Per AI — Gary Patterson’s defensive scheme breathes new life into the USC Trojans, directly targeting the physical, run-heavy styles of the Big Ten conference. As the legendary pioneer of the modern 4-2-5 “Mint” alignment, Patterson is replacing D’Anton Lynn’s old framework with a hybrid system designed to achieve maximum schematic flexibility.
Rather than tearing down the roster, Pattersonspent spring camp blending USC’s existing zone principles with his hallmark aggressive, man-match coverages.
1. Dual Play-Calling: The Split-Field Philosophy
The most transformative change Patterson introduces to Los Angeles is his independent split-field play-calling system. Unlike traditional coordinators who make one blanket call for all 11 players, Patterson issues two entirely separate calls on every down—one for the front seven and one for the backend secondary.
The Benefit: This allows the Trojans to seamlessly check into a premium run-stopping front while concurrently deploying an elite pass-coverage shell over the top.
The Execution: It eliminates predictable systemic weaknesses, giving USC the upper hand against complex pre-snap offensive motions.
2. Multiplicity but Simplicity: The Hybrid 4-2-5 Lineup
While the base formation functions as a 4-2-5, Patterson’s tactical genius relies on changing looks without changing personnel, frequently morphing into a 3-3-5 look to deceive quarterbacks.
The Five-DB Shell: The system leans heavily on three distinct safety positions: the Free Safety (FS), Strong Safety (SS), and the “Weak Safety” (WS) or overhang nickel back. This overhang player acts as the ultimate chess piece, tasked with elite communication to seamlessly transition from deep coverage to plugging gaps in the run box.
Aggressive Man-Match Press: Moving away from passive zone drops, Patterson uses “40” bracket coverages. Cornerbacks press outside receivers aggressively, allowing safeties to read the eyes of inside targets and jump intermediate passing lanes.
3. Front-Four Freedom & Stunt Variations
Patterson’s system focuses on maximizing a deep defensive line rotation to create organic pass rushes without over-blitzing.
Four-Man Pressure: The objective is simple: rush four, drop seven into coverage.
Infinite Stunts: Under Patterson’s rules, the defensive line can use a single interior stunt or twist while the secondary rotates through seven different coverage variations behind it. This limits bust rates for linebackers while forcing offensive lines into sudden, difficult protection re-calls.
4. White-Stripe Film Teaching
To fast-track the learning curve for USC’s incoming freshman class, Patterson instituted a unique visual coaching aid during spring practices: painting bright white stripes down the center of defensive backs’ helmets. During post-practice tape reviews, this allows the coaching staff to precisely track eye discipline and verify whether safeties are staring into the backfield or executing their correct coverage reads.
Luke Wafle’s Defensive Line Projection
Wafle— the towering 6-foot-5, 260-pound five-star signee—stunned the coaching staff by completely bypassing the usual freshman learning curve during spring camp.
The Blueprint:Patterson intends to use Wafle as an “everything edge” defender. He possesses the brute lower-body power to anchor against Big Ten offensive tackles in short-yardage run situations, but his high-end hand technique allows him to compress the pocket as a pure power rusher.
The Rotation:Wafle is locked in a fierce battle with Penn State transfer Zuriah Fisherfor starter snaps at defensive end. Even if Fisher gets the nominal nod early on, Wafle’s record-shattering high school productivity (23 sacks as a senior) and dynamic motor guarantee he will rotate in heavily on third-down sub-packages to hunt opposing quarterbacks.
The Overhang Nickel Safety Battle
In Patterson’s 4-2-5 system, the overhang nickel safety (often called the “Star” or “Weak Safety”) must be physical enough to fill the B-gap against the run, yet fluid enough to cover slot receivers. Post-spring practices have narrowed this battle down to two primary players with contrasting styles:
Alex Graham (The Cover Specialist): Wearing the historic No. 7 jersey, Graham exited spring with the inside track on the starting job. He brings elite lateral agility and coverage instincts to the apex, making him Patterson’s preferred option when USC faces spread offenses or heavy passing downs.
Prophet Brown (The Veteran Chess Piece): Brown is pushing Graham relentlessly by leaning on his extensive game experience and high-IQ communication skills. While he lacks Graham’s raw athletic ceiling, Brown excels at the pre-snap checks required in Patterson’ssplit-field play-calling system, rarely giving up a busted coverage assignment.
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We are reading where the 4&5 star players are committing to across the Country. Are those athletes better than the one’s USC has gotten commitments to? What it comes down to, it’s the coaching of those players that determines the outcome? Are our coaches better than theirs? This question never seems to be brought up by the media in ranking coaches. Are coaches too thin skinned to deal with this and somehow earn the media don’t tread on this?
In the second shootout match of the day (five shots for each team from 12 yds out), this one in Guadalupe, Mexico, Morocco beats The Netherlands 3-2. The Dutch are out.
Bad day for Europe. Both Germany and The Netherlands are out on penalty shoot-outs. Paraguay and Morocco are in and move on to the Round of 16.
Literally just hours after getting knocked out of the World Cup in the Round of 32 by its shootout loss to Morocco, The Netherlands 63-yr old manager Ronald Koeman immediately resigned.
The Netherlands have had strong showings at recent World Cups. They reached the quarterfinals in 2022, the semifinals in 2014 and were runners-up in 2010, losing to Spain 1-0.
European & South American soccer teams have had a competitive attitude with eachother feeling they are better than the other. In this thinking, the other continents are lesser competition. Of course in women’s WC, we are the one’s the World loathes to want to beat.
USMNT plays Bosnia on Wednesday in the Round of 32. Bosnia ended up 5th best of the 8 third place teams that get to move on. If US gets past Bosnia they likely face Belgium then either Spain or Portugal. US should get 2 more wins then they’re out. Mexico, France and Argentina are the only undefeated teams. Argentina and France are the top 2. 13 European teams, 9 African , 9 from the Americas and Japan are still alive. Hey we are closing in on July. What else is there to watch? MLB, WNBA? What’s more boring baseball or… Read more »
It’s a shame what consistent unprotected brutality Caitlin Clark has to go through. I don’t get it. So much animosity towards the person who elevated the WNBA in terms of exposure and salaries more in two years (by far) than any other female alive. JMHO.
Bill Plascke’s LA Times poison pen hit piece on Caitlan Clark read like it was written by a Parkinson’s Disease patient entering end stage Sundowner Syndrome. Tell us it ain’t so Bill?
