A third Heisman QB? The secret to Lincoln Riley’s unprecedented success
Tyler Greenawalt (Yahoo Sports)ย —ย Donโt call Lincoln Riley a quarterback whisperer.
Yes, heโs coached four Heisman Trophy candidates since 2017. Yes, his quarterbacks finished top-10 in passing yards 18 times since he became an offensive coordinator in 2010. But the term โwhispererโ doesnโt paint the full picture. Riley doesnโt just wave a magic wand or call a perfect game to create some of the best quarterbacks in college football. It takes an offense built around a quarterbackโs strength as well as communication, confidence and, above all else, trust between player and coach.
โI don’t think it should be a term,โ Riley told Yahoo Sports. โWhen you’re within the walls of these things, you realize all that’s gotta happen for a team and then โ as a byproduct of a team โ individuals to be successful.โ
But Rileyโs ability to mold quarterbacks into incredibly successful players cannot be discounted, either. And Caleb Williams is the most recent example of Rileyโs tutelage. The USC quarterback isย one of four Heisman Trophy candidates this yearย โ and the fourth coached by Riley afterย Baker Mayfield,ย Kyler Murrayย andย Jalen Hurtsย at Oklahoma.
If Williams takes the award, Riley would becomeย just the second coachย with a Heisman winner at multiple schools and the sixth to coach three Heisman winners (Mayfield won in 2017 and Murray won in 2018 when Riley coached at Oklahoma). However, Riley would be the first to have all three winners be quarterbacks. And that is the remarkable part of Rileyโs accomplishment.
โI’ve been extremely fortunate to coach some great players and great, just great people, great competitors,โ Riley said, โand been able to do it at two really, really good schools.โ
Riley adapts to his quarterbacks
Arguably the most striking element of Rileyโs success with quarterbacks is how different they all are โ physically, stylistically and personality-wise.
Mayfield was brash and boisterous; Murray was reserved yet confident; Hurts, who only played under Riley for one season after he transferred from Alabama, was, inย Rileyโs own wordsย โpretty serious, at times stoic.โ All three commanded the offense with different strengths and weaknesses.
Williams looks like a mixture of his three predecessors. Between his arm strength, rushing ability andย eclecticism, the sophomore signal-caller flourished in Rileyโs Air Raid offense after originally playing under him at Oklahoma in 2021 before following Riley to USC earlier this year. Williams finished fourth in passing yards and tied for first in passing touchdowns with a 66.1 completion percentage.
So how did Riley mold four very different people into Heisman contenders? He leaned on their character traits as competitors and blended them with variations of the offense he learned under Mike Leach at Texas Tech and augmented during his years rising through the coaching ranks.
โAll those guys are different. They’re different physically for sure,โ Riley told Yahoo Sports. โBut I think more than anything as we’ve evaluated โ trying to evaluate the intangibles: How smart these guys are, their competitiveness, their desire to improve, their belief in themselves? I think that those are things that we’ve put a lot of stock in. Those are like all shared characteristics that they all have, even though they’re all a lot different.โ
The three OU quarterbacks โ Mayfield, Murray and Hurts โ noticed Rileyโs innate skill, too.
Mayfieldย toldย Bleacher Report in 2017 that how Riley โadapt[s] to our personality and get[s] the best out of our players has been huge.โ That year, Mayfield won the Heisman after he took the college football world by storm with the second-most passing touchdowns, passing yards and a ridiculous nation-leading 70.5 completion percentage during the Soonersโ run to College Football Playoff.
Murray saidย in a 2022 ESPN articleย that โthe relationship [Riley] has with the quarterbacks โ he’s great at it.” Murray finished third in passing yards and passing touchdowns when he won the Heisman in 2018.
Hurts added that Riley โhad a very unique ability to put players in positions to make playsโ because of his flexibility on offense. Hurts finished second in the Heisman voting behindย Joe Burrowย after a 3,851-yard season that included 32 passing touchdowns and 20 rushing touchdowns.
