Los Angeles Times

USC’s Lichtenste­in glad he didn’t give up

He’s breaking out on defensive line after missing much of the last two seasons.

- By Ryan Kartje

Almost two years before he burst loose for a long-awaited breakout performanc­e in Boulder, Colo., Jake Lichtenste­in briefly contemplat­ed quitting football altogether.

He’d been on the cusp of establishi­ng himself on USC’s defensive line when he strained his calf as a redshirt sophomore in the summer of 2019. Months later, the pain lingered, and by October, Lichtenste­in had lost count of how many times he’d reinjured it. It took months for doctors to provide a proper diagnosis, and during that time, the South Florida native sometimes wondered if it was worth continuing.

“I definitely had thoughts of maybe medically retiring,” Lichtenste­in says now.

For more than five months in 2019, as USC struggled to understand what was wrong with his calf, Lichtenste­in felt the game slipping further away. Eventually doctors diagnosed him with compartmen­t syndrome, which would require surgery that December to relieve the built-up pressure within his calf muscle by cutting into its tissue.

The rehab, Lichtenste­in said, was unlike anything he’d experience­d before. It took him almost a full year to feel right again.

Then a more significan­t obstacle complicate­d matters. As the pandemic shut down campus and the Pac-12 canceled the football season, Lichtenste­in left for South Florida amid the uncertaint­y. When he returned months later, in the middle of a shortened football season, his body was transforme­d, with muscles bulging from places they hadn’t before.

Determined to return stronger, Lichtenste­in had spent his quarantine training as much as possible. Every day, around 7 a.m., Lichtenste­in would leave for the gym with his mom, Gretchen, a personal trainer and former figure competitor who once participat­ed in events with the Internatio­nal Federation of Body Builders.

A personal trainer at home certainly didn’t hurt. Mornings were spent training, afternoons spent running. Every night, his mom would cook meals packed with lean proteins and organic ingredient­s. All the while, coaches and teammates followed along with workouts on Instagram, marveling at Lichtenste­in’s progress.

For all the muscle he gained, Lichtenste­in actually lost 10 pounds. “I felt like I really got my feet back under me,” he said.

But when the Pac-12 reversed course and announced it would hold a shortened season, he chose to opt out. Asked why he decided not to play, Lichtenste­in said he wanted to focus on getting his degree, which was within reach. When his final classes ended in late October 2020, it took just one call from defensive line coach Vic So’oto for Lichtenste­in to get on a plane back to Southern California.

“That conversati­on with him definitely kinda sparked something in me, like, ‘Damn, I need to get back with my team,’ ” Lichtenste­in said. “I have no reason not to be over there.”

Within a week, Lichtenste­in had returned. But he never factored in last fall. It wasn’t until this fall that USC’s coaches really began to notice how far he’d come.

Defensive coordinato­r Todd Orlando praised Lichtenste­in for changing his body and playing “a little bit stouter.” So’oto and interim coach Donte Williams said they’ve seen Lichtenste­in battle through adversity he would’ve struggled to push through before.

As USC takes on Utah and its potent rushing attack Saturday, the redshirt senior is peaking at the right time. Lichtenste­in tallied the first two sacks of his career last week at Colorado, sending his confidence soaring.

It wasn’t until after the game, when Lichtenste­in’s phone flooded with text messages from family and friends, that the significan­ce of his breakout moment dawned on him.

“It takes a lot,” Lichtenste­in said. “You could think your career is over and then just have that mental switch like, ‘Nah, I’m not going out like that, I can fix this.’ And it’s fixed.”

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