Stoic, confident Sam Darnold is making USCās quarterback decision difficult
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The first great pass Sam Darnold ever threw was probably a misread. He hadnāt had much time to prepare. Darnold was a sophomore at San Clemente High, a starting receiver and linebacker. He was playing quarterback only because the starter got hurt.
His team trailed by seven against Tesoro. Darnold took a snap from the 34-yard line, took three steps, a hop, and lofted a throw straight into double coverage. The pass was perfect. It may have plopped atop the pylon had it not landed, like a raindrop, in the diving hands of his receiver.
Then Darnold went for the two-point conversion, won the game and returned a week later to receiver and linebacker for the rest of the season.
This is the allure of Darnold, a redshirt freshman, who is unexpectedly challenging Max Browne for USCās starting quarterback job, despite a dearth of college experience.
Darnoldās fast rise at USC does not surprise those who know him. As a 5-year-old basketball player, āSam was the one who was getting pissed off because they were double-dribbling and they were traveling,ā his father, Mike Darnold, explained. (Later, in high school, he was named the South Coast League most valuable player in basketball.)
Darnold has an athletic pedigree. His mother is a physical education teacher. She and Darnoldās older sister played college volleyball. Mike Darnold played college football. So did Mike Darnoldās father.
Sam Darnoldās other grandfather, the most decorated of them, played basketball for USC, made the U.S. Olympic volleyball team, then became one of the actors to play the Marlboro Man. Darnold was similar, stoic and assured, a little squeamish of attention.
Quietly, Darnold nurtured an intense confidence and the ability to pass the confidence to others. He has done so at USC.
Darnold committed to USC despite concerns that Cody Kessler would start his first season, that Browne was being groomed to take over and that Ventura St. Bonaventure Highās Ricky Town, considered by many to be the best high school quarterback, was in Darnoldās recruiting class.
āI figured, you know, I was going to compete wherever I went,ā Darnold said one day this summer.
Ultimately, Town decided to transfer early last season.
Darnoldās ascendance this spring surprised some because he was a bit of a mystery in high school. He didnāt court attention.
In high school, he participated in recruiting camps reluctantly. He wanted his play in games to speak for itself. He dragged his feet on cutting film. San Clemente Coach Jaime Ortiz put together much of his reel.
Defensive coordinator Justin Wilcox was the first USC coach to contact him, according to Ortiz. Wilcox, following Darnoldās sophomore season, wanted him to play outside linebacker.
āWhich he could do,ā Ortiz said. āI mean, Sam could play anywhere on the field.ā
Darnold politely declined.
For USC, offering him a scholarship as a quarterback posed a risk. Nobody outside of San Clemente could say much about Darnold after he sat out most of his junior season because of a foot injury. The kid looked like a good player. Maybe. It was hard to tell.
Coaches could count his starts at quarterback on one hand. The injury made him a more willing participant in showcase camps, where he impressed, but heād thrown for a total of just 748 yards in games that didnāt involve preteens. He needed another way in.
So Ortiz stuffed the film he sent to college coaches ā football coaches ā with highlights of Darnold playing basketball. Ortiz wanted to show Darnoldās athleticism and tenacity. Just wait, he signaled, until you see him throw.
It intrigued USC Coach Clay Helton and then-coach Steve Sarkisian enough to watch Darnold work out.
āWithin a 30-minute period,ā Ortiz said, āhe had an offer from USC.ā
Darnold told few people after he committed to USC. One was Ortiz.
Well, Ortiz remembered asking, are you going to make the news public?
āSure,ā Darnold told him. If Ortiz wanted to tweet the news, Darnold wouldnāt stop him.
One of Darnoldās concerns, before committing, was that the incumbent quarterbacks would receive preferential treatment, despite the coaching staffās assurances. On one of Darnoldās visits, Helton, then the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, left Darnold and Kessler alone in a room. It was a recruiting tactic. Kessler, he said, was free to answer any questions honestly, without any of Heltonās spin.
āWhatās this guy really like?ā Darnoldās family wanted to know.
Kessler just shrugged. There was no spin, he said. If Helton said Darnold would have a chance to start, he would.
Darnold and Browne, a redshirt junior, separately said they have appreciated Heltonās handling of this off-seasonās competition. Periodically, Darnold said, Helton has sat both down, together, and bluntly assessed where each stood. At Pac-12 media days, Helton announced that Browne wouldāve been the starter, had the season begun after spring practices. Darnold wasnāt surprised. Helton had already told him.
āCoach Heltonās been super open about the competition,ā Darnold said.
Browne said the two quarterbacks are ābetter friends than people imagine.ā
āYouāre mature enough, and you realize that itās not a personal thing,ā he added.
Both quarterbacks arenāt sure whether anyone buys that. Darnold offered evidence: Shortly before training camp both attended a small quarterback clinic, with Notre Dameās DeShone Kizer, in San Clemente. Another day this summer, Browne was browsing for Razor scooters online.
āHey,ā Darnold said. āOrder me one.ā
And so USCās two quarterbacks began tooling around campus on identical red scooters.
āObviously, itās going to be a little weird, especially with fall camp. Weāre probably not going to talk as much as we usually do,ā Darnold said. But, he said, āMe and Max are good buddies.ā
If Darnold doesnāt win the job, heād likely find himself in Browneās position: waiting three seasons before competing for the job as a redshirt junior. Does he have the patience?
āWeāll see,ā Darnold said, laughing. āIām sure Iāll be fine with it either way, whether I start or whether Max gets the job, Iāll be fine with it. Iām not going to transfer, I can guarantee you that. That wonāt happen.ā
Darnold says he is focused on winning the job now. College is the first time in his life he played football only. Football dominates his time.
The next evolution Darnold must make is becoming a more vocal leader. Darnold can be more loquacious around those he knows well, said walk-on receiver Jake Russell, a childhood friend from San Clemente.
Even among that crew, Darnold feels most comfortable with a ball in his hand. In the off-season, he fills his time by playing basketball with Russell and other friends.
āHeās throwing up three-point shots from Steph Curry,ā Russell said. āAnd heās knocking them down.ā
When theyāre not playing basketball, Darnold, Russell and crew of high school friends often return to Orange County for beach volleyball games.
āHeās good at that too,ā Russell added, as if it needed to be said.
Twitter: @zhelfand
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