USC football focuses on fine details during spring practice
Three weeks into spring practice, USC football coaches are making one thing clear: 95% of their best will not be accepted or tolerated. Wednesdayβs practice started with some of the players doing up-downs after forgetting equipment.
βIt was a good message from some of our staff and leaders in terms of the approach that we need to have every day that we come out here,β Trojans coach Lincoln Riley said.
A sentiment that was shared by junior defensive tackle Jide Abasiri: βWe just have to be better prepared.β
After the hiccup, Riley said the team responded well and it was back to business.
USC defensive tackle Jide Abasiri (97) is pushing himself to be a more vocal leader as a the Trojans help young players get acclimated to the program.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
After a spirited day on the field on Tuesday following a one-week spring break, Wednesdayβs practice was scripted with the intent to cause stress and create discomfort β stacking multiple two-minute drills after a 6 a.m. team meeting. The goal is to build a no-excuses program.
βItβs invaluable time, invaluable reps,β Riley said. βComing out and working plays and the techniques, great. When you start putting those guys in real life situations and you make it really difficult on them, you really start to see who rises up and theyβre great teaching moments for these guys and for the team in terms of what we want to be and what we want them to be.β
Regardless of the mental challenges Riley applied, the Trojansβ morale remains positive as players compete for spots in the lineup. The energy of the team comes from within, Riley said.
βIt allows us as a staff to really hone in on pushing these guys, and coaching and critiquing and correcting,β Riley said. βAnd theyβre taking it well.β
Attention to detail has always been important at USC, but Abasiri said this year there is an extra emphasis being placed on play-specific details. The staff has implemented drills that focus on a playerβs specific movement or job during various plays.
Entering his third season with the Trojans, Abasiri said he felt like he needed to be a team leader. USC landed the No. 1 class in the nation for the first time since 2006. With so many new young players joining spring practice and a limited number of Trojans with three years of experience, Abasiri felt it was his job to lead.
βJust being an older guy, I feel like itβs important for me to β¦ help them just come along,β Abasiri said.
So far, his advice has been to βjust have fun with it.β
βI mean, obviously, stay on top of everything and all your stuff, but I feel like people get so stressed and so caught up in what theyβre doing that they forget that this is supposed to be enjoyable,β Abasiri said.
The coaching staff, meanwhile, is balancing teaching schemes and the playbook.
βYou have to be able to do both at this level,β Riley said. βThe new guys that came in did have a pretty good foundation. A lot of them came from really good programs. A lot of them had a pretty good working football knowledge to where when we got started with them, it wasnβt like you felt like you were starting from literal square one.β
Return game is still unsettled
USC is still working to identify its top kickoff and punt return options.
βWe havenβt done a lot of live returns yet,β Riley said. βWeβre just trying to figure out who really fields the ball well, who understands it, who makes decisions and honestly, the returners, theyβre showing us a lot of what they can do just in the offensive and defensive periods.β
The coaching staff has a pretty good idea who some of the best players in that position are, but at the moment, they just want to develop the skills, from a return standpoint.