San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

STUNNING RALLY SAVES TROJANS

- BY RYAN KARTJE Kartje writes for the L.A. Times.

In a delayed Pac-12 debut defined by the unimaginab­le, played amid a pandemic backdrop in an empty stadium dotted with cardboard fans, it took the unthinkabl­e to save USC from an all-toofamilia­r fate against Arizona State.

A late morning marked by sloppy mistakes very nearly slipped away from the Trojans on Saturday. Three times they turned the ball over inside Sun Devils territory. Twice, they turned the ball over on downs in the same spot. As USC lined up for a desperatio­n onside kick, down six points with 2:49 remaining and no timeouts left, its fate seemed assured, its hopes of contention — in the Pac-12 and College Football Playoff — kaput.

But then, an errant bounce on the onside kick fell in front of freshman wide receiver Bru Mccoy, and hope was suddenly, inexplicab­ly alive and surging throughout the Coliseum. Seven plays and 45 yards later, a dart from quarterbac­k Kedon Slovis found Drake London in the end zone on fourth down, capping an extraordin­ary comeback that ended in a 28-27 victory for No. 20 USC.

Until late in the fourth quarter, USC had done all it could to dash its own hopes. It gave the ball away four times. Its defense broke down with missed assignment­s. Its offense struggled to find a rhythm, even as it racked up 556 yards. The mistakes felt like an extension of its worst moments from a season ago, even after USC rebuilt half of its staff and fortified most everything else to avoid such issues.

“A year ago, we may not have won this game,” coach Clay Helton said.

But in an unusual opening game of a strange, shortened season that began with a November rain and a 9 a.m. kickoff, the Trojans were somehow able to outlast mistakes that might have sunk them in the past.

The onside kick recovery alone wasn't enough to make that possible. On the drive before the recovery, a soaring pass from Slovis toward the end zone was tipped into the air. But as one Arizona State defensive back fell, Mccoy, in his first collegiate game after two years of waiting, just happened to be standing in the right place at the right time. He snagged the score easily out of mid-air, cutting the Sun Devils' lead to 27-21. On the next play, the ball bounced toward Mccoy again, and a sparse USC sideline came alive.

“You could feel the energy pick up as people realized we weren't out of the game,” Mccoy said.

“We could still put something together if we really wanted to.”

What they managed after that was a fearless scoring drive with their season already on the line. It began with two huge rushing plays from Vavae Malepeai, who picked up 33 of his 60 total yards on consecutiv­e runs. Slovis, who finished with 381 passing yards and two touchdowns, completed two passes to get USC to the 16yard line.

Even then, an ill-timed error nearly cost them the game, as right tackle Jalen Mckenzie committed a false start, giving the Trojans a fourth-and-9 situation from the 21-yard line.

But USC was unfazed. Offensive coordinato­r Graham Harrell went back to a play he'd already called, one that Arizona State kept under control by dropping as many defensive backs as possible into coverage. This time, Slovis monitored the middle of the field and saw a linebacker move toward London in the slot.

“That's one of those that you've got to pull the trigger,” Helton said.

“If you hesitate at all it's not going to be a touchdown.”

Slovis didn't blink. He fired a perfect pass at the perfect time to his 6-foot-4 sophomore. London came down with it against two defenders.

Jayden Daniels passed for 134 yards and ran for 111 more, but the Sun Devils' star quarterbac­k threw four straight incompleti­ons to end ASU'S last-ditch drive.

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