“We’re Going To Win a Natty This Year” — Husan Longstreet

Inside USC’s pursuit of Centennial QB Husan Longstreet

Patience, loyalty and hard work pay off as the Trojans and the 5-star quarterback appear to be a natural fit

Quarterback Husan Longstreet gives an interview after signing to play for USC at a National Signing Day ceremony Dec. 4, 2024, at Centennial High School in Corona. (Photo by Anjali Sharif-Paul, The Sun/SCNG)
QB Husan Longstreet gives an interview after signing to play for USC at a NSD ceremony Dec. 4, 2024, at Corona Centennial HS. (Photo by Anjali Sharif-Paul, The Sun/SCNG)

Luca Evans (OC Register)  —  LOS ANGELES — For a moment, finally, Husan Longstreet is still. His feet don’t like it. His eyes don’t like it. His trainer is distracted, and he is afforded a break. But there is no time for breaks. So the 18-year-old quarterback walks to a nearby mirror, holds his hands out for an imaginary snap, and the world fades.

He drops back, studying his reflection as it dances. He mimes a handoff. He mimes a three-step drop. His legs repeat, drilling himself, tracing his footsteps. Again. Again.

Football is – it’s an art, Longstreet explains later, finally settling on the right word.

“Like, it’s a canvas,” he says, stretching his hands out in front of him. “You can write whatever you want on it.”

Longstreet, the five-star QB at the center of USC’s future, writes with passion. He writes with love. He was homeschooled in the seventh grade, his parents hoping it’d build discipline; it did, but not quite in the way they hoped. He’d put off his homework to watch clips of Kobe Bryant, engrossed in his mentality. He’d look up and jot down every step of Tom Brady’s workout regimen, his sleep schedule, his nutrition.

He’s beaten the sun every morning since. He’s beaten the sun again, this Thursday morning in November. It’s still dark in Lake Forest, and thwacks echo across the empty parking lot in front of Saddleback Strength and Conditioning, as Longstreet whips a medicine ball at a concrete wall inside. Sophia Longstreet sits outside in a Nissan, for two hours, scrolling on her phone. Her son needed a ride. He didn’t need supervision.

“Like, he’s different,” trainer Tony Velasquez gushes. Longstreet overhears and grins.

The kid’s life is simple. Longstreet wakes up at 3:30 a.m. He prays. He stretches. He goes to school. He practices. He studies the playbook. He sleeps. Faith, family, football. Any kind of flash, as he says, isn’t “part of my thing.”

Flash, ultimately, is not USC head coach Lincoln Riley’s thing, either. He valued Longstreet’s mentality, as Riley gushed on National Signing Day. He values his dedication to the game. Eventually, across a whirlwind of a recruitment, Longstreet became his guy.

Eventually.

Anthony Catalano, Centennial’s assistant head coach, was honestly surprised it worked out. Kevin Longstreet didn’t think his son would be a Trojan. For months, USC was committed to another quarterback. For months, Longstreet was committed to Texas A&M. It all could’ve easily been unraveled by ego, as Riley stuck by Georgia five-star Julian Lewis for much of the cycle.

Longstreet, ultimately, didn’t care. He didn’t care that USC pursued Lewis instead of him. He didn’t care that he was offered “way less” money to play at USC than at Texas A&M, as father Kevin said.

“I mean, it’s a lot of places I could’ve went and got money, and just did that,” Longstreet says. “But it wasn’t, it wasn’t – it’s never that. It’s never a money thing, for me.”

This was about his future teacher, in Riley. This was about art. This was about his canvas.

A natural fit

In his junior year, Longstreet arrived at Centennial, after transferring from Inglewood, weighing roughly 170 pounds. On that Thursday at Saddleback, strapping a heavy vest to his chest for power-cleans and crunches, he sat at 205 pounds. Catalano has never heard of Longstreet eating any kind of fast food. Not once.

“My goal,” Longstreet said of his physical development, “was to be like, ‘What would I look like at the next level right now?’”

That’s dictated his mentality, for much of his life, in all areas. In that time he was homeschooled, Longstreet listened to Bryant’s words and did a self-evaluation. He wasn’t fulfilling his true potential, he felt. Again, he was in seventh grade. Didn’t matter. I know I can do more, Longstreet told himself.

