USC football has the same problems year after year …
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — At USC, It feels like 2023 all over again. Here we are, assessing the wreckage of a defense that today feels destined to doom USC’s season in some form or fashion. Except now there is no Alex Grinch to take the brunt of the blame. Now USC has one of the highest-paid coordinators in college football leading a defense with NFL-caliber prospects at every level.
But as its defense took the field for the final drive Saturday, with a one-point lead and 1:55 remaining, it felt inevitable that Illinois would march down the field to win. And sure enough, they made it into field-goal range with nearly half the time still remaining.
It wasn’t supposed to be this way. Not after coordinator D’Anton Lynn oversaw a significant step forward from the defense last season. Not after USC led the nation in sacks through four weeks of this one. It was barely a week ago that Lynn was being mentioned as a potential head coaching candidate. Now suddenly it’s not even clear how he can right the ship with his own defense.
The secondary is a mess right now. Injuries have definitely made matters more difficult in that department, as USC has been without Chasen Johnson and Prophet Brown, both of whom it expected to count on. USC can’t control injuries, but it’s clear that the secondary doesn’t have anywhere close to the depth that coaches thought it did.
“We’re playing pretty shorthanded,” coach Lincoln Riley said. “But nobody cares. There’s no excuses. … We’ve got to play better and coach better there.”
Even before the loss to Illinois, USC’s defense ranked among the worst in college football at allowing big plays through the air. Through five games, USC has now allowed 51 (!!) pass plays of 10 yards or more, good for 127th in the nation. The combined record of the seven teams below them on that list, if you were wondering, is a paltry 12-23.
The whole operation imploded Saturday without star safety Kamari Ramsey, who contracted food poisoning the morning of the game. Without him in the slot, where he’s had to fill in for most of the season, Illinois torched the Trojans defense over the middle of the field. Illini quarterback Luke Altmyer finished 16 of 18 for 248 yards and two touchdowns — all just over the middle!
Lynn knew all game that USC was being dominated in that area, and yet, seemed helpless to do anything about it. By game’s end, it was unheralded true freshman Kendarius Reddick taking most of the reps at nickel.
But the secondary wasn’t the sole reason why Altmyer was able to pick the defense apart. USC’s pass rush, which had 16 sacks through four games, was completely neutralized by an Illinois offensive line that, prior to Saturday, had allowed the most sacks of any team in the Big Ten.
USC’s starting front four finished with two total pressures. Two! Anthony Lucas had seven himself last Saturday!
Without any semblance of a pass rush, USC’s struggling secondary was left completely exposed. So much so that Lynn had to resort to blitzing from the defensive backfield, like he did last season when USC couldn’t create pressure. The defensive backs finished with the same number of pressures — and the game’s only sack.
“The struggles in the pass defense are at all levels,” Riley said. “You gotta affect the quarterback, you’ve gotta be sound in coverage, and you’ve gotta eliminate the run game. It’s still team defense at the end of the day.”
And still, in spite of its lackluster afternoon, USC was just one final-drive pass interference away from potentially escaping Champaign 5-0. One stop was all it would’ve taken for us to be discussing a totally different narrative two days later.
The road, after USC’s bye, only gets bumpier from here. Three of USC’s next six opponents rank among the top 12 highest-scoring offenses in America. Expect that every team from here on out will copy Illinois’ approach for shutting down the Trojans’ front four and attacking their secondary.
It’ll be up to USC’s coaches to find a counter. The school paid whatever it had to to keep Lynn precisely for moments like this. Now it’s time for him to earn that massive paycheck.
ILL players celebrate the winning field goal against USC. (Craig Pessman / AP)

