USC, JuJu Watkins gives Los Angeles ‘two hours of joy’ in win over Penn State
In front of a home crowd that needed ‘some semblance of normalcy’ amid L.A. fires, as Cheryl Miller put it, Watkins dazzled with 35 points on 13-of-15 shooting in their 95-73 win over Penn State
JuJu Watkins gets off a jumper outside the PSU defense during the second half Sunday, Jan. 12, 2025, in Los Angeles at the Galen Center. (AP Photo/Jayne Kamin-Oncea)
Luca Evans (OC Register) — LOS ANGELES — A few days before Cherie Nelson was set to be honored on the hardwood at the Galen Center, her mother Irene lost her home. It sat, once, on the intersection of North Fair Oaks Avenue and Pine Street in Altadena. That was before the nightmare.
It was probably “up in the air,” as USC women’s head coach Lindsay Gottlieb put it if Altadena-native Nelson was going to come on Sunday night. Alumni were driving in from parts of Southern California, and flying in from parts of the United States, for a nod to the program’s long history at halftime of USC’s game against Penn State. Nelson, once USC’s all-time single-game points leader before JuJu Watkins shattered it last year at Stanford, was a valued guest. Tragedy simply seemed ready to get in the way.
(Nelson played basketball for the Women of Troy from 1985-89, earning All-Pac-10 first team honors in 1987 and 1989 and named the Pac-10 Player of the Year in 1988).
But even as wildfires had claimed her home, and those of thousands of her Los Angeles neighbors, 98-year-old Irene wanted to see the Women of Troy. So she and Nelson (pictured with JuJu, the only Trojans to score 50+ points in a game) came and sat courtside, filtering in Sunday night with thousands across Southern California that needed some “semblance of normalcy,” as fellow legend Cheryl Miller put it.
Nelson left Sunday night with a show, this USC women’s program (16-1, 6-0 Big Ten) pouring their soul onto the hardwood in a 95-73 win over Penn State. She left with a photo with JuJu Watkins, who played perhaps the most transcendent and near-flawless game of her one-and-a-half seasons of transcendence in a USC jersey, dropping 35 points on 13-of-15 shooting and making her first 11 shots from the floor.
And Cherie Nelson left, as many did, with a much-needed smile.
“We appreciate the opportunity to help the community in that way,” Gottlieb said postgame, “to give people two hours of joy.”
Watkins, as her assistant coach Beth Burns marvels, is an artist. She’s done her best work, throughout time, when she paints with joy. But joy, recently, has been hard to come by in the only home she’s ever known.
Outside the Galen Center’s walls, on Sunday, her city was suffering. Ash has drifted from Los Angeles sky, and the Palisades and Eaton fires have rampaged. Her own family, even, was forced to temporarily evacuate – all is fine now – as parents Bobby and Sari Watkins told the Southern California News Group.
But the some-6,000 that flocked to Galen Sunday night needed to “get away from all the craziness of the world right now,” as fan Jason Ito said. The people needed a reprieve. And Watkins gave them one.
She played likely the best all-around game of her USC career Sunday: a double-double (35 points, 11 rebounds), five steals and three blocks. The true eye-catcher, though, was not the black ink itself but in the flourish of Watkins’ writing. She downshifted on a second-quarter hesitation with mouth agape, ducking through a thicket of Penn State arms for a pro-move finish to put USC up 13 early. She nabbed a steal to end the first half and took off with time waning, finishing through contact for a righty layup to cap off a 15-0 Trojans run before the break, Watkins beaming at a jumbotron camera as the Galen Center erupted and fellow star Kiki Iriafen lifted her up in a bear-hug.
“That run in the second quarter was impressive,” Gottlieb said. “We know we have the ability to do that, and then it’s about understanding our power to continue doing that, possession after possession.” After USC’s run to close the first half, Penn State (9-8, 0-6) never recovered, with the Trojans leading by as much as 27 points.
“I think our goal was to just, kind of put on a show, and entertain people for a couple of hours,” Watkins said postgame, part of a thoughtful presser in which she thanked firefighters and pledged philanthropic help to Los Angeles. “And I think I kind of took pride in that as well, in my performance. I see it as a great opportunity to have fun, the vibes are kind of down here in L.A. This week has been hard for L.A., for me. Just hearing about the stories, people I know were affected by it as well. We’ve been doing what we can to stay locked in and have as much positivity as possible.”
Watkins was definitely locked in, eclipsing the 30-point mark for the 19th time in her Trojans career while shooting 13 for 15 from the field. She attacked the rim without hesitation, absorbing contact and finishing with 16 points in the paint while going seven for nine from the free-throw line.