He arrived at Centennial to prepare himself to learn the game of collegiate football. He was in charge of pass-protection. He audibled. He checked out of plays to scramble. Throughout his recruitment, Catalano remembered, Longstreet was most interested in the intricacies of various programs’ offenses. At one point, while being recruited by Auburn, he called former Tigers quarterback and current Green Bay Packer Malik Willis to pepper him with questions on Auburn’s system.

Where did you feel prepared for the NFL? Where did you feel behind? 

“I don’t know what else he would do,” Catalano said of Longstreet, “if he didn’t have football. And you can’t say that about every kid.”

The top goal for Longstreet has been to make it to the NFL. A natural fit, then, existed 50 miles northwest of Corona, with a coach in South L.A. who’d produced five quarterbacks that started NFL games in 2024. It was the “writing on the wall,” Longstreet says, to choose USC and Riley.

USC just didn’t choose him, for a year.

Riley has recruited his quarterbacks with extreme precision, dating to his days at Oklahoma, one to rule them all, every two years. And Lewis, long viewed as the top quarterback in the class, had committed to Riley in August 2023, and reclassed from 2026 to 2025 partly at the USC head coach’s behest. Both sides held firm, even as Lewis took highly publicized visits to other programs and never publicly shut down his commitment.

“That guy has tremendous loyalty,” Kevin Longstreet said, reflecting on Riley’s process. “He will go into battle, and he would die with his guys. You know what I mean? And that’s a good thing. It could be a bad thing, it could be a good thing. And that’s what we got from him.”

Longstreet had wanted to play for USC since he was 9, when his family moved to California from Louisiana, watching Amon-Ra St. Brown and JT Daniels ball at Mater Dei and go on to USC. But Lewis was committed. And Lewis reclassed. And Longstreet never met Riley in person throughout that period. So Longstreet pledged to Texas A&M in the spring of 2024.

One thread still remained, though. One thread that refused to fray. His name was Luke Huard.

‘You’re the guy we want’

By blood, Huard is a quarterback. Brother Damon played in the NFL. Brother Brock played in the NFL. Nephew Sam played for Washington. Huard, himself, played for North Carolina.

A couple years ago, when Huard was USC’s inside-receivers coach, he visited Inglewood to check out now-Oregon tight end Jamari Johnson. But Huard, who became USC’s quarterbacks coach in 2024, came away particularly drawn to Longstreet. Huard told him he liked his grit, Longstreet remembered.

For months that followed, Longstreet’s father Kevin said, Huard “never wavered” from Longstreet, even as USC had Lewis committed. On visits to Centennial, Huard would walk up to Kevin at practice and bellow the same words.

I’m going to coach your son, he’d tell Longstreet’s father. I’m going to coach your son one day.

“I was kind of laughing it off,” Kevin chuckled, “like, ‘I don’t know, man.’”

They were never in consideration for Longstreet in the winter and spring, Catalano reflected. The sands shifted, though, in the summer, Lewis still taking visits: Auburn, Indiana, Colorado. House of Victory’s final offer to Lewis dangled. Quietly, Riley met Longstreet for the first time in August, part of an all-out push by USC to flip him from Texas A&M.

“They finally, for the first time, told him to his face – ‘You’re the guy we want,’” Catalano recalled.

Longstreet was loyal, same as Riley. He stuck with Texas A&M. But the seed was planted. As the Aggies’ season progressed, Longstreet started reviewing tape of an offense that finished 94th of 134 FBS teams in passing yards per game in 2024. He loved head coach Mike Elko. He loved offensive coordinator Collin Klein. He did not love the scheme.

“And that’s when Coach Riley and those guys came back around, and was like, ‘Listen, look at what you’re doing (at A&M),’” Kevin said. “And Coach Riley, shoot, put the fork in him. You know what I mean? It was done.”

Riley had planted himself in Longstreet’s ear, the quarterback seeing a spread-out offense that more clearly prioritized the pass. Quietly, as Kevin remembered, Longstreet told Riley over the phone he was coming, a month before he actually flipped. His dad tried to slow his roll, telling him they hadn’t much as seen USC’s weight room yet. Dude, what is wrong with you? But his heart had changed.

