Showing posts with label Robert Woods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Woods. Show all posts

Saturday, October 9

What We Learned from USC vs. Stanford: Silver Lining in a Tough Loss

PALO ALTO, CA - OCTOBER 09:  Robert Woods #13 ...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
USC and Stanford each suffered its first loss of the season last week. The Trojans looked outmatched against a Jake Locker-led UW team that rallied in the fourth quarter to down USC, yet again, with a field goal as time expired. The Cardinal jumped out to a 21-3 first quarter lead in its highly anticipated showdown against Oregon, but the Ducks responded by outscoring Stanford 49-10 over the next three quarters en route to a 52-31 thumping. Although its powerful offense played well, Stanford's defense allowed 626 total yards to Oregon and left coach Jim Harbaugh scratching his head.

Stanford entered the game as 10-point favorite at home. I thought the line was pretty conservative because I didn't think the USC defense would make a single stop. Stanford needed to win if it hoped to remain in the Pac-10 championship hunt and in the overall BCS picture. On the other hand, USC, despite what coaches and players said all week, probably did not expect to win the game; a solid overall performance in a close loss was more likely. And that's exactly what happened as Stanford nailed a field goal as time expired to send the Trojans home with a 35-37 loss.

Here are five takeaways from tonight's hard-fought game:

1. Matt Barkley's Improvement

Last week I criticized Barkley for his inability to make clutch routine plays. In that game, he failed to make simple throws in crucial situations. Tonight, however, was a different story. Barkley not only made the simple passes, but he made the tough ones, too. He showed great patience in the pocket, consistently made the right read, and maintained composure throughout the night. He showed that he could adjust the amount of velocity on his passes by zipping them into tight windows and floating ones over the defense, depending on what the situation warranted. Minus one ball late in the game in which he left Ronald Johnson exposed to a big hit by an oncoming safety, Barkley placed the football in the right spots for his receivers. The second-year quarterback ended the game 28-for-45 for 390 yards and 3 touchdowns. Most importantly, he did not throw an interception. Additionally, Barkley tied Allen Bradford for the team high in rushing tonight with 33 yards (although the team should not be proud of this).

2. Robert Woods' Emergence


Before tonight, most USC fans thought of Woods as two things:  a highly-touted, athletic freshman wide receiver and the special teamer who ran a kickoff back for 97 yards and touchdown against Minnesota earlier this season. While Woods showed flashes of brilliance throughout USC's first five games, he had not yet had his official "coming out" party. That all changed tonight.

The speedy game-changer had the performance of a lifetime. Woods caught 12 balls for a whopping 224 yards and 3 touchdowns. He also added 3 kick returns for 86 yards. Woods did everything that a team could expect from a go-to wide receiver; he caught tough passes over the middle in traffic; he made acrobatic catches in the air; he caught short passes in open space and made defenders miss en route to a huge yards-after-catch stat line; and he made catches on key downs/situations. He showed a lot of courage on a big stage tonight, and the USC coaching staff and USC fans should be ecstatic. The other wide receivers don't seem to want to, or be able to, step up and make big plays when the offense needs them. Fortunately, Woods looks like he is of a different mold. If Woods can stay healthy and remain motivated, he will do big things before he leaves USC for the next level.

3. USC Defensive Backs Have Eyes in the Back of Their Heads


…that is the only explanation for why every member of the USC secondary plays with his back to the football. I mention this every week, regardless of whether we win or lose. It happens at least once per game, usually more:  the opposing quarterback throws a pass, medium to deep in range, and a USC defensive back flails his arms in the air while watching the wide receiver catch the ball in front of him. No attempt is made to locate or catch the ball.

As expected, this happened multiple times tonight. On two different occasions, play-by-play commentator Mike Patrick said, "The defender…never..saw…the ball." Once it was safety Jawanza Starling and another time it was cornerback Torin Harris. Surprisingly, I don't think Shareece Wright was guilty of any no-look defending today, although he did blow a couple tackles. I'm still waiting for the day that a USC defensive coordinator teaches the players in our secondary to play the ball, not the wide receiver. Until then, our secondary will not be able to reverse the following statistic:  through six weeks, USC, out of all the teams in the country, has given up the most pass completions of 15 or more yards.

4. USC Defense Cannot Keep Containment

While I am tempted to say that the USC defense cannot stop the run, period, that may be a slight exaggeration. They have shown the ability to stop the inside run at times. However, it is the outside run that gives them trouble. Why? Because USC defensive linemen and linebackers cannot keep containment. We saw it plenty of times throughout the first five games and some more tonight. Stanford running back Stepfan Taylor carried the ball 23 times for 104 yards and 1 touchdown, and most of his success came on the edges. His long run of 31 yards was the result of him bouncing the carry outside and picking up yards on the perimeter.

