Trojans' Horses Have a Field Day
Seven Players Score TDs as No. 3 USC Overwhelms Virginia With 558 Yards of Offense: Southern Cal 52, Virginia 7
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Sunday, August 31, 2008
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Aug. 30 -- Southern California's song girls took their spot on the sideline of Scott Stadium. Trojans Coach Pete Carroll roamed the same area, a Hollywood tan accenting his Hollywood persona. A group of USC players even antagonized Virginia's student section leading up to the No. 3 Trojans' 52-7 rout of the Cavaliers in Saturday's season opener.
It became clear, even before the opening kickoff, that more than a football team was invading the idyllic Virginia stadium in front of a record 64,947 fans. It was the USC ethos, too. As much as the talent proved disparate, so did the programs.
The brick-and-pillared campus with the stoic coach and rebuilding roster was invaded by a team full of all-Americans, with a glamorous coach and a reign of dominance in college football.
Neither the loss, nor likely even the margin, presented much surprise. Virginia entered the game as a significant underdog, and the Trojans, whose next game is against No. 2 Ohio State on Sept. 13, sent a clear message to Columbus, Ohio, and the rest of college football.
"We knew what we were going to open with when we scheduled the game," Virginia Coach Al Groh said. "We wanted to take a team that is in a league of their own in college football. They've certainly proven that in the last six years."
The Cavaliers simply could do nothing to stop USC from the start, and they did little to force the Trojans to stop them. Only once in the first quarter did Virginia's defense force a fourth down. It was a fourth and one, and the Trojans unflinchingly elected to go for it. They did better, with C.J. Gable rushing for a 33-yard touchdown.
Although the Cavaliers teased with Mikell Simpson's seven-yard touchdown run in the first quarter, they did little to threaten the outcome.
Virginia's mystery at quarterback was solved with the first snap, when expected starter Peter Lalich directed the huddle. The sophomore played in a manner that Groh must ensure does not come to define his season: sudden spurts of effectiveness mixed with long droughts of ineptitude.
"It just wasn't very good play," Groh said. "We could put all types of psychological interpretations on it, but sometimes bad plays are just bad plays."
Lalich coped with little time in the pocket and few open men downfield. He finished 18 of 35 for 155 yards, with an interception and two fumbles. The Cavaliers' running back duo of Simpson and Cedric Peerman, expected to emerge as a strength this season, combined for just 50 yards on 14 carries.
A hole that would appear in one moment would be filled in a blink, often by USC's linebacker duo of Brian Cushing and Rey Maualuga. And USC's safeties are the size of many team's linebackers.
"We can go into the next one and say they were way better than us, and that's why we lost," Lalich said. "But there were also times when our execution just needed to be better. There were times we had a lot of open guys out there I should of hit, and there were times when we could have turned the thing around."
Those times weren't often. Virginia recorded just 14 first downs, two via penalties. The closest they brought the score was 14 points, and with a 17-point halftime deficit, the problems only magnified upon returning from the locker room.
The quality of USC's performance was topped only by the quantity of those performing. Seven players scored touchdowns. Nine players caught passes. The Trojans forced four turnovers and registered 558 total yards on offense.
"To be honest, as far as the plays and the things they did, we knew what was going to happen," linebacker Clint Sintim said. "That's why it's so disappointing. We knew what was going to happen, but they were still able to out-execute us. Losing by 40-odd points is very humbling. It lets us know exactly where we are as a team."
For the third straight year, the season opener leaves Virginia with more questions than answers. Losing to Wyoming 23-3 in the first game last season was embarrassing, but falling by 45 points in front of a record crowd left Virginia's players shaking their heads.
The lone cheering remaining in the final minutes came from a corner of the stadium adorned in cardinal and gold. It became emblematic of an afternoon when the pomp that follows USC overcame Charlottesville.
"You play a good, solid game and a team like that wins, you say we played as well as we can play and they're just real hard to beat," Groh said. "But to do some of those things we did today, that's disturbing to me -- disturbing to everybody in the organization."







