
USC Football 2025: No Excuses, Lincoln Riley Must Build a Complete Team
By Jason Burrell, The South Bay Black Journal

The clock has run out of excuses in Los Angeles. In Year Four of the Lincoln Riley era, USC is no longer a rebuilding project. The Coliseum faithful don’t want promises, they want proof. To compete in the Big Ten and chase championships, the Trojans must do more than flash talent; they must become something Riley has yet to fully deliver at USC: a complete football team. The season opener against Missouri State may look routine, but for far too long the Trojans have been talented yet fragile, explosive yet inconsistent, capable of highlight moments but undone by the grind of physical football. That won’t cut it in the Big Ten. Riley’s challenge now is not just to call plays, but to forge a program that embodies grit, discipline, and resilience, a team whose character is as imposing as its talent. And that begins with the defense. The X-Factor is cohesion under new coordinator D’Anton Lynn. If last year’s leap, from 34.4 points allowed in 2023 to 24.1 in 2024, was Act One, then Act Two is about sustainability. Lynn’s defensive mind transformed UCLA into a top 15 unit, and now he inherits USC’s biggest defensive line in decades. The bodies are there. The talent is real. The question is whether Lynn can stitch them into a unit whose chemistry is as lethal as its size. The belief here is that he can; and the defense will respond under his leadership.
Offense:
Balanced and Adaptable A complete offense scores in every way possible. Balance: USC’s running backs may be Riley’s best group yet. Woody Marks is gone, but depth and speed give USC the option to pound the ball when Big Ten weather turns bitter. Efficiency: The Trojans ranked just 57th nationally in red-zone touchdown percentage (59.5%) in 2024, far too low for a Riley offense. That number must climb. Adaptability: QB Jayden Maiava’s seven turnovers in the final four games of 2024, including three pick-sixes, cannot repeat. If Maiava struggles, the run game and tight ends must carry the load. “A complete offense doesn’t rely on one superstar it has multiplies threats.” With Ja’Kobi Lane (12 TDs in 2024) and Makai Lemon, USC has the weapons. But balance is the measure.
Defense:
Layers of Resistance Defense defines championships. Defensive Line: USC gave up 148.3 rushing yards per game in 2023. Under new DC D’Anton Lynn, that dropped to 126.7 in 2024. Still not elite, but trending. With the largest defensive front since Pete Carroll’s era, USC can now rush the passer with four. Linebackers: At 6’6”, Eric Gentry is the X-Factor, a tackling machine whose health and leadership stabilize everything. Secondary: The Trojans collected 12 interceptions last year (33rd nationally), up from seven in 2023. Kamari Ramsey anchors a group that must replace heavy turnover. “A complete defense bends rarely and breaks never.”
Depth:
Next Man Up Injuries are reality, not excuse. Can backup QB Hassan Longstreet keep the offense steady if Maiava misses time? Can a young corner like DeCarlos Nicholson (transfer from Mississippi State) survive when targeted 15 times in a row? Does the offensive line have legs left in the 4th quarter after Big Ten trench wars? A complete team doesn’t collapse when one domino falls.
Adjustments:
USC blew two second-half leads in 2024. That cannot continue. Discipline: Penalties cost USC 86 yards per game in 2024, ranking 114th nationally. That’s not Big Ten football. “A complete team reflects the personality of its coach, even under fire.”
Situational Mastery:
The Championship Edge The great ones own the small moments. Two-Minute Drill: USC managed points on just 29% of two-minute drives in 2024. Fourth and One: Converted only 53% of short-yardage situations. Crunch-Time Special Teams: Too often a liability instead of a weapon. That’s why dynasties, the early 2000s Patriots, Pete Carroll’s Trojans, Nick Saban’s Crimson Tide, didn’t just have stars. They had layers, balance, trust, and identity. The Bottom Line Lincoln Riley has had time. He’s had recruiting classes, transfer portal swings, NIL adjustments, and staff hires. USC’s 2025 roster is as big, physical, and talented as it has been in decades. But the Big Ten won’t forgive incompleteness. In 2025, Riley must finally deliver the team USC fans have waited for, one with no weak links. This year is not about style points or excuses. It’s about being complete. Point blank. Period.


