
USC QB Jayden Maiava throws during practice at Howard Jones Field. Maiava is hoping to improve on last year’s performance after taking over for Miller Moss. (Allen J. Schaben / LAT)
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — When John Beck first watched Jayden Maiava throw a football up close this summer, he could see pretty quickly why USC might hang its hopes on Maiava’s rocket right arm.
“He spins the ball really well,” Beck said. “The talent is there. The ability is there.”
Few are as qualified as Beck to make that assessment. A former NFL quarterback and private quarterbacks coach for 3DQB, he has helped fine tune some of the best passers in the sport, from Tom Brady and Drew Brees to Matthew Stafford and Justin Herbert. And this summer, over “a handful” of sessions at 3DQB’s training facility in Huntington Beach, Beck turned his attention to the mechanics of the Trojans’ starting quarterback.
Beck already had a general idea of how Maiava had risen into the starting role. He knew after impressing as a freshman at Nevada Las Vegas that Maiava had transferred to USC, where, last season, he started at quarterback over the final four games. He knew, too, that USC won three of those four, all while Maiava’s performance oscillated between breathtaking and anxiety-inducing.
That variability is part of what led Maiava to 3DQB — and to Beck.
As he watched Maiava throw for the first time, Beck saw that spectrum. He noticed certain types of passes weren’t maximizing the potential of Maiava’s arm. The later into the progression, the less efficient his mechanics often would be.
“He would make some throws, and you’d go, ‘Oh wow, there’s some real arm talent there,” Beck said. “Then you’d see some others, and the question would be, ‘Why isn’t that arm talent, that efficiency showing up in the same way on those specific throws?’”
“Just doing anything I can to be smarter and get more knowledge. Because knowledge is power.”— Jayden Maiava, on preparing for the season
All quarterbacks go through that process, Beck said. And while Maiava has plenty of natural talent at his disposal, he hadn’t worked with a dedicated quarterback coach until last spring. That first private coach, Ryan Porter, told The Times last fall that Maiava was “super raw” and was still digesting USC’s offense at the start of last season.
But as Maiava enters this season as USC’s unquestioned starter, his plan was to do everything to elevate his game. That didn’t stop at working with a private coach. Maiava set out to get stronger, to get faster. He devoured cut-ups of past Lincoln Riley quarterbacks, like Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray and Caleb Williams. He started reading motivational books, recommended to him by USC’s new strength coach, Trumain Carroll. He even started meditating.
“Just doing anything I can to be smarter and get more knowledge,” Maiava said. “Because knowledge is power.”
When it comes to his mechanics, Riley insists there were no “radical problems” for the folks at 3DQB to fix. Beck said their focus with Maiava was largely on the finer points of his mechanics; like how to be more efficient with your footwork; or how to transfer your weight to deliver different types of throws with the same zip.
Maybe most importantly, they repped Maiava in as many different scenarios as possible.
“They just did a great job of putting me in situations that I could be most prepared for,” the junior quarterback said. “Football is a game with a lot of possibilities. Anything can happen within a play.”
A season ago, that certainly felt the case with Maiava at the helm of USC’s offense. He completed fewer than 60% of his passes and threw six interceptions. Two of those picks sank USC’s hopes of upsetting rival Notre Dame, as the Irish returned both for touchdowns. A month later, in the Las Vegas Bowl, Maiava threw three interceptions before leading a wild comeback win over Texas A&M.
The bowl game ran the full gamut for Maiava, the good and the bad. But in the fourth quarter, he believes he found something that can help him going forward.
One of the books he read this offseason, “Winning: The Unforgiving Race to Greatness” by Tim Grover, stresses the importance of maintaining a “neutral mindset,” never allowing oneself to get too high or too low emotionally.
That resonated with Maiava, who had a tendency to dwell on mistakes. Against Texas A&M, he brushed off his performance in the first three quarters to lead USC on three touchdown drives in the fourth. On the final drive, Maiava completed eight of nine passes for 78 yards, including the winning touchdown, with eight seconds remaining.
“That’s something I like to reflect on,” Maiava said. “Just having that neutral mindset and going out there for that last drive.”
That’s the version of himself Maiava is hoping to hold on to this season. So far, the difference in him has been distinct, according to teammates and coaches.
“You can just feel Jayden being more comfortable in his own skin and more comfortable being one of the leaders of this football team and operating this offense,” said Luke Huard, USC offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. “You just feel an improved and elevated level of confidence with the way he’s going about his business.”
That was the goal when Maiava set out this summer to take himself seriously — reading and meditating and drilling down the finer points of the position.
“This was his first opportunity to really be trained like a pro,” Beck said.
