‘How can a West Texas boy go to L.A.?’ Lincoln Riley’s journey from Muleshoe to USC
MULESHOE, Texas —
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — Deep on the dusty plains of West Texas, where grain silos line the sparse landscape and a dry breeze blows loose tufts of cotton across U.S. Route 84, a stretch of railroad runs along a lonely highway. The Pecos and Northern Texas Railway companies laid the track here in 1913, cutting through this swath of Bailey County ranchland to connect the growing town of Lubbock to the border of New Mexico. A farming community sprouted alongside the track soon after — some 70 miles northwest of Lubbock and 30 miles east of the border — taking its name from the nearby ranch where, legend has it, the original owner found a stray muleshoe lying in the soil.
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 as head coach at Oklahoma — has become an inextricable part of the town’s story, one they’re more than happy to share, even if most can’t quite reckon with the latest twist.
Here in Muleshoe, the stunning news of Riley’s sudden departure to USC late last month was greeted mostly with sideways glances. Few believed it at first. California? Really? Oklahoma might’ve tested their allegiances as Texans, but Norman was still the Great Plains. Los Angeles, on the other hand … that felt like a world apart from Muleshoe.
“How can a West Texas boy go to L.A.?” asked David Wood, who coached Riley at Muleshoe High.
“It’s going to be a total change for Muleshoe to think about Lincoln being in California. That’s a whole ‘nother world than what he grew up in,” said Alice Liles, who taught Riley’s advanced English class and authored a book on the town.
Take a stroll along Main Street in Muleshoe; pay your respects to Old Pete, the mule monument standing guard near Muleshoe’s only stoplight; hit the livestock auction just outside of town; and maybe stop for a tamale or two during the lunch rush at Leal’s, the town’s beloved gathering spot, and you’ll start to understand what they mean. It’s hard to imagine a place any further away from Los Angeles. The only passing reference to L.A. found here comes from a novelty Rodeo Drive sign behind the bar at Rodeo, Muleshoe’s lone watering hole. Alcohol sales were first allowed in the town just three years earlier and to this day some respected folks still remain wary of setting foot inside the bar.
But everyone here trusts Lincoln. He was brought up in Muleshoe after all, raised with its good Christian values. Even his childhood mischief has become a part of the town mythos.
So when they hear insults hurled his way from Oklahoma, where the pettiness extended this week all the way to the state Senate, they spring quickly to his defense.
“My daddy would roll over in his grave if I said I was gonna root for USC,” Sam Whalin, the school’s retired maintenance director, says with a laugh. “But I think it’s a wonderful move.”
Kyle Atwood, a close friend and Riley’s leading receiver in high school, expects USC flags to be flying in town soon enough.
“Lincoln knows exactly what the heck he’s doing. Going [to USC], he’s obviously ready for that challenge. He’s ready to be a part of that city and what comes with it. And Muleshoe, it’s a town that backs people from the community. There’s an intense sense of pride. Muleshoe always supports their own.”
The town is quiet on a recent Saturday afternoon as Colt Ellis, Muleshoe’s 31-year-old mayor, locks up at the family funeral home and leads an out-of-town visitor on a tour in his pick-up truck. The hustle and bustle is happening at the livestock auction down the highway, where sheep and hogs and goats are being sold at a breakneck pace. But the rest of Muleshoe moves at a crawl.
Family roots run generations deep in Muleshoe, making it sometimes feel like time is standing still. Ellis is the third generation to run the funeral home, which his grandfather opened in 1959. Theirs is one of many businesses in town that have been passed down, then passed down again, lending Muleshoe an ingrained sense of continuity and pride. Growing up here, Ellis says, it often felt like you were insulated from the ails of the outside world.
While other small Texas towns have faded off the map, the dairy business has kept Muleshoe’s population hovering steadily around 5,000. Most folks here seem just fine with that. As the young mayor explains, change often comes to town at a particularly cautious pace. No new houses, he says, have been built in 15 years.
Ellis is hoping to change that with plans for a new development on the edge of town, a project he hopes might convince folks fleeing Lubbock, 70 miles to the southeast, to take refuge in small-town living. He has other big ideas to move Muleshoe forward. But Ellis knows patience is an important part of his job description.
