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The day USC became greater
Monterey Herald ^ | January 3, 2006 | JIM LITKE

Posted on 01/03/2006 2:25:59 PM PST by Dog Gone

LOS ANGELES - Grit was the final ingredient.

If Southern California beats Texas in the Rose Bowl to win an unprecedented third straight championship, the Trojans could do more than restart the debate over whether they're the game's best team ever. They might force coach Pete Carroll to step back and admire not just what USC has accomplished - "It has never been a focus of our program to look at the end of the rainbow," he said the other day - but how all those far-flung pieces settled into a portrait so close to perfection.

And if that happens, none will loom larger than the character-building exercise commemorated simply as the "Bush Push."

A dynasty built on dazzling speed and finesse was tottering unsteadily at Notre Dame, seven seconds and 18 inches from the end of its run. The Trojans arrived in South Bend, Ind., for an Oct. 15 game against the Fighting Irish on the wings of a 27-game winning streak, boasting as many skill-position stars as an entire wing of the College Football Hall of Fame nearby.

Quarterback Matt Leinart, the 2004 Heisman Trophy winner, could find the seam in most defenses and commanded a trio of NFL-ready receivers capable of ripping it open. All-purpose back Reggie Bush, already a front-runner for the 2005 award, gave Southern California the luxury of stretching those same defenses. His backfield tandem, LenDale White, added the option of running through them.

But at that moment, trailing 31-28, a team used to dodging and dancing away from opponents before scoring a TKO was being dared, finally, to stand in front of one and slug it out.

On the visitors sideline, Carroll called a quarterback sneak, eager to see how his team would react when push came to shove. But he also left Leinart an out: Spike the ball, set up a game-tying field-goal try and the Trojans would take their chances in overtime.

Before the whistle blew to resume play, Bush asked his quarterback the question everybody in the stadium wanted answered:

"You gonna go for it?"

Nine months earlier, Leinart waffled for nearly two weeks before taking one of the bigger risks in sports history. He left a guaranteed eight-figure deal from the pros on the table to play one more season at USC. But now, Leinart was ominously undecided about what to do next.

"You think I should?" he said.

"Go for it," Bush replied.

The ball was snapped.

"I think that's a moment you can only get, maybe if you're lucky, once in a lifetime, and that wouldn't have happened," Carroll noted, had Leinart taken the NFL's money and run.

"That was really, kind of, the turning point for us in a season as a team to get on a run to finish out this year. I know that was kind of a pivotal opportunity I think Matt will never forget."

It was unforgettable not just because of where Leinart eventually wound up - at the Rose Bowl to defend USC's back-to-back titles_ but because of where he'd just been.

Some 90 seconds earlier, facing fourth-and-9 from his own 26-yard line, Leinart brought the Trojans to the line, scanned the defense and checked off to a different play. Then he wedged a wobbly spiral between the Notre Dame secondary and the left sideline, where Dwayne Jarrett latched onto it and raced 61 yards to the Notre Dame 13.

A few plays later, from first-and-goal at the 2, Leinart took off up that same sideline to make up the rest of the distance himself. A perfectly timed hit by Irish linebacker Corey Mays sent the quarterback flying and the football flying even farther, backward and out of bounds. The final few seconds ticked off the clock, the Irish players rushed the field just ahead of the fast-emptying stands, and the officials struggled to maintain order.

By the time they succeeded, 7 seconds were back on the clock and the ball rested inside the 1. His mind made up, Leinart put his body behind left guard Taitisu Lutui and pushed. But the middle of the Notre Dame defense pushed right back, fighting to a standstill.

In the briefest of moments, as Leinart turned his back to the goal line and made a second effort to gain traction, Bush rushed in. He put both arms on his quarterback and pushed.

Touchdown.

For a few moments afterward, it was hard to tell who'd won.

Leinart made his way back to the sideline and cried. A half-hour later, drained, he sat in front of his locker and dabbed at his eyes. In the interview room, meanwhile, Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis smiled and said he hoped every one of his kids would have done what Bush did. He ran into the USC star at an awards ceremony not long ago. Nothing had changed.

"Reggie and I had a nice conversation about that down in Orlando," Weis recalled recently. "We sat down for about 10 or 15 minutes and we were talking about a bunch of things. I think when you're in football you can't look at the what-ifs."

