Friday, September 19, 2008

Passing the Test

WeAreSC.com


The USC Trojans have been known for the ability to impose their will upon opponents over year’s past, especially through the air.
The staple of the program over the last few years, which features two Heisman Trophy winning quarterbacks, took a giant step back last year with the well documented struggles of a young receiver corp.

A new quarterback at the helm and a brand new weapon poised to become the Trojan’s go-to-guy later, and things seem right back on track.

Through two games, both convincing victories over high caliber opponents, and pundits abroad can be heard with mumbles of a possible Mark Sanchez for Heisman campaign.

Given these are lofty expectations to throw on a quarterback just over a week shy of conference play, the stats do not lie. Sanchez has thrown for 510 yards through two games, including touchdown strikes to six different receivers.

Possibly even more impressive is the fact that Sanchez has only thrown two interceptions to go along with his seven touchdown connections.

The lone receiver on the roster with more then a single touchdown grab on the year is Arkansas transfer Damian Williams, a redshirt sophomore who has been Sanchez’ safety nest early on.

“Of course I’m going to look for Damian (Williams),” said Sanchez. “If a play breaks down I know he is going to find the open area.”

Much of the success can be attributed to the tight-knit nature of the unit, something Sanchez admits may have absent to this group last year.

“It’s a total family,” said Sanchez of this wide receiver group. “I don’t feel like they’re my friends or my teammates, they’re members of my family.”

That family attitude has transcended past the overall team mantra into individual position groups, something that allows different players to shine on any given night with no resentment amongst one another.

The beneficiary of a great off-season, Williams believes that the key to his success thus far was the countless hours of work logged in over the summer with his quarterback. Work that went far beyond the regimented practice schedule.

“Mark (Sanchez) and I worked a lot together over the summer,” said Williams of the obvious chemistry. “Whether it was here (USC) or in Orange County we were just out there working hard, trying to get stuff down pat.”

Mission accomplished early on.

“We’ve always tried to follow the guy that’s hot,” admitted Carroll. “He seems to really be on it.”

Number six understands that in order to keep this hot-streak alive, he must look to more then just Williams for success, although the Arkansas native’s recent efforts have not gone unnoticed.

“Damian is just really lighting it up right now,” added Sanchez on his new favorite target. “He’s having a great time, and hopefully he can carry it out.

“Don’t sleep on those other wide-outs, those guys are great.”

Playing the slot receiver position has given Williams plenty of opportunities to show his knack for splitting defenses and routinely coming up with big catches to move the chains.

“We have a lot of plays,” joked Williams. “I’m just able to get open in a lot of different situations. Being in the slot it makes it a little bit easier for you.”

As a freshman at Arkansas, Williams’ role primarily placed him on the outside along the sideline, allowing him to become more of a downfield threat.

“I enjoy being in there (the slot),” said Williams of his role within the offense. “At that spot it comes down to getting a rhythm, and that’s really what it boils down to.”

His time at USC, however, has drawn plenty of comparisons to some Trojan greats who came before him. Namely former slot receiver and current New York Giant Steve Smith.

“He (Williams) feels like Steve Smith out here,” said head coach Pete Carroll. “We feel like he’s a guy that can consistently find the open spots and get himself in the right place.

“Quarterbacks trust him and they can believe in him. They know he is going to make good decisions for them.”

The trust factor between Sanchez and Williams seems to be at an all-time high, although their work together has been somewhat limited due to the amount of time Williams has been donning the cardinal and gold.

If Saturday night’s performance against a top-five Buckeye team were any indication of things to come, they have surely made up for lost time.

“It felt really good to get in the end-zone,” admitted Williams. “It’s been a long time since I’ve been in there (end-zone).

“We still have a lot of work to do though.”

Past their obvious connection on the football field, the two seem to share a very similar outlook about the game. Never become satisfied.

“Even after a big win and as well as people think I did, there is still a whole lot of stuff left to clean up,” explained Sanchez.

The Mission Viejo graduate and former five-star quarterback prospect entered the USC program with plenty of expectations. Those expectations, at least for three years, seemed to rest on the back-burner.

With the Trojans’ sporting a near unanimous #1 ranking in each of the major polls, and possible talks of hoisting a Heisman trophy and BCS national championship trophy, Sanchez is putting forth his best efforts in blocking those thoughts out.

“That’s all stuff on the outside,” commented Sanchez on the team‘s recent success. “The Heisman talk and the national championship talk, that’s all stuff that stays out of our locker room.”

Did Sanchez say completely out of the locker room?

“We joke about it,” he admitted with a grin. “But it’s not something that’s at the forefront of our mind. We’re focusing on Oregon State.”

The well-spoken, yet humble gun-slinger from Orange County realizes just how far he has come to earn the starting job at USC, and everything that comes along with playing the position.

“That outside stuff is nice,” revealed Sanchez. “It reflects well on this team. I just happen to be the guy who gets a lot of the credit and a lot of the scrutiny.

“Both of which I don’t deserve.”

Williams and Sanchez nearly hooked up on another touchdown connection as the half was winding down against the Buckeyes. A play that resulted in an interception by Ohio State cornerback Chimdi Chekwa.

“I should have caught the ball,” explained Williams of the interception at the end of the first half. “That’s all there is to it.”

That unselfish attitude seems to be the hallmark of this year’s team, a team poised to do very big things on the national scene.

For now, Trojan fans can enjoy the recent performance of their receivers, and Carroll held nothing back when talking about his newest receiving threat.

“He’s (Damian Williams) been a factor,” said head coach Pete Carroll of the overall improvement of the passing game. “He really could have had four touchdown catches in this game (Ohio State).”

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Mustain can only watch and wait

Scott Wolf LA Daily News

USC sophomore Aaron Corp remains the Trojans' No. 2 quarterback, and offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian said Wednesday he is constantly talking to No. 3 quarterback Mitch Mustain to keep the former Arkansas star from losing hope for playing time.

"We're in constant communication," Sarkisian said. "Sometimes it's coach (Pete) Carroll. Sometimes it's me. It was the same with Mark (Sanchez) before he started and (John David) Booty before he got to play. They all want to play."

But Sarkisian admitted Mustain's case is different than Corp's because of the high expectations surrounding his transfer from Arkansas to USC.

"For Mitch, it's a little of a challenge not being the quarterback, more so than Aaron," Sarkisian said. "He started eight games in the SEC. He's trying to watch and learn and get more reps."

Mustain appeared to be unhappy after Corp was named the No. 2 quarterback before the season opener against Virginia. He said he is adjusting to life as the third quarterback after preseason expectations he might be able to overtake Sanchez for the starting job.

"I'm doing OK," Mustain said. "I'm picking up the offense and still learning things."

Sarkisian said even though he played Corp and Mustain briefly against Ohio State, he really wanted to get No. 4 quarterback Garrett Green into the game.

"He's deserving of playing time too," Sarkisian said. "But we only ran 62 plays. It's hard to get (guys in) when you're only running 62 plays. We'd like 80 plays."

No worries: Even though Pac-10 rival Oregon lost its first two quarterbacks to injury, Sarkisian said USC would not play Corp more in games for mor experience in case Sanchez got hurt.

"We value our practice field so much anyways that experience for Mitch and Aaron is as valuable as getting into a game," he said.

Wright pleads not guilty: Cornerback Shareece Wright pleaded not guilty to one felony count of resisting a police officer at a party in Colton. A settlement conference is scheduled for Oct. 29.

"I'm not saying anything about it," Wright said after Wednesday's practice.

Carroll was noncommital about whether he would suspend Wright.

"I don't know enough about it," Carroll said. "We'll find out more in the next couple days. I don't know any of the circumstances. I need really good information to see what it all means."

Wright attended a party that was broken up by police and tried to re-enter the house, which resulted in the charges.

McKnight better: Tailback Joe McKnight, who suffered a concussion and migraine headaches, said he would be able to play if USC played today.

"I felt better (Wednesday) morning, I wasn't dizzy," McKnight said. "I didn't have any after-effects."

Wright back at USC after court

DAN WEBER PE.com

SAN BERNARDINO - USC junior cornerback Shareece Wright pleaded not guilty and was released on his own recognizance Wednesday morning after being arraigned in Superior Court on a felony charge of resisting a police officer at a Labor Day weekend party in his hometown of Colton.

The District Attorney's office argued for $15,000 bail for Wright, the same as for the other three defendants arrested at the scene. But Wright, who was not arrested or notified that he'd been charged until last Wednesday, was allowed to return to school without bail after signing an agreement to return for an Oct. 29 court date and all other court dates.

Wright returned to practice Wednesday afternoon without comment, as directed by his attorney, Carlos Juarez.

Juarez said he viewed the case as basically one of an overreaction by the police who showed up at a loud party of some 30-plus people with a number of police and canine units "and then started tasering people."

The party was for Wright's best friend, Luis Alvarado, deploying as a Marine to Iraq on Wednesday. Wright, who often stays at his friend's home, was planning to stay that night. But police told Wright he had to leave the house, his attorney said.