Her defensive effort embodied the team’s goal as she dove for loose balls, battled for rebounds and relentlessly swiped for steals. She also finished with five steals and three blocks.
It’s okay, Gottlieb implored to her team across the past week, to focus on basketball. They were safe, on Sunday, USC monitored air quality inside and outside Galen as other games across Los Angeles were postponed or canceled. There were bigger things going on, yes. But Penn State still made the trip to Los Angeles. There was an opportunity, simply, to hone in on their craft in the time they had.
“That has an importance, as well, in their community,” Gottlieb said postgame. “And I think they’ve really bought into that.”
Sunday wasn’t perfect, USC’s defense was too often lackadaisical on the interior in letting Penn State hang around for 16 minutes. But freshman Kayleigh Heckel provided a spark off the bench, with nine points and four assists. And the Trojans pulled away thanks to Watkins and Iriafen, Gottlieb calling the two “the best duo in the country” after USC’s win over Maryland Wednesday.
As visually vibrant as Watkins’ game has become, Iriafen has become a methodical mechanic in the post, racking up a dominant 28 points on 12-of-18 shooting in feasting inside from the jump. Iriafen and Watkins have scored in double digits in every game this season.
Most in Galen on Sunday knew someone who’d lost something in the past week. Watkins. Gottlieb. Iriafen. Nelson. And there was a sense of unity in distraction, both from those on the floor and those watching.
“If we can put a smile on people’s faces for two hours, or kind of give them an escape to get away from everything that’s going on right now,” Iriafen said, “we’re super grateful to do that.”
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Mario williams had a great season at Tulane. He caught 60 passes for over 1,000 yards and a 17.2 average per catch and 6 TD’s. I hated to see him go. He did drop passes but I still thought he got open which was a problem for our receivers this year.
Mario was a huge part of one of USC’s worst bowl losses ever. Unfortunately for Mario (who declared for the Draft in Dec), he’ll always be infamous for that botched chest bounce out-of-bounds fumble at the one-yd line for USC, ironically against TUL which was a major factor in the historic Trojan 46-45 Cotton Bowl collapse. We’ll never know why Mario attempted to fair-catch the KO at the one within inches of the sideline, but maybe a special teams coach would have helped. USC had just kicked a FG and comfortably led 45-30 with just 4:30 to go in the… Read more »
“With 4:30 remaining in the 4th quarter, the USC Trojans kicked off to TUL after kicking a field goal to go up 45-30. USC had a 99.8% chance of winning after this kickoff, only 0.1% below the maximum possible value in ESPN’s model”. What none of us knew at that time was that this was an omen of bad things to come. We were seeing the greatest characteristic of LR coached teams……the ability to snatch defeat from almost absolute certain victory.
Pregnon is going to Oregon. I knew he would. I said it on this blog. After Dillon Gabriel was sacked 8 times with 13 tackles for loss against OSU, you have to believe that Oregon started tampering right after that game if not before. I would say that the next day Oregon backed the Brinks truck right into his driveway with an offer that he couldn’t refuse. If SC tampered that way they would find themselves on probation for 10 years. But it’s Oregon, so the NCAA is looking the other way.
After Sam Darnold’s disappointing performance last night, it’ll be interesting to see if the Vikings keep him.
He often didn’t have much time to throw and was under attack, but he still holds onto the ball too long, doesn’t make quick decisions, and isn’t accurate enough.
Too bad after such an excellent year, but the NFL playoffs is when QBs need to shine and Sam didn’t look like much against the Rams.
Too bad for Sam and my Vikes. I had a bad feeling about this one since the Detroit game. Sam might have lost himself tens of millions with his final two games, bringing out all of the “I told you so” crowd. In light of Sam’s past 2 games, both essentially playoff games, I expect MN to franchise tag him, then trade him off for much lower than he would have commanded before the past 2 games. They will commit to McCarthy and see if they can improve Daniel Jones like they did Sam, maybe signing Jones to a similar… Read more »
Would you take Sam Darnold or Brock Purdy? Both are decent-to-good NFL QBs who don’t deserve huge contracts like the one Dak Prescott stole from Jerry Jones which destroyed Dallas.
Sean McVay is just an awesome coach who can beat you in so many different ways, with so many different rosters. From what I saw, he completely took the Vikings to the woodshed, and the game was over early.
That young Ram defense is a big problem for most anyone and it’ll be interesting to see how they perform in the cold vs the Eagles.