Plaschke’s historically been a hit-and-miss columnist. I thought he swung too hard and missed big in Clark, but I don’t really watch the WNBA, so my opinion on her treatment pretty much comes from the cheap seats.
But the last clearly forcible push-down on her neck while she was laying crumpled on the hardwood was absolutely ridiculous IMO and something the refs need to address more harshly.
I don’t follow WNBA basketball but it doesn’t seem to be very popular outside of Clark. The NBA continues to subsidize it. My answer is why? If the ratings aren’t good and the people aren’t interested why try and make them interested by forcing it down their throats? Let it die like anything else that doesn’t have good ratings. Why the double standard?
I don’t watch the WNBA either, and won’t be doing so, unless Caitlan Clark shows up in which case I would actually turn on a game just to see her play. She’s that magnetic. Clark’s been a total game changer for the marketing moronic WNBA. She gets beat up and heavily fouled on a near constant basis from what I have read and observed from news reports, player interviews, and game clips. Clark is the Golden Goose of the WNBA. She’s the Queen who sells out arenas. You take her out, and the league slips back down to ground zero.… Read more »
When Lauren Betts, Juju Watkins, and Jazzy Davidson get there Clark won’t be the only show in town. From what I’ve heard maybe Clark could tone down her trash talk, a little maturity on her part may help. It’s still not an excuse to beat on her.
Really? You mean Caitlin Clark is supposed to shut up, or she’s not physically safe in the WNBA? That’s ridiculous.
As I said, the WNBA is moronic and if Clark either gets hurt bad or her career turns permanently south because of injuries due to league-allowed violence against her, the WNBA will get what they deserve — quick and massively reduced progress and star power that occurred purely because of Clark’s presence, and her presence only.
I said her trash talk is no excuse to get beat on and the league is negligent/incompetent in not cracking down. But for her own self preservation, she might tone it down, maybe it would help. If the players or the league won’t do the right thing, someone has be the grown up. I’ve already spent more time on the WNBA in the last day than the rest of my life but do you think the USC stars will further elevate the league?
I totally disagree with you. So does Larry Bird, one of the greatest NBA trash talkers in the history of championship basketball at the highest level. Bird would have trash-talked back into anyone’s face who suggested he “tone it down.” I would have loved to see that. Bird’s mouth was an important part of his game, and justifiably so. It helped make him great, and the NBA made sure he could do it without reprisal. Caitlin Clark shouldn’t have to worry about her physical health or self-preservation on the court (especially due to WNBA politics) because her game is so… Read more »
“Bird’s mouth was an important part of his game, and justifiably so. It helped make him great, and the NBA made sure he could do it without reprisal.” I understand trash talk is part of every sport. Your key point, the NBA policed it. If no one is coming to Clark’s aide she has to do something herself. Anyway I’m out with WNBA talk. 😎✌
So you’d advise Clark to let herself be intimidated by lesser players because the shameful WNBA won’t treat her fairly. As I said, I’d rather see her go to Europe where hopefully league politics don’t interfere with her excellence.
But maybe the bad-looking/perpetually struggling WNBA will finally get smart, do the right thing, and save their biggest league asset. That’s still a possibility, especially in view of the increased public spotlight and outrage towards the ref’s current blatant unfair treatment of its biggest star.
Let’s just say that LB was a very confident guy. That’s probably what made him great. One time before the NBA allstar game and right before the 3 point shooting contest he told the rest of the shooters that they might as well go home because this contest was already over(or at least that’s the way I heard the story).
They are actively trying to cut her off at the knees and destroy her game and they probably will be successful. How can you get your game going if the refs are letting the defense play jungle ball on you?
I agree and it’s a shame 007. Hard to comprehend why the perpetually struggling WNBA would actually try to hurt the career of the obvious “face of the league” who has had such a quick and remarkable positive financial impact on the league and its players.
I bet we don’t know the half of it behind the scenes. It’ll be interesting to see where this goes.
Either that or pay the players a lot less money so that it can make a profit. When the players are saying “Pay us what we are worth”(which is what they were saying during the allstar game), let’s be honest….on a business level they are worth a lot less than they are already making. There are a lot of ungrateful people in this country
SC made a big mistake back in 2013. They fired a coach who was a better coach than CH and LR put together. They fired him in the middle of the season. They didn’t even let him finish the season. I don’t know who was behind that. Most say Pat Haden but I really think it came from higher than him….Probably Nakias. Had they let him finish the season, I think he would have straightened that team out and gone on to win a couple of NC’s by now. The media hated Kiffin(back then more then now) and wanted him… Read more »
Today, Lane Kiffin is a better HC than LR. In 2019, Ed Orgeron was a better HC than LR is today and probably in 2013 as well. Lane Kiffin did a masterful job holding the team together during the first 2 years of the sanctions but by the end of ’12 and beginning of ’13 he lost the locker room. He was 38 at the time. It was another 8 years before he turned around Ole Miss including 3 years with Saban. You really think USC should have kept LK for the past 13 years? Would he be the HC… Read more »
You made a lot of great points. But I do think Kiffin was a great coach even back then. Definitely immature and unable to deal with the media but they haven’t liked him since then and they still don’t like him even today. Had he stayed he would have continued to knock the media and they would have done everything they could to destroy his reputation but if the USC admin had just asked them the question…what did we hire him for…to coach or to please the media?….and just let him coach, I think we would have won a NC… Read more »
I was thinking, how much did Ed O help Kiffin manage the players? I often wonder if a program cuts a coach loose too soon instead of riding out a rough patch. As Allen and others say USC is not a place for on the job training or grow in maturity. Interesting to wonder though if Kiffen or Ed O were still the HC 13 years later what would have happened.
