Lincoln Riley Has To Be Better, Right?

At sagging USC, Lincoln Riley should be on the hottest of hot seats

USC coach Lincoln Riley looks up and across the field during the Trojans' spring game at the Coliseum.Lincoln Riley so far has been unable to transform the Trojans back into one of college football’s elite teams. (Allen J. Schaben / LAT)

Bill Plaschke (LA Times)  —  As the fabled fight song heats up and the legendary gesture wags anew, let’s get one thing straight about what was once the Los Angeles sports landscape’s shining monument.

USC football has become a mirage.

The greatness is gone. The new tradition is mediocrity. The new heritage is irrelevance.

“Fight on” has become “Paddle on,” with each ensuing season an exasperating exercise in keeping that Trojan helmet afloat.

This is not opinion. This is not hyperbole. This is fact.

In the last 16 seasons USC has recorded double-digit victories five times.

During that same time span, Alabama has recorded double-digit victories 15 times.

LOS ANGELES, CA - NOVEMBER 30, 2024: USC Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley watches warm ups before the game against Notre Dame at the LA Coliseum on November 30, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

In the last 16 seasons, USC has had one major bowl victory.

During that same span, Ohio State has 10 major bowl victories.

Since the departure of Pete Carroll after the 2009 season, the Trojan football program has been rocked by NCAA punishment, roiled by a litany of ill-fitting coaches, betrayed by a string of embarrassing losses, and generally kneecapped by its own hubris.

This was once the greatest dynasty in college football history. I know, I was there, and rarely has one team energized and inspired this entire city like Uncle Pete’s champions.

But watching video from those days is like watching an alien football team on Mars. The current product, with all its failures and excuses, is almost completely unrecognizable.

In the past 16 years, the program has dissolved into the equivalent of a mediocre wannabe that no longer competes with the likes of Ohio State, Michigan, Texas, Georgia and Clemson.

USC has basically become the other USC — a South Carolina-type program filled with big aspirations but average results.

The Athletic recently ranked college football programs in terms of value. Despite playing in the country’s entertainment capital alongside the country’s most valuable professional basketball and baseball teams, the Trojans ranked only eighth. They were estimated as being worth nearly $1 billion less than top-ranked Texas, a school that plays in a much smaller market with eight fewer national titles.

Which brings us to the doorstep of another seemingly nondescript season, but one framed in a bold-faced question.

Lincoln Riley has to be better, right? He has to win double-digit games for only the second time in his four seasons, right? He has to lead the 2025 squad to a bowl game that isn’t played in San Diego or Las Vegas, right?

USC coach Lincoln Riley walks on the field during a timeout against Nebraska at the Coliseum on Nov. 16.

Most folks think Riley is not on a hot seat because of the untenable cost of his buyout, reportedly in the neighborhood of $80 million.

That better be wrong.

If USC wants to return to its former glory, Trojan administrators must hold Riley accountable for further tarnishing that shine.

In a billion-dollar industry, with a $200-million football facility currently under construction, USC cannot view its coach through a financial lens, only a football lens. They must insist that he win football games at a rate higher than, say, the guy he replaced.

Through 40 games, Riley is 26-14. Through 40 games, Clay Helton was 28-12 as a head coach.

Helton was publicly torn from limb to limb, yet Riley gets a pass?

Riley is 7-6 without Caleb Williams. He is 3-9 against ranked opponents. He has lost virtually every big game and blown almost every big moment.

If he doesn’t change the narrative this season, USC needs to change the coach.

USC football general manager Chad Bowden, left, speaks with coach Lincoln Riley during a team practice.

The Trojans have stabilized their front office with sharp athletic director Jen Cohen and highly regarded general manager Chad Bowden (above). They’ve made huge monetary investments in infrastructure and recruiting.

Now it’s on Riley. And he needs to get it done now.

If Texas A&M can pony up $77.5 million to buy out Jimbo Fisher, USC can find the money to replace Riley. The cost is unimaginable, but the price of falling further behind in an evolving sport where at least a dozen programs have already left them in the dust is even higher.

“I give a lot of credit to our administration … because it’s very apparent that USC is extremely serious about making this football program and returning it back to being one of the greats in college football,” Riley said to reporters Thursday at Big Ten media day in Las Vegas.

He’s right. Everything is there for him to succeed.

Take the 2025 schedule. It’s the lightest in years. The Trojans don’t play Ohio State. They don’t play Penn State. They don’t play Indiana. They play Michigan at the Coliseum.

Their only tough nonconference game is at Notre Dame. Their only serious hurdle on the road is at Oregon.