I thought Darnold looked bad on his own as well, and he’d be the first to admit that, which he has already done. His long-range passing game totally sucked, he’s too skittish in the pocket, he doesn’t take care of the ball, and when compared to quick-thinking Matthew Stafford, Darnold played like a rookie still unsure of his playbook instead of the seven-year vet that he is. His record-breaking nine sacks in a playoff game wasn’t all on the Vikings O-line, which was porous at best. But Darnold will never be a commanding QB until he finally learns how to… Read more »
I have to admit I don’t pay much attention to the NFL till playoffs. I would have thought Minnesota and Green Bay were better than that. They both got stuffed. Now six of the 15 Trojans are out. Which is my main reason to pick a team.
I’m for the Rams all the way now. Would have loved a Rams – Chargers SB.
Great question between Brock and Sam. I think Sam is slightly better physically, but something gets in his head. I only recall one game at SC when he really fell apart, that was the ND game, 2017 I think, but like last evening, the whole team collapsed too.
I think you’re right about Sam and Brock (not bad for aMr. Irrelevant!)
Sam’s simply got to find a way to make quicker decisions, which of course also includes throwing the ball away.
But he’s also got to use his head to fix his accuracy problem. There’s no substitute for accuracy if you’re a QB.
Even when Sam had the time, he missed so many throws in his last two games (especially against Detroit), I think the big-game mental pressure just got to him.
Sam had a good season with the Vikings winning 14 games.
But they were not well prepared for the playoffs.
Sam does hold on to the ball too long. And should throw the ball away more instead
of getting sacked.
Sam should try to stay with the Vikings if he can for it will be hard to find a better
situation.
Adjustments on the part of Sam and the Vikings will make the more playoff competitive.
I think the Vikings will unload Sam, one of my favorite USC QBs ever, but he’ll be the most heavily pursued QB free agent.
Had he not badly flubbed his last two Vikings games, he’d be getting ready to become the 10th QB in the $50 million-or-more-per-year club, though some think that Sam’s ontract was instead always set to mirror more closely the Geno Smith/Baker Mayfield deals, who were signed for $25 mil and $33 mil.
There’s a huge difference in women’s basketball from when I was growing up until now. I remember girls in gym shorts and tee shirts. They’d run down the floor, often dribbling with two hands, then stop bringing up the ball up from between their knees to loop it towards the basket.
Today the girls wear uniforms and play hard, occasionally harder than their male counterparts.
It makes me wonder if I will live long enough to see women in the NBA?
I remember when women had 6 per team, 3 on offense and 3 on defense. The defense would grab a rebound, bring it up to the half-court line and pass it the offense. Times have changed.
I do not think a woman will ever be able to hold a merit-based position on an NBA roster. The difference in speed, jumping, quickness and overall athleticism is so great due to inherent biological physiological differences.
Mario williams had a great season at Tulane. He caught 60 passes for over 1,000 yards and a 17.2 average per catch and 6 TD’s. I hated to see him go. He did drop passes but I still thought he got open which was a problem for our receivers this year.
Mario was a huge part of one of USC’s worst bowl losses ever. Unfortunately for Mario (who declared for the Draft in Dec), he’ll always be infamous for that botched chest bounce out-of-bounds fumble at the one-yd line for USC, ironically against TUL which was a major factor in the historic Trojan 46-45 Cotton Bowl collapse. We’ll never know why Mario attempted to fair-catch the KO at the one within inches of the sideline, but maybe a special teams coach would have helped. USC had just kicked a FG and comfortably led 45-30 with just 4:30 to go in the… Read more »
“With 4:30 remaining in the 4th quarter, the USC Trojans kicked off to TUL after kicking a field goal to go up 45-30. USC had a 99.8% chance of winning after this kickoff, only 0.1% below the maximum possible value in ESPN’s model”. What none of us knew at that time was that this was an omen of bad things to come. We were seeing the greatest characteristic of LR coached teams……the ability to snatch defeat from almost absolute certain victory.
Pregnon is going to Oregon. I knew he would. I said it on this blog. After Dillon Gabriel was sacked 8 times with 13 tackles for loss against OSU, you have to believe that Oregon started tampering right after that game if not before. I would say that the next day Oregon backed the Brinks truck right into his driveway with an offer that he couldn’t refuse. If SC tampered that way they would find themselves on probation for 10 years. But it’s Oregon, so the NCAA is looking the other way.
After Sam Darnold’s disappointing performance last night, it’ll be interesting to see if the Vikings keep him.
He often didn’t have much time to throw and was under attack, but he still holds onto the ball too long, doesn’t make quick decisions, and isn’t accurate enough.
Too bad after such an excellent year, but the NFL playoffs is when QBs need to shine and Sam didn’t look like much against the Rams.
