Lincoln Riley completes USC staff featuring new defensive blood, continuity …
Lincoln Riley introduces former TCU HC Gary Patterson as the Trojans’ new DC in January. (Ronaldo Bolanos/LAT)
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — When D’Anton Lynn abruptly left for Penn State on the eve of USC’s bowl game, the hope within the program had been to keep what remained of his defensive staff intact. All while also attracting a top-notch defensive coordinator to take Lynn’s place.
But Lincoln Riley, after four years of regular churn with his staff at USC, was also realistic. The coach had learned by now how quickly plans could change with the coaching carousel.
“It really doesn’t matter what team you are,” Riley said in December. “It doesn’t matter what staff you are. Doesn’t matter what your postseason situation is like. … We’ve been through this now for a few years. So you can’t always predict everything that’s going to happen, but this time of year, you have to be ready to adjust. It’s just the nature of the game.”
Some adjustments, as Riley suggested then, were probably inevitable.
The worst of it came late in the carousel, when defensive line coach Eric Henderson elected to return to the NFL, departing for the same position with the Washington Commanders. Losing Henderson, from a recruiting perspective alone, is significant. He finished the last recruiting cycle as the nation’s top-ranked recruiter, according to 247 Sports.
It was Henderson who took over the defense for USC’s bowl game, which led some players to voice their belief he should get the full-time gig. His name was floated for other jobs, too, including the coordinator position at his alma mater, Georgia Tech.
USC hoped to retain him as defensive line coach. But with the program determined to go outside of its staff for a new coordinator, Henderson ultimately chose to leave.
USC also moved on from secondary coach Doug Belk, who’d also been mentioned as a potential internal candidate. He spent the previous two seasons as a leading voice on USC’s defensive staff. But his contract was not renewed.
In hiring longtime Texas Christian coach Gary Patterson, Riley found the rare coordinator happy to blend in with a staff that’s largely in place already. Last month, in his first meeting with reporters, Patterson said he viewed himself more as “that last piece” on USC’s staff. He even assured he’d adapt his 4-2-5 defensive scheme to what USC did under Lynn.
“The group that’s here, they improved the defense last year,” Patterson said. “So instead of just coming in and saying, ‘Well this is how we’re gonna do it, it’s been a little bit more work of trying to put both of them together, understanding they did a great job and recruiting really good players. So you gotta really kind of listen a little bit more before you say this how we [do it].”
Some unique aspects of Patterson’s scheme, however, are probably best left in familiar hands. That’s especially the case with his secondary, which is called separately from the front seven.
It stands to reason then that Patterson would bring Paul Gonzales, a defensive backs coach who worked with Patterson for nearly half of his tenure at TCU. He left Baylor to join USC’s staff and is expected to lead the Trojans entire secondary. He’ll be joined by Sam Carter, a former all-Big 12 safety who played under Patterson.
The rest of the staff remains largely intact from last season. Defensive ends coach Shaun Nua stuck with USC amid rumors of interest from his alma mater, Brigham Young. Trovon Reed will continue to coach cornerbacks.
Mike Ekeler has been brought in from Nebraska to be the new coordinator of special teams, long an underperforming sore point under Riley, as well as a linebacker coach. Well-traveled Ekeler (12 different college programs) previously coached at USC under Lane Kiffin in 2013.
After a 2025 debut that produced disappointing-to-mixed results with a thin linebacker room under Rob Ryan, his exact status and future influence has been up in the air over the past two months.
Two defensive analysts were also promoted to full-time roles, as Skyler Jones, in his third season on staff, will coach defensive tackles and AJ Howard, entering his second, will coach outside linebackers.
That makes nine coaches on USC’s defensive staff alone, three more than it employed last season.
As of 2024, there are no longer limits on the number of coaches who can provide on-field instruction, meaning the Trojans can have as many assistants on staff as they please. But only 10 total, plus the head coach, are allowed to recruit off-campus. It’s unclear who among USC’s current staff will fill those 10 roles.
Zach Hanson, the secret to USC’s OL success, and his family.
On the other side of the ball, Riley was able to keep the whole band together. Offensive line coach Zach Hanson was pursued heavily by his alma mater, Kansas State, to be offensive coordinator under new coach Collin Klein, who Hanson considers to be one of his closest friends.
