Motivated by his young son, USC cornerback DeCarlos Nicholson is chasing his potential
Nicholson left the only state he had ever lived in when he transferred from Mississippi State to USC last winter, pursuing an NFL future and a better life for 2-year-old son De’Mauri
Luca Evans (OC Register) — LOS ANGELES — In the summers in Petal, Mississippi, father and son would take the grass together, no matter the triple-digit heat.
DeCarlos Nicholson was just a junior at Mississippi State when his boy arrived. Life changed. His dream never did. When De’Mauri was six months old, Nicholson would wheel him out in a baby carriage to a practice field and park him on the sidelines, and De’Mauri would watch his father go through cornerback workouts.
After a few months, he grew, and De’Mauri grew tired of simply watching. So he’d totter out alongside his father, a 1-year-old and a college kid running the same cornerback drills with trainer CJ Bailey, running backpedals until De’Mauri’s little legs tired. He’d pause and lay down, smack in the middle of a drill. Bailey and Nicholson would just shift to the opposite end of the field. They were used to this.
There wasn’t one session, Bailey remembered, when Nicholson didn’t bring his son, the little boy only seeing a hero.
“He know who his dad is,” Bailey said, of young De’Mauri. “But he don’t know who his dad can become. And don’t understand, like, what he can accomplish.”
It’s taken De’Mauri’s birth, and a strange path through football before a transfer to USC this winter, for Nicholson to figure that out himself.
Coaches see a bona-fide NFL athlete buried within Nicholson’s frame. He stands 6-foot-3, with spindly legs and a wingspan that could stretch from Los Angeles to Petal. As a JUCO prospect at Mississippi Gulf Coast in 2021, he once drove eight hours to Texas for a Baylor camp, clocked a 4.40-second 40-yard dash, and was offered a scholarship while ambling back to the stopwatch.
But that talent, for years, stayed docked in Mississippi. For years, Nicholson would talk constantly about getting out of his hometown. He never did. He went to Petal High, and then to Gulf Coast, and then to Mississippi State. He was a family man.
He was also, simply, scared.
“Once he came out,” Nicholson said Wednesday of De’Mauri, “everything became … like, bigger than me.”
Bigger than 11,000-population Petal, certainly. After USC head coach Lincoln Riley flew out there to visit him in the winter, Nicholson took a gamble on the Trojans, the first time he’s ever lived away from home. And come the start of his season, De’Mauri will be with him and girlfriend Rakeya Travis in Southern California, likely watching his father start at outside corner on Saturdays at the Coliseum.
During fall camp, though, Nicholson’s son has been back visiting Petal, staying with extended family. Before every practice, as Nicholson leaves his apartment, he walks past De’Mauri’s empty room.
The same thought flashes.
We can’t go back.
“I got him used to this,” Nicholson said of his son Wednesday. “He’s two years old, from Mississippi, country town, living out here, seeing this.”
“So there’s no way that I could do him that disservice,” he continued, “and take him back.”
JUCO beginnings
A few years ago, when Bailey’s son was enrolling at Petal, he saw a lanky kid working out on the school’s football field. The frame caught Bailey’s eye: such broad shoulders and such tiny hips, Bailey remembered, that dimensionally, he was built like a triangle.
Man, Bailey thought, that kid looks like a basketball player.
DeCarlos Nicholson had been a quarterback, actually, for most of his young life. He was fresh off a position switch when Bailey saw him, a raw bundle of Mr. Fantastic-limbs who had little idea of the cornerback he could become.
“Just thinking he knew how to do it naturally,” Bailey reflected, “was the most difficult part.”
Life in Petal was built on a handful of things, as Nicholson’s high school coach Marcus Boyles put it: Petal High, its kids, and Petal’s churches. And growing up, Nicholson was at the center of it, goofy and gangly and the starting quarterback at Petal High.
But after arriving at Gulf Coast, he received just spots of playing time as a freshman, dangerous off a quarterback keeper but challenged in his throwing accuracy. Head coach Jack Wright would glance over at his bench, stare at the 6-3 kid who could run sub-4.40, and scratch his head.
“Like, ‘Why do I have one of the greatest athletes on the planet sitting over here with me?’” Wright remembered.
In staff meetings, cornerbacks coach Clarence McDougal advocated for Nicholson to work at cornerback. It was drastic. But during one practice in training camp, entering his second year at Gulf Coast, Richardson took his stance across the line of scrimmage from a 5-10 receiver.
Wright took one look at Richardson’s limbs, and one look at his receiver’s height, and realized his quarterback simply couldn’t throw there.
DeCarlos, Wright thought, is going to have a chance.
He spent a year at cornerback at Gulf Coast. He spent much of it, too, cheering in the stands at Gulf Coast’s softball games, after meeting girlfriend Travis. The two were inseparable, McDougal remembered.
After entering the JUCO portal, Nicholson was recruited heavily by Kentucky. He was committed, for a while. His family, mother Mamie Henry said, wanted him to go to Kentucky.
But Mississippi State was three hours down the road. And Rakeya was pregnant.
Wanting more for his son
Nicholson didn’t want to tell his mom.
