Tuesday, March 20, 2012

USC football: Receiver Lee off to flying start

The acrobatic sophomore receiver turns in a stellar performance during the team's second spring practice.

By MICHAEL LEV

LOS ANGELES ? So how good can Marqise Lee be?

That was the question floating around USC after the sophomore receiver put on a show at practice Thursday.

Article Tab: USC receiver Marqise Lee is picking up where he left off last season, when he shared Pac-12 Freshman Offensive Player of the Year honors.
USC receiver Marqise Lee is picking up where he left off last season, when he shared Pac-12 Freshman Offensive Player of the Year honors.
PAUL RODRIGUEZ, THE REGISTER

Matt Barkley, the quarterback on the other end of many of Lee's receptions, didn't hold back.

"The best ever," Barkley said of Lee's potential.

That statement echoed Coach Lane Kiffin's from the end of last season, when he said Lee could become the best receiver in school history.

Lee is off to a flying start ? literally ? in spring camp, hauling in one Barkley pass by soaring into the air in front of defender Jawanza Starling.

"That was a play that you were like, 'Wow,'" first-year receivers coach Tee Martin said. "I told him, 'Man, you just kept climbing the ladder.' At some point you think he's going to stop and the ball's going to go over his head, but he kept elevating."

Martin said the 6-foot, 190-pound Lee has a huge "catch radius," meaning he can grab passes thrown high, low, in front of him or behind him.

"Sometimes that's undervalued in wide receivers until you get one," said Martin, a former quarterback. "He was born that way. And we like it."

Lee shared Pac-12 Freshman Offensive Player of the Year honors last season after catching 73 passes for 1,143 yards and 11 touchdowns. Barkley and Kiffin praised Lee for his approach to the game as much as his physical gifts.

"Even with all he did last year, he's still putting in work like he has to earn something," Barkley said. "I think a lot of guys coming in can learn from his mentality. I think that'll set him apart in the long run."

Kiffin especially liked the fact that Lee kept pushing as the team went through a series of post-practice 100-yard sprints.

"After all the stuff he did today, he could have pulled himself out of that last conditioning (drill)," Kiffin said. "He not only stayed in there (but) won it. That's just who he is."

NOTES

After being the star of the first practice Tuesday, sophomore receiver George Farmer suffered a hamstring injury and missed the latter portion of the workout. ... Receiver Robert Woods (ankle) did very limited work. ... Tight ends Xavier Grimble (toe) and Junior Pomee (undisclosed) did not practice, leaving Randall Telfer as the only healthy tight end available. ... Quarterback Jesse Scroggins (hip) was limited to individual drills.... Defensive lineman Greg Townsend Jr. left practice early because of a back injury. ... Tailback D.J. Morgan had two long touchdown runs, showing off his breakaway speed. ... The Trojans were sloppier on offense, something Kiffin said is typical for a second practice. ... The Trojans practice in pads Saturday.

Contact the writer: mlev@ocregister.com

marc tyler datone jones Jesse Scroggins max wittek cody kessler markeith ambles kyle prater

PAC-12 TOURNAMENT NOTEBOOK: Washington coach Romar makes his case to NCAA Tournament committee

Bruin Bites: No March Madness for UCLA Edition

PAC-12 TOURNAMENT NOTEBOOK: Washington coach Romar makes his case to NCAA Tournament committee

Monday, March 19, 2012

Katinka Hosszu and Women's S&D compete in Natl. Championships.

Felixchev_tiny by TheViewFromFigueroa on Mar 15, 2012 4:14 PM PDT

Hosszu2902_medium

via www.swimmingworldmagazine.com


Today, the #7 USC Women's Swim & Dive team will compete in the 2012 NCAA national championships in Auburn. Leading the team of 13 women is senior Katinka Hosszu, a three-time NCAA individual champion; World Championship gold medalist; and member of the 2004, 2008, and 2012 Hungarian Olympic Swim Team. In 2011, she received the Honda Award, given out to the best female athlete in each college sport. This year, she hopes to join fellow swimmer Kristine Quance (1996,1997) and women's basketball star Cheryl Miller (1984, 1985) as the third USC athlete to win the award twice. She will have her chance to make her case this weekend, as she competes in the 200yd IM, 400 yd IM, and 200yd fly. All three of Hosszu's individual titles came from these events at last year's National Championships.

Star-divide

Another swimmer of note is junior Haley Anderson, who will be competing in the 500yd and 1650yd freestyle as well as the 400 IM. Anderson has three school records as a freestyle swimmer and holds five conference titles, including three-consecutive in the 1650yd free. On Saturday, Anderson will attempt to become the first USC swimmer to win an NCAA title in that event, but to do it, she will have to take down Georgia senior Wendy Trott, who is trying to win her fourth straight national title at 1650 yds.

On the diving side is senior Victoria Ishimatsu. She is a seven-time conference champion and the first woman in Pac-12 swimming history to win the same an event four years in a row, dominating the 3-meter springboard in all four years of her eligibility. She has yet to compete in this event at the National Championships, as she injured her foot last year and was unable to compete in the springboard comps.

USC enters the National Championships with a 6-2 record and a 3rd place finish at the Pac-12 championships and seven individual conference titles (three from Hosszu and two from Ishimatsu and Anderson). 12 of the 13 swimmers have competed in previous NCAA championships, and eight of them have earned All-American honors. USC is one of only 8 women's swim teams to win a team national championship, with their sole title coming in 1997.