The Riley family came before most other fixtures in Muleshoe, settling in town in the 1930’s, not long after the town was incorporated. Both sides of the family were rooted in the farming business. Lincoln’s father, Mike, ran the family’s cotton compress and warehouse in the nearby town of Sudan, putting Lincoln and his younger brother, Garrett, to work hauling bales of cotton via forklift in the hot Texas sun.
The work was strenuous enough to teach Lincoln Riley the intended lessons about hard work and responsibility — but also to convince him he had no interest in inheriting the family business.
“My dad worked me enough there throughout the years that he broke me on that,” Riley joked during an interview with The Times last week.
But he happily embraced the family’s other enduring legacy in town, as the third of four Rileys to quarterback the Muleshoe Mules. His grandfather, Claude, was the first, leading the Mules to an undefeated season in 1938.
“That was the best the town had ever done,” Wood said, “until Lincoln.”
In West Texas, Muleshoe’s team was for decades a source of disappointment. Coaches came and went. Muleshoe football, as Riley remembers, was “one of the worst programs in the entire state of Texas for a long time.”
Mike Riley, Lincoln’s father, was a Mules quarterback through some of those down years. According to the Dallas Morning News, the Mules scored just one touchdown during the entire 1969 season. But the worst of times came decades later, just as his oldest son was learning to love football.
“As soon as the band quit marching, it’d just be a few of us, some parents and the coaches’ wives in the stands,” Stacy Conner, pastor at the First Baptist Church and a Riley family friend, jokes.
Still, Lincoln Riley grew up loving the Mules — and football, in general.
“There were multiple years in which we were 0-10 or 1-9,” Atwood says. “We still attended all the games. We were huge Muleshoe fans.”
It wasn’t until Wood came to town in the spring of 1996 that the team’s fortunes started to turn around. The new coach inherited around two dozen players, barely enough to field a full team, and the program was plagued by a lack of discipline. The day he interviewed, Wood recalls, there were three fights in the school’s halls.
“He wasn’t afraid to change things up, to do things different from what had been done there. What had been done was history or tradition or how they’d always done it, but it wasn’t working. … I’ve always carried that with me.” — USC COACH LINCOLN RILEY ON WHAT HE LEARNED FROM HIGH SCHOOL COACH DAVID WOOD
There was backlash to his new, strict approach at first, too. But Muleshoe “wanted discipline,” he said. “The town wanted to be good. They just didn’t know how to do it.”
Years later, when asked what he’d learned from Wood, Riley wouldn’t hesitate to draw parallels to the situation he now steps into at USC.
“He brought a program and a culture to Muleshoe that hadn’t been there,” Riley said. “He brought belief and hope. He wasn’t afraid to change things up, to do things different from what had been done there. What had been done was history or tradition or how they’d always done it, but it wasn’t working. … I’ve always carried that with me. I’ve never been afraid to go against the grain if I felt like it was the best thing for the team, for the program. I certainly won’t be afraid to do it here.”
The Mules won one game in Wood’s first season, then five the next, giving Muleshoe its first non-losing season in two decades. When Riley was a freshman, the Mules won 10, including a playoff game. Momentum was building, and at quarterback, the attention turned to Riley, who Wood says was set to take the reins as a sophomore. But he dislocated his throwing shoulder before the start of the season trying to make a tackle during a practice. He played out the year on the defensive line instead.
Some speculate the injury might’ve changed his trajectory, but the next season, Riley led Muleshoe to new heights as its quarterback anyway. The town would never forget.
Over time, some of the Riley stories from those days have come to drift into tall tales, depending on who’s telling them. But everyone agrees that the boy was uncommonly bright, even if he didn’t take notes in class and sometimes skipped his homework. As a quarterback, Wood says, his intellect was his greatest asset. Later, when his younger brother, Garrett, quarterbacked the team, Wood consulted with Lincoln about their offense.
“He could think on the field unlike anybody else,” Wood said. “Lincoln has a photographic memory, and when I say that, I really mean it.”
