Los Angeles Times

Christon makes fast work of chance

- DYLAN HERNANDEZ

Go far enough down the depth chart and you never know what you’ll find.

Like a player faster than Reggie Bush.

As the body count mounted in USC’s 41-14 victory over Arizona on Saturday night, coach Clay Helton was forced to play his fifth-string running back. In doing so, Helton might have unveiled USC’s next superstar.

Who could have guessed the California high school champion last year at 100 and 200 meters would be fast.

Only Kenan Christon was more than fast in his first college game.

He was electric. He was breathtaki­ng. And as much as you hate to burden an 18-year-old freshman with expectatio­ns, he scored the kinds of touchdowns that were last scored in the Coliseum by another running back from San Diego. Yeah, Bush. In less than two quarters, Christon had 103 yards

in eight carries. He scored a couple of exhilarati­ng touchdowns, one from 55 yards and one from 30.

The instant Christon reached the line of scrimmage on the 55-yard scoring run, running backs coach Mike Jinks said to Helton, “Touchdown.”

“He was right,” Helton said, “because the angle that both the safety and the corner took, you could tell it wasn’t going to happen, they weren’t going to catch him.”

Helton added: “He’s even, he’s leavin’.”

But Christon played only because misfortune struck players in front of him. After USC’s loss to Notre Dame the week before, Helton said that leading rusher Vavae Malepeai would undergo knee surgery. In the second quarter against Arizona, Stephen Carr strained a hamstring. In the third, Markese Stepp sprained an ankle.

Next up was Quincy Jountti, a walk-on who received a scholarshi­p this fall. Jountti lost a fumble on his first carry, prompting Helton to turn to Christon.

On the team, Christon’s talent wasn’t a secret.

“He’s just different,” quarterbac­k Kedon Slovis said.

And when did Slovis realize that?

“The first day of practice,” he said.

Last year, as a senior at Madison High in San Diego, Christon won the 100- and 200-meter races at the California track and field championsh­ips. He clocked 10.30 seconds in the 100, which tied him for third all time in the state.

Before that meet, Christon tattooed wings on the outer parts of his lower legs.

“They keep me light on my feet,” said Christon, who is listed at 5 feet 10 and 185 pounds.

A degree of temerity is needed for a person to tattoo wings on his or her legs. Christon obviously has it.

Asked whether there is anyone on the team faster than him, Christon replied, “Nope.”

Told that receiver Velus Jones acknowledg­ed Christon was faster than him, Christon replied, “He knows now. He has to.”

But Christon acknowledg­ed that confidence was shaken because of his place on the depth chart.

“It was a little tough,” he said. “Kind of broke my spirit at first.”

A conversati­on with Malepeai after training camp changed that.

“He just sat me down and talked to me for a little bit,” Christon said. “We just had a deep talk about the process that he went through, behind all the guys he was behind and now he’s a starter. It got to me on the inside. I felt what he was saying.”

With Malepeai down, Jinks told Christon to be ready. Was he ever.

“I always knew I had it in me,” Christon said. “I knew I was ready to go from when I got here.”

Christon scored on only his fifth touch.

“You see him in practice do it time and time again,” Slovis said. “But for him to do it out here and against live defenders, it was great.”

What became clear over the second half Saturday was that Christon deserves to play, regardless of the health statuses of the other running backs. If anything, he should have played sooner.

Christon could be a redshirt this season if he plays in four or fewer games, but circumstan­ces could compel Helton to use him more than he initially planned.

USC visits Colorado on Friday.

“With losing Vavae this week and then losing two more backs this week, I would imagine Kenan is going to have a pretty big role going into Colorado, as well as Quincy Jountti,” Helton said.

Helton sounded certain Christon wouldn’t be negatively affected by his newfound attention.

“In the recruiting process of Kenan, he was a definition of not only a studentath­lete, but what you wanted a Trojan to be from a person,” Helton said. “There’s trained and untrained, and this one’s been trained the right way.”

The soft-spoken Christon downplayed his individual accomplish­ments.

“I’m just happy that we won,” he said.

Christon didn’t smile, not in the interview room or in a separate question-andanswer session outside of the locker room.

Of the inevitable comparison­s to Bush, he said, “I try not to think about it too much because it’s easy to get overwhelme­d being in college football.”

But Christon never appeared overwhelme­d Saturday. The players who did were the ones trying to catch him. This shouldn’t be the last time.

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