Los Angeles Times

Calling an audible Trojans’ switch to Darnold at QB is a big reason they’ve turned their fortunes around

- By Zach Helfand

In a cramped room under Utah’s Rice-Eccles Stadium, bundled in a puffy red raincoat, USC football Coach Clay Helton offered an unusual declaratio­n.

“I can’t tell you how proud I am of the kids that are in that [locker] room and the performanc­e that they just gave,” Helton said.

It was a strange choice of words. USC had just suffered its most painful defeat of the season, a come-from-ahead collapse to Utah in the final minute.

If Helton regretted the phrasing, he didn’t show it two days later. Sitting just off USC’s campus for his weekly radio appearance, he smiled recounting the game.

“I walked off that field, that was the most fun I’ve had in a long time,” Helton said.

For many USC fans, the quote was jarring, out of step with reality. Fun? The Trojans, owners of a 1-3 record, had sunk to depths they don’t typically plumb.

Almost a month later, they have not lost since.

The Trojans’ season has developed like a photograph rendered next to its negative. It can be divided into two distinct eras: Before Darnold and After Darnold. Helton’s decision to insert Sam Darnold at starting quarterbac­k, replacing the popular and capable Max Browne, has altered USC’s trajectory.

USC has improved markedly in almost every significan­t statistica­l category since Darnold became the starter. Not all of it can be credited to him, but it marked the beginning of a surge. It began against Utah. Three turnovers and a surprising­ly porous defense late cost USC the win, but Helton had caught a glimpse of a bright future.

“As a coach, you’ve been in it 20 years,” Helton explained recently. “They haven’t. And you see a team that goes to Utah, the way they pre-

pared, the way they went into that hostile atmosphere and performed and came 16 seconds away, you’re like, ‘Wow, OK, there moving in the right direction. Now let’s don’t lose that momentum.’ ”

Here’s what has changed:

Offense

The difference wrought by Darnold has been dramatic.

He also stepped into a more stable situation than he would’ve had he started the opener against Alabama.

“I don’t think we were comfortabl­e yet with our team,” tight end Tyler Petite said. “You have a brand new coaching staff, a brand new way of doing things. We had a little bit of unrest that was settled with Coach Helton, and now it’s getting back to getting really comfortabl­e.”

Darnold’s impact has nonetheles­s been undeniable. In USC’s first three games, the team averaged 3.6 rushing yards per attempt. That boomed to 5.8 in the next four. Its 5.6 yards per throw jumped to 9.2.

The turnaround is so dramatic, in part, because USC’s start was so feckless. And an easier schedule helped.

But the schedule alone doesn’t fully account for the change. Since Darnold became the starter, USC has surpassed, often dramatical­ly, the average yards typically allowed by its opponents. (The same has held true for USC’s defense.)

The offensive style, too, underwent a dramatic shift. Colorado Coach Mike MacIntyre remarked that USC had become a spread team.

“The best thing is just knowing the quarterbac­k,” Trojans offensive coordinato­r Tee Martin said. “Earlier in the year it was two quarterbac­ks. And once we announced who the quarterbac­k was going to be, it was, ‘OK, what is he like?’ You have to call plays as if you’re him.”

Now, Martin said, “We’re kind of getting into a nice rhythm.”

The same could be said of USC’s best offensive weapons.

JuJu Smith-Schuster’s receiving yards jumped by about 84 yards per game with Darnold throwing to him.

And Justin Davis’ yards per carry have skyrockete­d in that span, from 3.6 to 9.2. (He missed the last game with a high ankle sprain).

Only one troubling habit has emerged: USC has seven turnovers in the last four games, up from three in the first three games.

Defense

Stuck with a defense that was anything but disruptive, Helton and defensive coordinato­r Clancy Pendergast held a meeting. Helton said he told Pendergast he had to find more ways to bring pressure. Pendergast agreed.

USC went from zero sacks against Stanford and Utah to three against Arizona State, then four in a punishing performanc­e against Colorado.

Like the offense, USC’s defense has improved from a middling unit to an efficient one. Its 5.0 rushing yards allowed per carry in the first three games improved to 3.7 in the next four. It shrank its passing yards per attempt from 7.4 to 4.9.

“The pressure that’s getting to the quarterbac­k is the thing you see the most,” Helton said.

Cornerback Adoree’ Jackson implied that the transition to a new coaching staff also played a role on defense. Now, he said, “we’re more playing as a team. Just knowing that person next to us is going to do his job.”

Earlier in the season, the defense wasn’t as confident in Pendergast’s new 5-2 scheme. “The guys feel more comfortabl­e in the system the more they play together,” Pendergast said.

Last week’s game at Arizona provided proof. USC had not seen a quarterbac­k this season as mobile as Khalil Tate, but it had no issues. Tate was fenced in, limited to modest gains on the ground. When he threw, he found nothing. He completed just one pass in the first half.

With USC on a three-game winning streak heading into the second half of the season, Helton sounded almost indistingu­ishable from September, when USC’s only win was against Utah State. That was by design, he said.

“Does anything change?” Helton said. “No. We’ll come right back out and we’ll do the same thing.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? UCHENNA NWOSU (42) celebrates after recording one of USC’s three sacks against Arizona State on Oct. 1. The Trojans’ defense has amped up the pressure on opponents the last three games.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times UCHENNA NWOSU (42) celebrates after recording one of USC’s three sacks against Arizona State on Oct. 1. The Trojans’ defense has amped up the pressure on opponents the last three games.

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