Los Angeles Times

USC pointed in right direction

Men’s basketball team appears to have all the pieces, even while missing a key one.

- BY ZACH HELFAND zach.helfand@latimes.com

Before the season began, Jordan McLaughlin noted that USC’s basketball team had a dynamic offense.

“We have so many weapons,” he said.

It was a new experience for USC, accustomed for years to a place in or near the Pac-12 Conference basement.

McLaughlin was asked how he, the senior point guard, would keep everybody happy.

He did not respond by saying he would spread the ball around. He did not talk about involving everybody. He said USC just had to win.

“That’s why the Warriors are so good,” he said. “They don’t care who’s scoring as long as they end up with a win. That’s all they care about.”

USC is 3-0 heading into Wednesday’s game against Lehigh, and McLaughlin carried the Trojans there by following the philosophy he set forth during preseason practices.

Sometimes he has distribute­d the ball, as he did in USC’s second game against North Dakota State when forward Bennie Boatwright scored a career-high 28 points, mostly inside the paint.

Other times, McLaughlin has needed to score. At Vanderbilt on Sunday, he had one of the best games of his career. He scored 35 points with four assists.

Trailing by three points on USC’s last possession of regulation, McLaughlin kept the shot for himself. He spotted up from deep behind the three-point arc and drained a shot that sent the game into overtime.

Sunday’s game, a road contest against an NCAA tournament team from last season, showed how valuable a senior point guard can be in college basketball. Perhaps more striking that McLaughlin’s point total was this: USC turned the ball over just once in the second half and overtime.

“Now that we got a more experience­d team, a deeper team, it gives us an advantage over our opponents,” McLaughlin said. “So we’ve just got to put it all together.”

The game also showed that USC has work to do on defense. USC suffocated Vanderbilt at times, but those times were brief. At the end of the first half, USC went on a 15-0 run. Vanderbilt couldn’t even register a shot in more than 31⁄2 minutes. Yet for the game, Vanderbilt shot 51%, and 49% on three-pointers.

USC could benefit from the return of guard De’Anthony Melton, a strong defender whose status remains in limbo as USC investigat­es his eligibilit­y.

Melton traveled late to the game at Vanderbilt but was not in uniform and did not play.

TONIGHT

VS. LEHIGH When: 7 Where: Galen Center TV: Pac-12 Networks. Radio: 690. Update: No. 10 USC (3-0) is coming off a 93-89 win over Vanderbilt in overtime. Chimezie Metu had 23 points and eight rebounds, and demonstrat­ed a new tendency to shoot from the perimeter. He made one of two three-point attempts. Elijah Stewart had nine points and registered his 1,000th career point. Lehigh (3-1) finished second in the Patriot League last season at 20-12. Lance Tejada leads the team with 15.8 points per game and five players score in double figures.

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