Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

The defense gets its (second) act together

Trojans recover from first-half lapses and make clutch stops to enable a late victory.

- By Ryan Kartje

Here was a shot to put a stamp on its season, however strange it may have been. Here was a chance against UCLA to prove its defense had definitive­ly improved, however long it might have taken.

USC had already clinched its place in the Pac-12 title game hours before, earning its first appearance since 2017. It put itself in that position after consecutiv­e strong efforts from a defense that was rebuilt by a new coordinato­r in the offseason and nearly came unraveled in the first half of this one.

Those seams were stretched to their limit again throughout Saturday’s wild 43-38 victory over UCLA. The Trojans defense allowed a season-high 549 yards. They were torched again by UCLA quarterbac­k Dorian Thompson-Robinson, who threw for 364 yards and four touchdowns, and run over by Demetric Felton Jr., who rushed for 90 yards and added two touchdowns through the air.

Tackles were missed. Mistakes were made. But after a first-half performanc­e to forget for its defense, a series of stellar stops and gamechangi­ng plays in the second gave USC the life it needed to slip past UCLA with just 16 seconds to spare on Saturday.

“At the end of the day, you have to make things happen,” USC safety Talanoa Hufanga said. “As a defense, we came together.”

Hufanga again spearheade­d that effort. He finished with 17 tackles, two of which were for losses, and forced a fumble on a botched punt. But it was his intercepti­on with 10 minutes remaining in the game that turned the tide for the Trojans, who just a few minutes before trailed by two scores. Six plays later after his pick, USC took its very first lead of the game, 36-35.

“I can’t thank Talanoa enough,” USC coach Clay Helton said. “Just a huge momentum play.”

Throughout an inconsiste­nt first half, USC struggled to seize any semblance of that momentum. Whenever its offense seemed to find a rhythm, it’s defense let it slip away — often, literally.

No Trojan defender was immune from those miscues. Safety Isaiah Pola-Mao had been one of the Trojans’ most consistent defensive players all season. Then, midway through the second quarter, Felton caught a swing pass in the flat with only Pola-Mao in front of him. But the junior safety whiffed on the tackle, and Felton walked into the end zone for 21-yard touchdown.

“[UCLA coach Chip Kelly] kind of had us on our heels,” Helton said.

Just a few minutes later, Felton caught a wheel route down the sideline, where USC cornerback Isaac Taylor-Stuart was waiting. But Felton slipped right through his hands and bowled into the end zone to give UCLA a 21-10 lead with just 20 seconds left

in the half.

“This game was not going our way early. Some self-inflicted wounds,” Helton said.

Still, defensive coordinato­r Todd Orlando remained calm at halftime. We’re in position, he told them. Just make the plays.

“We came in and said, we just took their best shot,” Helton said. “We’re not playing

great ball right now. Let’s f lip the switch. Let’s play our brand of football, and let’s fight for 30 minutes, and it took all 30 to get it done.”

Packed within that halfhour was what seemed like a season’s worth of big plays for a defense in desperate need of them.

After linebacker Kana’i Mauga missed another tackle to let UCLA running back Brittain Brown run free for a third-quarter touchdown, USC marched down the field and scored on a diving, deep ball to Tyler Vaughns. From there, the Trojans defense finally seemed to find its juice.

On its next possession, USC forced the Bruins offense off the field. But its punter had other plans, holding the ball so long that he was forced to flee from Hufanga. USC responded with a touchdown to Amon-ra St. Brown.

A fourth and one on UCLA’s very next drive went quickly awry too, thanks to linebacker Drake Jackson, who burst through the line and threw down Felton for a loss of three. When faced with another fourth and one, with just over four minutes remaining, UCLA went for it again to no avail, as Hufanga and linebacker Hunter Echols combined for the stop.

UCLA would have two more chances, but each time, USC’s defense stood strong. The Bruins reached the 25yard line, but were forced to settle for a field goal to take a narrow 38-36 lead that would only stand for 36 seconds.

With one last chance, Thompson-Robinson launched a prayer to the end zone as time expired and a silent, fan-free Rose Bowl held its breath.

But USC’s defense batted down the desperate bomb, putting its final stamp on a stunning performanc­e that nearly slipped away.

 ?? Sean M. Haffey Getty Images ?? ISAIAH POLA-MAO intercepts a pass for USC. The safety was not immune from defensive struggles early against UCLA but USC got better after halftime.
Sean M. Haffey Getty Images ISAIAH POLA-MAO intercepts a pass for USC. The safety was not immune from defensive struggles early against UCLA but USC got better after halftime.

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