The Times of Troy: Taking a closer look at new USC Trojans football GM Chad Bowden
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How well will USC HC Lincoln Riley and new GM Chad Bowden work together? (Gina Ferazzi / LAT)
USC has, in my six years on the beat, consistently been one step behind those tectonic shifts to the sport. (I, for one, will never forget Mike Bohn refusal to acknowledge the existence of the first NIL collective that formed at USC.)
But in hiring a new general manager this week, the belief among USC’s leadership is that the program is finally getting ahead of the curve.
Over four seasons at Notre Dame, where he first started as a recruiting coordinator, Chad Bowden made a reputation for pushing the envelope and thinking outside the box. Which made him something of an interesting fit at a place so conservative and steeped in tradition as Notre Dame. But at USC, one could argue that’s exactly what’s needed.
“There are no boundaries for where his mind goes,” Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman said of Bowden during an episode of Notre Dame’s official podcast, Wake Up The Echoes.
This is a guy who once suggested Freeman jump out of a helicopter to impress a recruit. He isn’t afraid to take risks — or wear a costume for a bit. But beyond the stunts, Bowden also clearly played a critical role in pushing Notre Dame into the modern age of college football, as it pertains to NIL and the transfer portal.
It helped that he and Freeman were very close, which makes his decision to trade Notre Dame for its rival all the more intriguing. Though, tripling a guy’s salary and paying him seven figures is certainly a convincing place to start.
Now he’ll have to work alongside Lincoln Riley, who has a very different personality, and he’ll have a tough task ahead of him at USC, where Riley will be under pressure to win immediately. But to hear Freeman talk about Bowden and his vision, it’s not hard to see how he could help USC’s head coach.
“Most of the time he has outside-the-box ideas. He pushes me.” Freeman said on that podcast. “You talk about a guy that challenges me to think outside of the box to get outside my comfort zone, sometimes I gotta say no. He is a guy that makes me better.”
“Jen Cohen, Lincoln Riley and USC’s total commitment to excellence make this a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” Bowden said, in a statement through USC.
“This is a place with the resources, facilities and support to build a perennial winner, and I’m excited to get to work to help bring more national championships to USC.”
What was your first reaction to Bowden taking the USC GM job?
I was definitely surprised at first. USC is Notre Dame’s biggest rival, so that’s a twist you usually don’t see coming. And, let’s face it, the programs are in different places right now as each coach enters his fourth year, so there’s some risk (also lots of potential upside) from Bowden’s end of things. But as someone at Notre Dame told me shortly after the news broke, this is an easier job to do at USC than it is at Notre Dame. Throw in the salary upgrade, and you can make sense of this move.
What is USC getting in Chad Bowden as its GM? What did he mean to Notre Dame’s recruiting and personnel operation?
He once got kicked out of the South Bend airport for welcoming recruits to town with a boombox. He definitely operated differently from how the Irish usually go about their business, and some of the old guard there isn’t exactly sad to see him go. Still, name me a championship contender who hasn’t had someone around to make folks uncomfortable from time to time. A segment of the fan base will rightly point out that Notre Dame’s recruiting rankings aren’t all that different from the Brian Kelly days, but the number of underclassmen — and transfers — who made an impact for the Irish during this run to the national championship game tells a different story.
Where Bowden truly excelled was in bonding with the recruits and their parents. Bowden is a young guy who is well-versed in the lingo of this generation, but I was always taken aback by how many parents went out of their way to single out how good their experiences with him were. Bowden was one of Sherrone Moore’s first calls when Moore got the Michigan job last year, and Notre Dame ultimately paid to keep Bowden. But I don’t think Michigan was offering anything near what USC did this time around.
Bowden was really close to Marcus Freeman. How do you anticipate him working with Lincoln Riley, who has a very different personality?
