USC football mandates meals and missed-weight punishments in newfound massive push for size and strength
The Trojans’ lack of size in 2023, defensive lineman Jamil Muhammad says, was an ‘elephant in the room,’ and the gains since then appear staggering
Luca Evans (OC Register) — LOS ANGELES — Gotta have carbs in the morning, USC sophomore defensive lineman Braylan Shelby (34) says. His definition of carbs is different than most.
For months, his breakfast has been the same. Egg scramble – not three, not four, but five eggs. Waffles. Yogurt parfait. Banana. He is listed at 250 pounds on USC’s spring roster, up from 245 in the fall; he really put on 20 in the offseason, he asserted Tuesday. He took pride in checking the scale, seeing the number rise, Shelby beamed.
Mason Cobb exhaled Tuesday, shaking his head, when asked about Shelby’s diet. Everyone’s diet around USC, this offseason. Cobb himself put on 10 pounds of pure muscle – one of the hardest winters he has gone through in his football life, he says.
“Ah, dude, it’s insane, bro,” Cobb said.
This was the directive. Since a disappointing 2023 season wrapped on an uptick in the Holiday Bowl, USC head coach Lincoln Riley has been adamant in a variety of public settings about a program-wide philosophical change to simply get bigger, particularly up front. And in private settings the past few months, the change has been grueling but welcomed, hearing USC players’ testimony on Tuesday. The program made meals mandatory, Cobb said; if players missed their target weight at weigh-ins, Shelby said, they’d be assigned plate-pushes as punishment.
Guys had to eat, Cobb said. And once you ate a lot, he added, “your stomach gets used to it.”
“That definitely helped, I guess, install in all our minds that – that’s the plan,” Shelby continued, animated. “That’s what we need to do this year. That’s what we need to change. That’s why we need to come different this year.”
Players, and coaches, often offered relentless positive reinforcement to media in the fall on the defense’s trajectory. Toss all that out the window. Toss in daily plates of eggs and waffles. Returning defensive lineman Jamil Muhammad, a steadfast team voice, minced no words: the emphasis on weight and strength was warranted, and needed last year.
Sure, they finished the year strong against Louisville.
“But it was still that elephant in the room, so to speak,” Muhammad said. “And we definitely knew it. Coach Riley knew it, coaches knew it, us as players knew it.”
“We just had to take it with a grain of salt,” Muhammad continued, “and take it personal to actually want to buy in and get better.”
The gains, via the eye test, are staggering. Muhammad is visibly beefier. Caesar Martinez, an assistant director for football sports performance at USC, shared side-by-side photos of freshman DL Jide Abasiri from Jan. 8 to Feb. 27 on Twitter on Monday night, in which Abasiri had gained 27 pounds and somehow looked five years older. Almost every returning defensive player for USC has gained notable weight – cornerback Jaylin Smith is up 10 pounds, defensive lineman Anthony Lucas is up 10, defensive tackle Bear Alexander is up 13.
“It looks different in drills,” Muhammad said. “It looks different translating from drills to the practice field or different team periods. It looks awesome so far, I can’t wait to see it progress.”
“Built by Bennie,” receiver Ja’Kobi Lane cracked Tuesday on his weight gain, referring to USC’s director of football sports performance Bennie Wylie.
Wylie has done his part, a true strength and conditioning veteran. But this is a true top-to-bottom organizational shift, Riley hiring D’Anton Lynn as his defensive coordinator in large part due to his emphasis on size up front, a focus that has even in part extended to searching for length in the secondary through the transfer portal. Mississippi State transfer cornerback DeCarlos Nicholson stands 6-foot-3; UCLA transfer John Humphrey stands 6-2, and is so lanky in-person it looks more like 6-5.
“I know we’ve talked about it some here in the first two years, that several positions have been pretty small, and that shows up,” Riley said. “And when you’re trying to obviously increase the physicality of your team, when you’re going to more of a professional-style defensive scheme – all that fits, certainly, to have bigger DBs.”
At the end of the day, as Riley affirmed Tuesday, this was the coaches’ vision. His vision, by proxy. And the effects, thus far, have been stunning.
“There are some massive changes,” Riley said, “in every part of the word.”
ocregister.com
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USC’s Kobe Johnson entering transfer portal, will test NBA draft The Trojans will be losing their team captain and two-time Pac-12 All-Defensive Team selection Luca Evans (OC Register) — LOS ANGELES — It was always Kobe Johnson’s goal, after his junior season, to test the NBA draft waters. So when he announced on social media Friday an intention to enter the draft, it was hardly a surprise, ending a three-year career of rapid growth at USC. The much larger surprise, however: Johnson also announced he was entering into the NCAA transfer portal. It’s a massive loss for the program, as… Read more »
First, I am not “buying the Kool Aid”. I am still at 8-4 for the season. And I will remain 8-4 until after the first 3 games of the season are played (LSU in Las Vegas, Utah State at home, and MI in the Big House). I am fully expecting SC to be 1-2 after that stretch. I think I should entitle this piece “Back to the Future.” With that limitation, I think we are witnessing something which is very rare LR is maturing and growing as a coach. It appears to me that he is moving from a coach… Read more »
Yes RJJ, Coach Riley has made the adjustments that were needed. The defense was just not up to par. But the coaches were greatly improved to professional level. And he finally is taking the approach of trying to be a complete HC. He is trying to look at the team as a whole instead of just the offense. That is what a HC is supposed to do. Hope he tries to improve the special teams also. But he still needs the players. This is where USC has fell behind with the Helton era. Oregon, Bama, OS, Georgia are the big… Read more »
What we also have to take into consideration was the quality of returning players and few new recruits LR had to work with in the beginning. He had to rely heavily on the Portal and we have learned it isn’t easy to mesh too many one year only players into a brand new system. I am not totaly exempting LR from his 2nd season. He should have dove in head first into recruiting HS talent and instead still pushed hard into the Portal in quick fixing. And even more so, he needed to pay attention to the importance of defense.… Read more »
Good point about over-reliance on subpar Portal guys. Combine that with some coaches who needed to go, and couldn’t develop, and you saw what happened.