“Now, it’s just about tying it all together.”
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.
For those interested, here’s the votes received by the also-rans outside of the top 25 in the just released AP poll.
Others receiving votes: BYU 156, Utah 144, Baylor 132, Louisville 90, USC 64, Georgia Tech 63, Missouri 33, Tulane 23, Nebraska 23, UNLV 21, Toledo 13, Auburn 10, James Madison 9, Memphis 9, Florida St. 8, Duke 6, Liberty 5, Navy 5, Iowa 5, TCU 4, Pittsburgh 3, Army 2, Colorado 1, Louisiana-Lafayette 1.
I don’t care about pre-season polls. I’m actually glad that they aren’t ranked that high. They are a really good team but they need an axe to grind. Being ignored will give them a chip on their shoulder..
I love the preseason polls. Absolutely. It’s like a four month horse race. They generate interest, competition, fun, conflict, discussion, motivation (as you correctly point out) and a way of keeping score in how the world views your team — as well as a historical perspective down the road. Check out the 1936 week 1 CFB AP rankings (directly below). MINN, DUKE, ARMY, NW and PUR were the top five. Now, 90 years later, they are all total afterthoughts and are lucky to end any season ranked in the top 20. By the way, MINN actually won the 1936 national… Read more »
That’s great. Where did you find that?
USC Trojans 4Ever on FaceBook
NFL GMs’ confidence in Caleb Williams is definitely slipping. Is he headed for trouble in Chicago? This info, which I’ve lifted from Colin Cowherd’s show, represents 50 voters (six NFL GMs, six asst GMs, six former GMs, eight NFL HCs, five execs and 19 asst coaches). Predictable tiers, but… Caleb Williams is #23, bottom of tier three. But 15 voters (30%) already put the USC Heisman winner/#1 draft pick way down in tier four, which is not even included in the graph and is comprised of older, over the hill players or poorly regarded QBs like Russell Wilson, Spencer Rattler,… Read more »
Rumors that North Carolina is going to leave ACC. Clemson to SEC.
Miami and FSU to BIG
I wonder if Stanford and Cal go BIG…..both programs seem nearly broken. Would the BIG want them? Is this what forces Notre Dame to get off their high horse and join the rest of us lowly programs. I wonder what happens to Duke and VA.
I noticed that as well, but didn’t put up the news about UNC because the ACC has them in a vice grip, as FSU and CLEM found out in court. They settled their cases for some reduced future exit penalty benefits (only $75 mil by 2031), but realized the ACC basically had them by the balls for all intents and purposes. Of course, the SEC could step in and make the Tar Heels a deal they couldn’t refuse if they really wanted. I hope the B1G stands pat for now and have no urge to see CAL and STAN bring… Read more »
Thanks!
Thank you illinoisusc for getting the topic started!
I’m just spitballing here of course, and have no crystal balls. It’s a great topic. What would happen to the great UNC/DUKE rivalry if the Tar Heels split? So many questions.
Nothing gives me more satisfaction than to see the Stanford Hubris University and University of California Berzerkley just eating it in the current CFB landscape.
It’s a beautiful thing.
Absolutely. CAL fans are basically overtly hostile. The STAN band once pissed on the Coliseum field. Neither has any respect for USC which has long dominated both.
That said, I wouldn’t mind playing either (just occasionally) just to remind them of who’s boss and give them some motivation to crawl out of the basement.
No votes for baby bears.
Don’t you love it! No mercy for UCLA, aka the “little gutties.” We squeaked by the pitiful, poorly respected Bruins 19-13 last season. Hopefully we spank ’em bad in 2025.
Sure do!!!
This is something Lincoln Riley needs to put up in the locker room as fuel for the team to prove they are a Top 25 team.
You know what was on the wall of my varsity locker room in huge letters?
“When the going gets tough, the tough get going!”
Real creative, huh? Probably in a thousand locker rooms, or maybe not.
It’s funny how you remember some things — while forgetting countless others.
Another thing I remember from that locker room, outside of the distinctly strong odor of smelly practice uniforms, was the kickoff line “Get your motor running, head out on the highway” from the song “Born to Be Wild” by Steppenwolf. That sucker was on our LR record player every day.
I bought that album–first record purchase for me. I used paper money.
Back in the good old days, when cash was king.
Sometimes it still comes in handy, and you can still swing a little deal with it.
