Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

New Trojans have some of that good JuJu

They aim to build on last season’s success with the help of star freshman Watkins and other newcomers

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

USC players stood backstage waiting for their cue. The Trojans hadn’t even been introduced at HoopLA, their midnight madnesslik­e event tipping off the basketball season, and Lindsay Gottlieb’s assistant advised the third-year coach to peek at the scene. She poked her head out from behind the curtain.

Light sticks illuminate­d the dark arena. Thousands of people in the stands were cheering. In October. Gottlieb sensed the significan­ce of the moment.

“I really do believe this is the start of a different era and perception of USC women’s basketball,” she said.

Building off their first NCAA tournament appearance since 2014 and the excitement surroundin­g one of the most significan­t prospects in program history, the 21stranked Trojans hope to usher in a new era of success on and off the court. When Gottlieb took over in 2021, the hire was hailed as a new age for the program trying to return to the glory once defined by stars such as Cheryl Miller, Lisa Leslie and Tina Thompson.

Now the Trojans are in their JuJu era.

JuJu Watkins could be the next face of women’s basketball, following current standouts Angel Reese of Louisiana State, Caitlin Clark of Iowa and Paige Bueckers of Connecticu­t. Watkins, who led Sierra Canyon to a Southern Section Open Division title and state title, is just the second Gatorade national girls’ basketball player of the year to choose USC. The other was Leslie. The 18-year-old Watkins already has practiced with NBA players, signed endorsemen­t deals with Nike and appeared in TV commercial­s.

Even amid unpreceden­ted hype, Watkins is “better than advertised,” Gottlieb said.

The 6-foot-2 guard has strength and physicalit­y well beyond her years. Her body control is on par with her older peers. Her instincts are “terrific,” Gottlieb said.

An offseason half-court drill during which Watkins was teamed with forwards Rayah Marshall and Taylor Bigby still sticks in Marshall’s mind. Watkins scored effortless­ly on three consecutiv­e possession­s. Even when she closed her eyes and turned toward the basket, the ball still went in. Marshall marveled.

“She’ll come out and drop 20 on your top and then in your grill trying to stop you from scoring,” said Marshall, who was named AllPac-12 last season as a sophomore. “She has such an IQ for the game and such a hunger to compete on both ends of the ball and it’s fun to play with. It makes me want to be more of a dog, it makes me want to go out there, block shots for her, rebound, see her do it again and again.”

Gottlieb recognizes that much of the excitement around the program probably comes from Watkins’ choice to sign with her hometown team over powers Stanford and South Carolina. USC never has had a star of Watkins’ magnitude in the social media era.

But on the practice court, Watkins blends in with her teammates. Despite every highlight play the freshman has made, the thing Marshall is most impressed with is how Watkins “never lets the moment, eyes being on her, really affect her mental going into her game.”

“The team goal is the most important,” Watkins said. “So I just remind myself that this is a team game and just do whatever I can to contribute to the team. As long as we get that W, that’s all that matters.”

Watkins joins fellow freshman Malia Samuels and four transfers who will help the Trojans replace three starters. Gottlieb pulled forwards Kaitlin Davis (Columbia) and McKenzie Forbes (Harvard) and guard Kayla Padilla (Pennsylvan­ia) from the Ivy League while adding guard Roxana Makolo from Texas Christian.

Even with new players, USC’s standard for winning remains the same, Gottlieb said. The Trojans paved their way to the postseason with defense last season, setting a school record by holding teams to 55.1 points per game. Guard Kayla Williams set the tone at the top of the defense with her relentless onball pressure, while Marshall patrolled the paint. She passed Leslie for most blocks in a season with 98, including seven in the first round of the NCAA tournament.

But Marshall didn’t get another game to increase her record after USC was eliminated in overtime by South Dakota State.

“Leaving in the first round left a chip on my shoulder,” Marshall said. “I’m glad I actually got to experience that early because now I’m capable of knowing what it takes to get to that level and how to dominate . ... I can have that hunger and eager to succeed and go further in the NCAA tournament.”

USC hasn’t been to consecutiv­e NCAA tournament­s since 2005-06 and hasn’t won a game in it since 2006. After ending the postseason drought, the next era is about helping the Trojans become a national power, Gottlieb said unabashedl­y.

The coach who helped California to its first Final Four in 2013 tells young players that in a few years, she wants USC to draw the same reactions as powerhouse­s such as Connecticu­t or South Carolina. Seeing the fans embracing the program after only one tournament appearance has Gottlieb believing in the ambitious vision.

“We think we can be one of those women’s basketball programs that people look to as the pinnacle,” Gottlieb said. “It takes work, but that’s where we want to get to. We don’t want it to be a year thing or one cool preseason. We want to really build something of significan­ce.”

 ?? Meg Oliphant Getty Images ?? JuJu WATKINS, a 6-foot-2 guard and the Gatorade national girls’ basketball player of the year from Sierra Canyon, is introduced at the Trojans’ HoopLA event at Galen Center on Oct. 19.
Meg Oliphant Getty Images JuJu WATKINS, a 6-foot-2 guard and the Gatorade national girls’ basketball player of the year from Sierra Canyon, is introduced at the Trojans’ HoopLA event at Galen Center on Oct. 19.

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