Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

USC’s defense still not quite ready to deliver a major road victory

- J. BRADY McCOLLOUGH

SALT LAKE CITY — This was going to be USC’s biggest win since Pete Carroll roamed the sidelines. This was going to be the Trojans’ first road victory over a ranked team in six years. This was going to be USC’s first triumph at Rice-Eccles Stadium (with fans) since 2012.

This was going to be the statement that the Trojans are already back under Lincoln Riley — tough enough to win in a rowdy atmosphere meticulous­ly crafted to torment them.

It was all of that until USC finally gave in for the first time this season — the only first that would come to fruition on a nightmarei­nducing mid-October Saturday night that

removed the Trojans from the ranks of the unbeaten. Utah 43, USC 42.

The seventh-ranked Trojans had every opportunit­y to leave this house of horrors victorious for the last time on their Pac-12 farewell tour, but their defense wilted again and again, giving up 415 yards passing to Utah quarterbac­k Cameron Rising, which perfectly erased the spectacula­r 381 from USC quarterbac­k Caleb Williams.

The season-high 12 penalties were partly to blame too. Riley’s Trojans, despite their early indication­s to the contrary Saturday, simply weren't ready to win a game of this magnitude on the road.

“We didn’t play as clean on all three sides as we wanted to,” Riley said, “and it came down to it, they made one more play than us or we made one more mistake, however you want to look at it.”

Many USC fans, who were starting to dream about a run to the College Football Playoff, will find it hard not to harp on the many miscues — like any of the unthinkabl­e 15 catches by Utah tight end Dalton Kincaid.

After his first defeat as USC’s leader, Riley made a point of sticking up for his players. He pointedly went after the Pac-12 game officials, which made two questionab­le roughing-the-passer calls that helped turn the game in the Utes’ favor.

“We had to overcome a lot tonight, and we got damn close to it,” Riley said. “This team has the inner fortitude, the culture, the desire to win, the desire to overcome anything that comes your way . ... We got enough of that to get it done.”

The Trojans, 6-1 overall and 4-1 in the Pac-12, were dropped into the middle of the exact kind of pressure cooker they haven’t been able to escape for much of the last decade. Even before USC vaulted itself into the top 10 to start this season, Utah had circled this game as the one it had to have if the Utes were going to repeat as Pac-12 champions and contend for a spot in the playoff.

Proof of the extra emotional emphasis could be seen on the Utes’ helmets, which were adorned with images of two fallen teammates, Ty Jordan and Aaron Lowe, each of whom died tragically within the last two years. It was no coincidenc­e that USC was picked as the game to honor their memory and galvanize the home fans into a fervor.

Trailing 21-7 in the second quarter, Utah brought family members of Jordan and Lowe onto the field for a touching moment of applause, and the Utes promptly pulled to within 28-21 by halftime and tied the score at 28 on the opening drive of the second half. The message? They were not going to let their brothers down.

Utah is a proud program, and, coming off last season’s near-win over Ohio State in the Rose Bowl, the Utes’ preseason ranking of No. 7 felt fully reasonable. But after dropping a heartbreak­er at Florida in the season opener and falling flat at UCLA last week, Utah entered Saturday desperatel­y needing a win to save its season.

All of these factors led me to think the Trojans were going to have to play the game of their lives to remain unbeaten.

From the kickoff, they appeared up to the task, following their confident captain in Williams, who took off for 55 yards on the opening drive and never looked back. USC’s explosive skill players saw nothing but green in front of them in the early going, blasting off and taking large swaths of Utah territory. Before the Utah student section could even fill out and complete the Rice-Eccles blackout, USC led 14-0.

Watching Riley’s offense find its stride in the first half of the season was fun, but this matchup with Kyle Whittingha­m’s unit loomed. Could USC run the ball against the always aggressive Utes front? Could Williams avoid the big mistake with the bright lights on and a national audience tuned in to see if the Trojans were actually for real?

The answers were resounding. The Trojans ran the ball with ease, but they didn’t really need to with the way Williams was spreading the ball from boundary to boundary, feeding his fellow transfer stars Jordan Addison and Mario Williams.

Despite its reeling defense, USC led 35-28 as the third quarter came to a close, and a victory seemed within reach. But, no surprise, during the fourth-quarter break, Utah honored the memory of Jordan and Lowe again, asking for the crowd to come together for a “moment of loudness,” as if calling up to the heavens for help.

Sure enough, the Utes, with the help of four USC penalties, marched the field to tie the score at 35.

They took their first lead of the game with 48 seconds left, 43-42, on a gutsy twopoint conversion run by Rising.

USC will feel devastated heading into its bye week, but it still has everything to play for. Beat UCLA at the Rose Bowl on Nov. 19, and the Trojans are very likely headed for the Pac-12 championsh­ip game in Las Vegas.

“A lot of our staff, we’ve been there, we know what it looks like to make a run,” Riley said. “This team has a real shot. If we handle this like I think we will, we got a real shot. I’m pissed right now. They fought their guts out. Well s—, I’m ready to go practice right now.”

A run to a Pac-12 title is certainly attainable for this USC team. The playoff talk can calm now, though. This defense is at least a year away from achieving a national championsh­ip level, and therefore so too is USC.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States