Commentary: With Lincoln Riley in charge, USC has finally stopped living in fear
J. Brady McCollough (LA Times) — We’re in the early stages of getting to know Lincoln Riley’s quirks. So far, here’s one: Detailed timelines of how seismic events occur aren’t going to be a strong suit.
Of course all anybody wanted to know from him Wednesday on national signing day was the nitty-gritty of how he courted quarterback Caleb Williams to follow him from Oklahoma to USC. He did provide a glimpse of the start — one that will induce more red-faced conspiracy theories from the incredulous Sooner State.
“There’s zero communication, and then all of a sudden Caleb and his family make the decision to jump into the transfer portal,” Riley said, “and we had a conversation shortly after that, and I don’t think we talked even one bit of football. It was just kind of like long-lost friend. It was kind of good just to be able to reconnect.”
From there, Riley’s narrative jumped about four weeks with his old pal Williams getting himself enrolled last Friday, his last chance to do so and be eligible for spring practice. Frankly, while we’d like to hear more, Riley knows the fact that Williams is on campus this week taking classes with his fellow Trojans is all that matters.
For USC folks, after years of listening to a coach who talked too much and delivered little, it had to be refreshing Wednesday to observe one who says just enough to prove their precious program is in worthy hands.
To this point, Riley’s public persona has been friendly yet not cheesy, confident yet not off-putting. He can be mildly forthcoming, as long as you’re not hoping to put together a concrete sequence of behind-the-scenes maneuverings that could later get him in trouble with the Boomer Sooner Bureau of Investigation.
Riley was happy to discuss how he handled waiting on Williams’ decision while USC’s presumed starting quarterback, Jaxson Dart, entered the transfer portal and began taking visits. Certainly, he could have ended up with neither.
“Having been in this position for a few years I’ve learned to … I don’t try to project as much anymore,” he said. “I’m just trying to build the best roster that we can at USC. And with the transfer portal right now and the fact that there’s no guardrails, players can leave you virtually 365 days a year if they choose. So you can’t predict all of that. And you can almost drive yourself crazy trying to.
“And so for me, my standpoint has been we’re going to be honest with all parties involved, whether it’s a current player on our roster [or] somebody that we’re recruiting about what we’re doing, about future plans, try to be very transparent, but that we’re not going to recruit or try to build our roster out of fear that people will leave. Just, you can’t operate that way, and we’re not going to.”
Let’s recall that when Riley was asked at his introduction about how soon he could get USC back to national prominence, he basically said, sooner than you may think. In just two months, he has taken a Trojans recruiting class unthinkably ranked last in the Pac-12 and punched it into the nation’s top 10 (when factoring transfers and recruits).
How did he do it? Just like he said above, by being fearless and honestly quite ruthless in his evaluations.
Riley and his staff pulled scholarship offers from numerous high school players who had committed to USC under Clay Helton, which was predictable. They did not hesitate to do the same with young men who had proudly worn the cardinal and gold over the last few disappointing seasons. Seventeen Trojans have left, some by choice and others at the discretion of the new staff. Thirteen hand-picked transfers have taken their place, joining eight traditional recruits in a 2022 haul that should only continue to grow until August.
“We know there’s going to be another surge of people in the transfer portal after these spring balls across the country start to wrap up,” Riley said. “And I believe we’re gonna be in a position to continue to build this roster at that time as well.
“I think you’re constantly building all parts of your roster. You just never really get to the part where, OK, we’re set at O-line, we’re good there. I think you’re constantly looking to upgrade and you gotta constantly be ready with an answer because it can change quickly both in having the opportunity to bring players in or potentially losing a player.”
Remember the days of Helton and the Trojans who became “loves of his life?” Over time, that led to a lack of competition across the roster, as players did not feel they could supplant the favorites among Helton’s 105 “sons.” Riley isn’t going to let football romance cloud his judgment or get in his way from completing the job, which is to have USC players celebrating under confetti on a Monday night in January.
In the short term, this class’ star power with Williams, Oregon transfer running back Travis Dye and Oklahoma receiver transfer Mario Williams could immediately help the Trojans retake the Pac-12. Long term, because of Riley’s relentlessness and intuition, the prognosis looks even better. The Southeastern Conference won’t have to worry about Riley just yet, but anyone with an appreciation for the sport’s history understands that a healthy USC is the top threat to shift the balance of power away from Dixie (it is no coincidence that the SEC did not take over the sport until Pete Carroll’s dynasty toppled).
Riley came here to build something of his own at a place with a ceiling few can match. He is proving that he will do whatever it takes, even if it means living with uncomfortable stats like a 13:8 ratio of transfers to preps.
“I would fully expect in the future that our class has a much higher percentage of high school players than this one currently does,” Riley said. “I’ll be interested to see how it evolves. At the end of the day, nobody’s really going to ask ‘how.’ It’s ‘did you put together the best roster you could and give us the best chance to accomplish what we came here to do?’ ”
The “how” is already clear without Riley having to explain. With him in charge — and with the backing of university administration — USC football is no longer afraid to be great.
latimes.com
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USC 59 ARIZ 54 — 6:58 to go.
Update: USC loses big, 72-63. Trojans looked absolutely horrible the last 7 mins. Couldn’t buy a bucket from any distance. Extremely poor shooting team.
