‘I love what he stands for.’ Fiery USC leader Travis Dye was molded by his brothers
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — The last time Mark Dye lost a game of ping-pong, he proudly proclaims, was back in 1987, years before his sons were born and his prowess became a point of family contention. Each of the Dye boys, all five of who would go on to play college football, eventually got their swings at the king, spending hour after hour testing each other at their house in Norco.
The competition intensified as the boys grew older. Paddles were thrown. Fights broke out. Still, none of the five boys — not Tony, Jordan, Thierry, Troy nor Travis — nor their younger sister, Jamie, ever managed to beat their dad, he claims.
“They all tried to knock me off of my ping-pong perch,” Mark says, with a laugh.
But Mark never had any intention of handing over the crown. In the Dye household, there were no handouts. That tone was set with Mark’s sons and daughter early on. If you wanted something, you earned it. Competition was not just encouraged, but rather a way of life. Scores were always kept. Trash was always talked.
For Travis, the youngest of the five Dye boys, that meant learning from an early age how to endure. There was no babying of their baby brother — and no extra protection from parents, either. If anything, Travis took the brunt of the brotherly abuse.
All, of course, out of love, his oldest brother assures.
“Poor Travis, he definitely got the worst of it,” says Tony, 32.
As Mark sees it, though, “it made him the fighter he is today.”
Under those pretenses, one of the Pac-12’s most prolific running backs was born, forged by the competitive fire within his family. At USC, Travis has emerged in his first season as one of the unquestioned leaders of a dynamic Trojans offense, capable not only of carrying the load in the rushing attack but leading the way in the locker room.
“I love what he stands for. He’s a competitive guy,” USC coach Lincoln Riley said. “And I appreciate that he’s made it a point to not just come in here and be a good running back and get better as a running back. He’s come in here because he wanted to make this place better.”
The decision to leave Oregon to be closer to home at USC, his family contends, was one of the toughest of Dye’s life. But ever since, they say they’ve seen a new spark in him, one that’s only grown brighter as USC has won six consecutive games to open the season, its best start since 2006.
Along the way, Riley has trusted Dye to be the Trojans’ workhorse, the first time he’s been handed such a major role outside of injury. His 571 yards rank second among running backs in the conference through six weeks of the season, but with the toughest test of the Trojans’ season looming Saturday in Utah, the eternal chip on his shoulder may be his most important contribution to USC’s push for a College Football Playoff semifinal bid.
He has his brothers to thank for that, Dye says.
“My older brothers gave me a hard time, every single day of my life,” he said. “Now looking back at it, they were just trying to teach me, to get me ready for this.”
Of course, it didn’t always feel that way. Like when Tony got a spitball stuck under young Travis’ eyelid. Or when his brothers squirted mustard in his mouth while he slept, a prank that left Travis forever disgusted by the condiment.
The constant competition between them only ratcheted up the stakes. The boys competed in whatever they could — foosball, air hockey, cornhole, dominoes, chess, you name it. They raced bikes. They raced on foot. Every Thanksgiving, along with playing the annual family Turkey Bowl, they’d race to officially determine which family member was fastest — a race that, until not long ago, had also been dominated by their dad.
At every step, Travis was naturally measured against what his brothers did before him. And by the time he made it to Norco High, his brothers had already left impressive legacies in their wake.
Tony was a standout safety at UCLA, before playing parts of three seasons in the NFL. Thierry played defensive back at Texas Tech. Troy, the closest in age to Travis, was a four-year starter at Oregon and is now in his third season with the Minnesota Vikings.
Tony, who left his NFL pursuit to join Norco’s coaching staff and help guide his brother, could sense that expectation weighing on Travis at times.
“I think a big part of his drive and why he was such a great high school football player was that he didn’t want to be the one who didn’t make it,” Tony says.
Instead, Travis became one of the most productive running backs in Inland Empire history, rushing for more than 5,000 career yards, ranking behind only the state’s rushing record-holder, Toby Gerhart, in the Norco record books. Still, no matter how many yards or touchdowns Dye seemed to rack up, his recruiting interest remained strangely stagnant.
He garnered just two offers while at Norco, one from New Mexico State, and another from Oregon, which he figured offered only because his brother Troy was still on the team.
The lack of attention was frustrating, even if he’s hesitant to admit it. Nonetheless, Dye says, “I took that [Oregon offer] and I ran with it. I’m not going to have too much pride for that.”
When he got to Oregon, his brother was sure to check any pride that remained.
“When I came in, Troy was Mr. Perfect,” Travis says. “He was never late to anything. He was the standard. Me coming in as a young buck, I was messing up a little bit. That made Troy look bad in a way, and so he put me in my place real quick when I first got there.”
It didn’t take long for Travis to settle in, and like always, his brother watched over him from afar, while needling him from nearby. Just as he had at Norco, Travis put up prolific numbers as an all-purpose weapon in Oregon’s backfield. Last season, he finished second in the Pac-12 in rushing (1,271 yards), while also leading the Ducks in receptions (46).