Confidence is key
Riley coachesย by the mantraย “if your system is not a quarterback-friendly system, you need to find a new system.” And that idea feeds directly into how he builds an offense around his quarterbacks.
The basics remain the same with the Riley Air Raid offense: High-tempo possessions, lots of plays and big shots downfield. But Riley doesnโt just want quarterbacks who can execute the offense, he wants quarterbacks who walk out as โthe most confident guy on the field every single time.โ
Part of that comes naturally โ especially with the aforementioned quartet. But itโs also nurtured by Rileyโs coaching style.
He asks for input from his quarterbacks on plays and strategy and tries to build comfort into his curated system. Sometimes that even includes ditching concepts heโd rather keep in the books.
โAt the end of the day, I’m not the one doing it,โ Riley said. โThey’re the ones that have gotta go execute it. We’ve had plenty of times through the years where I’ve had maybe an idea or thought that we feel confident with work and makes a lot of sense schematically. But if the guys aren’t feeling it, if it’s something that doesn’t just quite click for them, we toss it out.
โThat probably is a source of confidence for some of our guys because they know we’re not gonna walk into a gameplan with something that they don’t wholeheartedly believe in, even if we wholeheartedly believe in it. I think that, in a sense, kind of empowers them and they walk in with a plan that they have full confidence in.โ
Former Oklahoma quarterbacks Austin Kendall and Reece Clark, who both backed up Mayfield and Murray, saw that unfold firsthand. If Mayfield or Murray changed a play at the line of scrimmage without consulting Riley, it didnโt result in anger or restatement. Riley would validate their ideas when reviewing the film but also explain why something didnโt work.
โCoach Riley’s never like, ‘Hey man, what were you thinking? You went against me,โ โ Clark said. โHe would just kind of sit there and go through it and say โHey, what were you seeing here that made you do that?โ He doesnโt break those guys down.โ
โLincoln kind of tailors towards that and lets the quarterback be his own person,โ Kendall added. โHe kind of forms around them and knows what they’re good at and what they’re weak at and then helps to build off that.โ
This isnโt a new phenomenon in Rileyโs tool belt. Heโs been doing it since he coached at East Carolina more than a decade ago. Riley started with Dominique Davis โ an experienced dual-threat quarterback who played at Boston College and Fort Scott Community College before he transferred to ECU in 2010. Davis finished fourth in the nation in passing yards and third in passing touchdowns during Rileyโs first year as offensive coordinator. Three years later, Shane Carden went on to finish top-10 in passing yards and passing touchdowns in consecutive seasons.
Davis and Carden were โvastly different people,โ Carden told Yahoo Sports, but Riley found a way to make both feel comfortable in the offense he brought with him from Texas Tech. That included constant communication about the game plan as well as continued confidence in the execution.
โHe really asks your true opinion,โ Carden said. โAt the end of the day, if the quarterback doesn’t feel good about a play, why is it in the offense? He truly believes that.โ
Carden recalled a moment during his sophomore year in 2012 when ECU failed to score a touchdown in a 27-6 loss to North Carolina. It was Cardenโs third game as the starter. In the week following that loss, Riley told Carden, โYouโre our guy, donโt worry about it,โ before ECU won six of its next eight games.
โThere are good strategists, good play callers in college football,โ Carden said. โBut what he does too is he has a good feel and understanding of a player.โ
That, almost more than Rileyโs ingenuity as a play-caller, is what makes him an effective coach whoโs produced top quarterback talent, according to Ruffin McNeil, whoโs coached with Riley at Texas Texas, ECU and Oklahoma. He, like Riley, doesnโt like the term โquarterback whispererโ because it also undermines and simplifies what Rileyโs done at a basic human-to-human level.
โLincoln’s ability to adapt to each kid โ everybody can’t and everyone doesn’t do that,โ McNeil told Yahoo Sports. โItโs bigger than that.โ
For Riley, that meant building trust between himself and each of his quarterbacks individually. Mayfield, Murray, Hurts and Williams are all very talented football players in their own right. They all could have reached their respective college football heights on their own. But Riley built a foundation of trust and confidence that helped the four flourish.