Still, Hanson chose to stick with USC and Riley, whose offense will return not just every member of its staff, but also its entire offensive line, its star running back and a possible Heisman candidate at quarterback.
latimes.com
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USA beats Canada 2-1 for the Gold in OT behind the superhuman efforts of the greatest goalie in the world, Connor Hellebuyck.
“Do you believe in miracles?”
It WAS a miracle. I thought about turning the frustrating game off because Canada was so incredibly dominant in the 3rd period. The USA was on defense 100% of the time. The Canadians somehow missed shot after shot on goal, with Hellebuyck our absolutely brilliant savior.
Then in OT, the previously out-skated USA suddenly struck like a deadly rattlesnake and scored the historic winner on a bullet between the legs of the Canadian goalie. Hallelujah! 😀
Who’s most over paid? Have to be Riley and Sanders. Hate to diss on Sanders with his health problems.He maybe should retire, spend time with his family, take care of himself.
USC vs CU is like comparing a legend to a perpetual wannabe. The Buffs have been horrible for an eternity. Sanders quickly and miraculouly elevated them to relevance, brought the long-starved fans into the stands, and gave the program hope, even though he now seems overmatched. Riley has been a bust, pure and simple, at a program that is supposed to compete at the very highest levels of the sport. USC has a brand that CU can only dream of. For that reason, and that reason only, Riley still has a shot at making USC great again. This could actually… Read more »
I don’t know crap but I just wonder if we will see the next Saban emerge at LSU in two years. He has the talent for coaching and now has a machinery behind him.
I truly think Kiffin will win a CFB NC.
He’s got the juice, the smarts and the experience. Now he’s got the program.
Plus, he’s a great recruiter, one of the very best of all the head coaches. This is a guy who specializes in closing the deal. I’m sure glad he couldn’t sneak in from across the country to steal TE Mark Bowman from USC at the very end on LOI Day. It doesn’t surprise me that he tried.
If he had stayed at SC he would have won one by now.
You’re right 007! JMHO
LR needs to rebuild his reputation. He doesn’t have the same reputation that he had when he first came to USC. When he first came everyone was saying that SC would soon win a NC. Even Finebaum said it was a great hire. He was just considered to be one of the best college football coaches in the nation.. Some people are still saying that SC will win a NC but not because of him anymore but because of the other people SC has hired like Bowden and Cohen.
Yep!…….but as you know no way he could survive…….the sanctions were crippling and folks were so used to winning that 9-3 was considered a horrible year. Folks just did not understand the effect of the sanctions on the team. A real shame.
Have to agree that Riley has been a bust by USC standards. But he actually had USC ranked in top 25 for a few times in his tenure. His problem is finding a stable DC to be able to make the CFP.
It seems Patterson will be the DC we have been waiting for. And finally have a special teams coach. Lynn was ok but his heart was with Penn State.
Hope it is a turn of direction season.
One of Riley’s most noticeable problems has always been his inability to beat the good teams on USC’s schedules. USC used to always stand for this, at least when good. Under Riley, we’re always more worried about our better opponents than they are about us. That’s because Riley has a pitiful 6-13 record against AP Top 25 teams through the end of the 2025 reg season, and has especially struggled against top-10 teams, with an 0-5 record in those games. Occasionally and temporarily making the far reaches of the top 25 doesn’t do much for me. But that’s the standard… Read more »
USC will play 5 of the top 25 this year…..would have been 6 with ND…..and Rutgers, Wisconsin will be no cake walk.
So either this stuff goes away or…….it’s going to be a long year.
Three of the ranked games are at home.
We’ll have an experienced OL, experienced QB and RB, and good receivers. A quality defensive staff and top notch special teams coach…….so if we lose…..got to be turbulence on the plane. 😡
That’s why I favor playing some cream puffs at the start as opposed to playing 12 top ten teams every year(well, I suppose that would be a little impossible)
I wish we would all stop complaining about our schedule.
If we didn’t want a tough go, we should have stayed in the Pac 12.
But instead, we intentionally blew it up for big $$$. I’ll be glad when good teams start complaining about USC on their schedules again, instead of vice versa.
USC may be taking some of these top teams to the wood shed this next season. We may be pleasantly surprised.
