Los Angeles Times

Hawkins plays the game of his life with heavy heart

- By Zach Helfand zach.helfand@latimes.com Twitter: @zhelfand

In the moments before the Pac-12 championsh­ip game began on Friday, USC safety Chris Hawkins journeyed toward the end zone alone, kneeled and put his head down.

Hawkins had hardly slept the night before. At around midnight, he received word that his grandmothe­r had died of breast cancer.

“I just wanted to talk to her for a little bit,” Hawkins said. “I was just thinking about her, thinking about all the past experience­s I had with her. This was my first game where she wasn’t going to be watching, except from up above.”

Hawkins proceeded to have arguably the best game of his career. He led USC with 13 tackles, more than twice the number of the next closest player. Two were for loss. He had one forced fumble. During USC’s goal-line stand in the fourth quarter, he may have prevented a touchdown when he came around the backside of Stanford’s line to tackle Bryce Love in the backfield.

After the game, Hawkins teared up on the field when talking with reporters.

Moments later, coach Clay Helton gave him the game ball in the locker room.

“The man lost his grandmothe­r,” Helton said. “Woke up this morning with tears in his eyes, and battled for his brothers like I’ve never seen before. You’re the definition of a Trojan, son.”

Swann: Goals met

Since he took over as athletic director before last season, Lynn Swann has said he views championsh­ips as perhaps his No. 1 marker of success for the football team.

Asked last week whether he viewed the Pac-12 championsh­ip game as a pass-fail propositio­n, Helton agreed.

“The expectatio­ns when you’re at USC are championsh­ips,” Helton said. “I know that going in.”

Speaking as confetti fell after the win, Swann said the championsh­ip game didn’t precisely determine the success or failure of a season. But it went a long way.

“There’s always gray and nuance to whatever happens, but you set a goal and said this is the mark we want to make, and Clay met that goal,” Swann said. “So yes, disappoint­ing to lose to Washington State, disappoint­ing to lose to Notre Dame, but we met our No. 1 goal. Our team, with all the injuries and the 12 consecutiv­e weeks of play ... and everything we sustained, still came out and played a great game tonight.”

Swann said he would not determine whether Helton makes changes to his coaching staff in the offseason.

“Our head coach is in charge of his staff,” he said. “He’s the head coach. He builds his team. I don’t call plays. I don’t hire assistant coaches. I think it’s wrong.”

Jones to play in bowl

Ronald Jones II, who had 140 yards and two touchdowns on a career-high 30 carries, said he will play in USC’s bowl game, bucking a trend among potential high draft picks.

Jones, a junior, said he has not decided whether he will declare for the draft.

“I want to finish up school,” he said. “I want to get bigger. But if that opportunit­y’s there too, I definitely gotta go get that.”

Some star players who declare for the draft have started to skip non-playoff bowl games to avoid injury. Running backs, who take more punishment than most positions, have been extra cautious. Last season, Louisiana State’s Leonard Fournette and Stanford’s Christian McCaffrey both skipped bowl games.

Jones, though, said he would play.

“Oh yeah, most definitely,” he said. “I can’t go out like that.”

Fiesta Bowl-bound?

Almost every prognostic­ator has USC slated for the Fiesta Bowl.

But there are two other possible landing spots: the Peach Bowl and the Cotton Bowl.

The playoff selection committee is responsibl­e for placing teams in the New Year’s Six bowls. After it released its rankings, the committee has no flexibilit­y for deciding which teams get bids. One spot is reserved for the top-ranked Group of Five conference team, Central Florida, and the remaining teams are selected by ranking.

The committee then decides which of the qualifying teams go to which bowls. Typically, the committee tries to avoid rematches or bowl repeats, and it takes into account factors like geography.

That makes the Fiesta Bowl the most likely landing spot for the Pac-12 champion.

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