Saturday, November 19, 2011
Freshman WR Marqise Lee had eight catches for a career-best 187 receiving yards in the Trojans' 38-35 upset of No. 4 Oregon on Saturday night, including a 59-yard TD catch in the first quarter...
Coach Lane Kiffin had high praise for his team after its 38-35 upset of No. 4 Oregon on Saturday. “[In all phases] we played lights out,” he said. “We came in expecting to win, and we are happy we can celebrate like this.
Coach Chip Kelly said he thought the Ducks had all the momentum after recovering a fumble by USC RBMarc Tyler at the Oregon 11 with 2:31 to play. “You just felt at that time we were going to be able to go down and score, but we didn't,” Kelly said...
Oregon tight end David Paulson talks about the emotions in the locker room after the Ducks’ 38-35 loss to USC.
Even the normally reserved Lane Kiffin could not deny this was his greatest victory as a head coach. ``That's easy, it is the biggest (victory),'' Kiffin said. ``It broke the longest home winning streak in the country.
``Just a missed handoff between a fifth-year senior and a Heisman Trophy candidate.'' -- Lane Kiffin on Marc Tyler's fumble in fourth quarter
The Trojans build a 24-point lead before the Ducks miss a chance at a game-tying field goal for a 38-35 victory.
Urban Meyer a classless quitter who left Florida much worse than he found it? You decide.
http://t.co/t9MUGo7k
Urban Meyer will be new Ohio State coach. Write it down
http://t.co/8QHxN093
We all know that Lee Corso can get a bit excited when it comes to talking about college football. However, this morning during ESPN’s College GameDay, his excitement got the better of him when he let an [expletive] slip out on-air.
While making his pick for the SMU-Houston game, Corso grabbed an SMU megaphone before throwing it aside and putting on the head of the Cougars’ mascot. It was during that exchange that he let it slip out:
“How can you pick against SMU? Look at that one there — red, white and blue. U-S-A! … Ah, [expletive]”
Chris Fowler, Kirk Herbstreit and guest picker Carl Lewis all reacted to the outburst with Fowler telling Corso, who was still wearing the mascot head, “Shasta, shame on you.”...
#4 OREGON vs #18 USC
The Ducks are off a convincing trip to Stanford in which they dominated the Cardinal scoring 53 points on 63 offensive plays led by RB James who looked like a Heisman candidate with 146 rush yards (7.3) and 3 TD’s. UO has the Civil War on deck while the Trojans come in after an impressive showing vs Washington as they outgained the Huskies 426-244 (season low in yards for UW). Both teams have been ranked in the last seven meetings and the higher ranked tm has won five of the last six (UO pulled the upset in ‘09). Last year the situation clearly favored the Trojans who were hosting the #1 team at home looking for revenge but after taking a 32-29 lead, gave up 24 unanswered and lost 53-32. The last time here, the game was tied 17-17 late 2Q but USC was outscored 30-3 and outgained 416-134 (59 yds on their final drive) in a 47-20 loss. While a blowout isn’t expected, another Duck victory is.
PHIL’S FORECAST: OREGON 38 USC 31
Friday, November 18, 2011
Oregon is second nationally with 22 plays of 40 yards or more. The Ducks feature a bunch of playmakers who can take it the distance once they get into the open field. USC's DBs and LBs must wrap up in open space to prevent big, explosive plays...
The offense needs to take advantage of every scoring opportunity in the red zone. With WR Robert Woods questionable, that means WRs Brice Butler and Kyle Prater need to step up and give QB Matt Barkley more options near the goal line...
The Ducks play at a breakneck tempo, often going no-huddle in an attempt to wear down opponents physically and mentally. This strategy has resulted in 100 total points by Oregon against USC the last two seasons. Rotating players on defense will be key to slowing down the Ducks...
WR Robert Woods, the Trojan's leading receiver with 92 catches, remains a game-time decision against Oregon due to shoulder and ankle injuries. "I don't know either way," coach Lane Kiffin said. "I'm going to have to see speed, to see him get in and out of breaks, to see that he can play at a high level for us."...
Coach Lane Kiffin on his young players heading to Autzen Stadium to play Oregon: "They've got to be ready to play and stay focused, and not worry about what they can't control. It's going to be an exciting environment. It's the loudest place I've ever been to...
USC linebacker Dion Bailey on wide receiver Robert Woods: "He's good. He's a little banged up."