One of the funnier sights online last year was when Bowden got married and you saw pictures of Freeman — yes, the Notre Dame head football coach — standing among the groomsmen. That’s how close the two were, as Freeman brought Bowden with him from Cincinnati after the Irish hired him as defensive coordinator in 2021. There was definitely an element of big brother-little brother to their relationship, with Bowden always pushing up against the limits of Freeman and the school.
I’m not entirely sure what, if any, relationship Riley and Bowden have had prior to this move. But I would imagine USC did its homework, and if Bowden could sell South Bend, he sure will be able to sell L.A., presumably with fewer limitations than he had at Notre Dame.
Extra points
—In rebuilding its football program, USC has spared no expense. The school spent nearly $20 million to hire Lincoln Riley from Oklahoma, then at least $10 million per year in salary the two years after that. Hiring a top-notch defensive coordinator like D’Anton Lynn took another $2 million salary, before USC shelled out even more with a multi-year contract extension that this month made him one of the top paid coordinators in college football — again. Then Friday, USC backed up the Brinks truck to steal Bowden (for a reported $1 mil a year), to rebuild its personnel department. All three will be among the highest-paid in the nation at their respective positions next season, which sends a pretty clear message: USC is willing to spend to return the football program to prominence. And that’s before we talk about the $200-million football facility on the way, or the $20.5 million in revenue that USC will soon be sharing with athletes. The results, as of yet, haven’t been in line with the school’s investment. But there’s no questioning USC’s willingness to pay in solving its problems.
—Reggie Bush wants to be head coach at USC someday. In an interview with the Sporting Tribune, the Trojan legend said that he has “this urge inside of me to get out and coach” and that his dream would be to do that at USC. Maybe once upon a time, that would’ve been possible. But that was before Bush demanded the legal fees from his Heisman pursuit be paid by USC. And before he sued USC last year. University officials had made inroads to repair the relationship with Bush — then they found out about the lawsuit in a post on social media. Suffice to say, they weren’t happy. I would never rule out that a relationship can be repaired in the future. But the lawsuit remains ongoing, and Bush has made no effort that I’m aware of to talk it out with his alma mater.
—Pete Carroll will continue teaching his class, “Game is Life,” at USC this spring while taking over as the Las Vegas Raiders head coach. If you ever found yourself questioning Carroll’s vitality at age 73, well … Professor Pete would like a word. How much he’ll actually be teaching, or even physically present, this spring semester is another question entirely. But good on Carroll for keeping his promise to the kids who signed up to hear from him specifically. Raiders fans don’t seem thrilled with the idea, but Part-Time Pete might still be better than any of their Full-Time options over the last decade.
— As for replaced USC football GM Dave Emerick, a player personnel figure who was hired by Riley from Mississippi State in 2022, a source said Emerick “will remain a valuable member of staff.”
latimes.com
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College football’s 15 greatest programs based on all-time win percentage 1. Ohio State Buckeyes Winning percentage: .735 (978 wins, 335 losses, 53 ties) 2. Alabama Crimson Tide Winning percentage: .733 (974 wins, 341 losses, 43 ties) T-3. Michigan Wolverines Winning percentage: .732 (1,012 wins, 358 losses, 36 ties) T-3. Notre Dame Fighting Irish Winning percentage: .732 (962 wins, 339 losses, 42 ties) 5. Oklahoma Sooners Winning percentage: .722 (950 wins, 348 losses, 53 ties) 6. Texas Longhorns Winning percentage: .704 (961 wins, 393 losses, 33 ties) 7. USC Trojans Winning percentage: .693 (882 wins, 374 losses, 54 ties) Making its way through a challenging stretch in recent years, USC hungers to get back… Read more »
Bill Belichick Offering to Buy Pizza for UNC Frats Ahead of Duke Rivalry Game
“Please make mine Italian sausage, olives and mushrooms, Bill.”
Talk is that rosters for 2025 could run up to $30 million. It was close to 20 million last season. Figure Oregon to spend the most, again. I wonder if USC is a player yet or still behind.