Too bad for Sam and my Vikes. I had a bad feeling about this one since the Detroit game. Sam might have lost himself tens of millions with his final two games, bringing out all of the “I told you so” crowd. In light of Sam’s past 2 games, both essentially playoff games, I expect MN to franchise tag him, then trade him off for much lower than he would have commanded before the past 2 games. They will commit to McCarthy and see if they can improve Daniel Jones like they did Sam, maybe signing Jones to a similar… Read more »
Would you take Sam Darnold or Brock Purdy? Both are decent-to-good NFL QBs who don’t deserve huge contracts like the one Dak Prescott stole from Jerry Jones which destroyed Dallas.
Sean McVay is just an awesome coach who can beat you in so many different ways, with so many different rosters. From what I saw, he completely took the Vikings to the woodshed, and the game was over early.
That young Ram defense is a big problem for most anyone and it’ll be interesting to see how they perform in the cold vs the Eagles.
Yeah it looked more like the Rams defense was crushing it than it was Darnold’s fault.
I thought Darnold looked bad on his own as well, and he’d be the first to admit that, which he has already done. His long-range passing game totally sucked, he’s too skittish in the pocket, he doesn’t take care of the ball, and when compared to quick-thinking Matthew Stafford, Darnold played like a rookie still unsure of his playbook instead of the seven-year vet that he is. His record-breaking nine sacks in a playoff game wasn’t all on the Vikings O-line, which was porous at best. But Darnold will never be a commanding QB until he finally learns how to… Read more »
I have to admit I don’t pay much attention to the NFL till playoffs. I would have thought Minnesota and Green Bay were better than that. They both got stuffed. Now six of the 15 Trojans are out. Which is my main reason to pick a team.
Seemed to me that on a few of those sacks Sam could have thrown it away.
Sam has been dinged since game 12 … it’s obvious
I’m for the Rams all the way now. Would have loved a Rams – Chargers SB.
Great question between Brock and Sam. I think Sam is slightly better physically, but something gets in his head. I only recall one game at SC when he really fell apart, that was the ND game, 2017 I think, but like last evening, the whole team collapsed too.
I think you’re right about Sam and Brock (not bad for a Mr. Irrelevant!)
Sam’s simply got to find a way to make quicker decisions, which of course also includes throwing the ball away.
But he’s also got to use his head to fix his accuracy problem. There’s no substitute for accuracy if you’re a QB.
Even when Sam had the time, he missed so many throws in his last two games (especially against Detroit), I think the big-game mental pressure just got to him.
Take Sam in a second over Purdy. Shanahan created Purdy and now can’t get rid of him.
Sam injured his ankle severely in week 11 or so and hasn’t been the same since
Sam had a good season with the Vikings winning 14 games.
But they were not well prepared for the playoffs.
Sam does hold on to the ball too long. And should throw the ball away more instead
of getting sacked.
Sam should try to stay with the Vikings if he can for it will be hard to find a better
situation.
Adjustments on the part of Sam and the Vikings will make the more playoff competitive.
I think the Vikings will unload Sam, one of my favorite USC QBs ever, but he’ll be the most heavily pursued QB free agent.
Had he not badly flubbed his last two Vikings games, he’d be getting ready to become the 10th QB in the $50 million-or-more-per-year club, though some think that Sam’s ontract was instead always set to mirror more closely the Geno Smith/Baker Mayfield deals, who were signed for $25 mil and $33 mil.
There’s a huge difference in women’s basketball from when I was growing up until now. I remember girls in gym shorts and tee shirts. They’d run down the floor, often dribbling with two hands, then stop bringing up the ball up from between their knees to loop it towards the basket.
Today the girls wear uniforms and play hard, occasionally harder than their male counterparts.
It makes me wonder if I will live long enough to see women in the NBA?
I remember when women had 6 per team, 3 on offense and 3 on defense. The defense would grab a rebound, bring it up to the half-court line and pass it the offense. Times have changed.
I do not think a woman will ever be able to hold a merit-based position on an NBA roster. The difference in speed, jumping, quickness and overall athleticism is so great due to inherent biological physiological differences.
A fun read down memory lane of Vikings-Rams.
https://sports.yahoo.com/vikings-history-thwarting-rams-playoffs-110007162.html
https://www.ocregister.com/2025/01/08/alexander-rams-playoff-history-with-vikings-for-a-time-it-was-beyond-agonizing/
And the Vikes lay another egg.
Brutal. Great photos. Bad memories. Helps one look at football from a longer perspective.
Who will be the new coach of the Dallas Cowboys?
Who will be the new coach of the Chicago Bears?
Who will be the new coach of the Las Vegas Raiders?
Gonna be interesting … Any way Pete Carroll sneaks in? I doubt it, but it would be fun to see.
I think Mike Vrabel is a fantastic pick to take over the Patriots.