"He admits he'd been drinking," Juarez said of Wright, 21. "He said, 'This is my house, I'm staying here,' " and that "he always stayed there when he was not at USC."

"He did nothing wrong. It's an unfortunate incident," said Juarez, who said he is a family friend of Wright's and is handling the case pro bono.

The charge carries a penalty of up to three years in jail.

Juarez planned to "interview a number of witnesses that the police didn't talk to," with the expectation that after submitting witness statements to the District Attorney, the charge would be dropped.

While Wright wasn't asked to put up bail, Judge John Martin did issue a stern warning to the player, who failed to show up for a June 2007 speeding ticket hearing.

"Give me a reason to lock you up and I will slam you back in here. ... Is that clear?" the judge said.

Wright's status at USC hasn't been determined, Coach Pete Carroll said Wednesday.

"I don't know enough about it," Carroll said. "I haven't had a chance to talk to him about it. I need really good information."

Dr. Michael Jackson, USC's vice president for student affairs, said what happens to Wright now "is up to Pete Carroll and (Athletic Director) Mike Garrett based on what they know about the situation and eventually the results of the process."

For an external situation, there's no university policy, Jackson said.

"If it were a USC-sponsored event, that would be different and we'd be involved," he said.

DJ Morgan commits to USC

Scott Schrader WeAreSC.com

One of the worst kept secrets was which school DJ Morgan from Taft High in Woodland Hills would commit to, if offered. Stanford and Florida were the first schools to offer Morgan a scholarship, but the scholarship offer from USC was the one he wanted. Morgan received the USC offer and verbally committed after practice on Tuesday.

WeAreSC's Brian Matthews spoke with Morgan's brother, who confirmed the commitment to USC. Morgan was asleep at the time, so we'll have a full report tomorrow regarding his commitment.

Last season Morgan rushed for 1,173 yards and 10 touchdowns on 173 carries and had 19 receptions for 230 yards and three touchdowns. And his combination as threat carrying and catching the ball will earn him a spot as one of the elite prospects in the 2010 class.

Although Morgan is a football player running track, he runs the 110m hurdles and the 400m hurdles and his fastest time in the 400 hurdles is 53.06 and 14.14 in the 100m hurdles. "I’m the fastest in the world in my age group in both of those (events)," Morgan said.

We'll have more from Morgan tomorrow.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Hogue Report: Post-Ohio State

WeAreSC.com

Dominant defense + precision weapons offense + historic depth at almost every position = maybe the best USC team Pete Carroll has ever fielded?? It’s still early, but that equation may prove true by the time this 2008 squad is done.
The hype for this game reached a level just shy of the BCS Championship (I would argue it was more than last year’s Rose Bowl for sure). And yes, it was only September 13. I, for one, was trying all week to not succumb to the pressure around L.A. and the country of discounting Ohio State based on their lackluster performance against Ohio U. Even for the Trojans, I saw the Virginia film but felt it was too early to judge these Trojans, because Virginia simply wasn’t that good. Did we really know how good the offensive line would be against a talented group like OSU? Or how our QB and receivers would do against a talented secondary? And the Trojans D – Virginia didn’t even try to run the ball against the Trojans – could we really know how guys like Averell Spicer and Everson Griffen and others would fare against an OSU attack that averaged over 5-yards per carry against LSU last year in the BCS Championship Game?

Two words: QUESTIONS ANSWERED

Ohio State is a good football team. They may not be a top 4 or 5 team, but they are definitely top-10, and dismissing them as just another overrated Big-Ten team would be a disservice to the Trojans, who dominated OSU more than LSU last year and more than Florida the year before. And Ohio State’s defense is its best in the last three years, and its offense is much the same as last year and now has Terrell Pryor. But USC physically and athletically dominated the game – and it could have been very, very ugly if Pete hadn’t pulled back on the throttle.

The Trojan defense is as solid as any year under Pete Carroll, who seems to have a great grasp on his personnel packages and gets playmakers in the game at the rights times. Back in the mix is the forced turnovers. Back in the mix is the ability for the defense to score on its own. And back is that killer instinct that smells fear and just keeps turning up the heat.

And did anyone notice the second-half adjustments by Pete? Through most of the third quarter, the Buckeyes had negative yardage. He came after Boeckman with more ferocity and slanted the line repeatedly to the Buckeyes run tendencies. His approach to Pryor was different, as the ends contained him with pressure coming up the middle and he simply looked confused and often went backwards.

For the offense, I was even more impressed, as there were more question marks going in. My first props (it’s in my blood), go to the offensive line. For them to run the ball as well as they did (particularly using their athleticism at the corners of the defense) and give Mark Sanchez so much time to throw – in the face of a number of blitzes, was outstanding. And this group will get better each week.

Second kudos go to Steve Sarkisian, who I felt did a tremendous job both in preparation, and execution. There is a reason the blitzes were picked up, and even more, turned into scoring plays. That was preparation. Then you add the actual calls in the game: the balanced attack, the unpredictability, and the confidence he showed in his whole group… outstanding job, Sark.

And my last pat on the back goes to Mark Sanchez. Big game, big stage, big defense to go against, and all he showed was poise, confidence, leadership, passion, precision… (should I go on?) Mark may well be the best quarterback in the country right now, and he will improve each week. He would be the first to tell you that he wasn’t perfect, but who would you rather have running this offense?.. this team? Tim Tebow? He’s an amazing athlete, but he’s not a fit for this offense, and he isn’t a guy who can distribute to weapons like USC has. Remember – Florida lost to Michigan last year in their bowl game. Sam Bradford? Not a chance – I think he’d break. Chase Daniel? He doesn’t have the arm Sanchez does. Matthew Stafford? Not accurate enough to run this offense. Max Hall? Great system guy and accurate, but doesn’t bring the passion and leadership Mark does, which this team of stars needs. Jimmy Clausen? (I have to throw in some humor every now and then). Mark Sanchez is the right guy at the right time for this program. How do you reach new heights after 2004, 2005? You do everything else USC has done, and you have Mark Sanchez as your quarterback.

So now that I’ve heaped praise on the Trojans more than I normally ever do at this point in the season, let me offer this one word of warning (which I’ve said the last two seasons as well): Beware, Trojans, it’s a long season. We’re at week 2. Ten more regular season games to go. USC always does well in big games. And USC always has times where teams that were supposed to be walk-overs show up and make a game of it. So at some point, home or away, there will come a time where an opponent catches some breaks, and USC makes some errors, and all of a sudden it’s a game in the 4th quarter and the opponent has confidence and it’s anyone’s game. IT WILL HAPPEN! When it does, it’s up to this team to show their character and come away with victory. But to be honest, I wouldn’t want it any other way!

Onto Oregon State.

College Football - Could this be Carroll's best USC team?

Olin Buchanan Rivals.com

LOS ANGELES – Just as with the nation's other college football teams, there are questions facing USC.

Why is Pete Carroll smiling? Because it's tough to find a weakness in his Trojans.
But the questions surrounding the top-ranked Trojans are significantly different than those of the other programs, especially after Saturday's 35-3 flogging of Ohio State.

A cynical nation seems quick to dismiss the Buckeyes as plodding, clumsy oafs who benefit greatly from membership in the speed-challenged Big Ten. And though that's not truly the case, the Trojans sure made them look that way.

That dominant showing now raises questions: Do the Trojans have any weaknesses? Can anyone on their schedule beat them? Is this coach Pete Carroll's best Trojans team to date?

Ask the locals, who wear their emotions on their red-and-gold sleeves, and the answers are no, no and yes. But even after dominating the Buckeyes, Carroll wasn't about to compare this team to any of his seven others at USC. He did say the Trojans played to their standards, which pretty much says it all.

"Over the years, when we prepare this well, when we have our guys, we're hard to beat no matter who we play," Carroll said after the victory. "That's the standard we live in."

In seven-plus seasons under Carroll, USC has 78 victories, two national championships and six consecutive top-five finishes.

"I felt we performed to our abilities," Carroll said. "We didn't do anything unique; we just ran the game plan. This is a great win for us, but it doesn't mean any more than the others. The next game is just as big for us."

Whether the Trojans truly believe that likely holds the true answer to the aforementioned questions. It's not as if USC has been showered with "best-ever" praise before only to come away bitterly disappointed.

In 2005, the Trojans were being hailed as the best team in the history of college football, but lost to Texas in the national championship game. A year later, they appeared on their way back to the national championship game, but lost to Oregon State and UCLA along the way. Last season they seemed unbeatable – until lowly Stanford beat them.

But there are several reasons the Trojans figure to steer clear of the potholes this season as they take a bead on Miami, site of the national championship game.

Their quarterback play is excellent. Their running backs and receivers are explosive. Their defense is ornery. And their schedule appears easy after USC's Pac-10 brethren went 2-7 this past weekend. That includes Arizona, Arizona State, Stanford and UCLA going 0-4 against the Mountain West Conference, Washington State getting trampled by perennial Big 12 doormat Baylor and California falling to Maryland, which was coming off a loss to Middle Tennessee State.

