Freshman Matt Barkley was named Southern California's starting quarterback on Thursday.
With an outstanding performance at training camp, Barkley beat out sophomore Aaron Corp to get the start in the Trojans' season opener.
"He has exceeded all our expectations," Carroll said in a statement. "He has all the physical ability. He has the mentality and temperament to handle the position. His personality is very well received by all the players, and he's extremely talented. At this point, he's ready to be the guy for us."
Barkley was perhaps the nation's most sought-after football recruit last year at Orange County's Mater Dei High School. After choosing the Trojans, Barkley graduated from high school one semester early to participate in spring practice.
Aaron Corp, in his third year at USC, was named the Trojans' starter out of spring ball, but Barkley took advantage when Corp missed two weeks of workouts this month after breaking a small bone below his left knee Aug. 10.
Barkley is the first non-redshirt freshman quarterback to be picked to start a season opener for the Trojans.
"He's the starting quarterback at USC — it's not a one-game deal," Carroll said. "He seized the opportunity that was in front of him and took control. He deserves all the credit in the world, and we expect nothing but great things from him."
Barkley also beat out Mitch Mustain, the former Arkansas starter who played eight games as Mark Sanchez's backup last season. Sanchez, now the New York Jets' starting quarterback, left USC with a year of eligibility remaining.
Now Barkley must shoulder the enormous expectations of his position at USC. He's following nearly a decade of outstanding college quarterbacks, including Heisman Trophy winners Carson Palmer and Matt Leinart, along with John David Booty and Mark Sanchez.
USC opens the run for its eighth consecutive Pac-10 title next weekend but Barkley's ultimate early test: a trip to Columbus to face No. 6 Ohio State.
Showing posts with label MATT BARKLEY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MATT BARKLEY. Show all posts
9.13.2009
MATT BARKLEY - USC COMEBACK
There are worse places for a freshman quarterback to be than his own 5-yard line facing a second-and-19 with a five-point deficit, time wasting and the entire state of Ohio screaming in his ears.
Like San Quentin. Or the mouth of a shark.
Other than that, the situation in which Matt Barkley found himself at Ohio Stadium was about as bad as it gets.
It was in this most dire football circumstance that Barkley entered the USC huddle and … smiled.
"Matt came to us with a smile on his face and was just like, 'Let's get it done,'" Trojans center Kris O'Dowd said.
Did you think he was nuts?
"Maybe," O'Dowd said, grinning himself. "But I'm going to roll with it."
Oh, they're all willing to roll with this kid now. The Barkley bandwagon, picking up momentum for a month, is stampeding now.
Freshmen don't start at quarterback at USC. And freshmen don't come into a certifiable madhouse like the Horseshoe and beat the Buckeyes. And freshmen certainly don't beat the Buckeyes by leading long, dramatic, game-winning drives in the final minutes.
Until Barkley did all those things.
"The questions everyone was asking about Matt are totally legitimate. All we can tell you is that the guy is really special," Trojans coach Pete Carroll said
After producing precious little offensively all night, Barkley conjured the kind of crunch-time magic that separates special quarterbacks from merely talented quarterbacks. Against an excellent defense Barkley led USC to an 18-15 defeat of the Buckeyes that sucked the sound from a record crowd of 106,033.
By the time this drive was finished, the Trojans were howling. Rejoicing. Embracing. Winning a potential national championship elimination game that had appeared lost for much of the night.
Pete Carroll gave his freshman quarterback the keys to the offense in the final minutes.
The official stats say Barkley led the Trojans for 86 yards in 14 plays, scoring the clinching touchdown and two-point conversion with 1:05 left. The truth is that after a sack and a false start, USC was 19 yards from a first down and 95 yards from a touchdown.
The Shoe shook with noise, as Buckeye Nation anticipated the validating victory that has escaped it since January 2003.
For USC, the situation wasn't hopeless, but you could see it from there. That's when Barkley's arm and tailback Joe McKnight's legs saved the night, one play at a time.
First came a McKnight draw for 11 yards. Then, on third-and-8 from the 16, Barkley found McKnight on an option route against a linebacker and hit him for 21 yards.
The spark of hope from that initial first down of the drive became a bonfire. Barkley then drilled tight end Anthony McCoy on a seam route for 26 yards down to the Ohio State 37. At that point, you could hear the entire stadium pucker and feel the Barkley legend building.
