USC’s 2026 season is loaded with questions, and the biggest one on the defensive side might be the simplest: who actually settles in and owns the cornerback job? Marcelles Williams is at the center of that conversation, which is why he lands at No. 18 on the Trojans’ Top 30 Most Important Players list heading into fall camp.
Williams is one of the few known quantities in a room that suddenly has plenty of moving parts. With DeCarlos Nicholson gone, USC brought in transfer Jontez Williams, added freshman Elbert Hill IV and brought back youngsters RJ Sermons and Chasen Johnson. That leaves Williams as the most established option in the group, even if the competition around him is about to get real.
The 5-foot-11, 190-pound corner from Carson, Calif., and Bellflower St. John Bosco was a steady presence for USC last season.
He tied DeCarlos Nicholson for the team lead among Trojan corners with 621 snaps, started all 13 games and played in every one of them. Cornerbacks coach Trovon Reed saw the growth up close.
"You're talking about a guy with 11 starts who gave up one touchdown for one yard in the last home game," Reed said. "The sky's the limit for that young man. He went from the pup to the big dog because everyone who walked in was looking up to him because he's the only one that played."
The numbers from 2025 show a player who was solid, if not yet a shutdown force. Pro Football Focus gave Williams a 64.1 overall grade.
He finished with 36 tackles and eight misses, allowed 30 completions on 47 targets and gave up 411 yards, including a long of 44 yards and two touchdowns. He was the clear choice opposite Nicholson, but his season didn’t put him in star territory.
That’s why he’s slotted where he is. Williams is expected to be on the two-deep, and he should open camp with a starting job within reach.
But USC has options, and some of them come with real uncertainty after season-ending injuries. How Jontez Williams and Chasen Johnson look coming back is still unknown, which only sharpens the case for Marcelles as the room’s lone proven commodity.
The Trojans’ early schedule softens the blow if he misses time, and the deeper the season goes, the more the younger corners can grow into the role. Even so, Williams makes the top 20 because he’s already done the work of becoming a returning starter with a full year of 2025 experience behind him.
Last year, this spot belonged to safety Bishop Fitzgerald, who was viewed as a possible starter next to Kamari Ramsey. Instead, Fitzgerald became the back-end anchor while Ramsey spent plenty of time at nickel. Fitzgerald thrived, finished with 51 tackles, five interceptions and three pass breakups, earned a semifinalist nod for the Lott IMPACT Trophy and signed with the Tennessee Titans as an undrafted free agent after an injury ended his season against Iowa.
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Even with that talent still in place, USCs 2027 class has slipped to No. 13 nationally as other programs have stacked bigger commitment runs. The Trojans still have plenty of runway before signing day, and the bigger question now is whether this group can keep adding the kind of high-end pieces that can push it back toward the top tier. [Read more 🡒]
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Ari Wasserman recently pointed to Anderson as a name to watch for a breakout season, and the fit is easy to see from USC's side. The Trojans need more answers at receiver after departures to the NFL, and Anderson is expected to help fill that void as a downfield option and a player who can create after the catch. If the transition goes the way USC hopes, he could end up being more than just another transfer addition in a room that has become central to the program's identity. [Read more 🡒]
Five-Star USC Commit Weighs In On A Class Fans Keep Debating
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Faalave-Johnson has also offered his own read on the class, and it tracks with the way USC has been assembling it: not necessarily huge, but stocked with players who fit and cover important spots. He is expected to help on both sides of the ball, primarily at safety while also giving the offense options, and his view of the class adds another layer to the ongoing debate among fans about whether the Trojans are prioritizing star power, balance, or simply the right pieces in the right places. [Read more 🡒]