USC should hold Riley to a standard of 10 wins, which should make the Trojans competitive for one of the 12 playoff spots.

Certainly, that’s a lot of mandated wins. But at some point, the Trojan administration has to start demanding that they become the Trojans again, and that time is now.

They certainly cannot give Riley a grace period because he has the nation’s top recruiting class due to arrive in 2026. Riley has been here four years, the talent should be here by now, and he should not be allowed to hold the program hostage until his best class shows up.

USC coach Lincoln Riley walks on the sideline.

 Lincoln Riley during an impressive gut-wrenching 27-20 win against LSU on Sept. 1. (Robert Gauthier / LAT)

You want to judge Riley by impactful players? Judge him by this year’s quarterback, Jayden Maiava. He is Riley’s personal project, having been anointed the starter without offseason competition from the portal.

Nov 23, 2024; Pasadena, CA; Trojans QB Jayden Maiava signals a play during the 4th quarter against UCLA at the Rose Bowl. USC won 19-13. Robert Hanashiro-Imagn Images 

Maiava was both raw and brilliant last year after replacing Miller Moss, going 3-1 as a starter capped by a 17-point comeback in a Las Vegas Bowl victory over Texas A&M. He completed less than 60% of his passes in three of the four starts, and threw six interceptions to offset his 11 touchdown passes, but his athleticism is impressive and his arm is amazing.

It says here the new kid has a chance to be great. Riley can remind Trojan fans of his best asset if he can lead the new kid to that greatness.

“His arm talent, the decisiveness in which he plays and how he sees things is really unique and has a chance to be really special,” Riley said, later repeating, “He has a chance to be a really, really special player.”

And USC has a chance to have a really special season.

For sure. For real.

For the second time in 17 years.

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.

 

SUBSCRIBE HERE TO RECEIVE NOTICE OF NEW COMMENTS OR REPLIES.
Notify of
47 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Trojanfanatic
Noble Genius
Trojanfanatic
Offline
July 30, 2025 10:08 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

So I’m one that would be more than disappointed if the series was interrupted or cancelled, but something is just irritating about ND ( yes I know just being ND is enough) and it’s their yearly patchwork schedule because they’re an “independent.” Look at last year. What a joke. What’s next, schedule in a top ranked JUCO? Yes they came through well in the playoffs but the road was paved in gold. When you have an iffy schedule you don’t have as many potential injuries, you rest starters, you develop your second string, you can minimize your playbook for some… Read more »

Trojanfanatic
Noble Genius
Trojanfanatic
Offline
July 31, 2025 11:40 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Allen I do agree that if I was ND I wouldn’t join a conference. They’ve managed to work it to their advantage since in my opinion, strength of schedule, especially in the latter part of the season seems a secondary factor in ranking and national attention. I’ll be looking forward to seeing how we match up this year.

Jamaica
Major Genius
Jamaica
Offline
July 30, 2025 7:16 pm

It’s the start of a new pre-season camp where the defense is getting most of the attention in team improvement. The D-line has depth, big and physical. We have a new Linebacker coach who all about his players playing physical. But what I remember most when USC was physically dominating everyone in the PC years, was how the DBs & safeties would come up and cream the ball carriers. Just flatten them. I am hoping Doug Belk is in this train of thought. Any ball carrier getting into the Trojan backfield will get belted in paying a price!

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
Golden Trojan
Offline
July 31, 2025 7:39 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

USCFOOTBALL.COM/247Sports, Aug 13th, 2024 “As a team, we’ve had a 1,400-pound gain since the start of the offseason to now,” Riley said after USC’s first fall camp practice. “Obviously that was a big point of emphasis. Really, it’s been a phenomenal transformation by our strength staff, nutrition staff and medical staff. This was a major philosophy change, especially defensively, and to get these bodies equipped to come do it was a big step. We’re a lot bigger of a football team, and that’s a key step in the process, but there’s obviously a lot more to go.” “fool me once,… Read more »

RialtoTrojan
Major Genius
RialtoTrojan
Offline
July 30, 2025 1:41 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

He has a month to diagnose and correct blocking while simultaneously teaching the defense how to beat offensive linemen. Sounds about right, right?

