Los Angeles Times

DREAMING TEAM

Darnold’s improving skills are on display

- DYLAN HERNANDEZ

BOULDER, Colo. — Sam Darnold was in danger of becoming an afterthoug­ht, his early season intercepti­ons and USC’s two defeats diminishin­g the widespread enthusiasm over his breathtaki­ng talent.

In the relative obscurity of what feels like an underwhelm­ing season for the No. 11 Trojans, however, Darnold quietly reinvented himself.

The Sam Darnold who elevated USC to a 38-24 victory at Colorado on Saturday night wasn’t the same Sam Darnold who was the hero of the Rose Bowl last season. The Sam Darnold who secured the Pac-12 South championsh­ip for the Trojans wasn’t the same Sam Darnold who outshined crosstown rival Josh Rosen last year.

This version of Darnold was better.

The redshirt sophomore quarterbac­k displayed his everexpand­ing skill set at Colorado’s Folsom Field, making throws he had trouble making earlier this season.

Like the 32-yard throw down the right sideline to Steven Mitchell Jr. in the second quarter, which

[Hernandez, up the first of Darnold’s two touchdown passes.

Or the consecutiv­e 20somethin­g-yard passes he made to Tyler Vaughns on the opposite sideline, which positioned the Trojans to extend their advantage to 14-0.

Darnold completed 21 of 34 passes for 329 yards. The game was his first of the season without any turnovers.

“We kind of saw tonight, my deep-ball accuracy has gotten a lot better,” Darnold said.

This was by design. Improving deep-ball accuracy, especially down the sidelines, has been a long-term project for Darnold, who noticed earlier this season that defenses were crowding the middle of the field and daring him to beat them outside.

“He wanted to work really hard on that,” quarterbac­ks coach Tyson Helton said. “It was good to see it’s been starting to show up the last couple games.”

This newfound ability to throw to the sidelines has opened up other channels, as was the case when he found Deontay Burnett open down the middle of the field in the third quarter for a 37-yard completion.

Later on the same drive, when the Buffaloes doubleteam­ed his primary passing target on a run-pass option, Darnold kept the football and ran through the huge chasm in front of him for a 24-yard touchdown run.

The performanc­e extended a solid stretch for Darnold that started after the Trojans’ loss at Washington State on Sept. 29.

Darnold had nine touchdown passes and eight intercepti­ons through the Washington State game. In the six games since then, he has passed for 15 touchdowns and thrown only three intercepti­ons.

The improvemen­t is as much of a reflection of USC’s receivers as it as of Darnold. The departures of last season’s leading receivers, JuJu Smith-Schuster and Darius Rogers, forced a group of young players to take on added responsibi­lities.

“The maturity of the wide receivers has grown and it’s helped the quarterbac­k,” head coach Clay Helton said.

Tight end Tyler Petite went as far to say many of the early-season intercepti­ons weren’t Darnold’s fault.

“As much as he’ll say that it’s his fault for all the intercepti­ons, a lot of it falls on the receivers and tight ends,” Petite said. “We as a receiving corps need to be on the same page as Sam. It’s really hard when you have guys like Darius and JuJu that you’ve been working with since you were a freshman, guys that you know are going to be making plays. It took us a little bit to get on that rhythm and that same page with Sam. But as you can tell, it’s been working out really well.”

Four Trojans had four or more receptions — Burnett (six catches, 79 yards), Vaughns (five catches, 90 yards), Mitchell (four catches, 91 yards) and Michael Pittman Jr. (four catches, 59 yards).

Petite credited Darnold for being the kind of leader who could help the group develop confidence. Clay Helton said something similar.

“I’ve really enjoyed his leadership, through whether it’s good times or bad,” the head coach said. “Just the poise and the character. When you’re the quarterbac­k at USC and to have that much pressure on you and to do it with so much class and character on a weekly basis, whether things are going good or bad, and perform for his brothers, he’s the definiset tion of believing in the team’s success over the individual success.”

Darnold thinks he has grown into the role, mentioning how much more comfortabl­e he has become pulling aside a teammate or addressing the entire offense.

Darnold’s 24 touchdowns and 11 intercepti­ons this year mark a statistica­l decline from last year, when he had 31 touchdowns and nine intercepti­ons.

But in Tyler Helton’s mind, Darnold is a superior quarterbac­k than he was last season.

“In my opinion, he is,” the quarterbac­ks coach said. “Fans are going to evaluate stats. As a coach, you have to evaluate every situation.”

He’s right. And with the Trojans guaranteed a place in the Pac-12 championsh­ip game, Darnold will have a chance to showcase that on a major stage.

 ?? David Zalubowski Associated Press ?? COLORADO RUNNING BACK Phillip Lindsay looks for room against USC defensive backs Ajene Harris, left, and Chris Hawkins during the Trojans’ victory. Harris had two intercepti­ons, one returned for a touchdown, as USC dominated for most of the game.
David Zalubowski Associated Press COLORADO RUNNING BACK Phillip Lindsay looks for room against USC defensive backs Ajene Harris, left, and Chris Hawkins during the Trojans’ victory. Harris had two intercepti­ons, one returned for a touchdown, as USC dominated for most of the game.
 ?? Kevin C. Cox Getty Images ?? RYAN DAVIS of Auburn breaks a tackle by Natrez Patrick of Georgia on the way to a touchdown in the third quarter.
Kevin C. Cox Getty Images RYAN DAVIS of Auburn breaks a tackle by Natrez Patrick of Georgia on the way to a touchdown in the third quarter.
 ??  ??
 ?? Matthew Stockman Getty Images ?? USC’S SAM DARNOLD is chased out of the pocket by Colorado’s Rick Gamboa during Saturday’s game.
Matthew Stockman Getty Images USC’S SAM DARNOLD is chased out of the pocket by Colorado’s Rick Gamboa during Saturday’s game.

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