USC enters every season under Riley with the promise we will be “pleasantly surprised.” Every year, we’ve been forced to face the reality of the season, highlighted by bad defense, special teams and weak culture. But finally, Riley’s back is really against the wall. Even he knows by now how unpopular he is, with calls for his job, despite the massive payoff number, if he doesn’t make the playoffs. It’ll be fun when USC actually starts beating good teams instead of just talking about the possibility. I’ll hold off on the bragging, or reference to any “wood sheds” until USC… Read more »
Hey GT, and fellow TDB members …
If you were to rank these coaches in terms of their overall excellence, 1-10, how would you place them? Would your ranking be any different as far as your preference for them at USC goes?
Based on accomplishments as a HC. I think Swinney’s star is fading, Kiffin’s star is rising. Smart, Day, Cignetti and Lanning are the current elites. Riley, Sark and Elko remain to be seen. Sanders will be retired soon.
Thanks for answering GT.
I would have LR below Lanning, Kiffin and Elko. They’re all slam dunks as better coaches than Riley IMO and I would definitely prefer all of them to be at USC over Riley. Sark and Sanders, especially poor Sanders, don’t deserve their money if wins and losses is your measure.
Riley hasn’t been any good since he left OU, and as we all know, he was only successful there because Stoops was the resident Godfather.
and…..Cignetti landed free beer for life from Upland Brewing Company…..the local Bloomington brewery!
LOL……According to locals this might mean the brewery will not make it due to all the free beer.
Good, maybe he will become an alcoholic like “shooter” in ‘Hoosiers’ and then we won’t have to worry about Indiana
Overall poor football culture has always been a big problem with LR at USC throughout his first four years. Now USC is trying to aggressively address this through a culture flip, and most of us think it started with former ND GM Chad Bowden, and the decisive emergence of Jen Cohen as the leader. Tough-minded Bowden has never been afraid to take charge and ruffle feathers amongst the USC staff. Just ask D’Anton Lynn about how the two butted heads. Without a doubt, this “new USC culture” is also being further implemented at USC by the huge coordinator additions of… Read more »
For the first time in a long time there is a legit reason to be optimistic. The schedule is daunting but given a change in the defense…..who knows.
If Bowden, Patterson and Ekeler bring a toughness, take no prisoners, killer culture it becomes contagious. The D gives it to the O and the O will want to give it back and the same on special teams. Maybe we have arrived. Maybe not conference champs but 2nd or 3rd and into the playoffs. False hope is better than no hope!
I want to see those SC players choose to play in the bowl game instead of doing their own thing. That’s part of the culture as far as I am concerned. Either that or stop all this kool-aid about family and brotherhood and all that BS.
Tackling…it was refreshing to see great 1 on 1 tackling by Indiana and Miami after watching so much USC flag football. No bumper cars nonsense. Hopefully these new coaches will change that.
Cignetti somehow changed CFB in two years at IU. He didn’t need any excuses like most all mere mortal coaches do. He just took over and completely enforced his dominant winning will over a worthless football program.
I like your reference to “no bumper cars nonsense.” USC has been playing bumper cars under Riley.
We do have reason to be honestly hopeful I believe. USC football is shrouded by mystery as usual. But sometimes the unknown harbors pleasant surprises. Sometimes the Kool-Aid is more than just refreshing.
I’m optimistic by nature and an admitted spring kool-aid addict. I think these off-season coach changes are the second most significant (and potentially best) since the Helton-to-Riley change.
Local 2027 WR Quentin Hale Commits to USC Four-star WR Quentin Hale (6-3, 180, Corona Centennial) officially committed to USC over OU, TEXAS and LSU Friday afternoon. “They (USC) show me a lot of love,” Hale said. “They’ve just been consistent.” Hale was back on campus recently, and the consistent USC message hit home. Regular conversations with Chad Bowden and the USC staff always focused heavily on one theme: culture. “They talk about culture,” Hale said. “It’s a big priority to build culture at USC. You see them push it at USC.” WRs coach Dennis Simmons was instrumental in USC’s success here. “He’s a great guy,”… Read more »
Bowden is building well for ’27. Good get.
“Chad Bowden and the USC staff always focused heavily on one theme: culture. “They talk about culture,” Hale said. “It’s a big priority to build culture at USC. You see them push it at USC.” Question, who’s behind the culture and what kind of culture is it?
