Jayden Maiava, in first USC start, leads Trojans past Nebraska…
The new quarterback throws for 259 yards and accounts for four touchdowns in a 28-20 Big Ten victory. But it was running back Woody Marks who once again proved to be the steadying hand, even as Maiava took the reins. Marks ran for 146 yards on 19 carries to go with six catches for 39 yards.
Luca Evans (OC Register) — LOS ANGELES — Nine plays in, this attempt at an offensive revolution at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum stood in danger of dying before it’d even begun, USC head coach Lincoln Riley resting his hand encouragingly on his young quarterback’s shoulder pad.
Perhaps, if Jayden Maiava were a different young man of a different young mind, USC’s attempt at a quarterback change would’ve ended right there. Nine plays into a momentous first start, yes, the UNLV transfer stood a sorry 2-of-7 passing and had ripped a couple deep balls that hit green grass. Nine plays into USC’s Saturday clash with Nebraska, he’d sailed a toss directly to former USC cornerback Ceyair Wright, the Cornhusker defensive back taking a sobering first-quarter pick 45 yards to the house.
It was as disquieting of a start as USC could have imagined for its new quarterback.
A world had been placed on his young shoulders, with USC entering Saturday’s game 4-5. Veteran incumbent Miller Moss, whom this USC team had formed its entire identity around, was benched at the start of a bye week. Maiava was tossed into fire, and he raked his own program over the coals early.
But the kid has been a playmaker, the most common word used by teammates and coaches around him, from his earliest days on O’ahu to his earliest days this winter stepping into USC’s program. And after that early interception, Maiava trotted back out onto Coliseum turf with a complete absence of fear, operating with the kind of dual control and chaos to lead USC to a 28-20 win and wholly validate Riley’s trust in turning to him.
Maiava finished 25 of 35 for 259 yards, accounting for four touchdowns against a couple turnovers. Dominant back Woody Marks had his best game of a stellar season, finishing with 146 yards on 19 carries and six catches for 36 yards. And USC’s defense stepped up at every opportunity behind coordinator D’Anton Lynn, sealing a win on a last-gasp Nebraska heave with an end-zone pick by Greedy Vance Jr.
Before he was a quarterback, the 6-foot-4 Maiava was a receiver on fields across O’ahu, playing in a youth-league on the island coached by Tua Tagovailoa’s father Galu. And the same traits in him today, the former youth coach said, have been present since Maiava was running free across the ocean in middle school.
“No matter how bad the play is, and when things are broken – when it’s broken down with routes – just, you see Jayden trying to make something happen,” Galu Tagovailoa said. “And that’s just how that kid has been.”
It’s how he was Saturday, wholly unafraid in the midst of chaos. He missed a number of first-half throws, including an easy third-down drag to Zachariah Branch in a tie game late in the second half. He threw the early pick-six, yes. But not three offensive plays after Wright freewheeled into USC’s end zone, Maiava stepped up on a third-and-seven and delivered an 18-yard strike to senior Kyle Ford, reaching out over the fingertips of a Nebraska defender.
Four plays later, he rolled right as the Cornhuskers blitzed and a play broke, flinging a bomb over his right shoulder as he careened out of bounds. Somehow, in a play reminiscent of a certain recent Heisman winner, the football drifted 28 yards into the waiting arms of sophomore Duce Robinson.
Maiava hit Zachariah Branch for a touchdown on a short toss a play later, kissing his hands and raising them to the sky for the first passing TD of his USC career.
And the redshirt sophomore quarterback threw for another score in the second and third quarters, hitting Kyron Hudson on a bobbled-and-caught end-zone grab at the start of the second, bombing a 48-yarder to a wide-open Robinson in the middle of the third.
The penchant to “playmake” naturally came with a large margin of error. Up 21-17 in the third, after evading one oncoming Nebraska rusher, Maiava tried to make something from completely nothing and was strip-sacked, a costly mistake that could’ve changed the tide. USC’s defense, though, picked up the slack whenever needed – first with a beautiful second-quarter pick by stalwart corner Jaylin Smith when USC’s offense stalled, then with a third-down stop in the red zone by linebacker Mason Cobb after the field flipped on Maiava’s fumble.
The same baffling late-game execution that’s plagued USC all season seemed poised to play out again. Early in the fourth quarter, USC was set up for a field goal that would’ve given them a four point-lead – only to see Wright block Michael Lantz’s kick.
But another third-down defensive stop by safety Kamari Ramsey set up a subsequent drive with the kind of late-game offensive execution USC has rarely seen this season. The Trojans chewed over seven minutes of clock across 13 plays, Riley earning a shining moment by dialing up a fake-jet-sweep-pitch to Woody Marks for a 34-yard gain on a crucial fourth-and-one.
And with three minutes left and the ball at the 2-yard line, Maiava took a keeper and darted past a Nebraska defender, a born playmaker seizing his moment for the score that finally closed a game for USC.
It would take one last defensive stop for the Trojans to finally put Nebraska away, as Greedy Vance intercepted a pass from Nebraska’s Dylan Raiola as time expired.
USC CB Greedy Vance, right, celebrates after picking off a pass on the final play to seal the Trojans’ 28-20 win over NEB at the Coliseum on Saturday. (Gina Ferazzi / LAT)
Tough week, there were 7 upsets of the top 25 cfp poll teams yesterday.
The change to start Maiava appears to have worked, at least for this game. I wish he had some playing time earlier in the season, but better late than never. Hopefully he can play well in our two rival games coming up.
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SC’s defense has shown significant improvement. They are only giving up 22.4 PPG. The problem has been their offense. They are only averaging 30.3 PPG. I think that will go down by the end of the season(against UCLA and ND). LR better get things together on the offensive side of the ball or he will lose his reputation as being an offensive genius. Maybe he ought to think about going back to being the QB coach instead of roaming the practice field watching all the other factions of the program. Leave the O-Line and D-Line and all the other aspects… Read more »
I missed Jakobi Lane, is he in the dog house? Did he even get any PT?
I was wondering about that myself. Does anyone know?
Hearing ankle
I believe he posted some inappropriate comments on “X” or Instagram about Riley and inferred that he’s going to hit the portal after the loss to Washington. He took them down immediately but the damage may have been done…but, then again, Riley did say that there was a flu outbreak amongst the team this week…
When Woody went down I thought the worst. We have a good backup, but Woody is an emotional leader. Somehow whatever hurt him suddenly didn’t. Blocking schemes worked and runs became a good plan. It wasn’t perfect, but it could get better.
A win is a win!
I like close wins. They pay off later for a team.
Oregon appears to be in a battle at Wisconsin.
Absolutely. Badgers are fired up. I haven’t seen much of the game, but 5-4 WIS is coming off a bye and leading 13-6 with 4:30 to go in the 3rd Q.
Badgers were hitting … if had gotten any qb play Whisky wins
Quacks got a big Big 10 hack call, the old chop block that wasn’t even close to one , taking away a huge 3rd down conversion for Whisky. That seems to be B1G refs go to call when they need to put screws on a team. Like when SC was about to go up 21-3 on PennU.
Refs won it for Oregon……nothing new in the BIG. They will go undefeated whether they like it or not.
So right, they have to protect their “product”. It is time for college football to use refs from different conferences.
The blind hog LC finds the water hole, finally.