Caleb Williams wins the Heisman Trophy, cementing his place in USC football lore
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — NEW YORK — Since Caleb Williams landed in Los Angeles last February as the most coveted transfer in all of college football, the quarterback has carried the weight of tremendous expectation on his shoulders.
USC, after a decade of disappointment and scandal, anointed him. The rest of the country, dismayed by his exit from Oklahoma, questioned him. Brands, seeing a burgeoning star in the name, image and likeness era, invested in him. But as the pressure mounted and the stakes raised, Williams would rise to the occasion in a way few have in the sport’s history, not only reviving a dormant powerhouse at USC, but announcing himself as the best player in college football in the process.
The official coronation finally came Saturday, as Williams lifted the Heisman Trophy, becoming the first Trojan to win the illustrious award since Reggie Bush in 2005.
Despite his relatively late arrival to the Heisman conversation this season, Williams won the award handily, beating Texas Christian’s Max Duggan, Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud and Georgia’s Stetson Bennett, each of whom will get a shot at a national title as their consolation prize.
Williams’ stellar campaign would finish just short of those same heights, as USC fell in the Pac-12 title game to Utah despite the quarterback’s heroic effort battling through a painful hamstring injury.
“I may be standing up here today, but y’all get to go to the College Football Playoff,” Williams said to the other finalists. “Guess you can’t win them all.”
But while Duggan, Stroud and Bennett — who finished second, third and fourth, respectively — may have lifted their teams to the national semifinals, Williams still entered Saturday’s ceremony as the overwhelming Heisman favorite, a testament to the transformative power of his presence at USC this season. Williams tallied 2,031 total points, including 544 first-place votes, 356 more than Duggan, the runner-up.
When his name was announced as the 87th winner of the prestigious award, Williams, dressed in a plaid Gucci suit, took his place at a podium on stage at the Lincoln Center, where two dozen past winners of the Heisman, including three of the seven other former Trojan honorees, awaited.
Williams is the eighth USC player to take home the Heisman Trophy, the most of any school; though, the Heisman Trust still only officially acknowledges seven after the NCAA sanctions levied against USC saw Bush stripped of his trophy. Not since 2005, when Bush won, has USC even sent a finalist to New York.
As he spoke, Williams reflected on the formative moments that led him to this one: The car ride home at 10 years old, when he assured his father, Carl, he’d do anything to be great. The tears he shed at 12, when his coach told him he was “too small” to play in a championship game. The 5:30 a.m. workouts with “The Breakfast Club”. The legendary Hail Mary at Gonzaga College High.
“I used to write down my goals in a journal,” Williams said, “and what used to just be words on a piece of paper has me standing here today.”
His journey at USC, while only 10 months long thus far, would present its own adversity. Certainly, none of USC’s previous winners walked into a situation quite like Williams did this season.
USC was already a national football power under John McKay when running backs Mike Garrett and O.J. Simpson rolled to Heisman wins in 1965 and 1968, respectively. Charles White won a national championship at USC the year before hoisting his trophy in 1979. His backup that season, Marcus Allen, would go on to win, too, just two years later.
“I’ve just been in awe watching him. … People are finally starting to recognize that this guy is the best player in the country.”
— Carson Palmer, former USC quarterback and 2002 Heisman Trophy winner, on Caleb Williams
Perhaps only Carson Palmer, who quarterbacked the Trojans through the transition from Paul Hackett to Pete Carroll, could relate to how far Williams had to carry USC for his campaign to be considered Heisman caliber. But even Palmer had three seasons to find his stride at USC before the Trojans came alive under Carroll, a run that would later produce two national titles and two more Heisman winners (Matt Leinart in 2004 and Bush in 2005).
“I’ve just been in awe watching him,” Palmer told The Los Angeles Times. “I watched the team play the year before. It was tough. It was painful to watch. So to see how quickly the tide has changed … people are finally starting to recognize that this guy is the best player in the country.”
Leinart went even further.