Things fell into line quickly. The week before USC’s game against Nebraska on Nov. 16, Longstreet committed under-the-table to USC. After a win that night, Longstreet walked into the locker room and told the coaching staff he was coming. The next morning, Longstreet called Texas A&M and let him know he was flipping; USC, according to Longstreet, then called Lewis to inform him.

Lewis’ father T.C. largely declined to comment on the exact sequence of events, but said he hoped “nothing but the best” for USC and Riley. Lewis flipped to Colorado.

Once the news became public, Riley FaceTimed Longstreet. Over the phone, USC’s newest quarterback heard USC’s John McKay Center roaring.

“Coach Riley said, it’s the most excited,” Longstreet remembered, “he’s been in a while.”

‘It’s not about me’

On Thursday, Longstreet walked out of USC’s John McKay Center for the program’s bowl-game practice with the rest of the team, wearing a white hoodie. He wasn’t in pads. His paperwork hadn’t been fully cleared, just yet.

But he’d already joined the program, immediately after his graduation from Centennial. Weeks ago, he’d built a regimen with Velasquez and his father, designing workouts at Saddleback to physically prepare himself to step immediately into collegiate football. Longstreet’s been reviewing Riley’s playbook, too, since his Centennial season ended in late November, aiming to get cleared to suit up with USC for a couple bowl-game practices.

“I mean, just another situation of, if I am going to be that guy,” Longstreet said last week, “it’s not going to take long for me to just, understand the offense.”

Whether Riley will trust him immediately remains to be seen. Rising redshirt junior Jayden Maiava seems poised to continue as USC’s starter come 2025, a dual-threat chaos agent who impressed and frustrated across three starts to close 2024.

“I mean, I’m always gonna look for competition, so,” Longstreet said last week. “I’m blessed enough to just be in a position and – have the chance to go in and battle with Jayden.”

“But, 100%, I mean, if he wins the job, I’m behind him 100%,” Longstreet continued. “I’m, I like to do what’s best for the team. It’s not about me.”

At the same time, after last week’s workout at Saddleback, he waxed poetic about his hopes for the future at USC. He beamed from ear to ear when discussing fellow top 2025 signee Jahkeem Stewart, a five-star defensive lineman, noting the program now had “two young leaders on both sides of the ball.” This 2025 season, Longstreet promised, would be special.

Finally, asked what message he had for USC’s fans, he paused and smiled.

“Be ready for this season,” he answered. “Because, we’re going to go get a natty this year. For sure.”

This year?, he was asked.

“This year.”

Asked again if he was standing on that, Longstreet smiled: “Yes, I stand on that. We’re going to win a natty. This year.”

ocregister.com

___________

TrojanDailyBlog members —  We always encourage you to add factual information, insight, divergent opinions, or new topics to the TDB that don’t necessarily pertain to any particular moderator post or member comment.

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Fighton74
Noble Genius
Fighton74
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December 27, 2024 12:02 pm

I think hypothetically what is needed is a good AD who supports the direction of the program. I think that would be an alum for the HC position is the direction you go. PC AD or HC. Jeff Fisher HC or Jack Del Rio probably Fisher unless a name comes out of the hat of an elite DC HC candidate. Keep Lynn. Hire forward thinking OC, and a developmental offensive coach.

Fighton74
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Fighton74
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December 27, 2024 11:40 am

The money issue for the University right now is no bueno at all. These are all the outside issues that USC is dealing with because of people they have hired that lack integrity and thrive on greed, and that have cost the University a lot of money in lawsuits etc. USC needs to hire people with integrity, discipline, mental toughness, and accountability. Not people of flash and show offs. Now you have done so much damage that you can’t give players full NIL and you have to hang on to a coach who is a flashy Offensive guru, and is… Read more »

Fighton74
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Fighton74
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December 27, 2024 11:28 am

Well guys I have to say based on what I have seen in the transfer portal and de commits. I’d say things are starting to catch up with Riley. I think we got some good talent from the Portal and our commits, and obviously de-commits and transfer portal is normal thing now, however Riley is loosing more talent than he is gaining so far!!!!