All the events will be streamed on Auburn's website and, beginning on Friday, on ESPN3.com. All finals will begin at 5 PM PT.

UCLA Basketball: Mired in TOTAL Irrelevance, Expectations & Warning Signs For 2012-13

Uclabear1_tiny by Nestor on Mar 18, 2012 8:26 AM PDT in Basketball

Our community here has just started the discussion about expectations for next year's UCLA basketball season. We are starting with the premise that we think Ben Howland no longer deserves to the caretaker of Coach John Wooden's program in Westwood. Why we believe that doesn't require an extended explanation at this point given the exhaustive discussions on this topic here on BN. Even though we think Howland no longer deserves to be UCLA's coach, the hands of this community has been tied by an out of touch Chancellor, who simply seems to have no interest in getting rid of an incompetent athletic director.

As much as think Howland shouldn't come back next season, the more immediate short term need to resuscitate UCLA's dead hoops program is to bring in a new athletic director, who can lead a competent search for the next coach of UCLA basketball. In the meantime, discussions are going on over here and elsewhere with regards to what to expect from next year's program which will include Shabazz Muhammad in the lineup. It appears that Howland and Kory McCray will lay an egg wrt recruiting of Tony Parker, which is going to be another big FAIL and waste of recruiting resources like number of other pursuit of national recruits in recent years (See Ray McCallum, Quinn Cook).

Anyway, with Shabazz in the lineup we are going to expect a national championship run from Howland. Along with a legitimate national championship run we are going to have the following top-line expectations:

  • Line up a top-10 class for 2013 before the start of 2012 season that will feature commitments from a pg, sf and a post player
  • DOMINATE and win the Pathetic-12
  • Finish the regular season with a top-10 ranking
  • Win the Pathetic-12 tournament and/or secure AT LEAST a 3 seed or higher in the Western Region in the Dance
  • AT LEAST get to the Final-4 and no blowout/uninspiring losses to end the Tourney will be acceptable
  • Finish with a top-10 recruiting class and follow it up with another Pac-12 title and at least a Sweet-16 run in 2013-14

We will hash out those parameters in the coming weeks and months. In general we are not going to be in the mood to any excuses. That said while those are our expectations, there are serious concerns about actual results of next season. Let's get into that a bit after the season.

Star-divide

Tracy Pierson from BruinReportOnline.com recently posted a piece entitled ,"What Will it Take To Turn Around UCLA Hoops?" in which he expressed some serious reservations about next season. The reservations stem from Howland's abdication from a defense-first mindset that made him successful in his early years at UCLA. From Pierson (piece not behind subscription firewall):

[T]he dilemma and central problem of UCLA in the last four years: What exactly is the level of defense that Howland demands now? It definitely isn't the same as it was during those Final Four years. We've said it before and it bears repeating again: UCLA has lost its identity under Howland because he just doesn't emphasize defense like he did during those Final Four seasons, and isn't recruiting the types of players who can play it. If you had to narrow down all of the issues plaguing UCLA in the last four years to the biggest determining factor of why UCLA has slipped under Howland, it's that: The program simply doesn't play the type of defense it used to.

In terms of next year's team, this is why we believe, even given the influx of talent like Muhammad and Anderson, that there's a decent chance it could under-achieve. We don't see it having the make-up of a great defensive team, if you go by the projected playing time we laid out above. Smith, if he's in decent shape, will be better defensively, but we can't see him really making the complete turnaround from extreme defensive liability to strength. The only way Smith can be a decent defender is if UCLA plays a zone, and we are pretty certain that just isn't going to happen. So, you have a below-average defender as you're starting center. The Wears aren't great defenders. They're better defending the four, and not having to defend the five or the three, but they're still limited by their athleticism and lack of overall strength. Strong power forwards will always have a chance to over-power them, and quicker ones will always be able to out-quick them. You can probably project they'll be better defenders with another off-season of development and you know they'll put in the work, but the defensive upside is limited. The days of having a defensive four man like Luc Richard Mbah a Moute are long gone.

There is going to be a question of who Anderson guards. He almost certainly won't have the strength to match up against college power forwards, so we think he more than likely will be the choice to defend the opposing three. It very well could be similar to David Wear trying to guard the three spot this season, however, since Anderson isn't exactly quick (his nickname is "Slow-Mo.").

Read through the e

Howland to remain as UCLA basketball coach

Jon Gold on the NCAA Tournament: The creation of one giant middle class

More March Madness! Sunday Second Round Open Thread

377011_2642084725867_1068030137_32302525_1166539782_n_tiny by Ryan Rosenblatt on Mar 18, 2012 9:15 AM PDT in Basketball

Who wants a spot in the Sweet 16? Anyone? Anyone? Well, UCLA apparently didn't want a spot in the tournament, but eight teams have already booked their spot in the Sweet 16 and 16 more will take to the court today with the hope of filling out one of the eight remaining spots. More madness!

In case you missed it, Friday was the crazy day of the tournament and that is why just one of today's eight second round games is a chalk match-up. The rest are fulled with at least one team that pulled off an upset, and in some case, there are two upset pullers. Games like Florida vs. Norfolk St., South Florida vs. Ohio and Xavier vs. Lehigh guarantee to give us some big number seeds in the Sweet 16.

