USC makes a come-from-behind statement in thrilling Las Vegas Bowl defeat of Texas A&M
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — LAS VEGAS — It was less than four months ago, at the start of his third and most consequential season yet as USC’s coach, that Lincoln Riley walked off this same field at Allegiant Stadium, brimming with belief. His new quarterback had come through. His rebuilt defense had delivered. The statement he’d been searching for finally seemed to arrive in a season-opening win over Louisiana State.
“We know what we’ve been building,” Riley said that night. “I know we’re making progress.”
By late December, any signs of that progress had long since disappeared, and any confidence in USC’s coach had faded along with it, lost along the way through a frustrating season that ended Friday night right back where it began.
But after a campaign filled with frustrating fourth-quarter collapses, the Trojans were able to return, however briefly, to the form they found back in September, beating Texas A&M in the Las Vegas Bowl, 35-31, to finish their season 7-6.
The bookends bore some striking resemblance, down to the breathtaking finish, as USC once again fought through a fourth-quarter deficit to earn a statement-making win. Even if this statement didn’t ring quite in the same way it did in September.
Once again, it would take timely stops by USC’s defense and heroic performances from its top receiver, as Ja’Kobi Lane reeled in 127 yards and three touchdowns, giving him a dozen on the season.
But this time, the Trojans quarterback would have to dig his way out of a deep hole first.
Where Miller Moss had put on a show throughout the season opener, his replacement, Jayden Maiava (14), struggled to move USC’s offense at the start of a mistake-filled finale. He threw three head-scratching interceptions, each of which threatened to derail a Trojan offense that seemed to be hanging by a thread.
But before the questions about USC’s quarterback future could be posed, Maiava would manage to move the Trojans down the field on one scoring drive … then another … then another. He hit Makai Lemon for two big plays downfield, then found Lane for his second and third touchdowns of the evening. In quick succession, USC erased a three-score lead behind its quarterback’s cannon right arm.
Texas A&M would fire back, as quarterback Marcel Reed worked his own magic on a go-ahead touchdown drive, sprinting his way into the end zone with less than two minutes remaining.
It was too much time to leave Maiava, who put an ugly start behind him to finish with 295 yards and four touchdowns. As he sat back in the pocket on third-and-13, with the bowl hanging in the balance, he fired a pass to Lane, who stumbled his way through one tackle for a 33-yard gain. He hit Lane again, just before the goal line, but a delay of game set the Trojans back to the seven with just 12 seconds remaining.
It was Kyle Ford this time who broke open on the slant, as Maiava fired a dart for the go-ahead score.
It was a stunning, fourth-quarter turn for the Trojans, who had seemed well on their way to giving the game away. With five minutes remaining in the fourth quarter, USC trailed by 17, with three turnovers. But the Trojans’ defense stood tall from there, stopping the Aggies on three consecutive drives and giving Maiava just enough time to guide USC back.
Texas A&M wasted little time in asserting its will at the start, marching down the field with a methodical, 16-play scoring drive, while USC struggled from the start to move the ball at all. None of the Trojans’ first three drives Friday managed to extend beyond six yards, while the Aggies racked up 134 in the first quarter.
Opportunities kept being handed to USC. A 46-yard return from Makai Lemon set USC up at midfield, only for the drive to screech to an immediate halt. A diving interception from safety Kamari Ramsey (7) would set the Trojans up in similar position on the next possession … with similarly disappointing results.
At any moment, it seemed Texas A&M might break the game open. But a tipped Aggie pass in the end zone was picked off by safety Akili Arnold, giving the Trojans another chance to find their footing. This time, they followed through, as Maiava found Lane streaking wide-open across the field. He sprinted for a 30-yard score, tying a game that had been dominated by Texas A&M.
The Aggies stalled after that, managing a meager five yards in the second quarter. And yet USC still couldn’t seize control. One drive ended with a regrettable deep ball from Maiava that was picked off. Another was spent running down the clock just before half, only for USC to miss a 39-yard field-goal attempt.
Texas A&M would do their best to make USC pay after that. But it wasn’t enough, as the Trojans finished an up-and-down season on a high note, right where it started.
latimes.com
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Miami losing to Iowa State. Front-runner Cam Ward gave his team the first half, then decided he would sit the 2nd half. What a selfish SOB. But Paul Dee’s team losing is just delightful.
