USC Has A Playoff Push Riding On These Surprise Contributors

With the USC Trojans setting their sights on the College Football Playoff, several under-the-radar players are poised to make unexpected contributions in the 2026 season.

USC enters the 2026 season with plenty of attention on the known names, but the Trojans also have a few players who could wind up changing the feel of the roster. Jayden Maiava, Tanook Hines, Jide Abasiri, and Jahkeem Stewart are already set in clear roles, and Lincoln Riley’s group has enough established pieces to fuel College Football Playoff hopes. Still, the path to a real breakthrough often comes from the guys who weren’t the first names on the board.

That was the story for King Miller in 2025. Injuries opened the door, the former walk-on stepped in, and he made the most of the extra snaps. USC could have a similar kind of emergence this fall, and one name to watch on that front is defensive lineman Boucard.

Boucard was active in 10 games as a freshman and recorded stats in five of them. He finished the 2025 season with 9 total tackles, 1.0 sacks, and 2.0 tackles for loss.

For an interior defensive lineman in rotation, that kind of production is already noteworthy. Early on, USC leaned on him in pass-rush packages because of his ability to work through the middle and get after the quarterback.

He flashed right away as a true freshman, and another step forward could put him on the verge of a breakout in 2026.

The Trojans could also get a boost from Zacharyus Williams, who transferred in after a strong true freshman year at Utah, where he caught 10 passes for 101 yards. His first season at USC was slowed by injury, but the roster has room for him to carve out a real role. Hines is expected to be Maiava’s top target, and Williams’ move to inside receiver in the offseason gives him a chance to settle in as a dependable third option behind Hines and Terrell Anderson.

Williams said after a spring practice in March that the game is slowing down for him in Southern California:

"Have a year with this playbook, with this staff, so yeah. Definitely feel more comfortable. More comfortable with a returning quarterback as well, so it feels good to be back out there,"

On the back end, new defensive coordinator Gary Patterson figures to keep rotating defensive backs, especially early in the season. That makes sense with Chasen Johnson and Jontez Williams both coming off knee injuries, and it also opens the door for RJ Sermons to step in. Redshirt freshman Alex Graham showed promise right away as a true freshman, but injuries kept him from fully locking down his spot in the secondary.

Sermons arrived with plenty of attention, and the former top recruit reclassified from the class of 2026 to 2025 so he could get to USC a year early. Hill’s high school highlights point to a physical tackler against the run, plus the explosiveness and athleticism to bring back kickoffs for touchdowns. How he fits into Patterson’s defense could make him one of the more pleasant surprises for USC fans in 2026.

In Other News...

Indiana Just Lost Another Experienced Arm To The Portal

USC kept adding to its pitching depth this offseason with the arrival of Anthony Gubitosi, a veteran left-hander who is moving on for his fifth collegiate season after stops at Delaware and Indiana. The portal move gives the Trojans another experienced arm to plug into a staff that has helped them reach the NCAA Tournament in each of the past two seasons, with the program still pushing to take the next step in 2027.

Gubitosis path has been a winding one, and USC is betting that the mileage matters as much as the raw numbers. He worked mostly out of Indianas bullpen last season, and his profile fits the kind of depth piece that can matter over a long spring, especially for a team trying to build enough pitching to survive the postseason grind. [Read more 🡒]

What SoCal Coaches Are Saying About USC Recruiting Under Chad Bowden

USCs recruiting operation has taken on a different tone under general manager Chad Bowden, and plenty of Southern California high school coaches have noticed. The shift is centered on keeping elite West Coast talent close to home, with Bowden and his staff making a clearer push to land top local players while also being more direct about what USC can offer.

Some coaches around the region see that approach as a welcome change, especially the clearer communication around NIL opportunities that used to feel murkier. Others are not fully convinced the new formula will age well, and at least one voice in the local coaching community still views USC as too old school, with skepticism that lofty recruiting rankings alone will tell the full story. [Read more 🡒]