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At what point does SC schedule easier non-conference

opponents to place us on equal footing with other power 5 teams trying to make the playoffs... It is absolutely outrageous to this point that teams like Alabama and Georgia who regularly schedule out-of-conference cupcakes are ranked behind Oregon in this category as the Ducks are scheduled to play Bowling Green, Portland State and and San Jose State this year... I vote for Alabama who plays louisiana-lafayette, Arkansas State and the Citadel. I am all for keeping Notre Dame on our schedule but we need to ease up on our other out of conference games. Who else plays the the caliber of teams like Stanford and Texas in its first three games of the season?

OT- The OMG Particle. Very Interesting

The Origins of the 'OMG Particle'
By Paul Sutter, Astrophysicist | August 14, 2018 07:45am ET


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Gamma-ray bursts from distant stars, as shown in this artist's illustration, are one possible source of the ultra-powerful "OMG particles" that occasionally hit scientists' detectors on Earth.
Credit: NASA/SkyWorks Digital

Right now, as you read this very text, your DNA is getting sliced up by tiny, invisible bullets. The damage-dealers are known as cosmic rays, even though they are absolutely not rays — but the name stuck from a historical misunderstanding. Instead, they're particles: electrons and protons, mostly, but occasionally heavier things like helium or even iron nuclei.

These cosmic particles are trouble, because a) they're fast, and so have a lot of kinetic energy to toss around and b) they're electrically charged. This means they can ionize our poor DNA nucleotides, ripping them apart and occasionally leading to uncontrollable replication errors (aka, cancer).

As if this wasn't bad enough, every once in a while, roughly once per square kilometer per year, a particle comes screaming into our upper atmosphere at truly monstrous speed, knocking against a hapless nitrogen or oxygen molecule and cascading into a shower of lower-energy (but still deadly, of course) secondary particles.

There's only one appropriate response when confronted with a particle of such preposterous potential: "OMG."

Fastballs
"OMG" was the nickname given to the first example of what are now known as ultra-high-energy cosmic rays, detected in 1991 by the University of Utah's Fly's Eye cosmic ray detector. That single proton slammed into our atmosphere going roughly 99.99999999999999999999951 percent the speed of light. And no, all those nines aren't just for dramatic effect to make the number look impressive — it really was that fast. This particle had the same amount of kinetic energy as a decently thrown baseball … compressed down into an object the size of a proton.

That means this particle had over 10 million times more energy than what our most powerful particle collider, the LHC, can produce. Due to relativistic time dilation, at that speed, the OMG particle could travel to our nearest neighbor star, Proxima Centauri, in 0.43 milliseconds of the particle's own time. It could continue on to our galactic core by the time you've finished reading this sentence (from its own perspective).

OMG, indeed.

Since that particle's detection, we've continued to watch the skies for these extreme events using specialized telescopes and detectors across the world. All told, we've recorded around a hundred of the OMG-class particles in the past few decades.

Those few dozen examples both elucidate and deepen the mysteries of their origins. More data is always good, but what the heck in our universe is powerful enough to give a proton a good enough crack that it could almost — almost — challenge light itself to a race?

Knuckleballs
To accelerate a charged particle to insane velocities, you need two key ingredients: a lot of energy and a magnetic field. The magnetic field does the work of transferring to the particle whatever energies are in your event (say, the explosive kinetic energy of a supernova blast or the swirling gravitational pull as matter falls toward a black hole). The detailed physics are, naturally, incredibly complicated and not very well-understood. The birthplaces of cosmic rays are frightfully complicated and located in extreme regions of our universe, so a complete physical picture is going to be hard to come by.

But we can still make some educated guesses as to where extreme examples like our friend the OMG particle come from. Our first guess might be supernovas, the titanic deaths of massive stars. Magnetic fields? Check. A lot of energy? Check. But not quite enough energy to do the trick. Your garden-variety stellar detonation just doesn't have enough raw oomph to spit out particles at the speeds we're considering.