THE PETE CARROLL ERA
Pete Carroll's record since arriving at USC:
Year Record Bowl/result
2001 6-6 Lost Las Vegas Bowl
2002 11-2 Won Orange Bowl
2003 12-1 Won Rose Bowl *
2004 13-0 Won Orange Bowl #
2005 12-1 Lost Rose Bowl
2006 11-2 Won Rose Bowl
2007 11-2 Won Rose Bowl
2008 2-0 TBD
* - Shared national title; # - Won national title
But USC doesn't have to focus on the negatives of its conference to be positive about its chances of going unbeaten. Quarterback Mark Sanchez now has complete understanding of the offense to go along with his immense talent. He has thrown seven touchdown passes – four against Ohio State – in two games and is obviously more confident and polished than a year ago, when he started three games in place of injured starter John David Booty.

"He's working the offense the way it's (supposed to) work," Carroll said. "He's making the checks he needs to make. He's playing like top (USC) quarterbacks have played, and it's cool to see that early in the season."

For USC fans, it's also cool to see sophomore tailback Joe McKnight emerging as the electrifying presence he was expected to be when he was signed out of high school. McKnight averaged more than 8 yards per carry while rushing for 105 yards against the Buckeyes.

Then, there are the receivers, who arrived with great hype but haven't yet lived up to it. Arkansas transfer Damian Williams may be on the verge of doing so. He has 10 receptions this season and had two touchdown grabs against an experienced Ohio State secondary.

"He's an absolute stud," Sanchez said. "He was away from football for a year, so he's hungry."

And while L.A. loves flash and dash, this offense is more substance than image.

"They are not fancy but their protection is very good and their run game is solid," Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. "Their quarterback has pretty good feet and kept plays alive. He knew when to throw the ball away a few times.

"They were good across the board."

No doubt about that. The Trojans' first touchdowns were scored by fullback Stanley Havili and backup tight end Blake Ayles, both on receptions. When opposing defenses have to worry about Sanchez, McKnight and fellow tailback C.J. Gable and wide receivers Patrick Turner, Vidal Hazelton and Williams, it seems almost unfair that the Trojans can burn them with a fullback and a reserve tight end.

Associated Press
Damian Williams is quickly becoming a favorite target for Mark Sanchez.
"Obviously, it's a luxury when you have a fullback that you can throw to out of the backfield," USC offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian said. "And it's a luxury to have Joe McKnight and what he can do. We have a lot of versatility in our offense.

"Stanley has the ability to get down the field more than most fullbacks, and we'll use him."

USC typically has a high-scoring offense. What sets these Trojans apart might be the defense, which held Ohio State without a touchdown for the first time in 141 games.

When the Trojans reached the '05 national championship game, they had defensive issues and had allowed 31 points to Notre Dame and 42 to Fresno State before falling to Texas 41-38.

The Trojans return seven starters from a 2007 defensive unit which ranked among the nation's best. Five of them – tackle Fili Moala, end Kyle Moore, linebackers Rey Maualuga and Brian Cushing and free safety Taylor Mays – have been projected by various sources as potential first-round selections in next year's NFL draft.

The Trojans aren't dependent on their offense to score 40 points in order to win. They held Ohio State to 71 rushing yards, and the only time the Trojans seemed vulnerable was when OSU freshman quarterback Terrelle Pryor faked handoffs and ran.

That doesn't appear to be a worrisome issue, though. Washington quarterback Jake Locker is the only starting quarterback in the Pac-10 who's a true running threat.

"This is the best defense I've been on," said Moore, a senior. "I've been on teams that went to the national championship. We have a lot of seniors and we returned a lot of guys. And the young guys like (end) Everson Griffen are contributing. A lot of guys are contributing."

Five players notched sacks against Ohio State. The Trojans also forced a fumble and two interceptions, one returned 48 yards for a touchdown by Maualuga.

"The mark of a really good defense is taking the ball away," Carroll said. "If we keep this up, we can really be good. If this can become a factor for us, we can really be hard to beat."

As hard to beat as some of his previous USC teams?

Perhaps even harder.

Mike Huguenin's weekend winners and losers

Rivals.com

We're sure most of you saw the USC-Ohio State game and know the outcome.

The Trojans were big winners, and have the very early inside track on playing for the national championship.

There were dozens of other college football games this week, and there were plenty of winners – and losers.

We'll point out a few of them here, as well as some things you may have missed.

WINNERS

Mark Sanchez and Southern California solidified their hold on No. 1.
USC. The Trojans started a bit sluggishly, then dominated Ohio State. Admit it: If you're not a Trojans fan, this team scares you.

South Florida: The Bulls rallied from 17 down to beat Kansas on Friday night. In the process, they saved a little face for the Big East – which has been pitiful. Jim Leavitt may have found a running back in sophomore Jamar Taylor, who played in the same high school backfield as Florida's Chris Rainey at Lakeland (Fla.) High.

BYU: The Cougars had their way with a UCLA team that had rallied to beat Tennessee in Week One. Max Hall looked tremendous in carving up a good Bruins defense. The dominating performance came one week after BYU eked out a one-point win over a mediocre Washington team.

Oklahoma: Another week, another 50-point performance, this one against Washington. The Sooners had no trouble with the Huskies and look like the second-best team in the nation.

Big 12 quarterbacks: Going into the season, the league was thought to have the best group of quarterbacks in the nation. That notion certainly was strengthened this weekend, with Oklahoma's Sam Bradford, Texas Tech's Graham Harrell, Kansas' Todd Reesing and Missouri's Chase Daniel having monster games.

Ralph Friedgen and Chris Turner: Maryland's coach and quarterback, respectively, surely had fun Saturday when the Terps shocked California. Friedgen held off on making lineup changes in the wake of last week's loss to Middle Tennessee, and his players certainly responded to his faith in them. Turner, meanwhile, threw two TD passes, ran the offense with aplomb, avoided mistakes and likely ended any talk about a quarterback controversy.

Charlie Weis: Last week's weak performance against San Diego State now is forgotten after Saturday's victory over Michigan. His offensive line seems to actually know how to block this season, his sophomore quarterback is starting to show why everyone thought he was so good and his running game showed some signs of life behind Robert Hughes.

LOSERS

Kyle Williams had every right to be sad after Arizona State laid an egg Saturday.
Ohio State: Another big non-conference game, another big loss. The Buckeyes looked good on their second offensive possession, but who knew that would be their lone highlight? They have an excuse in that Chris Wells didn't play. But they still would've lost had he played; it just wouldn't have been by 32 points.

Arizona State: Well, that matchup next week against Georgia sure has lost some luster. The Sun Devils' OT loss to UNLV is the culprit. Arizona State looked mighty uninterested and it cost the Sun Devils.

California: During the first two weeks of the season, the Golden Bears looked as if they were for real. Alas, they lost at Maryland – which was coming off a loss to Middle Tennessee State.

UCLA: Yikes. All that goodwill emanating from that Labor Day victory over Tennessee is gone in the wake of a 59-point loss to BYU. It was UCLA's worst loss since 1929.

Auburn: Yes, we know the Tigers won, beating Mississippi State 3-2 behind a dominating defensive performance. But Auburn's offense looked miserable. Can Auburn muster enough offense next week to beat LSU? Not if it plays as it did Saturday.

Arizona: A 2-0 start, and an offense that scored more than 40 points in each of those games, had folks believing that perhaps the Wildcats were a Pac-10 sleeper. Uh, no. Losing at New Mexico – which had been 0-2 – curbs a lot of enthusiasm about the Wildcats.

Charlie Weis: As big as that win was over Michigan, blowing out your knee on a hit by your own player and facing surgery isn't good.

Rutgers: No, we didn't forget about the Scarlet Knights' Thursday night loss. Is anyone else starting to wonder if that magical 2006 season was an aberration?

Jim Heacock: Ohio State's defensive coordinator generally gets high marks for his work. But for the third time in three seasons, his unit was eviscerated in a huge non-conference game. Perhaps it's time to question Bollman and his schemes. Florida in 2006, LSU in 2007 and USC in 2008 had their way with the Buckeyes' defense (there's also Michigan in 2006).

The Pac-10: USC did its part. The rest of the league? Ehh. Oregon needed overtime to beat a Purdue team that hopes – hopes – to finish in the top half of the Big Ten. Arizona State was shocked by UNLV. Arizona, Cal and UCLA suffered embarrassing losses. Stanford and Washington got spanked. Washington State got clobbered by Baylor. The bottom line: Expect to hear a lot of "USC and the Nine Dwarfs" when people talk about the Pac-10 in the next few weeks.

DID YOU SEE THAT?

UAB's Joe Webb was called for two personal foul penalties in the Blazers' loss at Tennessee. A player getting two personal fouls in one game isn't that uncommon. But Webb is a quarterback. When's the last time a quarterback was called for two personal fouls in one game?

Boise State wore all blue on its home game against Bowling Green. All-blue uniforms on that blue field? It made for tough viewing for those of watching at home.

• UCLA's Alterraun Verner is one of the better cornerbacks on the West Coast, but Verner was burnt toast in the Bruins' loss to BYU. Cougars quarterback Max Hall seemed to go out of his way to pick on Verner, especially in the first half.