But perhaps most telling of USC's inability to contain runs to the outside is the amount of yards that opposing quarterbacks pick up with their legs. Tonight, Luck ran 6 times for 40 yards (6.7 yards per carry) and had a long of 19 yards that came on an important 3rd and 9 in the second quarter. Last week, USC gave up 110 yards to Locker. Trust me, these quarterbacks are not putting their heads down and running through Jurrell Casey in the middle; they are swinging wide around our defensive ends and around our outside linebackers that consistently over-pursue, get pinched down inside by a tackle or tight end, or find themselves out of position for whatever reason. Our defensive woes against the run will stop only if Monte Kiffin gets this straightened out. And beware:  our inability to contain on the edges will absolutely kill us against Oregon.

5. USC Has Heart

Look, obviously the Trojans lost. And they lost, for the second week in a row, in heartbreaking fashion. But in every defeat you can, and must, takeaway some good and parlay that into next week. And I saw plenty of good stuff tonight. Beyond the numbers and statistics, I saw courage and I saw heart. I saw players fighting for redemption. That kind of character will go a long way in determining how this team finishes the season and how some of these players finish their careers.

Barkley had a terrible game last week against the Huskies. Statistically, it was his weakest game of the season in terms of completions, yards, and touchdowns. And he made some costly mistakes that probably prevented us from winning. But Barkley responded tonight by having the best game of his season thus far. He had a season-high in completions and yards, and played mistake-free football. He bounced back and made a loud statement about what kind of player he is. And you have to respect and love that as a USC fan.

Next, take tailback Allen Bradford. Last week, the bruiser ran up and down Washington's defense and posted a career day with 223 yards and 2 touchdowns. This week? He was shut down by a much tougher Stanford defense. In fact, up until just over one minute left in the game, Bradford recorded 11 carries for only 20 yards. But how does he respond to three and one half quarters of getting knocked down and stuffed at the line? By carrying the ball twice, for 13 yards and 1 touchdown, in the red zone on USC's final drive. He didn't let the rest of the game and his performance affect him. Scouts will notice that.

Finally, senior fullback and captain Stanley Havili also redeemed himself tonight. During the fourth quarter, on a critical third down, Kiffin dialed up the most brilliant call of his young career by letting Marc Tyler throw a pass out of the wildcat formation. Tyler lobbed the football to a wide open Havili, but Havili, normally sure-handed, bobbled the ball and blew an opportunity to give the Trojans the lead. At that point, Havili could have ran to the sideline, took his helmet off, and mailed in the rest of the game. Instead, Kiffin sent him back onto the field, and on 4th and 2, Barkley went right back to Havili, who, this time, caught the ball, turned up field and converted the key first down. Only big time players overcome mistakes like Havili did.

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Saturday, September 18

Trojan Postgame Report: Recap and Breakdown of USC at Minnesota

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The biggest question for the 2-0 USC Trojans coming into today's showdown against Minnesota was whether both the offense and defense could deliver quality performances during the same game. Prior to this, the offense looked good against Hawaii while the defense looked terrible. In the next game against Virginia, the defense looked stout while the offense looked relatively anemic. Coach Lane Kiffin wants the team to play consistently week in and week out, and develop an identity. Let's see if Kiffin got his wish...

First Quarter

Leading up to the game, Minnesota spent a lot of time telling the media that they planned on emphasizing the run game today. It wanted to establish the run and then meet its goal of gaining at least two first downs per offensive possession. On its first drive, Minnesota ran the ball twice, both for zero or negative yardage, and then threw an incomplete pass on third down. Mission failed.

The Trojans offense began the game exactly how I expected:  slow. For whatever reason, I have these hopes that our offense will open every game with a quick strike and suffocate teams early. But unfortunately, for the third straight week, the team rudely wakes me up. The first play of the game was a play-action bootleg that resulted in Barkley connecting with tight end Rhett Ellison for 24 yards. That play got my hopes up, and the next four plays brought them back down. In the blink of an eye we faced fourth down and sent kicker Joe Houston out on the field. Not surprisingly, he missed. The SC kicking game has been atrocious throughout the Pete Carroll era, but hopefully Lane Kiffin can turn things around by emphasizing special teams more during recruiting.

Minnesota's second position was highlighted by a short completion on a crossing route that turned into a big gain. With the ball in the red zone, USC then committed a defensive holding penalty (shocking, isn't it?) that gave Minnesota the ball on the one-yard line. The Gophers punched it in from there and completed the extra point to take an early 7-0 lead. This particular drive was a wild one for freshman cornerback Nickell Robey. He made some nice open-field tackles and showed solid speed in pursuit of cutting down Minnesota ball carriers. But then he committed the holding penalty after getting beat off the line of scrimmage near the end zone. Robey is a good looking player who has plenty of athleticism. The experience he has received and continues to receive will benefit him going forward.

