USCโs Zion and Zachariah Branch pursue goals and greatness together…
The brothers, who grew up constantly competing in Las Vegas, have brought a dynamic relationship to the Trojans
Luca Evans (OC Register) —ย A goal that goes unwritten is merely just a dream.
As parents, Shรฉva and Renee Branch echoed that saying through a singular, faith-based belief: teaching their children the importance of goal-setting. Of positive self-talk. So from the time their boys Zachariah (right) and Zion were young, starting their journeys in youth football, their parents sat down and created โvision boardsโ for them โ making sure such dreams had a tangible manifestation.
And as their boys grew, Shรฉva and Renee had another idea. Theyย bought a swath of chalkboard paint, turning every square inch of the walls of the boysโ bedroom into a sketchable surface. It was a living, breathing canvas of imagination, dreams whispered in the night becoming written goals worked for in the morning.
Before they moved to a new home during Zionโs sophomore year of high school, Shรฉva said, they took pictures of that room. Preserving childhood intention in time. And a year ago, the parents took a trip down memory lane, looking at the photos and musing on how far their boys had come from childhood: goals in basketball, in track, in football at Bishop Gorman High.
And intent, too, to play for USC.
โWe remember taking them to the (USC) games when they were young โ I think they were 9, 10 years old, taking them to games and kind of talking about, โHey, could you see yourself running out of the tunnel and playing here?โโ Shรฉva said. โAnd for them to have those goals โฆ it was pretty exciting to see that, for it all to come together.โ
It came together, in a word, together. On the Christmas after Zionโs junior season at Bishop Gorman, the two sat their parents down and delivered news: They wanted to play college football with each other. A great surprise to Shรฉva and Renee, to be sure. But the boys had their goals, and so exactly a year later, a few days after Zion announced his commitment as a Trojan,ย Zachariah followed.
Their trajectories have veered apart at USC, similar to their personalities. Safety Zion is 6-foot-2 and steadfast, a year older and wiser,ย clawing his way back into USCโs plans from a season-ending injury last year. Receiver Zachariah is a 5-10 physical firecracker, one of the most-hyped freshmen in college football with four touchdowns in his first four USC games, a ready-made viral fit in a city of stars.
But they worked for this โ and have shared in the ups and downs โ together.
โTo be able to see them live out their dream, together, is surreal,โ Shรฉva said.
โIron sharpens ironโ
Once Zachariah arrived as a freshman at Bishop Gorman in 2019, nobody guarded him in one-on-ones except for Zion.
It was pretty much understood, Gaels head coach Brent Browner said. If any defensive backs wanted a crack at Zachariah, theyโd have to go through Zion. There was no trash-talk. No extracurriculars. Everybody just knew, Browner said, those two dudes were going to go at it.
Zion became the first freshman to start at the hotly competitive national powerhouse. Of course, Zachariah wanted to do it, too. And did.
โWe always say here, โIron sharpens iron,โ from the Bible verse Proverbs,โ Browner said. โAnd basically, thatโs what they did every single day.โ
It started young, egged on โ sneakily โ by Shรฉva. Heโd never let them share the same side of the field in flag football, each playing one half on defense, one on offense. Zachariah was the overzealous little brother, the kid whose legs moved sometimes faster than his brain processed instruction; Zion was the older torch-bearer, a perfectionist who wasnโt about to let perfect be outdone.
โTheyโre the yin and the yang of each other,โ Browner said.
Growing up, theyโd play chess and dominoes for push-ups and sit-ups. Friends would groan when theyโd go over to the Branchesโ house, because longtime sprints and strength coach Shรฉva, who played fullback at San Jose State, would make everyone engage in five-minute-long planking sessions (never actually enforcing the full five minutes, because these were children, after all). The brothers did everything together, from piano recitals to spelling bees.
And in one such spelling bee, Zachariah was so eager to show up his older brother that he claimed to his dad heโd memorized 500 words in the snap of a finger.
โIโd be like, โAre you sure you studied?โโ Shรฉva remembered.
โโYeah, I looked at all of them,โโ the father recalled his youngest son saying.
โAnd youโre just like, โMan, cโmon,โโ Shรฉva said. โAre youย sure?โ
โEach otherโs biggest fanโ
There was enough room in the Branchesโ childhood home, certainly, for the boys to have separate bedrooms. But Shรฉva and Renee wanted their boys to grow up close. So they put them in that same room with the painted walls, instituting a strict no-phones-at-night policy, all the way up until Zachariahโs senior year at Gorman, when Zion left for USC.
โIt was a lot of countless hours of them, Iโm sure, staying up late night talking to each other, with no distractions,โ Shรฉva said.
