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Football Initial PFF grades, snap counts, stats from USC-Minnesota

Offensive snap counts (66 total snaps):

QB Miller Moss 66, LT Elijah Paige 66, LG Emmanuel Pregnon 66, C Jonah Monheim 66, RG Alani Noa 66, RT Mason Murphy 66, RB Woody Marks 57, WR Kyron Hudson 56, WR Ja'Kobi Lane 42, WR Makai Lemon 35, WR Zachariah Branch 31, WR Duce Robinson 30, TE Kade Eldridge 30, WR Kyle Ford 20, TE Walker Lyons 18, RB Quinten Joyner 8, TE Joey Olsen 1, RB Ryan Jackson 1, OT Tobias Raymond 1.

Top offensive grades (min. 10 snaps)

1. RB Woody Marks 79.2
2. C Jonah Monheim 72.0
3. WR Duce Robinson 68.1
4. RG Alani Noa 64.3
5. WR Kyron Hudson 63.6
6. WR Kyle Ford 62.7
7. LT Elijah Paige 58.5
8. WR Makai Lemon 58.3
9. WR Ja'Kobi Lane 56.5
10. QB Miller Moss 55.5

Offensive stats of note ...

-Woody Marks rushed for a career-high 134 yards, which is his third 100-yard rushing performance in five games. With 468 rushing yards, he's already just 114 away from matching his career-high set in 2022. He had 62 rushing yards after contact Saturday and created 4 missed tackles.
-Quinten Joyner had 44 yards on just 4 carries but didn't touch the ball again after his second-quarter fumble. He averaged 5.25 yards after contact per touch (better than Marks' 3.10). That fumble is likely going to continue to be held against him even though he's now averaging 7.9 YPC.
-Miller Moss was 0-2 on pass attempts of at least 20 yards, with the game-ending interception. Per PFF, he was only under pressure on 8 of his 39 drop-backs, which seems counter to the eye test and more in line with Lincoln Riley's assessment of the OL. Moss finished 23-of-38 passing for 200 yards, 1 TD and 2 INTs. It was his lowest passing output as a starter.
-Speaking of which, this was a nice bounce-back game for RG Alani Noa, who registered an 86.8 pass-blocking grade. C Jonah Monheim was also solid with a 73.6 pass-blocking grade, while LG Emmanuel Pregnon got a respectable 69.6, RT Mason Murphy surprisingly got a 64.9 and LT Elijah Paige a 62.4.
-Per PFF, USC only allowed 5 pressures! I feel like I was watching a different game. Paige had 3, Murphy had 2. Then again, PFF doesn't have a sack accounted for even though Minnesota got 1 officially.
-Ja'Kobi Lane and Duce Robinson were the most targeted WRs with 7 each, followed by Kyron Hudson and Zachariah Branch with 6. Only 4 of those targets to Robinson connected and only 2 to Lane. Branch had the only drop.
-Hudson led USC with 5 catches for 54 yards.
-Robinson has a touchdown in three-straight games. He continued to play mainly out of the slot, with 18 snaps there and 12 out wide. His TD came out of the slot.

Defensive stuff coming ...

I am not saying anything bad about WR core, but

Lemon definitely earned more reps. Go back and look at the game (if you recorded) and look at two of his catches. Yards after catch were elite. The balance and footwork after his catches was really good. They were two important plays and I just never realized how good he is at getting the ball upfield after the catch. Even knocked off balance, recovers and gets the first down. I believe both plays were 3rd downs.

Football Lincoln Riley Thursday Zoom (Penn State week)

Just wrapped with Lincoln. The only news is that Jacobe Covington is questionable but progressing faster than expected.

He had some good stuff on how they're managing Quinten Joyner's fumble situation and what it means for him going forward, OL development/building strategy, coaching a player's confidence and more.

Transcribing now. It'll take me a while.

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The Data Is Clear: Hurricanes Are Not Getting More Dangerous

Andrew Montford has that data, and it shows that Helene wasn't uniquely dangerous.

The BBC has described Helene as ‘one of the biggest ever storms to hit the US Gulf Coast, with wind gust speeds of 140 mph’.

That’s true, but it is still quite a long way behind the 150mph of Camille in 1969, or the 160mph of the Labor Day hurricane of 1935, both of which hit the US before climate change was deemed a major concern.
We can go back even further, of course, to the Galveston hurricane of 1900, which is the deadliest natural disaster in American history, with 145 mph winds, resulting in between 6,000 and 12,000 fatalities. That storm affected the Dominican Republic, Cuba, the Turks and Caicos Islands, the Bahamas, the United States Gulf Coast, the central Midwest, the mid-Atlantic states, New England, and eastern Canada. That storm cut a swath of damage across North America at a time when nobody had even thought about anthropogenic climate change.

