Los Angeles Times

Helton sticks to a calming script

- By Zach Helfand zach.helfand@latimes.com

Like a politician giving a stump speech, USC coach Clay Helton hammered a theme during his Sunday evening phone call with reporters, playing to a riled-up base.

“The message to our team is that one game doesn’t define our season,” Helton said. “We had a hardfought game on the road against a very good opponent. We just finished September. We’re 4-1. And we control our own destiny. We could not say that a year ago.”

He would return to this notion again and again over about 20 minutes. Five times, he said USC is 4-1. Four times, he said USC controls its own destiny.

Fans expecting sweeping changes after USC’s first loss of the season, to Washington State, 30-27, on Friday evening, were never likely to be satisfied. Helton’s policy is one of stoicism and steadiness. Players like quarterbac­k Sam Darnold cited Helton’s calm in the face of a 1-3 start last season as one reason why USC rescued its season and reached the Rose Bowl.

Helton’s resolve will be tested in the coming weeks as USC addresses an offense on the fritz and the reality of needing to run the table to have a shot at the playoffs.

“As a head coach, you can do one of two things,” Helton said. “Because you have a failure or a loss you can panic and try to scrap everything. Or you can believe in the men that surround you. I choose to believe in the players that surround me as well as our coaches. I really, truly believe they’re gonna get the job done.”

USC has been in this position before. Last season’s loss to Utah in the fourth week left the Trojans in much more dire straits.

USC’s players said they were using that experience as a guide.

“This game is over now,” linebacker Uchenna Nwosu said after walking out of the locker room Friday. “Just next-game mentality.”

Safety Chris Hawkins said USC should focus only on what it could control.

“If we win out, we control what we control,” he said. “A 12-1 team not making it to the playoffs or whatever, I don’t really know how that works. But we’ve just got to do what we’ve got to do.”

But there are crucial difference­s from a year ago. One, USC switched quarterbac­ks, to Darnold. And its offense exhibited a general upward trend in total yards while its defense mostly stayed even.

This season has been the opposite. USC’s offensive yardage has declined every game, except for an explosion of yards against Stanford. Its defense has generally trended downward, though not as precipitou­sly.

There is no obvious positional change for Helton to make. Any shot in the arm, such as the one provided by Darnold, would have to come from the injured-player list. USC has seven injured starters, plus three others — running back Stephen Carr, receiver Jalen Greene and defensive tackle Malik Dorton — who play significan­t minutes.

“When we get a little bit more healthy and a little bit more in tune, I think that everybody will be happy,” Helton said. “We’re 4-1 with our destiny in our hands.”

Coach approves of play calling

Helton gave a vote of confidence to offensive coordinato­r Tee Martin after USC’s worst offensive output of the season.

“As far as the play-calling goes, I don’t have an issue with it,” Helton said. “I wish we would’ve executed better. But I have a lot of faith in Tee and the job that he does on a weekly basis.”

Helton said many of the issues in the passing game stemmed from USC’s tattered offensive line. Washington State pressured Darnold more than usual. That, Helton said, threw off the timing of routes and caused Darnold to scramble just as receivers were breaking open. “I thought one of the things that Tee did in that game, if you recognized, is he went to more sprints and nakeds to try to move the pocket a little bit, and they were effective for us,” Helton said.

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