New USC DC Gary Patterson is introduced at a news conference Wednesday. (Ronaldo Bolanos / LAT)Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — When Gary Patterson resigned as coach of Texas Christian in October 2021, midway through his 21st season with the Horned Frogs, the now-65-year old coach decided to take a step back and reevaluate where he and the college game were headed.
“I’d had a job since I was 9 years old,” Patterson said. “Just kind of wanted to take a break.”
For decades, football had been at the forefront of his and his family’s life, so much so that his wife joked she was merely his “mistress.” He wanted to spend time with her, with his grandkids. Plus, after a few seasons, he knew he’d be eligible for the College Football Hall of Fame, which was important to him.
Patterson ended up filling that time with football, anyway. He watched the game from afar, helping out as a consultant on staffs at Texas and Baylor, even working with Amazon Prime’s football coverage, just to score a subscription to Catapult (which specializes in athlete performance tracking technology), all along biding his time for the right opportunity to come along.
It came earlier this month, four years after his departure from Fort Worth, in the form of a text message from USC coach Lincoln Riley, whom he knew from their days coaching across from each other in the Big 12. The Trojans’ defensive coordinator, D’Anton Lynn, had left in late December for the same job at Penn State. Riley needed a replacement.
“He wasn’t going to jump back into this for anything,” Riley said Wednesday. “It had to be the right opportunity, the right kind of place, the right kind of setting. I know he knows and believe he’s found that.”
No one is more invested in that than USC’s head coach. Whether Patterson turns out to be the right fit at the right time for the Trojans may ultimately determine the trajectory of Riley’s future with the program. Patterson will be Riley’s third defensive coordinator in five seasons at USC.
“I think it’s an unbelievable hire by Lincoln,” said David Bailiff, who worked with Patterson at New Mexico and TCU. “For him not to be intimidated with Gary’s background, that all he wants to do is get USC better — a lot of coaches probably wouldn’t hire Gary because he’s been a head coach for so long.”
For Patterson, who never beat Riley in seven meetings while at TCU, it was a particularly ideal partnership.
“Any time that I was ever part of a team that had a great offense and scored a lot of points, we won a lot of ball games,” Patterson said.
Patterson, however, hasn’t been a full-time assistant since the turn of the 21st century. He last served as defensive coordinator under Dennis Franchione, who brought Patterson with him from New Mexico to TCU in 1998. He was promoted to head coach in 2000, when Franchione left for Alabama. A week later, across the country, USC hired Pete Carroll.
That’s how deeply entrenched Patterson was for more than two decades at TCU, where his tenure, by any measure, was a staggering success. Over 22 seasons, Patterson led the Horned Frogs to 181 wins and six conference titles. Throughout, defense remained his calling card. Five different times during his tenure, TCU finished No. 1 in the nation in yards allowed, as Big 12 offenses struggled for years to adjust to his multifaceted 4-2-5 scheme.
But by 2021, while Patterson’s TCU defense had largely remained strong, the luster of his long tenure in Fort Worth had faded. The bottom fell out that fall, as the Horned Frogs started the season 3-5. Informed that he wouldn’t be back the following season, Patterson instead resigned with four games left.
Now he returns not as a head coach, but as a coordinator, a step down that Patterson seemed just fine with when asked Wednesday.
“I love it, to be honest with you,” Patterson said.
And he loves coaching kids. He’ll be coaching them hard at USC. “The great ones wanted to be told, the good ones wanted to be coached, the bad ones – I mean, we gotta change them,” Patterson said, in a voice that has a familiar Doc Rivers-esque coach’s rasp, strained by years of exulting and exclaiming and loud, high usage.
Of course, the entire landscape of college football has also been turned on its head since Patterson last coached, with the advent of revenue sharing and the rise of the transfer portal. But he didn’t seem all that concerned by those changes Wednesday. Mostly because he doesn’t expect it to affect what USC is asking him to do.
Trojan fans hope Gary Patterson’s hire leads to more of this, when three USC players brought down a NW RB last season. in a 38-17 victory. (Eric Thayer/LAT)
“My job is defense,” Patterson said. “I don’t deal with NIL. I don’t deal with all those different things.”