Steveg, I have not posted much lately for a variety of reasons. I think the collegiate football we all knew and loved is long gone. It is now a professional sport and much surrounding changing. SC was slow to react to this changing world. ((Oregon was light years ahead of virtually every team in the nation on that shift and that window is, as I had expected, closing very quickly. My guess is they have at best two more years of their advantage) I think Jen Cohen gets it, is approaching this change realistically, and making the correct moves to… Read more »
Well said RJ, I agree.
A few things need to be clarified. You talk of payroll. Do you mean NIL or revenue sharing? Starting in the fall, each university will have revenue sharing with athletes. That figure is up to $21 million. Some conferences, some schools don’t have that (Mountain West) but some do (Big10). What I have yet to see is who shares in that pot. Title IX rules may require all scholarship athletes, men and women, or it might be revenue sports only, men and women, or only men’s BB and FB. If it is all scholarship athletes, men and women, at USC… Read more »
The Juju/Kiki show rolls on. 19-1 USC over the Gophers, 82-69. Sucks it was on Peacock! Final regular season road trip to the midwest, Iowa on Sunday and Wisconsin on Wednesday. Then Ohio St 19-1 and two with 20-0 UCLA in the last 6 games.
Eric Musselman makes his first big splash in the L.A. recruiting scene Five-star shooting guard Alijah Arenas, son of former NBAer Gilbert Arenas, has committed to play for USC next season, sources told On3’s Joe Tipton Thursday. The 6-foot-6, 195-pound scoring wing from Chatsworth, CA, picked the Trojans over UK, KU, ARIZ and LOUIS. “For me, it felt like the best fit,” the rangy Arenas explained. “Being on campus made me feel special.” Arenas was selected to be a McDonald’s All-American this year after averaging 31.8 points, 7.5 rebounds and 4.3 assists per game. He’s the first McDonald’s All-American selection from the LA City Section since… Read more »
Great catch for Muss. He needs a couple of big guys who can cover the paint.
I like Muss a lot. So personable and creative. And his “relentless” recruiting approach works well for me. “We have to recruit L.A.,” Musselman said after a game in December. “And not just recruit them a little bit. We have to recruit them relentlessly.” LAT — “Arenas gives USC a trio of prospects in this year’s class, alongside top-50 guard Jerry Easter of Missouri and four-star St. John Bosco guard Elzie Harrington. They’ll join a roster next season that will look decidedly different. More than half the team will have exhausted its eligibility, making it even more critical that Musselman… Read more »
USC Completely Restaffing Recruiting Dept Connor Morrissette (USCFootball.com) — New USC GM Chad Bowden continues to make staff additions in Los Angeles. A day after bringing over former Notre Dame Director of Player Personnel, Zaire Turner, to USC, Bowden is also hiring away Illinois’ Director of Player Personnel, Dre Brown. The 27-yr old Brown will be the Executive Director of Personnel and Scouting with the Trojans. Brown, an Illinois alum and former football player, was with the Illini for one year as DPP. Brown began his coaching career as a recruiting coordinator at Tennessee before moving to Notre Dame, where he was a defensive analyst and recruiting analyst under Bowden before getting promoted… Read more »
Jen Cohen has provided USC football with a solid GM and staff who will find, recruit, make the deals and sign talented players. USC also has solid defensive coaches. All that is left is a HC with a predictable offensive scheme. The question will be, can USC football win in spite of The Brat? Or, if you put lipstick on a Brat…
That is about what it’s about. Can we win in spite of him.
Allen said it earlier, it’s both a massive upgrade to the success of this football Program. But it’s also a trap (so to speak) in filling in all the holes to where Riley will now have no excuses if his HC’ing doesn’t win.
Lincoln Riley’s well-known negative issues will be significantly counterbalanced by Jen Cohen’s several new additions to help USC football finally begin to move forward.
It’s been a great month, especially because it also came at the expense of Notre Dame, which has dominated us lately. ✌
Yes, Jen Cohen has proven to be a good AD.
Like most everyone not satisfied with Riley.
