Los Angeles Times

MATCHUPS: USC (4-7, 3-5) at California (4-7, 3-5)

- Tonight at California Memorial Stadium, Berkeley, 8 TV: FS1 By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

Last hurrah

After a coaching search, two starting quarterbac­ks and countless blown coverages, USC will play its last game of the season. Then the Lincoln Riley era truly can begin.

The newly hired coach said during his introducto­ry news conference he is excited to watch his future team play. Knowing Riley will be tuning in could add intrigue to a game otherwise devoid of buzz.

With identical 4-7 records (3-5 in Pac-12 play), neither the Trojans nor Bears can qualify for a bowl game. It’s USC’s second losing season in three years. Despite getting blown out by UCLA last week, Cal is a four-point home favorite.

Here’s what to know about USC’s season finale:

For fans eagerly looking to turn the page on one of USC’s most disappoint­ing seasons, the end can’t come soon enough. But the Trojans have unfinished business.

“We owe the seniors to send them off the right way,” freshman quarterbac­k Jaxson Dart said this week.

Senior stalwarts such as running back Vavae Malepeai will suit up for the Trojans for a final time.

Just the thought of the end of his college career nearly brought tears to Malepeai’s eyes last week as the running back reflected on getting a start during his final game at the Coliseum after he had fallen behind transfer running back Keaontay Ingram on the depth chart. The team captain ran for a career-high 99 yards last week.

“I took pride in starring in whatever role I was asked to do for the team,” Malepeai said, his voice thick with emotion. “And I loved it. Every moment of it. And I’ll soak up this last week.”

Coaching carousel

Saturday not only will be the end for USC’s seniors, but also for many of its coaches who are unlikely to be retained by Riley. The situation seems especially precarious for interim coach Donte Williams.

This season wasn’t just the first head-coaching experience for Williams; the former cornerback­s coach never had even served as a coordinato­r.

But his recruiting acumen and connection­s in his hometown of L.A. still could make him a valuable commodity.

“It was a challenge,” Williams said of lessons he learned. “I wanted to be the best and [post a] win-loss record that didn’t happen, but at the same time I see a lot of players and I see a lot of people that developed . ... They all learned from this, not just me. We’ve learned from this together. And we’ll continue to push forward whatever path that may be.”

Injuries mount

Wednesday’s practice was USC’s most sparsely attended of the season. Many players were absent because of injuries and academic obligation­s with finals approachin­g, Williams said. The injury bug bit the secondary especially hard with cornerback­s Chris Steele and Isaac Taylor-Stuart and safety Jaylin Smith missing practice.

Taylor-Stuart was medically cleared to return Thursday morning, but all three players seemed questionab­le for Saturday.

Given the shortage of defensive backs, Williams said the Trojans could turn to freshman Prophet Brown or use freshman safety Caleb Bullock at multiple positions. Brown would be making his fourth appearance and maintain his redshirt status. Bullock is one of USC’s leading freshmen with 40 tackles and two intercepti­ons.

Quarterbac­k Kedon Slovis, who has missed two games because of a leg injury, returned to the field for practice this week but didn’t fully participat­e.

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