He might have stayed for a fifth season in Eugene, had Mario Cristobal not picked up and left for Miami. But if he stayed, Dye knew he’d still have a new coaching staff and a new offense to learn. He also had a new family to think about, after proposing to his high school sweetheart, Erin, last December.
Dye agonized over the decision at the time. When he finally decided to leave for USC, he took his Oregon offensive line out to lunch to break the news.
“He’s a very team guy,” Erin said. “He likes to make his people happy. So he had a lot of guilt.”
That guilt would fade upon arriving at USC, where Dye has fit like a glove in Riley’s offense. But he’s the first to remind his teammates how quickly that success can suddenly screech to a halt. He’s seen it all before with his brothers and their respective teams, watched their ups and downs from afar, taking in whatever he could from their decisions.
“I was definitely on the sideline for a very long time, just observing my brothers do everything I’m doing now,” Dye said. “It’s been a long time coming, getting to the front seat finally. Now that I’m there, I’m not gonna mess it up.”
His family has certainly sensed a difference in Travis since his move home. “I just think he’s a lot happier,” said Erin, whom he married last summer in Las Vegas. The fit at USC, she says, has been a seamless one.
Tony beams with pride talking about how far Travis has come.
“I don’t even see him as my kid brother anymore,” Tony says.
That is, until the family group text gets going and the trash talk starts flowing again. He might be one of the best running backs in college football — and perhaps the most prolific of the Dye boys to date — but don’t get them started on Travis’ facial hair.
“People think that Travis gets ripped on for his mustache publicly,” Troy says, with a laugh.
“Well, it’s an absolute bloodbath in the thread.”
latimes.com
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It’s all about the QB
Ed O, one of my favorite coaches ever, has a losing, under .500 record as a HC in college football without Joe Burrow, who won Ed a national championship before he imploded. And that’s at LSU and USC.
I agree for the most part. There are exceptions – GA last year won with Bennett because it had probably the best D in collegiate history. My guess is probably the entire 2 deep was NFL starting quality. You also need a supporting cast. Burrow had a starting #1 NFL Wr and a starting NFL RB. And a quality OL.
This brings up an interesting point, and another reason they are so important.
Great QBs are like magnets. They’re leaders. Often charismatic. People follow them, on both offense and defense, because they know their chances of winning are so much better with a guy who can really throw the rock, or run downfield and break your back when needed.
So true. It’s follow the leader for sure. One of the reasons I hated to lose Jaxon Dart, who players loved here, but who did the right thing for his career by transferring to a school and coach where he can play and shine. I think he had over 400 yards passing last week. I think he’ll be a Heisman candidate before he leaves Ole Miss
I love Jaxson too, and wish him the best with Kiffin. He checked all my boxes and I would have loved to see him stick with USC. But now that we have Caleb, and I’m starting to understand the nuances that separate him from other good QBs, I can see why LR always knew it was so important to steal him from OU too, right along with his batterymate Mario Williams, who followed right along. I’m still amazed at what LR has been able to put together so quickly for 2022. I guess I’ll never be able to stop saying… Read more »
Love Ed, but you are so right about the success and career of a coach depends so heavily with the quality of his QB. If you have an outstanding defense and run game, you can win with a Trent Dilfer. Look at Kyle Shanahan’s losing record without Jimmy G as an example.
Randy Johnson is now a sideline photographer with an incredible dead bird logo People are rediscovering that Randy Johnson is an amazing photographer, and it’s delightful. James Dator (SBNation.com) — “There are few athletes who have lived a better life in their retirement than Randy Johnson. The Hall of Fame pitcher, the Mariners and Diamondbacks legend, walked away from the game in 2010 and discovered a love of photography. He’s never looked back. “In truth, photography was Johnson’s first love — he just happened to be really, really, really good at baseball. He studied photojournalism at USC from 1983-85, and… Read more »
That’s right–didn’t Big Unit hit a bird while pitching?
March 24, 2001, Spring Training game in Yuma. The bird flew across as he threw the pitch, it exploded in a cloud of feathers.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9sIiajEEETw
It’s just a stunning event. Thanks for posting GT. I can’t believe “they were actually considering filing charges against Randy on the bird’s behalf.” Only in America.
Today, they definitely would file against him, because, well, birds are people too. 😜
I saw his interview on Dan Patrick months ago and he was sneaky good. Fun, dry personality who invited Dan and his crew to stay at his compound in Phoenix, for the Super Bowl week, when regular guest Charles Barkley said no way. Who knew! Very funny
I had no idea Randy Johnson had this huge passion as a very talented photographer. What a great, wonderful story. What a great guy, and a super Trojan to boot.
Hey Randy Johnson, if you aren’t already, how about getting some NIL deals for USC baseball.
Tom Brady is giving out NIL deals.
Tom Brady signs Jackson State QB Shedeur Sanders to clothing brand’s first NIL deal
“Jackson State quarterback Shedeur Sanders, who is the son of coach Deion Sanders, signed a NIL deal with Brady’s clothing brand on Thursday. It marks the first NIL deal that the Brady Brand has since it launched earlier this year.”