South Carolina was on national TV for the third week in a row. The Gamecocks were on ESPN the first two weeks, then were on CBS on Saturday against Georgia. Our condolences if you've watched the Gamecocks try to play offense each of the past three weeks.

Mike Huguenin is the college sports editor for Rivals.com. He can be reached at mhuguenin@rivals.com.

Five Things We Learned


Stewart Mandel FanNation

1. That Mark Sanchez and Joe McKnight are worthy heirs. It felt a whole lot like 2004 at the L.A. Coliseum Saturday night. This year's Trojans carry so many parallels to that undefeated team, with sophomore tailback Joe McKnight playing the role of sophomore tailback Reggie Bush; receivers Damian Williams (transfer) and Patrick Turner (preseason question mark) playing the roles of then-freshman Dwayne Jarrett and untested sophomore Steve Smith; and a similarly inexperienced offensive line charged with protecting QB Mark Sanchez. Linebackers Rey Maualuga and Brian Cushing are much the same senior defensive stalwarts as Shaun Cody and Mike Patterson were then.

But this team is already far ahead of where that team was at the beginning of its season. We knew USC's defense would be dominant, but against Ohio State, the Trojans' offense looked like a finely tuned machine. Give a lot of credit to the O-line, which routinely beat the Buckeyes' touted defenders off the ball, but it's pretty clear that Sanchez (68.2 percent, 510 yards through two games) and McKnight (9.2 yards per carry) sure looked a whole lot like Leinart and Bush.

2. That Chase Daniel is your new Heisman front-runner. Saturday against Nevada -- the same team that a week earlier held Texas Tech QB Graham Harrell to his lowest yardage total (297) in two years -- the Tigers' senior QB was a near-perfect 23-of-28 for 405 yards, four touchdowns and no picks. He played for eight possessions against the Wolf Pack before exiting in the third quarter -- and led Mizzou to seven touchdowns and a field goal.

Daniel's mastery of Gary Pinkel's spread offense is reminiscent of Alex Smith during Utah's undefeated 2004 season. While Missouri's version doesn't necessarily include as much of a QB-run component, the important thing is that Daniel, like Smith, makes the right decision on almost every single snap. It certainly helps to have the a luxury of weapons like WR Jeremy Maclin (six catches, 172 yards against Nevada), TE Chase Coffman (six for 127) and RB Derrick Washington (eight carries, 75 yards), but Daniel is still the trigger-man that makes the whole thing work. And right now it's working about as well as imaginable.

3. That the Mountain West owns the Pac-10. It certainly did Saturday. There were four head-to-head matchups between the two leagues and the MWC swept them all. TCU's home victory over Stanford wasn't a surprise, but UNLV over Arizona State? New Mexico over Arizona? And BYU putting up a 59-0 pasting on UCLA? It was a remarkable day for the wannabe BCS conference and a nightmarish weekend for the actual BCS conference. Even with USC's banner performance and Oregon's victory at Purdue, the Pac-10 went an astounding 3-7. Maryland knocked of Cal. Oklahoma trounced Washington. Baylor even clobbered Washington State.

MWC fans who have e-mailed me so far aren't trying to claim their league is superior to the Pac-10 -- not as long as USC is in it -- but they believe their top teams to be on the same level as the Pac-10's next-in-line. And they would sure love a shot at the Big East's automatic BCS berth, which, this year at least, they probably deserve. Personally, I don't like to read too much into single-game results until we have more distance to determine whether or not they were flukes (like UCLA's win over Tennessee), but I will say this much: BYU is going to face a whole lot more hurdles in its pursuit of an undefeated MWC season than USC will in its run through the Pac-10.

4. That the Maryland Terrapins and women have something in common. Which is -- I'll never figure out either of them. Year after year, Ralph Friedgen's team lures you into thinking they're going to be awful, than burst out with some entirely unexpected masterpiece. Last season, Maryland lost to North Carolina one week, then turned around and knocked off BC the next. There was one stretch in 2004 when the Terps lost five of six games, failing to score double-digit points in any of them -- but in the one exception, upset top-10 Florida State 20-17.

Which brings us to this season. In its first two games, Maryland edged Delaware 14-7 and lost 24-14 to Middle Tennessee. The Blue Raiders put up 400-plus yards on the Terps defense, and QB Chris Turner tossed three interceptions. So, naturally, the Terps went out Saturday and held Cal RB Jahvid Best to 25 yards on 10 carries while Turner was an impeccable 15-of-19 for 156 yards and two TDs. The Bears, down 28-6 at one point, did mount a comeback and put up 461 yards before falling 35-27, but the Terps still came away with a season-changing victory. And I came away from it with no better idea whether Maryland will now win the ACC or finish 5-7.

5. That the Temple Owls are cursed. Will somebody let this long-suffering program catch a bloody break already? Temple has finally found itself a legit coach, Al Golden. It's a found a conference in which it can be competitive (the MAC). All it wants is to go to a bowl game for the first time since 1979, an entirely realistic goal now that we're handing out 66 berths a year, but it's never going to happen with the kind of hard luck currently hammering the Owls.

Last week, Temple held defending Big East co-champ Connecticut without a touchdown for 60 minutes -- only to lose 12-9 in overtime on a Donald Brown TD run. Then, on Saturday, the Owls lost to Buffalo on a Hail Mary. That dagger dropped Golden's team to 1-2, which will become 1-3 once they visit their coach's alma mater, Penn State, next weekend. On paper, it looks like just another dismal year for Temple football when, in reality, they could easily be 3-0 right now.

Five Things We Learned

Stewart Mandel FanNation

1. That Mark Sanchez and Joe McKnight are worthy heirs. It felt a whole lot like 2004 at the L.A. Coliseum Saturday night. This year's Trojans carry so many parallels to that undefeated team, with sophomore tailback Joe McKnight playing the role of sophomore tailback Reggie Bush; receivers Damian Williams (transfer) and Patrick Turner (preseason question mark) playing the roles of then-freshman Dwayne Jarrett and untested sophomore Steve Smith; and a similarly inexperienced offensive line charged with protecting QB Mark Sanchez. Linebackers Rey Maualuga and Brian Cushing are much the same senior defensive stalwarts as Shaun Cody and Mike Patterson were then.

But this team is already far ahead of where that team was at the beginning of its season. We knew USC's defense would be dominant, but against Ohio State, the Trojans' offense looked like a finely tuned machine. Give a lot of credit to the O-line, which routinely beat the Buckeyes' touted defenders off the ball, but it's pretty clear that Sanchez (68.2 percent, 510 yards through two games) and McKnight (9.2 yards per carry) sure looked a whole lot like Leinart and Bush.

2. That Chase Daniel is your new Heisman front-runner. Saturday against Nevada -- the same team that a week earlier held Texas Tech QB Graham Harrell to his lowest yardage total (297) in two years -- the Tigers' senior QB was a near-perfect 23-of-28 for 405 yards, four touchdowns and no picks. He played for eight possessions against the Wolf Pack before exiting in the third quarter -- and led Mizzou to seven touchdowns and a field goal.

Daniel's mastery of Gary Pinkel's spread offense is reminiscent of Alex Smith during Utah's undefeated 2004 season. While Missouri's version doesn't necessarily include as much of a QB-run component, the important thing is that Daniel, like Smith, makes the right decision on almost every single snap. It certainly helps to have the a luxury of weapons like WR Jeremy Maclin (six catches, 172 yards against Nevada), TE Chase Coffman (six for 127) and RB Derrick Washington (eight carries, 75 yards), but Daniel is still the trigger-man that makes the whole thing work. And right now it's working about as well as imaginable.

3. That the Mountain West owns the Pac-10. It certainly did Saturday. There were four head-to-head matchups between the two leagues and the MWC swept them all. TCU's home victory over Stanford wasn't a surprise, but UNLV over Arizona State? New Mexico over Arizona? And BYU putting up a 59-0 pasting on UCLA? It was a remarkable day for the wannabe BCS conference and a nightmarish weekend for the actual BCS conference. Even with USC's banner performance and Oregon's victory at Purdue, the Pac-10 went an astounding 3-7. Maryland knocked of Cal. Oklahoma trounced Washington. Baylor even clobbered Washington State.

MWC fans who have e-mailed me so far aren't trying to claim their league is superior to the Pac-10 -- not as long as USC is in it -- but they believe their top teams to be on the same level as the Pac-10's next-in-line. And they would sure love a shot at the Big East's automatic BCS berth, which, this year at least, they probably deserve. Personally, I don't like to read too much into single-game results until we have more distance to determine whether or not they were flukes (like UCLA's win over Tennessee), but I will say this much: BYU is going to face a whole lot more hurdles in its pursuit of an undefeated MWC season than USC will in its run through the Pac-10.

4. That the Maryland Terrapins and women have something in common. Which is -- I'll never figure out either of them. Year after year, Ralph Friedgen's team lures you into thinking they're going to be awful, than burst out with some entirely unexpected masterpiece. Last season, Maryland lost to North Carolina one week, then turned around and knocked off BC the next. There was one stretch in 2004 when the Terps lost five of six games, failing to score double-digit points in any of them -- but in the one exception, upset top-10 Florida State 20-17.

