Andrew Johnson’s rise just got a lot bigger than USC.
The sophomore right-hander has become the first Trojans player to land on the USA Baseball Collegiate National Team since Ian Kennedy did it in 2005, giving USC a fresh national headline and putting Johnson in the middle of a 28-man roster headed to Taiwan.
Johnson earned the honor after standing out in training camp trials and then backing it up in the five-game Stars vs. Stripes series, which ran through the Fourth of July. In three appearances there, he gave up only three hits and one run across five innings while striking out five.
Now he’s set to join Team USA at the inaugural World Collegiate Baseball Championship, which will be played July 11-15 at Taichung Intercontinental Baseball Stadium. The Americans open group play against Korea, Chinese Taipei, and Japan from July 11 to 13, with the semifinals and finals scheduled for July 14 and 15.
For USC, Johnson’s national-team selection is the latest sign of how far he’s come in a season where he kept building steam at exactly the right time. He spent much of the year in the shadow of Mason Edwards and Grant Govel, but his biggest moments came when the Trojans needed him most, especially during their run to the Chapel Hill Super Regional against North Carolina, a top-five seed.
Johnson finished the season 7-2 with a 3.23 ERA and 85 strikeouts. In the NCAA Tournament, he was USC’s top arm, logging 20.2 innings, allowing five runs, and posting a 2.18 ERA.
His work helped carry the Trojans within one game of the College World Series before they dropped a 4-3 winner-take-all heartbreaker to the Tar Heels in the Chapel Hill Super Regional. USC ended the 2026 season at 48-18 overall and 20-10 in Big Ten play.
With Mason Edwards viewed as one of the top pitching prospects in the 2026 MLB Draft and unlikely to return, Johnson now steps into the spotlight on the mound for Andy Stankiewicz’s club.
Grant Govel should be part of that next wave, too. The sophomore right-hander went 10-2 with a 2.93 ERA and 96 strikeouts this past season, and he’s expected to take another step forward.
Even with the transfer portal departures of junior infielder Adrian Lopez, sophomore catcher Augie Lopez, and junior catcher Isaac Cadena, USC enters 2027 with real optimism around the program under Stankiewicz. The Trojans expect to stay among the Big Ten’s top teams, and Johnson’s Team USA call-up only adds to that momentum.
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The reason the number still draws attention is simple: it has become part history, part expectation, and part open question for the programs next chapter. Lamar Dawson was the last Trojan to wear it, and since then the jersey has sat untouched, leaving USC with a familiar kind of decision whenever a new coach weighs whether to preserve a tradition or put a new player into one of the most scrutinized uniforms in the building. [Read more 🡒]
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The bigger picture points toward the next wave of recruiting, where USC has been aggressive in the 2028 class and has already extended offers to several high-profile backs, including Micah Rhodes and Dalen Powell. The Trojans are also in the mix for other talented runners as the competition heats up, with major programs circling the same prospects and USC trying to make sure its future backfield does not become a bigger question than it already is. [Read more 🡒]
