Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Hogwash on Beanie

Like it makes a difference, Beanie Wells will suit up against USC. Tressel has played this out as a drama. With or without Beanie, the Trojans play the Buckeyes, no one player on either team makes a difference.

From the Associated Press:


Beanie's Back and Practicing with Buckeyes

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—Ohio State will have its Beanie back for Southern California.

Buckeyes tailback Chris “Beanie” Wells has been given the OK to play in the showdown at No. 1 USC on Saturday night.

Wells, who rushed for 1,609 yards and 15 touchdowns a year ago, went down with a foot injury in the second half of the fifth-ranked Buckeyes’ opener against Youngstown State and did not suit up when Ohio State struggled to beat Ohio University 26-14 last week.

But coach Jim Tressel said Tuesday that Wells would definitely play against USC.

“You know, Beanie ran well yesterday,” Tressel said. “In fact, he ran better than I thought he might.”

The next test for the 6-foot-1, 237-pound Wells is how he feels after going through his first workouts in 10 days.

“The big thing is Tuesday and Wednesday work and will that create soreness,” Tressel said. “Not only was he running well, then they (trainers) put him on the bike and wore him out, so they’re trying to do all the things. He’s been in the underwater treadmill and anything we can do, we’re doing (with rehab). I feel good about him.”

Wells would seem to be a weapon the Buckeyes (2-0) cannot do without against the fearsome Trojans (1-0) in the first meeting between the two old rivals in 18 years.

Defensive lineman Lawrence Wilson, one of Wells’ best friends, said he believes Wells will give the Buckeyes a big lift.

“Beanie told me he was going to play and when Beanie says he’s going to do something, he does it,” Wilson said. “He’s a tremendous competitor. I know when he says he’s going to play, to play.”

The only catch in Wells’ rapid return to action is that he won’t really be participating in full-contract workouts until at least Wednesday. Ohio State’s trainers will work with him away from the team on Tuesday and then will watch closely when he practices with his teammates a day later.

“If he steps on the field, he’s going to give it his best. And his best is pretty good, you know,” offensive tackle Bryant Browning said. “Yesterday I saw him running and he said he felt pretty good. He said he wasn’t in much pain at all. He said he would be ready.”

Tressel said Wells told him, “I’m ready to carry 45 times on Saturday.”

That doesn’t mean he’ll get the chance, however.

“He’s not going to carry 45 if he’s not effective,” Tressel said. “He’s like every other kid, he wants to play and he’s going to do all he can do and his effectiveness will be, in large part, based upon what the other guys do. If they block people, he can be effective. If they don’t, it will be harder.”

Last year Wells averaged 124 rushing yards on 21 carries per game. Dan Herron (12 carries, 50 yards), Maurice Wells (9 for 48) and Brandon Saine (5 for 15) combined for 113 yards on 26 carries against Ohio, which led 14-6 midway through the third quarter and 14-12 heading into the fourth.

“They ran hard. They combined for a pretty decent total,” wide receiver Brian Hartline said. Hartline said their numbers might have been even more impressive except for some listless and out-of-sync play by the rest of the offense.

Wells isn’t the only addition to the lineup, either. Starting cornerback Donald Washington and backup Jamario O’Neal both return as well after serving two-game suspensions for an undisclosed violation of team rules.

They figure to give the Buckeyes a shot of depth and talent in a secondary that has been stretched thin during their absence.

Asked if Washington would take his accustomed place at field corner, making Chimdi Chekwa, who started the past two games, a backup and nickel back, Tressel grinned.

“Tune in,” he said.


Tailgate at Galen Center

VictorEmail
Purchase TicketsOnline StoreOfficial Athletic Website


Copyright © 2007, the University of Southern California. The team names, logos and uniform designs are registered trademarks of the teams indicated. No logos, photographs or graphics in this email may be reproduced without written permission. All rights reserved.

Alumni Association Tailgate on Campus

It's Kick- Off Time for Our First-Ever Home Tailgate!


Saturday, September 13
2:00 – 5:00 p.m.
Argue Plaza (adjacent to the Widney Alumni House)


You've heard all about our famous weekenders - now the USC Alumni Association is proud to bring all of the fun and excitement of our away game events to Trojan fans in L.A.! Before USC's eagerly awaited Top-5 showdown with the Buckeyes, alumni, family and friends from all over will come together for a mouth-watering barbeque buffet, drinks, entertainment and a surprise special guest.

You can purchase advance tickets online or register at the tailgater. We look forward to seeing you there!

Fight On!

Monday, September 8, 2008

USC Pep Rally at the Grove


Sunday, September 7, 2008

For Second Week USC Tops Polls


For the second straight week, USC tops the AP and Coaches Polls. Unimpressed with Ohio State's performance over Ohio, the Buckeyes sit at #5 in both polls. In fact, the top ten teams are identical for both polls.

AP Poll
1. USC (33) 1-0 1,577
2. Georgia (23) 2-0 1,525
3. Oklahoma (2) 2-0 1,458
4. Florida (4) 2-0 1,438
5. Ohio State (1) 2-0 1,347
6. Missouri (1) 2-0 1,336
7. LSU (1) 1-0 1,231
8. Texas 2-0 1,100
9. Auburn 2-0 1,067
10. Wisconsin 2-0 910

USA Today' Poll (Coaches)
1. USC (34) 1-0 1,481
2. Georgia (18) 2-0 1,454
3. Oklahoma (3) 2-0 1,370
4. Florida (3) 2-0 1,306
5. Ohio State (1) 2-0 1,289
6. Missouri 2-0 1,212
7. LSU (2) 1-0 1,198
8. Texas 2-0 1,069
9. Auburn 2-0 1,017
10. Wisconsin 2-0 946


Full AP and Coaches Polls

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

We're Number One!



