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Trojans hit a crossroads in Lincoln
Los Angeles Times
|November 01, 2025
USC THREE THINGS TO WATCH
LINEBACKER Jadyn Walker (31) and the Trojans look to increase pressure on the passer against Nebraska.
(GINA FERAZZI Los Angeles Times)
With the second bye behind them and USC's season at a crossroads, Lincoln Riley has spent the better part of two weeks focusing his team on what's in front of them — a stretch of three winnable games — and not behind them — a demoralizing defeat at Notre Dame.
In doing so, the Trojans coach borrowed a well-worn rallying cry, one that traces back 2,000 years. Riley told his team, they had to “burn the boats.”
“We've put ourselves in great position, and we've got to be a really forward-focused team right now,” Riley said, “Things can get pretty fun from here if you really get on a run. This team is capable of that. They know it. We knowit.”
Considering the stakes, it’s anapt enough metaphor. Any hope of USC staying alive in the College Football Playoff conversation hinges on leaving Lincoln, Neb., with a win. And that will, at the very least, require presenting a much better product than before the bye, when USC’s defense gave up over 300 yards on the ground to Notre Dame.
That loss has left a notably bitter taste with the Trojans— especially on defense. This week, sophomore linebacker Jadyn Walker said he felt the group “didn’t come out ready to play” and wasn’t “hungry” enough against Notre Dame. Defensive tackle Jide Abasiri said fixing USC’s issues on defense meant “having our minds right.” For the second time in three weeks, USC returned to the basics on defense during the bye in an effort to iron out those issues.
This story is from the November 01, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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