โIt’s about spending time with each other and investing in one another,โ Riley said. โInvesting in that person’s game, investing in them as a person.โ
yahoo.com
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2022 PFF College All-Pac-12 first and second teams (11 Trojans) FIRST TEAM Offense QB Caleb Williams, USC RB Zach Charbonnet, UCLA RB Bucky Irving, Oregon WR Jordan Addison, USC WR Rome Odunze, Washington WR Jacob Cowing, Arizona TE Dalton Kincaid, Utah LT Jordan Morgan, Arizona LG Andrew Vorhees, USC C Brett Neilon, USC RG Justin Dedich, USC RT Taliese Fuaga, Oregon State Defense DI Nesta Jade Silvera, Arizona State DI Tyrone Taleni, USC ED Tuli Tuipulotu, USC ED Bralen Trice, Washington LB Daiyan Henley, Washington State LB Jackson Sirmon, California CB Mekhi Blackmon, USC CB Clark Phillips III, Utah S Calen Bullock, USC S Kitan Oladapo, Oregon State FLEX D Jaydon Grant, Oregon State SECOND TEAM Offense QB Michael Penix Jr., Washington RB Xazavian Valladay,… Read more ยป
I am seeing a lot of players int he portal and actually hearing about USC making some offers but so far nobody has jumped on it. I see some other schools making the connection and getting players, and I am wondering just how much NIL is coming into play and is USC even in the game? This BLVD deal just doesn’t sound like it is doing the job, as you hear nothing about it except it is going to regroup, which isn’t good.
BLVD was pushed by student body right to become a true collective like all the others. Not sure if they are using the everyone gets paid model, but if you jump on their site they did make changes. Their fee schedules, model, and way of collecting and paying out have all changed. I hope itโs competitive. I know we are so gun shy with the NCAA.
So true and as USC is so gun shy other schools are shooting bulleyes on available players.
If you have some time, go listen to the two star composite podcast. The guys at USC football.com do a great job of talking through recruiting and break down the portal and our offers. I throw it on in my office while working.
Oft-injured Trojan DL Kobe Pepe (#94; 6-2, 320; Bellflower St John Bosco, 2020 class; 2021 shoulder surgery) entered the transfer portal last night.
There is big and then there is TOO big.
College Football News Heisman Trophy College Football Experts (12) Picks
Overwhelming Consensus — Whoโs Going To Win?
1. Caleb Williams, QB USC
2. CJ Stroud, QB Ohio State
3. Max Duggan, QB TCU
4. Stetson Bennett, QB Georgia
yahoo sports
Scipio checking in after a two year hiatus…………. My USC season ending observation. I realize the season is not over. There is a bowl to played, I get it. I say this because my observation of bowl experiences over the years tells me the teams that play in bowls do not always reflect the body of work of that team for the regular season. There are many factors causing it: key players opting not to play in order to prepare for the NFL, announced couching changes may affect team moral positively or negatively, players for one of the teams may not be… Read more ยป
On CBS Sports Networks’ Inside College Football, the Trojans are predicted to run into tough sledding and lose to TULANE by Rick Neuheisel, Randy Cross and Aaron Taylor.
Only Brian Jones picked the Trojans as winners. The physical condition of Caleb Williams and USC’s below-average D are the problems.
Unfortunately, I agree with the Bruins on that panel. We have lost too many O-lineman to give CW any consistent protection.
This is the Cotton Bowl Trophy USC will be fighting for. The 26.5-inch-tall (67 cm), 35-pound (16 kg) trophy is oblong-shaped like a football at the base, tapering up to a flattened full-size football at the top.
Wish he could get into Foremans head and get that kid figured out. Now Justin Flow is in the portal, would the two of them make a dynamite pair or bust? It would be interesting to see them together.