Now USC’s theme is all about development. Great to finally see, as it makes such a huge difference to a program’s overall health. In ’70 and ’71, USC went 6-4-1 each year, my first two years in school. In ’72, we fielded one of the greatest college teams of all time.
The 1972 team is still my favorite of all time. I was a Senior at Glendale High School, CA that Fall. SC had three Tailbacks, 2 Quarterbacks, Charles Young at TE, Lynn Swann at Flanker, a good OL and solid Defense. The depth on the team was amazing and I remember reading that over 50 of the players on the roster that year were eventually drafted by the NFL. In my opinion, Mike Rae doesn’t get the credit he deserves for quarterbacking that team. He was also the placekicker for field goals and extra points. Mike was not a bad… Read more »
USC Football: Caleb Williams Intentionally Sat, So Miller Moss Could Shine. The Holiday Bowl Decision That Shaped The Roster Ryan Anderson (LAFB) — Former USC Trojan QB Caleb Williams has at times been painted as a bad teammate, but according to Brett Kollmann of “The Film Room” on YouTube, and of the Bootleg Football Podcast, Williams wanted to give, three-season USC Football backup quarterback, Miller Moss a chance to shine on the largest platform available to him at the time, the USC vs Louisville in the Holiday Bowl. Some even thought originally that this very move pointed toward Williams as a poor leader. Kollman — “So Williams… Read more »
That is classy, Caleb. No joke–CW has been a really great trojan and a great teammate.
It would have been nice if that plan was announced in December. We would have an even better view of Caleb the man, not just a great player. Makes sense now why he was there on the sidelines.
Okay, the REAL Elephant in the room is who was keeping USC and Oklahoma from getting BIG! Are you telling me dumb ass Grinch had the power to keep the teams small? Really Riley? Get some cajones! You are paid $10 million to be the boss. What in the world was the hold Grinch had on you?
And Luca, how about being a real reporter. Or are you afraid of getting banned again? How about a line, “unnamed sources say Grinch insisted on keeping the defense light and fast”. And we know how that worked! Or a line, “Grinch’s wife and Riley’s wife were so tight that Riley had no authority over Grinch till his job was on the line”.
GT — Please don’t pick on our young highly respected Trojan beat reporter from Chapman.
You absolutely know he’s got what it takes, and so does Lincoln.
Well since his ban/reinstatement, he’s writing nothing but puff pieces, so I guess Riley’s ban had some effect. This program wasted 2 years and Caleb William’s talent with this Grinch-Riley bromance. It would be nice if someone in the media called Riley out on it. The DC from SUCLA gets hired and suddenly USC is going to get big and tough, at least on defense. Well I’m not drinking that Koolaid till I see it in September.
I couldn’t disagree more. Puff pieces? No way. Luca Evans has taken numerous obvious sideswipes, most all of which I have posted here over the last several months, at Riley’s poor coaching, insight, and planning which led to USC’s disastrous season and Riley’s well-known drop in status as a coach. Riley’s ban, aka his “huge overreaction”, basically lasted a pitiful 24 hours before he hastily backed off (probably at Jen Cohen’s direction) and announced he should have handled things differently, completely reversing his decision. Made me laugh, how USC media newby Luca could force such a big-time 100 million dollar… Read more »
Allen, I kept thinking back why LR was willingly supportive of Grinch that 2nd season after having a pretty good first season even though the last games were a disaster defensively. And I came up with LR’s possible thinking the PAC and Big 12 were similar in being all offense and just out scoring the opponent. If his record and notoriety was good enough to get the USC gig, why not believe it would still work using Grinch’s speed versus size mentality? But it became apparent size did matter this past season and especially in tackling!!!! And the fact USC… Read more »
Lincoln just blew it. After watching USC’s total collapse at the end of 2022, especially when the Green Wave mercilessly abused us in the Cotton Bowl, it was obvious USC needed a brand new DC. LR just ignored what so many “untrained eyes” could spot. Why? Because it served his purposes, which is why most people do things. So LR wasted Caleb Williams’ final year. He was literally willing to do that in furtherance of his own ignorance. The entire USC team knew it was undersized and not strong enough. “But it was still that elephant in the room, so… Read more »
I have read where it was reported that Grinch placed speed over size and that resulted in a lightweight defense. That was probably okay in the Big12 days when defense was not really focused upon. Riley got it right, going into the B1G the size is going to matter. Now I am hoping we have enough conditioning that these big guys can carry that weight through an entire season. As is usual, most guys will come to a playing weight which will be down a few pounds from where they are now.
You are so right Steveg, gaining weight means you have to add muscle to handle it in maintaining a level of execution on the field. Adding depth where bulk is needed, I would think, would be of great importance rotating for needed blows and not losing performance would be ideal especially in the 4th quarter and OT when so many games are decided. I would think our line coaches are very aware of this.