Which brings us to this season. In its first two games, Maryland edged Delaware 14-7 and lost 24-14 to Middle Tennessee. The Blue Raiders put up 400-plus yards on the Terps defense, and QB Chris Turner tossed three interceptions. So, naturally, the Terps went out Saturday and held Cal RB Jahvid Best to 25 yards on 10 carries while Turner was an impeccable 15-of-19 for 156 yards and two TDs. The Bears, down 28-6 at one point, did mount a comeback and put up 461 yards before falling 35-27, but the Terps still came away with a season-changing victory. And I came away from it with no better idea whether Maryland will now win the ACC or finish 5-7.

5. That the Temple Owls are cursed. Will somebody let this long-suffering program catch a bloody break already? Temple has finally found itself a legit coach, Al Golden. It's a found a conference in which it can be competitive (the MAC). All it wants is to go to a bowl game for the first time since 1979, an entirely realistic goal now that we're handing out 66 berths a year, but it's never going to happen with the kind of hard luck currently hammering the Owls.

Last week, Temple held defending Big East co-champ Connecticut without a touchdown for 60 minutes -- only to lose 12-9 in overtime on a Donald Brown TD run. Then, on Saturday, the Owls lost to Buffalo on a Hail Mary. That dagger dropped Golden's team to 1-2, which will become 1-3 once they visit their coach's alma mater, Penn State, next weekend. On paper, it looks like just another dismal year for Temple football when, in reality, they could easily be 3-0 right now.

USC will have to lose focus to miss title game

Don Borst FOX Sports on MSN

And The Chase is on.
The USC Trojans and Missouri quarterback Chase Daniel have clearly established that they're the ones to beat in this college football season, and they already have put a little distance between themselves and their pursuers.

The way Southern California whipped up on Ohio State suggests that the next three months will serve as an extended process of determining whether the best team in the SEC or the best team in the Big 12 will earn the right to face the Trojans in Miami for the national championship on Jan. 8.

Yes, we know that college football is all about upsets, and USC has lost four Pac-10 games over the past two seasons, but the 2008 Trojans are much more than the flash and dash editions of the past couple of years. These guys are grinders as well, with linebacker Rey Maualuga and a surprisingly dominant offensive line providing the team's personality and quarterback Mark Sanchez and the ridiculous running backs the Showtime.

It's a hungry Pete Carroll and crew heading into an advantageous schedule, one that is a table set for the Trojans to run.

The nine other Pac-10 teams and Notre Dame are now counting on the Troy Boys to lose their concentration along the way. That's Carroll's job now for the next three months — to keep his talented squad from absorbing the stunning upsets, such as last year against Stanford, and the year before that against Oregon State and UCLA. The credibility that the fiery Sanchez has with his teammates will pay significant dividends in guarding against a letdown.

It's even good news for SC that the resurgent Irish (at least somewhat improved from last season, but facing a much easier schedule) will go into their late November game with a goodly number of wins on their resume — all the better for USC's computer rankings.

So, what else did Saturday teach us?

  • Chasing Daniel: Whether Missouri QB Daniel becomes the Usain Bolt of this race remains to be seen, but the Heisman Trophy Trust can go ahead and book a supersaver fare from Columbia, Mo., to New York for Heisman Weekend in early December.

    The real race will be to see who will join Daniel and incumbent Tim Tebow for the weekend of festivities leading to the announcement. Other serious candidates on the radar have to be USC linebacker Maualuga, Georgia RB Knowshon Moreno and Oklahoma QB Sam Bradford.

    As impressive as USC's Sanchez is — and he fits right into the Trojans' new tradition of Heisman quarterbacks — Maualuga is the best player on that team and the most impressive defensive player in the country this season.

    Daniel's performances so far have been mind-blowing. He's led Missouri to an average of 58 points a game, completing 72 percent of his passes, with 10 touchdowns, just one interception and already 1,031 yards of total offense (344 per game). He played the whole game against Illinois and about the equivalent of one whole game combined against Southeast Missouri and Nevada.

    The results of those 28 drives have been 20 scores (18 touchdowns, two field goals), four punts, one fumble, one interception, and two turnovers on downs. That's great, right? Now consider that in the Illinois game, once the Tigers had put the game away, they pretty well took the air out of the ball in the fourth quarter, and they went punt-punt-punt-downs in their last four possessions while running clock.

    So when Chase Daniel has been on the field in the first three quarters of games this year, they've had the ball 24 times, good for 20 scores (126 points). The schedule will get much tougher after this week's final non-league game against Buffalo, but his efficiency and leadership do not figure to wane.

    He's for real and so are the Tigers — and what's really interesting is that this year they don't play Oklahoma at all ... until they both reach the Big 12 Championship Game.

  • The bumbling Pac-10: Even as USC flexed for the national audience, the rest of the league took a giant step backward. Four Pac-10 teams (Arizona State, UCLA, Arizona, Stanford) lost to Mountain West Conference opponents, on what could be termed the worst overall day for the Pac-10 in a long time — maybe ever.

    On the same day USC sent the message that it has re-established its margin over the rest of the league, suddenly everybody in the MWC can walk into recruits' homes in the West and say, "Pac-10, Smack-10." Uh ... this is not a good thing for the non-Trojans out West — at least those in the Pac-10.

    What's more, a supposed Pac-10 contender (Cal) couldn't hang with a so-so ACC team (Maryland). And two other Pac-10 teams were blown out by Big 12 teams — and one of those teams was Baylor!

    Even when Oregon was able to rally to beat Purdue in overtime, Ducks quarterback Jason Roper sustained a knee injury that could cost him the next month.

    The big question in the Pac-10 right now is whether any of the other teams can get things together well enough and consistently enough to earn an invitation to the Rose Bowl while USC heads for the BCS championship game. It doesn't seem likely. These days, a team must have nine wins AND a top-14 national ranking to qualify for a BCS bowl, and this weekend's results sure make that seem unlikely — someone might even have to beat USC along the way.

  • The Mountain men: By handling four Pac-10 opponents — and it's 5-0 against the league so far this season — the MWC is now a stunning 6-2 in games against BCS conference opponents, with five different teams adding to the win total.

    BYU went medieval on UCLA, making a 59-0 statement for its eventual BCS candidacy. Consider that even if the Cougars go undefeated — which would have to include a victory over similarly white-hot Utah — they'd still not be guaranteed a BCS spot. According to BCS selection procedures, for a team from the Mountain West, Conference USA, WAC, MAC, or Sun Belt to be guaranteed a BCS bowl, they must be ranked in the top 12 in the final BCS rankings or be ranked in the top 16 and higher than a BCS conference champion.

    Even at that, only the highest-ranked team from outside the six power conferences would be guaranteed a spot, and other teams ranked in the top 14 would be eligible to be selected.

    That means teams like BYU, East Carolina, Utah and perhaps Boise State are not only competing with the glass ceiling that annually marks an upstart team's rise toward the BCS, but they're competing with each other in the minds of voters and computers.

    With the unusual possibility that no Pac-10 team will be eligible for the Rose Bowl, BYU and Utah ought to start raising money to purchase 50,000 Rose Bowl tickets up front, and start lobbying the folks in the distinctive white blazers in Pasadena by offering to buy up every single ticket if that's what it takes.

  • A competitive title game? Ohio State wasn't even a speed bump in the Coliseum, despite the earnest attempts of the college football world (including me) to hype this one as a wondrous early season showdown.

    The outcome was really quite predictable: In recent years, we have seen USC in really big games, and we have seen Ohio State in really big games ... c'mon, who's kidding whom?

    USC has lightning speed, knows how to win in the big-game spotlight, especially at the Coliseum, and was playing at home.

    Ohio State is somewhat lumbering (again), has not shown well in big games, was playing on the road and was playing without Beanie Wells (as if he would have made all that much of a difference).

    Even if the Buckeyes were to right themselves and roll to an 11-1 regular-season record, it's hard to believe that voters would value a perfect Big Ten record this year above a conference championship in the SEC or Big 12. In other words, this already looks like the BCS championship game will be a competitive game (for a change from recent years).

  • Next week: The SEC takes center stage with three big-time conference matchups, along with a nice opportunity for Georgia to make hay in the debate against USC.
    • West Virginia at Colorado (Thursday night)
    • Florida at Tennessee
    • Georgia at Arizona State
    • LSU at Auburn
    • Alabama at Arkansas
    • Boise State at Oregon
    • East Carolina at North Carolina State
  • Sunday, September 14, 2008

    This USC team shows it's the best of Carroll era

    Bill Plaschke Los Angeles Times

    Who is going to beat them?

    A game that was supposed to supply this year's USC football team with its first definitive answer instead ended with a roaring, resounding question.

    Who is going to beat them?

    You tell me, after watching the Trojans dismantle the country's fifth-ranked team by 32 points Saturday night, exactly who is going to be better than them?