“He’s as rare as they come, in my opinion,” he said of Williams. “The talent level, the things he does on the field, they’re one of one. No one can do that. Not even at the next level.”
When Williams took the reins, there was no serious talk of national titles or Heisman hopefuls, not outside the confines of Heritage Hall at least. USC had completely unraveled the previous season, firing coach Clay Helton just two weeks into a disastrous 4-8 campaign, a frustrating nadir for one of college football’s foremost programs.
While taking over last November, new coach Lincoln Riley vowed to bring USC back to prominence. But doing so required the services of his chosen star quarterback, whom Riley left behind in Oklahoma.
Convincing Williams to follow him to USC meant mending some fences with Williams and his family. Riley’s rebuild was well underway when he rang Williams, whom he knew could be the crown jewel of what became a 25-transfer class. The quarterback was on vacation, walking alone on a Florida beach to clear his head about his entrance into the transfer portal, when the coach called. The conversation, as it turned out, would mark a turning point in the storied history of USC football.
“As soon as we started talking,” Williams said this week, “it started up again.”
The conversation, as it turned out, would mark a turning point in the storied history of USC football.
Their renewed partnership would be the catalyst for a complete turnaround, as the Trojans won 11 of their first 12 games for the first time since 2008. Williams soared even higher in his second season at the helm of Riley’s offense, a scheme now responsible for three of the last six Heisman winners (Williams, Kyler Murray and Baker Mayfield), as well as an additional Heisman finalist (Jalen Hurts).
Like the other two Riley-coached quarterbacks who graced that stage, Williams began his career at another school, the fourth transfer since 2017 to take home the trophy. As Williams accepted the award on Saturday night, USC’s coach watched bleary-eyed from the front row.
“To take over the job at two storied programs, in the fashion that he did, neither one of them was a normal path to becoming a starting quarterback at a major university and big-time college football team, that takes guts,” Riley said. “You get out there, there’s nobody to catch you when you fall. Places like this, to play quarterback, you gotta perform. Your successes and failures are out there for the entire world to see and the entire world to judge, and believe me, everyone has an opinion. So it takes a special kind of confidence and drive, especially that young.”
Williams accounted for 47 touchdowns this season (10 on the ground), the most of any player in college football. His 4,075 passing yards are the second-most in a single season in USC history — and sixth-most in the nation this season — while his 372 yards rushing are the most for a USC quarterback.
“The talent level, the things he does on the field, they’re one of one. No one can do that. Not even at the next level.”
— Matt Leinart, former USC quarterback and 2004 Heisman Trophy winner, on Caleb Williams
If Williams is able to play in the Cotton Bowl next month, he’s likely to own nearly all of the Trojans’ single-season passing records by season’s end.
Still, as remarkable as his stats may be, Williams’ case for the Heisman was further fortified this season by his formative role in USC’s renaissance. From Day 1, teammates say, the transfer quarterback stepped in with a swagger that lifted the locker room, changing a culture that had previously come apart at the seams.
Evidence of that influence was present with him on Saturday night. In the gallery at Lincoln Center sat eight of USC’s offensive linemen, each of whom he flew to New York and thanked personally, by name, from the stage. Williams said he’d refused to come to the ceremony without them.
“While this may be an individual award, I certainly understand that nothing, in this sport or life, is done alone,” Williams said.
There was never a doubt this season at USC how much Williams meant to that equation.
“He kept us alive,” said Shane Lee, a linebacker and USC captain. “He’s the heartbeat of this team.”
There was no one defining game, no singular Heisman moment that would set Williams apart on his path toward the prestigious trophy. Most would probably point to his dazzling, four-touchdown performance against Notre Dame as his coronation, the daring escapes and the pinpoint downfield passes that pushed USC past the Irish and, for a brief time, into the College Football Playoff semifinal picture. It was that night, after all, that he struck the eponymous Heisman pose on USC’s sideline at his teammates’ behest.
“He’s the one,” said receiver Jordan Addison, who that night affixed an imaginary crown to his quarterback’s head.
