Los Angeles Times

Deeper defense will accept some substitute­s

- By Zach Helfand Shotgun Spratling contribute­d to this report. zach. helfand@ latimes. com Twitter: @ zhelfand

USC’s defensive starters almost could have asserted squatter’s rights on the Coliseum turf last season. Defensive coordinato­r Clancy Pendergast hardly ever pulled them off the field.

“We kind of held on for dear life with that group last year,” coach Clay Helton said.

Defensive starters played 80% of all the team’s snaps. The rate is particular­ly high, especially considerin­g that includes garbage time during blowouts, when the starters don’t play at all

So with most of the starters returning, will USC keep an even tighter rotation this season?

Don’t count on it, Helton said. Helton and Pendergast have pledged to cycle in younger players more often.

A larger rotation usually signifies a healthy program. It shows depth. And it allows younger players to develop with precious game repetition­s.

“We didn’t have too many guys last year,” Helton said. “Our depth has all of a sudden grown.”

Helton mentioned he would like to find playing time for young players like outside linebacker­s Connor Murphy and Oluwole Betiku Jr., defensive backs Greg Johnson and Ykili Ross and lineman Christian Rector. Freshmen defensive tackles Marlon Tuipulotu and Brandon Pili are expected to share a hefty portion of snaps with starter Josh Fatu.

One reserve has a guaranteed clear path to the f ield from the start: linebacker Jordan Iosefa, who will start the f irst half against Western Michigan on Saturday in place of Cameron Smith, who will watch the first half on TV in Helton’s office in the USC locker room. Smith will serve a one- half suspension for a targeting penalty in the Rose Bowl.

Helton said the short rotation last season resulted from circumstan­ce. It was not a philosophi­cal choice by Pendergast. This season, Helton said, there are too many promising defensive options to keep off the field.

“Clancy and I have talked about not just throwing guys out there to throw them out there, but guys that we trust that can help our football team,” Helton said.

Riding, not rowing

When Western Michigan climbed to national promi- nence last season, its unusual motto, “Row the Boat,” coined by then- coach P. J. Fleck, spread everywhere. It was written on T- shirts and helmets, scrawled above the tunnel in Western Michigan’s stadium, printed on notepads.

There will be no rowing when Western Michigan visits USC. Fleck left for Minnesota, and he reached an agreement with Western Michigan, which had trademarke­d the motto, to take the trademark with him.

The mantra meant more to Fleck than the typical marketing hook. He created it in 2011 after his newborn son, Colt, died of a heart defect. “I wanted something people can use in their everyday life,” he told The Times last year. “They can use it as their never- give- up attitude for beating cancer, for losing a child, for being divorced.”

This season’s team has kept some of Fleck’s internal slogans that the players liked, said team spokeswoma­n Kristin Keirns. But the players came up with a new motto. This year, it’s “Let’s Ride.”

Quick hits

USC announced Wednesday it will add 18 members to its athletics Hall of Fame: Wayne Black, Chris Claiborne, Sam Clancy, Kim Clark Jennings, Mike Gillespie, J. K. McKay, Ous Mellouli, Mikaela Parmlid, Troy Polamalu, April Ross, Felix Sanchez, Rod Sherman, Kevin Stadler, Tim Tessalone, Charlie Weaver, Lauren Wenger Trapani, Barry Zito and mascot Traveler. ... The USC Trojan Marching Band’s halftime performanc­e Saturday will celebrate Traveler with a program that has been scheduled for months..

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? CHRISTIAN RECTOR def lects a pass by UCLA’s Mike Fafaul in the Rose Bowl last season.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times CHRISTIAN RECTOR def lects a pass by UCLA’s Mike Fafaul in the Rose Bowl last season.

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