...When LSU hammered Oregon on the first Saturday of the 2011 season, it did so by making the Ducks play in a manner they despise: They made them play slow. This is pretty much the only way Oregon loses anymore — if a physical team can consistently contain the Ducks on first down, they need time to think about what they want to run on second and third down, and that deliberation makes them no different from any other team in the country. But Oregon absolutely kills people when it plays fast. The Ducks' Chip Kelly is the architect of the "Blur Offense," which is not so much a play-calling scheme as a design for life. The concept of using a nonstop, no-huddle offense is not new (Sam Wyche did it in the 1980s with

The Trojans find themselves in the unfamiliar position of being a sizable underdog for the second time in one season...
The No. 18 Trojans, barred from playing in the postseason because of NCAA sanctions, take on the No. 4 Ducks in what might be the most important game of Coach Lane Kiffin's short tenure.
Mike Bellotti rising at Arizona. Lots of chatter tonight.
Saturday's matchup between USC — which is the best team in Pac-12 South but can't go to the official title game — and Oregon should settle who gets the bragging rights as the conference's best team...
I am deep in an undisclosed forest right now enjoying a meal strange enough for an Indiana Jones film (by the way, Indiana Jones is fifth on a list of 37 people both fictional and real I have been basing my training on). This meal is part of a society of chefs too wild for normal chef duties, so they come to the wild and hunt and cook their own prey. I got an evite, so I rolled.
I had totally forgotten about today’s post until one chef (Olek) brought out a croque en bouche of pickled duck face mousse puffs. An impressive feat, but it made one ugly image pop into my head. Donald Duck’s rapist brother Puddles.

How did Puddles turn into this wide-eyed coke fiend? Look at his roots...

I think it’s because he hangs out with the wrong crowd.
The visored impostor!

A big day by Matt Barkley against the Oregon Ducks at Autzen Stadium might sway Heisman voters who have fallen under the spell of Stanford's Andrew Luck. It's happened before; Carson Palmer's performance at Autzen in 2002 helped him earn the trophy...
Once again, it comes courtesy of the venerable Gold Sheet: ``Trusted Pac-12 observers suggest Monte Kiffin's stop unit not properly prepared and constructed to deal with "Wildcat" looks and mobile QBs such as Oregon's Thomas.''
Considering the heat on Rick Neuheisel, Dan Guerrero may have a list of possible replacements that includes Boise State’s Chris Petersen. Guerrero is obligated to take a run at him, just in case he is willing to listen, and at the same time be prepared to move on quickly. It’s pretty much the same with Urban Meyer, the former Florida coach. If he returns to coaching, the thought is he is likely to pop up at Ohio State. Next up, Washington coach Steve Sarkisian. Didn’t he just get hammered in the Coliseum by USC? Correct. But he still has a 2-1 record against the Trojans, which has to resonate in Westwood. Sarkisian has the Huskies on the right track after taking over a program that was in worse shape than UCLA.
http://www.dailybreeze.com/news/ci_19355201