What's next? Active galactic nuclei are strong contenders. These nuclei are created as matter swirls to its doom around a supermassive black hole situated in the center of a galaxy; that material compresses and heats up, forming an accretion disk in its final moments. That twisting inferno generates intense magnetic fields from dynamo actions, forming the potent mixture of ingredients necessary to add some serious horsepower to ejected particles.

Except (and you knew there was going to be an "except"), the active galactic nuclei are too far away to produce cosmic rays that reach Earth. At the ludicrous speeds of an ultra-high-energy cosmic ray, cruising through the cosmos is more like trying to plow through a blizzard. That's because at those speeds the cosmic microwave background — the flood of low-energy photons left over from the very early universe — appears highly blueshifted toward higher energies. So, that high-intensity light smacks and swats at the traveling cosmic ray, slowing and eventually stopping it.

Thus, we shouldn't expect the most powerful cosmic rays to travel any farther than a hundred million light-years or so — and most of the active galactic nuclei are much, much farther from us than that.

Curveballs
For quite a while, a prime suspect for OMG generation was Centaurus A, a relatively nearby active galactic nucleus that sits somewhere between 10 million and 16 million light-years away. Powerful, magnetic and close — the perfect combo. But while some surveys have hinted that cosmic rays may come from its general direction, there's never been a clear enough correlation to tmove that galaxy from suspect to convict. [A Deep Look at the Strange Galaxy Centaurus A]

Part of the problem is that the Milky Way’s own magnetic field subtly alters the trajectory of incoming cosmic rays, disguising their original directions. So, to reconstruct the source of a cosmic ray, you also need models for the strength and directions of our galaxy's magnetic field — something we don't exactly have a full handle on.

If the OMG generator is not Centaurus A by itself, then perhaps it's the Seyfert galaxies, a certain galactic subclass of generally closer, generally weaker (but still insanely bright and strong) active galactic nuclei. But again, with not even a hundred samples to draw on, it's hard to make a rigorous statistical determination.

Perhaps it's gamma-ray bursts, thought to emanate from the peculiar cataclysmic end to some of the most extreme stars. But our understanding of the physics of that situation is (can you believe it?) kinda sketchy.

Perhaps it's something more exotic, like topological defects from the earliest moments of the Big Bang or some funky interactions within dark matter. Maybe we're getting physics wrong and our distance-limit calculations aren't accurate. Maybe, maybe, maybe…

The true origins of these ultra-high-energy "OMG" particles are tough to pin down, and despite almost 30 years of detection history, we don't have a lot of firm answers. Which is fine — it's good to have at least some mysteries left in the universe. Astrophysicists could use some job security, too.

Football They Said It: Nansen, Udeze, Pendergast

Assistant coaches Johnny Nansen and Kenechi Udeze offer insight on emerging young players at their respective positions, and DC Clancy Pendergast discusses the state of the run defense.

OLBs COACH JOHNNY NANSEN
--on whether Kana'i Mauga has surprised him at all with how quickly he’s emerged
"No, not at all. He’s exactly what I thought he was going to be. Just knowing the kid over the three years that I’ve been seeing him at camps. He picks things up, he understands football. So him coming in in the spring really benefit him. And then when we got him here, you could see the athletic ability and motor. He kind of reminds you of JR Tavai. The guy's just a football player, he loves the grind. He’s a tough kid, so he’s exactly what we’re looking for."

--on where he guesses Mauga will grow most over the next two months
"His overall game. Setting the edges. He’s a natural pass rusher. But his overall understanding of football. I just saw where Uchenna was at a year (after becoming a starter) and I think if he gets to that point, Jordan has really been helping him. I think that’s the reason why he’s so much ahead than he was in the spring."

