Trojan MVP — Woody Marks

The secret to USC running back Woody Marks’ career-best year: acupuncture

Woody Marks runs the ball against Utah State this season.

Woody Marks runs the ball against UTAH ST on Sept. 7. (Mark J. Terrill / AP)

Ryan Kartje (LA Times)  —  The needles never bothered Woody Marks. Mostly because he never looks at them. All USC’s star running back knows is every Wednesday his acupuncturist will put them in whatever muscle has been aching that week.

“I just close my eyes,” Marks says, “and let him do it.”

Over a senior season in which he has carried the ball 174 times — 53 more than his career high — and accumulated 1,024 rushing yards, the first Trojan in seven years to do so, Marks has done whatever he can to keep his body in peak form. The needles have become an essential part of that recovery process, one that Marks and those closest to him credit for keeping him as healthy as he’s ever been.

But acupuncture is just one part of his routine. Twice a week Marks gets a massage. He also gets a pedicure, to help relieve his sore feet of dead skin, a trick he learned from running backs coach Anthony Jones.

“It makes you feel light on your feet,” Marks said.

Whatever extra treatments strength and conditioning coach Bennie Wylie has suggested, Marks has been more than willing to try. In addition to his usual routine, he’s tried cryotherapy, infrared therapy, massages with cupping — anything to keep inflammation down and ward away the nagging injuries that followed him over three years at Mississippi State.

Recently, Marks even went to a spa for the first time. It was an eye-opening experience. “Amazing,” he says with a smile.

“I didn’t know a spa had that much in it,” Marks continued. “I went inside a room, and I did the cold thing you step in. I went into a sauna. They had a pool. I did hot rocks. I did a lot of stuff. It was all tied in, so I was like, ‘I’mma get my money’s worth. I’mma do everything.’ My body was feeling extra good.”

The opposite was true when he transferred to USC last January. A hamstring injury had hampered any hopes of him leaving for the NFL draft. So when he entered the transfer portal in search of a true workhorse role, the Marks family wanted to ensure his new school not only had ample opportunity but also a plan for keeping him upright along the way.

He wasn’t always the best gauge of his health. Marks was the type who always played through pain. Even when he shouldn’t have. At Mississippi State, he once broke his nose in a game against Alabama, only to stuff gauze in both nostrils and return to convert a third down.

“He’s not a guy you tell not to play football,” said Quinton Wesley, his high school strength and conditioning coach and a close family friend.

But when Marks chose USC in the portal, Wesley sat him down. He knew injuries could derail Marks’ path to the NFL if he wasn’t mindful. He needed to make his body more of a priority.

In Starkville, Miss., a city of just 25,000, there hadn’t been many extra treatment options. But every option he could imagine was at his fingertips in Los Angeles, where Marks marveled at the fact that a masseuse could make house calls.

“We knew he had injury issues in the past,” Wesley said. “This was the last go-round, the last stop, the last opportunity. He had to do more small stuff to be at his best every Saturday. It wasn’t really a choice. Just something that had to be done, in order to get to where he needed to go.”

The small stuff has made a major difference at USC, where Marks is on pace to finish with the most carries in a season of any running back in Lincoln Riley’s head coaching career. Marks is also just the fifth Trojans back since Reggie Bush left in 2005 to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a season.

When he crossed that threshold last week against Nebraska, Marks was feeling about as bad as he had all season. He had successfully avoided injury for 10 games, but a flu outbreak that swept through USC’s locker room late last week didn’t spare the senior back.

Naturally, Marks still played. He hadn’t even told his mom he was sick. Marks cobbled together a career-high 146 yards and when he saw his mom afterward, Tameka Marks wondered if her son’s asthma suddenly was kicking up again.

“He could barely breathe!” she recalled.

But after three years of battling through bumps and bruises, Marks has been mostly healthy. The new recovery routine has kept him as fresh as anyone could have hoped. And his NFL stock has soared as a result. The investment, by all accounts, has been well worth it for Marks.

Still, after all the treatments he’s tried, there’s one change that Tameka is hoping her son can make. Though, she thinks it’s probably a long shot.