His reputation as a mastermind on the defense certainly precedes him, and at USC, that’s where he’ll be needed most. Bailiff, who worked with Patterson at New Mexico and served as his first defensive coordinator at TCU, said that his ability to diagnose what a defense needs is “superior from any person I’ve ever seen.”
His signature 4-2-5 defense was designed, in part, to allow for such adaptability. With five defensive backs on the field most of the time, Patterson’s scheme is intended to adjust to any offense, allowing for his defense to limit substitutions and match up against most personnel groupings.
That scheme, after four years away from the game, is likely to be different by the time it’s installed at USC. Patterson said he plans to marry his original 4-2-5 at TCU with concepts he learned at Texas and Baylor. He also plans to integrate some of what USC’s defense was already doing, with most of the assistants from last season expected to remain on staff.
“Instead of just coming in and saying, well, ‘This is how we’re going to do it,’” Patterson said, “it’s been a little bit more work of trying to put it all together.”
It’ll be up to Patterson to put it all together on USC’s defense, which in four seasons under Riley, has never put things together for long.
“Hopefully,” he said, “[I can] be that last piece to help SC get over the bar, get into the playoffs, to bring out a championship.”
This is a program that needs someone who will light a fire under the defense, that will toughen up the Trojans on that side of the ball. Who can see the field like a canvas; who, they say, knows, to the inch, where his players all should be positioned.
Someone who has known how to win – and still knows how to?
latimes.com
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Not sure if anyone caught Lincoln Riley being interviewed on “Super Bowl Live” (NFL Channel) today about several former Trojans playing in the Super Bowl. Not trying to be petty but the man just seems uninspired and needing a B12 shot or something. They did spend some time on the new football facilities and surrounding areas.
See my second’s-ago response to SC Gator below.
Allen just read it now. You nailed it. I don’t know if one can make such a drastic transformation. Perhaps our new DC can lights some fires. I’m just worried that Bowden can only make recruiting miracles only for so long until Riley’s aloof personality and inability to win one big game catches up. There’s plenty of big games this season to make that leap and grab one.
Tackett Curtis had 25 tackles 14 solo and one sack in 2025. His numbers are going down each year. In 2023 he had 40 tackles and 24 solo and two sacks. In 2024 he had 27 tackles and 17 solo. Kind of surprising since(unless I’m mistaken) he was the player of the year in Louisiana high school ball in 2022, not Arch Manning.
What do these figures reflect on linebacker coach Rob Ryan?
What do these figures reflect on linebacker coach Rob Ryan????? As far as I can tell, they don’t. I’m just pointing out the difference between the careers of Curtis and Manning. One has blossumed and the other seems to be petering out.
I read a post below about drinking the koolaid (tis the season) and later I saw my memories from Facebook for today in 2017. We were rated the number 4 recruiting school in the nation and in January 2017 we won the Rose Bowl. So this year we lost our bowl game and our recruiting has been pretty good. I wonder if a little tequila in the koolaid might help?
(asking for a friend)
We lost the Alamo Bowl because half of our players didn’t play. They talk about family and we’re all brothers and all that slop. These family members are not going to come to your aid unless it benefits them. I can do without those kind of family members. Pete Carroll never, to my knowledge, had anyone who decided to skip a bowl game. He rarely had anyone who didn’t play the full 4 years. The only one I can remember was Mark Sanchez. Even if they do what they do in the NBA where you can go right into the… Read more »
The Pete Carroll Era is not a fair comparison, for two reasons.
First, skipping bowl games was not a thing then. The first instance I can recall was Christian McCaffrey skipping a second-tier bowl game in 2016. Since then the practice has exploded.
Second, all but two of SC’s bowl games in the Carroll years were games the studs would play in even today. Three were for the national championship; four more were BCS Bowls (3 Rose, 1 Orange). And there was no reason for anyone from the ’01 team to skip anything.
