USC men’s basketball is building toward another important year under Eric Musselman, and the conversation around the program this week wasn’t just about the roster. It also circled around a new NCAA eligibility rule that could reshape how teams across college sports manage their players.
Musselman, now heading into his third season in Los Angeles, spoke with USCTrojans.com and weighed in on the NCAA’s decision to move to a five-years-for-five-seasons model for Division 1 athletes. The rule will be fully in place for the incoming class of 2027 in the fall.
“I think the good thing about the 5-in-5 is that it will provide clarity for players, coaching staffs, and front office staffs,” Musselman said. “I think teams have been roster-building year-by-year with a lot of transfers, and I think that maybe this rule will help us have more retention across the board in all sports.”
That’s the kind of change that could hit college athletics right where it lives: the constant churn. Between the portal, redshirting, and transfers, roster math has become a year-round puzzle. A clearer five-year window would make it easier to track how long a player has actually been in the college game.
It could also affect the way teams think about redshirting. In plenty of cases, players sit out early with an eye toward moving on later, since a redshirt season doesn’t burn eligibility. Under the new setup, that loophole may not look quite the same.
For USC, though, the immediate focus is less about the rule and more about the group Musselman is putting together. The Trojans landed a pair of four-star transfers this offseason in former UConn center Eric Reibe and former Georgetown guard KJ Lewis. Even so, a big part of the roster will come from players who are already in the program, along with incoming high school talent.
Two of the biggest returners are guards Rodney Rice and Alijah Arenas. Rice opened the 2025-26 season on a tear, averaging a team-best 20.3 points per game over his first six contests before season-ending surgery shut him down for the rest of the year. He is expected back for USC in 2026-27.
Arenas, USC’s top-rated recruit in 2025, gave the Trojans 14.1 points per game in 14 appearances as a freshman. His season was derailed by a torn meniscus suffered in the offseason before the year began.
The incoming 2026 class adds even more to work with. USC brought in five-star forward Christian Collins, along with four-star center Darius Ratliff and four-star forward Adonis Ratliff.
After back-to-back seasons that left USC hovering around the .500 mark, the Trojans are trying to turn all that talent into a trip back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2023. Through two seasons under Musselman, USC is 35-32 overall.
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USC Is In A High-Stakes Fight For Elite In-State Tackle
Austin Attalah has quickly become one of the names to know on USCs 2028 recruiting board, and for good reason. The five-star offensive tackle from Cajon High School has already taken in multiple stops along his recruitment, including USC, Texas, Texas Tech and Ohio State, while also narrowing things down with a top-eight list that signals just how serious his process has become.
For USC, the appeal is obvious and the competition is familiar. Attalah has shown interest in the Trojans and in Texas schools, with his family ties to Texas giving those programs real momentum, but USC also has made a strong impression with its renewed commitment to going after elite national talent. The Trojans have been in this one from the start, and the next round of visits figures to say plenty about where this race is headed. [Read more 🡒]
USC Freshman Madden Riordan Is Suddenly Hard To Ignore In Secondary
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For a defense that is still sorting out its depth, that kind of early consistency matters. Lincoln Riley and Paul Gonzales have both pointed to Riordans instincts, football IQ and feel for the game, the sort of traits that can get a young defensive back on the field before the rest of the room is ready to hand over snaps. [Read more 🡒]
USC Just Got A New Reason To Worry About Oregon's Passing Attack
USCs biggest defensive concern for the Oregon matchup just got more complicated, because the Ducks are set to bring back the kind of passing-game firepower that can change a game quickly. Oregon already has key pieces in place on offense, and sophomore receiver Dakorien Moore has been singled out as one of the top skill-position threats in the country, giving the Ducks a dangerous blend of quarterback play and playmaking on the perimeter.
For the Trojans, that means the trip to the Coliseum now comes with even more pressure on a secondary that will have to account for Oregons depth as well as its stars. With the Ducks moving into a new era offensively after Will Steins departure to Kentucky, the one thing that has not changed is the expectation that Oregon will keep stressing defenses through the air, and USC is right near the top of the list of teams that have to sort out how to handle it. [Read more 🡒]