Trojans Top Both AP and Coaches Polls


It didn't take long for those that vote to recognize the error of their ways. Both the AP and Coaches Poll put USC #1 where they should have been all along. Georgia #1? I'm sorry, but not in this decade. OSU? So close, and yet, always so far away.

Here are the polls: USC #1

Now can they stay there throughout the season? Teams will be gunning for the Trojans. What's new?

Monday, September 1, 2008

Who's Number One?

National Media Hype for USC Heats Up

Although I prefer the Trojans to be top five and work themselves up to number one, maybe being number one is not a bad thing for this team. Pete Carroll, if anyone should be able to maintain a number one billing throughout the season.

Some of the national media thinks USC deserves the number one spot. Keith Jackson, during a phone interview on ABC was asked what he thought the Trojans should be ranked, higher than #3 was his idea.

Throughout the country, USC #1 is being bantered around. Personally, I think Georgia #1 sounds preposterous and ranking Ohio State over USC is plain silly. But that's going to be decided in a little less than two weeks.

NY Daily News Article

Washington Times Article


Offensive Line Proves it's point

Here's a nice photo which illustrates the power of the Trojan's offensive line.



Note the way the Trojan offensive line simply over powers the entire defensive line of the Cavaliers.

Before the season, there was some question as to whether the young USC offensive line would be up to task. If Saturday was any indication, there's nothing for Trojan fans to be concerned about.

In the spring, I interviewed offensive line coach Pat Ruel. He has such a great philosophy of coaching and teaches the youngsters well. He always has a new crop of players ready to take the lead on the offensive line.



Coaches Corner: Coach Pat Ruel

Coach Pat Ruel
Coach Pat Ruel

Posted Apr 5, 2008

Offensive Line Coach Pat Ruel discusses the new offensive line and his expectations for the upcoming season.








Discussing the Trojan Offensive Line


How are things different this year along the offensive line?

We had a cycle of players that went through, these seniors were really, really good. Its just time for a new group to take over.

This happens every year, it’s just that we had a special group of seniors. They won four straight conference championships; they did a lot of great things. The biggest thing I have is I graduated four guys, actually three and one left early, so I lost four guys and I have to rebuild the offensive line.

I’ve got good, young athletes out there that can get the job done.

Do you approach things differently with a younger group?

I have to ‘put a lot of paper down’ with this group. Every snap is kind of new to them. Every snap is important, but they are learning. They’re already getting better, the second offensive line has some great kids on it and they’re starting to make some improvement.

We don’t have to beat anybody right now. All we have to do is become the best football players and the best team we can become by August 30.

Does having the coaching staff intact for a few years help?

The continuity is good, but this program is interchangeable. Pete (Carroll) has a system that you know, if three of us were to go down in a boat at Catalina, he’d just pull in three pretty good guys and just roll right along…that’s a scary thought, though isn’t it? (He rolls with a big laugh)…I just hope I’m not one of those three (more laughter)…

I’m just saying, guys can leave and, I just think the system and the approach, the whole philosophy of the program is just not going to change. The guys that come in change to the program, guys that come here becomes part of it.

Even with a large group of new players, practices still seem to move quickly. You don’t seem to slow down for the new players.

I think we have some players that have grown up and understand the process. We expect that. We emphasize it. We don’t over coach on the field; we’re not going to slow down the practice so we can coach someone. We’ll coach them at team meetings or after practice a little.

We prepare players to have a good practice. It may mean reviewing scripts, it may mean telling them the emphasis of the day, what you expect them to do is to follow the philosophy and follow the emphasis. We want them to play fast so we can’t slow them down.

Sometimes that’s a hard thing to learn for older coaches, because you may think you need to teach all the time. Really, what you need to do is let them go, let them play, let them finish and get them back and keep showing them the right way to do it.

So let’s talk about Kristofer O’Dowd, how’s he doing?

O’Dowd’s doing fine. The thing I like about him is that he’s taking some leadership up there; he’s like the ‘quarterback’ of our offensive line. Jeff Byers is up there lending his experience so that kind of helps him out. Kristofer O’Dowd is just so much more advanced than he was a year ago. He wasn’t anywhere close to what he needed to be last year, but he’s that much closer now, and he just needs to keep working at it.

Who’s backing-up O’Dowd?

I’ve got Alex Parsons, Jeff Byers and Mike Reardon backing him up. Mike Reardon is taking all of the reps in the second unit. Mike’s a tremendous athlete, he’s a tremendous competitor, he’s a little ‘light’ but we like what we see in Mike. He red-shirted last year, he’s just going to be a red-shirt freshman, he’s going to be a really good player in a year or so.

The left side of the line appears to be stronger than the right at this point, you seem to be juggling players a lot on the right side, talk about that.

Yes, well, we’re going to find the best five players to play along the line. Then we’re going to find three, four or five other guys that we think can really help us win. The rest of the guys will have to wait another year before they get a chance.

The big thing is we have to get our offensive line to grow-up fast. I think the process is started. With our defense, they’re going to see it all, there’s nothing they’re not going to see.

Are the guys in the lineup at the number one spot now going to be your starters in the Fall?

No, no, the jury’s out, the jury’s going to be out until the week of the first game. Even then, we’re going to give guys the opportunity to compete. I think that some guys are just going to take a little longer, and some guys are just going to learn it quicker.

You’ve got a great freshman class coming in as well…

Sure, and I want those guys to get an opportunity as well. I’m just looking forward to having a full complement of offensive linemen here, which will be awesome. The guys who have to work with our defense will do a great job and the guys that come up and get to work with the offense should be ready to help us win. We’re moving along pretty well right now.