A couole names to keep an eye on: Michigan St.'s Draymond Green, who had a triple-double in Sparty's first round game and Norfolk St.'s Kyle O'Quinn, who not only led the other Spartans to a major upset, but also became a fan favorite for saying that their winning busted his own bracket and singing One Shining Moment on TV.

Today's schedule is below. All of the games are being televised, on one of four networks (CBS, TBS, TNT and TruTV) and streamed online via MMOD ($3.99 for the remainder of the tournament).

Star-divide

  • 9:15 am PT: Georgetown (3) vs. NC State (11) - CBS
  • 11:45 am PT: Michigan St. (1) vs. St. Louis (9) - CBS
  • 2:15 pm PT: North Carolina (1) vs. Creighton (8) - CBS
  • 3:10 pm PT: Florida (7) vs. Norfolk St. (15) - TNT
  • 4:10 pm PT: South Florida (12) vs. Ohio (13) - TBS
  • 4:45 pm PT: Xavier (10) vs. Lehigh (15) - TruTV
  • 5:40 pm PT: Kansas (2) vs. Purdue (10) - TNT
  • 6:40 pm PT: Florida St. (3) vs. Cincinnati - TBS

D.J. Morgan looks back on track for USC

The sophomore tailback shows off his sprinter's speed with a 70-yard plus run during the Trojans' second spring workout. He says he's finally past thinking about the knee injury he suffered in high school.

D.J. Morgan

USC running back D.J. Morgan appears to be running at full speed again for the first time since high school. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times / 3)

By Gary Klein
USC won't practice in pads until Saturday, so getting an accurate read on how players operate under full-contact conditions will have to wait.
Still, the Trojans' second spring workout came to a momentary standstill Thursday after sophomore tailback D.J. Morgan took a handoff and blazed untouched more than 70 yards to the end zone.
The burst and acceleration that were trademarks before a major knee injury in high school seemed to have suddenly reappeared.
Well, not so suddenly.
The 5-foot-10, 186-pound Morgan has been training with USC's track team and ran a 400-meter relay event with football teammates Nickell Robey, Marqise Lee and Tony Burnett two weeks ago at the Claremont Relays. The focus on running mechanics and core strength, along with finally overcoming the mental aspect of recovery from knee surgery, has restored Morgan's speed and confidence.
"I'm so many years [away from] my surgery," said Morgan, the 2009 California state 110-meter high hurdles champion. "I don't even have to think about it anymore."
That's a positive development for the Trojans.
Morgan, returning starter Curtis McNeal and redshirt freshman Javorious Allen are the only scholarship tailbacks on the roster, a lack of depth that Coach Lane Kiffin has described as "scary."
"We just have to make sure we stay healthy," Morgan said, "because if one guy goes down that's a big burden on the other two backs."
Morgan is looking forward to playing without the burden of inexperience.
Last season as a redshirt freshman, he started the first two games but fell out of the rotation because of fumbling issues.
Morgan said he was affected by the pressure of "trying to do everything right," while executing plays in a packed stadium with his mind still not completely clear of doubts about his knee.
"My mind was just going so fast," he said, "I didn't have time to slow things down."
Now, his legs appear to be moving at full speed.
"He looked different to me," said running backs Coach Kennedy Polamalu, assessing the breakaway run. "Not indecisive."
The time on the track has helped.
"I'm in my track form and my track shape," he said. "I'm able to translate it onto the field."
Quick hits Sophomore receiver Marqise Lee made the play of the day when he leaped and extended his body to catch a pass from quarterback Matt Barkley that appeared destined to sail incomplete. "He's still putting in work like he has to earn something," Barkley said. ... Receiver George Farmer was sidelined because of a hamstring strain, defensive tackle Greg Townsend because of a back issue, Kiffin said.
gary.klein@latimes.com
twitter.com/latimesklein

pac 12 champions Fight On SC WeAreSC SCPlaybook Scott Wolf Colin Cowherd usc football

UCLA vs. Arizona St. Sunday Baseball Open Thread: Let's Play Two!

by on Mar 18, 2012 12:42 PM PDT

The rain has gone away and we're playing baseball! Not just baseball, but a baseball twin bil. Yup, two games at Jackie Robinson Stadium today as #9 UCLA and #11 Arizona St. finish up their Pac-12 series. The three-game set got underway on Friday when the Bruins came from 5-0 down to even things up and then win it on Kevin Williams' walk-off homer in the ninth inning. It was the Bruins' 12th straight win and has them all the way up to number two in the RPI.

The first game today will see Nick Vander Tuig take to the mound for the Bruins. The key for him in throwing strikes so we'll see if he can find the plate. Even if he's not walking guys, if he gets behind in counts, the Sun Devils will rope him. Trevor Williams will be on the mound for Arizona St. in the first game and he's been nothing short of brilliant this season so Vander Tuig will have to be on his game. Freshman Adam McCreery will take the ball for ASU in the second game, while UCLA has not announced a starter.

For those of you not at Jackie Robinson Stadium, John Ramey and Tim Wilhelm have the call online so you can still listen to the games. You can also get all the game updates, notes, observations and whatever else from my UCLA baseball twitter as the Bruins look to make it 13 and 14 wins in a row. This is your doubleheader open thread so share updates as well as your thoughts and reactions here.