One day, he came home, Mamie remembered, and dropped the news he was going to be a father. It was a long two weeks after that, she chuckled.
She was hurt. She had raised Nicholson young, herself, determined against all youth to be present for her son. She knew the investment it took, and would tell Nicholson as a teenager: if he ever had a child, he had to do right by them.
“It’s no mama that’s around here – they teenage son come home from JUCO and let you know they got a kid on the way – that’s going to be jumping up and down and praising the Lord,” Mamie said.
“I should’ve been praising the Lord,” she continued, “because a child is a blessing. But I’m still a mother.”
Her son, Mamie knew, was a good kid. But he was a kid. He still is, in many ways. At Mississippi State, he gave himself the nickname “D-Dawg.” On Wednesday, he beamed with pride, telling reporters his son got to eat steak and lobster from USC’s cafeteria, sometimes. No more grilled cheese and hot dogs every night.
“But, there’s nothing wrong with that,” Nicholson said, cutting himself off. “I had eight hot dogs last night.”
Sure, her son, Mamie says, hasn’t gotten it right every time. But he’s gotten most right. He has raised his son, Mamie said, more gently than she ever raised him. His first year at MSU, preparing for De’Mauri’s imminent birth, Nicholson would walk into cornerbacks coach Darcel McBath’s office and pepper him with questions about being a father. What should I expect? How is it going to be?
After De’Mauri was born, McBath said, Nicholson returned to MSU with purpose. At that point, McBath reflected, he started to understand what the game could do for his family.
“I think, first, he was happy to be coming from Mississippi Gulf Coast, to be playing SEC football … and then once he had his kid,” McBath said, “I think it transitioned quite a bit to being the best player he could possibly be. To get the most out of football.”
He played two years in Starkville, and started seven games as a senior last season, still raw and developing when he turned to the portal. Boyles, for one, expected him to land at another SEC program. Recruits from Mississippi, after all, rarely ventured far beyond state lines.
The staff at Petal was “shocked,” Boyles said, when Nicholson told them he was interested in USC.
His mother didn’t want him to go, this time, not with that 26-hour drive. And Nicholson mulled the distance, certainly, the fear that kept him home all his life. If it was a younger him, he told McBath at one point, he might not have done it.
But the older him saw the value. He wanted more, for De’Mauri.
Mamie’s son was being a father, and so she gave him her blessing.
“He can go to the moon,” Mamie said, “and I’m going to be right there, standing on the sun, asking the Lord, ‘Can you turn it down?’”
Trusting his upside
When Nicholson took his official visit to USC in December, he left De’Mauri at home with family. He didn’t need to, looking back, he smiled Wednesday.
When he walked into his hotel room, a baby crib was sitting next to his bed.
At times, he’ll hop on an electric scooter, wheel around campus, and it will hit him. I’m really in L.A. It still hasn’t quite hit the folks back home, a vague air of surprise floating among his former schools that a kid from Petal has wound up in Southern California.
“I think everybody in Mississippi,” Wright said, “was a little surprised that a Mississippi kid went to USC.”
His growth, considering the room left for improvement, has been as good as anybody’s, USC secondary coach Doug Belk said Wednesday. All these years later, and he’s still a unique prospect, entering his redshirt senior season with the same number of years of true cornerback experience as the freshmen on the Trojans’ roster.
In the past, Bailey said, Nicholson didn’t play to his strengths as a corner. He was so long, Bailey emphasized, that a quarterback would have to throw a ball above 10 to 12 feet simply to place it over his arms. He used to chase receivers down, Bailey said, and never play the ball.
“Dude,” Bailey would tell him, “the ball just literally almost hit you in the back.”
In the spring, though, Nicholson sent clips of his reps to Bailey. The coach saw a different corner at USC, a prospective starter on the outside moving with authority. He wasn’t playing small, anymore. He was knocking away passes from receivers that had a step on him.
“He’s finally starting to trust his ability, upside, and using it to his advantage,” Bailey said, in the spring.
Most of the elite cornerbacks in the NFL, Bailey emphasized, were built like Nicholson. Take the New York Jets’ Sauce Gardner, who stands 6-3 and is listed at 190 pounds; Nicholson is 6-3 and weighs 195.
“He’s only writing his ticket,” Bailey said. “Right now, I think, only thing he gotta do is just figure out who he is, and go from there.”
In the spring, when his son was staying with him and Rakeya in Los Angeles, Nicholson would stop by his apartment after morning weightlifting to see his son. There were good days. There were hard days.
But De’Mauri would flash him a smile, and all would become clear again.
“It’s really made it easy,” Nicholson said, “for me to realize my reason for why I’m doing what I do, and being an example for him.”
ocregister.com
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Trojan QB transfers have had limited success elsewhere
Antonio Morales (The Athletic) — Here are the QBs who have transferred from USC within the past two decades: Aaron Corp, Jesse Scroggins, Max Wittek, Max Browne, Jalen Green, Ricky Town, Jack Sears, JT Daniels, Kedon Slovis, Jaxson Dart and Malachi Nelson.
