USC’s No. 55 has never been just another jersey. Around the program, it carries real weight, the kind that comes from a line of linebackers who turned that number into something bigger than fabric and digits. With the Trojans set to open the 2026 season on August 29 against San Jose State at the Coliseum, the countdown to kickoff turns to the most famous number in Cardinal and Gold.
The story starts with Junior Seau, the original No. 55 and still the standard for what that number means at USC. He was only in Los Angeles for two seasons, but he left a massive imprint.
In 1989, Seau piled up a historic 19 sacks and earned Unanimous All-American honors. That year, the Trojans won the Pac-10 title and beat Michigan in the Rose Bowl.
Seau’s USC career was just the beginning. He went on to a Hall of Fame NFL run and made 12 straight Pro Bowls from 1991-2002. He tragically died in 2012 by suicide due to CTE sustained during his football career.
When Seau moved on to the NFL in 1990, Willie McGinest stepped in and kept No. 55 in elite hands. McGinest played linebacker for USC from 1990-1993 and built a standout career of his own. He was first-team All-Pac-10 in both 1992 and 1993 and earned All-American honors as a senior.
The New England Patriots took McGinest with the fourth overall pick in the 1994 NFL Draft, and he spent 12 of his 15 NFL seasons there. He made two Pro Bowls, helped the Patriots win three Super Bowls, and still holds the NFL record for most career playoff sacks with 16.0.
Then came Chris Claiborne, the only Trojan linebacker to win the Butkus Award, which goes to the top linebacker in the country. Claiborne claimed it as a junior in 1998 and also picked up Unanimous All-American honors that season.
After eight years in the NFL, Claiborne moved into coaching. He worked as an analyst at USC in 2020, then became linebackers coach at Arizona State. In 2022, he was forced out amid an NCAA investigation into recruiting violations that led to the departures of head coach Herm Edwards and defensive coordinator Antonio Pierce.
Keith Rivers rounds out the 55 Club, and he brings something the others do not: a national championship ring. A decorated recruit from Central Florida, Rivers made an immediate impact as a true freshman on USC’s 2004 national championship team. He later earned first-team All-Pac-10 honors in 2006 and 2007 and was an All-American in 2007.
Like the other members of the club, Rivers was a top ten NFL Draft pick. He played seven seasons in the league.
The last Trojan to wear No. 55 was Lamar Dawson, who had the number from 2011 to 2015. His run came after Lane Kiffin made headlines by giving him the jersey, but Dawson did not come close to matching the expectations that came with it.
The number has been untouched since Dawson graduated a decade ago. Now it’s up to Lincoln Riley to decide whether No. 55 stays retired in practice or gets handed to another Trojan ready to carry the legacy forward.
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