This is a FanPost and does not necessarily reflect the views of BruinsNation's (BN) editors. It does reflect the views of this particular fan though, which is as important as the views of BN's editors.

Read More: Belmont Bruins, UCLA Bruins

Comments

Sunday, March 18, 2012

USC defense impressive in spring practices

The Trojans defense intercepts a pass by Matt Barkley, causes running back D.J. Morgan to fumble and breaks up several passes with intimidating hits in a full-pads workout Saturday.

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T.J. McDonald

USC safety T.J. McDonald celebrates a fumble recovery against Utah last season. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times / 10)

By Gary Klein
USC safety T.J. McDonald offered up the name without prompting.

The Trojans had just concluded their first full-pads workout Saturday and McDonald, a returning team captain, was eager to describe a defense that showed off speed and aggressiveness during the scrimmage portion of practice.

"The Dark Side," McDonald said. "That's what we call ourselves."

The defense intercepted a pass by Matt Barkley, caused running back D.J. Morgan to fumble and broke up several pass plays with intimidating hits.

It was an encouraging sign for a team that features a star-studded offense and is expected to open the season ranked among the top 10.

"We're playing faster now," said Monte Kiffin, the Trojans' assistant head coach for defense.

USC's defense was a question mark last spring and was under fire the first half of the 2011 season after giving up 43 points in a loss to Arizona State and 41 the next week in a victory over Arizona.

The Trojans, however, finished strong. They held off Oregon for a 38-35 victory at Autzen Stadium and then dominated UCLA in a 50-0 season-ending victory.

USC ranked 45th among 120 major-college teams in scoring defense, 54th in total defense and 102nd against the pass.

"Obviously unacceptable," Coach Lane Kiffin said of the pass defense.

But Kiffin has been impressed with the defense through the first week of workouts, noting that it was playing harder and had "a good confidence."

McDonald, senior defensive ends Wes Horton and Devon Kennard and junior cornerback Nickell Robey are the most experienced players for a unit that will feature three sophomore linebackers and several young defensive linemen.

Backup plan

Redshirt freshman quarterbacks Max Wittek and Cody Kessler both have impressed at times in the competition to win the spot as Barkley's backup.

Meantime, third-year sophomore Jesse Scroggins cannot seem to get started.

Scroggins sat out much of training camp and part of last season because of a thumb injury that required surgery. He was sidelined for the first two spring workouts because of a hip injury, and he spent Saturday's workout rolling across the turf as punishment for missing a weight-training session, Lane Kiffin said.

This is the second spring practice for Wittek and Kessler, who completed high school in December 2010 so they could get a head start on their college careers.

"It feels a lot better compared to a year ago," Wittek said. "I'm so much more confident and comfortable in the system.

"It was definitely the right choice, coming here early, because without that first spring I wouldn't be anywhere near where I am today."

Kessler echoed the sentiment.

"There's no comparison," he said. "You come back here and you have a whole season under your belt."

Quick hits

The Trojans are off this week and will not work out again until March 20. McDonald said the scheduling would serve the Trojans well because they were "able to play football, kind of get a feel of what we're doing, have a little break and come back knowing what we're getting into." Kiffin noted that the break would allow players to rest and return from minor injuries. His message about off-the-field behavior going into the break: "Just remind them, people have screwed up around the country; let's not be the ones that do it."

gary.klein@latimes.com

twitter.com/latimesklein
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More March Madness! Sunday Second Round Open Thread

377011_2642084725867_1068030137_32302525_1166539782_n_tiny by Ryan Rosenblatt on Mar 18, 2012 9:15 AM PDT in Basketball

Who wants a spot in the Sweet 16? Anyone? Anyone? Well, UCLA apparently didn't want a spot in the tournament, but eight teams have already booked their spot in the Sweet 16 and 16 more will take to the court today with the hope of filling out one of the eight remaining spots. More madness!

In case you missed it, Friday was the crazy day of the tournament and that is why just one of today's eight second round games is a chalk match-up. The rest are fulled with at least one team that pulled off an upset, and in some case, there are two upset pullers. Games like Florida vs. Norfolk St., South Florida vs. Ohio and Xavier vs. Lehigh guarantee to give us some big number seeds in the Sweet 16.

A couole names to keep an eye on: Michigan St.'s Draymond Green, who had a triple-double in Sparty's first round game and Norfolk St.'s Kyle O'Quinn, who not only led the other Spartans to a major upset, but also became a fan favorite for saying that their winning busted his own bracket and singing One Shining Moment on TV.

Today's schedule is below. All of the games are being televised, on one of four networks (CBS, TBS, TNT and TruTV) and streamed online via MMOD ($3.99 for the remainder of the tournament).

Star-divide

  • 9:15 am PT: Georgetown (3) vs. NC State (11) - CBS
  • 11:45 am PT: Michigan St. (1) vs. St. Louis (9) - CBS
  • 2:15 pm PT: North Carolina (1) vs. Creighton (8) - CBS
  • 3:10 pm PT: Florida (7) vs. Norfolk St. (15) - TNT
  • 4:10 pm PT: South Florida (12) vs. Ohio (13) - TBS
  • 4:45 pm PT: Xavier (10) vs. Lehigh (15) - TruTV
  • 5:40 pm PT: Kansas (2) vs. Purdue (10) - TNT
  • 6:40 pm PT: Florida St. (3) vs. Cincinnati - TBS

D.J. Morgan looks back on track for USC

The sophomore tailback shows off his sprinter's speed with a 70-yard plus run during the Trojans' second spring workout. He says he's finally past thinking about the knee injury he suffered in high school.