The New York Times shared an important revelation out of Eugene, Ore. yesterday, and we wanted to pass it on because we are immature: the spade-shaped Oregon "O" that Ducks fans so enthusiastically make to show support for the team means "vagina" in American Sign Language...
The Trojans have been the most disliked (hated? reviled?) team in the conference for years — decades, really — largely because of their success. But this week may represent a new low (high?) for them: I’d imagine that every fan, school administrator and conference official is rooting against Kiffin and Co. A victory at Oregon...
Quick: Name the second-rated passer in the Pac-12 behind Stanford's Andrew Luck.
It's not USC's Matt Barkley. It's not Washington's Keith Price or Arizona's Nick Foles.
It's Oregon's Darron Thomas, the guy that some -- let's call it a vocal minority -- speculated just a few weeks ago should be benched in favor of backup Bryan Bennett...
It's looking like Oregon might need some help to get into the Bowl Championship Series title game, and it could come Saturday night...
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Barkley's big moment? While much was made of USC quarterback Matt Barkley saying that Oregon didn't seem to be as good this season as the previous two years, a minor tweak won't decide this game. What it did do, however, is brighten the spotlight on Barkley just that much more. He's been the face of the Trojans for three years. This is likely his last college game that will attract national interest...
The former Crenshaw High star was bound for USC, but changed course and chose the Ducks, for whom he's had a productive freshman season. 'I just felt comfortable' in Eugene, Ore., he says...
Trojans say they're ready for Ducks' speed; now all they have to do is tackle...
...a resourceful tipster alerted us to a thread on the message boards of Cats Illustrated...The NCAA had left its internal SharePoint site unprotected (for some time, apparently, as Google had already crawled and indexed its files), meaning any outsider could comb through its data, which included years of accounting statements... By the time the NCAA realized its mistake late Tuesday, and made all the files inaccessible, they had all been downloaded and passed along to us. More »
Credit Arizona athletic director Greg Byrne for taking a swing at Urban Meyer, and he’ll now likely turn his attention to the usual suspects. But if Byrne is unable to land one of those strong candidates, a familiar name to Arizona fans should get a phone call: Sonny Dykes. Dykes is currently the head coach at Louisiana Tech, where he’s led the Bulldogs to five straight victories, including a 27-7 win at Ole Miss last week. … Dykes knows the Arizona program well, having served as offensive coordinator from 2007-09 under Stoops. He introduced the program to the spread offense, helped develop former signal-caller Willie Tuitama and brought star quarterback Nick Foles to Tucson.
http://www.nationalfootballpost.com/Could-a-DykesArizona-reunion-be-on-the-horizon.html
Boone County sheriff deputies arrested MU football coach Gary Pinkel Wednesday night for DWI. Pinkel posted a $500 bond and was released from the Boone County Jail.
http://www.komu.com/news/gary-pinkel-arrested-for-dwi/
Time has come for UCLA to fire Neuheisel and move on [Waldner - The Daily Breeze]
http://t.co/a4XmzvOM
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
USA Today is releasing its annual package on college football salaries for tomorrow's print edition.
But the on-line version is already available, and here it is.
The general theme of the story is that coaching salaries simply continue to rise, the average major college coach making $1.47 million per year, up 55 percent since 2006.
The list, however, does not include those of coaches from private schools, who are not bound to release such information. That includes two Pac-12 schools --- USC and Stanford.
Here's the list of the other Pac-12 coaches in order of what the newspaper lists as "total pay."
1, Chip Kelly, Oregon, $2.8 million
2, Jeff Tedford, Cal, $2.3 million
3, Steve Sarkisian, Washington, $2.25 million
4, Kyle Whittingham, Utah, $1.7 million
5, Dennis Erickson, Arizona State, $1.5 million
6, Mike Stoops, Arizona, $1.465 million
7, Mike Riley, Oregon State, $1.31 million
8, Rick Neuheisel, UCLA, $1.285 million
9, Jon Embree, Colorado, $725,000
10, Paul Wulff, Washington State, $600,050
USC's Lane Kiffin is probably the highest-paid coach, one report last year saying he makes as much as $4 million a year...
USC assistant coach Ed Orgeron said the key to playing Oregon is making sure the first player near the ball makes the tackle. ``You can't get spread out,'' Orgeron said. ``Otherwise LaMichael James will take off. You've got to make the first tackle.''
Dillon Baxter, who last month was removed from USC’s football program by Coach Lane Kiffin, is considering transferring to San Diego State or Nevada Las Vegas, according to this report.
Baxter told the Las Vegas Review-Journal’s Mark Anderson that he was intrigued by the possibility of playing for UNLV and was "looking at it pretty seriously.” Baxter also said he would prefer to play wide receiver...
Last summer, USC tailback Marc Tyler made remarks on camera to TMZ that were deemed inappropriate by the school and triggered a suspension by Coach Lane Kiffin.
This week, Tyler appeared again on TMZ.com in a video, saying the website helped him change, become sober and made him more conscious of what he says and does.
"I want to thank TMZ for helping me out," Tyler said in the video.
Kiffin said he had watched Tyler's latest appearance and had no problem with it.
"I thought he handled himself in a first-class manner," Kiffin said. "He's still a kid and those situations are hard...
The junior quarterback had said that the Ducks teams he played against in the past were better, but he said Tuesday that No. 4 Oregon might have one of the top defenses the Trojans will play.
Lane Kiffin said George Farmer is not an option to replace Robert Woods at wide receiver and will remain at tailback. ``It's too hard to move him back,'' Kiffin said.
Will Arizona State join Arizona in looking for a football coach?
Bob Davie to coach New Mexico...He replaces Mike Locksley.

