Daily Breeze (Torrance)

USC still searching for crunch-time identity

- By Luca Evans levans@scng.com

LOS ANGELES >> They crumbled in the span of 30 seconds in Pullman, Wash., a thorough systematic failure that summated the crunchtime identity of a USC team that's never quite had one.

With two minutes left in a fantastic effort against Washington State, down one after leading against a surging program for much of the night on Thursday, Isaiah Collier and Kobe Johnson and Boogie Ellis tossed the ball around the perimeter with all the intensity of a YMCA rec-league run. There seemed to be no offensive plan, outside of center Joshua Morgan attempting to seal 6-foot-3 guard Myles Rice, which was quickly blown up when Rice fronted the post. And with the shot clock winding down, Ellis stared daggers into Collier's eyes in the weak-side corner, floating a duck easily picked off by the Cougars' Jaylen

UP NEXT Today: USC at Washington, 1 p.m., Ch. 2

Wells.

It got irreparabl­y worse. As Washington State slowed the pace in transition and USC matched up, Morgan picked up Rice, well beyond the 3-point line. Johnson came over, motioning for him to switch. Morgan appeared to not hear. And by the time USC's center realized what was happening and rushed to contest, Rice had already fired a pass to an indefensib­ly wide-open Wells on the wing for a nailin-the-coffin 3-pointer.

This USC season, head coach Andy Enfield said before last weekend's matchup with UCLA, has refreshed his “hatred of losing.” It has come in particular­ly cruel fashion. USC is 11-17 overall, is 4-10 in games decided by 10 points or less and is 0-3 in overtime. The Trojans, Enfield has said repeatedly, are not used to losing such close games.

“We've lost a variety of ways this year,” Enfield said last week. “But, what it reminds us all of is the margin of error at this level is so small. And you have to defend at the highest level to have a chance to make March Madness and advance.”

By mid-February, the sobering realizatio­n had set in for USC that its games at the end of the regular season were really just “stepping stones” to the Pac-12 tournament, as DJ Rodman said last week.

“We're playing for that Pac-12 tournament,” Rodman said then, “and these games moving forward are just ... build-up to the Pac-12 tournament.”

The problem: USC has taken few real steps since.

USC looked like a different team, a tougher team, in a rivalry win over UCLA last weekend, punctuated by a physicalit­y and an effort on the glass that drove Bruins coach Mick Cronin into such a frustratio­n that reporters could rarely get in a question across lengthy tangents. They are, physically, a different team, Enfield pointing out in nearly every media session the relief it's been to simply have a full team back practicing after a slew of decimating injuries mid-season.

But they have been too often unable to execute in crunch time, with or without Collier and Ellis and Morgan. Missed free throws (the team now sits at 68% from the line on the year). Turnovers. Defensive breakdowns.

Despite its record, USC has been competitiv­e with a slew of Pac-12 programs in the past several months. If its status as the 11th seed in the conference stands pat with three games to play, it's entirely feasible the Trojans could avoid Washington State and Arizona until the semifinals of the Pac-12 tournament.

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