D.J. Morgan

USC running back D.J. Morgan appears to be running at full speed again for the first time since high school. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times / 3)

By Gary Klein
USC won't practice in pads until Saturday, so getting an accurate read on how players operate under full-contact conditions will have to wait.
Still, the Trojans' second spring workout came to a momentary standstill Thursday after sophomore tailback D.J. Morgan took a handoff and blazed untouched more than 70 yards to the end zone.
The burst and acceleration that were trademarks before a major knee injury in high school seemed to have suddenly reappeared.
Well, not so suddenly.
The 5-foot-10, 186-pound Morgan has been training with USC's track team and ran a 400-meter relay event with football teammates Nickell Robey, Marqise Lee and Tony Burnett two weeks ago at the Claremont Relays. The focus on running mechanics and core strength, along with finally overcoming the mental aspect of recovery from knee surgery, has restored Morgan's speed and confidence.
"I'm so many years [away from] my surgery," said Morgan, the 2009 California state 110-meter high hurdles champion. "I don't even have to think about it anymore."
That's a positive development for the Trojans.
Morgan, returning starter Curtis McNeal and redshirt freshman Javorious Allen are the only scholarship tailbacks on the roster, a lack of depth that Coach Lane Kiffin has described as "scary."
"We just have to make sure we stay healthy," Morgan said, "because if one guy goes down that's a big burden on the other two backs."
Morgan is looking forward to playing without the burden of inexperience.
Last season as a redshirt freshman, he started the first two games but fell out of the rotation because of fumbling issues.
Morgan said he was affected by the pressure of "trying to do everything right," while executing plays in a packed stadium with his mind still not completely clear of doubts about his knee.
"My mind was just going so fast," he said, "I didn't have time to slow things down."
Now, his legs appear to be moving at full speed.
"He looked different to me," said running backs Coach Kennedy Polamalu, assessing the breakaway run. "Not indecisive."
The time on the track has helped.
"I'm in my track form and my track shape," he said. "I'm able to translate it onto the field."
Quick hits Sophomore receiver Marqise Lee made the play of the day when he leaped and extended his body to catch a pass from quarterback Matt Barkley that appeared destined to sail incomplete. "He's still putting in work like he has to earn something," Barkley said. ... Receiver George Farmer was sidelined because of a hamstring strain, defensive tackle Greg Townsend because of a back issue, Kiffin said.
gary.klein@latimes.com
twitter.com/latimesklein

datone jones Jesse Scroggins max wittek cody kessler markeith ambles kyle prater george farmer

College Football Bowls 2012-13

Jon Gruden has some pretty snappy campers

Katinka Hosszu and Women's S&D compete in Natl. Championships.

Felixchev_tiny by TheViewFromFigueroa on Mar 15, 2012 4:14 PM PDT

Hosszu2902_medium

via www.swimmingworldmagazine.com


Today, the #7 USC Women's Swim & Dive team will compete in the 2012 NCAA national championships in Auburn. Leading the team of 13 women is senior Katinka Hosszu, a three-time NCAA individual champion; World Championship gold medalist; and member of the 2004, 2008, and 2012 Hungarian Olympic Swim Team. In 2011, she received the Honda Award, given out to the best female athlete in each college sport. This year, she hopes to join fellow swimmer Kristine Quance (1996,1997) and women's basketball star Cheryl Miller (1984, 1985) as the third USC athlete to win the award twice. She will have her chance to make her case this weekend, as she competes in the 200yd IM, 400 yd IM, and 200yd fly. All three of Hosszu's individual titles came from these events at last year's National Championships.

Star-divide

Another swimmer of note is junior Haley Anderson, who will be competing in the 500yd and 1650yd freestyle as well as the 400 IM. Anderson has three school records as a freestyle swimmer and holds five conference titles, including three-consecutive in the 1650yd free. On Saturday, Anderson will attempt to become the first USC swimmer to win an NCAA title in that event, but to do it, she will have to take down Georgia senior Wendy Trott, who is trying to win her fourth straight national title at 1650 yds.

On the diving side is senior Victoria Ishimatsu. She is a seven-time conference champion and the first woman in Pac-12 swimming history to win the same an event four years in a row, dominating the 3-meter springboard in all four years of her eligibility. She has yet to compete in this event at the National Championships, as she injured her foot last year and was unable to compete in the springboard comps.

USC enters the National Championships with a 6-2 record and a 3rd place finish at the Pac-12 championships and seven individual conference titles (three from Hosszu and two from Ishimatsu and Anderson). 12 of the 13 swimmers have competed in previous NCAA championships, and eight of them have earned All-American honors. USC is one of only 8 women's swim teams to win a team national championship, with their sole title coming in 1997.

All the events will be streamed on Auburn's website and, beginning on Friday, on ESPN3.com. All finals will begin at 5 PM PT.

D.J. Morgan looks back on track for USC

The sophomore tailback shows off his sprinter's speed with a 70-yard plus run during the Trojans' second spring workout. He says he's finally past thinking about the knee injury he suffered in high school.

