LOS ANGELES — Nearly seven years ago, James Franklin watched a USC kicker split the uprights in Pasadena as the clock hit zero and Penn State squandered a 17-point fourth-quarter lead to lose the Rose Bowl Game.
On Saturday, just a handful of miles west of the storied venue, Franklin found himself doing the same. This time, however, it was at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and it was his kicker, Ryan Barker, who converted a 36-yarder in overtime to beat USC 33-30 and keeping No. 4 Penn State’s undefeated season alive.
The kick capped the Nittany Lions’ comeback after they trailed 20-6 at halftime.
“We found a way to get a tough win on the road,” Franklin said. “I’m going to take it and run to the airport.”
Though Barker’s laces sent the Nittany Lions on the long trip back to Happy Valley with a smile on their faces, it was tight end Tyler Warren who carried the offense — and team — on his back Saturday.
“Game saver,” cornerback A.J. Harris said of Warren. “We really needed him today.”
To be able to save the game from an upset, Warren needed to break it. And he did, catching 17 passes for 224 yards, tying the FBS record for most catches by a tight end in a game and posting the second-most receiving yards in school history.
Coming into this game, Warren had never had double-digit receptions in a game.
“I’ve been talking about him being the best tight end in college football,” Franklin said. “But the reality is, he’s now part of a conversation on one of the best players in all of college football.”
Warren gave the Trojans’ revamped defense fits all game long. When they didn’t cover him, he made them pay. When they tried to cover him, he still found his way to the ball like a magnet. There was no stopping Warren on Saturday, but the Trojans couldn’t even begin to contain him. And that’s just what he did in his normal role — a position he had only started playing once he arrived at Penn State.
Elsewhere, Warren was a Swiss Army knife. In what was perhaps the play of the game, Warren lined up as the center. He snapped the ball to backup quarterback Beau Pribula, who lateraled it to starter Drew Allar, who then found Warren in the end zone for a 32-yard touchdown.
“Actually, my first position I ever played in football was center my first year of flag,” Warren said postgame. “I’ve thrown the ball 17 times in high school, but I never [had 17 catches]. … So yeah, it was fun.”
Warren also ran the ball for 4 yards on one play and even had a pass himself — a 9-yard completion that resulted in a first down for the Nittany Lions.
While the Penn State offense got off to a slow start against the Trojans, scoring only six points via two field goals in the first half, there wasn’t too much that was conservative about offensive coordinator Andy Kotelnicki’s game plan Saturday. He tried trick plays at will, moved skill position players around like chess pieces and left the revamped USC defense under D’Anton Lynn looking, at times, confused. Warren was at the center of Kotelnicki’s madness and in the second half, the unit found their stride, gaining over 300 yards and scoring 24 points. Allar, who had thrown two second-half interceptions, totaled 391 yards and two touchdowns by the end of the game.
“Coach K, Coach Franklin, they never lost faith in me,” Allar said. “We always talk in the QB room, to keep shooting. Keep shooting no matter what. Some things aren’t going to go your way. But it’s about how you bounce back.”
“I feel like our offense has stepped up a lot since last year,” Warren said. “Playing to win was something we preached on all week, not playing conservative, being aggressive. We did a great job”
It helped, too, that as Franklin and Co. made their way west, plenty of Penn State fans who were either local or made the trip peppered the stadium in bright white Saturday.
“Once we started making some plays, you could feel our Penn State presence in the stadium,” Franklin said.
USC coach Lincoln Riley took responsibility for the Trojans blowing a 14-point halftime lead. With his Trojans falling to 3-3, Riley said they have had a chance to win all six games despite playing one of the hardest schedules in the country
“To put yourself in position to win these games is friggin’ hard to do to begin with,” he said. “I get it. We have to do a better job at the end of games, I have to do a better job. We’ve got to be able to finish, and it all falls on my shoulders. That’s why they call me the head coach.”
Before the game, Riley had asked Trojans fans to bring the energy. But by the time Barker, a former walk-on, had won the game with his left foot and the stands had mostly emptied out of cardinal and gold, a gleeful Franklin and his team celebrated as if they were right at home.
The young collector who scored a one-of-a-kind baseball card featuring National League Rookie of the Year Paul Skenes has turned down a trade offer from the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Topps announced Friday that the 11-year-old from the Los Angeles area had declined the deal and instead was going to put the card — which features Skenes’ autograph and a patch from a game-worn jersey — up for auction.