At the helm of an I-formation, pro-style attack that bears no resemblance to the offense he ran at Oklahoma and will bring to USC, Riley led the Mules to an undefeated regular season in 2000. Muleshoe rolled through four playoff games on their way to the Class 3A state semifinals, including a rare win over Friona that inspired Riley and three teammates the next summer to climb the rival town’s water tower — and spray paint the winning score, 23-13, for all to see.
Atwood, who was one of the four, recalls that the boys were caught as soon as they descended the water tower. Today, he contends that their prank, now a part of town lore, was delayed payback for Friona painting the previous season’s score all over Muleshoe’s own weight room.
Two decades later, folks in town are still happy to relive that run through the state playoffs. Every Friday night that season, Muleshoe shut down. Caravans of pick-ups and SUVs would filter out of town for road games, packing visiting bleachers across the plains. Ellis, the mayor, says it “felt just like the movies.” For a small West Texas town obsessed with football, it was unforgettable.
“No one thought it was possible,” Riley remembers.
Muleshoe ultimately fell short in the state semifinals, losing handily to Forney High, a much larger school, 41-17. But by then, the town had already galvanized around its team, and Muleshoe was firmly on the football map.
“He could think on the field unlike anybody else. Lincoln has a photographic memory, and when I say that, I really mean it.” DAVID WOOD, LINCOLN RILEY’S FOOTBALL COACH AT MULESHOE HIGH
The run still resonates here. Wes Wood, the coach’s son who led the Mules to a state title as quarterback in 2008, said that season cemented Riley as his childhood hero. Few will ever forget Riley leading the Mules at Texas Stadium.
“Here’s little po-dunk Muleshoe playing in the [Dallas] Cowboys’ stadium,” said Wood, who’s now retired. “Back then, that was unbelievable.”
Eight years later, on the brink of that state championship, Riley returned to Muleshoe High for a pep rally. He’d recently been elevated to receivers coach at Texas Tech after years spent endearing himself to then-coach Mike Leach as a student and grad assistant. His coaching career would soon take off into the stratosphere, leading him to East Carolina, then Oklahoma and now USC, but Riley was already a star in Muleshoe.
The whole town packed into the high school gym that day, glowing as Riley spoke. He told the team not to waste one second of its big moment. There was a reason they’d come this far. “Just do what got you here,” Riley said. “Don’t change anything.”
The crowd roared. Some folks waited afterward to get his autograph.
“He inspired the whole town,” Wood said. “That was pretty exciting.”
In a back corner booth at Leal’s, where cowboy hats line the front walkway and tables are filling ahead of the lunch rush, Bob Graves is still sorting out his emotions over fresh-baked tortilla chips. No one in Muleshoe was more thrilled with Riley as Oklahoma’s coach than Graves, who served as the voice of Muleshoe football broadcasts and has been a Sooner fan since 1947. His exit left him stunned — and, he admits, a bit disappointed.
“It was so sudden,” Graves says. But as the conversation continues, even he’s starting to come around to Riley at USC.
There’s no shortage of small-town sleuths here still wondering aloud why Riley up and left the Sooners seemingly overnight. Some were convinced he’d leave for Louisiana State. Others speculate he wanted nothing to do with the Southeastern Conference.
“From what I understand,” Graves says, “he wants to build his own program.”
The theories are numerous, but some here who know the Rileys wonder if the sprawl of Los Angeles might offer a semblance of anonymity. That’s something they never felt in Norman, where fans would recognize Riley’s wife, Caitlin, at the grocery store and knew their daughters’ names.
“I just knew there were things I wanted to try to do. Life is too short, so don’t be afraid to go for it.”
USC COACH LINCOLN RILEY ON LEAVING HIS SMALL HOMETOWN OF MULESHOE, TEXAS
Garrett Riley, Lincoln’s brother, said he “had a little bit of an instinct that something like that may happen.” But even he learned his brother took the USC job via social media.
“He keeps things pretty close to his sleeve,” Garrett says.
Lincoln Riley isn’t surprised by the town’s confusion. Just like he isn’t shocked by the anger in Oklahoma. Even a few weeks ago, he says, “if you would’ve told me I was living in L.A., I don’t know that I would’ve believed you.”