But like with Kiff and Sark maybe if we are patient maybe
Riley will come around.
With his huge contract that seems to be the only choice right now.
At least we don’t have to worry about any other programs or the NFL trying to steal LR. There’s always a silver lining.
Report: USC football adding another staffer to the recruiting/personnel department USC hired GM Chad Bowden last week. The program will now welcome Zaire Turner. Connor Morrissette (USCFootball.com) — Days after poaching Notre Dame general manager Chad Bowden away from the Irish, USC is set to add another Notre Dame football staffer to its program. The Fighting Irish’s Director of Player Personnel, Zaire Turner, will join Bowden at USC, per John Brice of Football Scoop. Turner was elevated to Notre Dame’s Director of Player Personnel role a year ago under Bowden. While Notre Dame was preparing for the College Football Playoff championship game earlier this… Read more »
Wow, not to mention Dre Brown coming in also.
The genius of Andy Reid: “Start with the best players and coaches”! Andy Reid didn’t flinch when Eric Bieniemy jumped to UCLA, where he flamed out. Steve Spagnuolo merited a carrot raise and stayed put. Andy Reid waddles due to a knee injury suffered while playing line for Glendale Community College. USC steered Reid there as they had All Americans sitting on the bench. He was a Trojan O lineman in waiting, until that knee buckled. Andy Reid does not claim to have an eidetic memory like Lincoln Riley. In contrast, he has a sensate mind, able to intuitively figure… Read more »
Annie Hanson is leaving USC to spend time being a mother to their new baby. Wonder what the GM hire had to do with it. She is going to be missed.
Maybe she is leaving USC to spend time being a mother to their new baby. Most people (maybe with the exception of the feminists) would applaud that.
Oh yes, by all means. Being a mom is #1 full time job.
Yahoo Sports (Frank Schwab) — NFL coaching hires: Grading and ranking each one, including Cowboys’ surprise and Bears’ big splash 4. Las Vegas Raiders: Pete Carroll It’s a hard hire to judge. Based just on Carroll’s track record, it should be considered a home run hire. Carroll has a Super Bowl ring, and a college national championship, too. He had a winning record in 11 of his last 12 seasons guiding the Seattle Seahawks. It’s hard to find fault with his resume. But Carroll will turn 74 years old in September. When the Raiders kick off the season, Carroll… Read more »
How long can USC expect to hold onto D’Anton Lynn?
Ryan Kartje (LAT) — “The fact that USC was able to keep D’Anton Lynn from leaving for his alma mater suggests that there are no coordinator jobs in college football that Lynn would leave USC for.
“But Lynn has a lot of admirers at the NFL level, and I don’t think it will be long before he gets the call from one of his former colleagues in Baltimore to be an NFL coordinator. Enjoy Lynn while he lasts at USC.”
USC hires UCF’s Trovon Reed as CB coach to bulk up its defensive staff
The Trojans wanted to beef up the secondary coaching after the departure of asst DB coach Taylor Mays, who was hired to coach UW safeties.
Chris Trevino (USCFootball.com) — “The hire will also strengthen recruiting as Reed is known as a high-end recruiter. Reed, a Louisiana native, is now the fourth coach on the staff with ties to the South in addition to Belk (Georgia), DL coach Eric Henderson (Louisiana) and asst LBs coach Bryson Allen-Williams (Georgia).”
247sports.com
A good portion of the present coaching staff have connections to the south, including the newest addition Trevon Reed. You can’t help but sense Riley stubbornly is still aiming at SEC Country for recruits more than he should when his meat & potatoes recruiting priority should be here. Oregon is feasting on LRs backyard as is Washington and it is said Alabama has more California players locked up than USC. Riley’s ignorance of SoCal HS programs is plain stupid and his 3-years of HC’ing here has no evidence where his main resource is in recruiting. He has locked up nothing… Read more »
For 2025, nationwide there are 465 4-5* players, 25 of them in California. Only 7 California players are in the top 100 in the nation. Form California, Alabama and Oregon have 4 each, USC and TAM with 3, the rest are spread out among 10 other schools, Washington has 1. Maybe Bowden can flip some for ’25 and ’26 is wide open. USC should be tops for California talent but there is a lot more talent elsewhere (Texas, Georgia, Florida) but harder to get if you aren’t a top 5-10 program.