--on if he feels like the defense can avoid skipping a beat with Christian Rector at Predator in place of Gustin
"Oh, yeah. That was the whole plan coming in, just giving porter some time, some snaps off. So having Christian there and having Jordan moving back there when 35 comes back, we’re going to keep everybody fresh and there’s going to be a lot of guys playing this year."

--on what Rector does from that position that makes him special
"He just makes plays. He just makes plays. He’s a great pass rusher and he’s coming along, setting the edges and playing the run. He’s one of our main guys."

--on if defending RPOs is more challenging because of his inclination to get after the QB
"When you have an athletic quarterback, its kind of hard. Because he (Rector) is really a down lineman. That’s why you see us play with Jordan and Porter and Uchenna last year, it’s because were facing so any more RPOs and teams with running quarterbacks. You got to b able to have athletic guys play the edges. And I think he’s getting there. He has an understanding of it. And were doing a better job of putting him in the situation where we can cover him up with our safeties."

--on the recent play of Hunter Echols
"Hunter’s doing a great job. I think Hunter is going to play for us this year. He’s come a long way and I think he’s matured. He’s into football now and you can tell, he’s very productive so far in camp."

--on where Iosefa has made the most strides
"He’s our quarterback. Having him has been a blessing for our team for the last two years because you can do so many more things with the kid. Having Cameron with a hamstring is really helping Jordan get the reps. If something happened, he’ll be the next guy there. He knows the defense, so we’re really fortunate to have him."

DL COACH KENECHI UDEZE
--on where Tufele has grown the most since redshirting last year
"Just understanding the assignment and then of course the technique that goes along with it. A lot of times you get young guys in here and they just go full speed. But Jay is one of those guys where you have to slow him down and then you can start back up."

--on the nest steps for Tufele
"Just being more smart, seeing things before they happen. If an offense is giving you a certain formation, or if you have an offset back, just understanding what block reaction you can expect, and pass pro understanding, which way the line is going to slide. If they’re going to give you situational football, alerting the hard count, just little things, being a smart football player."

--on Helton saying Tufele is having as good a camp as anyone
"I look at it two years ago, we didn’t have strong depth, we didn’t have a good amount of guys up front to do what we were asking as coaches. I always look back to that time because you got to coach the whole room, you got to get everybody ready to play, even when a guy is redshirting, you got to coach them up. I’m really happy. … They’re running now. It’s really different when a guy has that opportunity to redshirt, they’re a better football player Year 2, and then they’re ready."

Continued below...

Football Quick Hits/Footnotes - Day 9 (8/13)

USC had a light practice without pads Monday. Here's the news:

WR Michael Pittman is not expected to return until next week at the earliest because of his shoulder sprain. Pittman still doesn't have full range of motion. He also suffered a broken nose that required surgery.

WR Amon-Ra St. Brown claimed the majority of first-team reps outside for the first time. Wouldn't be surprised if he never goes back to the second team. Will be interesting to see where he lines up when Pittman is back. St. Brown has barely worked in the slot over the past week. Tee Martin said he watched Robert Woods's freshman tape when he arrived in 2012 and thought Woods was the best freshman receiver he'd ever seen. He said today that St. Brown could be better in his first year.

RT Chuma Edoga (hip), DE Caleb Tremblay (stinger) and CB Je'Quari Godfrey returned to practice.

TE Josh Falo and WR Trevon Sidney also worked with the first team, in the slot.

LB Cam Smith participated in the walkthrough portion and worked on the side. He's clearly getting closer.

TE Daniel Imatorbhebhe (quad) is still not doing 11-on-11.

S Ykili Ross, TE Erik Krommenhoek, DL Jacob Lichtenstein, LB Levi Jones and WR Josh Imatorbhebhe remained out.

LT Austin Jackson (ankle), RB Markese Stepp and WR Keyshawn Young did not practice.

LB Palaie Gaoteote underwent surgery today for his torn meniscus. He’s expected to return in 2-4 weeks.

Rotations:
QB JT Daniels received significantly more first-team reps than the other two QBs. Jack Sears took his usual amount. Daniels' gain was Matt Fink's loss.