He looks back fondly on his upbringing in West Texas and the lessons it taught him. “It shaped who I am,” Riley says. But growing up, he always knew that he would leave.
“I just knew there were things I wanted to try to do,” he says. “Life is too short, so don’t be afraid to go for it.”
That notion crossed his mind the last Sunday morning in November, as he decided within a few hours to leave the comfort of Oklahoma for the uncertainty of USC. The idea of moving to Southern California was, he admits, pretty daunting. “There was some nervous energy,” Riley says. But as he and his wife considered the idea, Riley thought of his daughters.
“Conventional wisdom would say that you guys have been smallish-town people. That’s what you grew up in, that’s what your daughters are used to,” Riley says. “Conventional wisdom might tell you to stay in that, that’s what you do, and I certainly think that would’ve turned out just fine. But I think we saw this move as potentially a chance for them to experience new things, and when they get out in the real world — which will come way too quick — I want them to have been exposed to different things and different areas and different kinds of people. That part has always been important to me.”
The two weeks since that decision have been a whirlwind in both Los Angeles and Muleshoe, even if the definition differs in both places. At USC, expectations are already soaring. Fans are already convinced Riley’s arrival signifies a triumphant return to the Trojans’ rightful place atop college football.
In Muleshoe, no one needs any convincing. Sure, maybe they wouldn’t have chosen California as their favorite son’s next step. But like L.A., they have complete faith now that Lincoln Riley will deliver. He always has.
“It won’t be long,” Wood assures. “He’s gonna make the Trojans a powerhouse again.”
latimes.com
_________
Reading the story one thing really stood out. The new coach at Muleshoe came in and established discipline, and the parallels at USC. Discipline has not been on the USC sideline for a long time. It really showed in the number of players not making the Cal game. It was obvious that the team was NOT on the same page as Donte said it would be. Donte was trying to establish some discipline. The coddled players weren’t having it. Clay Helton had treated the team as “boys” for too long. Boys will be boys was the disciplinary system under the… Read more »
Kedon Slovis enters the portal. Just a little surprised he isn’t willing to compete for starter with LN. Dart hasn’t exactly set the World on fire in his play on the field even if the team is in poor shape. But the teams Slovis started on were never considered playing up to their expectation and Slovis looks like an older man out there with what he has had to deal with, a lazy-slack HC and Struggling OC. He has paid a price for playing for CH. He evidently sees the writing on the wall in what LR will accept. And… Read more »
Sad to see a kid peak in his freshman year, but then get worse in the next two years. Clay Helton is a cancer on any team he is involved with….
This season is emblematic of why I hate the whole ND thing. The only team ND played that remains ranked in the CFP Top 25 is Cincinnati — and the Domers lost that game handily (at home). The only other team that was even ranked at the time that ND played them was Wisconsin (then #18), but the Badgers ended the season with four losses. ND needed help ranging from “the luck of the Irish” to answered prayers to survive against awful Florida State, Virginia Tech, AND of all teams, Toledo. Six-loss UNC was competitive against them. But low and… Read more »
It’s hard for me to put down ND since USC has been so, so bad for many years now (yes, it’s true). Until USC finally starts putting ND in its place again on the field, I guess I figure I need to keep my mouth shut about those guys. Plus I enjoy seeing them lose big-time bowl games,
Just because we suck doesn’t mean we can’t call it as it is, Allen! But yeah, that is my favorite feature of the whole ND fraud — that they get promoted above whatever station they are at by bowl time every year, and thus their bowl record is abysmal and getting worse as times go by.
I want a USC football hoodie for Christmas with the U in the form of a muleshoe.
I like it, Rushmore!
Hypercompetitive Urban Meyer Trending Downward Jay Busbee (Yahoo Sports) — “It seemed like an odd idea at the time, hiring a guy who’d strode the college landscape like a colossus to run an NFL franchise. But hey, Urban Meyer knew how to win, and winning’s a universal language no matter the league, right? “As Meyer and the Jacksonville Jaguars have learned over the last three months, winning in college is a whole different endeavor than winning at the pro level. He’s lost 11 games already, more than he lost in his entire seven-year tenure at Ohio State. “Meyer might… Read more »
I thought we learned this lesson already with Saban’s short stint as the Dolphins head coach.