Stars matter. Nobody disputes that. But only to a certain extent. They often neglect to represent the intangibles and other less visible factors that are important in determining whether a player will be successful in college. Based on my experience in the recruiting biz, there are plenty of 3-stars out there who become vastly better than the 4/5-stars. Hundreds in fact. Spotting and successfully recruiting those guys is what the better recruiters often strive to excel at. Schools that over-emphasize recruiting service stars get a rep for “recruiting off lists” and often end up paying a big price with that… Read more »
Can’t disagree will anything you said. Going back the last 5 years, Alabama and Georgia should be the most talented teams by recruit ratings. One didn’t make the playoffs and the other lost their first game. However Ohio State has been in the top 5 recruiting and won it all. It’s not everything but it is important place to start to judge talent. Hoping Bowden can start getting the California talent.
“Start to judge” is the key. It’s a good place to begin. A framework which is often easily observed with a quick look at tape. or a couple of quarters at a game. Then comes the real work, over months of time. The best evaluators really get into the weeds on these kids. One coach once said to me, “I wanna know what the janitor or custodian thinks about this kid. I especially want to see what he’s like around his parents and team-mates. What’s his work ethic both on and off the field. How much does he love football?… Read more »
Thanks for posting. Seems to me JC is building all the infrastructure around LR such that he will have no excuses for failure, making it more justifiable to cut him loose if he fails. I’m not saying that’s her motivation or intent, but that will be a resulting effect. Facilities, coaches, recruiters, NIL funds…the ingredients will be there for success for any above average coach. It will reveal if in fact USC has a doughnut program, which is one with a big hole in the center, with its head coach. I like what I am seeing though, and it gives… Read more »
Whatever USC is paying Jen Cohen, it’s not enough. She’s a superstar IMO, as I’ve repeated so many times here.
These recent additions to USC over the last month especially have been unreal.
Many of them have been incredibly expensive, and without her, they aren’t happening.
I agree. Things are looking up. So many things that were simply never working well under LR’s original guidance have finally been discarded, and replaced.
Overall thoughts on USC’s immediate talent needs Antonio Morales (The Athletic) — There are immediate needs that new GM Chad Bowden and Lincoln Riley have to address. In my opinion, pass rusher is the most pressing because USC didn’t find one during the December portal cycle. Those players are expensive and those recruitments are competitive, so landing one is easier said than done. But it’s necessary if this defense is going to take the next step. Help at linebacker (lack of enough impact players) and in the secondary would be beneficial as well. On offense, there are needs at… Read more »
Bold 2025 predictions from The Athletic We asked everyone to submit their early bold predictions and hot takes for the 2025 college football season. Here are some of the most notable and interesting early calls: Scott Dochterman: After Notre Dame played five Big Ten opponents in 2024, conversations commenced between Irish leadership and Big Ten brass about a union similar to what the Irish enjoy with the ACC. Perhaps in football, a six-game annual scheduling agreement (three home, three away) with the USC series remaining intact and one game annually on the West Coast? Bruce Feldman: Florida makes the Playoff. Matt Baker: There were… Read more »
Come October won’t The Brat still be owed $70-80 million? Still seems like a lot unless some deep pockets are ready. I like the idea of firing The Brat and promote Lynn as permanent HC. Pay Lynn $5 million guaranteed plus incentives that could take him to $10 if he performs. USC hasn’t updated the coaching staff roster so who is the OC? Will that be Riley? If LR is fired in October they will need an OC right?
I don’t think LR’s gonna be fired soon and I disagree with The Athletic’s Lindsay Schnell here.