Stephen Carr was incorporated more with the first team. He said he wasn't 100 percent until just before training camp, which explains why they've had him on a bit of a pitch count thus far in training camp. He reaffirmed that he feels great, however.

With some offensive linemen limited, the first team sometimes featured Andrew Vorhees at right tackle and Alijah Vera-Tucker at right guard. Frank Martin worked at left tackle with the second team.

Come game week, I think Austin Jackson is going to be the starter at left tackle. Just reading the tea leaves.

CB Greg Johnson, who was dinged in the scrimmage, was a full participant and worked primarily with the first team. That CB competition is still open.

Safety Bubba Bolden took the majority of first-team reps. Isaiah Pola-Mao was exclusively with the second team, while Talanoa Hufanga and C.J. Pollard split reps at the other spot.

Impressions:
Had a chance to speak with Martin and QBs coach Bryan Ellis today. They, along with Clay Helton, alluded to the QBs not getting rid of the ball quick enough during the scrimmage. Ellis went in depth on the issue, explaining that the QBs need to call better protections. Of the eight sacks, only a couple of them were deemed physical beats. In other words, the O-line's struggles in the scrimmage were overstated. The QBs being the primary culprit of sacks is actually another point for Daniels, who was sacked just once Saturday.

Daniels wasn't as sharp today. He had a pass batted down at the line, was sacked twice, missed on a few throws and was picked off by Ajene Harris while trying to throw the ball away. Ajene is smarter than the average, but it was a good lesson for Daniels.

One play after the INT, Daniels threw a deep out to Tyler Vaughns amidst tight coverage that Vaughns secured for a long gain. It was an absolute dime.

Jack Sears hit Velus Jones in the deep middle for a long TD. Sears isn't afraid to unleash it. Was an equally great play by Jones, who can be a downfield weapon but still needs to prove he's dependable. Even if he doesn't start I'd expect him to play quite a bit this season. USC doesn't have good depth in the slot yet.

***
The defense won the day. Here were some of the best plays:
Jay Tufele batted a pass down. He continues to be disruptive up front.
Isaiah Pola-Mao he had a sack. He's starting to make more plays more regularly.
Juliano Falaniko recorded a safety (on Daniels) and stopped Stephen Carr on a run. He's been productive of late with the second team.
Liam Jimmons and Brandon Pili combined for a TFL.
Marvell Tell had a nice stop at the line of scrimmage.
Biggie Marshall broke up a pass from Daniels to Amon-Ra St. Brown.

We're seeing a confident group on this side of the ball.

Here are Tajwar's QB grades. We have an updated projected depth chart as well. We'll post interviews with OC Tee Martin, QBs coach Bryan Ellis, QB Jack Sears, and perhaps a couple others, later.

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Football Quick Hits/Footnotes - Day 10 (8/14)

USC was in full pads Tuesday. The team periods were made up almost entirely of run plays. I'll get to that in a moment. For now, the news:

RG Andrew Vorhees will be sidelined the rest of the week to rest his knee, which has flared up of late. Vorhees, you might recall, had surgery to repair a torn meniscus late in spring practice. Alijah Vera-Tucker claimed his reps today and has impressed the staff thus far in camp.

TB Markese Stepp missed his second consecutive practice because he's in the concussion protocol.

LB Solomon Tuliaupupu had the final screw removed from his foot. He'll soon begin running on the treadmill. "He's still a distance away but good prognosis," Clay Helton said. "He's really feeling good right now."

RT Chuma Edoga was a full participant.

LB Levi Jones returned to practice.

K Chase McGrath (groin), who missed all of last week, has been kicking the past two days.

LB Cam Smith remained very limited. He seemed to be anxious as he watched his teammates practice.

LT Austin Jackson, S Ykili Ross, TE Erik Krommenhoek, DL Jacob Lichtenstein, WR Josh Imatorbhebhe and WR Keyshawn Young remained out.