Jaxson Dart is the only quarterback of the past two decades who has left USC and was better off. He’s started at Ole Miss the past two seasons and could potentially lead the Rebels to the College Football Playoff this year.
nytimes.com
Actually a few of those transfers were a bit surprising at the time, but I remember most of those guys being for themselves and not the team. Max Browne and JT Daniels are two that stand out in my memory. Browne was finally given the job and quickly proved that USC needed better players. He was a deer in the headlights by the end of the first quarter at Alabama. JT Daniels never really recovered from being crushed. He’s like a dead letter transferring more times than anyone thought possible. Both quarterbacks came in as highly prized recruits. I guess… Read more »
In JT Daniels case, the trenches at Mater Dei were so good it hid his weakness. That was the guy who without an excellent O line failed at USC.
JT shouldn’t have rushed into college skipping his senior year in HS and redshirting his first year to get his feet on the ground. But look who his HC was, where QB’s were just fresh meat being served to opposing defenses. Every QB under the Cat got injured. Maybe JT wasn’t as good as the press clippings but can you say Kiffin’s clipboard holder was anything but a complete phony in keeping QBs on their feet?
Jam, great point about every QB got injured, and it was always from those hits they shouldn’t have taken. The Cat is gone, RIP.
You’re right about JT bad OL protection at USC, W.Virginia. Disagree with Antonio Morales about JT Daniels. USC, got hurt badly due to OC. Harrell’s QB’s to stay in da pocket, do not run or scramble and horrible OL pass protection. UGA, JT waited until C.Smart was forced to put him in. JT did well only playing ½ games, had a 7-0 record. He would have been ALL SEC QB if C.Smart played him full game. A+ OL protection proved dat’s all JT needed. W Virginia, why go there and play for OC.Harrell again. Got hurt once again due to… Read more »
Daniels, never the most mobile QB, definitely gave it all he had and played through numerous injuries while attending USC (beat out Matt Fink and Jack Sears), GA (he was 7-0 as a starter), WV (beat out by Garrrett Greene), and finally RICE. On Dec 1, 2023, Daniels medically retired from football, after sustaining four concussions during his career, two of which he has termed “severe.” He finished his career with more than 9,000 passing yds and 66 TDs across the four schools. Daniels has been hired as a West Georgia grad asst. Seems so long ago “I’m definitely excited to… Read more »
My thanks to Jaxson Dart for his performance in that memorable Wash State game. That was exciting.
Sat, Sept 18, 2021 — USC’s Jaxson Dart passes in a 45-14 win at WSU. The freshman stepped in for an injured Kedon Slovis and threw for 391 yds and four TDs in an electric debut. (Yong Kwak / AP)
Miller Moss Thoughts (Antonio Morales, The Athletic) Spencer Harris is now the executive director of USC’s most prominent name, image and likeness collective, House of Victory. But in January 2021, he was the Trojans’ director of player personnel and was part of a staff that signed Miller Moss and Jaxson Dart (now the Ole Miss starter and a Heisman candidate). “That’s a tough position. I give him a lot of credit,” Harris said of Moss then. “That’s what we want in a USC quarterback. He doesn’t care who else is in the room. To be the quarterback at USC, it’s hard… Read more »
It’s almost here! CFB!!!! Go Troy!
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What we’ve learned about USC football during the preseason Antonio Morales (The Athletic) — 1. Starter Miller Moss, who waited three years for his opportunity to earn the starting role, is essentially the poster child for “guys who are dying to be at USC.” Is UNLV transfer Jayden Maiava more physically gifted than Moss? Yes. But Moss already has two years in this system and the team backs him for his loyalty and leadership. 2. The RB group lacks depth but seems pretty set at the top. Woody Marks is the No. 1 starter based on the experience he accumulated during four seasons at MISS… Read more »
Alabama, Courtney Morgan agree to three-year extension, averaging $825,000 per year, per report Griffin McVeigh (on3.com) — According to Matt Zenitz of 247Sports, Alabama and general manager Courtney Morgan have agreed on a new three-year contract just ahead of the 2024 season. Morgan has been a key addition to Kalen DeBoer‘s staff since being hired and is now getting a pay increase, reportedly set to make $825,000 a year. The extension for Morgan comes after Lincoln Riley and the USC Trojans came after him to be the program’s President of Football. Instead, Morgan will stay in Tuscaloosa and continue to work for the Crimson Tide. “Morgan, a leading figure… Read more »
Big Ten football burning questions for 2024 season as Oregon enters Playoff race (Carter Bahns/247Sports.com) HOW WILL THE NEWCOMERS FARE? Pencil Oregon in as a Playoff team with very real Big Ten championship upside given the remarkable roster construction Dan Lanning completed over his first two years at the helm. Where do USC, UCLA and Washington fit into their new league? They all might be in separate tiers. The Trojans are probably a step behind the elite group at the top, the Huskies look like a middle-of-the-road team in Year 1 after their immense roster turnover and coaching change and the Bruins have heaps of work… Read more »
The Athletic ranks USC at #33 right behind Liberty, Memphis, and Louisville.
Miller Moss, from Mission Hills Bishop Alemany, in good form as USC’s “official starting QB.”