Los Angeles Times - 06.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

LATIMES.COM/SPORTS TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2019D3


Which underachieving
Power Five division will
assert itself?
When the Atlantic Coast
Conference added Miami
and Virginia Tech in 2004
and Boston College in 2005
to become a 12-team confer-
ence, leading to the creation
of two divisions, the as-
sumption was that the
Hokies and Hurricanes
would annually battle for
Coastal division supremacy
and the winner would face
Bobby Bowden’s dominant
Florida State program in a
high-stakes league champi-
onship game.
At the time, there was
every reason to believe that
was fair. Miami had played
in back-to-back Bowl
Championship Series title
games in 2001 and ’02 and
had won five national cham-
pionships dating to 1983.
Frank Beamer had built
Virginia Tech into a consis-
tent winner, and the Hokies
had played in the national
championship game in 1999.
Last season’s scenario —
a mediocre Pittsburgh team
that finished 7-7 won the
Coastal and was all that
stood in the way of Atlantic
division winner Clemson
and the College Football
Playoff — would have been
unthinkable 15 years ago.
But since joining the
ACC, Miami has compiled
only one 10-win season, and
Virginia Tech has reached
double digits only once in
seven years. With Manny
Diaz taking over for Mark
Richt at Miami and Justin
Fuente struggling to elevate
Virginia Tech, it looks like

another year of Clemson
having the easiest road to
the playoff.
In the realignment era,
setting up even divisions
has been a challenge across
the country. The Big Ten’s
West division has been hurt
by Nebraska’s irrelevance,
and Wisconsin looks under-
whelming after falling flat
last season with a No. 4
preseason ranking.
Northwestern repre-
sented the West in the
league title game, which is
telling.
In the Pac-12, a down
USC has made the Pac-12
South a bit of a punchline.
Utah won the South last
year and was surprisingly
picked by the media to win
the league this year.
Much of this is cyclical,
and college football’s three
underachieving Power Five
divisions all need the same
thing: their name programs
to play to their traditional
standing.
The Trojans have the
talent to take back the
South from Utah, but the
smart bet is for the Big Ten
West to make the most
progress this season.
Nebraska is a trendy pick
to have a bounce-back year
under second-year coach
Scott Frost, who will at-
tempt to bring modern
offensive football to Ameri-
ca’s Heartland by unleash-
ing sophomore quarterback
Adrian Martinez. Wiscon-
sin’s program has a strong
backbone and returns All-
American running back
Jonathan Taylor to carry
the load.
Even Kirk Ferentz’s
steady Iowa Hawkeyes have
the look of a top-25 team.

19 DAYS


TO COLLEGE FOOTBALL


Leading up to the opening games of the season on Aug. 24,
The Times each day will examine the top story lines for 2019
all the way up to the kickoff.

Praying for parity


in the Power Five


By J. Brady McCollough

The motivation came
from within, and from all
around him.
Osa Odighizuwa sized
up UCLA’s young batch of
defensive linemen and real-
ized that, as a fourth-year
junior, he was the oldest.
That made him feel almost
obliged to fulfill a coach’s
challenge to run offseason
workouts.
And so a new leader was
born, at 6 feet 2 and 280
pounds.
“He’s kind of like that big
brother,” sophomore defen-
sive lineman Atonio Mafi
said Monday of Odighizuwa,
“but also like a coach type.”
Odighizuwa set up drills
for his fellow linemen nearly
every day after classes and
on Saturdays. They worked
on hand placement, foot-
work and other techniques
to improve their pass rush.
The mentor shared in the
growth.
“The best way to learn
something is to teach it to
other people,” Odighizuwa
said, “so I like answering
people’s questions and just
like being someone that they
can look to.”
Odighizuwa had long
known the power of a role
model, having watched old-
er brother Owastar for the
Bruins before going on to
play for the NFL’s New York
Giants.
UCLA’s current front-
man for its 3-4 defensive
alignment said he and fellow
projected starters Mafi and
Otito Ogbonnia were
playing more instinctively as
a result of having mastered
the playbook during their
second year under defensive
coordinator Jerry Azzinaro.
“When you know the sys-
tem,” Odighizuwa said, “you
don’t have to think as much,
you can just make presnap
reads and things like that.”
The players’ increased
knowledge has also allowed
coaches to install additional
schematic wrinkles, Mafi
said.
Any improvement is wel-
come for one of the nation’s
worst pass-rushing units.

UCLA’s 15 sacks last season
tied it with Oregon State for
last place in the Pac-12 Con-
ference. The Bruins’ defen-
sive line generated only four
sacks, led by Odighizuwa’s
three.
Odighizuwa said sacks
shouldn’t be the only mea-
sure of the linemen’s suc-
cess. They also want to help
shut down the opposing run-
ning game and force rushed
throws to help the UCLA
secondary.
The line figures to get
ample help from sophomore
Tyler Manoa, junior Martin
Andrus Jr.and recently con-
verted linebacker Elijah
Wade, who manned the sec-
ond team during a recent
practice.
At 6-2 and 360 pounds,
Mafi has adopted a less-is-
more approach, having shed
51 pounds since his arrival on
campus last summer. A
body that’s as lean as it’s
been since he was a fresh-
man in high school isn’t the
only weapon he’s packing.
“It’s all about intent,” Mafi
said. “Last year, we didn’t
really have that pass rush
mind-set, and that’s what we
definitely have this year.”
The linemen also don’t
seem to mind the grind of
training camp, thanks to
their new leader.
“The way he’s been work-
ing, man, it’s unmatched,”
linebacker Krys Barnessaid
of Odighizuwa. “To see him
transition into the role that
he has now, it’s huge. I’m
really excited for the season
to see the breakout year he’s
going to have.”