Yahoo Sports
I finally finished watching the replay of the game, this morning I noticed several things that I couldn’t see from my seat. One of the things I saw is the Dye is not easy to ztop. After reading this I can see he hates to lose. He’s easily one of the greatest steals from the portal.
Unfortunately I noticed Korey Foreman was in the game for at.least one play where he had the WSU quarterback in his grasp, but failed to bring him down. I saw the big zero on his chest and it fit his efforts.
Rialto, The play I remember was Foreman was assigned the ‘spy’ duty on the WSU QB. I think it was 3rd and 6 deep in their territory. He lined up at I think DT and then dropped back to make certain the QB could not run. The QB ran and Fireman wiffed on tackling him. The QB ran for a 1st. I watched him a few other plays and he is indeed a 0. Hopefully, the kid can figure it out.
I keep wondering just what it is that Korey is supposed to “figure out?” How to tackle? How to learn a swim move? How to prevent from getting knocked on his butt? What is it that he’s gonna suddenly learn? He’s just not a playmaker from what I’ve seen and USC has other DL/DEs with better quickness, toughness, agility, and ability. I saw the play you’re talking about and I think he gave a really good effort. He just couldn’t get it done, but he was close. I think Korey’s trying out there and he has good size and looks… Read more »
The young man I really respect is Solo. He has fought through injuries, coaching changes, under performing teams and an overall dumpster fire of a football program. And he never gave up. He is easy to root for.
I never thought David Shaw’s name would show up here
I see on 247 some of the commits are moving up in rankings, like Lane and Banuelos. Quinton Jointer moved up to #5 running back. LR has a knack of picking guys that others don’t quite see as being that good. Considering Helton would pick guys and they were never good.
Who here (who has watched the vicious Draymond Green punching incident), thinks Green should be back practicing with the Warriors tomorrow?
Not me.
Not me.
I would move on from him. He’s made a difference in the playoffs, but at his age, and with the Warriors having so many good young players, no way I give him a contract extension after this year
Wow, 36 carries really sounds old school. Back to the OJ days.
Too bad Abanikanda broke Tony Dorsett’s single-game rushing record at PITT. I loved watching Dorsett run, both at PITT and with the Cowboys. But Tony easily beat out Ricky Bell for the 1976 Heisman. That part is unforgivable.
Dye has been a great addition to our program. Not just as a player but as a person.
I’d say Dye’s the unofficial team leader, though it seems Caleb’s the official face of the program, at least among the players. That’s two amazing players at QB and RB who have USC’s offense in their hands, and we haven’t even gotten to Jordan Addison, or USC’s other elite WRs yet.
If USC’s D can somehow find a way to stop getting frequently gashed big-time in the run game, the 2022 Pac-12 title trophy could just end up in Heritage Hall or the McKay Center, wherever they put that hardware now.
Dye is the workhorse of the backfield but I would sure like to see Raleek break one, and this weekend would be a great time to do it.
Raleek Brown is coming. I don’t know if he’ll arrive before the UTAH game, but eventually this year he’ll make a few big run highlights that will give USC another dimension later in the season.
I would love to see Caleb get the ball to Raleek in space and let him run past people like Reggie used to
I really think this will happen. Raleek’s poised to unleash his breakaway ability in a big way once he jumps into the right hole. Hope I’m right.
I’d love to see uber-fast Raleek decimate UCLA in spectacular fashion with a couple of headline runs. Even if USC loses to UTAH (as most seem to predict) this year’s USC/UCLA game looks epic to me.
Colin Cowherd keeps calling this “the best college football weekend of the year, easily.”
He also picks ALA over TENN, MICH over PSU, and UTAH over USC.
This is the game that defines the USC football team. If they gel and execute I cannot see Utah keeping up with them.
Let’s hope he’s wrong about Utah beating us. If we play the way we’re capable, Utah doesn’t stand a chance.
The problem is that so far, at least as I see it, USC has blatantly shown it’s not capable of stopping any run game, UTAH’s strength.
I don’t have it in me to predict an actual USC loss in SLC, but I’m darn concerned about it, that’s for sure.
While I don’t think USC matches up well against UTAH, just like Joel Klatt proclaims, this could end up being a magical year for USC football, and the Utes have already lost two games. Edge to the Trojans there.
Whether or not our defense stops the Ute’s running game, it appears Whittingham will try to confuse Caleb with disguising their defense and hoping for picks and incompletes. Of course, LR will try to confuse the Ute’s defense with multiple offensive alignments, which is what Chip Kelly accomplished on them last week. Whittingham admitted as much seeing 3-defenders on one WR while another was clearly open. USC needs to be physical on both sides of the ball. It may wind up a high scoring game with whoever has the ball last, will win the game.
That is my favorite kind of game. Edge of your seat for four quarters.
As the USC/UTAH game gets closer and closer, its potential magnificence is gaining momentum, especially from us Trojan fans who find LR’s 6-0 juggernaut one of the most amazing Trojan football things we have ever seen.
These Pac-12 teams who are being completely left behind by USC for the B1G are taking their final shots at the big, bad, Portal-restructured bully in the west.
The drama is building. What a season so far!