But by the final week of the regular season, that sort of casual wizardry had become routine for Williams. There was the effortless, 75-yard score against Stanford, the do-or-die drive and game-winning dart at Oregon State, the no-look touchdown pass against Colorado. With every successive game, Williams seemed to conjure a new, stunning way to scramble, flipping a Sun Devil defender over his shoulder one week, before spinning and dancing past a Utah linebacker the next. His poise in the pocket often appeared to approach the supernatural.
“I think it’s black magic,” Travis Dye, USC’s top running back, said earlier this season. “I don’t understand it either!”
The magic would ultimately run out in Las Vegas, with searing pain coursing through his hamstring and tears welling in his eyes. Just a sophomore, Williams will get another shot to lead USC to a College Football Playoff national title before the NFL comes calling. But in just one season, Williams has already left an indelible mark on USC, dancing and dazzling his way into the record books, exceeding every possible expectation on his path to the Heisman Trophy.
latimes.com
__________
Lincoln Riley @LincolnRiley
Coach-
You will certainly be missed, but your impact on so many will live on-
Thankful for every moment. You changed my life and so many others.
All of our prayers are with Sharon & the Leach family-
Rest In Peace my friend. 🙏
https://twitter.com/i/status/1602102536462139392
Well ………….. rather see Sam (and his teammates ) celebrate a Division Title than that guy Brady .
RIP Mike Leach, always a formidable opponent and a credit to the game
Lincoln Riley’s Incredible Story About Mike Leach Talking To A Complete Stranger On The Phone For 90 Minutes Brady Cox (WhiskeyRiff.com) — Needless to say, judging by the responses of his fellow football coaches, along with the rest of college football media, it’s easy to see how much the guy is loved, and always has been. I can’t help but think of all the best moments I’ve seen from Leach, whether it stems from coaching, or hilarious postgame interviews. With that being said, I can’t stop thinking about this hilarious story told by current USC head coach Lincoln Riley. Leach hired Riley… Read more »
Great story that fits his very unique personality. I always felt that Mike Leach was one of the very few coaches that got the most out of the talent he had at every school he was at, because he stuck with a style and culture that he believed in and perfected. I always wanted to see what he could have done at a Blue Blood program with 4 and 5 star recruits and unlimited resources, but maybe that just wasn’t his style, or he just wasn’t coveted enough by those AD’s. The best compliment anyone could ask for is the… Read more »
The beautiful tributes mourning Coach Leach’s passing have shown the dramatic, everlasting effect he had on the game of football at all levels, and so many who luckily worked with him.
Conversations with this friendly, unique, and gifted man will be remembered and passed along as they should be.
Swing Your Sword Coach. Wish I had known you.
MISS ST Coach Mike Leach Dies SI.com — News originally broke on Dec. 11 that Leach suffered a “personal health issue” while at home and that he was taken by emergency transport to the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, Miss., some 125 miles away from his home in Starkville. Reports emerged that Leach suffered a severe heart attack while at home. Late in the football season, Leach said he was dealing with an unspecified health issue that appeared to cause a persistent cough. Leach was a fixture on college football sidelines since the 1980s, initially working on the… Read more »
God Bless you, Coach Leach and may He comfort your family in the wake of your loss.
A true legend has left us, but so much of what he has done remains. Thanks coach Leach, a man we will always fondly remember.
Report: Pitt/USC QB Transfer Kedon Slovis Visits BYU Could BYU be closing in on its next starting QB? BYU is looking to add at least one transfer portal QB, and an emerging target is former PITT and USC QB Kedon Slovis. Slovis told Adam Gorney — national director of recruiting at Rivals — that he visited BYU this last Friday. From Gorney’s update on Rivals: “The transfer portal QB has told me Notre Dame, UCLA and BYU have come out to meet with him face-to-face. He was in Provo on Friday and is looking to set up a visit to UCLA now. He could also… Read more »
What I see so far in the portal activity, USC has offered 12 defensive players and one offensive player. I sure hope they offer Carson Steele from Ball State.