...You can see the pros: money, first and foremost, but it’s far from the deciding factor. Leaving as a junior grants Barkley a head start on an N.F.L. career with a decidedly short shelf life; injuries happen, cross your fingers, and the graveyard of should-have-been-stars is littered with quarterbacks who, either through injuries or ineffectiveness, never lived up to expectations...
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
The junior quarterback had said that the Ducks teams he played against in the past were better, but he said Tuesday that No. 4 Oregon might have one of the top defenses the Trojans will play...
The visitors for Oregon's game this weekend against USC all have tiny little numbers by their names. Arik Armstead has a 1 by his name. He's the nation's number one offensive lineman and he''s reportedly down to Oregon and USC...
Pullard, a redshirt freshman linebacker who has started every game, was teammates with Thomas at Crenshaw High. They are best of friends, but Pullard says he won't hold back...
Just when the Houston Texans were looking like one of the teams to beat in the AFC, quarterback Matt Schaub suffers a foot injury that will keep him out indefinitely. Now is the time for Matt Leinart to prove, once and for all, that he can be a successful starting quarterback in the NFL.
“It’s a huge opportunity for me,” said Leinart, a former Heisman trophy winner at USC who has served as Schaub's backup the last two seasons...
It’s starting to hit me this season is almost over and I admit, I haven’t been this pumped up since early in the Pete Carroll days. This team is young, fast and literally getting better every game. If you haven’t been watching the games, you aren’t realizing that it is literally happening again. ESPN does not show our highlights, the media downplays USC’s accomplishments and the only time they mention us is to try and pump Barkley up to leave by making grandiose statements about him (not to say he doesn’t deserve them).
The truth is, we have a chance for a 10 win season while sanctioned. We have a chance to win the Pac 12 South. Oregon is going to be a beast this week, but there’s a palpable sense that our “penance” has been paid and the rest of the world is going to have to reap what they sowed...
On Oct. 30, a day after whipping Colorado 48-14, Arizona State was 6-2 and ranked 19th in the BCS standings. Looking at its four remaining games -- UCLA, Washington State, Arizona and California -- a 10-win season and all the rewards that brings seemed possible. There was talk of coach Dennis Erickson signing a contract extension. A South Division championship seemed a near-certainty, which meant the team could feel free to dream about the Rose Bowl.
Monday, November 14, 2011
When Oregon trudged off the Cowboys Stadium field after a 40-27 loss to LSU on Sept. 3, just about everyone counted them out. That was made real when they were poleaxed by pollsters, dropping from No. 3 to No. 13 and No. 14 in the AP and coaches' polls, respectively. That will teach Oregon -- and anyone else -- to agree to a marquee non-conference matchup against an elite team that everyone wants to see! Most turned away from the team with loud uniforms...
Trojans Coach Lane Kiffin has called Oregon 'the hottest team in the country right now.' USC faces the Ducks, who moved up to No. 4 in the Associated Press poll, in Eugene this week.
Erickson is 64 years old and has one year left on his contract. With one year left it is almost impossible to recruit so he is either getting a contract extension, getting fired or retiring with a year left on his deal. With a record at Arizona State of 31-28, it is obvious that the Sun Devils under Erickson are very mediocre and with new Pac-12 television money coming in and lots of empty seats at Sun Devils home games, it is time to find a coach that can do more than be average. Arizona State as a university has to decide just how bad they want to win in football. Do they want to make the commitment necessary to be relevant or are they content just being mediocre? Right now it’s hard to believe that they want to be great. It’s hard to believe that they care enough about football. Firing Erickson will be a start in telling its fans that they no longer want to settle for mediocrity.
http://arizonasports.com/category/gambo-blogs/20111113/It’s-time-for-change-at-ASU/
Lee returned the second-half kickoff 88 yards for a touchdown in the Trojans' 40-17 victory over Washington. He also caught nine passes for 74 yards and a touchdown. It was the second consecutive game that Lee scored two touchdowns. Lee has caught 52 passes and scored eight touchdowns...
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Time to pass along some of the more pertinent links covering Saturday's game.
--- Here's the game story with the nuts and bolts of what happened.
--- Times columnist Steve Kelley says the Huskies seem to be regressing.
--- Here's the notebook with items on Keith Price, the special teams, the sequence that turned the game for good, and the offensive line.
--- Also if you want them, the stats and the 2-Minute Drill.
--- The LA Times says USC seems to be hitting its stride at the right time.
--- The punter who ran 35 yards for USC is a walk-on.
--- Here's one handy link to everything that the Orange County Register wrote about the game. Included is this game story in which USC players said they noticed UW's body language change after the fake punt and that they thought they had the Huskies flustered from the start.
--- ESPN.com says this was a game USC would have lost the last two years.
--- ESPN.com also has a story quoting CB Nickell Robey as saying the Trojans finally got their revenge.
And I'm figuring that may be about all most of you want to read about that.
The facts are as cold as the night here. Rick Neuheisel has been unable to make the case he has what it takes to rally support for the UCLA football program and buy himself more time as coach. But what a belly flop, a 31-6 spanking coming from a second-rate opponent, and a reminder that nothing really has changed with UCLA football since Neuheisel’s arrival. Like so many other disappointing conference Saturdays the last four years, this one fell flat of soaring expectations. And not many more UCLA Saturdays are going to be available to Neuheisel...
Saturday, November 12, 2011
“This has become a big rivalry,” said Trojans coach Lane Kiffin, who coached alongside Sarkisian at USC for much of the previous decade. “It’s going to be a very competitive rivalry for a long time.”
Just not this time. Kiffin’s Trojans seem to be getting better every week down the stretch, winning five of six heading into next weekend’s trip to Oregon...
The walk-on, who kept alive a scoring drive with a fake punt, has played all season without a scholarship. Yet he says, 'Being a Trojan is worth it.'
Freshman catches a touchdown pass and returns a kickoff 88 yards for another score in Trojans' 40-17 victory over Washington, giving him four touchdowns in the last two games.
Trojans show how much they have improved with a solid victory at the Coliseum. Oregon will be a big test.
``I've said it 100 times. It's not about me or our staff, it's about USC. It's the only place that can bring in the quality players we have despite the sanctions.'' -- USC coach Lane Kiffin
Lane Kiffin said wide receiver Marqise Lee was ``arguably the best player on the field today.'' Lee was sick Thursday night and needed IVs. ``(He) could barely get out of bed,'' Kiffin said. ``He's going to be one of the greats to play here for sure.''
Here are some quotes from UW coach Steve Sarkisian following Saturday's 40-17 loss at USC:
...On what happened on the fake punt: "They faked it - and the guys responsible for the fake didn't see it, didn't execute."
On the shotgun snaps and going to a pistol look: "The shotgun snaps have been concerning for me for three weeks now, and we touched on it all week in practice that it needed to change or something like that would happen, and it finally got us. So hopefully that changes things..."
Friday, November 11, 2011
Here's the expanded version of the Scouting Report that will run in our Saturday paper that includes the nuts and bolts on the game:
Washington (6-3, 4-2) at USC (7-2, 4-2)
The line: Trojans by 12.
The setup: The Huskies have one more chance to get a marquee win in the regular season against a ranked team and do so against a USC squad against which it has pulled off big upsets the last two seasons... The game also marks another homecoming for UW coach Steve Sarkisian, an assistant at USC for seven years before taking over at Washington.
What to Expect: The weather forecast calls for temperatures in the mid-60s and rain, and that might slow down two offenses that have high-flying passing attacks. If the offenses can overcome the elements, however, this is another UW game that has all the earmarks of being a shootout...
...Notes:... This will be UWs last trip to USC until at least 2015, however, as the Trojans will come to Seattle next season and then the two teams won't play in 2013 and 2014. ... USC leads the overall series 49-28-4 and 29-11 in the LA Coliseum. However, UW is 9-9-1 in the last 19 meetings overall. ... Leading the announcing team is Gus Johnson, best-known among UW fans for his enthusiastic call of Isaiah Thomas' buzzer-beater against Arizona in the Pac-10 basketball tournament last March. ... UW has a chance to win seven regular-season games for the first time since 2002. ...
Key matchup: UW's defensive front seven vs. USC's offensive line...
...Upset brewing?: The Huskies have beaten USC as a double-digit underdog each of the past two seasons, so no reason they can't do it again, right? If nothing else, UW should go into the game with confidence, and if Chris Polk can have a big game and Price reverts to form anything is possible, as the Huskies have proven the last two years.
Washington's Steve Sarkisian and USC's Lane Kiffin are friendly rivals but the Trojans will seek to beat the Huskies coach for the first time in three meetings...
Tomorrow's game will be a big matchup to see which visor-wearing former Pete Carroll assistant will assert dominance and assume the mantle of Caesar Jr. Steve Sarkisian currently holds the honor but is an underdog. Lane Kiffin looks ready to assume the title . . . if he can...
The Trojans play Washington on the birthday of Robey's mother, who died not long after the sophomore cornerback signed a letter of intent to play at USC...

