Los Angeles Times

From bad spring to spring in step

After shoulder surgeries, USC’s Griffin looks like a No. 1 cornerback.

- By Ryan Kartje

This past spring, before a barrage of intercepti­ons made him the most buzzedabou­t defensive back at USC’s training camp, Olaijah Griffin sat at home, doing little else but stewing in his own misery.

Offseason surgery on the labrums in both of his shoulders left him in agonizing pain, with limited range of motion. For weeks, he could barely move his arms. But the pain was only a small part of the self-pity that would come to consume him.

It was the stagnation that proved most maddening. Griffin couldn’t practice. He couldn’t do much of anything. So he sat and waited and thought about how much he missed football.

Griffin wouldn’t be able to ease that pain until months later, when he first stepped onto the turf at Howard Jones Field for fall camp and breathed a sigh of

relief. It would take only a few days for a healthy Griffin, who arrived last year as a five-star recruit from Mission Viejo, to emerge as a potential No. 1 in a crowded group of young, talented USC corners, picking off more passes (five) during the first week of fall camp than USC’s defense had all of last season (four).

“You see me getting picks,” Griffin said, flashing a grin. “I’m feeling good.”

But he hasn’t forgotten about spring, a time he refers to as “the worst of my life.” Until he arrived at this more joyous juncture, he says, “I went through hell.”

After his freshman season, in which he missed four games because of injuries, he hadn’t expected any sort of surgery. His shoulders felt fine. But medical exams before his arrival at USC had suggested that Griffin had “loose shoulders,” which, coach Clay Helton explained Thursday, would have eventually needed to be operated on if he continued playing football. So the staff told Griffin it was best to take care of it right away.

Both shoulder surgeries carried with them sixmonth recoveries, and each one of those days passed excruciati­ngly slowly. This was Griffin’s first real surgery, his first time away from the game he’d fallen in love with at 4 years old. It felt as if a part of his identity had been stripped away. That was an unfamiliar notion for a player whom Helton describes as “happy as a lark.”

As his recovery dragged on, Griffin began to notice the muscles he’d built up in his arms disappeari­ng. He was horrified.

“I started to doubt myself,” Griffin said. “Like, ‘Dang, why do I look like this?’ ”

Every night, he called his parents, searching for support, and every night, they offered the same assurances. Eventually, they told him, you’re going to get better.

He wasn’t the only one eagerly awaiting his return. USC desperatel­y needed him to make a full recovery. Four major contributo­rs at cornerback had graduated. The secondary needed to be retooled, and Griffin, with his five-star pedigree and his preternatu­ral cover instincts, was an ideal heir apparent.

As he eventually regained range of motion in his arms and the pain, emotional and physical, subsided, Griffin began working harder than he ever had. Every day, his father, the rapper Warren G, sent him texts to inspire him.

But now that he was finally able to move forward, there would be no slowing his progress. He wanted to prove — to himself, to his parents, to his teammates and coaches — that he could pull himself out of the dark place he’d descended into over spring. Coaches saw his attention sharpen in meetings. They watched him put the weight he’d lost back on.

“He’s made a lot of progress,” defensive coordinato­r Clancy Pendergast said.

“He had an unbelievab­le summer,” Helton added.

And by the time he arrived at fall camp a week ago, the darkness had disappeare­d entirely. His shoulders are fully healed. On the first day of camp, Griffin forced a fumble and intercepte­d a pass. The next day, he jumped a short route, picked off presumptiv­e starting quarterbac­k JT Daniels, and took the intercepti­on to the house. Already, after one week, Griffin seems to have a strangleho­ld on the top corner spot.

“He fought his way through it,” Helton said, “and now, you can see him bouncing around here, and he’s the old OG.”

Griffin, though, understand­s he’s different now, perhaps, in a way that no one else could. His spring of selfpity left an indelible mark. He was stronger now. He was better for the misery. Because now he knew he had the strength to get through it.

“I feel like this camp, for me, is about proving a point,” Griffin said. “You might have a little setback. But you can have a major comeback.”

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