Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — By the time he arrived at USC last spring, Jayden Maiava looked late to the party. Miller Moss had staked his claim on the Trojans’ open quarterback spot in December, throwing six touchdowns in a debut so convincing that coach Lincoln Riley joked he would scare away any transfers who might want to come.
Not Maiava. Just two weeks after Moss’ fairytale first start in the Holiday Bowl, he left an assured starting role at Nevada Las Vegas, then flipped his commitment from Georgia to compete for a job at USC that already seemed won.
It was the opposite path most passers would take in this era of instant portal gratification. Yet Maiava’s journey already had been more circuitous than most. He didn’t have the experience of other top quarterback prospects, having picked up the position as a teenager. He didn’t grow up learning from a private coach, paying top dollar to train like so many of his peers. Instead, he bounced between three high schools in two states, moving in with his uncle in Hawaii as a sophomore out of concern his life was heading off course in Las Vegas.
Any concerns have faded, replaced by a quiet determination in Maiava and a groundswell of intrigue at USC, where coaches and players alike have raved about a “major, major jump” from the redshirt sophomore. What seemed like a runaway competition as recently as last month wound up being “neck and neck” as a result, according to Riley. Even Moss, who ultimately was named the starter, attested to how much Maiava pushed him.
“He’s got a bright future here,” Riley said. “No doubt about that. It was a great battle.”
Consider the extraordinary tools at his disposal and you start to understand the makings of that rapid ascent. The prototypical size at 6 feet 4, the prototypical arm strength, the silky throwing motion that looks as if it were designed in a lab.
“The ball just makes sense coming out of his hand,” said Ryan Porter, the quarterback coach who trained reigning Heisman Trophy winner Jayden Daniels and now works with Maiava.
It would take more than a rocket right arm and a smooth spiral to help Maiava find his way to USC. That was always the part that came easy to him.
The rest would take time — and some help — to figure out.
That road to self-discovery started with a detour.
A few years after Jayden and his family moved from Hawaii to Las Vegas, his uncle, David Tautofi, started to worry about his nephew. His grades were slipping. Tautofi wondered if he was falling in with the wrong crowd.
“There was a discussion about a change of environment that would better suit him, better help him,” Tautofi said.
He suggested Jayden come live with him in Hawaii, close to where he grew up in the Palolo Valley near Honolulu — and where Jayden could play for him at Kaimuki High, where he was the coach.
Some around the Hawaii prep scene accused Tautofi of recruiting his nephew. Tautofi balked at the accusations.
“The focus was that he’d come here and it was supposed to be a holistic experience for him,” Tautofi said. “He was still trying to figure out who he was, still trying to find his identity.”
Jayden already had the look of a promising quarterback prospect, with early offers from Auburn and Tennessee. But Tautofi was wary of those “uncommittable” offers. He worried they might get in Jayden’s head, knowing the teen still had a lot to learn as a quarterback.
“He had everything to pass the eye test,” Tautofi said. “There were just a lot of things he needed to adjust within himself.”
In Hawaii, Tautofi tried to give Jayden a structured environment, one with rules and expectations. On the field, Jayden thrived. In 2019, he threw for 3,317 yards and 41 touchdowns while rushing for five as Kaimuki finished 10-3.
Over that year, Tautofi sensed a change in his nephew off the field too. He was “sharpening his name and his character,” Tautofi said. He was more focused. His confidence as a quarterback was growing.
Then, the pandemic struck. Hawaii canceled the 2020 season. So Jayden decided to move back to Las Vegas with his parents that June.
It was another new school, more new circumstances. But the concerns Tautofi once had faded. And at Liberty High in Henderson, Nev., Jayden picked up right where he left off on the island.
“He was everything we wanted — athletic, strong, accurate,” says Rich Muraco, Liberty’s coach. “He fit in right away.”
Jayden led Liberty to the state title game in his lone season. But it wasn’t enough to get on the recruiting radar of the big schools. He had a Louisville offer but decided to stay local and stick with UNLV.
Then, the day before signing day, Auburn called to say they wanted him to sign.
“I think that messed with his head a little bit,” Muraco said. “He wanted to go SEC. His parents were like, ‘Nope, they haven’t talked to you or done anything with you for however many months.’”
Maiava kept his commitment with UNLV and took the reins right away as a redshirt freshman, throwing for more than 3,000 yards while helping lead the Rebels to their first nine-win season since the Reagan administration.
In spite of that success, Tautofi suggests there were disagreements about “decisions made for his development” at UNLV. Tautofi, a self-described “pioneer” of the name, image and licensing space, says he was the first to suggest Maiava enter the transfer portal.
“I prayed about it a lot just to show me the right path,” Maiava said. “And I believe I made the right decision.”
