Los Angeles Times

Gill seeks to mold USC back into title pedigree

Former Loyola Marymount coach is tasked with reviving the Trojans

- By Jack Harris

Jason Gill leaned forward in his office and contemplat­ed the weight of his words.

“I know it might sound funny,” USC’s new baseball coach said, explaining his core considerat­ion for taking the Trojans job last summer, “but for me, it was all about winning national championsh­ips.”

In the context of USC’s storied history, this shouldn’t seem strange: The Trojans have 12 College World Series titles, double the amount of the next closest schools in the country. They have 21 CWS appearance­s and 2,858 wins, both fifth-most all-time. They have a historic alumni list that includes legends Tom Seaver, Randy Johnson and Mark McGwire. Most of all, they are situated in arguably college baseball’s most fertile recruiting landscape.

“It’s U-S-C,” Gill continued, emphasizin­g the threelette­r acronym that for so long was synonymous with baseball excellence. “It’s like, this is the best job in the world.”

Only, this century, it hasn’t been. Instead, a program once perched on the sport’s mountainto­p now finds itself far from the summit, almost 20 years removed from its last CWS berth and facing a steep climb to reach Omaha again.

“I feel the same way [about USC],” said Gill, a 49year-old Southern California native who spent the last 11 seasons coaching Loyola Marymount into a mid-major contender. “But I don’t know if everybody else does.”

Gill’s first game as Trojans coach comes Friday against Western Michigan at home. There is no one diagnosis for USC’s decadeslon­g decline.

After the retirement of national-championsh­ipwinning coach Mike Gillespie in 2006, the Trojans suffered through a string of ineffectiv­e hires. Its recruiting tailed off (between 2011 and 2019, the Trojans signed only three national top-25 classes, according to Perfect Game) and its pipeline to the MLB draft dried up (since 2010, only four Trojans have been selected in the top-five rounds). Its home facilities at Dedeaux Field have been surpassed by renovated and revamped complexes at other programs, too, especially within the Pac-12.

Then there is college baseball’s recent transforma­tion. In 2009, the NCAA adopted new roster regulation­s (limiting roster sizes at 35 players and capping the number of players allowed to be on scholarshi­p at 27) that dispersed the player pool and promoted sport-wide parity. In the years since, blue-blood programs such as USC have been put on a far more equal playing field.

When Gill arrived following his June 14 hiring, he honed in on smaller symptoms he deemed to be equally problemati­c. For example, the clubhouse was left by last year’s team in an “unacceptab­le” state of disarray. In Gill’s office, a corner of the wall was chipped. The carpet beneath his desk was stained.

“I don’t want to throw anybody under the bus,” he said, “but there’s a lot of that around here.”

It was the opposite of what he was used to at LMU, where he won 322 games and eclipsed the 30-win threshold six times in 11 seasons.

“Not that LMU is a better brand than USC, but what I had going on at LMU was a well-oiled machine,” Gill said. “Towards the end, I wasn’t having to do a lot. Everybody knew their role. Everybody understood it. Everybody was getting their stuff done. So then I walk out of that to something that has been dysfunctio­nal … you can see things right away.

“I know that sounds really minuscule or not relevant, but believe it or not, those are the things that, when you start paying attention to winning, you lose focus of.”

It’s a chicken-and-theegg argument. To Gill, onfield success can be hatched only once off-the-field habits are properly cultivated. At LMU, that philosophy helped the Lions tie for a conference championsh­ip in 2017 and reach an NCAA regional final last spring. Now at USC, on a team picked by the Pac-12’s coaches to finish seventh in the conference this season, Gill’s new players have learned the line of thinking as well.

“Even since Day 1, we had our first meeting the Sunday before school started … and after the first 15 minutes, he had us all ready to run through a brick wall,” junior pitcher John Beller said. “He talked about how the culture was going to change, and how he was going to put it on himself to make that happen. I think him being able to take ownership of the program right away, immediatel­y, helped us feel comfortabl­e following him.”

This offseason’s rebuild started from the ground up. Gill and his staff, which includes 10th-year USC assistant Gabe Alvarez and newly hired pitching coach Ted Silva, retaught defensive fundamenta­ls almost from scratch — “starting with catch,” junior Jamal O’Guinn joked. For much of fall practice, pitchers were allowed to throw only fastballs in scrimmages until they demonstrat­ed command of the strike zone.

And, as promised, the clubhouse was cleaned up.

“The locker room has been spotless,” Beller laughed. “They took everything out, they took the furniture out. It’s just super clean. There’s not even an excuse to have food or trash or anything, because it gets noticed.”

Long-term, Gill is confident his other coaching tools — he has been a lifelong recruiter in Southern California and put together a pitching staff at LMU that ranked 14th in the country in ERA last season — will help a program with only two NCAA tournament appearance­s since 2002 rediscover a level of consistenc­y that has been lacking for too long.

“I took the job knowing what the standard is,” he said. “The standard is winning national championsh­ips at USC. That’s pretty much in every sport. You come to USC to play baseball. That’s the standard. Now it’s about us upholding them, or just reminding ourselves of how to get to that point. I just think they need some direction on how to do that.”

‘It’s U-S-C. It’s like, this is the best job in the world.’

—Jason Gill, first-year Trojans coach, on the school’s venerable past

 ?? Katie Chin USC Athletics ?? JASON GILL, center, believes his familiarit­y with the Southland recruiting scene can help the program.
Katie Chin USC Athletics JASON GILL, center, believes his familiarit­y with the Southland recruiting scene can help the program.

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