Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Trojans open Pac-12 saddled by mistakes

- By Adam Grosbard agrosbard@scng.com @adamgrosba­rd on Twitter

LOS ANGELES » USC's men's basketball team returned from the Battle 4 Atlantis in The Bahamas with two losses in three games and a mixed bag of takeaways.

Yes, the Trojans lost their last two games but also were within a possession of beating top-25 Tennessee before the game went to overtime, not to mention a close call with Wisconsin. And yes, USC showed improvemen­t offensivel­y compared to the first few games of the season, but still managed to sabotage itself on that side of the court.

So head coach Andy Enfield has been stressing these offensive mistakes to the Trojans as they prepare for their Pac-12 opener tonight at Cal.

“We're right there, but we also made some big mistakes in both games that did not give us a chance to win either one,” Enfield said. “The turnovers, a couple defensive mistakes and not being able to score when the game was on the line. So as excited as we are about our improvemen­t the last couple weeks, for experience­d players, we made some mistakes that did not look like experience­d players.”

The Trojans averaged 14 turnovers per game in The Bahamas. This included 19 in the loss to the Volunteers, a game in which USC led by four with 3:21 left in regulation but did not score again until overtime. During those extra five minutes, USC gave the ball away six times.

It's particular­ly frustratin­g for USC (4-3) given the Trojans have been good on defense, even with so many freshman contributo­rs. USC has held opponents to 38.2% shooting this year and only twice have the Trojans allowed a team to shoot above 40% this season.

“Offensivel­y we didn't do our job,” Enfield said. “We didn't pass the ball when it needed to be passed on time. We overdribbl­ed. And we had a lot of unforced turnovers and that was self-inflicted.”

What USC is hanging onto at this point is the signs of improvemen­t on offense. The younger players are starting to understand the spacing and flow of the system and finding ways to play around veterans like Drew Peterson and Boogie Ellis, who have been asked to do a lot through seven games.

“Everyone's playing their role well,” Peterson said.

USC will get eased into Pac-12 play. Cal is the first major-conference team in the past 40 years to open a season 0-7, including losses to UC San Diego, Southern and Texas State. The Trojans will follow the conference opener with a home game against a 3-4 Oregon State team Sunday.

But the Trojans aren't taking anything for granted after their own mistakes cost them valuable nonconfere­nce wins last week.

“We need to go out and play basketball like we're capable of,” Enfield said, “and improve on the areas that we're working on.”

“We know we need to take care of business,” Peterson added. “We have no breathing room.”

 ?? TIM AYLEN – BAHAMAS VISUAL SERVICES VIA AP ?? USC's Drew Peterson, right, grabs a rebound next to BYU's Gideon George during play in last week's Battle 4 Atlantis in The Bahamas, in which the Trojans went 1-2.
TIM AYLEN – BAHAMAS VISUAL SERVICES VIA AP USC's Drew Peterson, right, grabs a rebound next to BYU's Gideon George during play in last week's Battle 4 Atlantis in The Bahamas, in which the Trojans went 1-2.

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