Special teams coordinator? Lincoln Riley doesn’t believe in a dedicated one for USC
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — It was already an eventful evening for USC’s special teams when, with 13 minutes remaining last Saturday against California, a surprise onside kick dribbled between receivers Brenden Rice and Kyron Hudson on the frontline of USC’s return team.
The Trojans had previously botched an extra point on a bad snap, and handed over prime field position due to poor punting. Now, the onside attempt bounced off Rice’s hand, slipped past Hudson and was recovered by the Bears. Cal scored soon after, cutting USC’s lead to seven.
It was a critical moment for USC’s special teams. But on the Trojans sideline, the man technically tasked with coordinating those special teams was limited in his ability to address it. That’s because NCAA rules bar Ryan Doughtery from doing any actual, on-field coaching.
A former East Carolina punter, Dougherty is listed as USC’s senior special teams analyst and assistant special teams coordinator. But in spite of the distinguished-sounding title, Dougherty is not considered among USC’s 10 on-field assistants. That means he can’t communicate with USC players on the field or during practice, but can help USC’s other coaches help players on special teams.
It’s a convoluted arrangement, born out of NCAA rules limiting football staffs to 10 full-time assistants. Hiring off-field analysts to get around those rules has since become a time-honored tradition across major college football.
But whether one of those precious full-time, on-field spots is best used on a coach coordinating special teams is still up for debate.
USC is one of just two Pac-12 teams that doesn’t entrust those duties to a full-time, on-field member of its coaching staff. (Cal is the other.) Three Pac-12 schools opened the season with one of their 10 full-time assistants dedicated solely to special teams, while USC’s opponent this week, Colorado, promoted a special teams assistant to the full-time staff midseason when Karl Dorrell was fired as coach.
The conference’s other six schools, including UCLA, have one assistant pull double duty, adding special teams to another positional responsibility, such as coaching tight ends or nickel backs.
For Lincoln Riley, there was never any question of how to split up those duties at USC. He chose instead to divide special teams units among select Trojan assistants, while Dougherty coordinated and oversaw the specialists.
Mekhi Blackmon (6) and LB Clyde Moore (35) react after Blackmon tackled CAL RB Ashton Hayes (26) for no gain on a punt return at the Coliseum on Saturday. (Gina Ferazzi / LAT)