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Football Debate of the Day: Which freshmen will play first?

The remainder of USC's 2018 signing class is expected to arrive on campus Friday and will immediately jump into player-run practices as well as offseason conditioning with Ivan Lewis & Co. Of course, five freshmen and juco transfer Caleb Tremblay participated in spring practice. So with everyone now on board, I took a look at the depth chart to see who's best positioned to quickly climb the ladder.

Here are the five true freshmen who I think have the most to gain this summer:

QB J.T. Daniels
WR Amon-Ra St. Brown
LB Kana'i Mauga
LB Palaie Gaoteote
CB Olaijah Griffin

If you had to pick five freshmen to get on the field right away, who would they be?

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Do 5 star running backs exist or even linemen

It seems like for the most part when I look at our competition for a lot of our recruits that I see. It seems like we are in the mid western conference, cause those are the other schools we are cempeting against for some of these recruits. We are not competing with Alabama, Ohio State, Clemson and SEC and ACC for the same recruits at some positions OR most positions.

WE ARE NOT EVEN TRYING TO COMPETE WITH THOSE SCHOOLS FOR SAME KIDS.
By looking at our recruiting if we stay on this same 3 Star thing. It won't matter who the coach is we just won't be able to compete nationally.

Football PRP Footnotes (6/5)

USC held its first player-run practice of the summer Tuesday evening.

Before it began, I briefly caught up with Clay Helton, who informed me he met with junior cornerback Jack Jones this week and came away hopeful that Jones will take care of his academics at a JC over the next year, which would open the door for his return to the Trojans in 2019. Jones is academically ineligible for 2018. Helton said the plan is for Jones to sit out the upcoming football season and enroll at a community college for the summer, fall and next spring, completing his associate's degree in the process.

Jones, of course, could choose to play football at a JC and nullify redshirting. He also could transfer elsewhere once he's regained his eligibility. Sources have indicated Jones is considering all his options, but it's worth noting that Helton seemed optimistic he'll eventually return. Helton’s certainly leaving the door open for him. (And as we know, it's in his nature to hold out hope for the best.)

Helton also expressed confidence in Jones' potential replacements, noting that redshirt freshmen Greg Johnson and Je'Quari Godfrey are healthy. He likened Jonathan Lockett to Ajene Harris in that he is so bright and can play multiple positions in the backfield. And he’s very encouraged by what he's seeing from Isaiah Langley. He didn't forget to mention the incoming freshmen either. Jones was an asset, but cornerback might be one of the deeper position groups on the team.

Some notes from the PRP:
The hour-long workout commenced with position drills and included 7-on-7 before concluding with a brief team period.

TB Stephen Carr, TE Daniel Imatorbhebhe, TE Erik Krommenhoek, WR Trevon Sidney and OL Andrew Vorhees were not in attendance.

TB Aca'Cedric Ware (foot), TE Josh Falo and WRs Josh Imatorbhebhe and Randall Grimes did not participate.

DT Marlon Tuipulotu did individuals but sat out the team period. DL Jacob Lichtenstein, who missed the second half of spring practice with a knee injury, was also limited.

Dominic Davis has switched positions again, this time from tailback to nickel.

The freshmen enrolling in summer are set to arrive Friday.

***

QB Matt Fink took the majority of first-team reps.

Toa Lobendahn, who was held out of team drills in spring as a precaution, was the first-team center.

Clayton Johnston and Austin Jackson shared first-team reps, with Johnston going first. Alijah-Vera Tucker claimed first-team reps at right guard.

Jordan Iosefa, who missed the end of spring after undergoing a minor knee surgery, was the first-team strong-side linebacker.

Ykili Ross was the first-team strong safety. Langley was the first-team corner opposite Biggie Marshall. (I believe Langley has the inside track here.) Lockett primarily worked at nickel, behind Ajene.

There were no other notable changes with the first team on either side.

The front four on the second team sometimes featured Liam Jimmons and Jay Tufele inside, with Hunter Echols and Kana'i Mauga as the outside linebackers.

Highlights:
Fink completed a couple really nice throws, including a sharp pass up the seam to Velus Jones. Fink appeared thicker to me in his upper body. He's filling out.

Jack Sears connected with Tyler Vaughns over the top for a long gain. He threw an even better ball beyond the reach of two defenders downfield to Keyshawn Young, only Young couldn't hang on for the would-be touchdown in the corner of the end zone. Safe to say both QBs had a positive opening PRP.

Both Vaughns and Michael Pittman looked dominant at times, with the latter basically having his way with whomever lined up across from him. I know Pittman has been working this offseason with Curtis Conway, who's stressed reading defenders and their tendencies. Pittman has also placed extra emphasis on his conditioning. I thought Vaughns looked a bit quicker. No pads, of course, so we'll see.