Even now, just about everyone else who caught the conclusion of the best college game so far this century agree on a few things: The push was illegal. It was a brilliant bit of improvisation. And it proved that USC's grip on the crown was less about pedigree than toughness.

That last point was hardly wasted on Texas. The Longhorns destroyed Colorado that same October afternoon and a few players paused to watch the end of USC-Notre Dame before leaving the locker room.

"Any athlete, any competitor, would have done the same thing," Texas defender Mike Huff recalled Monday. He didn't try to hide his admiration for the "Bush Push," either.

"I know," Huff added, "I would have."


TOPICS: Sports
KEYWORDS: bowlgames; collegefootball; rosebowl; usc
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1 posted on 01/03/2006 2:26:00 PM PST by Dog Gone
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To: Dog Gone
And it proved that USC's grip on the crown was less about pedigree than toughness.

Sums up the article nicely.

2 posted on 01/03/2006 2:28:49 PM PST by Mr. Mojo
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To: Dog Gone

Hook 'Em Horns!


3 posted on 01/03/2006 2:30:10 PM PST by toomanygrasshoppers ("In technical terminology, he's a loon")
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To: toomanygrasshoppers

Could be a classic game like USC's at Notre Dame was. We'll know soon enough.


4 posted on 01/03/2006 2:37:44 PM PST by Dog Gone
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To: toomanygrasshoppers

HOOK EM HORNS!

(currently a Sr. at UT!)


5 posted on 01/03/2006 2:39:02 PM PST by Zeppelin (Stop Global Warming. Shut a Liberal's Mouth.)
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To: Dog Gone
"If Southern California beats Texas in the Rose Bowl to win an unprecedented third straight championship..."

Uh, I think the folks at LSU would say "second".
6 posted on 01/03/2006 2:39:11 PM PST by Maximus of Texas (On my signal, unleash DD.)
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To: Dog Gone
And that's a big resounding IF ;) Go Horns!
7 posted on 01/03/2006 2:39:53 PM PST by BigTex5
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To: Dog Gone

I will solve the championship controversey right now.

USC has either 2.5, or it has 3, because the BCS RECOGNIZES the AP championship as well.


8 posted on 01/03/2006 2:40:58 PM PST by MikefromOhio (Happy New Year)
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To: Maximus of Texas
Uh, I think the folks at LSU would say "second".

Let them say that. The AP has been awarding the "national championship" trophy for longer than most of them have been alive, and they never gave it up when the BCS was formed.

The AP even refused to allow the BCS to use its rankings in the formula this year.

A USC victory would be a third consecutive national championship. Not an undisputed one from a couple of years ago, but the upstart BCS is still trying to figure it out.

9 posted on 01/03/2006 2:46:00 PM PST by Dog Gone
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To: Dog Gone
Anything supported by "the press" should be viewed as suspicious. This is the same liberal media that rakes Bush over the coals. Yes, I know, this is sports but they are part of "the press" and are not above politics when casting their votes. Outside of a true playoff system, the BCS is the best alternative.
10 posted on 01/03/2006 2:50:52 PM PST by Maximus of Texas (On my signal, unleash DD.)
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To: Maximus of Texas
Outside of a true playoff system, the BCS is the best alternative.

LOL. Tell me you are kidding. Please.
11 posted on 01/03/2006 3:01:42 PM PST by MikefromOhio (Happy New Year)
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To: Maximus of Texas

Gimme a break. Oklahoma didn't even win its conference and made it to the BCS championship.

Even honest Oklahoma fans felt a little guilty about being there, and more so after they were thumped.

And USC put an end to any controversy with showing Oklahoma the door in last year's Orange Bowl.

It should have been USC against LSU in the BCS championship two years ago. Just about everyone admits that.

I don't know how it would have turned out, but those that think the BCS has figured it all out and it's the only title that matters need to explain why the BCS keeps changing the formulas each year. THEY obviously don't think they've got it all figured out.


12 posted on 01/03/2006 3:02:08 PM PST by Dog Gone
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To: Dog Gone; MikeinIraq
Is the BCS perfect? No. Does it need to eliminate the automatic bids that put 8-4 teams like Florida State into a BCS bowl? Yes. Do I want media folks determining the national champion? No.

