The Palm Beach Post

Trojans, Irish have good run games

Jones, Adams rank with nation’s best for longtime rivals.

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SOUTH BEND, IND. — Quarterbac­ks have received most of the attention whenever Southern California and Notre Dame have their annual showdown in college football. The running backs have often decided the outcome.

It should be no different tonight when No. 11 USC (6-1) and No. 13 Notre Dame (5-1) meet as ranked opponents for the first time since the 2009 season.

While quarterbac­ks Sam Darnold of USC and Brandon Wimbush of Notre Dame will command much interest, the Trojans’ Ronald Jones II and Irish workhorse Josh Adams will be key.

Both coaches — USC’s Clay Helton and Notre Dame’s Brian Kelly — love their players but spoke glowingly of their opposition.

“He is a big, fast running back who is hard to bring down — you have to gangtackle him,” Helton said of the 6-foot-2, 225-pound Adams, who has 776 rushing yards and is averaging 9.02 yards per carry (second nationally) for Notre Dame’s fifth-ranked rushing offense (308 yards per game).

Kelly has been enamored with the 6-foot, 200-pound junior Jones since he tried to bring him to South Bend from McKinney North High in Texas.

“He’s got speed, explosiven­ess, great vision — I love Ronald,” Kelly said of Jones, who has four 100-yard games, including 111 in last week’s 28-27 comeback victory over Utah, among his 640 rushing yards and eight TDs. “I think he’s as good as anybody in the country, and you know, he runs in an offense that can throw the football.”

Other things to watch: Under center: Darnold has won 15 of the 17 games he has started. He has thrown nine intercepti­ons and been susceptibl­e to fumbles (he had three in the first half against Utah) but is completing 62.7 percent of his passes for 2,063 yards and 15 touchdowns.

“He has a knack of making plays when it looks like you’ve got everything covered,” Kelly said.

Wimbush is expected to start after a foot injury sidelined him for Notre Dame’s last game, a 33-10 victory at North Carolina two weeks ago. He has rushed for 402 yards and a team-high eight touchdowns and thrown for 782 yards and six TDs with just two intercepti­ons.

Turnovers: Last year, when Notre Dame finished 4-8, its defense managed just 14 takeaways (104th nationally). Under first-year defensive coordinato­r Mike Elko, Notre Dame already has 14 turnovers (17th), consisting of six intercepti­ons and eight fumble recoveries. The Fighting Irish have outscored opponents 73-10 in points off turnovers. The Trojans have 10 intercepti­ons this season, fifth best nationally, led by sophomore cornerback Jack Jones with four. They have forced 16 overall turnovers (ninth nationally) — the exact number committed by the USC offense. Still, opponents have scored just 24 points off USC turnovers.

Red zone: Notre Dame has scored on 24 of its 26 trips into the red zone (92.3 percent, 18th nationally) and stopped the opposition on five of 20 red-zone trips (75 percent, 28th nationally). Notre Dame, Alabama and TCU are the only schools that are ranked 30th or better in both categories.

Rivalry: Notre Dame owns a 46-37-5 edge in the series. “It’s got brand power,” Kelly said. “It sits up there with the great rivalries of college football.”

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