Ranking the conference realignment moves of the 2010s (Yahoo Sports) 1. Texas A&M: Big 12 to SEC 2. Utah: Mountain West to Pac-12 3. TCU: Mountain West to Big 12 TCU spent years wandering through conferences after the Southwest Conference dissolved, moving from the WAC to Conference USA to the Mountain West and briefly heading toward the Big East before landing in the Big 12. Gary Patterson had the Horned Frogs atop the league in their third season, and Sonny Dykes led them to the 2022 national title game. Alongside Utah, TCU stands as a major success story of… Read more »
This makes me spew my coffee! Princess getting her preseason accolades. The 1 seed could happen, but I think the tourney seeding committee will be aware of their garbage schedule and avoid outrage by seeding them lower.
Cupcakes abound for Notre Dame
Sept. 6 Wisconsin (Green Bay)
Sept. 12 Rice
Sept. 19 Michigan State
Sept. 26 at Purdue
Oct. 3 at North Carolina
Oct. 10 Stanford
Oct. 17 at BYU
Oct. 31 at Navy (Foxborough)
Nov. 7 Miami
Nov. 14 Boston College
Nov. 21 SMU
Nov. 28 at Syracuse
LOL……and Miami is at home…….
At least Notre Dame can no longer just let the grass grow long so as to slow down or even injure its fast track opponents like USC.
I wonder when USC will add its 12th opponent for this season, or is there a chance we will only play 11 2026 reg season games?
I fear the first FCS opponent for USC is coming. Who in LA will pay for that?
Given the new Riley tradition of playing the weakest (Missouri St) team around…..North Dakota St just joined the mountain west…….great potential for a memorable matchup. Think of the potential……Can we put 80 on the board…….
How can they possibly give up the revenue for the 12th game?
Riley will get on the phone and call some junior college team….but insist it be a home game.
Don’t be so sure about NDSU being a cupcake. Maybe pick on someone else. They have 10 NCAA Division I FCS titles (all since 2011) and 8 Division II national championships. NDSU is considered the most successful FCS program in history, with 10 titles in 15 seasons. They’re 9-5 against FBS teams.
As long as LR is calling plays in the 4th quarter, a loss to anyone is possible.
OK…..pick a weak mountain west program.
Dropping ND for a crap outfit isn’t going to look very good on the old USC resume. Fortunately, our schedule is tough enough to keep the haters at bay.
Frankly, I don’t care about the “never-playing an FCS team before” bragging point. The CFB world has changed anyway. A cupcake is a cupcake, whether it’s FBS or FCS.
I think if USC finally started fielding great teams again, the fans would come regardless of who the opponent is. JMHO.
I agree…….in his defense……is this me…….the schedule is a killers row. No need to dress it up……just the travel is a challenge. USC is now BIG playing the toughest teams around. No need to hang our heads……Wash St, Cal, Or St. etc are gone.
As for the season ticket fans…..they get a game against Ohio state, Oregon, Washington…..wow.
Please no!
I’ve said this before here, but ND should be disqualified from any playoff consideration with this schedule. Period. Not buying the sos is of importance narrative that is thrown out there. I would say the same for any team that has this schedule and expects to be in the playoffs. Yes USC needs to take care of their own business, but we need some order in the system.
It’s like playing in the mountain west and going 11-1 and claiming a spot…..maybe…..maybe not.
Good analogy !
When it comes to domers the committee will not want to upset them again. The committee will ignore their schedule as always.
Sorry 1972 Trojans. Where are you?
Total recency bias. I’d love to know the ages of those compiling this list.
It always shows doesn’t it.
Fortunately, help in the name of Mike Ekeler is coming —
Pro Football Focus ranked USC 124th out of 136 FBS teams when it came to special teams after the 2025 season, giving the Trojans a lowly 64.6 grade.
For the 2022 season, PFF graded USC’s play on special teams as the absolute worst in the country. That was back when Lincoln Riley famously stated he simply didn’t “believe in a singular special teams coordinator.”
Lets see.
LR minimized the priority / importance of a good solid defense ( national embarrassment) = now he believes
LR minimized the priority / importance of recruiting top OL’s and DL’s = now he believes
LR minimized the priority / importance of recruiting the top players in the nation less than an hour away from campus = now he believes
LR minimized the priority / importance of having a focused special teams coordinator (statistically national embarrassment) = now he believes
Folks, that’s a lot growth. Which was unnecessary.