volunteerTrojan
Major Genius
December 27, 2024 11:52 am
Reply to  Fighton74

I agree. So far it looks like a net loss.

illinoisusc
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illinoisusc
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December 27, 2024 7:59 am

Anybody know if A&M is going with its regular DL? I’d like to see how our OL of the future does tonight against another line. I understand Monheim is out so the line will be the starters from next year unless we hit the portal.
I’am getting some sleep tonight and will watch it on Saturday. Indy time start is 10:30 est.

parcelman007
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parcelman007
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December 27, 2024 7:55 am

SC will have a good solid D-Line. They could probably use a LB or two and a D-Back or 2. But they should have a real good defense next year. But if they don’t get one or two more O-Linemen or quickly develope a few, they will have the same problem on offense(and probably worse) that they had this year……not a great running game and a QB who does not have enough time to make his reads in the passing game. A lot will depend also on how good of a line coach Zach Hanson turns out to be. Nobody… Read more »

Fighton74
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December 27, 2024 1:47 pm
Reply to  parcelman007

Could not agree more O-line is horrendous. I don’t know much about this Hanson guy, but I do know it’s gonna get worse before it gets better if we are not developing O-linemen. Crucial piece for LR. Especially if you are struggling to get talented linemen.

USCrosegreen
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December 27, 2024 1:29 am

Alternative medicine is when you go to the traditional doctor and he says you need a liver transplant, however you can go to an alternative doc and get a easier kidney transplant. Likewise, in FB, longball Riley opts for a long ball pass on 4th and 2, instead of the traditional quick slant in or similar safer play. And this blog is also alternative: an upcoming bowl game demands pre game analysis and remarks; this blog opts for alternative chit chat about a new QB.😆

ATL D.D.S.
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ATL D.D.S.
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December 27, 2024 6:05 am
Reply to  USCrosegreen

The bowl games, which I used to love, have deteriorated to the point to where they are only slightly above a spring game with a different team. Key players sitting out or portalling drops interest in the last game of another failed season under Riley the magnificent. Alternative blog, really?

volunteerTrojan
Major Genius
December 27, 2024 7:35 am
Reply to  USCrosegreen

An alternative to what? This implies there is another “mainstream, generally considered as the normal and standard” blog out there. I know not any. This is a wonderful site with a wide variety of collected and published articles with a wide variety of opinions and experiences from knowledgeable Trojan fans. Very few fan bases have an equivalent forum to enjoy. If it’s an alternative, it’s an alternative to the trite, shallow, uninformative fan sites that dominate the “interwebs”.

USCrosegreen
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December 27, 2024 1:46 pm

“That is to say” [ as Dr Wolf used to say in Biochem]: There is/was very little chit chat about tonight’s game…one can view an in depth rooster for the game on USC trojan/24/7. I get the feeling that Trojan fans [ like me] are very apprehensive…that the Trojans will be blown out early [ I hope I am wrong].😟

DanaPtTrojan
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DanaPtTrojan
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December 26, 2024 11:50 am

Privately I agree that age waits for no man. It will be interesting how the McKaskey’s handle this age issue, if they mention it at all. Any comment about “age” as a disqualifying hiring factor raises Title IX implications. Best solution: offer to hire Pete as Caleb’s QB mentor or coach on a one year basis. Pretty sure Pete would walk away from that. And damn sure the McKaskey’s are too cheap to hire an expensive tier one head coach on the open market. And there is no way in hell USC will hire Pete as a GM. Pete’s announcement… Read more »

Jamaica
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Jamaica
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December 26, 2024 12:22 pm
Reply to  DanaPtTrojan

Dana PT granted the big reason PC wouldn’t take the USC GM job if offered would Riley’s ego. Two big ego’s competing with eachother would be frustrating and in the way of accomplishment. LR’s big contract versus PC’s success.

parcelman007
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parcelman007
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December 25, 2024 11:54 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

PC is too old. He need to just be an analyst at USC or something like that.