Forecasters didn't even get 2024 completely right:

This year, with the Earth experiencing a temperature spike, there was near unanimity among forecasters that the Atlantic would experience a remarkable jump in hurricane activity, with one news outlet saying this would be a ‘supercharged’ hurricane season.

However, the reality thus far, with two-thirds of the season behind us, is that it has been no more eventful than average.

In other words: The Earth's climate, the global climate, remains as it has been, an inconceivably vast and chaotic system with trillions of inputs and outputs. One of the reasons that the Atlantic hurricane season was milder than expected? Unexpected rainfalls in the Sahara Desert, half a world away from the path of Hurricane Helene. There is no set of projections or computer models that can accurately predict these systems; it's difficult for weather forecasters to get local weather right more than a few days out, so it should be no surprise that models attempting to predict global trends often get things wrong when they don't even know all the possible inputs.

Football In-depth USC offensive notes -- Penn State week

From practice and interviews Tuesday ...

--

Coming off his best game yet as a Trojan, running back Woody Marks is just 114 yards away from matching his career-high (582) set two years ago at Mississippi State.

Marks has reached 100 rushing yards in three of his five games in a USC uniform, including 134 yards and a touchdown on a season-high 20 carries (6.7 YPC) Saturday at Minnesota. He also added 4 catches for 30 yards.

For the season, he's up to 468 yards and 4 TDs on the ground (5.8 YPC) and another 145 yards through the air, but ask Marks and he'll say he's not satisfied with his production yet.

"I really think I haven't proved a lot. I proved a little bit, I showed a little bit, but I haven't really just established like a dominant game yet. ... I haven't played up to the standard that I hold myself accountable to," he said.

That's how coach Lincoln Riley felt about the run game, in general, even as the Trojans rushed for 173 yards on 6.2 YPC as a team -- its best mark this season against a power conference foe.

"We did do a lot of good things in the run game that was exciting, and honestly we ran it well, but we were agonizingly close to having just a crazy day running the ball. I mean, it was some of the times that we got down, it wasn't by much, and so no, we were really, really excited about what we did in the run game," he said. "Thought the guys played well, prepared hard. I thought Alani Noa had his best game as a Trojan, which was great to see. I thought Elijah [Paige] took some really good steps. [Mason] Murphy was really good in the run game. We did some really good things that we absolutely can build on."

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, Riley was asked if that rushing success might, you know, encourage him to stick with it more late in games (wink, wink, nudge, nudge) ...

"No question, we did a lot the other night. We ran it a lot, we ran it well. It was good to see the rest of the group really do some good things in the run game -- I know we talked about that some after the game and that was important the other night, but it's obviously going to be really, really important going forward," Riley said. "I feel like we took some great steps. Listen, the most fun time to call plays is when you have a great running game. It's a lot different, so it was good to see us take some steps."

Starting with the decision to have Miller Moss dropback and pass on third-and-4 from the Minnesota 35-yard line early in the fourth quarter -- the play on which he was hit while throwing and intercepted -- USC didn't run the ball again the final 10-plus minutes of the game. Of course, the Gophers had the ball for most of that time, USC's ensuing three-and-out started with a 9-yard sack (though that drive might have been well-served to start things off on the ground) and the final drive was a race against the clock.

As for Marks, he is also just 40 carries away from his career-high of 121, so being a workhorse back is a bit of a new role for him, though he said he had some 20-carry games in high school. He credited Bennie Wylie and the strength staff for getting him ready for this season.

"I think training [factors] into that throughout the summer. I think Coach Wylie put me in a great position to have my body equipped to get that many carries," Marks said. "You've got to work hard every day. You might get 5 carries, but in the summer you're working like you're getting 50 carries. You gotta train your body to overdo what you've got to do on the field."

Sophomore running back Quinten Joyner didn't touch the ball again after his second quarter fumble Saturday, and it's unclear how the coaching staff will handle that moving forward with the talented young back, but either way it looks like Marks is going to continue to be a major focal point for this offense.

"He's been exactly what we had hoped he'd [be] up to this point. He's been, I think one, a steady, veteran presence for us because we've got a lot of youth and new players around him. He's ran the ball well. He's done a nice job in pass pro, and then obviously he's been a factor in the receiving game as well," Riley said. "So I think he's going to keep getting better as he gets settled in with our guys, our linemen, our system, everything, I think he can still continue to improve and I believe he will, but he's just a quiet, unassuming, hard worker, shows up every day, you can tell he's really motivated to play and he's been a great teammate. So I can't say enough about him at this point."

--

As for Riley's praise of Noa, the sophomore right guard, he played every snap in this game after rotating with redshirt freshman Amos Talelele the previous week. And he responded -- Noa received USC's highest pass-blocking grade (86.8) and run-blocking grade (72.2) from PFF while allowing 0 pressures and committing 0 penalties.