𝐈𝐓’𝐒 𝐎𝐅𝐅𝐈𝐂𝐈𝐀𝐋: The 11-year-old collector who pulled the Paul Skenes 1/1 Debut Patch card has DECLINED the Pirates’ offer.
The Pirates offer included: – Two Pirates season tickets behind home plate for the next 30 years – Meet & Greet with Paul Skenes – Two Paul Skenes… pic.twitter.com/oRBhhD647j
The Pirates had put together a package that included 30 years’ worth of season tickets behind home plate at PNC Park and the chance to play a softball game on the field in exchange for the card.
Skenes’ girlfriend, LSU gymnast and influencer Livvy Dunne, also offered the card’s owner the opportunity to take in a game with her in a luxury suite at the ballpark during one of Skenes’ starts.
While the collector wrote in a journal entry shared by Topps that nabbing the card was a “dream come true,” that dream apparently did not include spending the next three decades attending games at PNC Park.
The 11-year-old collector who pulled the Paul Skenes 1/1 Debut Patch card just shared his journal entries…
The team posted on X after the decision that it was “bummed” but offered to have the fan at a game sometime during the 2025 season.
Fanatics Collect, which will handle the auctioning of the card in March, said it would donate its proceeds from the sale to fire relief funds in the Los Angeles area.
The card could hold pretty high value considering the potentially bright future ahead for the 22-year-old Skenes, who finished third in NL Cy Young Award voting after an outstanding rookie season.
The No. 1 pick in the 2023 amateur draft made his major league debut in May and put together one of the most impressive rookie seasons in recent memory. Skenes was selected as the NL’s starting pitcher in the All-Star Game after only 11 starts and finished 11-3 with a 1.96 ERA in 23 games.
Skenes said over the weekend he hasn’t thought about the potential of signing a long-term contract to remain in Pittsburgh, saying instead that his focus is on helping the Pirates take a step toward contending in 2025. He is eligible for free agency after the 2029 season.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Two-time All-America safety Xavier Watts will enter the NFL draft rather than return to Notre Dame for a sixth season.
Watts made the announcement on social media Friday, four days after the Irish lost to Ohio State in the College Football Playoff championship game in Atlanta.
Watts began his college career as a receiver in 2020 and moved to defense his second season. He had 13 interceptions over the past two seasons, most by any player in the Football Bowl Subdivision. He picked off six passes this season, running one back 100 yards to help Notre Dame seal its win against Southern California. He was voted to the Associated Press All-America first team for two straight years.
Watts, whose hometown is Omaha, Nebraska, could have returned to Notre Dame to use the extra season granted by the NCAA to athletes who were active during the 2020 pandemic season. Most draft analysts project Watts to be selected late in the first round or in the second.
“As I embark on the next chapter of my football journey, I’m filled with pride as I look back on the many memories and people that I’ll forever cherish,” Watts wrote on X. “I hope that my time in the Irish uniform has helped continue the tradition of those that came before me.”
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
OMAHA, Neb. — Calvin Jones, who rushed for more than 3,000 yards in three seasons at Nebraska and was with the Green Bay Packers when they won the Super Bowl after the 1996 season, has died. He was 54.
Police said Jones’ body was found in the basement of a house in north Omaha on Wednesday night. Police have not confirmed a cause of death pending an autopsy.
A friend of Jones, Jo Dusatko, told the Omaha World-Herald that carbon monoxide poisoning was suspected. She said the furnace in the home was not working and that Jones was using a generator in the basement.
We are deeply saddened by the passing of Husker legend and Super Bowl Champion, Calvin Jones.
Jones was a high school All-American at Central High School before he went to Nebraska, where he rushed for 3,166 yards and 40 touchdowns and was an All-Big Eight pick in 1992-93.
Jones and Derek Brown formed the tandem called the “We-Backs,” a nod to the Cornhuskers’ I-back position, with Jones the backup to Brown in 1991. Jones’ breakout that season came when he ran 27 times for a Big Eight freshman-record 294 yards and a school-record six touchdowns in a 59-23 victory over Kansas. His rushing total against the Jayhawks ranks No. 2 on the Nebraska single-game rushing chart.
Jones declared for the NFL draft in 1994 and was a third-round selection of the Raiders. He appeared in 15 games over two seasons with the Raiders and had a total of 27 carries for 112 yards and two catches for 6 yards. He appeared in one game for the Packers in 1996 but had no carries.