Los Angeles Times

Slovis not USC’s guy, but on radar

He ascended depth chart and gave starter Daniels a reason to battle at quarterbac­k.

- By Ryan Kartje

He arrived last January as an afterthoug­ht.

Kedon Slovis was just 17, still a few months short of his senior prom, and little was expected of him. He was a late bloomer, a three-star prospect lost in the shuff le of big-time quarterbac­k recruiting, who commanded only a handful of other FBS offers. His arrival, in the grand scope of USC’s competitio­n, would elicit little more than a passing shrug outside of the program.

Inside, however, the young freshman from Scottsdale, Ariz., was turning heads. He was calm. He was confident. Where other quarterbac­ks were forced to adjust to the Air Raid’s simplicity, Slovis’ grasp felt preternatu­ral.

As spring slipped into summer, the baby-faced freshman was expected to fade. He never did. For 30 practices, as he flashed an arm so few had expected, carrying himself with the swagger of a more pedigreed passer, Slovis made the most convincing — and unexpected — push of any at USC to unseat the incumbent, JT Daniels, at quarter

back.

“Kedon is a special talent,” USC offensive coordinato­r Graham Harrell said. “I think, talent-wise, he’s as good as I’ve ever seen. But what Kedon did the best was come in and expect to play well. He came out and didn’t hesitate. He never acted like a freshman. He said, ‘If this is an open competitio­n, I’m going to compete.’ ”

That competitio­n may now be closed with Daniels officially earning his place under center for the second straight season. But Slovis’ performanc­e was perhaps the most noteworthy part of USC’s protracted camp battle.

His ascent to the primary backup spot, ahead of more experience­d options in redshirt sophomore Jack Sears and redshirt junior Matt Fink, was a testament to the competitio­n that USC’s staff tried to foster, even as so few believed Daniels’ starting role was in peril.

Over the summer, Slovis quickly progressed. He added 15 pounds of muscle and studied hours of tape, accelerati­ng his developmen­t in an offense that was new to all four quarterbac­ks competing for USC’s open job.

If not for Daniels’ unrelentin­g consistenc­y throughout camp, though, his job may not have been all that safe from Slovis, Harrell said.

“Kedon can make some throws that other people can’t make,” Harrell said. “He just came in and made some freshman mistakes, and if he wouldn’t have, I don’t know if he would’ve won the job or not, but it could have been a different story possibly. He knows that.”

It wasn’t lost on Daniels either.

“Stepping into college last semester, it looked like he’d been here before,” Daniels said of Slovis. “The kid is a really good football player. He wants to get better. He learned the system.”

The system would prove to be the great equalizer, just as coach Clay Helton had intended.

Even though Fink and Sears had more experience, the system’s simplicity ultimately offered a more equal glimpse at the talent of USC’s group of four quarterbac­ks, all of whom Helton insisted are capable of starting elsewhere.

For Sears, who has two years of eligibilit­y remaining, that could be the case in the future.

The redshirt sophomore chose not to speak with reporters on Wednesday, but his decline from competing for the starting job to sitting fourth on the depth chart, calls his future with the program into question.

For Slovis, that future appears bright. Few expected him to be this far along, this early on. Even if those anticipate­d limitation­s hadn’t dawned on the freshman himself.

As news spread of his ascent up the depth chart, messages of congratula­tions came pouring in from friends and family. It left the freshman puzzled.

“It was a weird deal,” Slovis said. “People are saying congrats, but you want to be the guy, you know?”

He may not be that guy just yet. But after ascending in USC’s quarterbac­k competitio­n, he’s no longer an afterthoug­ht either.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? KEDON SLOVIS, left, added an unexpected level of competitio­n for JT Daniels at the quarterbac­k spot.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times KEDON SLOVIS, left, added an unexpected level of competitio­n for JT Daniels at the quarterbac­k spot.

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