Los Angeles Times

Slovis picks bad time to lose mojo

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

The quarterbac­k who seemed unshakable in the biggest moments f inally blinked.

With USC in position to score another comeback victory Friday, USC’s Kedon Slovis was f lushed out of the pocket in the fourth quarter against Oregon and found nothing but white and green jerseys in front of him. He slung a prayer into space near the sideline. Oregon’s Jamal Hill was on the receiving end as the defensive back tipped the ball to himself and scraped his toe across the Coliseum grass before falling out of bounds.

After watching the slowmotion review on the big screen, the cheers from Oregon players f illed an empty Coliseum.

USC’s comeback kids had fallen.

After engineerin­g three last- minute comeback victories this season, Slovis’ fourth- quarter magic ran out Friday in USC’s 31- 24 loss to Oregon in the Pac- 12 championsh­ip game as the sophomore quarterbac­k bookended the performanc­e with costly intercepti­ons in the first and fourth quarters. The f inal intercepti­on Friday, which was Hill’s second of the night, was Slovis’ first fourth- quarter intercepti­on of his career.

“The kid made a nice play on the sideline,” USC coach Clay Helton said. “I know that [ Slovis] was trying to get that ball out of bounds.”

Slovis f inished with 320 yards on 28- of- 52 passing with two touchdowns and three intercepti­ons. His 17 touchdown passes in six games lead the Pac- 12. But so do his seven intercepti­ons.

Between each misstep Friday, Slovis remained calm in front of his teammates as the Trojans ( 5- 1) had chances to tie or win the game twice in the fourth quarter, first on a drive with 4: 43 remaining and then again with 23 seconds left.

“He’s going to have some hiccups here and there, but it’s Kedon Slovis,” receiver Drake London said. “We all trust in him.”

Slovis threw two intercepti­ons in USC’s first three drives, spotting the Ducks, who gained entry into the championsh­ip game only after f irst- place Washington was forced to pull out because of a COVID- 19 outbreak within the program, a 14- 0 lead.

It looked like an early repeat of last year’s loss to the Ducks when Slovis had the worst performanc­e of his Pac- 12 offensive freshman of the season. The Scottsdale, Ariz., native threw for three touchdowns and 264 yards with three intercepti­ons while completing just 56.1% of his passes in USC’s 56- 24 loss.

Slovis was sacked three times in both games, and the pressure Friday seemed to rattle the sophomore.

Oregon defensive end Kayvon Thibodeaux was a menace in the backfield with f ive tackles, one sack, two tackles for loss and a pass breakup, earning him game MVP honors.

“We know Kayvon and what he can do,” Helton said of the former Westlake Village Oaks Christian star. “I thought he had tremendous jump off [ the ball] tonight. … They f lushed Kedon out of the pocket. Got him off his spot a bunch.”

It persisted until the final play of the game, when Slovis was forced out of the pocket and illegally f lipped the ball to a nearby lineman to avoid a sack near the sideline, but still got crunched.

The game officially ended with an intentiona­l grounding call with Slovis f lat on his back surrounded by concerned coaches and trainers. He slowly got to his feet with assistance, but his right throwing arm was hanging limp by his side as he gingerly walked off. Helton said after the game Slovis was undergoing X- rays.

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