    "If we practice and prepare as we have done, I don't think anybody," said beaming Trojan Kyle Moore, standing firm on the unscarred Coliseum field, saucer-eyed Ohio State players trudging around him.

    This supposed game of the century ended up being a referendum on the last eight years.

    You can stop debating the identity of the best team of the Coach Pete Carroll era, because, in four months, everyone will agree.

    This will be it.

    This was more than a 35-3 victory against an experienced group that has appeared in the last two national championship games.

    This was more than a second victory in a season in which the Trojans have outscored their two major-college opponents by a combined 87-10.

    This was linebacker Rey Maualuga scoring on an interception return by outrunning a wide receiver.

    This was quarterback Mark Sanchez getting his Favre on by throwing four touchdown passes from his heels, his toes and his wits.

    This was a debutante ball for the future undefeated national champions.

    "This was USC football," said linebacker Brian Cushing, smiling under the "Feel Me" sign etched into his eye black.

    Oh, the Buckeyes felt them, all right.

    With flags flapping and players leaping, they initially ran on to the field as famed Ohio State.

    But they left it three hours later as another state entirely. A state of confusion. A state of disrepair. Washington State?

    The Buckeyes' reputed "best defense in football" -- Pete Carroll's words, not mine -- felt the Trojans score after lunging catches, playground picks and Joe McKnight's cleats on their face masks.

    The Buckeyes' smart and experienced offense felt a Trojans defense that chased them from here to the Alamo Bowl with relentless pressure, constant thumps and two allowed yards in the third quarter.

    Two yards.

    "Yeah," said Cushing, nodding with a complete lack of surprise.

    Some Columbus folks will say it could have been different if the Buckeyes had had the services of injured star running back Chris "Beanie" Wells.

    Fine, if Wells played, they would have lost by only three touchdowns.

    Other Columbus folks will be quick to blame the loss on three turnovers and 10 penalties, including a holding call that negated a first-half touchdown.

    "It was a play here, a play there, a penalty there," said cornerback Malcolm Jenkins. "We never stopped playing hard."

    Oh yeah? That's not what USC folks saw.

    "Most of the game, their offensive linemen were talking to each other, then near the end, they just stopped," said Moore. "It was like they just wanted to get the game over. They were done."

    To be fair, the Buckeyes had a couple of early moments of competitiveness that were cut short with penalties and mistakes, particularly when guard Ben Person tackled Trojan Averell Spicer on a touchdown pass.

    But from the middle of the second quarter, the Trojans outgained the Buckeyes, 208-69.

    "They got slower, and we just got more charged up," said Moore.

    Isn't that what always happens with great Carroll teams?

    Who is going to beat them?

    Their remaining games are all against either a seemingly weak Pacific 10 Conference team or Notre Dame. Anything resembling a potentially tough battle -- Oregon, California -- is at home.

    "Over the years, when we prepare this well, when we have our guys, we're hard to beat, no matter who we play," Carroll said. "That's the standard we live in."

    And, under his watch, this standard has never been higher.

    They don't have two Heisman Trophy winners like the 2004 team, but they might have a dozen NFL starters.

    They don't have the experience of the 2002 team -- which Carroll loved dearly -- but they have more speed and depth.

    The 2003 team won the Associated Press national championship, but lost a game, returning us to the question revolving around the current team.

    Who is going to beat them?

    Of course, there are always cracks that could lead to holes, with one appearing before the game.

    On Friday, Times reporters David Wharton and Gary Klein reported that cornerback Shareece Wright had been charged with felony resisting a police officer at a party last weekend.

    Many college sports teams immediately suspend athletes who are charged with felonies. Yet Wright was allowed to start and play, with Carroll saying, "We understand what happened."

    Yeah, so do I, and it doesn't pass the smell test.

    Afterward, Carroll said the issue would be addressed again this week. Here's hoping he handles it with the same good sense his team is showing on the field.

    Who's going to beat them?

    Only themselves.

    Key for Trojans' title run is to avoid Stanford-like loss

    Dennis Dodd CBSSports.com

    LOS ANGELES -- The word causes the usually genial Trojans to pause. The mention of it carries so much weight that its two syllables might as well be five fingers balled up into a fist. Gut punches aren't easily forgotten.

    Stanford.

    As much as you want to get excited about No. 1 USC's latest statement-making win, there's a certain, "Yeah, but ..." to its future. As in: Yeah, but is there another Stanford in its future? In a season of upsets, USC losing at home to the 41-point underdog Cardinal last season might have been the biggest -- of all time.

    It was obvious after Saturday's 35-3 victory over Ohio State that the Trojans were still figuring out what happened last Oct. 6 and convincing themselves that it would never happen again.

    "After watching it 100 times, I couldn't tell you what happened," said senior defensive tackle Fili Moala. "I think it was just complacency."

    I've been covering USC extensively during the Pete Carroll era and I've never heard anything close to the c-word uttered by a Trojan. Part of Carroll's success is his uncanny ability to keep his team on task. His practices are significantly shorter -- and thus more enjoyable for his players -- than at other schools.

    His players seem to bask in the limelight, without hogging it. Must have something to do with growing up in the L.A. media market. Half of them look like they stepped off the sand after an afternoon of surfing at Manhattan Beach. The few that are from outside California value the experience like an extended vacation.

    The program has had its share of off-field problems but because Carroll is so open with everyone, not just media, the transgressions don't linger in the minds of critics.

    You want to like them. In the week leading up to the Ohio State, I heard Carroll use the word "dude", "cool" and "awesome" a couple dozen times combined. His favorite time of day is playing catch in practice.

    This isn't a 56-year-old coach, it's a 12-year-old who snuck into Heritage Hall.

    Despite all that, a skeptic can't help but ask if there is another Stanford out there. Has complacency snuck ever so subversively into the program? I'm not necessarily talking about the Stanford game (Nov. 15 at Palo Alto), but a loss to an underdog that doesn't make sense. Two years ago, it happened at Oregon State and at UCLA. Last year, it was the Cardinal. The other 2007 loss at Oregon was hardly an upset. Starting quarterback John David Booty was injured and with the inexperienced Mark Sanchez, the Trojans fought valiantly and lost by a touchdown.

    "We remember that (Stanford) game every week, every day," said Sanchez, who threw four touchdowns on Saturday. "Those kinds of games are out there. For us to avoid them is going to take intense focus and tremendous effort knowing we're never going to ... throw our hat out there, our helmet out there."

    There was a giant reminder Saturday night of how a season can deteriorate in an instant. Arizona State, thought by many to be USC's chief challenger in the Pac-10, lost at home to UNLV. The Pac-10 itself seemed to be falling by the wayside with other embarrassing losses by Cal, UCLA, Arizona and, yes, Stanford.

    The temptation is to fast forward the season and place USC in the BCS title game against: Pick one a.) the SEC champion; or b.) the Big 12 champion (Oklahoma or Missouri). USC will likely be favored in its remaining 10 games. There's not a team left on its schedule that approximates Ohio State, which just got its head handed to it before the biggest Coliseum crowd in 15 years.

    "We come out here and play games," Moala said Saturday night. "I see better (players) in practice."

    You'd think, then, that after six consecutive BCS bowls and 11-win seasons, there would be more faith in the Trojans.

    "I think it's dangerous to think like that," Moala said. "A lot can happen, people can get complacent. People can get big headed and think something of themselves that they aren't."

    In a locker room of go-to interviews, Moala might be the conscience of the Trojans. His answers are thoughtful. He thinks about the question and doesn't spout clichés. You can tell without asking that teammates look up to him.

    It's obvious from talking to him that there was an element of leadership that was missing last season. Maybe the Trojans were too young, too complacent. This year's team has 12 senior starters counting special teamers. It's hard to say what went "wrong" after an 11-2 Rose Bowl-winning season in 2007. I do know they don't necessarily measure success here by mere Rose Bowls.

    What's the big deal? The program has lost once at home since 2001. That loss was to Stanford and the stench doesn't wash away that easily.

    "We were thinking less of our opponents and not thinking they were dangerous and they (Cardinal) came in here and beat our butts," Moala said. "Our team grew up in a year. Honestly, I think we're very dangerous."

    It's still tempting, then, to christen these Trojans as favorites once again. Sanchez looks like a budding Matt Leinart. If it's possible, tailback/returner Joe McKnight has even more moves and is faster than Reggie Bush. The receivers have finally started to step up after shrinking into the background last season.

    USC has a lot of time to contemplate its future. It doesn't play for 11 more days, on a Thursday night at Oregon State. You can tell even now that the two dreaded syllables haven't left the building, or the Trojans' minds.

    "Say if we played Stanford next week ... we're going to prepare like it's a national championship, like they're coming to beat us ...," linebacker Rey Maualuga said. "That (loss) is something we feed off of because we don't ever want that to happen again."

    Buckeyes falter again in spotlight

    Stewart Mandel SI.com

    LOS ANGELES -- The Ohio State Buckeyes adapted well to their Hollywood surroundings here this weekend. They provided a town full of screenwriters the perfect script for a blockbuster horror flick.

    What exactly should we title the latest masterpiece meltdown delivered by Jim Tressel Productions? The Rocky Pick-off Horror Show? Saw (This Already) III?

