Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Williams blocks out Heisman talk

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

LOS ANGELES » The past few weeks, USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams has seen an uptick in text messages from friends and family. Some are congratula­tory, others are commenting on all the hype surroundin­g Williams as a leading candidate for the Heisman Trophy.

Williams is sure to send an obligatory “thank you” back, then tries to get back to the work at hand for the Trojans.

“One of the things that we did two weeks ago was block out the noise and that's what I've been doing because we have bigger goals in mind,” Williams said after practice Tuesday. “I'm sticking to my same routine, still trying to lead these guys.”

Williams and the Trojans will face Utah on Friday in the Pac-12 championsh­ip game in Las Vegas. A win there, and USC will lock up its spot in the College Football Playoff for the first time in program history.

So that is where the attention should be. But Williams has establishe­d himself as the Heisman favorite at this point in the season. His 44 total touchdowns are a single-season record at USC, and his 65.8% completion rate is higher than either Matt Leinart's or Carson Palmer's during their Heisman campaigns at USC.

Williams first learned of the Heisman, given annually to college football's best player, when he was nearing the end of elementary school. It quickly became a goal of his, as he's always considered himself the best player on the field.

“I thought that last year when I was playing, I thought it before I came into college,” Williams said. “It's a certain confidence.”

And it was something head coach Lincoln Riley spoke with Williams about when he first recruited the quarterbac­k to Oklahoma. Riley coached Heisman winners Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray with the Sooners, as well as finalist Jalen Hurts. So the comparison resonated with Williams.

“(Riley) believed that I had traits of them all and also had some unique traits of myself,” Williams said. “He tries to recruit guys like that, that can help him go win championsh­ips.”

It's the idea of a championsh­ip that Williams is trying to focus on right now, despite all the hype surroundin­g him personally. His teammates have appreciate­d that concentrat­ion, with linebacker Shane Lee noting that Williams has not brought up the possibilit­y of the award with the team.

Williams said he's relied on his family as a support system, as well as lessons learned from his parents to guide him through these moments.

“I want to win and getting too big-headed and focusing on the highs and anything like that is where you start going downhill,” Williams said. “So focusing on routine, being here, trying to win with these guys and leading them keeps things in perspectiv­e.”

Trojans move to No. 4 in CFP rankings

USC is one win away from going to the College Football Playoff for the first time in history.

That's what became clear on Tuesday when the CFP released its penultimat­e rankings. The Trojans moved up two spots from No. 6 to No. 4, putting USC in the projected field for this season's fourteam playoff. No. 1 Georgia, No. 2 Michigan and No. 3 TCU round out the current playoff field.

The latest rankings make things clear for USC entering Friday's Pac12 championsh­ip game in Las Vegas: Beat No. 11 Utah and improve to 12-1 on the season, and earn a playoff spot for the first time since the format was introduced in 2014.

 ?? KEITH BIRMINGHAM – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams is the Heisman front-runner going into Friday's Pac-12champion­ship game.
KEITH BIRMINGHAM – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams is the Heisman front-runner going into Friday's Pac-12champion­ship game.

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