Showing posts with label Stanley Havili. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stanley Havili. 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 25

Trojan Postgame Report: Recap and Breakdown of Washington State at USC

Today marked the beginning of Pac-10 play for the 3-0 USC Trojans. While the opponent, Washington State, does not intimidate USC, it is important for the Trojans to begin conference play with a solid performance. The opponents from here on will only get tougher, so the Trojans need some momentum going into future games.

First Quarter
  • Trojans defense looked pitiful on the game's opening drive. The Cougars ran 9 plays for 80 yards and scored in an efficient 3 minutes and 27 seconds. WSU quarterback Jeff Tuel made plays with his arm going 3-for-5 for 19 yards. But, perhaps more concerning, Tuel made plays with his legs. Tuel ran twice for 27 yards, the second run of which went 23 yards on a third down. The touchdown came on a wide receiver reverse pass from Jeffrey Solomon to Jared Karstetter. Although Trojan fans should hope that the defense would be discipline enough to not get fooled on trick plays like that, the play prior to that was a little more alarming in my opinion. On that particular play, Tuel dropped back and threw a deep ball intended for wide receiver Marquess Wilson, who beat Shareece Wright off the line and got behind safety T.J. McDonald. Luckily, Wilson was unable to hall in the pass, but USC should not allow receivers to get behind the secondary so easily.
  • The Trojans response was quick and straightforward:  a 59-yard rush by Stanley Havili. The senior fullback took a stretch handoff left and cutback right. He then made several moves to shake Cougar defenders downfield, and just like that, the game was tied.
  • The defense rebounded from the Cougars first drive nicely by scoring its first defensive touchdown of the season. After a quick three step drop, Tuel fired the ball to the left sideline, but cornerback Nickell Robey jumped in front of the pass, picked it off, and returned it 25 yards for a touchdown. Last week, I talked about how Robey was maturing as a player (he's only a freshman), and he followed up that performance with a nice start in this game. It was good to see the defense score, something that has been lacking in recent seasons.
  • USC's second drive started with another big play by, yet again, Stanley Havili. Matt Barkley, who had what seemed like hours in the pocket, fired a bullet to Havili on the run who broke into the open field and ran for a 58-yard gain. USC's speed has overwhelmed the Cougars; receivers are getting great separation and simply outrunning the defense; backs are sprinting through holes and open space and making defenders miss.  Barkley completed the drive by throwing an 11-yard touchdown pass to Robert Woods. Midway through the first quarter, the Trojans have ran four (4) plays for 135 yards and have scored more points (21) than they did in four quarters at home versus Virginia (17). This is the kind of quick start that I have longed for the Trojans to show.
  • WSU, who seemed like it had great momentum after its initial drive, has since sputtered and returned to its usual anemic state. Tuel cannot seem to throw an accurate pass; he overthrows receivers deep, bounces passes to receivers in the flat, and makes receivers over the middle stretch/reach for passes. When Tuel has been on target, receivers struggle hauling in the catches cleanly.
  • USC special teams does its best Beamer Ball impersonation by blocking WSU's punt attempt on the Cougars' third drive. However, on the ensuing play, Barkley returns the favor by throwing an interception in the end zone. The pass, intended for Ronald Johnson in the back of the end zone, was severely under-thrown.
  • I think, and have always thought, Shareece Wright is extremely overrated. He has struggled with injuries throughout his career, yet during spring ball every season, the media and fans jump all over him with praise. He might be USC's best corner, but if he is, the Trojans have major problems in the secondary. Wright has yet to prove himself as a legitimate corner at the college level. During the first quarter, Tuel completed numerous passes to receivers being "covered" by Wright. The senior corner was also beat several times over the top, but luckily for him, Tuel did not deliver catchable passes to those receivers. Despite all this, the Fox Sports announcers have stuck to their initial claim that Wright is a shutdown corner on an island. Am I missing something? Did Wright lead the NCAA in interceptions or pass deflections one season that I simply am not aware of? Do offensive coordinators game plan around him? If I were calling plays, I would attack Wright and make him step up before I looked elsewhere.
Second Quarter
  • Trojans looked to establish the run with Marc Tyler, who gained a first down after two carries. Barkley then through a duck to Ausberry that should have been picked off. Two plays later, Barkley through a ball over the middle that was begging to be picked off, and, in fact, was picked off. Barkley has looked terrible thus far. If you take out the 58-yard pass to Havili, who gained most of those yards after the catch, Barkley is 1-of-4 for 11 yards, 1 TD, and 2 INTs. In other words, he has completed one pass to USC players and two passes to WSU players.
  • WSU took advantage of Barkley's second pick and pulled to within one score after Tuel threw a floater to Karstetter in the corner of the end zone. It was Karstetter's second touchdown catch of the game. USC blocked the point-after attempt to keep its lead at eight points, 21-13. Regardless, the first half has been an inconsistent showing for the Trojans. The first seven minutes were somewhat impressive, while the rest of the time has been extremely disappointing.
  • The two teams traded turnovers midway through the second quarter. USC tried to run the ball more to take pressure off Barkley. Allen Bradford ran the ball up the middle for a decent gain before coughing up the football. A couple of plays later, Tuel threw a deep pass right into the lap of Robey, who already had a pick six earlier in the half.
  • USC closed out the first half with a touchdown scoring drive, a T.J. McDonald interception, and a Joe Houston missed field goal. Although they would have loved to cash in on that field goal (we need a new kicker), that series of events gives the Trojans some momentum heading into the break.
Third Quarter
  • USC executed very nicely on its first drive of the second half. Barkley completed passes to Ronald Johnson and Brandon Carswell, both of whom gained considerable yards after the catches. Barkley then completed a short pass to Brice Butler over the middle after a nice pump fake to give the Trojans an early score. Mitch Mustain ran the ball in for a successful two point conversion, and the Trojans are now 2-for-7 on those attempts so far this season.
  • At the 10:30 mark in the third quarter, Wright, again out of position while defending a pass, got away with a ridiculous pass interference no-call. 
  • USC's second drive resulted in another touchdown to make the score 43-13. Ronald Johnson finally got on the board by catching a 7-yard pass from Barkley, who increased his passing touchdown count to three on the day. In the third quarter the Trojans scored on one drive that spanned 4 plays for 93 yards and another drive that went 12 plays for 98 yards. Very encouraging.
  • Mustain entered the game with 40 seconds left in the 3rd quarter. At this point I changed the channel because there were plenty of other great games in progress, including UCLA's surprising performance against Texas, Arkansas' upset bid over top-ranked Alabama, and another installment of the Stanford-Notre Dame rivalry.
Fourth Quarter
  • It was a relatively uneventful final quarter, from what I could tell by looking at the box score. Mustain threw his first touchdown pass of the season to Havili. And the defense allowed a sympathy field goal that brought the Cougars with 34 points. Final score:  USC 50, WSU 16.
Final Breakdown