A few tweaks and the BCS would be fair and elimate the backroom politics that goes on in the AP.

Remember, this is the same press that used to award the Heisman to NE schools year after year. The history of the AP is full of stories that are as bad as the BCS.
13 posted on 01/03/2006 3:09:16 PM PST by Maximus of Texas (On my signal, unleash DD.)
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To: Maximus of Texas; Dog Gone
A few tweaks and the BCS would be fair and elimate the backroom politics that goes on in the AP.

I am guessing that by your screen name, you are a Texas fan? Anyone want to fathom a guess as to WHO was doing the "backroom politics" with the COACHES POLL that got Texas into the Rose Bowl last year??????

The Bowl Coalition was 100000X better than the BCS. It is absolutely insane to call something the "Bowl Championship Series" but NOT have a series to determine it's champion.

EVERY other sport in the NCAA chooses it's champion via a playoff. Until that happens, NO system is good enough.
14 posted on 01/03/2006 3:11:32 PM PST by MikefromOhio (Happy New Year)
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To: Maximus of Texas

"Anything supported by "the press" should be viewed as suspicious."

Look, no argument there generally, but here's the thing about USC's 2003 AP title. The media is going to trumpet USC's 'half' of the 2003 championship because (a) they voted for that half (the coaches voted USC #1 on the other half as well, but that's another story!), and (b) what has happened since has reinforced their position. Many in the country recognized two years ago that USC had a special group, and they were proven right, as USC hasn't lost a game in the two years since and is riding a 34-game winning streak. LSU should feel fortunate to be able to claim their 'half' of the 2003 title, and leave it at that.


15 posted on 01/03/2006 3:15:29 PM PST by raptor29
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To: Maximus of Texas
Hey, the BCS is an improvement in that it eliminated the locked in bowl matchups. Other than that, it's a work in progress.

Unless you're willing to assert that all other national champs in American history awarded by the AP are questionable, then USC's quest for a third one is just as valid. This year, it's going to work out. The AP champ is going to be the same as the BCS champ. That happens when there are only two undefeated teams. Lucky for them.

They figured it out when it's a no brainer. Bring out the confetti.

To assert that LSU's win over Oklahoma erases USC's national championship in the minds of thinking adults is silly. We know better. They have the AP trophy. It's there.

16 posted on 01/03/2006 3:25:27 PM PST by Dog Gone
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To: Dog Gone
Some 90 seconds earlier, facing fourth-and-9 from his own 26-yard line, Leinart brought the Trojans to the line, scanned the defense and checked off to a different play. Then he wedged a wobbly spiral between the Notre Dame secondary and the left sideline, where Dwayne Jarrett latched onto it and raced 61 yards to the Notre Dame 13.

That's what seperates the men from the boys.

17 posted on 01/03/2006 4:46:03 PM PST by hole_n_one
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To: Dog Gone

In 1978, USC and Alabama 'split' a national title. USC won the UPI coaches title, Alabama was voted number one by the AP writers. The two teams played each other earlier in the year, AT ALABAMA, and USC won 24-14, and was ahead 24-0 in the 4th quarter. Both teams finished up with the same overall record, 12-1, I believe. They played each other(!!!) and USC won, but they had to split the title??!!!! Hell, AP owed us one.


18 posted on 01/03/2006 4:59:48 PM PST by raptor29
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To: raptor29
USC is playing for a third consecutive national title. When another team comes anywhere near the same claim, I'll listen with an open mind.

The Coaches Poll is the BCS. They sold out when they agreed to vote for the BCS Champion as #1, Maybe that's right or maybe it isn't but it doesn't change the fact that the AP, which is not part of the upstart BCS, has been awarding national championships far longer than anyone else.

It's still the most prestigious in my opinion until the BCS finally settles on a formula and sticks with it for more than a few monthts.

19 posted on 01/03/2006 5:17:55 PM PST by Dog Gone
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To: Dog Gone

All these news stories are getting ahead of themselves and making me nervous! I love USC, but how can they possibly hold up to all the hype? USC has everything to defend -- 2 consecutive National Championships, a 34-game winning streak and back to back Heisman winners. They have everything on the line, while the Longhorns have nothing to lose. I'd rather be the underdog. That said, "FIGHT ON, SC!"


20 posted on 01/04/2006 7:41:45 AM PST by soccermom
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