Riley was among the first to reach out when he hit the portal. Right away, Maiava was drawn to the coach.
“I wanted to play under Lincoln Riley,” Maiava said. “The things he’s done, the accomplishments he has under his belt.”
Maiava, though, first committed to Kirby Smart and Georgia in early January. But almost immediately after his father shared news of his commitment with ESPN, Maiava called Tautofi with second thoughts.
“He shared with me his heart,” Tautofi said. “That’s when I realized he made the wrong decision. He realized it too. The very next day, we were trying to put out that whole fire.
“Luckily, Riley saw something in him. He was gracious enough to be forgiving about it.”
Porter could see it too. It took all of one passing glance this past spring to understand the natural gifts his new pupil had at his disposal.
But the quarterback coach, who works for the agency California Power, also could see how raw Maiava was as a passer. Everything Maiava had done had been powered by instinct or athleticism. He just happened to be so athletic and so instinctual that the other details never proved to be a problem.
“You watch Jayden make these throws, and you’re like, yeah, 90% of kids in the country can’t make that throw because their feet aren’t in position,” Porter said. “But it’s completely natural to him.”
It reminded Porter of another client with incredibly agile feet, the reigning Heisman winner Daniels, who trained privately with Porter for more than a decade.
Unlike Daniels, Maiava hadn’t been schooled for years in the intricacies of the position. When Porter asked Maiava specifics about dropback techniques and what he’d learned from other coaches, Porter says Maiava offered a confused look in response.
Maiava had a lot to learn, so they sat down together in Porter’s office and sketched out a development plan. Fortunately, as Porter came to understand, Maiava could pick up concepts the first time he was told. He just needed the confidence to use them.
Porter focused on the finer points. He taught him how to tie in route concepts to his footwork, allowing him to throw multiple concepts from different types of drops. They dove deep into Riley’s playbook, with Porter mindful of matching his training with the coach’s plans for Maiava.
USC’s coaches have seemed pleased with the progress since spring, when he first began working with Porter. It wasn’t enough to unseat Moss, who started with a significant lead in spring, but Riley made a point to note that Maiava had “improved drastically, ” more than any of the staff expected.
“He’s certainly so much more comfortable, [with] presnap communication, just getting up there,” USC quarterbacks coach Luke Huard added. “Now he can just react and go play ball rather than thinking through 30 different scenarios.”
Porter has seen enough from his new pupil to know that progress is only the beginning. Maiava’s arrival as a top quarterback prospect might have come later than most, but Porter’s confident that it’s only a matter of time before Maiava gets his opportunity at USC.
And when he does?
“When Jayden Maiava finally steps foot on that field,” Porter said, “he ain’t coming off. That I truly believe. He’s gonna be a good one.”
latimes.com
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Just watched “Trouble Along The Way” , 1953, starring John Wayne (Marion Morrison, USC 1926-1927) and Donna Reed. A big part of the movie was the hypocrisy and corruption in college football. Even back then it was well known. So glad finally in 2024 student athletes get paid for what they are worth and it is all out in the open, sort of.
I just watched it as well. (Coach) John Wayne showed he could still drive block on the gridiron like nobody’s business. Overall, I really enjoyed it, especially if you like time machine travel back to 1953. Wayne was such a huge star with such amazing command, he could even float a pretty rudimentary plot that strung us along with the idea he and the beautiful but antagonistic Donna Reed (amazing childhood crush material) would eventually get together. It was incredible what a male lead like Wayne could get away with conversation-wise towards the ladies in those days on film. Such… Read more »
Lincoln Riley said there will be new captains for every game this year. Trojan players will have to earn that distinction every week.
I like it. Good for motivation, inspiration, accountability and culture.
For LSU it’s S Akili Arnold, LB Easton Mascarenas-Arnold, QB Miller Moss, C Jonah Monheim and WR Kyron Hudson.
In case you were wondering…
HOME JERSEYS
USC will wear its traditional cardinal home jerseys while LSU will wear their traditional white home jerseys for the Kick-Off Classic.
Does that mean that USC is designated the home team for the Kick-Off Classic? I’m thinking of getting a last-minute ticket as Las Vegas is only an hour drive for me. I would want to sit on the correct side with other USC fans. TIA for any information.
Did anyone catch the LA Times video of the USC/UCLA beat writers and Bill Plascke, where they assess the two teams for this year? I must admit to thinking that Plascke was a enormous fool. After watching the video, I was being charitable. Here are some of his pearls of wisdom: Riley could well be fired by the end of the season Moss is only a game manager QB. His success in the Holiday Bowl was due to Louisville only playing 3rd stringers on defense Ethan Garbers is a great QB who will be a Heisman finalists. BTW- While these… Read more »
Caleb Williams and Jayden Daniels (#1 and #2 NFL Draft picks) are now impressive and immediate starters with both Chicago and Washington…
But first-year starters Miller Moss and Garrett Nussmeier should be just as compelling, especially against each other in the Kick-Off Classic this Sunday.