That year, they beat the Trojans a whopping 6-2 a year after having won 14-7. Of course, UW rarely plays at USC (or anywhere else) in consecutive years --- the only other times it's occurred with USC are 1930-31 and 1988-89 (UW, in fact, played at both USC and UCLA in 1989, playing five conference road games and just three at home).
But UW plays here again tomorrow due to a quirk in the schedule created by expansion. As we wrote earlier this week, this could be UW's last trip here until 2015...
Chris Polk could have been a Trojan.
Trojans want to make up for consecutive last-second losses: Memories of two straight last-second losses to Washington are burned in USC's mind. The Trojans hope to flip the script Saturday.
Nickel Package: Looking at the key matchups against Washington Kyle Williams looks at the keys for USC as it tries to avoid a third straight heartbreaking loss to Washington.
Former USC defensive coordinator-turned-traitorous Northwest farmer’s market attendee Nick Holt called out our offense saying he’d rather face us than Oregon, which is fun to say when your pass defense ranks worst in the Pac 12. That said, the biggest bulletin board material comes from Keith Price, young UDub QB, who has publicly responded to Mark Sanchez’s famous Mexican Flag mouthpiece...
Wednesday, November 09, 2011
Good Monday, Arrogant Nationals. I write to you from the back of a wild boar as we are out hunting an animal so delicious and endangered I can’t tell you about what it’s called (it’d freak you out) or how it tastes (you’d think everything tastes like sandpaper from here on out). I mean, it’s actually so delicious it borders on being disgusting, almost like, it’s so good I hate it because the bar is set too high. It’s like that scene in Once Upon a Time in Mexico where Johnny Depp kills the chef who made carnitas so good that he needed to murder someone. And that’s me right now only I am on a boar (which are surprisingly amazing to drive, I am even able to blog on my Apple II I brought because I am just so Brooklyn).