“Now, we just have to get him on some vegetables,” Tameka said. “He does not like eating his vegetables.”

latimes.com

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TrojanDailyBlog members —  We always encourage you to add factual information, insight, divergent opinions, or new topics to the TDB that don’t necessarily pertain to any particular moderator post or member comment.

 

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Steveg
Major Genius
Steveg
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November 22, 2024 3:37 pm

Welcome 4* OL Alex Payne from where else, Georgia. Great flip. Maybe Henson can recruit a little.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
November 22, 2024 6:33 pm
Reply to  Steveg

Payne and Dunn, ranked 16 and 17 OTs, got Payne away from UNC. USC has 2 of the top 20 OTs, along with Alabama and Oklahoma to have 2 each. That is a very positive sign. Good for Henson, Riley and HOV if they get them. Only six 5* OTs and they are spread all over the place, even Georgia Tech has one.

Steveg
Major Genius
Steveg
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November 22, 2024 6:53 pm
Reply to  Golden Trojan

Have you noticed the talent getting spread out more, the teams are more equal. Who would have thought that even Army has a shot at the playoffs.

Rock2112
Noble Genius
Rock2112
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November 22, 2024 1:30 pm

Well, it had to happen eventually. Tomorrow I will go to my first USC/UCLA game in person. I never went to this game (I went to many others) when I was in school, both because you had to enter the lottery for tickets and I was too lazy or busy to do that, and because that game was usually too close to finals and Holiday busy-ness. After school, life just generally got in the way and I preferred watching that game in the comfort of home anyway. That way I could punch the couch if we lost instead of doing… Read more »

volunteerTrojan
Major Genius
November 22, 2024 4:26 pm
Reply to  Rock2112

Cool, hope you have fun, Rock!

Jamaica
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Jamaica
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November 22, 2024 12:26 pm

HOV simply has to loosen its purse strings or this football program will never escape this reputation of disappointment & underachievement it is hampered with for the last decade. Hensen needs to go and position depth on both lines has to be addressed. If this recruitment class comes up to level expectations it will spare LR an off-season of grief being a failure. This is a time where he has to show he is head coach worthy.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
November 22, 2024 3:15 pm
Reply to  Jamaica

Jamaica you have it in reverse of what I’m thinking. If I’m a big HOV donor I would say, when SLR shows he is a head coach worth $10 million a year, fires Henson, replaces him with a first rate OC and a tough as nails NFL type OL coach, then he has earned a $20 million NIL budget. Right now I’m not dumping millions into NIL with a head coach who can’t do the basics.

Jamaica
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Jamaica
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November 22, 2024 3:37 pm
Reply to  Golden Trojan

GT I believe that is partly what I said? Maybe not about HOV due to reading on this website a year or so back the HOV brain trust whoever they are were being tight in doling out the funding in what LR was feeling he needed to sign the best players. We have been losing the battles signing top players (HS & Portal) these past few years so it is the basis of what I was posting above. If I am wrong I will reverse this thinking.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
November 22, 2024 3:51 pm
Reply to  Jamaica

Yeah we are probably on the same page. You are right in that if USC doesn’t have a $20 million NIL budget we are not getting the top players. I wouldn’t fault HOV for being cautious 6 months or a year ago. But now we know what the market demands compared to what others are paying out. The other side is that this season SLR has shown some real failures at basic coaching, game planning, play calling, game/clock management. So I would be careful if I were HOV giving SLR the keys to the vault.

TrojanRJJ
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TrojanRJJ
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November 22, 2024 7:59 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

I read online that the kid is from MI and MI offered him $10.5 million over 4 years. How much do you think OR paid Dillon? Or Miami paid Ward? Both of them are in the CFP. I watched the OR WI game, IMO, OR would not have won that game without Dillon or a QB of his mobility and athleticism. An athletic mobile HS QB is now getting a guarantee of $10.5 million plus scholarship plus any side deals he can develop. New world for recruiting. Particularly for QBs.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
November 22, 2024 8:55 am
Reply to  TrojanRJJ

Looks like Dillon Gabriel is has NIL valuation of $1.7 million for this year. I guess that’s what he’s getting, don’t know if valuation = actual money. Wonder when the ceiling will be hit for deals?