D.J. Morgan

USC running back D.J. Morgan appears to be running at full speed again for the first time since high school. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times / 3)

By Gary Klein
USC won't practice in pads until Saturday, so getting an accurate read on how players operate under full-contact conditions will have to wait.
Still, the Trojans' second spring workout came to a momentary standstill Thursday after sophomore tailback D.J. Morgan took a handoff and blazed untouched more than 70 yards to the end zone.
The burst and acceleration that were trademarks before a major knee injury in high school seemed to have suddenly reappeared.
Well, not so suddenly.
The 5-foot-10, 186-pound Morgan has been training with USC's track team and ran a 400-meter relay event with football teammates Nickell Robey, Marqise Lee and Tony Burnett two weeks ago at the Claremont Relays. The focus on running mechanics and core strength, along with finally overcoming the mental aspect of recovery from knee surgery, has restored Morgan's speed and confidence.
"I'm so many years [away from] my surgery," said Morgan, the 2009 California state 110-meter high hurdles champion. "I don't even have to think about it anymore."
That's a positive development for the Trojans.
Morgan, returning starter Curtis McNeal and redshirt freshman Javorious Allen are the only scholarship tailbacks on the roster, a lack of depth that Coach Lane Kiffin has described as "scary."
"We just have to make sure we stay healthy," Morgan said, "because if one guy goes down that's a big burden on the other two backs."
Morgan is looking forward to playing without the burden of inexperience.
Last season as a redshirt freshman, he started the first two games but fell out of the rotation because of fumbling issues.
Morgan said he was affected by the pressure of "trying to do everything right," while executing plays in a packed stadium with his mind still not completely clear of doubts about his knee.
"My mind was just going so fast," he said, "I didn't have time to slow things down."
Now, his legs appear to be moving at full speed.
"He looked different to me," said running backs Coach Kennedy Polamalu, assessing the breakaway run. "Not indecisive."
The time on the track has helped.
"I'm in my track form and my track shape," he said. "I'm able to translate it onto the field."
Quick hits Sophomore receiver Marqise Lee made the play of the day when he leaped and extended his body to catch a pass from quarterback Matt Barkley that appeared destined to sail incomplete. "He's still putting in work like he has to earn something," Barkley said. ... Receiver George Farmer was sidelined because of a hamstring strain, defensive tackle Greg Townsend because of a back issue, Kiffin said.
gary.klein@latimes.com
twitter.com/latimesklein

Jesse Scroggins max wittek cody kessler markeith ambles kyle prater george farmer xavier grimble

For USC, it's NCAA Tournament or bust in 2012-13

Season review: After enduring a ton of injuries and losing a school-record 26 games, the Trojans aim to be back in the NCAA mix next season. Coach Kevin O?Neill?s future could depend on it.

Unless the USC basketball team is under the spell of some voodoo curse, the Trojans will be much better next season. Exactly how much remains to be seen ? and could determine the fate of Coach Kevin O'Neill.

After USC's nightmarish 2011-12 season ended, O'Neill was asked whether he needed to make the NCAA Tournament next season to retain his job.

Article Tab: The fate of Coach Kevin O'Neill could depend on whether USC qualifies for the NCAA Tournament next season.
The fate of Coach Kevin O'Neill could depend on whether USC qualifies for the NCAA Tournament next season.
PAUL RODRIGUEZ, THE REGISTER
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USC AT A GLANCE

WHO'S LEAVING

Eric Strangis (F)

KEY RETURNEES

James Blasczyk (C)

Dewayne Dedmon (C)

Aaron Fuller (F)

Jio Fontan (G)

Garrett Jackson (F)

Maurice Jones (G)

Alexis Moore (G)

Byron Wesley (F-G)

NEWCOMERS

Strahinja Gavrilovic (F)

Ari Stewart (F)

Brendyn Taylor (G)

J.T. Terrell (G)

Eric Wise (F)

MICHAEL LEV/The Register

"I would think we would have to win," O'Neill said, defining that as at least being "in the mix" for an NCAA bid.

With good health, the Trojans absolutely should be in that mix. They don't lose any scholarship players from this season's 6-26 team; they bring back three injured starters; and they add three transfers who have produced on the Division I level.

"We're going to be way better on defense," said freshman Byron Wesley, one of USC's few bright spots this season. "Offensively, we're going to be in a whole 'nother league. It's looking real good for next year."

But going from last place in the weak Pac-12 to an NCAA Tournament berth won't be as simple as filling out a new starting lineup and rolling the ball onto the court. The Trojans have some healing to do after the worst season in school history.

"When a season finishes far below what you wanted it to, it's hard to live with," O'Neill said. "You can't lose this much and not feel it."

The psychological scars run deep. One of O'Neill's coping methods is to compartmentalize what happened in 2011-12. In his view, the season was an aberration not reflective of the state of the program. There's ample evidence to back that up.

In O'Neill's first season, USC finished 16-14 despite losing three players to the pros and suffering school-imposed sanctions in midseason. In his second season, the Trojans made the NCAA Tournament. In his third season, the Trojans lost five of 11 eligible scholarship players to season-ending injuries.

"I think we do have a winning culture here," O'Neill said. "We had a losing season.

"I'm convinced we have the right guys in place to turn that back around. I've coached too long to panic over circumstances."