While it might be tempting to take a pessimistic view of the defense because it allowed 16 points to a sad Cougars offense, I will look to remain positive. I thought the defense played really fairly well today. The rush defense has been solid all season and it continued against WSU by only allowing 69 yards on 26 rushes (2.7 yards per carry). If anything, the pass defense needs a bit of help. I think the USC secondary is overrated (especially Shareece Wright) and I think they need to send more blitz packages to get some pressure on the quarterback in order to take pressure off of the corners and safeties. That being said, the secondary intercepted three passes today and returned one for a score, which is always great.

The offense got off a very fast start and then halted to a stop just as quickly. In the first half, Barkley looked downright awful. His final numbers (16-of-25, 290 yards, 3 TD, 2 INT) were padded a bit after Lane Kiffin decided to keep it simple for the second-year quarterback by calling short passes that gave receivers/backs the ball in open space.

Today's player of the game was Stanley Havili. The star fullback burned the Cougars defense as a rusher and as a receiver. He ran 4 times for 80 yards and 1 touchdown, and caught 5 passes for 107 yards and 1 touchdown. A great all-around performance by Havili, who is one of the team's most dangerous and versatile weapons.

The running back corps looked very nice, as well. Along with Havili's 80 yards, Bradford rushed 7 times for 84 yards, Baxter ran 15 times for 76 yards, and Marc Tyler added 6 carries for 31 yards. As a team, the Trojans ran 39 times for 283 yards, which comes out to 7.3 yards per carry. Very impressive. The running game is clearly USC's strength through its first four games.

Ultimately, it was a good tuneup for the Trojans. The team played well in every facet of the game for most of the game (remember special teams even added a blocked punt). Hopefully this performance will carry into the tougher part of Pac-10 play, which begins next week at home against the Huskies. I will watch the game live from the Coliseum, so my weekly breakdown will be a bit delayed.