USC gets passed over again, this time by the AP
AP Top 25
1. Texas
2. Penn State
3. Ohio State
4. Clemson
5. Georgia
6. Notre Dame — Oct. 18 in South Bend
7. Oregon — Nov. 22 in Eugene
8. Alabama
9. LSU
10. Miami
11. Arizona State
12. Illinois — Sept. 27 in Champaign
13. South Carolina
14. Michigan — Oct. 11 in L.A.
15. Florida
16. SMU
17. Kansas State
18. Oklahoma
19. Texas A&M
20. Indiana
21. Ole Miss
22. Iowa State
23. Texas Tech
24. Tennessee
25. Boise State
BIG has 6 of the top 20……when you win in the BIG it’s going to count.
USC isn’t the only B1G school investing in massive football facility upgrades
NW is building a new $850 million football stadium called Ryan Field, entirely privately funded with a significant donation from the Ryan family.
The stadium is designed to be a state-of-the-art facility with enhanced fan experiences, community engagement, and sustainability features. Construction is expected to be completed in 2026,
The new stadium will have a smaller capacity than the previous Ryan Field, with 35,000 seats compared to the old stadium’s 47,000.
Rendering of New Ryan Field by HNTB
Visually, NU’s temporary Stadium along the shores (literally) of lake Michigan, is pretty cool….
Absolutely. I was very glad to see this cool move by NW, a relatively downtrodden, STAN-like team that is still respected because of its academic stature while only a rarely dangerous outfit (only a 35,000 seat capacity now).
Gonna be better for the B1G too, which is now making money hand over fist, a lot of which is and will be flowing into USC’s coffers.
Giants should feel hopeful after Jaxson Dart’s impressive NFL debut, even if it’s a preseason game Connor Hughes (Yahoo Sports) — ORCHARD PARK, NY – It doesn’t count. Not really. This is the preseason, an exhibition football game in the middle of August, when the game plans are vanilla and carried out by those weeks away from waking up from their NFL dreams. But that doesn’t matter because it doesn’t make this any less impressive, feel any less good. There was Giants rookie QB Jaxson Dart, standing tall in the face of pressure, delivering a perfect touch pass to Lil’Jordan Humphrey before being knocked to the… Read more »
Kedon Slovis getting some playing time right now for Texans against Vikings.
5th round pick Shadeur Sanders looked good last night for the Browns in his first showing. 3rd round pick Dillon Gabriel (only 5-11) who was a star (’24 B1G MVP) at ORE after transferring from OU, already looks like he’ll be packing his bags.
And…Slovis handing off to Woody Marks in 2nd half.
Sanders not too bad, he overthrew some easy ones, but certainly looked like he belonged on the field.
His two TD throws were awesome. Frankly, he looked better last night in his first NFL game ever than Caleb Williams often does. Sure, it’s pre-season. But that kid looked very composed, confident and able to make good throws both in the pocket and on the run, for the hapless Browns no less.
I sure hope Woody Marks makes it. He’s not a real breakaway guy, but he’s got skills, and toughness.
Yep!….He is not a breakaway….but neither was Payton……he is no Payton but there is some similar characteristics. Hopefully they will give him a shot.
Another Clay Helton casualty. He is a smart guy so hopefully he can catch on as a backup somewhere.
Great News! Thank you Jen Cohen… USC has extended Andy Stankiewicz’ contract three years, through 2030 Shotgun Spratling (USCFootball.com) — The architect of the best USC baseball season in a decade and the best three-year stretch in two decades, Trojans’ HC Andy Stankiewicz has been rewarded with a three-year contract extension, sources have told USCFootball.com. The new deal Stankiewicz signed Friday has him now under contract through 2030 and will give him a notable boost in pay particularly in the later years of the deal. The contract also includes an increase in the assistant coach pool that will begin after… Read more »
Welcome news. After trying to hire the cheapest coach available for years, SC finally went out and got a proven winner in Andy. I hope he is our coach for a long time. Hard to believe we mismanaged the most storied program in all of college baseball, and ceded the top spot in So Cal to the bruins. I hope Andy can restore the pecking order and get us on top again.
These post-Mike Gillespie USC baseball coaches were all basically worthless:
Chad Kreuter (2007-2010)
Frank Cruz (2011-2012)
Dan Hubbs (2013-2019)
Jason Gill (2020-2022)
Calling them worthless is being charitable. They set our program back years
Stankiewicz is an improvement alright. But truthfully a run of 500 baseball would have been an improvement these past years. I wouldn’t brag too much with a record 102 & 74. Especially with the talent available in our backyard. What the program has been lacking is player development and keeping the better players here. Andy needs to show he has a good read on assistant coaches who can make inroads with the talent recruited in. Get the baseball stadium completed instead of it looking like a last priority in the athletic dept.