Jamaica
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Jamaica
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December 26, 2024 9:55 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

How old was Bud Wilkerson when he took the Cardinal job? Rick Vermiel with KC? I’d say PC was in better shape than those two for sure. But I think what has been discussed here recently, PC would be the ideal GM for USC football to get it straightened out. But only if LR was cooperating in understanding it’s about the program’s development and not about what he thinks he knows, which so far indicates very little about rebuilding as the program continues to flounder. That would be Jen Cohend’s responsibility to broker an understanding between the any GM and… Read more »

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
December 26, 2024 10:18 am
Reply to  Jamaica

I guess it all depends on LR’s contract. Who he has to take orders from and what orders he has to take.

parcelman007
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parcelman007
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December 26, 2024 11:13 am
Reply to  Jamaica

BW was only 62 when he took over the Cardinals and he was only 9-20 in 2 years with the Cardinals and Vermeil was 44-36 with the Chiefs but he was only 65 when he took over the Chiefs

parcelman007
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parcelman007
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December 26, 2024 11:14 am
Reply to  parcelman007

PC is 73

Jamaica
Noble Genius
Jamaica
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December 26, 2024 12:17 pm
Reply to  parcelman007

Stand corrected. For some reason I thought Wilkerson was older.

Jamaica
Noble Genius
Jamaica
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December 26, 2024 12:17 pm
Reply to  Jamaica

Wilkenson

SC Gator
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SC Gator
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December 26, 2024 12:46 pm
Reply to  Jamaica

Wilkinson

parcelman007
Noble Genius
parcelman007
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December 27, 2024 7:43 am
Reply to  Jamaica

In all fairness, in those days it was harder for a college head coach to become a pro HC. The Players would look at him like he thought that their practice was to chant Rah,Rah, Rah for 2 hours. I think it was Jimmy Johnson who changed all of that.

illinoisusc
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illinoisusc
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December 26, 2024 10:40 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

As bear fan who is desperate for a good coach…..CPC is not the answer. Everyone who is 70 plus knows that as much as we like to pretend…..some days it’s just not there. The presidents have massive staffs that do all the work…..a head coach has to be hands on most days.

parcelman007
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parcelman007
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December 26, 2024 11:04 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

College and pro coaching is very stressful and it takes a lot of energy. Once you hit 70 you just don’t have the kind of energy you had when you were 50.

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
December 25, 2024 8:24 am

Merry Christmas to all. Faith, family and freinds are more important than football. But it’s right up there. 😎

illinoisusc
Major Genius
illinoisusc
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December 25, 2024 5:33 am

Merry Christmas to all! No white cover here in Indy. Hopefully somebody has it.

John Weld
Admin
Major Genius
John Weld
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December 24, 2024 10:33 pm

Wishing everyone a very Merry Christmas filled with family, friends and good food!

DanaPtTrojan
Genius Member
DanaPtTrojan
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December 24, 2024 7:36 pm

Merry Christmas to Trojan Nation!
Never give up!!!!! Fight On!

Steveg
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Steveg
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December 24, 2024 6:07 pm

I am sure nobody is to excited we got a new punter, but then we would sure be upset if Riley didn’t go get one. Looks like he might be pretty good with a 47.1 yard average.

Merry Christmas to our little family here at TDB.

ATL D.D.S.
Major Genius
ATL D.D.S.
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December 24, 2024 7:03 am

Merry Christmas, ye merry fellows of the TDB nation, as we look forward to yet another coal-filled Trojan Football Stocking tomorrow.

I don’t know about y’all, but I’ve been really good in 2024 and I think we deserve better!😂

RialtoTrojan
Major Genius
RialtoTrojan
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December 23, 2024 7:17 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Bear Alexander to Oregon? It might be interesting for them. I remember when he transferred to USC and fans at his last stop were talking trash about him saying he wasn’t that good and often didn’t put effort into his play.
My question is should we be frank about our feelings or let Oregon pander to his lack of experience?

Jamaica
Noble Genius
Jamaica
Offline
December 23, 2024 1:22 pm

I’m sure Husan is “ different “. Question is are those in front and to the side of him on the field “ different too”?

Golden Trojan
Major Genius
December 23, 2024 2:31 pm
Reply to  Jamaica

Question is will the HC run the ball enough to give his QB a chance? You can’t win a Natty, a playoff game or even get to the playoffs passing 60% of the time. You may get enough reps throwing to get to the NFL though.

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