LBs Porter Gustin and Palaie Gaoteote played catch during practice. Gustin in particular was walking around really well. Didn't notice a limp.

CB Isaiah Langley was back with the first team, and Greg Johnson with the second team. Clancy Pendergast said afterward that competition is still open.

I asked Helton who has stood out to him that maybe hasn't been discussed enough and he rattled off quite a few names: DT Jay Tufele, OLB Hunter Echols, OLB Kana'i Mauga, Greg Johnson, Isaiah Langley, Austin Jackson, Alijah Vera-Tucker.

I also asked Helton if there's any separation right now in the QB competition. He didn't take the bait, of course. But he said he's going to sit down after Saturday's scrimmage to evaluate where things stand and intimated that he could make a decision. He revealed that he and QBs coach Bryan Ellis sat down with each quarterback this past weekend after the scrimmage in the Coliseum.

"We told them exactly what their strengths in this camp have been, where there area of improvement needs to be to win the job, and taking the time to provide clarity for them," he said.

This would explain the hint of somberness from Matt Fink and Jack Sears while talking to the media Monday. If Daniels shows out again Saturday, I don't see why Helton would delay the announcement any further.

Impressions:
Is Devon Williams the fourth best wide receiver on the team? I found myself asking this question today because there is a noticeable dropoff once you get past Tyler Vaughns, Michael Pittman and Amon-Ra St. Brown. The staff is hoping the answer is Velus Jones, who's slated to start in the slot. He's definitely had his moments. But he hasn't been consistent enough to convince you he needs to play a lot or that he will produce. Williams, however, not only blends raw talent with a unique build but the intangibles are starting to show up. You can see him practicing with more confidence, being more competitive. He's also beginning to be more physical.

John Houston had a really good day today. I know he hasn't been mentioned much in this space but that's only because I haven't noticed making a ton of plays. It's entirely possible that I'm missing his impact. I know Clancy Pendergast is a big fan. Anyway, he had a couple great run stops today, one where he me Carr at the LOS and another where he tripped up Aca'Cedric Ware in the backfield. USC has to be better in the run game this season and it means just about everyone on the field should be better in this area, even if it's just a little bit.

Christian Rector had a big day as well. I thought he's been a little quiet since moving to Predator, but I know he's working to be better defending RPOs. He made a nice stop on Vavae Malepeai and sacked JT Daniels as well. USC's isn't as good without Cam and Porter, but having Rector and Iosefa to slide into their spots is a luxury. Other recent USC defenses would have been doomed.

Malepeai had an eventful day. He fumbled one of his carries and was stopped for no gain on his final one by Juliano Falaniko and Connor Murphy. He also caught a screen pass from Daniels and then scooted in for a TD. He needs to be more involved in the passing game. The backs are all very capable pass catchers. For some reason that had me thinking about the tight ends, too. They've been pretty underutilized in this camp.

The bulk of today's reps went to Daniels and Matt Fink, with the latter getting the most passing attempts. He hit Randal Grimes over the middle for a touchdown. He also made a dangerous throw across his body to Josh Falo that C.J. Pollard broke up. Fink shouldn't have thrown it, but once he did, Falo has to go get it. His hesitancy allowed Pollard to come in and knock it down. It's a throw that could very well turn into a turnover, and it would likely mean six for the defense. Fink had another good throw to Grimes but it was dropped. The passing game wasn't particularly sharp today. For those keeping score, I don't believe Sears had an attempt.

Kana'i Mauga is quickly becoming a favorite. It started in spring but he's steadily improved since. The kid shows up in team periods every day. Johnny Nansen can't say enough good things about him.

Hunter Echols is starting to make plays more regularly. He had a pressure on Daniels that forced an incompletion. Talanoa Hufanga had a tackle for loss on Stephen Carr. He too has been showing up much more in Week 2.