True. The comparison isn’t solid because of exactly what you say. However, here’s another wrinkle. And that’s Pete. Lincoln Riley has flat out demonstrated so far that he’s simply no Pete Carroll. He’s just not. And it’s not because of X’s and O’s, effort, intelligence, experience, or football genius stuff. It’s because Pete was a proven “culture builder” at USC. A leader. Under Pete, USC always played fast and loose, was very balanced, aggressive, opportunistic, fearless, got up for big games, and could hurt you bad on both sides of the ball. It wasn’t just schemes, plans, and talent. It… Read more »
I agree with you 100%. Pete is an alpha; Riley has demonstrated he is not. Pete is a terrific interview; Riley is ChatGTP.
Pete is a leader; Riley is not and, worse, shows no signs of becoming one.
I guess you’re saying that it is a different era and players do things differently today. But we lost more players in that game than any other bowl game team. TCU only lost one player, their QB. Their great receiver(who is a senior) played injured.And it wasn’t as if he left them with a freshman QB. The guy that took his place was a starter at Vanderbuilt for 3 years who has thrown for 4600 yards in his college career. So he didn’t just leave them flat footed.So even with todays standards, those SC players who are always talking about… Read more »
You’re right.
I’m on record saying the players who were healthy but did not play betrayed their team and teammates; and that they should not have been permitted to travel to the game. That goes double for the ones who skipped the bowl but went to the Shrine game.
I’m just tired of hearing all the BS about “brotherhood” and “family”. When the rubber meets the road, for these kids nowadays, it’s all about ME. This is the ME GENERATION. It also depends upon the coach. Certain coaches were able to build a culture whereby players were willing to sacrifice their desires for the sake of the team(their “brothers and family”). Bobby Knight was able to do that and so was Pete Carroll. LR hasn’t proven to me that he can build that kind of a culture.
Honor Fa’alave-Johnson is a must get, whatever it costs. They not only need to get him but they need to put him at RB not safety. This kid is starting to look like another generation kid. Watch his film.
“The Searchers” was one of the Duke’s earlier films. I personally preferred the 1975 “Rooster Cogburn” movie with Katherine Hepburn, still a classic.
I rewatched John Wayne in The Searchers recently. Just maybe his greatest performance in a western, or any film ever. Nobody messed with John.
Duke should have won an academy award for The Searchers.
I agree but my favorites are the Quiet Man and McClintock. Both would never make it today…..imagine that scene where John bends Maureen over his knee and smacks her with the pan. The leftists would have a heart attack.
Agree, great movies.
Former USC OLB Uchenna Nwosu on fellow Seahawk Leonard Williams — “All-Pro level, All-Pro talent, Pro-Bowl talent. That’s what he’s been, he’s been able to do that. He was the No. 6 overall pick for a reason. He’s always had it in him, he always could do it, and I’m happy he’s doing what he’s doing right now. He deserves all the recognition, because he’s playing at a high level.”
Now you’re talking. Hopefully if Henderson is hired by Dallas we keep who we have.
It seems like a “key coaching role” opportunity that coach Henny might have a tough time turning down, even though the Cowboys are perpetually mediocre.
The coaching churn these days is unreal.
I am more optimistic now about Trojan football at any time since I witnessed the debacle of the Cotton Bowl loss to Tulane. After witnessing a completely incompetent combination of special teams and defense (the worst defense SC D performance I have witnessed and I had season tickets for 25 years), I predicted LR 2nd years was going to be disaster as he learned nothing from that debacle. My optimism is based on Gary Patterson. Not on his being the next savior of SC football. Nope. My optimism is based on the fact he took the job. First,Patterson is a… Read more »
Good points. GP looks like the grown up on the staff. Maybe he can mentor LR, he needs it. He may be looking to improve his defensive savant rep of the last couple season he coached. If it gels it could be good. We can hope.
Nice work, TRJJ.
It’s Kool-Aid Drinking Season Again Hey, isn’t this great? It’s the CFB off-season and we’re all falling into the same trap we do every year, some more than others. But speaking only for myself, I always find the Trojan Kool-Aid a little hard to resist. And once again, after a mediocre season and a disastrous and unnecessary minor bowl game loss, USC football has poured itself into some big changes that will hopefully get the Trojans into the playoffs and out of the dog house. I have no idea how this newest mix of coaches and players is going to… Read more »
Allen I don’t know if this will sweeten your Kool-Aid or not but taste this. USC went 7-6 in ’24 and 9-4 in ’25, on the rise. USC has played in 56 bowl games, 33 in the Rose Bowl. USC is 36-20 total, 25-8 in the Rose Bowl, but only 11-12 in non-Rose Bowls. Non-Playoff bowls are even more of a toss up and less important nowadays. The new D staff is at least as good if not better than the old one. Drink up bud! 😉🍹
We’ll know what kind of team we’ll have by September 26th.