So being tied to a monumental buyout which USC wanted to avoid, they have taken everything you said and turned him around. Lets see, kind of like Jesus said, go and sin no more from this time forward. Lets see what we have in a head coach from this time forward. I think GP is going to have a huge effect on Riley. We have a real good staff to get it done.
Agree. To date the best staff so far. I just commented to Allen that I hope GP doesn’t hold his tongue and mentors LR. Yes, LR has a deserved reputation for stubbornness in the wrong areas, but I have cautious hope. This year’s schedule is arguably the hardest in the nation, so it’s somewhat of a now or never situation.
You would think Lincoln Riley had learned a lot more at OU than he did. He somehow mysteriously arrived at USC remarkably unprepared and misguided in so many regards and has basically used USC as a coaching training ground. Yet he’s never been able to establish a winning culture. Unfortunately, that’s his honest history here along with his newfound generational wealth. Thankfully, USC remains one of the great brands in CFB and is a recruiting magnet and preferred coaching destination which has helped elevate Riley and USC to a place where it’s possible we won’t have to watch USC football… Read more »
I agree that we now have the best staff helping LR to date. You wondered why LR didn’t pick up more from his time at OU. I’ve thought that from the beginning. Stoops is considered one of the all time great HC’s in CFB. I watched a documentary on OU ( Stoops years) and they ran very physical practices with energy and focused efficiency. Perhaps LR was too young. Let’s hope GP doesn’t hold his tongue and mentors LR.
Even a University President & AD who gives a HC like Riley everything but the kitchen sink to help
him win championships will eventually pull back over time if the return on investment doesn’t happen. Riley should get on his knees thanking his lucky stars he didn’t have to deal with a Nikias & Haden.
We are all thanking our lucky stars they are now gone.
That is negligence in the extreme, and an act worthy of a tarmacing, and one of which none of us would have survived in our professions.
I have a suspicion Gary Patterson copied some of FSU D coordinator Mickey Andrews under HC Bobby Bowden substituting raw strength at linebacker with speed pitting strong safeties there. His defenses were #1 in CFB during the 1990s. The O-linemen couldn’t block the Backers in being too quick to block. I don’t know if Andrew’s is still alive, but I’d sure like to know what he thought of Payterson’s defense.
This is Paul Gonzales, the new safeties and passing game coord from BAY who coached under Gary Patterson at TCU from 2012-21.
You would think he may have learned a few things being under Aranda to boot.
Expected Commitment Comes Through
DL Isaia Vandermade (6-2, 270, 3-star, SMC, CA), committed to USC today. He’s commit #3 for the 2027 class. A legacy recruit — former Trojan coach Lenny Vandermade played for USC’s 2003 national championship team.
Isaia is known for his high-motor, versatile game. He quickly committed within 10 days of his offer from coaches Shaun Nua and Skyler Jones.
Vandermade joins CB Aaryn Washington and WR Eli Woodard among the Trojans’ first three 2027 commits.
On film he looks great
Isaia Vandermade…..On tape that kid looks great…..on offense and defense….They have him listed as a 3 star….what a joke. This year he had 8 sacks in the last 3 games of the season.
He’s got a non-stop motor. His technique is great with a number of moves like swim moves. He’s quick enough to go around an O-Lineman and strong enough to bull rush the O-Lineman. Apparently, Henderson didn’t want this guy. It was Nua who was impressed with him and after Henderson left they brought him in.
Robert Duval won the “Best Actor” Award for “Tender Mercies” playing Max Sledge: “I’m not a bad person, I’m just a bad drunk”.
Duval was nominated for “The Great Santini” while tormenting his son: “ you gonna cry”.
In “Assassination Tango” he lived in Argentina for months learning to dance the tango, later dancing tango at the White House.
How can one forget “Apocalypse Now” with those sad lines: “ I love the smell of napalm in the morning” and “Charlie don’t surf”.
True Grit, the Godfather….. what an artist and scene stealer. His acting added patina to his films.
Tender Mercies, where Tess Harper saves his boozy, low-key ass, is quite an amazing movie.
Duvall even wrote some songs and did his own country music vocals. As prep, he also drove through Texas learning local accents while observing country musicians.
After learning of his daughter’s sudden death: “See, I don’t trust happiness. I never did, I never will.”
