It Won’t Be Long Now

USC camp takeaways: Secondary should be strong point of revamped defense

USC cornerback Jacobe Covington follows a play.

CB Jacobe Covington figures to play a big role in USC’s secondary this season. (John McCoy / AP)

Ryan Kartje (LA Times)  —  Greedy Vance heard all the whispers about USC as he weighed his options this offseason. A coveted corner coming from a top-flight defense at Florida State, Vance had his pick of the transfer portal. Yet here he was joining a USC unit that scraped the bottom of the FBS last year.

“There were a lot of people in my ear about the defense,” the redshirt senior said. “I just wanted to come in and be a part of the turnaround.”

If there is a turnaround in store for the Trojans defense this season, then the secondary is certainly where it will start. There may not be a deeper position on USC’s roster this fall than cornerback, where Vance has joined a room with at least six viable starting options, most of whom are capable of playing multiple positions.

Vance is likely to get the nod at nickel, while two other transfers — DeCarlos Nicholson (Mississippi State) and John Humphrey (UCLA) — are among the top three options at outside corner, along with Jacobe Covington. The safety spots are just as steady, with transfers Akili Arnold (Oregon State) and Kamari Ramsey (UCLA) rounding out an almost totally rebuilt group.

Then there’s Jaylin Smith, a versatile returning puzzle piece who, given the depth elsewhere, can fit in wherever he’s needed, a luxury USC hasn’t had in its secondary since Lincoln Riley took the reins.

There are plenty of reasons to be wary of whether USC can turn things around on defense. But the secondary shouldn’t be one of them.

Here are some other takeaways from USC’s fall camp, as the season opener against Louisiana State approaches:

USC is perilously thin on the offensive line
LOS ANGELES, CA - AUG. 5, 2022: USC offensive lineman Jonah Monheim taps a sword.

Starting OC Jonah Monheim headed to the practice field. (Michael Owen Baker / For The Times)

USC can add all the muscle mass it can muster on both fronts. But for the offensive line, bulk wasn’t the problem. Between projected starters (from left to right) Elijah Paige, Emmanuel Pregnon, Jonah Monheim, Alani Noa and Mason Murphy, USC is averaging 320 pounds per lineman.

It’s what comes after those five on the depth chart that should be cause for concern. If either tackle were to miss time, USC would either have to shift Monheim out to left tackle or trust raw redshirt freshman Tobias Raymond in a critical role.

The interior isn’t exactly flush with proven options, either. Redshirt senior Gino Quinones can fill in at either guard or center … but beyond him, USC’s other options — Amos Talalele and Micah Banuelos — have only appeared in a single game each, for a few snaps each.

This is a big season for offensive line coach Josh Henson. And he’ll spend most of it crossing his fingers his line stays healthy.

Woody Marks is USC’s No. 1 running back, but Quentin Joyner will play a major role

Marks is the ideal complement to a quarterback such as Miller Moss, who can get the ball out quick. He’s a proven receiver, with 214 college receptions to his name, more than nearly all of USC’s young receiver room combined.

But Marks has also never had more than 121 carries in a season. That’s fewer than Austin Jones had as the second option, behind Travis Dye, in USC’s 2022 offense.

Enter Joyner, who’s earned praise all camp for his progress. Riley assured he’s “firmly in the mix” for carries, while Marks says the redshirt freshman has really honed in on the finer points of the position.

“From pass protection to catching the ball out of the backfield, and in the meeting room,” Marks added, “he’s impressed me a lot.”

He’s not the only one. By season’s end, don’t be surprised if the backfield looks a lot more even than you might’ve expected.

Zachariah Branch is still the Trojans’ most dynamic offensive weapon
USC wide receiver Zachariah Branch warms up before a game against Washington in November.Zachariah Branch warms up before the UW game in November. (Gina Ferazzi / LAT)

Last season, Branch became the first freshman All-American ever to grace the field at USC — a tremendous distinction, given the Trojans football history — and yet, somehow it still feels like he enters this season oddly underrated.

USC has a wealth of young, exciting talent at wideout, all seemingly primed for big seasons, and understandably, it’s more fun at this point to talk about how Ja’Kobi Lane or Makai Lemon might be USC’s breakout star at the position. But while Branch has already broken out, it seems we’ve only scratched the surface of what he’s capable of.

Branch has been working on his running mechanics as a track athlete and how he could be even quicker and harder to bring down on the football field. That should be a scary thought for Big Ten defenses.

USC is really counting on Anthony Lucas to reach his potential
USC defensive lineman Anthony Lucas runs through drills at practice.