Lincoln Riley has coached brothers before. Never quite like this. Not with Zachariah and Zionโs closeness, a bond deeper than the moniker โbest friendsโ or โsiblingsโ can summate.
And heโll goad them in practice, the USC coach grinned, with that understanding. Zachariah drops a pass?ย Ah, letโs get Zion over here to do it. One of them beats each other in a one-on-one rep?ย Ah, better tell the family at Thanksgiving.
โYou can tell โ they are like, each otherโs biggest fan and biggest supporter,โ Riley said Thursday, โand probably inspiration.โ
Both were blue-chippers coming out of Bishop Gorman โ Zion recording five interceptions as a sophomore, Zachariah becoming one of the most-hyped recruits in the nation after an electrifying 14-touchdown junior year โ but they charted different routes.
Things just came a bit more natural to Zachariah, Browner said; the younger brotherโs challenge was patience, putting the grind in to push himself past natural talent. Zion was the role model, the older brother who had to fight just a bit harder to pave the way.
The summer before Zionโs freshman year at USC and Zachariahโs senior year at Gorman, Zion had a โfreak accident,โ he saidย as reported by SCNGโs Adam Grosbard, that necessitated knee surgery.
The day after the surgery, Zachariah was there helping his brother out of the hospital.
โโJust put your arm around me,โโ Shรฉva remembered Zachariah saying. โโI got you.โโ
They talked โpretty much every day,โ on the phone, Renee said, through a year of Zion rehabbing on the sidelines. Praying together. Zachariah offering a word of support.
โJust seeing him battling through adversity, those troubling times, Iโm always in his corner,โ Zachariah told reporters this fall.
They came into this spring, then, with the exact same amount of game experience at USC, eager to prove themselves. And the first thing Zachariah asked Zion when he got to campus, Shรฉva said, was to be his roommate.
โIโm glad theyโre both together, because I feel like, knowing them both โ the support that they give each other is only going to strengthen them through the good and the bads,โ Browner said.
โThat kidโs insaneโ
Check Zachariah and Zionโs phones now, former Bishop Gorman running back Camโron Barfield said, and he guarantees they still have a list of goals pinned as their deviceโs wallpaper.
And sure enough,ย in a September video by Whistle,ย Zachariah showed his lockscreen โ a picture of a handwritten list. Chief among them: Win a Heisman Trophy.
Most every teammate at USC, it seems, has a story of instantly knowing Zachariah was the next big thing. Returning running back Austin Jones told his dad, after USCโs spring practice, the kid was the โreal deal.โย Tight end Lake McCree saw the youngest Branchโs first speed drills and knew, he said, โhe had a switch that was different from other people.โ Transfer MarShawn Lloyd has claimed heโs said Zachariahโs special since arriving from South Carolina.
โThat kid,โ Lloyd said in September, โis insane.โ
In Zachariahโs first game,ย he scored two touchdowns, including a 96-yard kickoff return. His agility can only be understood by the naked eye, capable of hitting hyperspeed in a split second, built from years of top-speed training with Shรฉva; itโs talent that buzzes behind an electric personality, havingย adopted Christiano Ronaldoโs signature โSIUUUโ as a touchdown celebrationย from playing the game FIFA.
Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. has messaged him. Miami Dolphins receiver Tyreek Hill hasย shown him love. The younger Branch has burst onto the national spotlight โ but brother Zion, coming off an injury, is still scratching for consistent playing time in the safety room as a redshirt freshman.
Zionโs opportunity is coming, Riley said, after a standout fall and a rapid recovery. And the two brothers share everything, Browner and the brothersโ parents said. Through good. Through bad. No sense of one ever being in the otherโs shadow.
Before their first collegiate game against their parentsโ alma mater, San Jose State โ a full-circle scene that made Renee just about come to tears โ Zachariah ran out of the tunnel, scanning for his brother. The two had prayed together before every game since Bishop Gorman; reunited again at USC, they convened there in the end zone.
Theyโve done the same, in every game since. Dropping to a knee. Bowing their heads. Clasping arms. Present, on different paths but the same journey, together.
ocregister.com
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Pac-12 football analysts are no longer as impressed with USC entering the CU game Matt Zemek (Trojans Wire) — Fresh doubts have emerged for USC football after a sloppy Week 4 game. We at Trojans Wire need to see Alex Grinch earn fresh trust. He has to get this defense to tackle better and show that the Trojans will be able to stand up to high-quality opponents. It’s not just us, however. Other Pac-12 analysts are doubting the Trojans after Week 4, as the Men of Troy prepare to face Colorado in Week 5. Ducks Wire analyst and staff writer Don Smalley told… Read more ยป
The Grinch narrative is once again the dominate theme of USC 2023 football. The issue, IMO, is not Grinch learning and developing (I think John covered that issue quite well, he cannot and will not). The issue is LR. Will he learn and grow?