The next eight plays were either passes or quarterback sneaks by Barkley or runs by McKnight. Finally, on first-and-goal at the 2, Stafon Johnson took a handoff and danced outside the right end to score untouched. Then Barkley passed to McKnight for two points and an 18-15 lead.
"It's on his [Barkley's] shoulders, and he did it," linebacker Chris Galippo said. "He was so not like a freshman. [Mark] Sanchez, [Matt] Leinart, [Carson] Palmer -- I don't know whether they could have done that."
Barkley could. Barkley did. Then Barkley grinned and shrugged, less awed by his precocity than the rest of us.
"This is what it's supposed to be, and what I came here for," he said. "It is kind of surreal, but it's what I've always wanted."
And Buckeyes fans also can shake their heads over Pryor, the splendid physical specimen who often looks ordinary.
In this battle of young quarterbacks, sophomore Pryor had the ball last. More than a minute remained on the clock when the Buckeyes took over at their own 36-yard line, but they made nothing happen.
Just like that, the night was lost. And 15 games into Pryor's college career, he's still waiting to have the kind of moment Barkley enjoyed Saturday night.
Like San Quentin. Or the mouth of a shark.
Other than that, the situation in which Matt Barkley found himself at Ohio Stadium was about as bad as it gets.
It was in this most dire football circumstance that Barkley entered the USC huddle and … smiled.
"Matt came to us with a smile on his face and was just like, 'Let's get it done,'" Trojans center Kris O'Dowd said.
Did you think he was nuts?
"Maybe," O'Dowd said, grinning himself. "But I'm going to roll with it."
Oh, they're all willing to roll with this kid now. The Barkley bandwagon, picking up momentum for a month, is stampeding now.
Freshmen don't start at quarterback at USC. And freshmen don't come into a certifiable madhouse like the Horseshoe and beat the Buckeyes. And freshmen certainly don't beat the Buckeyes by leading long, dramatic, game-winning drives in the final minutes.
Until Barkley did all those things.
"The questions everyone was asking about Matt are totally legitimate. All we can tell you is that the guy is really special," Trojans coach Pete Carroll said
After producing precious little offensively all night, Barkley conjured the kind of crunch-time magic that separates special quarterbacks from merely talented quarterbacks. Against an excellent defense Barkley led USC to an 18-15 defeat of the Buckeyes that sucked the sound from a record crowd of 106,033.
By the time this drive was finished, the Trojans were howling. Rejoicing. Embracing. Winning a potential national championship elimination game that had appeared lost for much of the night.
Pete Carroll gave his freshman quarterback the keys to the offense in the final minutes.
The official stats say Barkley led the Trojans for 86 yards in 14 plays, scoring the clinching touchdown and two-point conversion with 1:05 left. The truth is that after a sack and a false start, USC was 19 yards from a first down and 95 yards from a touchdown.
The Shoe shook with noise, as Buckeye Nation anticipated the validating victory that has escaped it since January 2003.
For USC, the situation wasn't hopeless, but you could see it from there. That's when Barkley's arm and tailback Joe McKnight's legs saved the night, one play at a time.
First came a McKnight draw for 11 yards. Then, on third-and-8 from the 16, Barkley found McKnight on an option route against a linebacker and hit him for 21 yards.
The spark of hope from that initial first down of the drive became a bonfire. Barkley then drilled tight end Anthony McCoy on a seam route for 26 yards down to the Ohio State 37. At that point, you could hear the entire stadium pucker and feel the Barkley legend building.
The next eight plays were either passes or quarterback sneaks by Barkley or runs by McKnight. Finally, on first-and-goal at the 2, Stafon Johnson took a handoff and danced outside the right end to score untouched. Then Barkley passed to McKnight for two points and an 18-15 lead.
"It's on his [Barkley's] shoulders, and he did it," linebacker Chris Galippo said. "He was so not like a freshman. [Mark] Sanchez, [Matt] Leinart, [Carson] Palmer -- I don't know whether they could have done that."
Barkley could. Barkley did. Then Barkley grinned and shrugged, less awed by his precocity than the rest of us.
"This is what it's supposed to be, and what I came here for," he said. "It is kind of surreal, but it's what I've always wanted."
And Buckeyes fans also can shake their heads over Pryor, the splendid physical specimen who often looks ordinary.
In this battle of young quarterbacks, sophomore Pryor had the ball last. More than a minute remained on the clock when the Buckeyes took over at their own 36-yard line, but they made nothing happen.
Just like that, the night was lost. And 15 games into Pryor's college career, he's still waiting to have the kind of moment Barkley enjoyed Saturday night.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)