Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Air game goes missing in key loss to Stanford

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

Stanford’s Ryan Johnson (23) pressures USC quarterbac­k Kedon Slovis as he’s releasing a pass during Saturday night’s game at the Coliseum. The Trojans lost 42-28.

Through two games, it appears USC has fixed one problem on its offense. The Trojans have been able to establish a legitimate run game, averaging 172.5 ground yards in the opening two weeks.

But when head coach Clay Helton recapped to reporters on Sunday his takeaways from the tape review of Saturday’s disastrous 42-28 loss to Stanford, what stood out was that the Trojan passing attack had fallen flat.

“Really the missed opportunit­ies in the passing game as an offensive unit,” Helton said. “To be able to create explosive plays as well as points in the red zone. You look up and you really got five plays over 15 yards on the day and two of those were within the run game.”

Yes, the passing game, pretty much the one aspect of USC that has been unassailab­le the past two seasons, is now a cause for concern for the Trojans.

In the loss to Stanford, quarterbac­k Kedon Slovis completed 27 of 42 passes for 223 yards, a touchdown and an intercepti­on.

The pick, which was returned for a costly Cardinal touchdown, was a drop by receiver Drake London. But as offensive coordinato­r Graham Harrell noted, the throw was also behind the receiver.

USC did do better in the red zone, scoring in all five trips and three times reaching the end zone. But the two field goals came after misses on potential touchdown passes.

“If we hit that post to Drake early on, that’s four more points. If we make the catch on the seam to Gary, that’s four more points,” Harrell said. “All of a sudden, you got a totally different feel, a totally different game.”

Two games is undoubtedl­y

USC (1-1, 0-1) AT WASHINGTON ST. (1-1, 0-0) When: 12:30 p.m. Saturday

Where: Martin Stadium (Pullman, Wash.)

Watch/listen: Fox/ 790AM

USC update: The Trojans suffered a dispiritin­g loss to Stanford in their Pac-12 opener Saturday, a 42-28 defeat that was only that close due to two garbagetim­e touchdowns by USC. It was a real fall from grace for USC after an encouragin­g Week 1performan­ce.

But the Trojans committed nine penalties for 109 yards, struggled to extend drives on third down and got gashed for big plays by a Stanford offense that struggled in a loss to Kansas State one week earlier.

... DE Nick Figueroa left at halftime, the second week in a row he’s been unable to play in the second half. In Week 1, Figueroa suffered an AC sprain in his shoulder.

Washington State update: The Cougars offense has been solid if unspectacu­lar through the first two weeks of the season. Washington State is averaging 411 yards per game and 257 through the air. The other side of the ball, though, has been another matter, with the Cougars surrenderi­ng 430.5 yards per game. Even in a bounce-back win over Portland State on Saturday, Washington State gave up 420 total yards and 318 through the air.

— Adam Grosbard

a small sample size, but it’s what there is to work with at this point. And through two games, Slovis’ completion percentage has dipped to 65.4% from 67% in 2020 (and 71.9% as a freshman). Slovis is moving the ball an average of 6.1 yards per attempt, down from 7.3 last year and 8.9 in 2019.

Asked directly if the offense has made the progress it should in Year 3 with the same offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­k, Helton deflected to discuss how USC’s average starting field position at its own 22 hurt the Trojans.

But Harrell’s Air Raid attack is supposed to be the type of offense that moves quickly down the field regardless of starting position. Helton said Sunday that he felt USC didn’t really get its desired tempo going until the fourth quarter, at which point the Trojans were already down by 29.

“They just executed better than we did tonight out there,” said Harrell, who also said Stanford did not do anything schematica­lly that surprised USC. “We gotta play harder, we gotta execute better. We didn’t execute great Week 1, especially in the red zone in Week 1.”

Helton echoed that line Sunday, saying, “I thought [Harrell] put our kids in good position last night to be able to make plays. It’s something that, I know our kids are going to look back on and say gosh darn, we missed some opportunit­ies there.”

Injury report

Helton said that USC defensive end Nick Figueroa was pulled from Saturday’s game after his AC sprain from Week 1 flared up again. Figueroa is considered day-to-day, but Helton acknowledg­ed he may need some down time to let the shoulder heal.

Figueroa’s primary backup, freshman Korey Foreman, was also limited on Saturday by a foot injury.

“Credit to the kid, he’s been a warrior fighting through it,” Helton said. “We limited his role just based on the amount of practice he got last week.”

WR Drake London “tweaked his back” on his fourth-quarter touchdown catch, Helton said, but is not expected to miss the Washington State game.

 ?? KEITH BIRMINGHAM — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ??
KEITH BIRMINGHAM — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER

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