Lane’s a phenomenal coach but he comes with a heavy price tag that has nothing to do with money. He says what he wants, when he wants and that can be a big distraction and pain in the butt. But he’s still easily worth it and I think he’ll likely win a NC at LSU as he has already publicly predicted. Amazing talent is already rolling into Baton Rouge to play for him. Had LK more time, he might have even stolen prize TE Mark Bowman from USC. Most coaches would have never even tried for that last-minute cross-country switch.… Read more »
Yeah, I forgot to mention the situation he was under during his tenure because of the corrupt NCAA. Definitely a great recruiter and a great X’s and O’s man. He still doesn’t get along very well with the media(think of him and Paul Finebaum) but I don’t think that would have hindered him. I could be wrong. Maybe he was too immature at SC. But I would have loved to see what he would have done had they not fired on the spot just because of one loss without even taking some time to think about this decision. But that… Read more »
You could probably call Ed O another mentor of his. And let’s not forget his father. You guys are right. USC is not a place for on the job training. But in 2010(his first year) they got robbed at Stanford when the clock manager at Stanford Stadium wearing a Stanford baseball cap and Stanford jacket gave Stanford extra seconds to go down and kick a field goal and win the game. I also think they would have beaten ND if Barkley had played. They should have went 10-3 with those two wins not to mention a 32-31 loss to Washington.… Read more »
All the pieces are in place. It’s produce or ‘Hit the road Jack’. I don’t know what the next 2 years will produce but, barring a disasterous season, I think they will give him 2 more years. You asked where would USC football be today if LK was still here after 13 years? There’s no way to say but I would have liked to see them let him finish that 2013 season. The story I heard(can’t be sure whether it is true or not) is that when they told LK on the tarmac that he was out as the HC,… Read more »
Nikias was a disaster. Thank god he was forced to leave his role at USC in 2018 because he had “lost the moral authority to lead.”
“There’s a deep well of frustration across the university that the university has lost its way. It is harming our students and it is harming our reputation,” said a faculty member who had taught at USC for 22 years at the time.
Dan Weber, who used to be with the Ryan Abraham staff and still appears every once in a while(whom I used to like to listen to…he made sense most of the time), developed a friendship with Nakias and said that MK loved USC football and college football in general. I don’t think that he loved football at all. Steven Sample came to USC in 1991 promising to make USC the Princeton of the west and he did a good job turning SC into an academic school. But Princetons academic prowess grew at the same time they degraded a very powerful… Read more »
A mysterious story has appeared on Facebook, but I think it’s just clickbait. It goes into detail about how Lincoln Riley has removed a player from the roster for being disruptive on field and in the locker room. Some versions of the story name Miava as the instigator of the removal.
I cannot find anything anywhere else about this story outside of Facebook and no iteration names the player who was removed. Has anyone else seen anything along these lines?
Per AI — The Exact Fake Quote Circulating Online A widely shared, fabricated Facebook and clickbait blog post manufactured a fake quote from Maiava, claiming he said: “As long as I’m here, he will never step on that field. If he’s around, I’m not.“ The post paired this fake quote with headlines like “USC Trojans Face Locker Room Shakeup as Lincoln Riley Removes Disruptive Player” to generate clicks. Why It Is Factually Untrue The Quote is Fabricated: Maiava never gave this quote to any media outlet, nor has he made any public ultimatums regarding his teammates. In actual press… Read more »
This season’s Trojan team is a yet unsolved mystery for many of us. Who the heck knows how this Hybrid 4-2-5 Overhang Nickel Safety D installed by Gary Patterson is going to really work? It’ll be interesting to see how B1G teams attack it and if it works based on some of the unproven talent USC has to run it. Will Maiava step up his game and lose the inconsistency? Will USC finally figure out how to run the ball when it counts against the better competition? Will special teams lose the Achilles Heel status LR has unfortunately cultivated here?.… Read more »
Good point. Not sure we really have a Grootegoed guy like that. It’s a tall order. Talanoa Hufanga, another one of my faves, or Su’a Cravens would also be nice.
All-Pro safety Talanoa Hufanga, now with the Broncos
Now that looks like a guy who loves the game of football!
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June 25, 2026 7:58 pm
Shout out to John Weld for his assistance while we were in Africa this past spring. Hopefully John enjoyed the African photo album, particularly the shot of LR putting it to USC in the wild? Tried to attach a parting shot from Zimbabwe airport? Hopefully the Zimbabwe Basketball Team picture attached and appears?
I agree on the shout out. I was in Mexico last week and found myself blocked from posting. I contacted the blog and John lifted the block.
I learned two things while in Mexico 1. Posting is blocked by a service. And . Never say out loud, “Soccer is a keep-away game invented for kids who can’t catch,” in a restaurant full of people wearing green jerseys and watching two teams playing keep-away for kids who can’t catch.
RT — I was in Mexico too several days last week, in the Valle de Guadalupe wine country for a wedding. We came back on Father’s Day through Tijuana with a group. As expected, we ran into a massive jam at the border on our return but had wrangled some type of magical “medical pass” which allowed us to blow through the border in some expedited lane that literally saved us hours. It’s the only way to go! I couldn’t believe how the USA lost to Turkey 3-2 last night at very the last second. Just when you think it’s… Read more »
Too bad. This World Cup team could have made history, which for a lackluster, underachieving soccer nation like the USA would have been terrific, and a big deal. I’d say a little air left the balloon. Was it worth it? Time will tell. Instead we flopped, got gut-punched, and gave Turkey a reason to go home with their heads held high. Good for Turkey. They wanted it more. I had to admire their grit and opportunistic attack. It’ll be interesting to see how the USA bounces back from the loss to an 0-2 team that was headed back home. Will… Read more »
The USMNT has the talent to beat Bosnia on Wednesday, the last 3rd place team to barely get to the round of 32. That will put the US in the Sweet 16. Then it will get very tough.
Allen, they still have that far left medical vehicle lane? Used to pay $10.00 to a Mexican doctor to have blood pressure taken, grab a doctor’s note, jam over into the far left lane and save yourself hours waiting in that baking sun.
We went to Mexico in a large van and they never checked our passports, just flagged us “future purchasers” through. We didn’t have anyone with medical issues, but the person who set us up apparently paid the right people and we went through the border back into the USA in literally 15 mins with thousands stuck in their cars. I almost felt a little guilty. Almost. 😉 😃
What house were you in ’72, if you don’t mind? I was a Sig. Crazy, but fun and met some great guys from all over the U.S., but especially California and the West.
No need to divulge if you don’t want. The Row was an incredible place back then in the early 70’s. At least that’s how I remember it.
Delta Sigma Phi, corner of University and 30th Street, just south of the row. Several years before you, but the Sigs were and probably remain the dominant dawgs. The DSP house folded in 2010, the result of lack of pledging and internal drug use well after my time. We coveted that front porch, watching the lunch time co-ed parade back to the row where my bride passed by. Incredibly that property sold for $7.5M and was converted into private upscale housing.
I just can’t go past 20 minutes of men’s soccer. The bad histrionics, the keep away game so brilliantly described by Rialto— I just would watch a Taylor Sheridan show on paramount plus
I stumbled on the US v. Turkey game last night and promptly watch the Turks tie the game 1-1. I am probably a jinx to our team.