I don’t focus on overall records as much as I do the important games GT. The cupcake wins are basically worthless. Last season, USC typically lost all their biggest games (ILL, ORE, ND) — unfortunately a big habit of ours under LR. Beating mediocre MICH and their derelict soon-to-be-fired-and-in-jail coach was never all it was cracked up to be. The 9-4 Wolverines lost every one of their big games too. I don’t think losing any bowl games is ever good, regardless of USC’s excuses. I’m sure mediocre brands like TCU and TUL loved kicking USC’s butt lately, while USC dropped… Read more »
Maybe Patterson can be the mentor LR needs so badly. Try not to pour the bitters on your Kool-Aid. Save it for your Manhattans and Old Fashions!😎
USC football can only cry wolf so many times. Fortunately, that’s not really true.
We will all wait forever for USC football to finally come back. There’s lots and lots of Kool-Aid to be drank until it happens. But happen it will.
I agree. Martini-time will eventually return!
Orange Bitters for brightness!
Allen you are certainly correct the pressure is on a head coach that few if any have experienced support & patience. So much so, can we imagine what pressure Jen is experiencing? If Riley doesn’t survive here, how could Jen for what she has OK’d giving an overwhelmed HC all he has gotten in support. If I see Riley bounced out, I’d say good riddance. But Jen as the scapegoat would be heartbreaking to say the least. I think in the back of our minds we are praying another Max Nikias isn’t hired as the next President who will not… Read more »
Pattersons defenses from 2016-2021 were rated in total defense 64th, 16th, 40th, 58th, 35th and 118th. Assuming that he was the real DC like Pete Carrol was when he was at USC and comparing those defenses to the great success he had before 2016, it seems like the offenses were beginning to catch up with the 4-2-5 defense. Hopefully, in the last 4 years where he hasn’t been so busy with coaching and has time to do a little analysis, he’s been able to tweak his defenses a little. He is an inovator.
Sam Darnold is one of my favorites Trojans ever. Great kid, who could have done more, but was saddled with terrible coaching. As for Holtz, I hated watching SC lose to his Irish, but I have a lot of respect for him, both as a coach and person.He is a devout Catholic, and fought for a lot of good causes outside of football. He will be missed.
GO SEAHAWKS!
89-yr old Lou Holtz is in hospice, receiving end-of-life care. I have always had a lot of respect for Coach Holtz. He tormented some strong USC teams over a very long period of time, not an easy thing to do. Sometimes the losses were brutally close and disappointing. One of the best football games games I’ve ever seen in person was when we finally beat him and the Irish 27-20 on Nov 30, 1996. Everyone stampeded the Coliseum field after the wonderful OT victory. We were delirious after having gone winless for 13 years. Lou immediately stopped coaching at Notre… Read more »
I really liked Lou Holtz as Dr. Lou. The stuff he said made a lot of sense to me as opposed to what I am hearing in this woke society(like a man can have a baby and you can be a boy today and a girl tomorrow and there are not 2 genders but 50-100). But as Coach Lou, I wasn’t overly fond of him. He particularly hated SC and called USC, the University of Spoiled Children. Great coach but not one of my favorites. RIP Dr. Lou.
Lou always had that attitude of, “golly, they are a really good team I don’t think we have a chance”. Whether it was Navy or USC. And then go out and kick the hell out of them. Pretty fun schtick.
Holtz and I communicated during my magazine days. He was an incredibly thorough guy who overlooked nothing and made quick decisions. Very instinctive.
I love the fact that before the big Convicts vs Catholics game, he famously riled up his team in the locker room before the game when after urging them on, he proclaimed, “Leave Jimmy Johnson to me.”
Playing for the diminutive but self-assured Holtz would have been a pleasure. How could you not be confident things might turn out well?