One look at Anthony Lucas, when he arrived at USC in early 2023, was enough to understand the buzz coming out of College Station, Texas. He is, after all, a massive physical specimen (6-5, 275), with all the athletic tools to become a dominant defensive lineman.

Those tools have yet to translate in his short tenure as a Trojan. But once again, the buzz at USC through camp is that Lucas is finally living up to that potential. Defensive coordinator D’Anton Lynn said this week that Lucas had been “tremendous” since summer.

“He has a lot of ability,” Lynn said. “He can rush the passer, he can stop the run, you can move him inside. He’s surprisingly athletic off the ball in space. He’s a guy that you can really do just about everything with him, and the more he’s able to do the more that’s going to unlock for other guys on the field. So him taking that next step is huge.”

USC desperately needs someone on the defensive line to step up alongside Bear Alexander. On the interior, coaches and players keep banging the drum for Wyoming defensive tackle Gavin Meyer, who arrived after spring but has quickly asserted himself as a contributor.

latimes.com

___________

TrojanDailyBlog members —  We always encourage you to add factual information, insight, divergent opinions, or new topics to the TDB that don’t necessarily pertain to any particular moderator post or member comment.

 

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TrojanMPA90
Noble Genius
TrojanMPA90
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August 25, 2024 5:40 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Wish them all the best. We should be fine without tbem

RialtoTrojan
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RialtoTrojan
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August 25, 2024 9:55 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

This is interesting. This morning I said that I wasn’t going to try to keep up with transferred former Trojans this year. The players who left contribute nothing but distractions. On the other hand, for the first time in years I plan to watch professional Trojans playing on Sunday. (Maybe become a Rams fan again) Already I’ve been treated to proof that the NFL rules committee can’t leave well enough alone. (Starting with the kickoff)

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
August 25, 2024 7:07 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

I heard him say USC could be a dark horse in the Big10. There’s an opinion to respect. He also likes LSU for a playoff spot. Can’t wait for next Sunday.

Canyon
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Canyon
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August 25, 2024 9:36 am
Reply to  Golden Trojan

Saban is right about USC being a dark horse.    As y’all know, my dark horse is Bama. No one is giving Bama a chance to make the final 4. I believe they make the final 4.   C.Deboer O is sophisticated and hard to defend. Best O in college FB. And, he has been successful with an average run game and D. Now, he’s gonna have an A+ OL & D, dual threat QB (his previous QB’s were pocket types and bad mobility), a stable of top RB’s & WR’s and TE’s. His Bama O will be more lethal than his previous teams. It’s going to… Read more »

illinoisusc
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illinoisusc
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August 24, 2024 4:28 pm

and Florida St……number 10……dies

volunteerTrojan
Noble Genius
August 25, 2024 1:37 pm
Reply to  illinoisusc

They’re a great example of too high of a ranking based on last year’s team with no thought of how many players they lost. Remember their bowl game and how many players sat out?

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
August 24, 2024 2:06 pm

College football coach are now miked up with their QB. The end of an era! What will all these guys do now?

College-Football-Signs
RialtoTrojan
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RialtoTrojan
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August 25, 2024 10:06 pm
Reply to  Golden Trojan

Sign twirling on the corner seems right. I always wondered why the other team didn’t correlate the signs with plays and defend against it. I planned to ask Him Harbaugh but he stole away before I could. My personal feeling is the mushroom steak is good play sign, is better than the kick my ex play sign.

Chris
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Chris
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August 24, 2024 9:54 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Romello Height with a sack and face mask on the play.

Chris
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Chris
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August 24, 2024 8:59 am

We made it! Happy football season. On Thursday I’m on a plane to Vegas. Fight on!

illinoisusc
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illinoisusc
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August 24, 2024 9:05 am
Reply to  Chris

Have a great time! Either way, you can have a world class cigar and dinner so you can’t lose. LOL.

illinoisusc
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illinoisusc
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August 24, 2024 8:25 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Just heard that either the RG or LG was in a boot after practice. I did not catch which…..unfortunately the guy backing up might be better…..but one more injury and it might be trouble for them.