    Following his fifth-ranked team's 35-3 thumping at the hands of No. 1 USC here Saturday night, Ohio State star James Laurinaitis said, "Obviously, we're going to take a beating around the country and around the world."

    Actually, that's already been underway for nearly two years now (at least on domestic soil), but the Buckeyes' latest big-game blowout -- the most lopsided of Tressel's eight-year tenure -- figures to carry far greater consequences.

    The past two took place in BCS championship games. This one likely eliminated any possibility of a return trip just three weeks into the season.

    While most fans and analysts predicted a Beanie-less blowout for the Buckeyes, even the keenest prognosticator couldn't have prophesized some of the more imaginative facets of OSU's latest disaster.

    It's not every day you see a team not only outgain its opponent in the first half, but hold more than a two-to-one edge in time-of-possession -- yet trail 21-3.

    It's not every day you see a team have both a touchdown and a 16-yard red-zone pass nullified by holding penalties -- on the same drive.

    And it's not every day you see a coach, Tressel, break out what seemed like an inspired game-plan wrinkle -- alternating starting quarterback Todd Boeckman and freshman phenom Terrelle Pryor every other snap -- only to watch it backfire when ... well, when he kept putting Boeckman back in.

    "Obviously," said the coach, "we're going to go back and evaluate everything from what we designed to how we executed to what we're going to do going forward."

    No word whether those future plans involve avoiding any further matchups with top-two teams.

    In their first true test since gaining their No. 1 billing, The Trojans wound up exerting their dominance in nearly all phases Saturday. Tailback Joe McKnight blazed his way to 105 yards on 12 rushing attempts. Quarterback Mark Sanchez threw four touchdowns. And USC's never-ending army of pass-rushers completely overwhelmed Boeckman in the second half.

    Yet by midway through the second quarter, it was clear the Trojans wouldn't need any of it to emerge victorious. Not when Ohio State seemed so steadfastly determined to one-up its self-destructive performance against LSU in last January's BCS title game with another mind-numbing clinic in stage fright.

    It started with some simple false starts. Then came the first of two roughing-the-passer penalties that helped set up USC touchdowns. Trailing 14-3, the Boeckman/Pryor tag team put together an 11-play drive that could easily have put the Buckeyes back within a score, but, thanks to the aforementioned holding gaffes, culminated instead in a missed 46-yard field goal attempt.

    "We shot ourselves in the foot too many times," admitted Boeckman.

    And that was before the real fun even began.

    Just when the fleet-footed Pryor started getting into a rhythm late in the second quarter -- picking up consecutive 11-yard running gains -- Boeckman threw a pass right into the hands of USC linebacker Rey Maualuga, who returned it 48 yards for a back-breaking touchdown. The Buckeyes' next possession began with another Pryor highlight (a 12-yard run) and ended in another Boeckman lowlight (fumbling on a Clay Matthews sack).

    OSU ended the first half on a rare high note -- safety Chmidiwa Chekwa's leaping interception of a Sanchez pass into the end zone. But the miscue seemed only to energize USC's junior quarterback. Following a fairly modest first half (10-of-18 for 89 yards), Sanchez came out and torched the Buckeyes in the third quarter -- 5-of-6 for 79 yards, with scoring strikes of 24 and 17 yards to Damian Williams that put the Trojans ahead 35-3.

    With the Buckeyes forced to go one-dimensional in order to catch up, USC's defense teed off on Boeckman, sacking him three times. Third-quarter yardage for the two teams: USC 135, Ohio State 2. Even Beanie Wells' injured toe curled into a fetal position.

    The Buckeyes never came close to scoring again, while the Trojans likely could have kept scoring had Pete Carroll not emptied his bench halfway through the fourth quarter.

    "We wanted to take everything from them," beamed USC defensive tackle Fili Moala. "We wanted to give them a little housewarming gift and send them on their way back."

    On the heels of a season-opening 52-7 rout of lowly Virginia, Moala's team made another resounding statement by dominating a team that's won 29 of its past 30 regular-season games. Following two years of "modest" (by Carroll standards) 11-2 campaigns, the 2008 Trojans have yet to exhibit the slightest hint of weakness.

    The real question, however, is why the team on the other sideline -- one with just as many names on the early NFL draft boards as USC or any other school -- continues to humiliate itself against elite national competition.

    While the absence of OSU's All-American running back undoubtedly factored into Saturday's lopsided score, it's hard to believe his presence would have reversed the outcome. Wells' 146-yard night against LSU last January couldn't compensate for the Buckeyes' litany of self-induced breakdowns then; it would have taken a career night to offset OSU's offensive and defensive woes against the Trojans.

    For a coach who constantly espouses the importance of discipline, Tressel's teams seem to become unavoidably unglued when it comes to their nonconference showcases.

    "I don't know what it is," said visibly perturbed receiver Brian Hartline. "We do a great job with the Big Ten teams but you've got to prepare yourself to play out of conference, and we haven't done that well recently."

    One abundantly obvious weakness is OSU's offensive line. Much like in the LSU game, Boeckman's blockers held up fairly well early, but once the Trojans built a lead and the Buckeyes had to start passing, they stood almost no chance against Moala and Co.

    "It's very frustrating," said Hartline. "Me and [receiver Brian Robiskie] felt like we were running open the whole game. The ball just couldn't get in the air."

    In their interviews after the game, none of the Buckeyes players seemed particularly despondent. They were universal in their message in that "we've got to keep our heads high because we've got a long season ahead of us."

    They've certainly got plenty left to play for. Most notably, the chance at an unprecedented third straight outright Big Ten title and accompanying Rose Bowl berth is theirs for the taking. If Wells returns and excels and the Buckeyes start rolling, OSU could conceivably thrust itself back into national title contention.

    But in the aftermath of Saturday's debacle, neither seems particularly plausible.

    First and foremost, the Buckeyes will likely find themselves blackballed from consideration for the national title game. Yes, there's a whole lot of time left to climb back up the polls. But OSU was already playing under a shroud of considerable skepticism even before Saturday's blowout. Having watched this game and the two title-game routs before it, it's hard to imagine a scenario where the pollsters would voluntarily place the Buckeyes in the top two of their final ballot.

    Nearly any other viable contender -- especially one that wins its conference championship game -- would likely leapfrog them that final night of the season, a la what happened to Georgia last year.

    And even that would require OSU running the table, a feat that suddenly seems far less realistic than it did over the summer.

    For one thing, new-look Penn State is suddenly looming as a worthy adversary in the Big Ten. Others may soon follow. But more importantly, these Buckeyes have some serious issues to address.

    For one thing, they now have an official quarterback controversy on their hands. After starting off so strong against mostly inferior opponents last season, Boeckman, who finished 14-of-21 for 84 yards and two picks Saturday, has struggled mightily dating to last November's Illinois game. Pryor (7-of-9 for 52 yards, with 11 rushing attempts for 53 yards) showed flashes of greatness in the first half Saturday. He's obviously a dangerous runner, but his passing repertoire is as limited as you would expect for a freshman.

    "I don't know about starting spots," Tressel said when asked about the quarterbacks. Some sort of continued rotation is likely in store. Whether that's a good thing or a bad thing is yet to be seen.

    Tressel and his staff don't necessarily need to go back to the drawing board -- but they've obviously got some touchy matters to discuss in the days and weeks ahead.

    They'll be doing so, however, under much less glare than they've become accustomed to these past few years. OSU has nine regular-season games left -- but at this point you'd have to be pretty sadistic to keep tuning in.

    Sanchez, No. 1 USC too much for Buckeyes

    FOX Sports on MSN

    LOS ANGELES (AP) - Southern California turned the most anticipated September game in years into another Trojans' victory march.

    Mark Sanchez threw four touchdown passes, Joe McKnight rushed for 105 yards on 12 carries, and the top-ranked Trojans crushed No. 5 Ohio State 35-3 Saturday night in a matchup of two of college football's most successful programs.

    Ohio State played without star tailback Chris "Beanie" Wells, sidelined with an injured right foot. But moving the ball wasn't the Buckeyes' biggest problem before the Trojans made it a rout. Instead, they were done in by a handful of crucial mistakes.

    A holding penalty nullified a touchdown in the second quarter, and an errant throw by Todd Boeckman was intercepted and returned for a touchdown by Rey Maualuga.

    "It worked out beautifully for us," USC coach Pete Carroll said. "Over the years, when we prepare this well and we have our guys, we're hard to beat. It doesn't matter who we play when we do that. This is what we're capable of doing, we didn't do anything out of the ordinary to get there. We had a nice night.

    "If we can keep this momentum going and we can keep our playmakers showing up, we're going to be really tough. This game is a nice win, but it doesn't mean more than another game. Our players understand that. I think that's why they prepare properly."

    And that's what makes the Trojans so scary good.

    Ohio State (2-1), a decisive loser in the last two national championship games, probably won't have to worry about another BCS title game failure. Getting there for a third straight year after this beating will be a long shot, no matter how well the Buckeyes do in the Big Ten.

