USA TODAY US Edition

USC’s dynamic Darnold is 2017’s must-see QB

- Paul Myerberg @paulmyerbe­rg USA TODAY Sports

It was around LOS ANGELES the Arizona State game last season that Southern California defenders began to stand. One defender stood, followed by another. Then another, and another. Before the end of the regular season, the entire defense — barring injury or discussion­s with a position coach — would not sit on benches but stand along the sideline, pushing closer and closer to the field to get a better glimpse of Sam Darnold.

“I don’t sit down,” junior linebacker Cameron Smith said. “I just watch him.”

They wanted to see in action what they’d seen in practice. As a true freshman one year earlier, Darnold had torn through the defense as the scout-team quarterbac­k, routinely gouging the Trojans starters while defensive coaches fumed. They’d ask: Can’t you stop this guy?

“But there was nothing we could do,” senior safety Chris Hawkins said. So the Trojans found a silver lining. When Saturday rolls around, they said to one another, at least we know we faced a better quarterbac­k during practice. “He was definitely a scout-team legend,” USC coach Clay Helton said.

And this wasn’t long after Darnold first stepped on cam- pus. He’d had the option of enrolling early and joining USC for spring practice, like most quarterbac­k recruits, but demurred. Injuries had cost him much of his junior year at San Clemente (Calif.) High School, and Dar-

nold wanted to chase a state basketball title with his friends. Go for it, USC coaches said.

“I just thought that was the coolest thing ever,” Helton said. “You rarely see that.”

It helped that the staff had a five-star quarterbac­k signee — Ricky Town — in the same recruiting class, though Town transferre­d not long after arriving on campus. Another former fivestar prospect, Max Browne, started the first three games of last season before Darnold’s ascension to the starting job. He has also since transferre­d.

Years earlier, while growing up in San Clemente, Darnold would attend several USC home games a year with his father, Mike. Night games were their favorite: Father and son playing catch outside Los Angeles Coliseum before kickoff, then again under streetlamp­s as they walked back to their car.

Could they have known? Could anyone? Darnold was a legitimate prospect but not even the most ballyhooed quarterbac­k recruit in his own program’s signing class. He didn’t enroll early. He had played in just three games and attempted only 22 passes before his first career start. He’d lost the competitio­n for the starting job during the preseason — a choice Helton called the toughest decision of his career.

USC dropped Darnold’s debut, at Utah, and hasn’t lost since. He tossed five touchdowns to lead USC past Penn State in the Rose Bowl. He caused not just teammates to stand up and take notice but all of college football — not to mention NFL scouts and executives, who already are drooling over the young sophomore. He’s the brightest young star in the sport.

So who saw this coming? Maybe Helton. Maybe Darnold’s friends in San Clemente. Certainly his family: Mike, a former offensive lineman at the University of Redlands; his mother, Chris, who played volleyball at Long Beach City College; and his sister, Franki, a two-time all-conference volleyball player at the University of Rhode Island. And Darnold himself. “I kind of expected it out of myself. I kind of expect to win a lot of games,” he said. “The stuff that comes with it, the sword and the ‘Fight On’ and all that? That’s all great. But I don’t like to get surprises mixed up with expectatio­ns. I think I expect that out of myself, if that makes sense.”

Confidence, but not cockiness, bubbles to the surface. Others heap praise. “He’s such a dope talent,” former offensive tackle Zach Banner said. “His feel for the game is insane,” said Smith, the linebacker. “He’s a unique dude,” former wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster said. “It’s like he’s been there, done that.”

The quarterbac­k who nonchalant­ly led USC to a last-second Rose Bowl win has only once lost his temper, his father recalled: Darnold broke his pinkie punching a locker after a loss in basketball during his junior year at San Clemente.

After tossing the tying touchdown against Penn State with a little more than a minute left, as teammates roared and raced toward the sideline, Darnold stood calm, holding his fingers aloft as he looked toward Helton: Kick to tie or go for two?

“I would definitely say I’m reserved and shy. I’ve always been that way,” Darnold said. “I’ve definitely broken out of my shell a little bit, but I don’t think I’m going to change that much at all.”

He hasn’t changed, even if the circumstan­ces have. Though noticeably different from his predecesso­rs at the position — far more mobile, a dual-threat passer and runner, and certainly ahead of the curve — Darnold, like others before him, enters his sophomore season hyped as a Heisman Trophy contender. After last year’s torrid close, his team likely will begin September ranked inside the top five of the Amway Coaches Poll. There will be immense pressure, individual­ly and as a team, to match these expectatio­ns.

“I’m not worried about the hype or anything like that,” Darnold said. “But yeah, I definitely realize that there is hype. I’m not blind to that. You’ve really got to put that in the rearview mirror and focus on what’s ahead of you.”

Darnold will meet those expectatio­ns “right in the middle,” Smith-Schuster said. Not too high and not too low, Darnold has always “been just a flat line,” his father said. He’s like a great golfer or pitcher, Helton said: “Whether it’s a strike or a ball, on the green or off, whether it’s good or bad, he’s on to the next one.”

This isn’t normal. Tossing 31 touchdown passes and leading USC on a nine-game winning streak as a first-year starter isn’t routine. Dominating the conversati­on at the NFL combine as a redshirt freshman isn’t typical. That the Trojans now follow Darnold’s lead — leaning away from glitz and glamour to embrace their quarterbac­k’s steadiness — isn’t ordinary.

It’s unique. But so is Darnold. From his first days on campus, USC sensed something special. Even when he was sitting third on the depth chart as a true freshman, teammates knew he’d eventually be a first-round draft pick, Smith-Schuster said. Even in the beginning, when he dominated on the scout team, the Trojans wouldn’t marvel at what Darnold just did — they’d poke and nudge and smile, wondering just what he’d do next. What does come next? Hype and acclaim in equal measure. His face on billboards in Hollywood. Promise and potential. An auspicious debut eclipsed only by a bright future. Remember: Darnold’s a redshirt sophomore. The legend is growing but far from complete. It’s enough to make anyone stand up and take notice.

“He’s making his own way,” Helton said. “He’s following a great lineage of quarterbac­ks, but he’s kind of putting his own stamp on the position, of the new-age quarterbac­k that’s out there. It’s been redefined.”

 ?? KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS ??
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS
 ?? KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Southern California quarterbac­ks coach Tyson Helton watches Sam Darnold throw during a spring practice last month.
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS Southern California quarterbac­ks coach Tyson Helton watches Sam Darnold throw during a spring practice last month.

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