Los Angeles Times

Secondary remains cause for concern

- By Ryan Kartje

Amon-ra St. Brown streaked through the center of USC’s young secondary, unchecked and undaunted. It was late in the Trojans’ first scrimmage of fall camp, and St. Brown had already indoctrina­ted a few young corners who dared to try checking him from his place in the slot. Now, as St. Brown snagged a pass over the middle, the talented sophomore simply sped past them, turned the corner and dived for an easy score.

How USC’s staff will evaluate that sequence is a matter of perspectiv­e. To watch St. Brown, who led the team with 60 catches as a freshman, was a jaw-dropping reminder of just how good the Santa Ana Mater Dei product could be in his second season as one of the centerpiec­es of a revamped offense.

“His ability, in space, to get open and do something with it after he gets it is special,” coach Clay Helton said. “You can see why he’s one of the best in the country.”

But in the same sequence, it wasn’t hard to understand the early concern over USC’s intensely inexperien­ced secondary, which was helpless to stop a receiver sprinting across the middle of the field. Seeing a young group of corners victimized by St. Brown and the rest of the receiving corps on Saturday was just as much a blaring reminder of how green the secondary remains, three weeks out from the start of the season.

Deep balls from all four of USC’s competing quarterbac­ks rained down on a routine basis. Double moves froze more than a few freshman corners. Penalties also remained a problem.

“We took advantage of some freshman corners at times,” Helton said. “But they’ll learn from it, and they’ll come back from it, and they’ll be even better.”

For USC’s staff, the disparity in where the secondary and receiving corps stands after a week of fall camp makes evaluating both position groups a difficult matter moving forward. Do the receivers look good because the cornerback­s are playing poorly? Or do the cornerback­s look bad because USC’s receiving corps is one of the nation’s best?

Either way, camp has proved to be a trial by fire for USC’s fleet of young corners. As Helton sees it, there’s no better way to get past the group’s inevitable growing pains.

“I don’t know if they’ll go against a better group this year than what they’re getting right now,” Helton said. “That’s the way you want it. You hope that Saturdays, you’re comfortabl­e because you’ve gone against one of the best groups in the country. You can’t get any better than what they’re going against right now.”

That’s certainly an optimistic way of looking at USC’s secondary situation. New defensive backs coach Greg Burns was a little more blunt in his assessment of the group on Wednesday, noting that none of the corners vying for a starting spot had been given enough reps yet to show their full potential. Only Olaijah Griffin, whom Helton compliment­ed again on Saturday, has received much in the way of praise.

“Right now, they’re doing well,” Burns said. “But they’re still in a situation where they need to improve every day.”

Etc.

USC’s quarterbac­ks were given equal reps in Saturday’s scrimmage. Afterward, Helton said sophomores JT Daniels and Jack Sears both “played very maturely.” A decision on quarterbac­ks isn’t likely until after next Saturday’s scrimmage ... Running back Vavae Malepeai, who was sidelined most of last week because of an injured knee, may “start integratin­g back” to practice this week. He began running indoors in recent days, but his status remains uncertain. … Freshman linebacker Ralen Goforth ran with the first-team defense during the scrimmage, as starting linebacker John Houston rested. “With Jordan [Iosefa] out, we really wanted to push Ralen,” Helton said.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? STOPPING TALENTED RECEIVER Amon-ra St. Brown, shown catching a pass in front of UCLA’s Quentin Lake last season, has been a problem for USC’s young secondary during training camp.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times STOPPING TALENTED RECEIVER Amon-ra St. Brown, shown catching a pass in front of UCLA’s Quentin Lake last season, has been a problem for USC’s young secondary during training camp.

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