Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Trojans are selling NFL pedigree to recruits

- By Luca Evans levans@scng.com

LOS ANGELES >> They had recruits by the boatload coming in from SEC territory, and so USC's recruiting staff tailored their weekend's host events specifical­ly to their personnel: a crawfish boil, complete with specially-customized The University of Southern California seafood bibs.

When a slew of defensive prospects arrived to USC's spring practice last Saturday, there was a special guest on top of it all: recently-retired Los Angeles Rams defensive lineman Aaron Donald, observing and sporting a 99 hat. There was pomp. There was certainly circumstan­ce. And come Monday, USC had made a nationalle­vel recruiting splash: five new commits, three of them on the defensive line, all five from SEC territory.

Yes, a slew of factors coalesced, perhaps, towards one of the best recruiting days in recent USC history. Crawfish. Donald. But the key, beneath it all, lies in the deep-bassed voice of Eric Henderson, the recentlymi­nted defensive line coach whose presence is rapidly changing life around USC.

“The pathway to the NFL — especially when you talk about the defensive linemen that are able to come through here, and have come through here — I mean, that's everything,” Henderson said after USC's spring practice Thursday, savvily delivering a quasi-sales pitch through media lenses. “If that's what you want, then where else are you looking to go? I mean, there's not a better place ... I think people are starting to realize that.”

The belief in Henderson's vision was evident Monday, the torrent starting with the commitment of highlytout­ed Georgia defensive linemen Isaiah Gibson and Justus Terry. It ended in one final verbal from Texas DL Gus Cordova, whose recruitmen­t has been highly controvers­ial after reports he intentiona­lly placed peanuts in the gear of a teammate with a peanut allergy. In the midst, two prospects in the secondary — Florida's Hylton Stubbs and Dominick Kelly — both committed Monday, too, under new USC secondary coach Doug Belk.

“That's a good feeling that what I'm seeing, other high-level recruits are seeing,” Kelly told the Southern California News Group this week. “And not just regional — not just guys on the West Coast.”

As USC has gradually made a greater recruiting push into SEC territory under Riley — Texas now their most-heavily-targeted state by total offers in recruiting classes since 2021 — Henderson is the figurehead, a gregarious presence who brings a background thriving as the Rams' defensivel­ine coach to USC. He is a relationsh­ip person, Henderson has described repeatedly, someone who simply loves meeting people and carries an unabashed confidence. At the same time, he's been described by players in their first taste of spring ball as highly technical, carrying a wealth of knowledge from five years coaching Donald and other luminaries in the NFL.

“Just the way I line up, playing with my hand in the ground now is actually comfortabl­e,” sophomore defensive end Braylan Shelby said on Henderson's teachings last week. “I've learned ... playing on the edge, playing with more of a base, having more of a pop when you get off the ball. So he's been teaching me some things I haven't even known yet.”

Behind Henderson — and a new-look defensive staff — USC can sell legitimate NFL pedigree. Donald showing up on Saturday was simply good timing, stopping by to show support Henderson; “it just happened to work out,” a poker-faced Henderson said, “that people were able to see him.”

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