USC baseball had been the absolute dregs since Mike Gillespie was unceremoniously let go after 20 years and a ’98 NC by Mike Garrett, without so much as even a brief meeting. “Stanky” immediately guided USC top three straight 30-win seasons, the first time since the 2000-2002 seasons. And he hasn’t even had any real home field advantage, having to bus his team all over hell and back. And it’s not his fault USC still doesn’t have the money to give him a completely built stadium. By the time Stankiewicz took over USC baseball, the program had slipped so far… Read more »
There are 11 current MLB players that are ex Trojans and another 12 that played MLB in the last 15 years. Jen Cohen needs to get these 23 and other great ex Trojans/MLBPs back to Fred Lynn to start promoting Trojan baseball.
It’s really too bad they all had to play during such downtrodden baseball days for the Trojans. As others have mentioned here, it’s hard to believe the once absolutely phenomenal USC baseball program got so lost in the weeds for so long. Goes to show. You’ve got to take care of your assets, or they won’t take care of you. Bring it home Freddie, here in 1976! Lynn won four Gold Gloves (1975, 1978, 1979, and 1980), and in 1979 won the AL batting title with a .333 average and finished fourth in MVP voting. He was elected to the… Read more »
Allen it isn’t I don’t like Stanliewcz but we sure saw him get out coached playing Oregon St. in the quarter finals. And he was outcoached when the beavers bunted in runs taking the lead and I saw Stankiewicz doing nothing other than sit in the dugout watching more bunting to score another run.
As I said Jam, I like AS a lot more than you do, regardless of your good point about the ORE ST disaster. Not a problem for me. I’m just appreciative of how quickly he has already improved our program, even without Dedeaux to play at. Fight On USC baseball! ✌
I think AS is an outstanding coach. My only problem with him is that he doesn’t seem to be able to hang onto players. Look at all the players he lost after last season
Jamaica, you need to remember that Trojan BB has not had a home baseball field for the entire time he has coached here and will not for next year and maybe even the year after. Several of the Trojans that went to the portal complained about the fact that they had to practice and play home games at a junior college in Long Beach.
Jayden? Or QB coach Huard or HC Riley, contact John David Booty who will tell you the secret to higher completion percentage, limit or eliminate most of the game picks and be a “real” game manager! Booty’s solution is if the reciever isn’t open with good open space, don’t throw him the damn ball! Eat the thing, run the thing but don’t throw it. Now how hard was that John Beck? Makes no difference how hard you throw the football, just think Bret Farve or John Elway who could zip the ball harder than most, but they mistakenly thought they… Read more »
Jen Cohen Backs Lincoln Riley. “We just have to go execute.” 2/18/25 — James Parks (si.com) — “Lincoln has the experience, right?” Cohen said to The Los Angeles Times. “He’s built and led championship teams before. “So my focus with him is just investing and giving him, and not just him, but his entire coaching staff, his support staff that he has around him, every resource possible to get to the next level. “What I can say is that USC is a special place and that we’re aligned and we’re resourced in a way to compete in what is a… Read more »
If Maiava can execute Riley’s offense anywhere close to Mayfield, Murray, and Williams, USC will go far. Will he have such a command of the situation to audible a run out of the pass play called? Will he know when to tuck and run instead of throw the pick? If he can, it will be fun. A dialed in Maiava and a stout physical defense can make a huge difference over last season.
Caleb Williams clearly checked out of Lincoln Riley’s calls whenever he wanted during the disappointing 2023 season when USC ran the infamous Hero Ball offense. Since then, Luke Huard transitioned from inside receivers to quarterbacks coach for the 2024 season, adding offensive coordinator duties entering 2025. We’re all hoping LR finally ditches his strong Air Raid leanings in favor of a more balanced attack featuring a more prominent ground game, especially at critical times for better clock control, game management etc. I don’t really know what changes will be made in actual games for the 2025 season. I’m not that… Read more »
I agree with you Allen, Jordan is going to be a game breaker, but I think we have a stable again this year that could be one of the best in a long time. I wonder if they will feature the one back or go with the committee. Of course I always hope that they keep in the guy that is “hot” at the moment. Each one of the 4 backs bring something different. This will be fun to watch.
As you point out Steveg, the development and differing roles of these different USC RBs is gonna be such an interesting aspect of what I consider to be an underrated Trojan team. Their diverse skill sets should be another reason to have confidence this year’s offense won’t need to be so QB dependent. That’s my big hope for USC if it expects to finally turn the corner under LR. It’s not every day that a school places three RBs on the Doak Walker Award Watch List: Bryan Jackson (6-0, 230, great goal-line/short yardage guy), Waymond Jordan (below, aka “the junkyard… Read more »