In '01, I believe, when we played a ranked Notre Dame team the broadcasters noted that we had two games under our belt while Notre Dame was in their first game of the season against us, and it showed.
I think USC, despite having to break in a new quarterback and running back, is considerably better that '01 Notre Dame team.
And having a 2-1 advantage is a far cry from a 2-0 advantage.
It's too little to draw conclusions on - they have one game, we have two; they'll be breaking in John David Booty (or Mark Sanchez?) while we return Zac Taylor...it's all guesswork at this point.
I think it's too early to expect a win here. I'll hope and cheer for one with the rest of you, but let's be fair here: to pull off a victory at USC would be a
huge upset, which by nature indicates it's completely unexpected.
For them though, they get more time to prepare for the game, thus more game planning for them against us, and Pete Carroll can really dissect film of us.
In that same Notre Dame game mentioned above, the broadcasters also said it was just pure, simple football, not much to analyze or give away. Of course, I don't think you could say the same about WCO.
That said, I don't think we'll necessarily limit what we do. I think it's good sense to add in a few surprises, bells and whistles for the USC game, but I don't really think it would be a good idea to constrict the gameplan against any opponent. The advantages are too sparse, IMO, for it to be worth it. Think about it: the first two games, our team has to gel together and tune-up for USC. We can't do that if we're going to be playing a fundamentally different game against USC. And if we don't play a
fundamentally different game, there's no advantage of not letting them screen videos of us at all.
Luckily for us, there are a lot of new players on the team, which means USC can't look at film from last year.
True, but we do return a lot of starters, too, particularly on defense. And we return Zac Taylor, while they've lost a QB,
two trophy running backs and I believe their top WR.