Go Sam Darnold. How could anyone not be happy for this deserving Trojan?
The Seahwks also have Uchenna Nwosu, Brandon Pili and Leonard Williams. The Patriots have no USC guys. Go Hawks!
Matt Zenitz (CBSSports.com) — USC is expected to hire Sam Carter as as a member of its defensive staff. Carter joins former TCU and BAY DBs coach Paul Gonzales on the USC staff. Each has close connections to DC Gary Patterson and will expedite the Trojans’ new 2026 defense install.
Carter is a former TCU All-Big 12 safety and Jim Thorpe Award semifinalist who has coached both corners and safeties for teams like ARK, OLE MISS, PUR and LA TECH. He played for Patterson at TCU from 2010-2014.
Increasing the coaching staff? As I look at this, I see new DC Patterson bringing in “his people” who are college career coaches. How will this affect the chemistry of development of existing returnees & the freshman class? I can’t believe it will produce complete harmony in what Ryan & Henny are & have been teaching. If keeping it simple is in fact what needs to be Stressed then you have line coaches teaching NFL details, a variance in philosophy at linebacker with a NFL coach versus a college career one and, the backfield solidly college based teaching. And DC… Read more »
As a long time HC you would think GP will make it work. The guys staying and the guys coming in must be there cause they are on the same page. Otherwise they would have already been let go. Belk was let go, maybe cause he didn’t like the new team. From my untrained eyes it looks like a better staff than 2 months ago.
Wel, only of them is a lock to make the playoffs, so Ill start there.
Bold 2026 predictions (28 total) involving USC (four) per The Athletic College Football Staff We asked our staffers to offer up bold predictions and hot takes about 2026. These are meant to go out on a limb; they do not have to align with answers to previous questions. The bolder the better, but we’ll be honest: Don’t expect a high percentage of these to come true. Then again, Indiana just won a national championship in football. Matt Baker: Oregon, USC and Ohio State all make the semifinals, further cementing the Big Ten as the nation’s best conference. Scott Dochterman: With the… Read more »
With the hiring of a new DC and special teams coach the expectations for the future should be increased. Patterson is a seasoned DC with credenials in the College Football Hall of Fame. Under Riley the offense was good enough to get to the CFP. It was the defense that was the problem. With the hiring of an established DC things should turn around. Hopefully, Jonas Williams will get playing time and not transfer like Longstreet.
Sadly, special teams have always been a problem under Riley. So many brutal special teams bungles have seriously added to USC’s problems.
Hopefully, the addition of Mike Ekeler can get USC back on track and into the positive in this underrated aspect of the game.
Kennedy Smith and USC women stun No. 8 Iowa in a huge statement win — USC women’s basketball defeats No. 8 Iowa 81-69 with one of its best performances of the season. — Kennedy Smith’s relentless scoring run in the third quarter sparked USC to victory after the Trojans lost six of their last seven entering Thursday. — Kara Dunn scored 25 points for USC and freshman Jazzy Davidson added 21 points and eight assists. Ryan Kartje (LAT) — At the bitter end of a brutal January, Kennedy Smith put her head down, determined to will her way to the hoop.… Read more »
Good to see USC at least on the board with 2, but tosu and mich have more.
Nice to have two of the top 32 but…….let’s see if two years from now they still are Trojans and if they have been developed. The past four years have been nothing less than a disaster in this regard.
SR LB Luca Torti (6-1, 205, DIII Wheaton College, IL) — “I’m beyond blessed and truly grateful to commit to USC. Words can’t describe how appreciative I am for the people around me who pour into me, both as a man of faith and as an athlete. God is so good, and I’m incredibly excited for this next chapter. Fight On!”
2025: First Team All-CCIW selection…third on the Thunder in tackles with 84, including four TFLs and two sacks…forced three fumbles, tied with teammate Peter Johanik for conference lead.
Performed well at the DIII level, will be one of the smaller LBs, Carroll will need to put some meat on his bones. Seems a big jump from DIII to Power 4 Big10. The brain trust must see something. Hope he makes an impact.
We will be playing 4 of the top 12.