So, we might as well talk about that football game we played against that school on that day that wasn’t Saturday (F U Larry Scott). First of all, my enjoyment of this ass-kicking was severely limited by the fact that Folsom Field sucks. It’s factual and I think it cannot be defended.
The biggest evidence this stadium was developed by children with crayons was the view the ESPN cameras had to use for the game...
Here they are. ...
1, Stanford --- Stanford (now 9-0, 7-0) preps for what is now the biggest game in Pac-12 history. The Cardinal has also won an astonishing 17 games in a row. Its 2006 season, when some were writing the Cardinal was maybe the worst in conference history, really isn't that long ago, which leads one to wonder if there has ever been a program in the history of the conference to go from that bad to that good (and good for a sustained period of time) so quickly.
2, Oregon --- The Ducks (8-1, 6-0) didn't have to work quite as hard as some thought to get past the Huskies and set up the likely all-or-nothing clash with the Cardinal for the Pac-12 North title. And worth noting one more time --- Oregon's not going anywhere anytime soon. Oregon had 10 seniors on the two-deep for Saturday's game with UW, only one more than Washington.
3, USC --- The Trojans (7-2, 4-2) are a similarly young team, though they'll probably be starting over at QB next year. Still, the rumors of USC's demise so far seem unfounded. Trojans could easily finish 9-3, which given everything would seem more than good enough...
Q1: We'll start off first with kind of a big-picture question on how USC has responded to its NCAA sanctions. The conventional wisdom in a lot of places was that it might impact the motivation of the players. But USC seems to be playing at a pretty high level right now and that doesn't seem to be an issue, looking from the outside. Is that an accurate view, and how have the Trojans managed to keep the motivation high?
A: The sanctions and absence of an opportunity to play in a bowl game does not seem to be an issue for USC players in terms of motivation. If anything, coaches have used it as a rallying point. It's a classic "Us against them."...