USC responded with a 13 play, 60 yard drive that lasted 5 minutes and 28 seconds. It was a run-heavy drive that even included an Allen Bradford sighting! The bruising back got 2 carries for 23 yards after Marc Tyler and Dillon Baxter were taken out for breathers. It was great to see Bradford get some carries and contribute. I am still a bit disappointed that Bradford has not been featured more in the offense this season, but I do recognize that Tyler and Baxter are worthy running backs and that someone has to unfortunately be left out.

The quarter ended with a disappointing personal foul penalty on one of SC's defensive linemen. Coach Orgeron chewed the big fella out on the sideline as ESPN showed us statistics of how ridiculously undisciplined the team has been so far this year..

Two last first quarter notes:  First, the play-by-play announcer said that C.J. Gable is one of the best kickoff returners in USC history. Is that the most ludicrous comment we've heard through the first three weeks? I dare you to find one that is worse. Second, the defensive line looked really impressive in the quarter. It got great jumps off the ball on running plays and blew up most of Minnesota's rushes. Ideally, I would like a little more pressure on the quarterback but the Gophers do not exactly have a dangerous passing attack.

Second Quarter

SC begins the second quarter with the type of quick strike that I expected from them in the first quarter! After a short pass from Barkley and two modest runs, Kiffin called a play-action deep ball. Barkley rolled to his right and fired deep down field to an open Ronald Johnson, who caught the ball in stride and galloped into the end zone. On the replay, RoJo zigzagged through the Gophers defense and got behind its secondary with ease. And, perhaps most importantly, the team did not commit a penalty, so the play actually counted. A beautiful 4 play, 77 yard drive in 1 minute and 37 seconds.

After the touchdown, SC went for two, continuing a trend that was set during the first game at Hawaii. The conversion failed as backup quarterback Mitch Mustain ran into a wall of Gophers at the 2-yard line.  I still don't understand the decision making process on these two point conversion attempts. According to the guys in the booth, if SC sees that the defense lines "right," then they will revert back to the extra point, but if the defense looks unprepared, then they will go for two.

SC got a nice stop on the ensuing Minnesota drive capped off by a T.J. Bryant sack. 

If SC is running at full potential, you would expect them to capitalize off the strong defensive stand and score another touchdown. The next drive started off poorly with two penalties on three plays. That resulted in a 3rd and 15, and Barkley only managed to get 10 of those yards back on a pass over the middle. However, on the next play, a simple, innocent punt to Minnesota, the ball hit a Gopher in the back as it bounced up off of the ground and SC recovered the football. Huge break for the Trojans as they get the ball on the Minnesota 38.

The half ended the two quarterbacks through back-to-back interceptions. It was the first interception thrown by both Matt Barkley and Minnesota's Adam Weber. It was altogether a very disappointing half in my estimation. The Trojans failed twice, once in the first and once in the second quarter, to capitalize on favorable field position. Also, the Trojans hampered themselves with 5 penalties for 42 yards. I would have liked to see the offense gun it a little more. Barkley was accurate throughout the first half--the lone interception was the result of a miscommunication between him and a receiver. And USC's receivers have the speed to get behind the Gophers secondary, as demonstrated by RoJo on the 53-yard touchdown catch.

Random thought to close the half:  some of Kiffin's antics are beginning to not only confuse me, but bother me. In the Hawaii game it was the rampant two-point conversion attempts. He showed a little more of that against Virginia and today at Minnesota. But as the first half was coming to an end, Kiffin refused to use timeouts to spare the clock with over a minute remaining. Minnesota threw an interception on a third down that Barkley promptly returned back to them on the ensuing possession. But then, with about 30 seconds remaining (less time than on the previous defensive stand), Kiffin started to burn the timeouts! He was not going to let Minnesota simply kneel on the ball to run out the clock. After Minnesota punted the ball, Kiffin then sent Barkley out to kneel the ball. Is Kiffin off his rocker, or is it just me? Was there any strategy there?

Third Quarter


The opening drive of the second half looked great until SC committed its obligatory drive-killing penalty. Wide receiver Brandon Carswell delivered a low block on a swing pass that cost the Trojans a first down and another 15 yards. Then Barkley committed his worst decision and throw of the season thus far by forcing a high ball over the middle that Minnesota's James Manuel picked off.

