They started this strange season as unlikely conference contenders, elevated by virtue of a soft schedule, a star sophomore quarterback, and an ever-lingering sense of unrealized potential. They opened with two unlikely comeback victories and the most unsettling unblemished record in college football.
But on Saturday night, the USC Trojans wouldn’t need an onside kick or a lucky tip or a star turn from Kedon Slovis to escape with a last-second, heart-stopping thriller. It was a far less fluky effort, built on stingy defense, with which No. 20 USC beat Utah, 33-17, for its first win in Salt Lake City since 2012.
And for that unexpected reason, it was undoubtedly the Trojans’ most important victory of the season so far. USC is halfway to an undefeated slate and doesn’t have to leave Los Angeles until a potential Pac-12 title game in late December. Even as skepticism remains, there’s no denying the fortunate road ahead.
That path to a possible Pac-12 title was supposed to feature one of its most challenging obstacles in Utah on Saturday. Instead, it led to a team that looked like it was playing its first game of the season in late November, one that was forced to replace its quarterback, top running back and nine of 11 starters on defense.
After weeks of USC paying for its own crushing mistakes, Utah seemed keen on returning the favor. The Utes turned the ball over five times, handing USC opportunity after opportunity.
This time, USC obliged.
Linebacker Drake Jackson was the first to make a sloppy Utah offense pay, jumping in front of a screen pass in the first quarter for his first career interception. It was the start of a long day for new Utah quarterback Cameron Rising, who wasn’t publicly revealed as the starter until the first snap on offense.
Rising was bailed out on that first turnover, as USC’s offense, again slow to start, went three and out. But on Utah’s next offensive snap, fate wouldn’t be so kind, as defensive tackle Marlon Tuipulotu burst through the line, hit the quarterback and knocked the ball loose. Defensive end Connor Murphy recovered the ball at the four-yard line, putting USC in perfect position to take the lead.
It was a scenario strikingly similar to the one in which the Trojans found themselves last weekend, near the goal line against Arizona. USC reached the one-yard line but was unable to convert and missed a field goal, completing one of the most inept sequences of its season so far.
This time, however, Vavae Malepeai burst through tacklers on second and goal and ended the suspense early en route to a 10-3 lead.
There were other signs of growth. After watching its linebackers get steamrolled in the run game over the first two weeks, USC held Utah, last year’s Pac-12 leader in rushing, to 111 yards on the ground. Ralen Goforth and Kana’i Mauga, two linebackers who both had struggled early on, combined for 23 tackles, doing a lot of that work themselves.
USC had Utah’s quarterbacks on the run all night, as well, sacking Rising and his eventual replacement, Jake Bentley, three times and pressuring them far more, forcing errant throws throughout. Combined, the two quarterbacks were held to completing 55% of their passes for only 216 yards.
Another Utah fumble on a botched handoff put USC in great position again. But this time, Slovis gave the ball right back on an errant pass, which was intercepted by Nephi Sewell at the Utes’ 13-yard line. Sewell had helped Utah tie the game early in the second quarter, returning a fumble by Stephen Carr 23 yards for a touchdown.
Again, Slovis struggled to stay sharp throughout. He missed several open receivers and threw into compromising situations more than once. He still finished with 264 yards on 24-for-35 passing, with touchdown passes to Tyler Vaughns and Erik Krommenhoek in the second quarter that gave USC the lead for good, but it was clear for the third straight week that the sophomore quarterback isn’t yet entirely on his game.
So, USC leaned on its ground game, in spite of the fact that its last two meetings with Utah yielded only 86 yards on 53 attempts.
Malepeai finished with a team-leading 62 rushing yards. But it was sophomore speedster Kenan Christon who keyed a huge drive with a 47-yard run.
By that point, USC had started putting the game away via field goals. Parker Lewis kicked three in the second half while the Trojans shut out the Utes, leaving their next remarkable comeback for another week.