USC is 1-1 all-time vs LSU, with one game each home and away.
Scott Schrader (WeAreSC) on swapping talent with LSU…
Which players on LSU would you swap their USC counterparts for? Conversely which USC players would be on your “no trade clause” list?
Schrader — “I want Harold Perkins for Mason Cobb.
“Redshirt freshman WR Ja’Kobi Lane is my “no trade” guy on offense and (frosh LB) Elijah Newby on defense.
on3.com
I get the sense USC is on par with LSU for talent. Notice Schrader didn’t want to swap out any of our OL, which LSU is supposed to be loaded. Harold Perkins, 6’1″, 225 JR, 2023 all SEC 2nd team, Mason Cobb, 6′, 230, R-Sr., 2023 all Pac12 2nd team. Probably a wash but with better coaching and schemes, I take Cobb.
Cobb isn’t anywhere near as good as the 6-1, 220 lb Perkins, who has been clocked at 4.45 and is a unanimous 1st-team Pre-Season AA.
Cobb is one of USC’s least effective defensive players, especially with the new talent infusion. Some of his tape from last season is absolutely embarrassingly bad.
It’s not even close, regardless of scheme or coaching. Scott Schrader is right on.
I’m hoping The Grinch Effect has downgraded the status and effectiveness of USC defenders and looking for big improvements this season.
With all due respect, Cobb simply has nowhere near the talent, speed or overall ability, however coached, as a likely first-round draft pick such as Perkins, who could outperform Cobb with leg irons on.
As many at LSU have stated including Brian Kelly at a press conference…….they may not run on us but our DE’s may not be able to make Moss run without help……but we’ve got folks that can manufacture pressure….. I believe he was talking about Perkins.
Others I would trade for Sage Ryan, Campbell, Jones, Dellinger.
On the other hand, they would want at least two of our Receivers, TE, Alexander and maybe our MLB. They have very good receivers and TE’s but USC has elite class talent.
Like I said, it’s a hope that Grinch so stunted the development of the defensive players and Lynn will amaze us what will get out of them. Fingers crossed.
I just don’t buy your premise (fantasy IMHO) that Lynn, or any other coach, can somehow magically make slow-motion, non-twitchy Cobb into super-fast and athletic Pre-Season 1st team AA Perkins. Neither does any other CFB writer in the country. Good luck with that. ✌
Stephen A. Smith’s A-List
Top Five CFB Storylines
1 Will DeBoer Succeed At ALA?
2 Will Coach Prime Make CU Relevant?
3 Will Ryan Day Beat MICH?
4 Lincoln Riley Survive At USC?
5 ND Validate #7 Ranking?
It looks like ND will have a tougher schedule than many of us first gave them credit for:
A&M, LOUIS, GT, FSU and USC are all potential losses IMO.
Yes, I was slightly leaning toward them for the A&M game till I checked the weather. They will be outside in brutal heat and humidity. In a close game the fourth quarter might not be fun for them. Another loss and as an independent with what most think is an easier schedule….that is all she wrote. I remember very clearly the August day a young second lieutenant (me) in the Northern Illinois National Guard flew to Texas for a 2 week camp……when the door to the plane opened my platoon sgt who was from Texas screamed…..Welcome to Hell! and when… Read more »
Go Aggies. I really think the Irish are looking at a loss in College Station. Kyle Field will be wild.
Like USC, A&M is coming off an embarrassing year. Their new HC Mike Elko, comes in very well-respected from DUKE.
Personally, I never liked playing in the heat, especially with too much glare. I see the Irish wilting here as you suggest. Nice.
I wonder if Jayden is related to former USC Linebacker Kaluka Maiava. Kaluka played with Brian Cushing, Rey Malaluga, and Clay Matthews back in the 2006-time frame.
Per USCTrojans.com, Kaluka (who played six years in the NFL with the Browns and the Raiders) is Jayden’s uncle…and Kaluka is also the grandson of professional wrestler Neff Maiava, as well as the nephew of Dwayne Johnson, who played football at MIA before gaining fame as professional wrestler “The Rock” and eventual major movie star fame.
However other sources claim that there is no relation between Jayden and Kaluka, and that one or the other has specifically denied any relation as close as “uncle.”
Most think that all the Maiava’s are at least “distantly related.”
As we have learned previously with some Hawaiian/Polynesian/Somoan football players being recruited to SC, the concept of “uncle” in thier cultures is very fluid. It appears that it doesn’t have to be a blood relation to be Uncle to someone. I think it is similar to a clan cheiftain in Celtic cultures. It sounds like Jayden’s “uncle” did a good thing by stepping back into Jayden’s life at the right time.