All the attention is on Coach Prime and the Buffs. It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen before.
For once, USC will hugely benefit from a game against CU because of what CU is bringing to the table.
Great stage for the Trojans! Capitalize on it USC!
Allen, your Joel Klatt post got me thinking. If I’m DS how to attack USC? On D, contain CW in the pocket, create opportunity for a blitzer, all before he gets off the pass or escape. CW and the offense are too dangerous with him on the loose. On O, I would attack my strength against SC’s weakness, the pass. I would look at the plays where the SC coverages get blown. I would go after the biggest weaknesses, Wright and Jackson. If you don’t get a completion you will get holding or interference penalty. The Buffs would love to… Read more ยป
I sure don’t know any more than you GT, and we’re on the same page here. I think we all know CU can’t run the ball, and apparently can’t stop the run either. I would give Marshawn Lloyd a minimum of 20 carries and let him smash the Buffs inside and outside. I’d also give them a taste of promising Quinten Joyner. Dare the Buffs to run at me and go all out to let our much-improved DL play havoc with sacks and TFL. Both QBs are basically unstoppable if they are on their games. In Caleb’s case, he’s unstoppable… Read more ยป
It is obvious that these two brothers have some outstanding parents who have led and encouraged them along the path of growing up. Great job to Mr. and Mrs. Branch. Not only be proud of your boys, but rest assured you will have greater rewards to come.
USC has had some fantastic brothers duos playing for them over my lifetime, and these two are exciting, from what I’ve seen. Hopefully we will see more from #1 this season.
Defense, Defense, Defense
Don’t look now, but Brent Venables, the former DC at CLEM, has his #14 ranked Sooners holding their first four opponents to 17 pts or less for the first time since 2006: (73-0 over ARK ST; 28-11 over SMU; 66-17 over TULSA and 20-6 over CIN). OU plays 2-2 IA ST this weekend in Norman.
And, do not look now, but UCLA (by changing DCs) is also greatly improved over last year. Holding the Utah O to seven points in SLC is a huge accomplishment. Problem was not the D, but Moore who gave the Utes at least 17 points (7 via pick six, at least 3 via a fumble on the Utah 10, and 7 via a bad overthrow of a wide open UCLA receiver who was behind the Utah D).
Unlike LR, Venables “gets” defense. Should be a good game via Texas in the Red River Shootout.
I love that UCLA running game! 9 yards vs UTAH.
As usual, the Bruins screwed the pooch in a big game and set themselves back. So did STAN, CAL and ND. Perfect weekend.
Yup, the Utes organized the D to stop the run first, forcing Moore to beat them. Smart thinking. I’ll bet they had a Plan B in place if Moore torched them. Remember, that number includes Moore’s sacks. Really a bad game by Moore: I remember DTR’s starting I think the first game of the season as a true frosh; as I recall, it was against Cincinnati at the Rose Bowl. DTR was awful, just as bad as Moore was against the Utes. The play I recall was Chip went for in on fourth down in Bruin territory. It was a… Read more ยป
I do believe that Moore is gonna be really good down the line. How long will it take him? By the time the USC game rolls around, I’ll be much more wary of him.
Safe for Six!
I’ve never seen anything like this, and I doubt I will ever again after this year (or maybe even this week). One of my favorite football shows is the weekly CBS Sports Network’s Inside College Football, even though three of its regulars are Bruins Rick Neuheisel, Randy Cross, Brian Jones (who also played for TEXAS, and Domer Aaron Taylor, who goes out of his way to refer to USC as Southern Cal (for those who care about that stuff). Despite what would seem like a stacked deck against USC, when naming their top three Heisman candidates as of now, the… Read more ยป
CBS hasn’t seen Caleb this season. USC has been broadcasted on Fox and PAC 2 channel. I don’t know, but assume CBS sports has seen other Heisman hopefuls, so their views are skewed.
I’ve never liked listening to Neuheisel. He’s like Stephen A to me-knowledgeable but annoying. I’ll never forget when USC put up 50 on the bRUINS when Neuheisel was their HC. Despite being scoreless and behind by over 40 points, he kept calling timeout when the bRUINS had the ball late in the game. That annoyed USC HC Lane Kiffin, so when USC got the ball with very little time left, Kiffin had Matt Barkley throw a bomb and it connected for a TD. He’s been against SC ever since and I can’t really blame him for that.
Joel Klatt breaks down Caleb Williams. Worth the short watch.
https://youtu.be/HKOSQl4ZIeE