From AI:
U.S. men’s national team rested nine of their regular starters in their final group-stage match against Turkey. With their spot in the knockout round already secured, head coach Mauricio Pochettino utilized the dead-rubber game to protect key players from injury and avoid suspensions for the Round of 32. The rotated U.S. squad fell to Turkey 3-2 after conceding a goal in the eighth minute of stoppage time.
USMNT (2-1) plays Bosnia (1-1-1) on Wednesday. Bosnia just squeaked in to the final third place slot. US is getting favorable opponents so far.
You will see a strong safety creep up to a linebacker position numerous times in Bowden’s FSU D-scheme. He might of used even before when he was at West Virginia?
Hey AI whoever you are, I read Patterson’s defense is a new hybrid replacing Lynn’s old scheme? Explain to me how this 4-2-5 defense is new when Patterson used it all the yrs he was at TCU? Maybe it’s new to USC football but certainly not college ball. And no one around here has yet asked GP if he didn’t get his 4-2-5 from watching Bobby Bowdon’s defense used after 1976? You watched it Allen. It looked just like what GP is doing here.
I really enjoyed watching Bobby Bowden’s exciting teams, and for good reason:
Bowden’s official career record as HC at FSU is 304–97–4. While his team actually won 316 games on the field during his 34-year tenure (1976–2009), the NCAA stripped the program of 12 victories from the 2006 and 2007 seasons due to an academic cheating scandal involving an athletic department tutor.
Bowl Game Record: 21–8–1
National Championships: 2 (1993, 1999)
ACC Championships: 12 titles
Undefeated Seasons: 1 (1999, finishing 12–0)
Top-5 Finishes: 14 consecutive seasons from 1987 to 2000
Better football minds please correct me if I’m wrong. Seems as though if opposing offenses fake the “Overhang Nickel Safety” with a pass and run it up the B gap the RB or QB could be gone for big gainer. A lot rides on that position, yes?
I don’t see Maiava as a dual QB. He doesn’t have concrete football shoes like Leinart and John David Booty but he’s not a real dual QB. He can get some yards with his legs but I don’t ever think he will get a lot contrary to what a lot of people think. He takes too long to get going. Once he gets going he’s got good long strides and he can move pretty fast in the open field but he doesn’t have the quick instinctive moves like Caleb where he just plants his foot and has this tremendous speed… Read more »
I have my issues with Riley, who has disappointed all of us. But Lincoln has forgotten more about coaching than Helton will ever know. If given enough time, Clay might have destroyed USC football.
Coaches shouldn’t be measured by how much they know about football IMO. What matters are results, period. Many other qualities like leadership, focus, perspective, delegation and collaboration expertise, creativity, adaptability, and the knack to perform under pressure all come into play as well as other factors.
I’m sure some of the most knowledgeable football minds in America can’t coach worth a lick even if they tried.
Personally, I don’t think any coach is capable of destroying USC football. We’ve had some very bad coaches, like Paul Hackett for instance.
Clay Helton’s Georgia Southern Eagles (2022–Present): 27-25 with a 1-3 bowl record.
I wonder how Lincoln Riley would be doing against this line up were he coaching the Eagles in the Sun Belt conference?
Would the nation’s best QB prospects want to hang their hats there with LR in prep for inferior comp, crap TV, old facilities, low-perk, no recog bowl games and the NFL Draft?
Well gosh darn, if playing your heart out like champs isn’t enough for an elite quarterback, I don’t know what is. Helton’s always looking for a new love of his life. Maybe he can hire Linkon’ as his offensive coordinator and git his self one of them there elite quarterbacks. Linkon’s philosophy is “with the right quarterback, you don’t need them other ten guys on offense.” Heck Helton’s so smart he can cut that ten other guys down to nine in must advance situations.
I’d love to see this happen😛
One difference between Helton and Riley IMO .
Helton loves the game. He cares about the kids. Does not have the raw IQ to coach at the upper level.
Riley probably visits his banker and financial advisor weekly. Has the IQ but many other critical personality traits are insufficient.
He did love the kids and I think most of the players loved him. I remember Uchenna Nwuso saying that Helton saved his career after he got into some trouble and had to go back to Jr. College. As far as his football knowledge….I really don’t see why he was ever qualified for the job. Why they offered it to him I’m not sure. But they did offer it to him. If you were a football coach and you were offered this big career promotion paying big bucks…would you turn it down? Most coaches would take it and run. But… Read more »
In all fairness, LR had some pretty good years when he was an OC at East Carolina and lacked great QB’s. I’ll admit that if he had been the HC he would have had some problems because those were the days when he didn’t believe in defense and without a defense he wouldn’t have been able to win big at ECU like he did at Oklahoma(with Grench as his DC).
Lincoln Riley’s Air Raid attack at ECU: “a basketball team on grass with no running game” AI — When Lincoln Riley was the OC at ECU from 2010 to 2014, his teams were ultra-finesse, high-octane statistical monsters that completely rewrote the school record books. As a play-caller, he was an elite, highly productive coordinator who built one of the most feared aerial attacks in the country, which is exactly why Bob Stoops hired him away to Oklahoma. However, his teams suffered from the exact same structural flaws you see today: they were utterly dependent on high-volume passing, highly vulnerable to… Read more »
I’ll admit….at ECU his running game wasn’t great but he evolved when he came to Oklahoma. In his 7 years at OU he ran the ball 55% of the time(check it out) for a lot of yardage. For some reason when he came here he drifted back into his passing montage without a strong running game. But I think that he’s now going back to his Oklahoma offense. I’m not going to predict that this guy will ever be a great coach but he is young and he is evolving. At Oklahoma he couldn’t have cared less about defense or… Read more »
Unfortunately for USC, nobody in charge had the faintest clue that Lincoln Riley utterly lacked any foundation whatsoever about how to play defense, special teams, or physical football. To say that he is “young and evolving” is the understatement of the year. He’s made so many stupid errors involving judgment, approach and egotistical arrogance at USC in his nearly five years on the job that it boggles the mind. USC got taken to the cleaners because we were desperate and lacked the leadership necessary to properly vet a coach who was living well off the structure of another much better… Read more »
Very well stated. I sure wish we knew the exact details of the stupid contract that keeps this moron here.
In the meantime….make lemonade out of lemons…..in spite of the fact that some programs are drinking Cristal.
