November 6, 2024

USC defense exposed by Utah’s dynamic duo of Cam Rising and Dalton Kincaid

Utah #Utah

In the first quarter of Saturday’s memorable game in Salt Lake City, Cam Rising didn’t look very good. He threw an interception which was wiped away by a roughing-the-passer penalty. Later, he badly air-mailed a wide-open receiver on 3rd and 4. It was not the start Rising or Utah needed.

Apparently, what Rising needed was to fall behind by 14 points and develop a level of urgency which had been missing in previous games this season. Utah had to win this game to stay in the Pac-12 race. After falling behind 14-0, Rising and his teammates knew there was zero margin for error.

Scoring 43 points and winning on a 2-point try in the final minute? Rising and teammate Dalton Kincaid certainly answered the bell.

Here’s how the night unfolded for the USC defense:

FAMILIAR FORMULA

RARE BUT COSTLY

THE PLAY

CHINKS IN THE ARMOR

ALIGNMENT

ANGLES

UTAH URGENCY

NUMBERS

MORE NUMBERS

UTAH’S ADJUSTMENT

PLAY MIXTURE

SECOND HALF

A PROBLEM

THIS REALLY BITES

YIKES

https://twitter.com/AdamGrosbard/status/1581471005754609666

EXPOSED

CLUTCH PLAY

MOTIVATION

ANOTHER BOGUS PENALTY ON USC

BROCK HUARD CAN’T BELIEVE IT, EITHER

UH-OH

POIGNANT

WRENCHING

THE TRUTH

PAIN

BRUTAL

The really hard part of all this for USC is that on the Cam Rising 2-point run for the win, Eric Gentry was out of the game. Not having his presence on the field for that play is something which creates a hollow feeling for USC.

BOTTOM LINE NO. 1

Some games are going to be slugfests. Some games are going to be shootouts. This was a game where the winning team made more offensive plays, not more defensive plays. Utah made the final winning play, one more than USC did.

BOTTOM LINE NO. 2

We all said — throughout the season — that if an opposing offense played great, this USC defense was in trouble.

Utah, after a sluggish first quarter, played great offense in the final three quarters. USC will have a lot to look at on film. This game will need to be a powerful teaching tool for UCLA on Nov. 19.

Story originally appeared on Trojans Wire

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