Four-Star Calif WR Phillip Bell Announcing Commitment August 31 Scott Schrader (WeAreSC.com) — Bell (6-0.5, 200) took his official visits to USC, Ohio State, Washington, Penn State, Tennessee and Georgia during the spring and summer months. The No. 177 prospect in the On3 Industry Ranking will reveal his commitment on Aug. 31. “My mind is made up,” the Mission Viejo WR told On3. “The main things for me throughout my whole recruitment stayed the same. They were development, a place I know I can be happy at every day and the place that I feel can help get me to where I want… Read more »
USC’s Zachariah, Zion Branch land college football’s first Jordan Brand NIL deal
USC football players and brothers Zachariah and Zion Branch will become Jordan Brand’s first NIL football endorsees, according to multiple reports on Monday.
The brothers will join a roster that includes Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott, San Francisco 49ers wideout Deebo Samuel, and Philadelphia Eagles QB Jalen Hurts.
“It’s a huge blessing,” said Zachariah. “It’s just an honor to be chosen since there’s only a select few that go through this with Jordan Brand. We’re making history. Jordan is the standard; he’s greatness. We’re excited about it and super grateful for the opportunity.”
foxsports.com
Brian Kelly believes LSU is well prepared for its opener against USC, the importance of starting 1-0, and “Gadget Weapon” Zach Branch Heightened sense of urgency in this opener, how Kelly feels about the defense and why path to a win starts with play of the front seven. Glen West (Geaux247) — Brian Kelly goes into this Sunday’s opener in Las Vegas against USC sure of a couple of components in regard to this LSU team. When Kelly and his staff started evaluating this iteration of the Tigers eight months ago, they did so with the understanding that many of the guys in the ‘front row’ wouldn’t… Read more »
I think both defenses will still be a work in progress so expect lots of scoring. Whichever D is further along will win. Tale of the tape:
Avg Height
LSU DL 6’3″
USC DL 6’3″
LSU OL 6’5″
USC OL 6’4″
Avg Weight
LSU DL 277
USC DL 276
LSU OL 315
USC OL 312
We match up on size, who is stronger and more talented?
And who is better coached, I would add….
Nick Saban — “I think USC’s a dark horse.”
Looks like Dedich made the Rams cut. ✌️Shane Lee and Brendan Rice made the Chargers cut.
If Maiava lives up to the hype then all the better for USC. Lets see what Moss can bring to the table first and then I would love to see Maiava get some early PT.
What I like about Moss is his knowledge of the offense and is said to be a cool customer under pressure. Won’t make mistakes. Maiava needs more time to mature and observe on the sidelines. He did throw a good number of picks last year at UNLV.
Primetime’s Revolving Door
CU leads FBS with 42 incoming Portal players
Buffs also lead Power 4 schools with 51 players exiting via the Portal
According to ESPN, we are 8 million short of the collective at Ohio State. Not sure how much to believe, none of it is public record.
we are 12 million plus, they are 20 million plus.
if true, not great.
It’s that Cali cost of living! That’s why SC is short in the NIL. Blame it on a generation of Dhimmicrat governance in the once Golden State!😂
After being ditched by the Patriots, JuJu Smith-Schuster has signed a one-year gig with the Chiefs where he already won a Super Bowl. The 27-year-old former USC star led K.C. WRs in 2022 with 933 yds and three TDs on 78 catches — behind only Travis Kelce in yds and catches. Smith-Schuster signed a three-year/$25 mil deal in New England last season but struggled with injuries (ankle) and consistency, catching only 29 balls for 260 yds in 11 games. He made the Pro Bowl as a Steeler in 2018 with 111 catches for 1,426 yds, both of which remain career-high marks for… Read more »
The average NFL career for WRs is 2.8 years. JSS has earned $31 million so far in 7 seasons and expected to get another $7 million this season. Get another ring with the Chiefs Juju.
Dallas just gave CeeDee Lamb $136 million for four years, which includes a $38 mil signing bonus. Without Lamb, the Cowboys are virtually punchless.
WOW!
Well, they are the Cowboys. You can’t expect much from them since Jerry has his thumbprints all over everything in that franchise.
Jerry truly is a piece of work. He thinks he’s this great GM, yet look at the Cowboys’ record over the last quarter century.
He had a lot to do with the Rams coming back to L.A., so I’ll give him that!
Haven’t been able to stand Jerry after he fired one of the classiest NFL HCs of all time-Tom Landry. Jones has an ego bigger than the state of Texas!
Yeah and he didn’t like the national anthem kneelers, either….