I’m not saying he should be there 2 more years. I’ve said consistently that the Oregon game should be a canary in the coal mine game. If they lose that in the Coliseum, you have to wonder whether this guy will ever beat the good teams. I’m just saying that I think they will give him 2 more years barring a disasterous season and I still think they will. But he is young and he is evolving. You got to remember, this guy came out of the Mike Leech school of football. There he learned the passing game well but(like… Read more »
Riley’s a horrible 24-15 at USC over the last three years, losing most every single big game and showing laughable (if you’re our opponent) clock and game management problems as well as usually finishing games badly, just like what happened yet again in the Alamo Bowl loss to TCU. There are countless other examples. The only reason USC has Gary Patterson now is because D’Anton Lynn split for PSU. That’s not Riley’s evolution. He was literally forced into it, which is a Riley trait. And his special teams were so leaky and inept that he had no choice but to… Read more »
Where do I start? Nobody is happy with his first 4 years(myself included). Definitely underwhelming. You said “The only reason USC has Gary Patterson now is because D’Anton Lynn split for PSU”. The way I heard it, they were trying to sign Patterson a couple of years ago but he wasn’t ready to jump back in. So they went with Lynn. Why PSU wants Lynn is a mystery to me. He was certainly better than Grench but his best year as a DC was at UCLA. The fact that Patterson chose to come on staff this year is a good… Read more »
We are reading where the 4&5 star players are committing to across the Country. Are those athletes better than the one’s USC has gotten commitments to? What it comes down to, it’s the coaching of those players that determines the outcome? Are our coaches better than theirs? This question never seems to be brought up by the media in ranking coaches. Are coaches too thin skinned to deal with this and somehow earn the media don’t tread on this?
In the second shootout match of the day (five shots for each team from 12 yds out), this one in Guadalupe, Mexico, Morocco beats The Netherlands 3-2. The Dutch are out.
Bad day for Europe. Both Germany and The Netherlands are out on penalty shoot-outs. Paraguay and Morocco are in and move on to the Round of 16.
The Dutch take their soccer very seriously.
Literally just hours after getting knocked out of the World Cup in the Round of 32 by its shootout loss to Morocco, The Netherlands 63-yr old manager Ronald Koeman immediately resigned.
The Netherlands have had strong showings at recent World Cups. They reached the quarterfinals in 2022, the semifinals in 2014 and were runners-up in 2010, losing to Spain 1-0.
Shocker!
Paraguay (ranked #41 in the world), 4-1 losers to the Americans, beats Germany in a 4-3 sudden death shoot-out. Ya baby!
Huge upset loss for Germany. Good look for the USA.
European & South American soccer teams have had a competitive attitude with eachother feeling they are better than the other. In this thinking, the other continents are lesser competition. Of course in women’s WC, we are the one’s the World loathes to want to beat.
USMNT plays Bosnia on Wednesday in the Round of 32. Bosnia ended up 5th best of the 8 third place teams that get to move on. If US gets past Bosnia they likely face Belgium then either Spain or Portugal. US should get 2 more wins then they’re out. Mexico, France and Argentina are the only undefeated teams. Argentina and France are the top 2. 13 European teams, 9 African , 9 from the Americas and Japan are still alive. Hey we are closing in on July. What else is there to watch? MLB, WNBA? What’s more boring baseball or… Read more »
It’s a shame what consistent unprotected brutality Caitlin Clark has to go through. I don’t get it. So much animosity towards the person who elevated the WNBA in terms of exposure and salaries more in two years (by far) than any other female alive. JMHO.
I find it deplorable.
Bill Plascke’s LA Times poison pen hit piece on Caitlan Clark read like it was written by a Parkinson’s Disease patient entering end stage Sundowner Syndrome. Tell us it ain’t so Bill?
Plaschke’s historically been a hit-and-miss columnist. I thought he swung too hard and missed big in Clark, but I don’t really watch the WNBA, so my opinion on her treatment pretty much comes from the cheap seats.
But the last clearly forcible push-down on her neck while she was laying crumpled on the hardwood was absolutely ridiculous IMO and something the refs need to address more harshly.
Thugettes gotta thug.
I don’t follow WNBA basketball but it doesn’t seem to be very popular outside of Clark. The NBA continues to subsidize it. My answer is why? If the ratings aren’t good and the people aren’t interested why try and make them interested by forcing it down their throats? Let it die like anything else that doesn’t have good ratings. Why the double standard?
I don’t watch the WNBA either, and won’t be doing so, unless Caitlan Clark shows up in which case I would actually turn on a game just to see her play. She’s that magnetic. Clark’s been a total game changer for the marketing moronic WNBA. She gets beat up and heavily fouled on a near constant basis from what I have read and observed from news reports, player interviews, and game clips. Clark is the Golden Goose of the WNBA. She’s the Queen who sells out arenas. You take her out, and the league slips back down to ground zero.… Read more »
When Lauren Betts, Juju Watkins, and Jazzy Davidson get there Clark won’t be the only show in town. From what I’ve heard maybe Clark could tone down her trash talk, a little maturity on her part may help. It’s still not an excuse to beat on her.
Really? You mean Caitlin Clark is supposed to shut up, or she’s not physically safe in the WNBA? That’s ridiculous.
As I said, the WNBA is moronic and if Clark either gets hurt bad or her career turns permanently south because of injuries due to league-allowed violence against her, the WNBA will get what they deserve — quick and massively reduced progress and star power that occurred purely because of Clark’s presence, and her presence only.
I said her trash talk is no excuse to get beat on and the league is negligent/incompetent in not cracking down. But for her own self preservation, she might tone it down, maybe it would help. If the players or the league won’t do the right thing, someone has be the grown up. I’ve already spent more time on the WNBA in the last day than the rest of my life but do you think the USC stars will further elevate the league?
I totally disagree with you. So does Larry Bird, one of the greatest NBA trash talkers in the history of championship basketball at the highest level. Bird would have trash-talked back into anyone’s face who suggested he “tone it down.” I would have loved to see that. Bird’s mouth was an important part of his game, and justifiably so. It helped make him great, and the NBA made sure he could do it without reprisal. Caitlin Clark shouldn’t have to worry about her physical health or self-preservation on the court (especially due to WNBA politics) because her game is so… Read more »
“Bird’s mouth was an important part of his game, and justifiably so. It helped make him great, and the NBA made sure he could do it without reprisal.” I understand trash talk is part of every sport. Your key point, the NBA policed it. If no one is coming to Clark’s aide she has to do something herself. Anyway I’m out with WNBA talk. 😎✌
So you’d advise Clark to let herself be intimidated by lesser players because the shameful WNBA won’t treat her fairly. As I said, I’d rather see her go to Europe where hopefully league politics don’t interfere with her excellence.