USC’s still all-in on LR, which is why Jen Cohen is doing everything possible to fix USC football and spending big-time as we TDBers blog along.
I also have no real idea what LR’s actual buy-out figure truly is. Apparently, you don’t either. Whatever it is can be negotiated big-time in various ways.
On another site several months ago, a person in the know had information that Riley made a total of $19.7 million from USC in 23. It’s revealed on USC’s tax return as he is the top earner at the school. Of course this included all fringe benefits and pension accruals. A little over 10 million was salary. USA Today also reported the same numbers. So…….Bohn dug a hole to China for Jen if this info is true…..my only solace is that USC now receives 30 million more from the BIG than the pac 12 each year. Plus another 5 million… Read more »
Clearly some of these uys were justnfooling around with their predictions.
That’s an interesting take vT. I would only ask, why would professional writers for the most successful on-line sports site “just fool around, ” to make themselves look way off-base. The article never hinted for a second that this was a joke piece. I think these are serious opinions from these people, regardless of how wrong you think they may be. From what I know about a few of them as CFB analysts, they are very well-informed, sourced, and insightful. But maybe you’re right. Maybe I entirely missed the boat here. If you would, please indicate which predictions are the… Read more »
Fair question. Yes, The Athletic is a reputable source, as are the contributors, but I’ve always interpreted articles that tease with “early bold predictions” or “hot takes” as a chance to have some fun and go out a limb. It’s as though the tee-up provides a safety net in advance so the contributors can get a little wild and crazy. If they are wrong, no problem or credibility hit as the prediction was understood to be playful and not necessarily based on substantiated evidence or in-depth research. If they are right, they can have fun with the old “I told… Read more »
I take these people a lot more seriously than you do, in part because I used to work with some of them a lot. It’s only natural. Ralph Russo has been the national college football writer for The Associated Press for two over decades before joining The Athletic. I dealt with him extensively on LOI Day rankings and info every year. He’s very quick and thorough. Stewart’s as smart as any college football scribe I’ve ever talked with. He’d call me for recruiting interviews and I would usually end up learning more than he did. He didn’t really stick his… Read more »
Mark Kulkin implied on his show that Oregon is actually paying money to St John Bosco to send their players to Oregon. Maybe I misunderstood what he said but what is that all about and is that legal?
I don’t know. I heard their coach was in some hot water involving paying player tuition, but haven’t looked into it.
The Oregon Collective has bought houses around Eugene for the families of 2026 recruits to move in and recruits will play their senior year at a local HS.
Is that legal? What’s next…..paying all their bills for life?
Now the high schools will start bidding for the services of these kids.
Riley isn’t going to get fired unless he completely falls apart and has a losing record. Most of these projections are probably not going to happen.
Which ones do you find the least likely to occur?
Which are the most likely to happen?
We are all very enthusiastic about Bowden. Jen is doing all she can with the cards she’s dealt. I’m struggling with one aspect of this new hire. We are all identifying a laundry list of “must do” turnarounds Bowden is expected to accomplish, with 80% ( guessing ) aimed at Lincoln Riley. Seriously, how is Bowden expected to have such an instant incredible impact, when there’s so many aspects of LRs HC responsibilities that needs a 180 change ? Basic recruiting fundamentals, OL/DL focus, D focus, outdated simpleton offense, game / clock management, donor / alumni interaction, etc, etc etc.… Read more »
So Bowden is the new Orgeron? Ed could sell Louisiana to a kid from Santa Anna whose mom is a Trojan. Bowden needs to get Riley out to schools in the south land and hold his hand throughout the process. Maybe the coach will win in spite of himself.
Something tells me Riley had a bad experience selling burpee seeds door to door as a kid. He hates home visits and couldn’t sell ice cream for a nickel a scoop. Hopefully Bowden will shake things up in a great way.