Jamaica
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Jamaica
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August 24, 2024 9:58 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

And yet the Tigers are favored. It could be the belief they are a more physical team that will wear down our Trojans. And it could be due to Kelly a better game manager? Kelly & LR haven’t coached against eachother? Since this will be telecast as a big event where the whole nation will see it, I wonder if LR will hold anything back in his playbook?

volunteerTrojan
Noble Genius
August 25, 2024 7:02 am
Reply to  Jamaica

Toss in a little SEC bias too.

illinoisusc
Noble Genius
illinoisusc
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August 24, 2024 11:01 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Very true……this game will teach both fan bases a lot. Either good or bad. The books in Vegas have it at 62.5 for over under. I was a little surprised. Considering both offenses should score a bunch but evidently Vegas thinks the defenses will be better. Can’t wait.

illinoisusc
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illinoisusc
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August 23, 2024 8:03 pm

One thing that might help USC…….LR can talk to Moss thru his helmet until there are 15 seconds prior to the play. Different than prior years.
It’s like putting LR on the field until the execution……or the folks in the booth.
Lots of play changes at the last minute.
I somehow don’t think LSU and Brian Kelly will be as focused on the field. More of a….. if you execute properly anything will work mentality.

Jalenbuck1
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Jalenbuck1
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August 23, 2024 4:58 pm

Can’t wait to see how the defense looks, just tackling better and eliminating RAC and YAC would be an improvement.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
August 23, 2024 6:49 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

USC-LSU and Clemson-Georgia are the only top 25 to open their season with another top 25 team. Notice USC and Florida are the only Big10/SEC teams listed more than once. Fortunately this is the last year for USC. Florida may get their coach fired with that schedule. Big12 and ACC still need to pad their schedule with nonconference games.

SC Gator
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SC Gator
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August 25, 2024 8:03 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

CFB Report needs to update. Arizona-Kansas State is not a non-conference game.

TrojanMPA90
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TrojanMPA90
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August 23, 2024 10:29 am

I’m cautiously optimistic that we’re going to have a good season. I think 10-2 is definite possibility.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
August 23, 2024 11:05 am
Reply to  TrojanMPA90

10-2 if everything goes right. The D staff can really coach em up. Henson has developed an OL that can run and pass block. 8-4 is my worst case but hopeful of better.

Steveg
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Steveg
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August 24, 2024 5:31 pm
Reply to  TrojanMPA90

I agree 100%

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
August 23, 2024 10:59 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Allen you are spot on, as you usually are. I tried to compare SC and Ohio St OL by average height, weight and class rank. USC is pretty equal in all 3 but lacks total numbers. This SC OL are the guys Riley and Henson recruited. If they are not able to run and pass block this season that means they can’t recruit the talent and/or develop OL. Henson will have to go if SC still has no run game and Moss has no protection. Grinch put the defense back a year or two. They will be way better than… Read more »

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
August 23, 2024 11:04 am
Reply to  Golden Trojan

One question, if SC can run the ball, will Riley want to run the ball much?

TrojanRon
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TrojanRon
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August 24, 2024 4:34 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

The newcomer Marks looks promising in revamping USC’s run game. The question is how much LR will be calling running plays. Back in the day under McKay and Robinson, SC was a run-first, mix-in-the-pass Offense. Now it’s flipped under LR.

Steveg
Major Genius
Steveg
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August 24, 2024 5:33 pm
Reply to  Golden Trojan

If Riley can run it he will. Look at the game stats from previous seasons, he is always fairly close. They ran a lot at OK.

alfa1
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alfa1
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August 24, 2024 1:27 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

LR needs to watch the 2009 USC V OHIO ST. game ’The Drive’ again and again, to understand how important a good run game and offensive line is !

volunteerTrojan
Noble Genius
August 25, 2024 6:59 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

That drive ranks right up there with the drive culminating with the Bush Push as one of the greatest game ending drives! Total exhilaration!!!

RialtoTrojan
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RialtoTrojan
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August 23, 2024 9:47 am

If the defense has learned a few fundamental things we should be fine. The first is tackling. For several years it seems the defense has employed the bump tackle technique, which has baffled me. I’d be yelling just lay the ball carrier out, finesse is for ballet. Next cover the pass instead of allowing big plays. Finally just showing football smarts instead of head scratching mistakes.
My optimism for this season lies in the fact that for the first time since before Todd Orlando, I saw some of these things during the bowl game last year.

Jamaica
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Jamaica
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August 23, 2024 9:24 am

I thought all along the off season that the DL was the main concern in holding up from breakdowns & injuries during this coming season as was being talked about the most. But now with what information from various sources we have been able to gather, it’s the OL that worries me most in being able to effectively protect Moss and open holes for Marks, Joyner and Branch when he is lined up in the pocket. The lack of playing experience of the OL backups is what’s scary after Quinones. I hope to see some rotating of the OL whenever… Read more »

Steveg
Major Genius
Steveg
Online
August 23, 2024 8:54 am

One of the things that impresses me is the size of our running backs.