Which makes Pete Carroll’s success in Seattle and at USC remarkable, agree?
I do! Carroll really figured things out before he came to SC, and he didn’t walk into Seattle with an “I’m great, and I will make you great” attitude. Carroll knew better than that — it was more, “we’ve got work to do, but there is fun out there to be had, so let’s go get this thing together.” From what I am hearing, Urban walked into Jacksonville like a guy ready to wave his magic wand and have everyone fall in line. That can work with kids auditioning for a future, but not with gozillionaires.
Could Kliff Kingsbury, the former USC OC for a day, win the Super Bowl this year with his 10-2 Cardinals?
They play the visiting 8-4 Rams tonight at 5 pm PT.
Not sure if it will happen, but it’s pretty natural to think Jahmyr Gibbs might follow Tashard Choice here.
They think he is Alabama right now, but this could change the game a little.
Pretty sure he’d be RB1.
Donte Williams is now expected to remain on USC’s coaching staff.
Seems like good news to me, when all is said and done.
Erjk McKinney (WeAreSC)
Down deep I’m very happy he stays. Would love to see him reap benefits of new staff and culture. I believe there is class in move to keep him part of family
Agree, and to keep him from going back to Oregon or UCLA
Probably kept on to be lead recruiter to Mater Dei football😎
He he . Truthfully I bet this tips scales with a number of families
This is a big deal. Recruiting just gets better, Donte becomes better under qualifed coaches, and we get to see a better team. Everybody wins.
Keep him around until after recruiting and then ‘ see ya’
It’s a whole new era …. nothing from the past decade or the Pete Carroll coaching weed remains !
You lost me, if he is under a different and highly qualified HC why not make him better. Why just throw someone away because he had to endure coaching under Helton just so he could be with his dad during his last days. I say keep him and make him better and use his talents recruiting. Sometimes the old way is better than how it is done in the “new era”.
Canzano: A twist — Justin Wilcox turned down the Oregon Ducks
John Canzano (The Oregonian)
Wilcox must have had assurances from Cal that they weren’t moving on from him to turn down Oregon. Kinda shocking to be honest. He was one of the worst DC hires we’ve ever had here and we couldn’t get him out of town fast enough, yet he reinvented himself with a successful stint as DC at Wisconsin, and now this. Good for him. If Lanning can talk someone like Joe Brady to be OC at Oregon, then they may have something
He must be a great interviewee, and have some solid people who give him props on the inside. Because I sure haven’t seen much performance on the field.
He has not shown much as a DC or HC. He had a good season at Wisconsin which got him the Cal job. I just can’t figure this one out, he as said he would like out of Cal, yet refuses the 2nd best job in the Pac12. Perhaps he is afraid of the high expectations at Oregon.
I’d be afraid of ORE/Phil Knight expectations if I were Wilcox. IMO, he’d get fired up there. He can stay at CAL, bat .500, beat STAN some of the time, and be okay.
Phil is old and probably wants a NC. Lanning, to be honest, is a real gambler. Moving to a culture he does not know and to an area of the country where he has no recruiting network. I would never gamble my future on such odds.
Especially when you don’t know if that GA defense was Lannings or Smarts.
It looks too much like Bama’s defense. It’s what Smart knows and I would have to believe it is what Lanning knows also.
I’m interested to see how much of a SEC culture Lanning will try to create up here where physically tough & aggressive defenses are the rule. If he can recruit the right players that is.
ORE so lucked out! They went to the mat for Justin Wilcox, and still ended up with Lanning, who is at least a question mark. Wilcox has already proven he’s average at best.
That’s what I was thinking when I read about Wilcox & Oregon. Oregon is a high pressure HC job. And It wouldn’t surprise me at all Wilcox didn’t want any of that. CAL definitely isn’t high pressure.