Former five-star, A&M transfer DE Tunmise Adeleye (Katy Tompkins, TX; 6-3, 295; Rivals’ #8 Portal prospect) is down to four schools:
MICH ST (12/10), USC (Lincoln Riley in-home last week), CAL AND MIA (12/13-15).
Adeleye had six tackles in two games last season for the Aggies.
Hopefully it’s not just going to be all about the money offered. Of all of those schools, none are closer to a championship right now than SC, and none need him more than we do.
USC’s been on one giant infomercial since word got out that a big majority of voters were likely going to vote Caleb Williams into the Heisman Club as USC’s #8. Then Caleb handled himself with such grace, dignity, and occasional humor at the ceremony that even the most ardent USC detractors couldn’t say anything because he was a deserving pick for so many reasons. I don’t know how USC’s really handling the NIL stuff now. Figures thrown around out there about Caleb’s bank account and L.A. apartment are amazing. There seems to be some concern that USC’s NIL commitment may… Read more »
Cal? Really? How are they even in the running with the other 3? But I guess if you want a woke, politically correct, marxist indoctrination that’s the place. Maybe like Colin Kaepernick, he has a communist girlfriend! 😃
Watching Kyler Murray go down running with no contact against the Patriots accentuates that every QB is just one step away from getting carted off.
All the more reason CW should have been benched when he pulled the hami.
The hamstrings are what protect the ACL. If they don’t fire when needed, out for a year!
He joins others, like Caleb Williams, Hendon Hooker and Teddy Bridgewater just off the top of my head. The strain on elite athlete’s bodies is immense.
So true. Looking back on our season, we were fortunate that Caleb didn’t go down earlier. So many collapsing pockets and twists and turns made me hold my breath on many occasions
Caleb Williams takes himself, USC to another level with Heisman Trophy win Antonio Morales (The Athletic) — “Everyone came to the conclusion that USC QB Caleb Williams was a potential Heisman Trophy winner at their own speed. “For Shane Beamer, who played a significant role in recruiting Caleb Williams to Oklahoma, it was when he first evaluated the talented quarterback when he was just a high school player in Washington, D.C. “Kind of what I thought (he’d be). You knew he had the chance to be a really, really, really special player,” Beamer said recently. “You go all the way back to high school and how… Read more »
There’s an interesting article on the Sun Newspaper (oc register) today that makes a case for returning Bush’s Heisman and other accolades. I wonder how many are in agreement with this?
TEXAS and OU may be leaving the Big 12 for the SEC sooner than expected. Brett McMurphy of The Action Network reported the “climate is right” for the two powerhouses to get out of their SEC contracts ahead of the 2024 season. TEXAS and OU are currently slated to join the SEC in 2025. While the Big 12 appeared to be in danger of dissolving in the immediate aftermath of TEXAS and OU announcing their departures, the league instead rebounded to add BYU, UCF, CIN and HOU. The addition of those four schools helped the Big 12 land a new television… Read more »
Clarion Ledger @clarionledger
MISS ST football coach Mike Leach had a massive heart attack on Sunday in Starkville and was transferred to University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, where he is still being cared for on Monday.
According to multiple sources, Leach, 61, collapsed at his home in Starkville, but did not receive medical attention for between 10 to 15 minutes. EMTs used a defibrillator machine and delivered multiple shocks to restore normal heart rhythm.
Say a prayer for The Pirate. The scenario described requires an arduous journey back to normal. If that is even possible.
One of the most interesting and influential guys in all of college football. I really enjoyed his book, Swing Your Sword.
Here are some excerpts from The Pirate’s Swing Your Sword (2011), with Bruce Feldman “My parents were independent thinkers and they were very well-read, and following their lead I read everything I could about my obsessions. I was curious about everything.” “I loved Billy Martin. Still do. He was determined to make others work harder. He was always looking for an edge. “I realized that any problem I was faced with—whether it was money-related, academic-related, or anything else—only one person is gonna have the solution, and that was me. It was then that I realized that your choices come down… Read more »
Sure hoping and praying that Mike pulls through. Love his coaching style and personality. Mentored and influenced many successful young coaches including Mike Riley. Fight on Mike!
