3rd and 20 disaster is representative of Lincoln Riley era at USC

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After seeing how TCU won the Alamo Bowl against USC, a logical first instinct would be to call that 3rd and 20 game-deciding play “unbelievable” or “stunning.” Yet, it’s not unbelievable at all to see USC blow a game in such fashion. This is not an outlier, an aberration, an exception. No, this is how USC blows games under Lincoln Riley. It has happened before.

2023 Cotton Bowl

USC scored 45 points and lost. It had a 15-point lead with under five minutes left. It lost. As awful as this Alamo Bowl game against TCU was, the 2023 Cotton Bowl was worse.

2022 at Utah in Salt Lake City

USC led by 14 points. It lost. USC scored 42 points. It lost. USC makes the College Football Playoff if it wins this game. Utah was the only team USC lost to in the 2022 regular season.

2023 vs Washington

USC scored 42 points and lost decisively because it allowed over 50 points to the Huskies, who went through Alex Grinch’s defense like a knife through warm butter.

2023 vs Utah

The pig farmer, Bryson Barnes, beat the Trojans on the road with a late scoring drive. Enough said.

2025 vs Oregon

USC allowed over 40 points in a big, season-defining game. Oregon didn’t even play its best and still waltzed all over the Trojans.

2025 vs Notre Dame

Notre Dame quarterback CJ Carr didn’t play well. It didn’t matter. The Fighting Irish still ran for over 300 yards against USC’s soft defense.

Eric Henderson calling plays

D’Anton Lynn didn’t call plays. Eric Henderson did. USC fans hoping for a true change in identity and results were disappointed.

It’s not just the coaches

We can be mad at Eric Henderson for not rushing more players on that 3rd and 20, but in the end, that play involved four USC players missing tackles near the sideline. That’s nearly half the team. Players have to finish plays, and USC’s defensive players simply weren’t good in 2025.

Cycle of failure

Whether it’s the coaching and player development or the actual talent of the players, USC’s football operation is failing to create high-end quality on defense. Recruiting, evaluation, development — none of these core areas of coaching and football ops are rising to the necessary standard.

3rd and 8

As bad as 3rd and 20 was and is (and always will be), the 3rd and 8 TCU converted when trailing by 10 points midway through the fourth quarter was an even worse display of caution by Eric Henderson. Leading by two scores, USC had zero reason to sit back. Force TCU to make plays under more pressure. Even if USC allows a touchdown, it still leads. Sitting back with a two-score lead is truly unforgivable and unacceptable.

D’Anton Lynn leaving doesn’t seem so bad now

D’Anton Lynn leaving probably means Rob Ryan leaves and Eric Henderson leaves. Given what we saw from them in 2025, a reset of the defensive staff might be a net plus, not a minus.

Defensive coordinator search is huge

USC absolutely has to nail this hire. It could decide Lincoln Riley’s fate. A coordinator might look at the USC situation and worry about being on the job for only one season, but on the other hand, there’s a top-ranked recruiting class coming in and a chance to save Lincoln Riley’s job, which would be a huge resume-boosting item for any coach who thinks he’s good enough to get the job done. All that aside, USC can pay top dollar — and it will. The Trojans should get an elite candidate.

Pete Kwiatkowski has to be the top choice

The former Texas defensive coordinator is part of the Chris Petersen coaching tree. He makes way too much sense for USC. His Texas defense held Ohio State to 14 points on the road this past season. He has to be USC’s top target.

Ryan Walters of Washington is Plan B

Ryan Walters is an experienced Big Ten defensive coordinator. If Kwiatkowski doesn’t want to coach at USC, this might be the best alternative.

Lincoln Riley on the hot seat

Lincoln Riley will enter Year 5 in 2026 at USC. This Alamo Bowl loss underscores everything wrong with the Riley era, every reason why Riley has fallen short. If we see more of the same in 2026, there’s no legitimate justification for retaining him other than the belief USC needs one more recruiting cycle to truly set the table for a championship run in 2027. USC can’t keep living with these failures and an overall lack of toughness.

This article originally appeared on Trojans Wire: USC football allowing OT touchdown on 3rd and 20 defines Lincoln Riley

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