Did you know that Duval sang ” I love to tell the story” with Emmylou Harris on the Letterman show? They sounded spectacular. Mr. Duval was a multi talented giant in the entertainment industry
Goodbye to a great actor. May Robert Duvall rest in peace.
The range of roles he played, to perfection, was amazing!
Duvall’s ability to quietly dominate films in so many varying roles was uncanny. His subtle, wry sense of humor effortlessly permeated through so much of his work I can’t think of another actor who would have been more fun and interesting to spend an hour with off-camera.
What a great career……and a man with class. He actually stood up to John Wayne. RIP.
Duvall generally enjoyed the life of a supporting actor. “Somebody once said that the best life in the world is the life of a second leading man. You travel, you get a per diem, and you’ve probably got a better part anyway. And you don’t have the weight of the entire movie on your shoulders.”
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — Trojan Tidbits —Chad Bowden wasn’t subtle about his expectations for next season. USC’s general manager told reporters that he was “on a warpath” heading into 2026. He made clear that success next season is “black and white. You’re either in the playoffs or you’re not,” he said. He added that fans “should be unhappy” with a nine-win season and that he was “sick to his stomach” about it. Strong words from someone whose opinion matters a lot within Heritage Hall. Chalk it up as more evidence that a Playoff appearance is the baseline of expectations for… Read more »
The gauntlet is down, playoffs for bust for Riley!
Who would have thought local guys will take less money to stay close to home and play in front of family. Says something that USC doesn’t have to out bid everybody to get talent.
Well they only need 2 LBs on the field so they should have depth with 11 guys. One LB is considered the Mike and the other the Will.
I am glad to see the standard and expectations for next season have been raised. I want Riley to succeed but he needs to prove he can get us to playoffs.
The February Trojan Kool-Aid is sweeter than usual this off-season. Year five of LR might actually not be a disappointment, and the “on the warpath” nature of Chad Bowden’s approach seems like just what the doctor ordered.
But the proof will be in the pudding, and being a little gun shy while cautiously optimistic seems to the recipe for me about now. We definitely have a shot at the playoffs. LR just has to make it happen, because the buck stops with him.
If Indiana can do it, why can’t USC?
I wonder if this is the beginning of Chad distancing himself from Riley in having seen enough of an overwhelmed HC given so much to help him win and not really seeing improvement from making so many mistakes as the USC HC? Bowden is about results, doing what he says he will do. And this is not what we are seeing, let alone hearing from Riley. Chad sees the effort & results of AD Jen Cohend and that, thank goodness, is probably the reason we haven’t seen or heard of any rumors Chad wants to leave. The team of Bowden… Read more »
literally creating a human administrative and coaching protective circle around Riley so all he has to do is worry about not calling a fade on 3rd down at the 2 yard line is not going to cut it. The football fundamentals are not going to miraculously appear even if Saban and Cignetti were added as well. At the end of the day we have someone who cut their teeth on a niche outdated offense and little else. But but but….he scores lots of points! So did Washington state, the old Texas Tech and wherever Hal Mumme went. Outscoring is simply… Read more »
Quick Summary 1 DC D’Anton Lynn departs for the DC job at PSU, his alma mater. 2 Co-DC/DL coach Eric Henderson returns to the NFL as the Washington Commanders DL coach. 3 DB coach Doug Belk’s contract isn’t renewed; He is now the Denver Broncos DB coach, replacing recently-fired CB coach Addison Lynch. Broncos WR coach Keary Colbert was also let go and Colbert is now the WR coach of the Baltimore Ravens. 4 Former TCU HC and 2026 CFB Hall of Fame electee Gary Patterson becomes USC’s third DC under Lincoln Riley and will implement a 4-2-5 scheme. 5 Mike… Read more »
After seeing that 2 years ago Riley wanted GP to replace Grinch I am fairly confident in the D staff. GP wanted some time off at the time and Riley went with Lynn instead. Now we get a recharged DC that USC football brain trust wanted all along. Why did it take so long to announce? I would think it was figuring out who was staying, who was leaving and who to bring in. Henderson as Co-DC was just a title. Belk wasn’t going to fit. Ekeler and Gonzales left good teams to do the same job. Gonzales knows GP’s… Read more »
The wife is an optimist, which is probably why she married this cynical Trojan. Three (3) USC degrees, amortized over decades of football mediocrity, discounted to present value, equal minimal ROI. Lincoln Riley is 43 years old and undeniably had a far superior negotiating attorney/agent when Bohn gleefully cast Trojan nation’s feet into a 10-year cement contract. Year five, we are in the same place. That diminutive ex-president Foltz countersigned that illusory contract, which probably in part account’s why she too is gone. Gleeful posts implying LR is the next coming, “makes me wanna puke” and ignores history. LR hired… Read more »
Cynical doesn’t describe it. I have my doubts about Riley, but by all accounts, the Patterson hire was brilliant. Riley hired GP because he hated having to game plan vs. the HOF coach. He knew that Patterson got the most out of players. Let’s be honest- If SC hired Jim Leonard or Matt Patricia as their DC, you would be complaining it was a lazy hire. You don’t sound like you thought this through, but just hate Lincoln so much, you oppose all of his moves.