No doubt this season was full of disappointments. But it felt great to win that game after being down by 17. BTW- USC posted as many wins this season vs. SEC teams as Oklahoma.
I am glad that we lost Branch to the portal rather than Lemon. I think he is a much better player
For USC, a woeful 2024 ends with a wild Las Vegas Bowl victory. Will its lessons stick? Antonio Morales (The Athletic) — It was easy to write off the Trojan defense after USC lost crucial LB Eric Gentry and DL Anthony Lucas to various injuries within weeks of each other back in October. But DC D’Anton Lynn and his staff maximized the talent that was left and kept USC more than respectable defensively. There were opportunities for the unit to call out sick on Friday night, especially with the bad situations Jayden Maiava and the offense were putting them in, but they came… Read more »
Column: USC players stepped up during a Las Vegas Bowl win. Now Lincoln Riley must do the same Dylan Hernandez (LAT/UCLA grad) — Lincoln Riley was beaming. The USC coach said he saw it when his team came back from an 17-point deficit against Texas A&M to claim a 35-31 victory in the Las Vegas Bowl. He said he could feel it in the locker room. “There’s a toughness and a hardness that’s developing within this program right now,” Riley said. But how much should be made of this? As much as Riley raved about the resilience of the Trojans, the reality is they were a 7-6… Read more »
Allen you touched on all the relevant factors concerning this program. Less of it is positive unfortunately and that is being honest even after a win because of how the game was played. Riley may never have a true understanding of time management as he again had everyone including the TV announcers in bewilderment wasting seconds at the end of the 2nd half that lead to no scoring and a sour taste in everyone’s mouth going into the locker room. The brat may have this never give up attitude until the game is over but you have a fanbase exhausted… Read more »
This was a win that I’ll just take for all it’s worth, basically not much. The game could just as easily have been decided by the flip of a coin, it was that circus-like, error-filled, and topsy-turvy. USC needs a lot of portal help and coaching improvement from LR. As you reveal, who knows what may come? Most of all I’m glad the USC seniors got to split with this great memory under their belts. They took on a lot of water this season and dramatically beating a similarly roughshod A&M group is a well-deserved send-off. The best thing I… Read more »
Wow, did someone steal this writer’s Christmas presents? This was a big win because the team learned how to win a close game. And yes, Riley has plenty of believers that were sitting in the stands rooting for the Trojans even when they fell behind by 17. The crowd was loud and on fire when Ford caught the winning TD. Yes, there are things that need to be fixed, but heart and playing hard tough no quit football are not two of them.
Erik McKinney (WeAreSC) Surprises of the Game The positive surprise is how the USC offensive line played without two starters and lost a third after five snaps and still played well enough in that game. Texas A&M was playing without its best defensive linemen, but someone who hadn’t watched the Trojans all year would never have been able to guess USC was down three starters at key positions along the offensive line. That was a very solid showing from a group that came in as the biggest question mark. To balance this out, the negative surprise is that Jayden Maiava… Read more »
Excellent analysis.
Lots of questions that need answers. We’ll see and talk about it.
The fact that TAMU is SEC makes it all the more sweeter. The mouth of the south is quiet today.
Frankly, this is the one thing I most enjoyed from this win.
Nice to win!
The man from Muleshoe pulled a “muleshoe” from out of his posterior and USC won a game they really shouldn’t have. A complete reverse of what happened during the regular season. Bryan Jackson showed that USC could run the ball despite a swiss cheese Oline. Just imagine what Woody could have done in key end of game situations if he had been allowed to touch the ball all year. Lane, Lemon and Ford showed up for business and saved Maiava’s bacon multiple times with outstanding catches. This Trojan fan is not sure Maiava is the answer at QB. Perhaps Mr.… Read more »
For past few weeks I have been mourning the loss of some the portal pirates who left the scene for easier paths, but I’m not sure all who left this season will be truly missed. Did I miss Miller Moss? Yes! His leadership and abilities were missed this game. Did I miss the two running backs, or the offensive linemen? No! Our patchwork line played well enough to tell me there might be a future here. No false starts and no major blunders by the line had me wondering if the line coach could have been the albatross of the… Read more »
Maiava will need a lot of hand holding from the QB whisperer going forward. Three bozo no-no picks, but no fourth quarter collapse. Sure Maiava sometimes played ugly, but USC won. We’ll take it and run like we stole something!