parcelman007
Noble Genius
parcelman007
Offline
July 31, 2025 3:24 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Klemms years at UCLA and Oregon as O-Line coach were great. His early years at SMU weren’t bad either particularly 2010. If SC’s current O-Line coach doesn’t work out I would consider him a candidate.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
Golden Trojan
Offline
July 30, 2025 11:32 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Hear this about every S/C coach USC hires. Let’s hope it’s true.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
Golden Trojan
Offline
July 31, 2025 7:24 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Reagan said of the Soviets, trust but verify. For me and the USC football program it’s, hope but verify. Prove it on the field. A few quotes from 2024 with the new and improved Bennie Wylie: The team collectively gained 1,400 pounds of muscle, according to ESPN, Branch went from 5.8% body fat to 4.8%, Lane put on 14 lbs, On3, Trojans Players Gained Insane Amount of Muscle Mass This Offseason, Sports Illustrated. Are they even more fit than last year? I hope so but show me. Oh and there still is the problem with the HC. But I’m trying… Read more »

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
Golden Trojan
Offline
July 31, 2025 9:35 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Pass happy Riley, 6-6. Balanced Riley 12-0.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
Golden Trojan
Offline
July 30, 2025 10:34 am

USC Football held its first practice today at 7am. The 2025-26 college sports season has officially started! Enough negatives, at least till the first game. We are undefeated so far. I put up a new flag out front. Fight On!

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
Golden Trojan
Offline
July 30, 2025 10:43 am
Reply to  Golden Trojan

New Flag

fightonflag
RialtoTrojan
Major Genius
RialtoTrojan
Offline
July 30, 2025 1:35 pm
Reply to  Golden Trojan

Here’s ours. It has to stay inside because when I was installing an outlet on the other side of the wall it’s on, I drilled holes looking for an obstruction. It turned out the wire I was fishing down the wall was too short. Anyway it covers my mistake until I patch and paint.

IMG_8632
RialtoTrojan
Major Genius
RialtoTrojan
Offline
July 30, 2025 10:05 am

After reading the article I thought about the past 17 years and the brain trust at USC. I would point out that our current athletic director is only the third non-former- USC player since John McKay. It makes me think the administration at USC has bigger fish to fry than to worry about football. I had real mixed feelings about Mike Bohn, because he failed to fire Helton right from the get go, but also brought in a head coach who seemed to have a reputation. (Seemed is the operative in that statement) Who didn’t cheer when Lincoln Riley was… Read more »

parcelman007
Noble Genius
parcelman007
Offline
July 29, 2025 5:49 pm

This guy Keawe Browne that was supposed to be a silent commit to Texas is difficult to get a handle on. They say he might come to SC. The only big schools that wanted him was Texas and SC. If you watch his highlights he only catches one pass as a tight end. Mostly the highlights show him blocking or on special teams and also quite a bit on defense as an edge rusher. I can’t believe they are going after him as a tight end.

ATL D.D.S.
Major Genius
ATL D.D.S.
Offline
July 30, 2025 6:44 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Agree with every comment, including the Plashke reference🤣

parcelman007
Noble Genius
parcelman007
Offline
July 30, 2025 9:37 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

The NCAA never misses a chance to stick it to SC

parcelman007
Noble Genius
parcelman007
Offline
July 30, 2025 9:44 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

It almost seems like the NCAA would rather pay the money than see USC succeed.

SC Gator
Genius Member
SC Gator
Offline
July 29, 2025 6:05 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Who could forget?

It was extra special for me. From 1962 to 2008, I attended 47 straight SC-UCLA games. In 2009 I was hospitalized and missed the game. In 2010 I had a bad cold and it was an 8:00 start in December. Since my streak was no longer alive, I passed.

So 2011 could have been # 50 in a row. Never figured they’d treat me to a 50-0 blowout.

volunteerTrojan
Major Genius
July 29, 2025 9:15 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Oh yeah! Barkley’s late 4th quarter TD bomb!

SC Gator
Genius Member
SC Gator
Offline
July 29, 2025 10:23 am

That was in the 2009 game.

ATL D.D.S.
Major Genius
ATL D.D.S.
Offline
July 30, 2025 6:58 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

It was a beautiful thing.

illinoisusc
Major Genius
illinoisusc
Offline
July 28, 2025 6:51 pm

Well, Plaschke sounds like the midwestern doubters I poorly described the other day. It’s been many decades since I’ve read the LA Times so I have no idea if he is normally objective or anti USC but it’s a shot across the bow from a local source. It’s time to show them. Can Riley do it…..Quite a few USC fans are extremely doubtful…….but……can it be done after his passing……definitely. In fact……Its probable….USC has too many natural advantages. Come on Riley……kick some ass and get those SEC types shaking again when they play us in the playoffs…..and if he should fail…..for… Read more »

ATL D.D.S.
Major Genius
ATL D.D.S.
Offline
July 30, 2025 7:02 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Texas and Texas A & M have alumni that have stupid levels of oil money. Especially for football, it seems that the oil tycoons have a bottomless supply of greenbacks to throw at their alma mater for any problem.