Wilcox is smarter than I thought. He has a realistic view of his talent level. He is at best a .700 coach. Most likely a .500 coach. That would get him fired at Oregon in 3 years at best. Where is Mark Helfrich now? Being a .500 to .700 level coach at Cal is a lifetime position. He has a good job at Cal, no reason to leave.
Lanning will have to hire a OC who has an offensive scheme he likes & trusts.
What a story, small town boy makes the big time. He seems to have the character and integrity that mothers want their sons to be associated with. How wonderful it is to have a HC that actually knows how to coach and run a program. He was taught by one of the best in Bob Stoops, with influences from other knowledgable coaches. It is something we have not had in over a decade. I am sure his success is assured, and along with that success at USC. FINALLY!!
“The No. 16/No. 15 USC Trojans (9-0, 2-0) will host Long Beach State (3-6) at the Galen Center on Dec. 12 at 2 p.m. The game will air on the Pac-12 Network with J.B Long and Don MacLean calling the action. “USC is 9-0 to start the season for the first time since 2017, when USC opened the campaign 14-0. The Trojans are one of eight undefeated teams still remaining in college basketball. USC debuts at No. 7 in the NET this week, the chief rankings used for the NCAA Tournament selection and seeding. This is USC’s first Sunday game of… Read more »
Liked how this team has looked this year. Lotta ‘Fight On’ Team is great fun to watch. Big ‘D’
Oh and there will be a ‘few HS/college Footballers’ in the house with some new guy on
campus C. L. Riley
For fun take a Google Map Street View of Muleshoe, TX. The skyline is made up of grain silos and the horizon is literally a straight horizontal line and you better own a pickup truck.
Great article on Lincoln Riley, Allen. I am now famous, as I live 97 miles Northeast of Muleshoe, TX. ha ha
Let’s face it. Lincoln Riley is just an amazing guy. All bias aside, this guy is a special person, who just might save USC football. ✌
That is the hope of 99.959 % of The Trojan Family.
Oh you mean Amarillo, the suburbs of Muleshoe! The Panhandle must love it LR leaving Oklahoma.😎
New RB coach on board. By all accounts he is a great hire.
Tashard Choice from Georgia Tech.
Attention to Detail! Scott Schrader (WeAreSC) — “For the time ever USC rented a beach house to entertain the visitors and their families. Saturday they held the dinner there and arrived around 4pm…in time to enjoy sunset. “One of the most interesting nuggets from the dinner in Manhattan Beach was about Lincoln Riley. He spent a lot of time talking to QB Jaxson Dart at dinner. “Let’s finish with this. Annie Hanson who came from Oklahoma with Riley is paying attention to every detail. They even replaced all the outdated furniture in the McKay Center and filled it with rental furniture. Hired a staging company for that.… Read more »
Ah new blood. Fresh eyes on things. Really? Outdated furniture in the McKay Center? Bohn has really had to clean up a mess that is still a work in progress. Sounds like Riley’s crew is kickin’ it up a knotch.
USC FOOTBALL has been in a rut for a decade….out with the old, in with the new.
Since Pete Carroll left right before the NCAA attacked USC football:
2010, Kiffin, 8-5
2011, Kiffin, 10-2
2012, Kiffin, 7-6
2013, Kiffin/Ed O/The Cat, 10-4
2014, Sark, 9-4
2015, Sark/The Cat, 8-6
2016, The Cat, 10-3
2017, The Cat, 11-3
2018, The Cat, 5-7, the wheels fall completely off
2019, The Cat, 8-5
2020, The Cat, 5-1
2021, The Cat/Donte, 4-8
Wins — 95
Losses — 54
It’s bad…It feels more like 54-95
But heck, I removed my rear view mirror
Now, let’s scrub those floors, get ride of the culture of the last decade
.
Still Let’s honor those players(there are many) who fought to keep the torch lit at Coliseum
I think it feels a lot worse because of the lopsided blow-out losses which USC fans have had to get used to. Even in the 10 year win years under The Cat, USC was getting totally destroyed by some teams.
When you look at The Cat’s records, it looks great. But, we all know that these records are deceptive. He destroyed the program.
I don’t think they look great. Maybe I’m not drinking enough!