Thanks for posting. Interesting list, but as we all know, this means nothing. For example, I expect Bryce Underwood under Whittingham to be much much better. On that note, I am very scared of where KW will take the wolverines. I believe he’ll get them back in natty contention very soon. Will be fun to see, but it will be at USC’s expense.
Jayden Maiava had such a bad game vs TCU, it’s hard for me to think of him as #7. JMHO. Of course, #1 Dante Moore didn’t look worth a crap vs IU either.
These rankings are an interesting magnet to look at, but often mean so little outside of name/brand recog.
I’ll be intrigued to see how #6 Sam Leavitt does for Lane Kiffin at LSU.
I’m surprised UCLA’s Nico Iamaleava isn’t here. He’s pretty dangerous.
Interesting point. Notice the correlation between the qb rating and where each qb’s team is in preseason rankings. Pretty strong correlation, so is the qb boosted by the team and its coach, or is the team boosted by the qb? A lack of Nico on the board is an example of the strong correlation.
Of course, Maiava is a bit of an outlier, unless he’s benefiting from a not-yet-dead-but-should-be perception of LR being a qb whisperer and offensive genius. Our untrained eyes tell us differently.
There is something about Donte….I can’t put my finger on it. He seems to fall apart under pressure…..any pressure. Not just that game against IU but in prior games and even when at UCLA. He has a don’t give a s— look in his eyes and appears emotionless. Maybe that is good at times but……just a guy that seems to find a way to screw it up…..which may be why Lanning went out and signed Dylan.
I hope for his interests he improves…but….I bet he is on a shorter leash this next year.
The way I understand it, Archie Manning is actually the highest paid player in college football. He’s good but not that good.
He does make bookoo bucks, that’s for sure — close to $7 mil per some estimated valuations.
I thought Arch improved a lot last year. He can make plays, and his Manning name value is simply off the charts.
We’re officially in the CFB Business these days. So many interesting new angles to college ball. What commercial logos are gonna show up on Trojan uniforms?
Maybe Sharper Than Ever After All These Years? Haley Sawyer (OC Register) — Gary Patterson convinced the room (during his intro presser) that the copious amounts of film he watched in recent seasons as an analyst with Texas and a consultant for Baylor have kept him sharp and ready to coach in the modern college football landscape. “My wife watches Netflix. I watch film,” Patterson said. “The cool thing for me is I’ve been out for three years, so I got a chance to watch more football and evaluate people about how you play defense, how the game is going… Read more »
Max Browne on Sam Darnold, as told to The Athletic’s Jayson Jenks Darnold — “I played QB with Sam Darnold in college. His perspective is his secret weapon “I was a redshirt sophomore at USC when Sam Darnold showed up in the summer of 2015. “Cody Kessler was the starting quarterback at the time, one of the top returning signal callers in college football. I was the former Gatorade National High School Player of the Year and Kessler’s backup. That summer, two freshmen joined the QB room: Ricky Town, a five-star quarterback who was the next big USC recruit. And… Read more »
Excellent insight into the dynamics of those years that I had not heard before.
As a college teaching coach, Patterson couldn’t have come into a program at a better time to see talented young players be developed and mold into a cohesive playing sound physical unit. Gary may be the final piece in the USC football puzzle to move it into a serious contender to win championships. If Riley can’t win enough games doing what little he has to do anymore after what Jen has given him to minimize his responsibilities , then I would like to believe we won’t see him much longer. Riley has to work on his game management & playcalling… Read more »
Patterson could possibly be exactly what SC needs to turn this defense around and give us a top 10 defense. Personally, I would have found some way to hire Kwiatkowski or the Missour DC.
Lots of reporting Paul Gonzales will be hired to coach the secondary, but nothing official yet? He worked with Patterson for 10 years at TCU and is currently the Passing Game Coordinator at Baylor. Lets hope these guys bring the culture of toughness USC needs.
This guy has no ego holding him back and he is all in. He could be the best hire Riley has ever made and could finally, through just being himself, make Riley the coach we always wanted him to be. Coach Patterson is going to make a huge difference in many ways at USC football, we are just getting started. We finally have a real pro in the DC spot. The guys that he does bring in will be good also.