Los Angeles Times

HEARTBREAK

Trojans blow a 14-point lead and lose with 0:16 left

- By Zach Helfand

SALT LAKE CITY — Adoree’ Jackson lost his shoe.

On the play that would decide the game for USC on Friday evening, Jackson lined up opposite Utah receiver Tim Patrick. Patrick made a beeline for the front corner of the end zone. Quarterbac­k Troy Williams lobbed it.

The pair grappled. Their feet tangled. And Jackson lost his shoe, and, at that moment, USC might have lost a grip on a season rumbling off the tracks.

Jackson slipped. Patrick, unguarded at the last instant, pulled in the pass with 16 seconds remaining, capping No. 24 Utah’s late comeback over USC, 31-27.

The loss dropped USC to 1-3, and 0-2 in the Pac-12 Conference, unleashing further unrest among an unhappy team, and raising questions about the efficacy of Coach Clay Helton, who is now 1-5 since being named USC’s fulltime head coach.

“We had our opportunit­y tonight,” Helton said. “And we let it slip away.”

In the postgame locker room, after USC had let a 14-point lead get away, Helton praised the team’s fight.

“I’m heartbroke­n for them,” Helton said. “I truly believe that we can be a really good football team. We’ve got to just finish with wins.”

Two late decisions came to define the game. Facing a fourth and three, on Utah’s 37-yard line, with about five

getting against USC’s line.

“We were doing it all night,” Whittingha­m said. “Went back to the well again.”

The offense stayed. Zack Moss took a handoff. He gained five yards. On the next play, from the USC 18, quarterbac­k Troy Williams lobbed a pass to Tim Patrick. Cornerback Adoree’ Jackson grappled with him, then lost his shoe and slipped. Patrick, suddenly uncovered, made the catch to put Utah ahead with 16 seconds left.

“We had our opportunit­y tonight,” Helton said in a small room just beyond the end zone where Patrick had made his catch. “And we let it slip away.”

The loss, which dropped the Trojans to 0-2 in the Pac-12 Conference, further rumbled an unhappy team and fueled questions about Helton’s efficacy. He is now 1-5 since being named USC’s full-time head coach.

“I’m heartbroke­n for them,” Helton said. “I truly believe that we can be a really good football team. We’ve got to just finish with wins.”

“After the game we were all down,” quarterbac­k Sam Darnold said outside the locker room. “But we have hope.”

The hope may be Darnold, who was confident and dynamic in his debut as the starter.

In the third quarter, he executed two of his best passes of the game, on consecutiv­e plays. First, he placed a delicate pass in the pocket between the linebacker­s and safeties on a seam to Taylor McNamara for 21 yards. On the next play, he hung a raindrop to JuJu Smith-Schuster along the sideline for 35.

He finished 18 for 26 for 253 yards, plus another 41 yards on nine rushes, including a quarterbac­k keeper when he helicopter­ed into the end zone.

“You walk into a hostile atmosphere like this on a rainy night and you go out there and do what he did?” Helton said. “As good as you could hope for.”

Darnold’s presence could not change one vexing problem. For the second game in a row, USC could not get out of its own way on offense. Against Stanford, it was penalties. Against Utah, it was fumbles.

On the first drive, Justin Davis burst through a hole for 16 yards. He was hit. He fumbled. Utah recovered.

On the second drive, Darnold scampered on a quarterbac­k draw for 14 yards. He was hit. He fumbled. Utah recovered.

On the third drive, Ronald Jones II took a handoff on a third and one. He wasn’t even hit. Yet he too fumbled, after bumping into center Nico Falah.

“Those extra possession­s that we could’ve had earlier, those were the difference,” Jones said.

Sometimes, USC was just unlucky. Up 14 in the third quarter, USC’s Rasheem Green popped the ball loose on the goal line. The ball pinballed around, then dropped into a pile of bodies in the end zone. Had USC recovered, Utah might have been done. But an offensive lineman, Isaac Asiata, emerged from the pile, holding the ball high for a Utah score.

Otherwise, USC mostly outplayed Utah, until the fourth quarter. Utah brutalized USC early, using 12 runs in 12 plays to score on its opening drive. But USC finished with 466 yards, to Utah’s 456. Jackson added a 100-yard kickoff return.

Davis eclipsed 100 yards in the half, to become USC’s first 100-yard rusher this season. But he was used sparingly in the second half. He finished with with 126 yards in 10 carries, with a touchdown.

“It’s really going to show what type of team you are to bounce back from this,” Davis said. “I don’t remember the last time we started off the season this bad.”

USC led by 10 points entering the fourth quarter. It surrendere­d a touchdown pass to Rae Singleton with less than 10 minutes remaining. On the final drive, Utah drove 93 yards.

After the game, Helton defended the fourth-down call. “You’ve got to trust your defense,” Helton said. “And I trust them.”

He continued: “Would I change the decision? No.”

 ?? Rick Bowmer Associated Press ?? USC’S CHEERLEADE­RS don’t have much to cheer as Utah’s Tim Patrick celebrates his 18-yard touchdown catch with 16 seconds to play. Patrick had six catches for 100 yards as the Utes stayed unbeaten.
Rick Bowmer Associated Press USC’S CHEERLEADE­RS don’t have much to cheer as Utah’s Tim Patrick celebrates his 18-yard touchdown catch with 16 seconds to play. Patrick had six catches for 100 yards as the Utes stayed unbeaten.
 ?? Gene Sweeney Jr. Getty Images ?? SAM DARNOLD showed that he is more than an athlete in USC’s loss to Utah on Friday.
Gene Sweeney Jr. Getty Images SAM DARNOLD showed that he is more than an athlete in USC’s loss to Utah on Friday.
 ??  ??
 ?? Rick Bowmer Associated Press ?? USC defensive back Adoree’ Jackson has a grip on Utah receiver Tim Patrick, but Patrick keeps his grip on the ball during the first half and the Utes eventually rallied for the victory on a touchdown catch by Williams.
Rick Bowmer Associated Press USC defensive back Adoree’ Jackson has a grip on Utah receiver Tim Patrick, but Patrick keeps his grip on the ball during the first half and the Utes eventually rallied for the victory on a touchdown catch by Williams.
 ?? Rick Bowmer Associated Pres ?? UTAH QUARTERBAC­K Troy Williams crosses the goal line in the first quarter to give the Utes a 7-0 lead. Adoree’ Jackson can’t stop Williams.
Rick Bowmer Associated Pres UTAH QUARTERBAC­K Troy Williams crosses the goal line in the first quarter to give the Utes a 7-0 lead. Adoree’ Jackson can’t stop Williams.

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