But maybe the bad-looking/perpetually struggling WNBA will finally get smart, do the right thing, and save their biggest league asset. That’s still a possibility, especially in view of the increased public spotlight and outrage towards the ref’s current blatant unfair treatment of its biggest star.
Let’s just say that LB was a very confident guy. That’s probably what made him great. One time before the NBA allstar game and right before the 3 point shooting contest he told the rest of the shooters that they might as well go home because this contest was already over(or at least that’s the way I heard the story).
They are actively trying to cut her off at the knees and destroy her game and they probably will be successful. How can you get your game going if the refs are letting the defense play jungle ball on you?
I agree and it’s a shame 007. Hard to comprehend why the perpetually struggling WNBA would actually try to hurt the career of the obvious “face of the league” who has had such a quick and remarkable positive financial impact on the league and its players.
I bet we don’t know the half of it behind the scenes. It’ll be interesting to see where this goes.
They should treat it like any other failing business. If they people aren’t interested then let it die.
Either that or pay the players a lot less money so that it can make a profit. When the players are saying “Pay us what we are worth”(which is what they were saying during the allstar game), let’s be honest….on a business level they are worth a lot less than they are already making. There are a lot of ungrateful people in this country
SC made a big mistake back in 2013. They fired a coach who was a better coach than CH and LR put together. They fired him in the middle of the season. They didn’t even let him finish the season. I don’t know who was behind that. Most say Pat Haden but I really think it came from higher than him….Probably Nakias. Had they let him finish the season, I think he would have straightened that team out and gone on to win a couple of NC’s by now. The media hated Kiffin(back then more then now) and wanted him… Read more »
Today, Lane Kiffin is a better HC than LR. In 2019, Ed Orgeron was a better HC than LR is today and probably in 2013 as well. Lane Kiffin did a masterful job holding the team together during the first 2 years of the sanctions but by the end of ’12 and beginning of ’13 he lost the locker room. He was 38 at the time. It was another 8 years before he turned around Ole Miss including 3 years with Saban. You really think USC should have kept LK for the past 13 years? Would he be the HC… Read more »
You made a lot of great points. But I do think Kiffin was a great coach even back then. Definitely immature and unable to deal with the media but they haven’t liked him since then and they still don’t like him even today. Had he stayed he would have continued to knock the media and they would have done everything they could to destroy his reputation but if the USC admin had just asked them the question…what did we hire him for…to coach or to please the media?….and just let him coach, I think we would have won a NC… Read more »
I was thinking, how much did Ed O help Kiffin manage the players? I often wonder if a program cuts a coach loose too soon instead of riding out a rough patch. As Allen and others say USC is not a place for on the job training or grow in maturity. Interesting to wonder though if Kiffen or Ed O were still the HC 13 years later what would have happened.
Lane’s a phenomenal coach but he comes with a heavy price tag that has nothing to do with money. He says what he wants, when he wants and that can be a big distraction and pain in the butt. But he’s still easily worth it and I think he’ll likely win a NC at LSU as he has already publicly predicted. Amazing talent is already rolling into Baton Rouge to play for him. Had LK more time, he might have even stolen prize TE Mark Bowman from USC. Most coaches would have never even tried for that last-minute cross-country switch.… Read more »
Yeah, I forgot to mention the situation he was under during his tenure because of the corrupt NCAA. Definitely a great recruiter and a great X’s and O’s man. He still doesn’t get along very well with the media(think of him and Paul Finebaum) but I don’t think that would have hindered him. I could be wrong. Maybe he was too immature at SC. But I would have loved to see what he would have done had they not fired on the spot just because of one loss without even taking some time to think about this decision. But that… Read more »
You could probably call Ed O another mentor of his. And let’s not forget his father. You guys are right. USC is not a place for on the job training. But in 2010(his first year) they got robbed at Stanford when the clock manager at Stanford Stadium wearing a Stanford baseball cap and Stanford jacket gave Stanford extra seconds to go down and kick a field goal and win the game. I also think they would have beaten ND if Barkley had played. They should have went 10-3 with those two wins not to mention a 32-31 loss to Washington.… Read more »
All the pieces are in place. It’s produce or ‘Hit the road Jack’. I don’t know what the next 2 years will produce but, barring a disasterous season, I think they will give him 2 more years. You asked where would USC football be today if LK was still here after 13 years? There’s no way to say but I would have liked to see them let him finish that 2013 season. The story I heard(can’t be sure whether it is true or not) is that when they told LK on the tarmac that he was out as the HC,… Read more »
Nikias was a disaster. Thank god he was forced to leave his role at USC in 2018 because he had “lost the moral authority to lead.”
“There’s a deep well of frustration across the university that the university has lost its way. It is harming our students and it is harming our reputation,” said a faculty member who had taught at USC for 22 years at the time.
Dan Weber, who used to be with the Ryan Abraham staff and still appears every once in a while(whom I used to like to listen to…he made sense most of the time), developed a friendship with Nakias and said that MK loved USC football and college football in general. I don’t think that he loved football at all. Steven Sample came to USC in 1991 promising to make USC the Princeton of the west and he did a good job turning SC into an academic school. But Princetons academic prowess grew at the same time they degraded a very powerful… Read more »
Orgeron made homosexual jokes and big lib Haden had a ghey son. That happened and then Haden hired a semi functioning alcoholic for his replacement.
Yeah….I guess you just can’t mess with the gay mafia in todays america.
A mysterious story has appeared on Facebook, but I think it’s just clickbait. It goes into detail about how Lincoln Riley has removed a player from the roster for being disruptive on field and in the locker room. Some versions of the story name Miava as the instigator of the removal.
I cannot find anything anywhere else about this story outside of Facebook and no iteration names the player who was removed. Has anyone else seen anything along these lines?
