Lincoln Riley and Alex Grinch’s trust in Tackett Curtis finally pays off
The freshman linebacker’s usage over veterans who have looked better in pass coverage has left some scratching their heads, but Curtis had a standout game in the loss to Notre Dame
Luca Evans (OC Register) — LOS ANGELES — By all indications, scout team ball carriers’ participation in defensive drills is rewarded with care. With grace. With non-threatening hits from USC headhunters. At least, from what reporters are allowed to see during the viewing portions of practice; wide receiver Brenden Rice once referred to Tuesday practices as “Bloody Tuesday.”
Regardless, in one Wednesday drill on Sept. 27, linebackers approached and tackled ball carriers as if they were bubble-wrapping pieces of fine china. The focus, of course, seemed more about the path to the ball.
Then freshman Tackett Curtis stepped up, hit an oncoming Raleek Brown, and spun him to the turf.
“I mean, that’s always been part of the reason why I like playing football,” Curtis said after USC’s victory at Arizona State, with a shy smile more indicative of his age than a 225-pound bulging frame. “There’s certain stuff you can do on the football field you can’t do in real life, so I feel like that’s just a huge part of playing football, for me.”
“Once I can hone in my aggressiveness and make sure I’m in the right spot and play that same way,” Curtis continued, “I feel like that’s (when) I reach … closer to my ceiling.”
Joe Cryer, a high school teammate of Curtis’ at Many High in Louisiana, said Curtis “always had that chip on his shoulder about playing mean.” Just was in his nature, born a little man asking his dad for a pull-up bar and just loving to hit. So mean, in fact, that USC defensive coordinator Alex Grinch said back in September that in instructing his players to “violently uppercut” the football as a means to force fumbles, he had to preface with Tackett that didn’t mean an uppercut at the opponent’s face.
Playing mean, though, only goes so far against multilayered offensive schemes in college football. In his second game, Curtis was ejected for targeting. In his sixth game, he got steamrolled by Arizona running back DJ Williams. Since starting the first game of the season, he’s played more snaps than any other inside linebacker aside from Mason Cobb – somewhat questionably at times. The returning Eric Gentry and Raesjon Davis both have looked better in pass coverage, and Curtis’ percentage of missed tackles is the second-highest behind Davis among USC’s linebackers thus far, per Pro Football Focus.
But after disappearing at times in the middle of the field – Curtis figuring out how to balance instinct with technique – things clicked into place on Saturday night against Notre Dame, when he made eight tackles and several one-on-one stops of Fighting Irish running backs who were trying to hit a hole.
“The biggest thing for me that I feel like I’m mostly getting a little bit better at, is getting a pass or a run read … over time, reps, I’m getting more familiar if they’re going to pass on this play or throw on this play, so I can just break faster,” Curtis said on Thursday.
Indeed, he seemed more consistently in position to be a playmaker on Saturday, a huge lift in the middle of USC’s defense. It’s been no secret that USC’s staff is high on Curtis – Coach Lincoln Riley himself made the trek down to Many during his recruitment – and the freshman just “kept swinging,” Grinch said, when asked about the coaches’ trust paying off in starting Curtis as opposed to Gentry or Lee.
“I think you saw glimpses of what that kid’s going to be,” Grinch said.
No ‘told-you-so’ from Grinch
Glimpses appeared Saturday, too, of an improved USC defense that Riley hung his public hat on last Tuesday. Curtis and Cobb patrolled the middle; Christian Roland-Wallace played the best game any member of USC’s secondary has had in 2023; Bryson Shaw and Jaylin Smith wrapped up on second-level tackles.
Grinch, though, for all the national criticism chirping at him and his unit, didn’t take any sort of prideful stance Tuesday when asked if he felt he saw progress.
“I absolutely did, but those are hollow words,” Grinch said.
Zion Branch prepares to step up
Safeties Max Williams and Shaw, two of Grinch’s most trusted veterans in the secondary, exited Saturday with apparent injuries. Grinch said USC would “see how the week goes” with both to determine their status for this weekend against Utah, and he pivoted quickly to praising fill-in Zion Branch, who has been searching for opportunities ever since returning from a season-ending ACL injury his freshman year. That seems to indicate, then, that Branch will play an increased role against Utah.