Minnesota's run-dominant play-calling to this point has befuddled me. I think it's great to establish the run, but eventually you have to abandon it and take a shot down the field. On the other hand, USC does not seem to want to win this game, so perhaps Minnesota thinks it can just stay close by running the ball and controlling the clock until deep into the fourth quarter when it will take a risk.

Oops, I guess I was wrong. Minnesota ran and controlled the clock until deep into the third (not fourth) quarter when it took a risk by throwing a 31-yard touchdown pass to Da'Jon McKnight to take the lead. As is customary for USC cornerbacks in the past seven seasons, Robey had his back to the football as it was in the air and thus could not even make an attempt at a play. Pathetic.

But just like that, the Trojans responded behind a Robert Woods 97-yard kickoff return for a touchdown. He is an electric playmaker and the big play completely took the crowd out of the game. Wait, why wasn't C.J. Gable--the best returner in USC history--back to return it instead? Somebody ask the guys in the booth. Fortunately for us, it was Woods instead, because I know Gable would not have brought that one to the house.

SC's defense followed the game-changing return touchdown by stuffing Minnesota's run game to force a punt. The ensuing drive poured over into the fourth quarter…

Fourth Quarter

The drive that started in the previous quarter reminded me of something out of Varsity Blues. If you remember, in the movie the racist head coach used the black running back to pound the ball all the way into the red zone, where he would then dial up a pass for his white quarterback so that the QB would look great in the box score.  Well, on this drive, SC ran the ball down Minnesota's throat with a steady dose of Allen Bradford and some Marc Tyler sprinkled in here and there. Then when they got near the red zone, Barkley dropped back and floated a ball to David Ausberry who ran a slant-and-go into the end zone for a 21-yard touchdown catch. I'm not insinuating anything about Kiffin, but I just thought that the way the drive developed looked familiar to me. Regardless, it gave SC a two score lead and probably went a long way in boosting Barkley's morale.

On SC's second drive of the quarter, they continued to run the football and keep the clock on its side. Minnesota bailed them out on a third and long with a critical face mask penalty, and then a few plays later, Bradford added to his dominant performance by breaking a 56-yard touchdown run through the middle of the Gophers defense. Through three and a half quarters, Bradford has rushed 12 times for 127 yards and 1 touchdown. Perhaps this will showing will get him more carries in the future.

Forgotten linebacker Chris Galippo helped the defense maintain a decent level of intensity as he had an impressive fourth quarter. The highly recruited linebacker had a huge sack and added an interception off a tipped pass. USC ended the game by giving Mitch Mustain some snaps under center and C.J. Gable the majority of the garbage time carries. Gable ran the ball well and stirred up some nostalgia from my sophomore year when he was a featured back in Carroll's offense.

Final Notes

The Trojans started slow, but finally showed signs of putting it all together. They still have not reached their full potential, but it was good to see both sides of the ball have success. The running game looked great as it went 37 carries for 206 yards (5.6 yards per carry). They were really able to dominate on the ground, which is a testament to the ability of the offensive line to get a good push off of the ball.

The passing game was okay today as it struggled during some stretches of the game (Barkley's 2 interceptions) but still showed signs of explosiveness (RoJo's 53-yard catch).

Special teams made a difference today, which is all you can ask from that unit. Robert Woods' 97-yard kickoff return for a touchdown in the 3rd quarter changed the game and gave SC the swagger it needed to finish the game strong. Punter Jacob Harfman also helped SC tilt the field during certain situations by delivering solid kicks.

Finally, it was also pleasant to see the defense not let up during garbage time the defense played pretty well until the 0:11 mark of the 4th quarter when it allowed a "feel good" touchdown to Minnesota. Prior to that, Minnesota did not test SC much. The D forced 3 turnovers, held Weber to 15-for-29 on pass attempts, and limited the Gophers to 2.2 yards per carry on the ground. Seeing as that the Gophers ran the ball 37 times, it was impressive to see the defense hold them to under 100 yards.

My player of the game was Allen Bradford. After losing his starting job to Marc Tyler in the preseason and arguably losing his second-string spot to freshman Dillon Baxter, the thunderous senior tailback rushed 13 times for 129 yards and 1 touchdown (9.9 yards per carry). On countless occasions he ran over/through multiple defenders and reminded us (not that I needed it) that he can take over a football game. My runner-up was Robert Woods, who delivered a crucial kickoff return for a touchdown. Although it was just one play, it was probably the most important play. USC was against the ropes at that point as Minnesota had just taken a 14-13 lead and the crowd got back into it. Woods' play single-handedly rejuvenated the Trojans and devastated the Gophers and their fans.

Ultimately, while I was frustrated at times, I thought it was an encouraging performance. Conference play begins next weekend against the Washington State Cougars. I am looking for a dominant performance in Pullman.
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