Los Angeles Times

Grinch says no rushing USC’s defensive fix: ‘You can’t microwave it’

- By Ryan Kartje

When Alex Grinch sat down to process the disastrous end to his debut season as USC’s defensive coordinato­r, he started with the worst of the worst.

The big plays. The missed tackles. The mental breakdowns. Considerin­g the nearly 2,000 combined yards his defense surrendere­d over its final four games, there was plenty to sift through in November and December alone.

“You rip the Band-Aid off real quick,” Grinch said Tuesday. “That’s the appropriat­e thing to do.”

In the wake of USC’s embarrassi­ng bowl loss, frustrated fans pleaded for Lincoln Riley to cut Grinch loose. But the coach made clear in January, at the height of that frustratio­n, that his confidence in the coordinato­r had never wavered. Grinch was back in the office the morning after the bowl defeat, trying to make sense of how and why USC’s defense had unraveled.

More than two months later, Grinch spoke with reporters for the first time about his unit’s frustratin­g finish. Asked about his process for fixing the defense, the analytical Grinch spoke for three straight minutes in granular and sometimes meandering detail, explaining each of the individual lenses through which he evaluated USC’s defensive performanc­e.

The process began, Grinch said, with first looking inward.

“It takes a lot of discipline, and it takes a lot of maturity as a coaching staff to go through it because you’re rehashing the most frustratin­g plays of the season and it’s fresh,” he said. “So you look at it through that lens, ‘What can we do?’ You have to have an honest evaluation.”

What revelation­s, if any, came from that self-assessment remain to be seen. But any ref lection on the defense last season included some hard truths. USC finished 106th in the nation in total defense and 93rd in points allowed, and even those figures don’t capture where the unit stood by the fourth quarter of its bowl game, as it allowed Tulane to tally more than 10 yards per play.

Riley said Tuesday he was “very pleased with the progress defensivel­y” this spring. But Grinch wasn’t running away from any of those hard truths.

“You can’t microwave it,” Grinch said of fixing USC’s defensive issues. “You gotta go through it. And we also have to make sure as you go through it that at USC, we’re not afraid of the struggle. We’re not afraid of the hard stuff.”

USC added six transfers on defense to speed up the process, and most of them appear on their way to making a major impact.

Those additions have been most apparent along the defensive front, Riley says.

Former Arizona defensive tackle Kyon Barrs has looked like an immediate contributo­r on the interior, while Jamil Muhammad, who transferre­d from Georgia State, has made an impression with his power off the edge. Anthony Lucas, a former five-star defensive lineman, also has been “intriguing,” Riley said, given his athleticis­m and size.

“We brought in some good players up front. There’s no question about it,” Riley said. “And we’ve got a few more coming. There’s more competitio­n. There’s less of a gap between what was good for us last year on the front and then kind of the gap between the next level was too big. The gap is much smaller.

“There’s a lot more competitio­n, a lot more talent. I think this group has shown they have an opportunit­y to be more difficult for offenses to block than our group last year.”

It would be tempting to assume that a year of experience might make this offseason smoother for Grinch and his defense. But the embattled assistant warned explicitly against that sentiment.

“You can’t just simply say, ‘It’s Year 2, so all things are going to be better — just the natural progressio­n, we’re older, we’re better,’ ” Grinch said. “So we describe it to the guys, it can’t be Year 1, 2.0. … Believe me, everyone loves Year 2 compared to Year 1. But that’s not the magic elixir, either.

“We have a responsibi­lity to stack days and work harder. But there’s a bigger unit, there’s a stronger unit, and I think it’s a very confident unit.”

Etc.

USC tight end Malcolm Epps entered his name in the NCAA transfer portal Wednesday morning. He caught three touchdown passes during two seasons with the Trojans after transferri­ng from Texas . ... USC announced the addition of former Southeaste­rn Conference and NFL defensive backs coach Greg Brown to its staff as a defensive analyst.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? ALEX GRINCH is on the hot seat as USC’s defensive coordinato­r.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ALEX GRINCH is on the hot seat as USC’s defensive coordinato­r.

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