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Many are pointing to LR’s too strong reliance on the Portal to recruit the needs of the team. While it was necessary to fulfill holes on the team last season, we did not see a PC & staff type effort to blanket the national recruiting scene last year to find “HS Linemen” on both sides of the ball that could be brought in to develop rather than seeing another round of one & done players. Makes no sense. You must bring in & develop HS recruits to succeed on the LOS. We cannot be fooled into seeing the team easily… Read more »
Hopefully, LR isreadjusting his thinking about both the short and long-term effects of his current approaches to USC football. Riley gave us a terrific kick start after the dark years under Helton. He needs to start quickly focusing on USC’s remaining big problem areas, because those areas remain in trouble as the better teams hit our schedule.
He’s had a bad month. The next one is turning out to be even more important than what I envisioned before the season started.
Joel Klatt — “Did you know that Caleb Williams has been pressured 58 times in the last four weeks? That’s fifth in all of college football. They can’t block anybody.
“If Lincoln doesn’t get the run game going, this is a problem down the stretch because they face way too many good and physical teams. MarShawn Lloyd’s only getting 10 carries a game. Yet he’s leading college football in yards per carry. He needs the ball more. He needs to get 15-18 carries against UTAH this weekend.”
They will be ok……Utah is not ND…….just hold on to the ball. Frankly Williams had a bad game. His passes were off……mostly due to the pressure but they were off anyhow. Everybody has an off day. Can’t carry an entire team for an entire season without a let down. He’ll probably be back to normal…..which is outstanding.
Would be nice if they practiced kickoff coverage…..a little sarcasm mixed in.
It has come to me why Williams was waiting so long between plays and draining the clock to take snaps…..Riley told him to take time off the clock to protect the defense. Unfortunately that can contribute to all the illegal procedure penalties on the offense. Stop with the nonsense……if Grinch can’t coach stop screwing up the one thing that works…..the momentum of a high grade offense. Don’t allow those defensive linemen to rest between snaps and tee off on your tackles. Why are these guys making millions when they can’t figure the simple things out.
Shaw cannot cover receivers, but tackles pretty good. Williams covers well but misses tackles. Maybe Branch is the answer at safety. Cobb either makes a play or gets lost in the scheme. Curtis takes bad angles but is getting better, Davis can cover in passing but gets lost also in the schemes. CRW is the best defensive back we have.
Colin Cowherd on what is going on at USC right now “Take a deep breath. Everything is gonna be okay at USC. “But LR said after the game when talking about Caleb Williams and the Notre Dame game, ‘Separation for receivers really wasn’t a problem. Go back and look at the tape. On all three turnovers guys were wide open and running around. We just gotta finish plays…’ “When Lincon Riley came to USC, people have no idea what a mess the program was. Coming off 4 and 8, and with about 28-30 legitimate players. Out of 85, about 30… Read more »
Last Saturday was indeed a mess vs ND, but it’s still just one game. SC needs to learn from it, get over it and move on. When I was a student at USC in the 1970s, USC won two Nattys, one in 1974 and the other in 1978, both with losses in those seasons. A win over Utah this Saturday would be a big lift for the team and alleviate the sting of losing twice to them last year. Beat the Utes and Fight On!
With all due respect to the USC/ND rivalry, I think this abomination that USC put on the field in South Bend last Saturday somehow amounted to more than “just one game” which can be used to prop up USC’s situation. When you are somehow undefeated, yet unimpressive at the same time against mediocre comp, and get a dreadful beatdown in a Big Noon Kickoff historically significant rivalry game like that, it sticks to your ribs for a while. USC’s been headed downhill performance-wise ever since the bye week when lord knows what started this latest USC pattern of winning ugly… Read more »
I agree with you Allen. The most painful ND South Bend game for me was 1977, a.k.a. “The Green Jersey” game when ND came out of a huge Trojan horse with those green jerseys for the first time. I was a first-year graduate student in the USC School of Business, having graduated the previous June from USC with a bachelor’s in business. The 1977 team started out ranked #1 with Charles White at Tailback, Mosi Tatupu at FB, Rob Hertl at QB, and Cal Sweeny and Randy Simrin at WR. Anthony Munoz and Brad Budde were on the OL and… Read more »
Many are pointing to LR’s too strong reliance on the Portal to recruit the needs of the team. While it was necessary to fulfill holes on the team last season, we did not see a PC & staff type effort to blanket the national recruiting scene last year to find “HS Linemen” on both sides of the ball that could be brought in to develop rather than seeing another round of one & done players. Makes no sense. You must bring in & develop HS recruits to succeed on the LOS. We cannot be fooled into seeing the team easily… Read more »
Hopefully, LR is readjusting his thinking about both the short and long-term effects of his current approaches to USC football. Riley gave us a terrific kick start after the dark years under Helton. He needs to start quickly focusing on USC’s remaining big problem areas, because those areas remain in trouble as the better teams hit our schedule.