Well stated and on target…….although painful to accept. It all boils down to the same thing…..change this, change that……but don’t change the one thing that needs to change.
But LR is gifted in the area of offense. Sometimes when you have a gifted HC on offense or defense or a gifted OC or DC, the team can potentially go far. All they have to do is find someone who can adequately handle the other side of the LOS. SC did pretty well under Pete who was a defensive genius. The Bears and the 1969 Jets did well when Buddy Ryan was there. The Vikings did well when defensive genius Bud Grant was there. The Cowboys had Tom Landry on defense and the Packers had Vince Lombardi on offense.… Read more »
Being “gifted” on offense isn’t nearly good enough when you’re basically a dunce on defense, special teams, and culture-building. Having great assts or other coords is fantastic if you can line ’em up to integrate your program and fill out the gaps where your expertise is literally non-existent. But Lincoln Riley hasn’t been able to do that in four years. He’s been a total bust in those areas outside of offense. And his offense under Caleb Williams was too centric on Caleb, and totally ineffective with Caleb off the field, or simply playing reckless Hero Ball. Lincoln has never been… Read more »
“Being “gifted” on offense isn’t nearly good enough when you’re basically a dunce on defense, special teams, and culture-building”. Tell me how you feel. Don’t hold anything back. He’s a dunce on defense. But you now have GP. He’s a dunce on special teams.But you have Mike Ekeler. He’s a dunce on culture building. But you have Bowden and Cohen. SC is building a program….putting the right people in the right places. If LR doesn’t straighten up and fly right, he won’t be there much longer. I can’t help thinking Bowden and Cohen are already thinking “we have to get… Read more »
Hey, we’re all pulling for LR. It’s not like I want the guy to flop. I’ve just gotten used to it. We all want him to become the great coach we thought we had. But you’re right. While I have no idea what Cohen or Bowden really think of LR, this program should be ready to pop. So bring it home LR. Start beating the best teams, not just the also rans. Get this USC football culture fixed and field a balanced, dangerous USC team with a killer instinct that finishes strong and can push some people around when it… Read more »
I agree that we can’t wait forever for this guy. Certainly not the 10 years or whatever his contract runs. We should make the playoffs in 2026. It will be interesting to see what they will do if we don’t
I’ve always said that LR is young and evolving. He’s saying the right things which means there has been an evolution in his thoughts. He didn’t think that way back at Oklahoma. Back then he thought he could go 15-0(winning every game 50-49) and win an NC without a great defense. Let’s hope that his new defensive language will bring practical results on the field and is not just more kool-aid.
The best thing to ever happen to Lincoln Riley was Jen Cohen.
The next best thing was Chad Bowden, who would never have been brought aboard without Cohen’s authorization and huge financial outlay.
Without those things, and Bowden’s new recruiting strategy, Riley would be blah, blah, blah, and still recruiting more in Georgia than Calif.
Riley owes a lot to USC. Much more than USC owes to Riley (except money).
The third best thing may be Gary Patterson. Interesting in your previous post that they wanted Patterson 2 years ago over Lynn but GP wanted some time off. Wonder what took so long? Maybe figuring out the rest of the staff.