Per AI — The Exact Fake Quote Circulating Online A widely shared, fabricated Facebook and clickbait blog post manufactured a fake quote from Maiava, claiming he said: “As long as I’m here, he will never step on that field. If he’s around, I’m not.“ The post paired this fake quote with headlines like “USC Trojans Face Locker Room Shakeup as Lincoln Riley Removes Disruptive Player” to generate clicks. Why It Is Factually Untrue The Quote is Fabricated: Maiava never gave this quote to any media outlet, nor has he made any public ultimatums regarding his teammates. In actual press… Read more »
This season’s Trojan team is a yet unsolved mystery for many of us. Who the heck knows how this Hybrid 4-2-5 Overhang Nickel Safety D installed by Gary Patterson is going to really work? It’ll be interesting to see how B1G teams attack it and if it works based on some of the unproven talent USC has to run it. Will Maiava step up his game and lose the inconsistency? Will USC finally figure out how to run the ball when it counts against the better competition? Will special teams lose the Achilles Heel status LR has unfortunately cultivated here?.… Read more »
If I’m an opposing team OC, I would think I would attack that ONS and see if he can be a linebacker and a DB at the same time.
Good point. Not sure we really have a Grootegoed guy like that. It’s a tall order. Talanoa Hufanga, another one of my faves, or Su’a Cravens would also be nice.
All-Pro safety Talanoa Hufanga, now with the Broncos
Now that looks like a guy who loves the game of football!
Shout out to John Weld for his assistance while we were in Africa this past spring. Hopefully John enjoyed the African photo album, particularly the shot of LR putting it to USC in the wild? Tried to attach a parting shot from Zimbabwe airport? Hopefully the Zimbabwe Basketball Team picture attached and appears?
I agree on the shout out. I was in Mexico last week and found myself blocked from posting. I contacted the blog and John lifted the block.
I learned two things while in Mexico 1. Posting is blocked by a service. And . Never say out loud, “Soccer is a keep-away game invented for kids who can’t catch,” in a restaurant full of people wearing green jerseys and watching two teams playing keep-away for kids who can’t catch.
A third thing you don’t want to learn the hard way. In a Mexican cantina, don’t go sit with a cute senorita sitting by herself! ✊🍺
RT — I was in Mexico too several days last week, in the Valle de Guadalupe wine country for a wedding. We came back on Father’s Day through Tijuana with a group. As expected, we ran into a massive jam at the border on our return but had wrangled some type of magical “medical pass” which allowed us to blow through the border in some expedited lane that literally saved us hours. It’s the only way to go! I couldn’t believe how the USA lost to Turkey 3-2 last night at very the last second. Just when you think it’s… Read more »
Most all the better part of the US team was resting because they had already qualified for the finals.
Too bad. This World Cup team could have made history, which for a lackluster, underachieving soccer nation like the USA would have been terrific, and a big deal. I’d say a little air left the balloon. Was it worth it? Time will tell. Instead we flopped, got gut-punched, and gave Turkey a reason to go home with their heads held high. Good for Turkey. They wanted it more. I had to admire their grit and opportunistic attack. It’ll be interesting to see how the USA bounces back from the loss to an 0-2 team that was headed back home. Will… Read more »
The USMNT has the talent to beat Bosnia on Wednesday, the last 3rd place team to barely get to the round of 32. That will put the US in the Sweet 16. Then it will get very tough.
Allen, they still have that far left medical vehicle lane? Used to pay $10.00 to a Mexican doctor to have blood pressure taken, grab a doctor’s note, jam over into the far left lane and save yourself hours waiting in that baking sun.
We went to Mexico in a large van and they never checked our passports, just flagged us “future purchasers” through. We didn’t have anyone with medical issues, but the person who set us up apparently paid the right people and we went through the border back into the USA in literally 15 mins with thousands stuck in their cars. I almost felt a little guilty. Almost. 😉 😃
We had no medical issues either. We just played that game, learned from a fraternity brother.
What are frat brothers for?
What house were you in ’72, if you don’t mind? I was a Sig. Crazy, but fun and met some great guys from all over the U.S., but especially California and the West.
No need to divulge if you don’t want. The Row was an incredible place back then in the early 70’s. At least that’s how I remember it.
Delta Sigma Phi, corner of University and 30th Street, just south of the row. Several years before you, but the Sigs were and probably remain the dominant dawgs. The DSP house folded in 2010, the result of lack of pledging and internal drug use well after my time. We coveted that front porch, watching the lunch time co-ed parade back to the row where my bride passed by. Incredibly that property sold for $7.5M and was converted into private upscale housing.
I just can’t go past 20 minutes of men’s soccer. The bad histrionics, the keep away game so brilliantly described by Rialto— I just would watch a Taylor Sheridan show on paramount plus
I stumbled on the US v. Turkey game last night and promptly watch the Turks tie the game 1-1. I am probably a jinx to our team.
Taylor Sheridan is wild, isn’t he? Yellowstone, Dutton Ranch, Landman, The Madison, Lioness. What a formula he’s got going for himself.
Go Beth and Rip!
I’ve been blocked every time I’ve been to Europe. My workaround is to set my phone’s VPN to the US. Problem solved, quick and easy.
NCAA passes 5 in 5 rule. You get 5 years starting when you start…..5 years later you are done…..no more red shirts and waivers that go on forever.
clean, better
From AI:
U.S. men’s national team rested nine of their regular starters in their final group-stage match against Turkey. With their spot in the knockout round already secured, head coach Mauricio Pochettino utilized the dead-rubber game to protect key players from injury and avoid suspensions for the Round of 32. The rotated U.S. squad fell to Turkey 3-2 after conceding a goal in the eighth minute of stoppage time.
USMNT (2-1) plays Bosnia (1-1-1) on Wednesday. Bosnia just squeaked in to the final third place slot. US is getting favorable opponents so far.
You will see a strong safety creep up to a linebacker position numerous times in Bowden’s FSU D-scheme. He might of used even before when he was at West Virginia?
Hey AI whoever you are, I read Patterson’s defense is a new hybrid replacing Lynn’s old scheme? Explain to me how this 4-2-5 defense is new when Patterson used it all the yrs he was at TCU? Maybe it’s new to USC football but certainly not college ball. And no one around here has yet asked GP if he didn’t get his 4-2-5 from watching Bobby Bowdon’s defense used after 1976? You watched it Allen. It looked just like what GP is doing here.
His 4-2-5
I really enjoyed watching Bobby Bowden’s exciting teams, and for good reason:
Bowden’s official career record as HC at FSU is 304–97–4. While his team actually won 316 games on the field during his 34-year tenure (1976–2009), the NCAA stripped the program of 12 victories from the 2006 and 2007 seasons due to an academic cheating scandal involving an athletic department tutor.
And zero pedophiles on his coaching staff, unlike his contemporary at PSU, St. Joe Pa’.
