Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pac-12 thirsts for relevance, but drought to continue

Utah may be best in mediocre conference

- By Greg Beacham The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — The Pac-12’s national championsh­ip drought hits 15 years this winter, and there are few signs of a respite. Several of the conference’s traditiona­l powers are in states of rebuilding or disarray heading into a season that’s murkier than a Mike Leach metaphor.

Even the preseason media poll couldn’t identify a clear favorite, with plucky Utah barely emerging on top after several schools essentiall­y split the vote.

But to the coaches entrusted with returning the West Coast’s major conference to national competitiv­eness, this seeming parity actually underlines the overall strength of a league on the rise again. Elite talent is easy to find around the Pac-12, and several programs are in a position to potentiall­y put it all together.

“There are not a lot of conference­s out there that can legitimate­ly look up and say more than half their conference has a chance to win the conference,” Stanford coach David Shaw said. “The people that know football know how deep and how difficult this conference is. The people that only want to look in two spots, in the SEC and the Big Ten footprint, you can’t win them over anyway, because they’re not paying attention to the scope of college football.”

Still, the Pac-12 doesn’t have a traditiona­l power in peak form after graduation losses at defending champion Washington and Stanford, Southern California’s miserable 2018 season and the questions still looming around resurgent Oregon and its 5-4 conference mark.

Into the gap stepped Utah, the (relative) conference newcomer with numerous returning starters, an elite defense and promising quarterbac­k Tyler Huntley.

Whether the Utes live up to their hype or another power emerges, Huskies coach Chris Petersen is confident this league is on its way up again.

“Five or six years ago, the Pac-12 could do no wrong,” Petersen said. “We were in the greatest position ever, and we were going to do this and that. And five years later, (people think) we don’t even know how to play football anymore. … I think it’s all cyclical.”

Here are more things to watch during the Pac-12 football season:

Utah is the preseason favorite, but it’s not going to anybody’s head in Salt Lake City, according to coach Kyle Whittingha­m. In fact, he wants his Utes thinking not about national championsh­ips, but

Utes up front:

only about achieving Pac-12 supremacy, largely because the league’s South Division teams are 1-7 in the league championsh­ip game. “We felt like we were going to have some preseason hype, and so we wanted to make sure that we got out ahead of it and talked to our players about just ignoring the noise and staying focused,” Whittingha­m said. “We all know that the Pac-12 championsh­ip is our goal, as I’m sure it is for every team in the Pac-12, so the focus is not on the goal. It’s (on) how we are going to achieve that goal.”

Coach Clay Helton clearly needs a swift rebound with his Trojans coming off their first losing season since 2000, including five losses in their last six. USC finished 91st in scoring in the FBS despite a talent-studded offensive roster, and Helton addressed the problem by hiring blue chip coordinato­rs Kliff Kingsbury and then Graham Harrell, who brings

Trojan hot seat:

his version of the Air Raid offense to Tailback U. The Trojans’ brutal early season schedule is an obstacle to a quick turnaround, but Helton knows what’s expected — or else.

Quarterbac­k Justin Herbert returned to Oregon for his senior season, and he’ll finally have the same coach in consecutiv­e years. Mario Cristobal’s Ducks should contend for their first league title since 2014 if Herbert takes another step from his 3,000-yard season last fall. Herbert calls it “a huge bonus” to have the same coaching staff for the first time: “We go from having spent all this time learning to teaching. We’re able to reach out to those younger guys, get them dialed up and up to speed so they are able to jump in as soon as we can.”

Herbert’s return: Huskies recharge:

Although Washington is heading into its biggest rebuilding season in a half-decade after losing 13 starters from last year’s champions, quarterbac­k Jacob Eason has hopes running high in Seattle. The touted local product returned from Georgia last season in hopes of replacing four-year starter Jake Browning this fall. Petersen insists Eason is competing with sophomore Jake Haener in camp, but most expect Eason and running back Salvon Ahmed to step in for Huskies stalwarts Browning and Myles Gaskin.

UCLA is coming off its worst season since 1977 after going 3-9 in coach Chip Kelly’s debut. Those Bruins largely got a pass due to the program’s steady decline in Jim Mora’s final seasons, and they also beat USC. But the deep-pocketed UCLA boosters who attracted Kelly will be looking for some return on their investment this fall, and they might get it if Kelly fields an improved offense around quarterbac­k Dorian Thompson-robinson.

The Chip dip:

 ?? Mark J. Terrill The Associated Press ?? The gap between finishing under .500 last season and where the Trojans need to finish this season to save coach Clay Helton’s job is much wider than arms’ length.
Mark J. Terrill The Associated Press The gap between finishing under .500 last season and where the Trojans need to finish this season to save coach Clay Helton’s job is much wider than arms’ length.

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