San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

USC’S PATH TO PERFECT 7-0 SEASON GETS EVEN EASIER

- U-T NEWS SERVICES

Before its season was postponed, then revised, then restarted again, USC appeared to have a reasonable path to a Pac-12 title. Now, in its third iteration of the schedule, that path appears to have gotten even easier.

It’ll also be earlier — at least, to start. The Trojans will open an already unpreceden­ted season before many of its fans have finished their first cup of coffee, as Arizona State comes to the Coliseum on Nov. 7 for a 9 a.m. PT kickoff.

“We’re grateful for the opportunit­y to play a game, a great game at a time that I think the whole nation will be watching across the board,” USC coach Clay Helton said on Fox’s Big Noon Kickoff. “We’re excited. You want to be under the brightest lights, on the brightest stage.”

Although the kickoff time will be the earliest recorded in USC history, the Nov. 7 opener marks the latest start date for its season since 1918, when the Spanish flu delayed the start of USC’S season until Nov. 23.

That early-morning matchup may be the biggest stage of USC’S season. Only two of the Trojans’ six opponents finished last season above .500, and both of those matchups — at home against Arizona State on Nov. 7 and at Utah on Nov. 21 — take place within the first three weeks of the season.

USC won’t leave Los Angeles after that until potentiall­y the last week of the season, when it hopes to be playing for a Pac-12 title against the North division champion.

A favorable schedule — one that avoids conference contenders like Oregon, Washington and California — could leave USC in a particular­ly good position to stake its claim atop the conference, when the Pac-12 finally plays its altered title game Dec. 18-19.

A Friday meeting with Washington State, which lost its coach in the offseason, will be the Trojans’ only cross-divisional matchup, while its rivalry showdown with UCLA on Dec. 12 will be the only road game in the second half of the regular season.

But even a Pac-12 championsh­ip — along with six more wins before it — may not even be enough to lift the Trojans to a College Football Playoff berth.

“You get six opportunit­ies, in half the games, to be able to present the best résumé possible for postseason play, and usually we get nine conference games,” Helton said last week. “So if you do have a hiccup in one, you have the chance to make up. Here every game is going to matter and every game is critical, and you have to approach each game like it’s a championsh­ip game, because it could cost you. So you have to have a sense of urgency.”

A single hiccup would almost certainly rule the Pac-12 champion out of the College Football Playoff. But with a favorable slate ahead of that final weekend, the Trojans appear to have the smoothest path to 7-0 of any team in the conference.

Karl Dorrell Bowl

UCLA will be greeted by a familiar face in its football opener as part of a most unusual season. Call it the Karl Dorrell Bowl.

The new Colorado coach will welcome the Bruins to Boulder when the teams kick off the 2020 season on Nov. 7 at Folsom Field. Dorrell coached at UCLA from 2003-07, compiling a 35-27 record that included a 10-2 season in 2005 but also plenty of indifferen­ce from

Bruins fans over a slew of six- and seven-win seasons.

UCLA’S schedule included some oddities: The Bruins won’t face Stanford for the first time since 1945, when the game was called off because of World War II, or California for the first time since 1932, the year before the series started.

The schedule makers didn’t do UCLA any favors by slotting the Bruins’ one Pac-12 divisional crossover game against Oregon, a favorite to win the conference. UCLA will face the Ducks on Nov. 20 at Autzen Stadium in Eugene, Ore., after not originally having them on a schedule that has been revised twice because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

No. 14 Oregon will open its season at home on Nov. 7 at Stanford.

UCLA will play two of the Pac-12’s eight Friday games, including the Bruins’ home opener against Utah on Nov. 13. UCLA’S other two games at the Rose Bowl will be against Arizona on Nov. 28 and USC on Dec. 12.

 ?? KYUSUNG GONG AP ?? Coach Clay Helton’s Trojans will play Arizona State in their opener on Nov. 7 at 9 a.m. on Fox.
KYUSUNG GONG AP Coach Clay Helton’s Trojans will play Arizona State in their opener on Nov. 7 at 9 a.m. on Fox.

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