I am confident that USC football will return to it’s glory days. I’m just not sure how soon. It depends upon how fast LR evolves or whether they have to get someone else. But they have a lot of power people in the administration behind them now. I don’t think that they had that before. The way I understand it(and I have no inside info…..just what I’ve read) Steven B Sample came on as president in 1991. He was quoted as saying that he wanted to make SC the Princeton of the west academically. He has succeeded to a certain… Read more »
I’ve never understood why it had to be either/or. A university such as USC can be both an academic and athletic power, they’re not mutually exclusive. Just get the right people to lead each pursuit.
agreed
The problem is not that they can’t do both. The problem is that they don’t want to do both. You have many professors out there (some are on the board of trustees) who may be making peanuts compared with what these coaches and athletes make. Lets say a professor makes $200,000 a year. LR makes 550 times that. These professors look at him as a glorifies jock who has no advanced degrees like them and they are just plain jealous. You have those same professor types all over the country but here on the left coast they feel empowered to… Read more »
There are 2 kinds of leftists. Ones with little money and don’t want anybody else to have money. And those with a lot of money and feel guilty. CEOs, Big time entrepreneurs, actors, musicians, coaches and athletes get paid a lot because few people can do it. Simple Econ 101 supply and demand. Even professors should understand that.
You’ve shown me an example of great logical thinking. My question is “what’s logical thinking got to do with leftists”. The phrases logical thinking and leftists are oxymorons. They are like talking about a square circle.
As George Orwell said, “some ideas are so ridiculous only intellectuals would consider them”.
It’s true….you need a lot of education to get you to the nonsense level where you start believing that a man can have a baby and there are not 2 genders but 50-100 and you can be a boy today and a girl tomorrow and we can keep the peace with social workers rather than policemen.and ICE is evil because they are trying to rid the streets of cartel members and MS-13 and Tren de agua and socialism is great. Leftists will say……”I don’t believe all of that”…..but you vote for people who do.
True….If there is a big demand and a small supply, somebody is going to make a lot of money
The problem with getting someone else, they have to start all over. That would make many fans even more unhappy. It seems that fans think USC can call anyone and they will automatically come simply because it is USC. It isn’t that way any more, and with players they will leave at the drop of a hat, which makes it even harder to start all over. We hang with Riley simply because it is the fastest way to get to the top. I do believe he can get us there, especially now with GP, and hopefully Riley gains some wisdom… Read more »
I do believe LR has some promise especially since he really is great offensively but you can’t wait forever.
Agree completely. Riley doesn’t know how lucky he is to have those two in his corner. The financial investment in facilities and NIL are so critical. Getting top assistant coaches, and being able to pay for them is crucial. And if it wasn’t for Bowden, Riley would probably still devaluing defense and special teams. And we would still be losing recruiting battles to schools in the Southeast, instead of prioritizing L.A. area players. Without those two, there is zero chance Riley succeeds. Even with them, he still might fail.
Or with them and GP he may soar and succeed. Lets have some hope.
One thing that has been great for change in Riley, the fact they keep getting their ass kicked in the B1G by the good teams. It seems as though he finally wants to fight back. Lets see if this is the staff and team to do it.
We’ll see
Has USC’s Time Truly Come? Lincoln Riley: “It’s time for us to be great on defense. Plain and simple. It is time. The players are here. The setup is here. It is time to step up into that next level of defensive play, consistently.” Erik McKinney (WeAreSC) — USC hasn’t had a “great” defense in quite a while. The Trojans finished No. 49 in total defense (yards allowed per game) last year. You have to go back to the 2013 season to find a USC defense that finished the season with a top-25 unit in terms of yards allowed per… Read more »
An interesting point in your post USC’s defense was #13 in 2013. That’s the half and half plus Helton season. Kiffin was left at the airport, Orgeron fired up the team and Helton coached the bowl game. I wonder what chemistry was at work during that season, which can be channeled into a better outcome this season.
Sounds like Riley has talked himself into no excuses for this coming season. He’s got talent, depth, staff and resources to get it done.Third place, at least, in the Big10 or LR’s butt will be burning.
As far as LR finally discovering there are no more excuses, he really has no choice. It’s been forced upon him by USC fans now that he’s in year five of his pass-happy disappointing tenure. Many of us have been completely done with his excuses for several years already. Others are much more patient, despite his complete failures as both a coach and leader in the areas of culture, defense and special teams. I’d say he’s got it darn good. Here you are talking about him just having to get to 3rd place in the B1G. We’ve come a long… Read more »