He’s had a bad month. The next one is turning out to be even more important than what I envisioned before the season started.
The Hugely Disappointing USC O-Line
Joel Klatt — “Did you know that Caleb Williams has been pressured 58 times in the last four weeks? That’s fifth in all of college football. They can’t block anybody.
“If Lincoln doesn’t get the run game going, this is a problem down the stretch because they face way too many good and physical teams. MarShawn Lloyd’s only getting 10 carries a game. Yet he’s leading college football in yards per carry. He needs the ball more. He needs to get 15-18 carries against UTAH this weekend.”
The run game lacks imagination … starting to see some different things
Might be hope
They will be ok……Utah is not ND…….just hold on to the ball. Frankly Williams had a bad game. His passes were off……mostly due to the pressure but they were off anyhow. Everybody has an off day. Can’t carry an entire team for an entire season without a let down. He’ll probably be back to normal…..which is outstanding.
Would be nice if they practiced kickoff coverage…..a little sarcasm mixed in.
Or just kick it out of bounds and start at the 35. Not great, but it’s not a long or TD return.
It has come to me why Williams was waiting so long between plays and draining the clock to take snaps…..Riley told him to take time off the clock to protect the defense. Unfortunately that can contribute to all the illegal procedure penalties on the offense. Stop with the nonsense……if Grinch can’t coach stop screwing up the one thing that works…..the momentum of a high grade offense. Don’t allow those defensive linemen to rest between snaps and tee off on your tackles. Why are these guys making millions when they can’t figure the simple things out.
Shaw cannot cover receivers, but tackles pretty good. Williams covers well but misses tackles. Maybe Branch is the answer at safety. Cobb either makes a play or gets lost in the scheme. Curtis takes bad angles but is getting better, Davis can cover in passing but gets lost also in the schemes. CRW is the best defensive back we have.
Just play Branch … has upside and at least looks the part. The new DC is going to play him anyway.
Colin Cowherd on what is going on at USC right now “Take a deep breath. Everything is gonna be okay at USC. “But LR said after the game when talking about Caleb Williams and the Notre Dame game, ‘Separation for receivers really wasn’t a problem. Go back and look at the tape. On all three turnovers guys were wide open and running around. We just gotta finish plays…’ “When Lincon Riley came to USC, people have no idea what a mess the program was. Coming off 4 and 8, and with about 28-30 legitimate players. Out of 85, about 30… Read more »
Lot of baggage … whatever happened to ‘just win baby’
Last Saturday was indeed a mess vs ND, but it’s still just one game. SC needs to learn from it, get over it and move on. When I was a student at USC in the 1970s, USC won two Nattys, one in 1974 and the other in 1978, both with losses in those seasons. A win over Utah this Saturday would be a big lift for the team and alleviate the sting of losing twice to them last year. Beat the Utes and Fight On!
With all due respect to the USC/ND rivalry, I think this abomination that USC put on the field in South Bend last Saturday somehow amounted to more than “just one game” which can be used to prop up USC’s situation. When you are somehow undefeated, yet unimpressive at the same time against mediocre comp, and get a dreadful beatdown in a Big Noon Kickoff historically significant rivalry game like that, it sticks to your ribs for a while. USC’s been headed downhill performance-wise ever since the bye week when lord knows what started this latest USC pattern of winning ugly… Read more »
I agree with you Allen. The most painful ND South Bend game for me was 1977, a.k.a. “The Green Jersey” game when ND came out of a huge Trojan horse with those green jerseys for the first time. I was a first-year graduate student in the USC School of Business, having graduated the previous June from USC with a bachelor’s in business. The 1977 team started out ranked #1 with Charles White at Tailback, Mosi Tatupu at FB, Rob Hertl at QB, and Cal Sweeny and Randy Simrin at WR. Anthony Munoz and Brad Budde were on the OL and… Read more »
That Astro Bluebonnett Bowl was awesome .. so many big plays like watching Grinch being the DC for both teams
Good one USC1988!