Not every run was stopped. Ware had a great run between the tackles where he made Bubba Bolden miss and went for a huge gain, maybe 40 yards. It looked like Biggie Marshall ran him down. Carr had a 7-yard run after shaking a defender. Fink also ran for a first down after fooling Connor Murphy on a read option.

Biggie had an interesting sequence where he blanketed Vaughns, which led to an incomplete pass. He was ruled for PI, however. The consensus on the sideline was that it was a bad call. Biggie was noticeably perturbed, exclaiming later that the call ruins his rep. I think it's fair to say he cares more now than ever before. His play would suggest so.

Since there were virtually no passes attempted today, there won't be QB grades, but Tajwar ranked the top 10 players after 10 training camp practices. We also have interviews with OLBs coach Johnny Nansen, DC Clancy Pendergast, S Talanoa Hufanga and DT Jay Tufele coming later.

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Another top rated linemen that was supposed to

be a lock for SC until recently. Sounds familiar AGAIN. Again, we are not getting, or we keep losing, top, top olinemen. They are the heart and sole of a team. I think, they think, they can get who ever abd just coach em up. All the great talent we are getting will not shine AS MUCH as they would if our line was a (top of the country) talented line. Our line has a lot to prove and I don't think it can he done just with coaching.

Chris & Adam: Bullet Point Questions if you can answer

Hey guys,

First off wishing you and your family all the best Adam with your newborn, nothing like being a dad!

If you guys can answer some of these bullet point questions that would be great.

-I know that JTD has a history playing with ARSB, but is he keying to much on him or do you think that he will settle in and be a good distributor. We do have a few other phenomenal receivers & TE!

-I had no idea that Solomon was injured, is he far behind the others now, and is his injury pretty bad, prognosis?

-Hearing a lot of good things about O.Griffn, was he always ahead of ITS because in recruiting, wasn't ITS the higher upside recruit?

-All thru spring and PRP's all we heard about was how far along T. Hufanga was, since fall camp we have really not heard much out of him or coaches mentioning his name at all, any reason or where is he at depth wise?

Thanks for getting to these when you can!

Grading the Quarterbacks: Day 9

After a day of the JT Daniels show on Saturday, we saw a return to the competition’s regularly scheduled programming on a day without many exceptional moments. The group performed solidly for the most part, with JT taking the lion’s share of the reps (not an indication of anything according to Coach Helton) and Sears taking the second most. Nothing we say today from any of the 3 signal callers changes the standing of the competition at this point.

JT Daniels: B+

Daniels came down to earth a bit today after his monster performance at Saturday’s scrimmage. He missed on a handful of throws he definitely should’ve hit, all 3 of them uncharacteristically overthrown over open recievers. He also threw the only pick of the day on a ball that was meant to be a throw away until Ajene Harris pulled an incredible toe drag on the sideline to snag it. Aside from those miscues, Daniels was solid on the day, completing a vast majority of his passes, doing an impressive job of progressing through his reads and getting the ball to the open man. He had moments of success deep, including two well thrown post routes to Randall Grimes and Devon Williams. On his last throw of the day however, he flashed the inhuman accuracy we saw from him on Saturday, putting an incredible back shoulder throw to Tyler Vaughns on a rope up the sideline right through two defenders. Daniels is squarely leading the race for QB1, and nothing we saw from him today took away from that.

Jack Sears: B

Jack Sears had a nice today, picking up where he left off from the second act of the scrimmage on Saturday. He did a good job working through his progressions and firing on the open man for much of the day, completing most of his balls across the middle. He flashed his ability to make throws out of the pocket, throwing a pair of well placed darts towards the sideline after rolling out. He busted out the cannon today as well to make sure we didn’t forget about it, hitting Velus jones 40 yards down the field on a gorgeous bomb up the seam. Even though he had a good day for the most part, a lot of the issues that seemed to plague him Saturday hadn’t been remedied. He still held on to the ball much longer than he should’ve, and his misses tended to be head-scratchingly off the mark. Good days like this from Sears are nice, but it’s not enough to put him back in the conversation for the starting spot.