Bowden’s obviously got recruiting skiils that Riley never dreamed of. Thankfully, the extraordinary Jen Cohen helped reel him in and put together the finances to make it happen (basically tripling his ND salary) at a time when the Trojans need a great GM so badly. By all accounts, the Irish know they are gonna really miss Bowden. For example — “Bowden’s high energy and constant communication reportedly played a significant role in why many recruits committed to the Fighting Irish. It’s not every day you see a GM leap from one blue-blood program to another…” “Chad has been such an… Read more »
Allen, Chad is going to be happier here and do wonders for this program because he won’t be limited like he was at ND in being creative. I have been accused of being too negative on this website. I know it’s true and I own up to it. Here I go again. All that has happened these past weeks puts hope in our eyes with coaching & administrative upgrading. Thank you Jen and those who assisted her. But Ryan, Bowden and who else there is that matters isn’t going to be standing next to LR in dealing with his clock/game… Read more »
I’m just happy with the new coaching and staff additions over the last 30 days. All appear exceptionally positive.
These moves were badly needed and I’m excited to see how quickly USC will begin to see any positive effects.
Stealing Bowden from ND is quite a coup for USC football. Recruiting and roster management have been weaknesses that need to disappear and I’m confident Bowden will benefit USC greatly.
The money they are pouring into the football program tells me that they want to bring this program back to the promise land. I’m tired of seeing players committed to SC change their mind on the last day and go to Oregon. The Ducks have 21 players on their team that are 4 or 5 star that came from California. That needs to stop.
That’s why it’s fantastic that Jen Cohen just managed to pull in our new GM Chad Bowen from ND with an amazing $1 mil-plus per year contract offer. USC is now definitely #1 in that regard. But some players choose ORE over USC because they simply want to play for Dan Lanning over Lincoln Riley. It’ll be interesting to see how much, and how quickly, Bowen can affect that problem. ORE is generally ranked as a top 5-7 2025 preseason pick. I have yet to see USC appear on anyone’s top 25, despite all the recent new, important additions to… Read more »
In 2023 SC was #30 in the final AP poll and in 2024 they weren’t in the top 35…..not exactly performing like a powerhouse
UCLA men beat USC 82-76. Trojans finish badly. Only make 11 of 19 free throws.
Top 10 projected WRs in the B1G for the 2025 season per Grant Hughes (247sports): 10. Dakorien Moore, Oregon 9. Vinny Anthony II, Wisconsin 8. Ian Strong, Rutgers 7. Dane Key, Nebraska 6. Denzel Boston, Washington 5. Nick Marsh, Michigan State 4. Carnell Tate, Ohio State 3. Makai Lemon, USC (Photo: M. Samek, 247Sports) Lemon led USC with 52 receptions for 764 yds and three TDs as a soph this fall and is poised for a breakout JR season with Jayden Maiava helming Lincoln Riley’s offense at USC. Maiava and Lemon developed a strong connection towards the end of… Read more »
Makai is a stud … hope #26 for Michigan has life insurance because Trojans will not forget that cheap shot on ML last year that cost him 3 games
get that guy!
These revenge things never really happen do they?
Not that I’ve seen, especially in a sport premised on violence with over a year between games. Too much else going on.
Mens BB – Ucla at USC tonight at 7pm on Fox Sports 1.
I’m starting to limber up liking Ryan Kartji. I don’t like his soft-soap questions put to Riley but maybe that is the demand LR’s support staff puts on reporters if they want any access to him? The walls are caving in on the brat and he can hide behind all the covers he wants but it won’t keep him from being exposed anymore. As for Chad Bowden, I am putting a lot of faith in him, in advance, he is going to be a difference maker Jen Cohend wants of him. He is a thinker outside the box and that… Read more »
Jen Cohen is building a what looks to be a great football house. I get the feeling that The Brat might think it is for him. What he will find out is, he is only a renter and will be evicted soon. Then the real owner will come in, maybe Lynn.
When do you honestly think USC will fire Riley?
Best guess is $30 million from now.
Name Lynn coach after the Brat loses a close one at Illinois, pisses away Michigan, gets slapped at ND. That stretch will make or break LR.