    Ohio State had the ball for more than 20 minutes in the first half and gained 177 yards to USC's 172, but left the field trailing 21-3. Sanchez threw two touchdown passes to Damian Williams in the third quarter to put the Buckeyes away.

    Once they fell behind, the Buckeyes were helpless against Maualuga and the swarming Trojans. Ohio State gained only 30 yards in the second half.

    At one point late in the third quarter, the right-handed Boeckman tried a desperation left-handed pass as he was being tackled by Kyle Moore. The result was an intentional grounding penalty. Everson Griffen sacked Boeckman on the next play.

    The Trojans won for the 39th time in their last 40 home games before a partisan crowd of 93,607 at the Los Angeles Coliseum. In the first game between the storied programs since 1990, USC won its sixth straight over Ohio State and eighth straight against the Big Ten.

    Sanchez finished 17-for-28 for 172 yards with one interception before being relieved by freshman Aaron Corp midway through the fourth quarter.

    McKnight carried only five times for 22 yards in the second half, spending most of his time on the sideline with a migraine. But he wasn't needed.

    "He's so explosive," Sanchez said. "When he's got time, when he's got a little space, anything can happen."

    Boeckman completed 14 of 21 passes for 84 yards with two interceptions. Freshman Terrelle Pryor, who split time at quarterback, provided some spark and had to leave some Buckeyes fans wondering if their quarterback of the future may soon be Ohio State's starter.

    The highly touted Pryor went 7-of-9 for 52 yard and also gained 40 yards on 11 carries. Dan Herron, filling in for Wells, led the Buckeyes in rushing with 51 yards on 11 carries.

    USC sacked Boeckman four times and Pryor once.

    The Buckeyes certainly missed Wells, who ran for over 1,600 yards last season. It's doubtful even a the 235-pound star would have made that much of a difference against USC.

    Ryan Pretorius kicked a 29-yard field goal on Ohio State's second possession, capping a 69-yard, 17-play drive that ate up nearly 8 1/2 minutes. But keeping the Buckeyes out of the end zone only seemed to get the Trojans riled up.

    First, USC moved 74 yards on seven plays, scoring on a 35-yard pass from Sanchez to fullback Stanley Havili for a 7-3 lead.

    "We ran the play about 12 times in two weeks," Sanchez said. "It was perfect, it was kind of like we had done it a million times already. That first big play against one of their pressures really did it for us."

    Then, after the Buckeyes went three-and-out, Sanchez threw a 1-yard touchdown pass to freshman Blake Ayles. McKnight provided the bug play on the drive with a 24-yard run.

    Ohio State moved deep into USC territory on its next possession, but the Buckeyes stopped themselves by committing two holding penalties — the first nullifying a gain to the USC 3, the second a touchdown pass by Boeckman. Pretorius then missed a 46-yard field goal.

    The Trojans made it 21-3 with 2:49 left before halftime when Maualuga stepped in front Brian Hartline for his fourth career interception and returned 48 yards for his first touchdown.

    "I turned around, saw the ball, took it," Maualuga said. "I was hoping the receiver wouldn't catch me."

    Sanchez threw a 34-yard scoring pass to Williams with 6:02 left in the third quarter and a 17-yarder 4 1/2 minutes later. Ohio State had only one first down in the period and the rest was garbage time.

    So much for the game of the year. Instead, USC made a statement and Ohio State went home with another humbling loss on a big stage.

    USC stays on top as Oklahoma moves past Georgia into No. 2 spot

    ESPN

    NEW YORK -- Southern California is now a no-doubt-about-it No. 1 in the AP Top 25, and there's a new No. 2 as Georgia slipped again.

    The Trojans' resounding 35-3 victory against Ohio State on Saturday night made USC an overwhelming No. 1 in the media poll. USC received 61 first-place votes and 1,596 points on Sunday. The Trojans had 33 first-place votes last week.

    Oklahoma moved past Georgia into No. 2. The Bulldogs barely got past South Carolina 14-7 on Saturday and the Sooners notched their third consecutive blowout victory, winning 55-14 at Washington.

    Georgia is the first preseason No. 1 to drop that far after starting 3-0 since Oklahoma in 1985. The Sooners also fell to No. 3 after winning their first three games.

    The Bulldogs received two first-place votes this week. No. 4 Florida received the other first-place vote and Missouri moved up a spot to No. 5.

    Ohio State dropped eight spots to No. 13.

    No. 6 was LSU, followed by Texas, Wisconsin, Alabama and Auburn. Half the top 10 teams are from the Southeastern Conference.

    Two Pac-10 teams dropped out of the rankings after losing: California and Arizona State.

    Clemson moved back into the rankings. The Tigers started the season ranked ninth and fell all the way out after losing their opener 34-10 to Alabama, and returned as No. 23.

    Florida State also moved into the Top 25 for the first time since the middle of last season. The Seminoles were No. 24.

    Texas Tech is No. 11, followed by South Florida, Ohio State, BYU and East Carolina, which slipped one spot to No. 15 after squeaking past Tulane 28-24 in its first game as a ranked team since 1999.

    Penn State was No. 16 and Oregon was 17th, followed by Wake Forest, Kansas and Utah.

    The final five were West Virginia, Illinois, Clemson, Florida State and Fresno State, which lost 13-10 to Wisconsin.

    Sanchez, defense sparkle in dominant Trojans performance

    Ivan Maisel ESPN

    LOS ANGELES -- Chris "Beanie" Wells wouldn't have mattered. The same goes for Warren Wells, Dawn Wells, Orson Welles or the Mineral Wells (Texas) High Rams. No. 5 Ohio State could have put them all in white jerseys and gray pants, and it wouldn't have mattered Saturday evening.

    No. 1 USC struck with a consistency atypical for mid-September on both sides of the ball. Led by quarterback Mark Sanchez's four touchdown passes, and by a 48-yard interception return for a touchdown by linebacker Rey Maualuga, the Trojans defeated the Buckeyes 35-3.

    Ohio State suffered its worst loss since 1994 and scored its fewest points in head coach Jim Tressel's eight seasons. USC's 32-point margin matched what it did to Illinois in the Rose Bowl in January. The only thing you could say about this so-called showdown is that it could have been worse. USC made two other trips into the red zone against Ohio State and didn't score.

    "This was a really good indication of [us] doing what we're capable of doing," USC coach Pete Carroll said. "There were some great plays, but I don't know that there were that many great plays. We played good football all night long. We were able to stop them. We were able to move it. We ran it, threw it, protected. We had a fantastic night on special teams."

    It's a shame Carroll didn't give a shout-out to the popcorn vendors. Let's face it, Oscar acceptance speeches have been shorter than that. But every bit of what he said is true.

    So, too, is this: For the third time in its past 17 games, Ohio State played in a game that riveted the nation and stunk up the joint. The previous two performances, with the past two BCS championships at stake, resulted in one-sided losses to Florida and LSU.

    All the Buckeyes played for before 93,607 in newly expanded Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum was pride and style points.

    They won none of the latter. And the former -- well, what they have may be bruised.

    "When you turn it over and have penalties and stop drives and just not take control in any way, shape or form," Tressel said, "a good team like that is going to make it hard for you to climb back into it."

    Ohio State committed three turnovers, and a holding penalty on guard Ben Person called back a 21-yard touchdown pass in the second quarter from Todd Boeckman to Brian Robiskie. That's too bad, because Boeckman could have used the highlight. It's not just that USC sacked him four times and intercepted him twice.

    Had Wells, Ohio State's junior tailback, been able to play, he may have diverted the attention of the USC defense. But Wells, held out of the game because of an injury to his right big toe, wore no pads beneath his jersey, and red sweats in place of his uniform pants.

    Ohio State desperately needs an offensive spark. USC limited Ohio State to 207 total yards, only 30 after halftime. That spark may revive when Wells recuperates. It may come from freshman quarterback Terrelle Pryor, who alternated with Boeckman and made the USC defense respect his running ability. Pryor, with a playbook no thicker than a Dr. Seuss book, competed 7 of 9 passes for 52 yards and rushed 11 times for another 40.

    But the sad truth is that Ohio State had no gain longer than 16 yards against the Trojans and only two "big plays" (20 yards or more) last week against Ohio. In the second half against USC, Ohio State never got past its own 43.

    "We were in the right spots all night and we made plays," said USC defensive end Kyle Moore, who had eight tackles, including a sack, and recovered a fumble. "… We worked real hard. We had two weeks to prepare for them. We [saw] everything [in practice] that they ran tonight. … A major part of their running game was sitting on the sidelines tonight. He can make plays. But tonight he didn't."

    The Trojans don't play again until they open the Pacific-10 Conference season at Oregon State a week from Thursday. Forgive Ohio State if it looks at its schedule and does a double take. The Buckeyes will play the Trojans again. At least those Trojans are from Troy.

    Ivan Maisel is a senior writer for ESPN.com. Send your questions and comments to Ivan at ivan.maisel@espn3.com. His new book, "The Maisel Report: College Football's Most Overrated & Underrated Players, Coaches, Teams, and Traditions," is on sale now. For more information, go to TheMaiselReport.com.