Stewart Mandel’s post-transfer portal early Top 25 for the 2022 college football season. Where’s OU? Nowhere to be found. 5. Utah (previous: No. 4) The Utes bring back the bulk of their Rose Bowl team, but had a potentially big void at linebacker without All-American Devin Lloyd and Nephi Sewell. They’re hoping for help from Florida’s Mohamoud Diabate, a two-year starter with 176 career tackles. Expect Kyle Whittingham to dip back into the portal now that Signing Day has passed. 7 . Notre Dame (previous: No. 5) Notre Dame should field another strong roster, but Marcus Freeman’s first staff now includes just three holdover… Read more »
Question for Allen and John: how are the AI geniuses (students, faculty, athletic department staff) at USC going to be used by Lincoln Riley to enhance USC athletes’ performance and, based on data gathered on other programs’ coaches’ and athletes’ tendencies to plot against opponents? Does USC have a leg up in AI resources?
B/R — Caleb Williams’ NIL Deal
Beats by Dre @beatsbydre
Welcome to LA and the Beats family, @CALEBcsw! Let’s get it
Trojans squeaked one out late last night against the Sundevils. Thankfully they have one guy that can shoot Free Throws. Boogie won the game in the last minute. Arizona and UCLA up next this week. Trojans need to step it up.
It was a painful game to watch. ASU was super agressive on defense committing 23 fouls and 11 blocked shots. USC only shot 20%+- for the first half and 30% for the game. USC won the game because they outrebounded ASU 58-29, Boogie hit some big free throws and Mobley hit two big 3 pointers in the last couple of minutes of the game.
SC shot 30% and still won. A similar effort like that vs. the Wildcats, and it will be over by halftime.
Trojans need to step up.
How about that Bruin player arrested for spitting on fans after their loss to ARIZ! The Little Gutties at their finest.
USC GETS IT SWAGGER BACK. The haters are really out now so Riley must be doing something great.
My brother a big Ducks fan texted me how LR is burning bridges in the Pac12 by “Stealing” Travis Dye and then “steals” Caleb Williams. The Pac 12 knows they will all be second rate to USC. I Love It!
Let them eat cake.
They can all screw themselves win the NCAA went Trojan hunting with a vengeance they all cheered them on. I say burn the rest of the PAC down.
Becoming the PAC -12 football conference champion will be the easiest one to win of all the Power 5 conferences. The MWC would no doubt be a more formable foe as their teams continue to beat the PAC teams played these past years. So explain that, anyone who disagrees. Having said that, while USC was down, only a few programs (Oregon and for a few years UDUB) cared to compete nationally. Now that USC has finally gotten enough of being another PAC-12 tomato can, the hate is starting back alright.
I’ve said this a number of times and a number of ways. When Kiffin took the reins of the team he started what I called sanctions mentality. Sark didn’t change it and Helton embraced it. Riley is the first coach at USC who has done things that are beneficial to the team in over a decade. We should see dividends sooner rather than later and I am glad we are finally out of the sanctions mentality.
The “Sanctions Mentality.” So let it shall be known! So let it shall be dead!
Let the sanctions mentality die a quick death (but not the term, which I like). Had USC hired a top notch coach after Kiffin, we’d already be back. No way the sanctions have influenced our on-field performance in the past few years. We are were are (were) due to lousy coaching hires.
Kiffin had to do sanctions mentality. If he hadn’t wet the bed as a head coach, I think we would have been better off at sanctions plus 5 years than we were having lived through the Sarkissian train wreck and the ruminations on mediocrity promoted by El Gato.
The Sanctions Mentality was completely embraced by The Cat. It’s all part of the “loves of his life” and “sons” routine.
I didn’t fully realize that this was part of Helton’s schtick all along. Until now. The official USC Sanctions Mentality, as coined by @RialtoTrojan, is the perfect description of USC football pre-LR.
It was a horrible mentality to live through. But did it. We survived. It’s so strange to wake up and think something good about USC football might happen every single day under the new LR Mentality. So refreshing.
It’s like Christmas morning every day now
Mediocrity would’ve been a step up
While I’m a big Lane Kiffin fan, he simply wasn’t a good manager of USC football outside of handling the roster numbers during the NCAA’s reign of terror through the USC program. You can’t be fist fighting with asst coaches like Kennedy Pola and showing up to bowl games wearing a hoodie to hide your black eye.
Right — the first aspect of the “sanctions mentality” was the idea that we would soften practices to avoid injuries. Kiffin is not a soft coach, but he did what he thought he had to do as a matter of survival. But the evidence was in very quickly that the soft approach did more harm than good. Then Sark came along and frustratingly did the same thing. Finally, the Cat took soft, and turned it into an art form. He didn’t even know how soft he was being, because he had never even seen a real program (good luck Georgia… Read more »
Bruce Feldman @BruceFeldmanCFB
“With half his coaching staff (including his right-hand man) being forced out in the wake of a lengthy NCAA investigation, and with ex-staffers who have connected Herm Edwards directly to violations, it’s increasingly likely that ASU may have no choice but to make a HC change.”
That would be ugly this late in the game. Who are you going to get at this point
I can fly my flag at my house again. (USC Flag)
Finally…it’s about time USC started acting like the big kid on the block. It’s a welcome relief and I couldn’t be happier about the state of things for Trojan Nation!