Etc.
UCLA’s defense suffered
its first injury casualty of
training camp. Linebacker
Tyree Thompsonwas spot-
ted wearing a yellow jersey in
the weight room alongside
injured running back
Joshua Kelley during the
portion of practice open to
the media. Receivers Theo
Howard, Michael Ezeike
and Dymond Leepracticed
while wearing yellow jerseys
to signal they, too, were re-
covering from injuries. The
Bruins are scheduled to take
Tuesday off from practice.

UCLA REPORT

Odighizuwa


embraces new


leadership role


By Ben Bolch

The consensus top
basketball prospect in the
country is on his way to USC.
Evan Mobley, the No. 1
overall recruit in the 2020
class according to the
247Sports Composite
Rankings, chose the Trojans
on Monday, The Times has
confirmed. Mobley will be
one of the highest-rated
recruits to ever play for
USC’s basketball program.
Mobley’s commitment
has long been viewed as a
foregone conclusion, since
his father, Eric Mobley,
joined Andy Enfield’s staff.
Mobley’s brother, Isaiah, is
also a five-star forward who
is already practicing with
the team as a freshman.
The opportunity to play
alongside his brother — and
for his father, who joined
USC as an assistant in wake
of Tony Bland’s unceremo-
nious exit — undoubtedly
played an outsized role in
Mobley’s decision.
In an interview with
247Sports, Mobley assured
that his recruitment was
kept open, in spite of his fam-
ily connection to the Tro-
jans. Though, other schools,


apparently convinced he
was unattainable, never “re-
cruited me super hard,”
Mobley said. “USC was al-
ways at the top.”
For a school that has
spent most of the last dec-
ade in relative basketball ob-
scurity, the significance of
such a high-profile commit-
ment can’t be overstated. A
freakishly athletic 7-footer,
capable of dominating on
both ends and in transition,
Mobley averaged 19 points,
10 rebounds and nearly five
blocks per game last season
as a junior at Rancho Chris-
tian in Temecula.
Mobley, who also boasts a
7-foot-5 wingspan and a 40-
inch vertical, is viewed by
most as “a generational tal-
ent,” says Etop Udo-Ema,
the founder of Compton
Magic, Mobley’s AAU pro-
gram. As far as Udo-Ema is
concerned, Mobley is the
best big man to come out of
Los Angeles since Domin-
guez High’s Tyson Chandler,
who was chosen No. 2 overall
in the 2001 NBA draft.
Ray Barefield, Mobley’s
coach at Rancho Christian,
actually takes that projec-
tion a step further. He de-
scribed Mobley’s potential
as “a little bit of the Greek
Freak [Giannis Anteto-
kounmpo] and Kevin Du-
rant, all in one.”
“As a prospect,” Barefield
says, “I can’t imagine he’s
not in the top three ever in
California.”

As such, his commit-
ment, the first for USC in the
2020 class, could shift how
recruits, now and in the near
future, view USC’s basket-
ball trajectory.
It’s widely believed that
Mobley will play only one
season at USC before de-
parting for the NBA. But
even just one season with
such a generational player
could turn the tide for a
school that has long trailed
other top programs on the
recruiting trail.
“When has USC had the
No. 1 player in the country?”
Udo-Ema said. “This is a po-
sitionless 7-footer who really
could be a marquee guy in
the NBA someday.”
The last time the Trojans
signed one of the nation’s
foremost recruits, it didn’t
quite go as planned. O.J.
Mayo arrived at USC in 2007
as one of the most-hyped
recruits in program history
and averaged 20 points per
game during his lone season.

But in 2010, an NCAA investi-
gation revealed that Mayo
received improper benefits
during his recruitment and
had thus forfeited his ama-
teur status. USC was then
forced to vacate all 21 of its
wins from Mayo’s only sea-
son, as well as withdraw
from postseason action in
2009-10.
While Mobley’s commit-
ment is certainly the most
celebrated in some time at
USC, the Trojans’ incoming
class of freshmen appears to
be one of the best in program
history.
The class is highlighted
by five-star forwards Isaiah
Mobley and Chino Hills’
Onyeka Okongwu, the
reigning Times player of the
year.
That impressive recruit-
ing class will get its first taste
of game action together this
week as USC travels to Eu-
rope for a 10-day trip that will
include stops in Barcelona,
Spain; Paris and Cannes.

USC reels in


top prospect


in Mobley


Standout at Rancho


Christian in Temecula


could alter Trojans’


future recruiting.