Although it often felt that way, this season wasn't a total loss. Wesley averaged almost 35 minutes per game, improved markedly over the course of the season and looks like a player O'Neill can build around. The players who survived the season never quit, displaying resolve and character that will serve them well in the future.

Additionally, the Trojans won't lack for incentive after losing as much as they did.

"This whole year was motivation," Wesley said. "We lost to our rival, UCLA, three times, which just can't happen."

Wesley is sure to be among the returning players seeking to end that streak. If USC brings in three recruits, as projected, some of the current veterans won't be back. Those are issues O'Neill must tackle in the coming weeks and months.

Regardless of the comings and goings, the Trojans will have an entirely new look when they reassemble in full in fall. For the first time in the O'Neill era, USC should have real competition for playing time. After the season he just endured, potential chemistry issues don't concern O'Neill in the least.

"I'll welcome that problem," he said. "I can deal with that problem."

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Saturday, March 17, 2012

March Madness! Friday Open Thread

Img_0052_2_tiny by Patroclus on Mar 16, 2012 9:00 AM PDT in BN Community

Just in case one day of wall-to-wall college basketball was not enough for you, here is day 2 of the NCAA Tournament. Yesterday started off slow, with the high point of the early sessions coming from an SPTR-like assist keeping Syracuse from becoming the first 1-seed to lose its opening game to a 16-seed. Things heated up a bit late, with Colorado ending the night doing its best to uphold the honor of its new conference by defeating UNLV.

The already small west coast representation in the Tournament took a hit yesterday - today sees just a pair of California schools seeking to join Colorado and Gonzaga in the round of 32 - SDSU tipping off shortly against NC State, and St Marys facing Purdue late in the afternoon. Florida-UVa and Memphis-Saint Louis are a couple of the promising matchups of the day, while folks are looking at Georgetown-Belmont as a possible upset.

Today's schedule is below. All of the games are being televised, on one of four TV networks (CBS, TBS, TNT or TruTV) and and streamed online via MMOD ($3.99 for the remainder of the tournament).

Star-divide

  • 9:15am PDT: Cincinnati (6) v. Texas (11) - CBS
  • 9:40am PDT: San Diego State (6) v. NC State (11) - TruTV
  • 10:40am PDT: Creighton (8) v. Alabama (9) - TBS
  • 11:10am PDT: Florida (7) v. Virginia (10) - TNT
  • 11:45am PDT: Florida State (3) v. St. Bonaventure (14) - CBS
  • 12:10pm PDT: Georgetown (3) v. Belmont (14) - TruTV
  • 1:10pm PDT: North Carolina (1) v. Vermont (16) - TBS
  • 1:40pm PDT: Missouri (2) v. Norfolk State (15) - TNT
  • 3:50pm PDT: Memphis (8) v. Saint Louis (9) - TBS
  • 4:15pm PDT: Duke (2) v. Lehigh (15) - CBS
  • 4:20pm PDT: Michigan (4) v. Ohio (13) - TNT
  • 4:27pm PDT: St. Marys (7) v. Purdue (10) - TruTV
  • 6:20pm PDT: Michigan St. (1) v. Long Island (16) - TBS
  • 6:45pm PDT: Notre Dame (7) v. Xavier (10) - CBS
  • 6:50pm PDT: Temple (5) v. South Florida (12) - TNT
  • 6:57pm PDT: Kansas (2) v. Detroit (15) - TruTV

And last but not least, Washington hosts Northwestern in an opening round NIT matchup at 7pm. Feel the excitement.

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UCLA men's basketball season over after failing to receive an invite from NIT

USC men's Tennis beats A&M 5-2 at College station

Tennis_tiny by so.cal.native1952 on Mar 16, 2012 11:34 PM PDT


Steve Johnson winning 50 matches in a row leads the undefeated Trojans past Texas A&M with a 6-2, 6-1 victory over #27 Alexis Klegou, wow 50 in a row. The trojans took the doubles point with wins at #1 Steve Johnson & Roberto Quiroz 8-5 & # 2 Daniel Nguyen & Ray Sarmiento 8-3 with Emilio Gomez & Yannick Hanfmann losing in a tie break 7-6. Singles matches were wins at #1, #2, #4 and #6 with Danny Nguyen pulling off the clincher a 6-4, 6-4 win. The trojans are now 17-0 and will be home for a 3pm match against Florida on Monday.

#1 USC 5, #20 Texas A&M 2

March 15, 2012 -- College Station, Texas

DOUBLES

(1) S. Johnson/Quiroz (USC) def. #22 Ore/Withrow (TAMU) -- 8-5

(2) #21 Nguyen/Sarmiento (USC) def. Hoover/Klegou (TAMU) -- 8-3

(3) Angus/Lewis (TAMU) def. Gomez/Hanfmann (USC) -- 7-6 (5)

USC wins doubles point.