Matt Fink: B-

Matt Fink threw less than 10 balls against a defense today, so there isn’t much to work off of when giving him a grade. On the reps that he did get, he didn’t do much to warrant a second look, only completing one pass past ten yards in all his attempts. Admittedly, it was a good throw, coming on a curl route for Tyler Vaughns over the head of a defender, but once again it’s just not enough. Fink is quickly becoming an afterthought in this race, and unless he starts balling out very soon, he might not warrant a paragraph in this segment anymore.

Football They Said It: Martin, Ellis, Sears

With JT Daniels and WR Amon-Ra St. Brown still not available for interviews, we were left to asking OC Tee Martin, QBs coach Bryan Ellis and QB Jack Sears for their thoughts on the dynamic freshman duo. They went in depth on their play and the scrimmage as a whole.

OC TEE MARTIN
--on how the QBs played in the scrimmage
"The guys played well with what they had to manage. The obvious of JT throwing great, was 10 of 12 or whatever it was, three touchdowns, that was kind of obvious. But I feel Matt and Jack also did some good things as well. Some of the sacks were on us. We've got to improve that. The decision-making was there. They got us in and out of some runs that made some runs successful. Protections, I thought they managed well. But it was good to just have the guys in the environment of the Coliseum. It's always different for young guys and inexperienced guys. Got a chance to kind of see the guys operate without us being on the field. That was good to see. Again, first live-bullet scrimmage, obviously we have to improve as an offense together and then as quarterbacks. They got their notes from Coach Ellis and myself earlier today, and we'll improve this week."

--on why the scrimmage setting proved to be so different for some players
"It's sometimes when you're out here [at practice] you have that feeling of extra time. But then when it's real live bullets and you're getting blown down for a sack and it counts and the ball's going to be spotted, it's a little different tempo, a little different ... we've got to have a better sense of urgency at times. Not all of them, just a couple of them, but we'll improve those things as a unit, couple physical beats up front that made it look a little worse than what it could have been. But all in all as an offense it was a really positive day."

--on what makes Amon-Ra St. Brown atypical for a freshman?
"He is unbelievable. I remember getting here and watching Robert Woods' freshman tape and saying, 'That's the best freshman I had ever seen.' And if he continues to go the way that he's going, we'll be saying that about him. Very mature, not only from a physical standpoint but mentally. He's a one-rep guy. What I mean by that, he's a guy you can say it to him one time, he does it one time and he gets it. He's not a high-rep guy. And makes plays. He's faster than advertised, stronger than advertised and he's just the total package. So we'll continue to have him grow within what we do and compete for a starting spot. He's playing really well right now."

--on St. Brown’s ability to win 50-50 balls
"I think his jumping ability and his strength. He's able to body people up, similar to basketball being in the paint. He's really strong. He's benching over 300 pounds as an 18-year-old. That's not normal. He has great body control. A lot of that timing of the jump, body control, strength, it all comes together when the ball's in the air and he has that ability to do that."

Continued below...

Football They Said It: Pendergast, Rector, Iosefa

USC DC Clancy Pendergast discusses juggling personnel and DE/OLB Christian Rector and LB Jordan Iosefa discuss juggling positions in light of recent injuries ...

DC CLANCY PENDERGAST
--on what Christian Rector brings to the Predator position
"Stability. He’s got the ability to move inside and outside. We like his matchup on tackles because of his length in pass rush situations. He’s just a unique body type and we can play him in different spots. He’s open to playing inside or outside."

--on whether the plan already was to use him at Predator at times before Gustin was injured
"I think so. Yes, no doubt. We really kind of came up with that last year in fall camp and he demonstrated that during the season, that he could bounce in and out."