I liked that the article said that Patterson was modifying his usual defensive schemes to reflect the strengths of the personnel he has available.
What a concept! Has anyone told our one-trick-pony head coach that this is possible? Not that Riley would do anything that intelligent.
What do my untrained eyes know about football anyway?
Better football minds please correct me if I’m wrong. Seems as though if opposing offenses fake the “Overhang Nickel Safety” with a pass and run it up the B gap the RB or QB could be gone for big gainer. A lot rides on that position, yes?
I don’t see Maiava as a dual QB. He doesn’t have concrete football shoes like Leinart and John David Booty but he’s not a real dual QB. He can get some yards with his legs but I don’t ever think he will get a lot contrary to what a lot of people think. He takes too long to get going. Once he gets going he’s got good long strides and he can move pretty fast in the open field but he doesn’t have the quick instinctive moves like Caleb where he just plants his foot and has this tremendous speed… Read more »
I have my issues with Riley, who has disappointed all of us. But Lincoln has forgotten more about coaching than Helton will ever know. If given enough time, Clay might have destroyed USC football.
Coaches shouldn’t be measured by how much they know about football IMO. What matters are results, period. Many other qualities like leadership, focus, perspective, delegation and collaboration expertise, creativity, adaptability, and the knack to perform under pressure all come into play as well as other factors.
I’m sure some of the most knowledgeable football minds in America can’t coach worth a lick even if they tried.
Personally, I don’t think any coach is capable of destroying USC football. We’ve had some very bad coaches, like Paul Hackett for instance.
And the past administration under Max Nakias would have given him enough time.
Clay Helton’s Georgia Southern Eagles (2022–Present): 27-25 with a 1-3 bowl record.
I wonder how Lincoln Riley would be doing against this line up were he coaching the Eagles in the Sun Belt conference?
Would the nation’s best QB prospects want to hang their hats there with LR in prep for inferior comp, crap TV, old facilities, low-perk, no recog bowl games and the NFL Draft?
Well gosh darn, if playing your heart out like champs isn’t enough for an elite quarterback, I don’t know what is. Helton’s always looking for a new love of his life. Maybe he can hire Linkon’ as his offensive coordinator and git his self one of them there elite quarterbacks. Linkon’s philosophy is “with the right quarterback, you don’t need them other ten guys on offense.” Heck Helton’s so smart he can cut that ten other guys down to nine in must advance situations.
I’d love to see this happen😛
One difference between Helton and Riley IMO .
Helton loves the game. He cares about the kids. Does not have the raw IQ to coach at the upper level.
Riley probably visits his banker and financial advisor weekly. Has the IQ but many other critical personality traits are insufficient.
He did love the kids and I think most of the players loved him. I remember Uchenna Nwuso saying that Helton saved his career after he got into some trouble and had to go back to Jr. College. As far as his football knowledge….I really don’t see why he was ever qualified for the job. Why they offered it to him I’m not sure. But they did offer it to him. If you were a football coach and you were offered this big career promotion paying big bucks…would you turn it down? Most coaches would take it and run. But… Read more »
In all fairness, LR had some pretty good years when he was an OC at East Carolina and lacked great QB’s. I’ll admit that if he had been the HC he would have had some problems because those were the days when he didn’t believe in defense and without a defense he wouldn’t have been able to win big at ECU like he did at Oklahoma(with Grench as his DC).
Lincoln Riley’s Air Raid attack at ECU: “a basketball team on grass with no running game” AI — When Lincoln Riley was the OC at ECU from 2010 to 2014, his teams were ultra-finesse, high-octane statistical monsters that completely rewrote the school record books. As a play-caller, he was an elite, highly productive coordinator who built one of the most feared aerial attacks in the country, which is exactly why Bob Stoops hired him away to Oklahoma. However, his teams suffered from the exact same structural flaws you see today: they were utterly dependent on high-volume passing, highly vulnerable to… Read more »
I’ll admit….at ECU his running game wasn’t great but he evolved when he came to Oklahoma. In his 7 years at OU he ran the ball 55% of the time(check it out) for a lot of yardage. For some reason when he came here he drifted back into his passing montage without a strong running game. But I think that he’s now going back to his Oklahoma offense. I’m not going to predict that this guy will ever be a great coach but he is young and he is evolving. At Oklahoma he couldn’t have cared less about defense or… Read more »
Unfortunately for USC, nobody in charge had the faintest clue that Lincoln Riley utterly lacked any foundation whatsoever about how to play defense, special teams, or physical football. To say that he is “young and evolving” is the understatement of the year. He’s made so many stupid errors involving judgment, approach and egotistical arrogance at USC in his nearly five years on the job that it boggles the mind. USC got taken to the cleaners because we were desperate and lacked the leadership necessary to properly vet a coach who was living well off the structure of another much better… Read more »
Very well stated. I sure wish we knew the exact details of the stupid contract that keeps this moron here.
In the meantime….make lemonade out of lemons…..in spite of the fact that some programs are drinking Cristal.
I’m not saying he should be there 2 more years. I’ve said consistently that the Oregon game should be a canary in the coal mine game. If they lose that in the Coliseum, you have to wonder whether this guy will ever beat the good teams. I’m just saying that I think they will give him 2 more years barring a disasterous season and I still think they will. But he is young and he is evolving. You got to remember, this guy came out of the Mike Leech school of football. There he learned the passing game well but(like… Read more »
Riley’s a horrible 24-15 at USC over the last three years, losing most every single big game and showing laughable (if you’re our opponent) clock and game management problems as well as usually finishing games badly, just like what happened yet again in the Alamo Bowl loss to TCU. There are countless other examples. The only reason USC has Gary Patterson now is because D’Anton Lynn split for PSU. That’s not Riley’s evolution. He was literally forced into it, which is a Riley trait. And his special teams were so leaky and inept that he had no choice but to… Read more »
You nailed it. Every word. Hopefully even this joker can somehow get over himself and let the talent and machinery take us to where we belong.
Where do I start? Nobody is happy with his first 4 years(myself included). Definitely underwhelming. You said “The only reason USC has Gary Patterson now is because D’Anton Lynn split for PSU”. The way I heard it, they were trying to sign Patterson a couple of years ago but he wasn’t ready to jump back in. So they went with Lynn. Why PSU wants Lynn is a mystery to me. He was certainly better than Grench but his best year as a DC was at UCLA. The fact that Patterson chose to come on staff this year is a good… Read more »