"I think in some instances he was thinking a little less and just playing a little more and that turned out well for him. Certainly, it was good to see that, and if he keeps growing on that he'll be a real good player for us," center Jonah Monheim said.

Riley was asked what the film showed him about the pass protection overall. While PFF logged USC for a season-low 5 pressures allowed -- down from 21 vs. Michigan and 15 vs. Wisconsin -- the reality is that two of them swung the game, on Moss' hit-induced fourth quarter interception and then the sack to start USC's next drive leading to a three-and-out in between Minnesota's two touchdowns to seize the game.

"I think we just got to continue to build on [it]. I think we've had a few weeks here -- we didn't play good against Michigan and again I own a lot of that, I screwed us up in our silent count. Our linemen had some things working against them in that game -- and obviously they weren't perfect -- they had some things working against them in the game that were not their fault, that were mine. We didn't play good in that game.," Riley said. "We were better against Wisconsin, we were better against Minnesota. We've got to stay on that trend. If we keep doing that, these young dudes are going to get better and their cohesion is going to grow. There's a lot of good things on that tape from the other night, and I think we'll continue to build on it. Obviously, we want our depth and our guys to keep pushing them, and obviously be ready to sub in there and go in as well."

...

Tim Walz calls for the end of the Electoral College! Totalitarian tyrants and authoritarians want to deconstruct the US Constitution.

Tim Walz says the Electoral College ‘needs to go’ …. ITS ALL ABOUT 1 PARTY RULE…​

Calling for the end of the Electoral College.

“I think all of us know the Electoral College needs to go,” Walz said at a campaign fundraiser hosted at California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s home on Tuesday, according to pool reporters in the room. “We need a national popular vote that is something. But that’s not the world we live in.”

Walz has long been vocal in his belief that the Electoral College system, which decides the presidential winner, should be nixed in favor of the popular vote.

At an earlier fundraising event in Seattle Tuesday, Walz called himself “a national popular vote guy” and added “But that’s not the world we live in,” according to the New York Times.
When he calls for the end to the Electoral College, it means he doesn't understand the basic principles of our Constitution and why the Founders employed the Electoral College. And/or he just wants California and New York to control the vote to dictate Democratic wins, that they want to overturn a critical part of the Constitution to ensure their own power. It also means he doesn't care about the interests of the smaller population states. I hope people in those states think about that when they are voting, how this guy would like to cut their legs out from under them.

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Trojan's Live with Lincoln Riley 10/7

Question about what they could have done differently

First we did a lot of good things as a team and we put ourselves in position there late in the fourth to win the game, and so obviously kind of like the Michigan game, frustrated that road football is difficult to win as we saw across the country this last week, and you got to put yourself in position and then you got to go capitalize. We've put ourselves in position, but you got to go capitalize there at the end and we're disappointed that we didn't get that done Saturday obviously. I think looking at the game as a whole, I mean to me there was a few things. I think the first thing you look at is the turnovers, right? We lose the turnover battle three to one, and I know we had to be pretty aggressive there at the end with the clock running down, but in all three turnovers we're in the offenses plus territory where you're down there in scoring position, you've got good drives going on all three. So those were massive. I think we did not do as good a job defensively against the run as we've done this entire year up to this point, and I think our inability to either to not stop the run and certainly even just the field position game and how that played out was really critical because even when we did stop them, typically the offense had the ball backed up quite a bit and so you've got to drive it a long way against a good defense as opposed to get some of those stops earlier. Now it's shorter fields or maybe you get a chance to return some punts. So I didn't think we played very well in sync there and I think those were, to me, the two biggest factors in the game. We didn't stop the run. Well then we had three turnovers in the plus zone and I mean that wiped out all the other advantages that we did have in the game. We dominated third downs, we dominated explosive plays. We still did a lot of good things as a team, but those are big, big things there that are going to equalize it. Then all of a sudden the game comes down to one play or one call or whatever it is and anything, I'm like, sometimes those are going to go your way and sometimes they're not. Then typically on the road they find a way not to, but that's part of playing on the road. We all know what it is. It is what it is and you got to be able to overcome it. We put ourselves damn close, but we didn't get it done.

What's your message to the team and how to close out those games where you have leads in the fourth quarter and how do we offensively and defensively do the right things to make those Ws?