Or maybe he really thinks the whole “Suck for Luck” campaign is overstated.
Sarkisian said if he were an NFL coach, he’d select USC’s Matt Barkley over Heisman contender and consensus No. 1 selection Andrew Luck of Stanford in the NFL Draft...
Wednesday, November 02, 2011
It was an arrogant day and night. All around. I had bought a bottle of champagne before noon, hung out poolside at the Four Seasons, got a little eucalyptus steam room action in, drank the champagne all before the game kicked off. Like last year with the Oregon game when I got married, I was celebrating my anniversary this weekend. Even my wife, who did not go to a football school (although she got to see a Harbaugh National Title at USD) loved this game, even if the outcome wasn’t perfect.
Let’s rewind...
The Pacific 12 Conference suspended McDonald for an illegal hit on Stanford receiver Chris Owusu on Saturday.
The thrilling game against Stanford may have been a preview of the renewed excitement and relevance USC can expect once out of NCAA jail.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011

"We had some good moments," he says, amending that later to say, "Just the best 30 seconds. That's how long the feeling lasts after winning a big game or doing something really special.
"I run into Ronnie Lott or Marcus Allen, you get that look, there's a connection, and maybe it's only 30 seconds but it's like, 'Yeah, we did it.'
"There aren't many reunions that last all night; most go about 30 seconds before everyone moves on to talk about something else. But those 30 seconds are special."...
Tuesday, October 25, 2011

...Further, Barkley has been fairly honest about how he's competitive with Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck. This will be his last shot at him as the Trojans quarterback. So, yes, the Trojans should have some feelings about the Cardinal.
Then, after playing Colorado, USC plays Washington, Oregon and UCLA on consecutive weekends...
Monday, January 31, 2011

...I’m merely saying that it’s a guessing game. Who thought that Marcus Dupree would play one-plus seasons at Oklahoma before drifting away, never to be heard from again? What signs were there to indicate that Xavier Crawford’s journey as the nation’s top recruit would lead him as far away from football as one can imagine? Who knows how Jadeveon Clowney’s career will go?...
Tuesday, November 16, 2010

The players say they are going to dig deep to improve, while the coaches try to find ways to help this team win.
"I don't have magic for it," Riley said. "I just point out the obvious. I know what tears you apart is the vagueness and blaming of not doing your work.
"Players need tangible ways to get better. We have to go to them as coaches and show them this is what to work on, and see progress. Then they can climb out of the hole."
While the Beavers are trying to figure themselves out, they need a win over USC to keep their slim postseason hopes alive...
Also, Beavers face tough task to reach bowl eligibility - Salem Statesman-Journal
Thursday, July 08, 2010

...Tennessee might be the only school publicly aiming its sights at U.S.C., but it won’t be the last — nor is it the only program hungry to kick the Trojans while they’re down, privately or publicly. Fellow Pac-10 schools see an opportunity: it’s not a large window...but for the first time in a decade, there is no dominant team atop the conference...
...U.S.C. likes playing the heavy, enjoys the doubt, revels being the bully. Yet you never want to supply your enemies with ammunition, not when your rivals sense a window to nab the crown off your head.
Tuesday, June 15, 2010

..."We checked everybody that came in. We scrutinized it. I guess it's projected like there were agents everywhere. It was never like that. At no time was it ever like that, and for somebody to perceive it that way, they don't get it. They didn't understand it, and they didn't do their homework because that's not what it was like.
"The perception that you received was not the reality. The reality was much different than that. The fact that we did things in a very unusual way, and made it as much as we could possibly make it for as many people and to share the experience with as many people as could fit, that made people uncomfortable. I thought we did it in glorious fashion. For that stuff, I don't apologize one bit. For the players, they would never apologize for that. We worked for everything we gained at that time, and are very, very proud of that. But it's part of this perception that was different."
Also, Carroll denies knowing of violations - Seattle Times