As an aside, I learned Pittman and Tyler Vaughns have organized regular throwing sessions with the three scholarship quarterbacks (yes, that includes J.T. Daniels) for more than a month now. A source told us some in the program already feel Daniels is "ready" to compete for the starting job right away.

The defensive backfield had its moments, too. Marvell Tell looks to be in impeccable shape and is moving really well. Biggie had a great pass break-up that was nearly an interception. Freshman safety Talanoa Hufanga deflected a pass and stopped Velus in the backfield on a reverse. (If you're scoring at home, this play doesn't work in games, practices or even PRPs). Hufanga, meanwhile, continues to impress. Wherever the play is, he's always there.

Until next time...

Football USC Top 20 Players of 2018

Chris Swanson, Murf Baldwin and I each ranked the top 20 players on the team. Click on the link for the final list: TrojanSports.com staff top 20 composite ranking.

Here are our individual lists:

SWANSON
1. Tyler Vaughns
2. Toa Lobendahn
3. Cam Smith
4. Iman Marshall
5. Porter Gustin
6. Stephen Carr
7. Michael Pittman
8. Christian Rector
9. Jordan Iosefa
10. Marvell Tell
11. Ajene Harris
12. Chuma Edoga
13. Brandon Pili
14. Daniel Imatorbhebhe
15. Josh Falo
16. Vavae Malepeai
17. Talanoa Hufanga
18. Chris Brown
19. Andrew Vorhees
20. John Houston

BALDWIN
1. Christian Rector
2. Jordan Iosefa
3. Tyler Vaughns
4. John Houston
5. Cam Smith
6. Stephen Carr
7. Daniel Imatorbhebhe
8. Marvell Tell
9. Porter Gustin
10. Josh Falo
11. Iman Marshall
12. Chuma Edoga
13. Vavae Malepeai
14. Toa Lobendahn
15. Aca'Cedric Ware
16. Michael Pittman
17. Ykili Ross
18. Ajene Harris
19. Malik Dorton
20. Andrew Vorhees

MAYA
1. Cam Smith
2. Tyler Vaughns
3. Stephen Carr
4. Porter Gustin
5. Biggie Marshall
6. Marvell Tell
7. Toa Lobendahn
8. Chuma Edoga
9. Michael Pittman
10. Christian Rector
11. Ajene Harris
12. Jordan Iosefa
13. Daniel Imatorbhebhe
14. Josh Falo
15. Brandon Pili
16. Vavae Malepeai
17. Isaiah Pola-Mao
18. Jay Tufele
19. Kana’i Mauga
20. Talanoa Hufanga

Thank you SOOOO much! Now, go fix a real problem, you dumb asses!

https://sports.yahoo.com/pac-12-passes-rule-requiring-6-wins-bowl-192320498--ncaaf.html?src=rss

Pac-12 passes rule requiring 6 wins for bowl eligibility

The Pac-12 will require its teams to win at least six regular-season games to play in a bowl, eliminating the opportunity for a 5-7 squad to earn a postseason spot when there are not enough six-win teams nationally to fill the bowls.

Pac-12 presidents passed the rule proposed by a subcommittee of athletic directors led by Washington's Jennifer Cohen.

''The Pac-12 is committed to supporting the highest quality of competition at post-season bowl games,'' Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott said in a statement to The Associated Press on Monday. ''In requiring a minimum of six regular season wins our goal is to support the significance of the bowl season and provide our fans around the country with the most exciting games featuring our leading Pac-12 teams.''

The growing bowl lineup led to the NCAA determining in 2015 that 5-7 teams with the best Academic Progress Ratings would be bowl eligible if there were not enough six-win teams to fill the then-80 spots. Three 5-7 teams played in bowls in 2015 and two did so in 2016. None were needed last season when the number of FBS bowl slots dropped to 78 (39 games, not including the national title game) with the Poinsettia Bowl folding.

No 5-7 bowl-eligible teams have been from the Pac-12, which this season has seven contracted bowl spots for its 12 schools. Sending a team to a far-off and low-profile bowl game, where it will draw few fans, can be a losing financial proposition for an athletic department, but bowl eligibility does come with extra practice time (20 hours per week) that coaches like.

Washington State coach Mike Leach called the conference's policy, which is in effect for this season, ''a solution searching for a problem.''

''If we had a 5-7 team lucky enough to make a bowl, they could probably use the practice and the players would probably appreciate the chance to play another game,'' Leach said. ''Why should we limit opportunities when other conferences aren't?''

There will again be 39 FBS bowl games this season.

---

Follow Ralph D. Russo at www.Twitter.com/ralphDrussoAP
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