By Ryan Kartje


EVAN MOBLEYcommits to USC to join his father
and brother as part of the Trojans basketball family.

Gregory PayanAssociated Press

has taken a liking to a new
nickname — Zipper Boy.
O’Neal was preparing to
start his career at UCLA last
summer when he “felt
funny” during practices. He
was diagnosed with an
anomalous coronary artery
— a congenital heart defect
that caused an artery to
grow in the wrong place.
He announced on Twit-
ter that he would redshirt
his freshman season. He
underwent open-heart
surgery on Dec. 13, 2018.
“The recovery was prob-
ably the easiest part,” said
Shaunie O’Neal, his mother.
“It was the pre-surgery and
surgery that was the tough-
est part. Recovery, it was
just patience for him. I know
he was frustrated and
wanted to get back faster,
[but] we pushed through.”
The pain after his surgery
was unlike anything O’Neal
had felt before. Still, he
wanted to walk around the
hospital just days afterward.
Sitting around for
months and not being able
to play challenged him men-
tally.
“The recovery was hard.
It was hard to sit around and
do nothing for almost a
year,” he said. “So the men-
tal side I had crazy thoughts
in my head [and] people
telling me this and that. I
had to overcome. Every time
I play, I still think about it.
Every time I look in the mir-
ror, I have this giant scar on


my chest [that’s] going to be
there forever.”
After months of rehabili-
tation, the 6-foot-9 forward
was medically cleared to
play in March.
He decided to play in the
Drew League, which fea-
tures high school, college,
professional and street play-
ers competing on 24 teams.
“I was itching to get back
after my surgery, so the
Drew League was the first
thing that came [up],”
O’Neal said. “I feel good
playing in the Drew League.
It’s fun playing here. I didn’t
announce that I was playing
or anything. I just showed up
and then people started fol-
lowing along.”
When O’Neal arrived at
King Drew Magnet High in
Los Angeles to play on June
15, he was excited to play in
front of his hometown
crowd.
“I feel like if you’re an L.A.
basketball player you have
to come to the Drew League
and kind of just get that re-
spect in house,” O’Neal said.
In his first game following
surgery, O’Neal caught a lob
from former NBA point
guard Brandon Jennings for
his first basket in months.
He finished a putback dunk
after a miss from K.J. Mar-
tin.
“I felt weird. I felt new to
the sport,” O’Neal said. “I
had like a cool 10 points. I
was just trying to get my run
and my wind back to see how
I felt. I felt really good. I felt

like a whole new player. I
could definitely feel the dif-
ference from my last high
school game to my first Drew
League game. I felt stronger,
better. I felt like my breath-
ing was better.”
He drove to the basket
and completed dunks like
his father, the Hall of Fame
center who helped the Lak-
ers win three straight NBA
titles from 2000 to 2002.
He is averaging 15 points
and nearly 10 rebounds a
game in the Drew League,
playing for Tuff Crowd, a
team sponsored by his
mother.
O’Neal’s return is a
source of great joy for Shau-
nie O’Neal.
“That is the best part of it
all. His passion and his
dream is to play ball,” she
said. “So, I knew how bad he
wanted to get back on the
court and now that he is
[back], it’s even more joy
watching him now than it
was before.”
Being away from basket-
ball for so long taught
O’Neal to be more grateful.
“I learned to never take
anything for granted be-
cause I thought everything
was fine before. Thought I
had the perfect life going
on,” he said. “I thought
basketball was going to be all
this and that and then
boom, I got the call one day
that I couldn’t play.”
Support from his family
inspired O’Neal to add a tat-
too to his calf. It shows

Shaquille O’Neal’s reaction
after an alley-oop dunk in
the seventh game of the 2000
Western Conference finals
against the Portland Trail
Blazers.
While only 4 months old
at the time of the game,
O’Neal fondly recalls the sto-
ries his father told him about
the iconic play that helped
clinch a spot in the NBA Fi-
nals for the Lakers. “In an in-
terview, he said he was
pointing at me,” O’Neal said.
“We were up in the box suites
and it’s a special moment to
me. I was always told that’s
where I got my basketball
skills from. He said he was
just pointing, and the skills
went to me. It’s just a special
moment.
“I was going to get a regu-
lar picture of him, but I feel
like this picture has more
meaning. I’m glad I have it
tattooed on me.”
O’Neal added a picture of
his mom to the other side of
his calf. The new ink is dedi-
cated to his parents for their
unwavering support during
one of the toughest times in
his life.
“I feel [really] good. I’m
back at UCLA, training,
weightlifting and practicing,
so my wind is getting back,”
O’Neal said. “Still not 100%
yet.
“It’s going to take awhile,
but I feel really good. I feel
like each day I’m getting bet-
ter. Every time I play it’s a
blessing to be playing
again.”

SHAREEF O’NEAL,dunking easily for Crossroads’ Roadrunners, missed his freshman season at UCLA after
being diagnosed with an anomalous coronary artery and undergoing open-heart surgery last year.


Gina FerazziLos Angeles Times

UCLA’s O’Neal back on court


[O’Neal,from D1]

Free download pdf