upgrade.
Actually it is laughable some of the stuff coming out on different sites. But also it is informative making you look up different names to see what they have accomplished. White is a good DC no doubt. I don’t agree with the tiers of DC quality sites put out. Sometimes they fail to take into account the places people have coached, which often determines the quality of players they have to begin with.
If so, I will be underwhelmed and so should everyone else. Where is his championship experience? He has none!
I guess you have been underwhelmed for a long time Jam. When was the last time we someone with championship experience, either side of the ball.
Holiday Bowl Watch: All signs point to Clemson-USC matchup Kirk Kenney (San Diego Union-Tribune) — Clemson in line for first trip to San Diego; USC would be making its fourth Holiday Bowl appearance in the game’s 45-year history. Two of the biggest brands in college football are expected to be invited to the 2023 DirecTV Holiday Bowl when bowl berths are officially extended on Sunday. Clemson, which would be making its first Holiday Bowl appearance, has been tracking toward San Diego for the past month. USC has been in and out of the picture. And now the Trojans are back… Read more »
Reggie Bush will be inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame awarded by the National Football Foundation this coming Tuesday night, in Las Vegas.
Proper thing. Give him back his Heisman.
As it should be!
College football coaching grades: Dan Lanning, Brent Venables top second-year leaders, Lincoln Riley tumbles Grant Hughes (247sports) — DUKE’s Mike Elko started smaller but parlayed smashing success at DUKE into a lucrative deal at A&M. While some built momentum, others like USC’s Lincoln Riley and Florida’s Billy Napier stumbled this fall and enter a third year at a crossroads. LINCOLN RILEY, USC Andrew Ivins: C Cooper Petagna: C+ USC didn’t address its defensive issues from last season, and the team regressed as a whole, finishing 7-5. It’s early, but it doesn’t look like the Trojans are favored in any of their hunts… Read more »
2024 NFL Mock Draft: Bears take Caleb Williams, Jayden Daniels crashes top 10 Dane Brugler (The Athletic) 1. Chicago Bears (from CAR): Caleb Williams, QB, USC Justin Fields will be under a microscope the final month of the season as the Bears consider their quarterback options. One question that will help them make a decision: Is the front office prepared to give Fields an extension with $100-plus million in guarantees? Because that is eventually what it will take. If the answer is no, then Chicago is better off turning the page and reinvesting in the position with a promising rookie on a significantly cheaper deal.… Read more »
Any news yet on the DC hire front? I suspect that if it is taking this long that the coach we want is coaching a game this weekend. That could be a good thing. It’s either that or Lincoln hasn’t decided who he wants to hire yet. I hope that isn’t the case.
Could also be the one USC wants is trying to get one of the HC jobs.
Marc Kulkin says he has heard the hire is finalized and an announcement is coming. I wouldn’t take that to the bank just yet though.
Some talk at 247 Tony White is the object of Rileys desires.
Not a splashy name but could be effective. I would love to see some videos of him going ‘old school’ on his players or hear some comments from players that he helped develop into NFL prospects.
Of Nebraska?
Ya, he brought Nebraska defense from #100 to #14. He was under consideration for the SDSU HC job. He was at ucla and worked under Rocky Long a few years.
Or waiting to see if a HC’ing job is available? Jim Leonard is probably waiting. I just hope Jen Cohen/LR are looking at some defensive coaches from the top SEC programs too. Those coaches would have a better pipeline to big HS linemen down south recruitment wise. Oregon hasn’t done too badly going that route!
If we could just somehow get MICH, GA, ORE and TEXAS into the final playoffs, I think that would be perfect. Joel Klatt and Colin Cowherd agree…)
Joel Klatt’s top 10
1 MICH
2 GA
3 UW
4 ORE
5 TEXAS (Go Sark!)
6 OHIO ST
7 ALA
8 FSU
9 PSU
10 OLE MISS (Go Lane!)
The winners of the top 4 are in. Texas will have to bump FSU. It will be hard to keep out an undefeated FSU though they would be the weakest to make the top 4. Go Louisville!
The problem is the Playoff/BCS choices have never kept an undefeated Big 5 conference champion out of the playoff. If FSU beats Louisville, you figure they will get in ahead of Texas. Joel Klatt says there is a possibility Texas could jump over Oregon if they both win and Bama beats Georgia (due to Texas beating Bama earlier).
Raleek Brown is planning to go portal again. This begs (my) the question was he mishandled or does he think more highly of himself than the coaches do. We had two really strong backs this season so he wasn’t needed. It seems players don’t trust the judgement of the coaches anymore. They think the game is about individuals and not a team sport.
Raleek is like a round peg in a square hole at USC. Players are thinking dollars a lot more than before.
One component of NIL I think would go a long way towards team is to spread the wealth. I have used the example of Utah. Every scholarship player gets the use of a new truck, a free lease. If USC is not going the pay for play route (a big mistake) the least they could do is show every player they have value. Of course, independent collectives could do both.
Xamarion Gordon going portal.
I had to look him up so I didn’t say, “Who?” I wonder if he’s a bit premature . After a year of the worst defensive coordinator in football, you’d think you’d want a year to prove the fault was his. Oh well more to come I suppose.