Yeah, we need to do what we did against LSU because it was really the same scenario and we got it done. We had the scores, we got the stops. You've got in those critical moments at the end of the game, that's where you've got to be laser focused. You can't get caught up on the emotions of the game or the excitement, the end of the game and it's coming down to it. I mean, that's where you've got to hone in on your craft, on your technique, on the calls, on the communication even more. And so yeah, I mean I think it's a learning experience for us. I mean I think the one, we will look back I think on this first early stretch of games and we know we've put ourselves in position to win every one of 'em. It's been a tough stretch. It's been good competition, not many games at home, all that, but at the end of the day, we need to learn from it and we need to be better in the second half because of it. There's that battle tested feel. Our team is very battle tested. I would argue I'd be a little surprised if there's another team in the country right now that's more battle tested than we are, and so we got to make that our advantage going forward and if we'll handle it the right way, we'll continue to stay positive, continue to have competitive upbeat practices continue to improve, develop our roster. It's a long year and as you see across the country, the parity's, different. Things have shifted a little bit and it's affecting some of the on the field too, and so the teams that stay steady through it and persevere on the back end of it could be really good football teams and we have a chance to be one of those teams. We have a good football team right now. We have a good football team. We have a chance to be a very good football team if we'll handle this the correct way.

How would you evaluate your quarterback's performance now that you've got to watch the tape back?

Yeah, I thought he played pretty good. I did. I thought he was pretty steady for us again. He had a lot of really, really good plays, a lot of good decisions. He had a couple of loose throws that he misses that he missed, that he doesn't normally miss. And then I think, listen, the decision there at the end is one that you're going to have to be aggressive at some point. You got a couple of plays left probably, and I'm never going to curve a quarterback from being aggressive in those moments. You got a score touchdown. I mean, you know what it is. And so that to me is all different situation together. But no, I thought he moved us well. I mean the offense moved the ball well, the entire game. Again, the turnovers were the biggest thing that just without the turnovers it was there was a lot of good stuff on tape offensively and honestly, there was a lot of things that we did better in that game offensively than we did against some of the previous opponents.

Are you guys still in an information gathering phase and trying to figure out how to master this whole thing of going cross country and winning games? Where do you stand on that?

I think there's one, there's a lot of good teams in this league, so you go on the road and you're not just going on the road, you're going on the road to play a pretty good team most likely. So I think that's a big part of it. Yeah, I think is everybody learning about the travel and the effects on the guys and all that because this is the NFL player. He does football and then he goes home with his family or his buddies or whatever. These guys' schedules are jam packed. They're probably more jam packed than they've ever been before. These guys are going, these guys are full-time students on top of trying to play high level college football. So some of that I think remains to be seen, and I think we're all going to learn a lot going forward. I mean teams on both coasts and everybody obviously is involved a bit in it now. So yeah, I think we're certainly trying to be very attentive to our travel procedures, the amount of rest, these guys are getting, effects on the body, obviously trying to optimize performance and recovery, so we're definitely trying to pay attention to those things. I don't know that I could sit here and say, well, that traveling really made it a lot harder for us to beat Michigan or a lot harder for us to beat Minnesota. I don't necessarily feel that way right now, but we're certainly not going to leave any stone unturned and obviously we want to continue to be better in all phases. when we travel.

What have you seen from Zachariah Branch? How do you get him to maybe unlock that next level of the player?

Yeah, I think he's trying really hard. He's practicing really hard. I do think he would probably admit he's probably guilty sometimes of maybe just pressing a little bit, but that's a little bit of the evolution from a role player to a starter, and I think Zach is going to make, he's had a lot of really good plays for us. He had a lot of really good plays other night he had a bunch of great blocks. He had a couple of really big plays and I think he's just been right on the cusp of a few more. So we have a lot of confidence in him. The player he is now and the player he's going to become. He's got to stay the course. We're certainly going to stay the course with him and keep giving that guy opportunities because a heck of a player and he's just going to get and better from this.

How much confidence does that give you as a play caller going forward when you have that type of success on the ground?

That was important. That's a good defense. They had an experienced front. The two interior guys were really good players, so it is been a big emphasis point, and we did do a lot of good things in the run game that was exciting and honestly, we ran it well, but we were agonizingly close to having just a crazy day running the ball. I mean, it was some of the times that we got down, it wasn't by much, and so no, we were really, really excited about what we did in the run game. Thought the guys played well, prepared hard. I thought Alani Noa had his best game as a Trojan, which was great to see. I thought Elijah took some really good steps. Murphy was really good in the run game. We did some really good things that we absolutely can build on.

VIDEO/QUOTES: Penn State HC James Franklin previews USC game

Hey guys! Richie O’Leary here, publisher of Happy Valley Insider aka the Penn State-Rivals site. Just wanted to drop by and post our video from Penn State head coach James Franklin's press conference today.

There is only a couple of USC questions / answers in there. I'll add the full transcript to the linked article shortly as well and will stop by throughout the week to answer any and all questions along with posting more PSU / USC content ahead of the game. Thanks!

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