Los Angeles Times

Trojans need drop-off in this stat

Missed passes were a problem against Texas, but Darnold has faith in his receivers.

- By Zach Helfand zach.helfand@latimes.com Twitter: @zhelfand

— Tee Martin stood in a far corner of USC’s practice field this week and acted like a toddler begging for attention. This was intentiona­l, part of a drill. Trojan receivers caught passes from a Jugs machine as Martin swatted at the players, smacked them with foam pads, grabbed their arms, nagged, pushed and prodded.

Practice had ended. The rest of USC’s players had left the field. Eventually, coach Clay Helton did too. The sun was setting and the lights were off when Martin and the last of the receivers walked off the field, finally finished with remedial catching class.

“We needed it,” said Martin, USC’s offensive coordinato­r and receivers coach. “We’ve got to get back to fundamenta­ls and focus, really.”

USC’s receivers dropped either six or seven passes last week against Texas, depending on who was counting. Either way, it was a continuati­on of a malady that began in Week 1, disappeare­d in Week 2 and in Week 3 was enough to torpedo several drives and keep USC’s scoring down.

The performanc­e also exposed a vulnerabil­ity in USC’s offense. After two weeks of running the ball with ease, USC faced a Texas front that was loaded with defenders within a couple of yards of scrimmage. The Longhorns dared the Trojans to win in the air. USC did. But it was not easy.

The strategy of stopping the run at all costs provided a blueprint for teams such as California, which USC will play Saturday. It is an imperfect one, but it may be the best option for slowing down USC’s dangerous attack — unless USC’s receivers make that option unpalatabl­e.

“A team’s gonna blitz,” Martin said. “You’ve gotta make ’em pay.”

Texas’ approach could give ideas to Cal coach Justin Wilcox, a former USC defensive coordinato­r. Cal has frustrated high-f lying offenses this season with exotic blitzing schemes, much as Texas did to USC.

USC’s receivers know a stacked-up line of scrimmage is an indictment of their performanc­e.

“When you do that play after play after play, that’s like a direct shot to the receivers and the quarterbac­k, challengin­g us to get open,” Jalen Greene said.

Deontay Burnett agreed, adding, “We take it personally.”

Said quarterbac­k Sam Darnold: “I think our receivBERK­ELEY ers should take it personally because that means they’re playing one-on-one coverage on our guys.”

There’s one sure-fire way to get defenses to back off, Helton said: “Have 400 yards of passing.” USC just about did, with 397 yards, the second-most of Darnold’s career. But Helton acknowledg­ed that the passing game left some “meat on the bone.”

Six drops cost USC 87 yards, not including potential yardage after the catch. Martin also counted an incompleti­on to Tyler Vaughns in the end zone on a diving attempt. That would make 111 yards squandered on drops, each by a different player.

“It felt like the guys took turns dropping the ball,” Martin said.

Darnold could have passed for close to 500 yards. Instead, he was left with the worst completion percentage in his career as a starter, 57%. Without drops, it would have been 69%.

Darnold said he maintained confidence in all of his targets — “They know that they can’t drop the ball” — and he returned to any open receiver last Saturday without hesitation. But Martin said it’s natural for that confidence to wane if the drops continue.

The drops also highlighte­d another problem for USC’s offense. The Trojans haven’t settled on a reliable No. 3 receiver. After Greene’s drop led to an intercepti­on returned for a touchdown, USC yanked him and inserted Vaughns, who also has taken starting repetition­s this week during practice.

“We’re definitely well aware we haven’t been playing up to our standards. Especially me,” Greene said. “Just picking it up and showing up to the party, making my plays — simple things like that. That catch against Texas, that’s something I catch every day, catch in my sleep, so just not being lackadaisi­cal, just focusing in on every ball.”

Cal hasn’t defeated USC since 2003, and achieving the upset would entail more than just a defensive effort. The Bears’ typically explosive offense has been a bit more modest this season, ranking 62nd nationally in points, with 31.7 per game. Putting up that many points against USC’s defense could prove difficult.

And the Bears’ defense may remain gun-shy around Darnold. It yielded five touchdowns to him a season ago in a 45-24 loss at the Coliseum. It was proof that daring a Heisman Trophy candidate to throw is a dangerous propositio­n.

“Yeah,” Martin said. “When they catch the ball, it looks real good.”

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? TEXAS’ DeShon Elliott grabs a pass def lected by USC’s Jalen Greene (10) and turns it into a pick-six.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press TEXAS’ DeShon Elliott grabs a pass def lected by USC’s Jalen Greene (10) and turns it into a pick-six.

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