--on who else has stood out to him at outside linebacker.
"I’d say Hunter Echols, Juliano (Falaniko) and Kana’i (Mauga). It’ll all depend on who we play from as scheme standpoint, and who we’ll play out there matchup-wise."

--on whether he feels better equipped to lose a projected starter (Rector) from the D-line
"No question. We’ve got more bodies inside. That depth really does help us to be more flexible in other areas."

--on who’s impressed him at defensive end
"We’ve got some guys, Malik, able to play a 3-technique. He’s real probably our best technician. Jay Tufele’s had some really good practices as of late. Liam Jimmons has done a nice job of bouncing out there and playing 3-technique. And Marlon’s got that ability to where he can swing playing both nose or 3-technique. He’s an active guy for his size."

--on if Tuipulotu is 100 percent back
"I haven’t seen anything but full speed out here. He’s shown no signs of having surgery last year."

DE/OLB CHRISTIAN RECTOR
--his thoughts on moving back to Predator
"I like were I’m at right now. It’s a position that I feel comfortable at, and I think I can make the most plays at that position. I can really play anywhere on the line I think. But I feel very comfortable with where I’m at."

--on seemingly preferring Predator to defensive end
"If I had to pick, definitely. Even in the run game, the blocks I’m getting on the outside are a lot easier to play, a lot easier to make my reads and convert them to a pass rush."

--on what was key to his success last year at Predator
"I’d say I was very coachable, I was willing to adapt. I knew I wasn’t going to have everything down when they threw me out there because I’d been playing mostly inside. But I just took the coaching that KU and Nansen gave me and was able to adapt and make plays. I think I have a natural ability to get to the passer. I wasn’t getting too deep too much and I think I had a good counter move inside, especially helping me get home."

--on how much he played on the strong side
"I played on both sides. We were in our over front a lot more than our under front, so a four-down front. In our under front, I was mostly playing the 5-tech, so they would move Uchenna to that Predator spot. I was playing on the other side of that, to the boundary."

--on what he’s learned at his position since emerging last fall
"Most of the offenses run zone read, RPOs, and so I wasn’t as acclimated to that as I am now, because I’ve had a full spring and full summer to get better and develop at those things, change direction, flipping my hips."

--so the primary focus this offseason has been playing the run
"Exactly."

LB JORDAN IOSEFA
--on Pendergst saying he could play any of the four linebacker spots
"I guess I could. I’m not saying that I’m perfect at it. I just think playing all positions really helps be an overall player. Having a chance to play inside is just as good as outside, you see the whole picture from playing inside. Playing outside linebacker really helps see what they (outside linebackers) do, and it’s really unseen what they do, the effort thy put in, the amount of conditioning they have to do, the hard-nosed effort every single play."

--on if he’s better inside
"I don’t know. I think it takes a lot of time and practice. I’ve had equal time playing both positions. Game reps are every important. You need those reps to build that confidence in yourself. Getting the reps at ones at MIKE helps me see the whole picture, helps me take command."

--on Pendergast saying Iosefa knows the defense as well as anyone and when that would have happened
"I think when I got my concussion after the Washington State game, I really took it upon myself to, if I’m not playing, then I got to see what everyone’s really doing. Then after being thrown into the Notre Dame game, I’m just like, alright, this is what the outside guys are doing. If they’re doing this, then the safety and corner are going to be doing this. If the safety’s doing this, then the MIKE’s doing this. If the dime (linebacker) is doing this, then the outside linebacker will do this. If the nose (tackle) is doing this, the tackle has to do this."

"A lot of it is context clues, you see a sentence, if it’s missing a word, then you got to fill it in with a word. Seeing the whole picture really helps. You just got to fill in what happens."

--on whether he thinks he’ll play some inside linebacker this year even after Cam Smith returns
"When he got hurt (last week), Clancy came up to me and was like, you got the MIKE today? I’m like, sure, why not? This is very humbling, and I’m glad that they trust me in that aspect."
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