Lincoln Riley delivers halftime magic: Takeaways from USC’s win over ASU
Thus Nhi Nguyen (LA Times) — Caleb Williams punctuated his postgame press conference with a final reminder. The quarterback likes to get in the last word.
“5-0,” he said, rising from the table and pumping his fist after USC’s 42-25 win over Arizona State on Saturday at the Coliseum.
USC is 5-0 (3-0 Pac-12 Conference) for the first time since 2020 and the fourth time in the past 27 years after turning a close game at halftime into a comfortable home win. Yet the No. 6 Transfer Portal Trojans remain unimpressed. When asked of what the unblemished record means to the team, tight end Malcolm Epps didn’t hesitate.
“Absolutely nothing,” he said after he caught a four-yard touchdown in the win. “Not a thing.”
Here are three takeaways from the win:
Halftime Magic
Lincoln Riley talks with electric QB Caleb Williams during the 3rd Q of the Trojans’ win over ASU at the Coliseum on Saturday. (Luis Sinco / LAT)
Coach Lincoln Riley admitted USC didn’t quite have the “edge we’re used to playing with” in the first half. The Trojans went into halftime with a four-point lead and gave up 17 points to an offense that entered Saturday averaging 22.8 points per game.
But as is becoming a signature for this team, the third quarter shifted the game in USC’s favor quickly. The Trojans averaged 7.2 yards per play and scored the quarter’s only TD while keeping Arizona State (1-4, 0-2) to just 14 yards and minus-three rushing yards during the frame.
Including Saturdays’ 7-0 advantage, the Trojans are outscoring opponents 55-7 in the third quarter of games this year.
“I think Coach Riley’s like Steve Kerr,” Epps said, referencing the Golden State Warriors’ famous third-quarter dominance. “It’s nothing new, he just came in and said, ‘Hey, we’re not playing like the Trojans.’ Simple. Take the challenge, he challenges us all the time and we accept the challenge, and we did what we were supposed to do.”
No Comfort On Defense
Korey Foreman (0) flushes ASU QB Emory Jones out of the pocket during early at the Coliseum on Saturday. (Luis Sinco / LAT)
Without takeaways to take the sting out of allowing explosive plays and long drives, defensive coordinator Alex Grinch said he was “disappointed in how we played for the bulk of the night.”
Arizona State, which was the second-worst offense in the Pac-12 by yardage and scoring entering the game, finished with 331 yards, 218 of which came in the first half. The nation’s best ball-hawking defense didn’t get its first takeaway until the final 33 seconds of the game when Calen Bullock swooped in for his pick.
USC didn’t sack ASU quarterback Emory Jones in the first half but got to him five times in the second half. Part of it was the additional rushers Grinch sent toward the Florida transfer because the coach said he was displeased with USC’s zone defense, which was struggling to recreate the same tipped passes and takeaways USC has generated every game this season.
Jones had a season-high 23 completed passes on 32 attempts with 243 yards and one touchdown.
Offensive Shuffle
Caleb Williams throws downfield under pressure from ASU at the Coliseum on Saturday.
(Luis Sinco / LAT)