Sorry, I meant Lincoln Riley
The winner of the 2022 Polynesian College Football Player of the Year award will be announced on Dec. 13. The formal presentation of the award will be held at the 2023 Polynesian Football Hall of Fame Celebration Dinner on Jan. 21, 2023.
If I’m a top offensive lineman recruit or in the portal, why wouldn’t I want to come to SC and block for this guy, who is not only one of a kind, but shows massive love and respect to his teammates. Not to mention be part of a possible playoff team.
In case you wondered…
The 929 Heisman electors included 870 media members, 58 living Heisman winners, and one fan vote. There are 145 voters in each of the six regions: the Northeast, Southwest, South, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest and Far West.
Game Day: Caleb Williams, USC’s Instant Heisman Hero Instant local heroism like this might become more common under college football’s looser transfer policies — but Williams has an uncommon greatness Kevin Modesti (Daily News) — “O.J. Simpson and Matt Leinart had been playing football games for USC for more than a calendar year before winning the sport’s top individual honor, Reggie Bush had been cutting across the Coliseum field for more than two years, Charles White and Marcus Allen had been building their followings for more than three years, and Carson Palmer, allowed to redshirt his sophomore season because of… Read more »
I may be late to notice this. ——Mark Sanchez is good on FOX NFL.
Agree. Not only on game day, but every time I see him interviewed on Colin Cowherd and Dan Patrick, he is insightful in ways that others aren’t and has a great personality.
I know Caleb prefers “Superman” as his nickname, but I think maybe there’s a little truth in the name. I’ve read a lot of stories about him in the days leading up tho the trophy ceremony, but only a few tried to verbalize how exciting he has been. He does things that defy words. He turns in the opposite direction that most tacklers predict and he does it without seeing what’s coming. It has been fun watching him this season, I am glad he will be back, and maybe become that rare repeat winner.
“I’m officially in the transfer portal”
USC OL Ty Buchanan enters NCAA Transfer Portal
247sports.com
Wasn’t this prior to the start of the 2022 season?
Good catch. It all makes more sense to me now!
Olivia Whitmire @omwhitmireTV
Standout OLB Jamil Muhammad is heading to the West Coast to join Lincoln Riley and USC.
The QB-turned-LB (6-2, 245) from Madison, AL, is transferring from GA ST with two years of eligibility remaining.
The latest Trojan commitment was ranked as the No. 128 overall player in the 2023 On3 Transfer Portal player rankings.
Muhammad, also a hoops standout, was an Alabama HS QB at Madison Clemens, throwing for 1,773 yds and rushing for 942 yds as a SR while scoring 18 TDs.
ISC football provides a special stage for talent. Why did Caleb win it this year? He was probably the best player in the country, but there were a lot of really great players, like Pennix from UW. One reason Caleb won was because he played at SC and the SC-UCLA and SC-ND were “big stages” upon which he was given the opportunity to perform and he performed magnificently. Those performances “mattered”, in part, because he had performed (for the most part) incredibly well on the “small stages” provided by the rest of the teams SC played AND SC won all… Read more »
Very good article by Ryan Kartje. Going into the season I was thinking 9-3 but 11-1 in the regular season blew me away. I knew Caleb Williams would add a dual-threat dimension to USC’s Offense but how he performed during the season was just spectacular in my mind. I wish Caleb the very best in life and am already looking forward to a stellar 2023 season.
Hopefully this award for Caleb signifies a change in the direction of the program
as Carson Palmer’s Heisman was under PC. PC was a defensive guru as Riley is an offensive one. Riley needs to find his Norm Chow to change the defense around.
Grinch can be the coach but he has to raise his level of performance a little.
Agree 100%. Great Offense may get the awards, but great Defense wins Championships.