Order of finish: 2, 1, 3

SINGLES

(1) #2 Steve Johnson (USC) def. #27 Alexis Klegou (TAMU) -- 6-2, 6-1

(2) #16 Daniel Nguyen (USC) def. Colin Hoover (TAMU) -- 6-4, 6-4*

(3) Junior Ore (TAMU) def. #24 Ray Sarmiento (USC) -- 3-6, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (2)

(4) #41 Emilio Gomez (USC) def. Jeremy Efferding (TAMU) -- 1-6, 6-4, 6-4

(5) John Lewis (TAMU) def. #30 Yannick Hanfmann (USC) -- 6-3, 6-4

(6) #121 Roberto Quiroz (USC) def. Niall Angus (TAMU) -- 6-2, 6-2

Order of finish: 1, 6, 5, 2*, 4, 3

This is a FanPost and does not necessarily reflect the views of Conquest Chronicles' writers or editors. It does reflect the views of this particular fan tho

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Friday, March 16, 2012

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USC Tennis; Men & Women both win at Texas

Tennis_tiny by so.cal.native1952 on Mar 14, 2012 9:44 PM PDT

The USC men took a 6-1 win over the #13 ranked Longhorns at Austin, with Steve Johnson leading the way with a 6-0, 6-1 win at #1 singles. Again freshman Yannick Hanfmann clinched the match playing #4 singles after moving up from #5, this kid will probably be #1 next year if he sticks around. Roberto Quiroz, Ray Sarmiento and Daniel Nguyen all won their singles matches with only Emilio Gomez losing a tough 3 set match. The trojans are now 16-0 and match-up with Texas A&M on thursday at College Station at 6pm, I am wondering if my old mix doubles partner Madilyn will be there.

The Womens team also had an easy time in beating the #8 Longhorns 4-0 then giving in to two losses in 3 sets after the match had been decided, at Austin. Valeria Pulido playing at #6 started things off with a 6-2, 6-1 victory after the trojans took the doubles hands down, winning all 3 matches. Sabrina Santamaria playing at #3 singles came in with the next point with a 6-2, 6-2 win over Noel Scott, then the kicker came at #1 singles by Freshman Zoe Scandalis a 6-3, 6-4 winner over #24 Aeriel Ellis. The women are now 12-2 on the season and will play on the road at Uath next friday.

Star-divide

#1 USC 6, #13 Texas 1

March 13, 2012 -- Austin, Texas

DOUBLES

(1) S. Johnson/Quiroz (USC) def. #40 Camillone/Holiner (UT) -- 8-5

(2) Chen/Whitehead (UT) def. #21 Nguyen/Sarmiento (USC) -- 9-7

(3) Gomez/Hanfmann (USC) def. Lewis/Swaysland (UT) -- 8-2

USC wins doubles point.

Order of finish: 3, 1, 2

SINGLES

(1) #2 Steve Johnson (USC) def. #62 Soren Hess-Olesen (UT) -- 6-0, 6-1

(2) #24 Ray Sarmiento (USC) def. #69 Daniel Whitehead (UT) -- 7-5, 6-3

(3) #16 Daniel Nguyen (USC) def. Sudanwa Sitaram (UT) -- 5-7, 6-1, 6-3

(4) #30 Yannick Hanfmann (USC) def. Ben Chen (UT) -- 7-5, 7-5

(5) David Holiner (UT) def. #41 Emilio Gomez (USC) -- 2-6, 6-4, 6-3

(6) #121 Roberto Quiroz (USC) def. Joey Swaysland (UT) -- 7-5, 6-1

Order of finish: 1, 6, 4*, 2, 5, 3

DOUBLES

(1) #4 Christian/Santamaria (USC) def. #23 Padegimaite/Scott (UT) 8-6

(2) #49 Pulido/Scandalis (USC) def. Ellis/Gaytan-Leach (UT) 8-5

(3) Lao/Ramos (USC) def. Damico/Gajic (UT) 8-2

Order of Finish: 2, 1, 3

SINGLES

(1) #21 Zoe Scandalis (USC) def. #24 Aeriel Ellis (UT) -- 6-4, 6-3*

(2) #75 Krista Damico (UT) def. #18 Danielle Lao (USC) -- 0-6, 6-3, 6-4

(3) #31 Sabrina Santamaria (USC) def. #122 Noel Scott (UT) -- 6-2, 6-2

(4) Cierra Gaytan-Leach (UT) def. Kaitlyn Christian (USC) -- 3-6, 6-3, 1-1 (ret.)

(5) Lina Padegimaite (UT) def. Gabriella DeSimone (USC) -- 6-3, 2-6, 6-2

(6) Valeria Pulido (USC) def. Elizabeth Begley (UT) -- 6-2, 6-1

Order of Finish: 6, 3, 1*, 4, 5, 2

This is a FanPost and does not necessarily reflect the views of Conquest Chronicles' writers or editors. It does reflect the views of this particular fan though, which is as important as the views of Conquest Chronicles' writers or editors.

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Amir Carlisle cleared to play for ND THIS season...so where's the hardship??

Images_tiny by Paragon SC on Mar 15, 2012 4:00 PM PDT in USC Football

You gotta love the NCAA, they continue to twist the rules as they see fit.

From the OCR...

Former USC running back Amir Carlisle has been granted an eligibility waiver for the 2012 season by the NCAA. Carlisle, who is now at Notre Dame, was expected to sit out the 2012 season.

So, like I asked above, where is the Hardship?

Alex Stepheson wasn't allowed to play for USC hoops without sitting out a year and his story was well documented.

Carlisle's only "hardship" was that his parents moved to Purdue and they wanted him closer.

More double standards by the folks in Indy. Then again, if you ask Pat Haden, these are fair minded people....

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