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Latest recruiting win makes it harder for USC to move on from Riley
Southern California Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley. Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Latest recruiting win makes it harder for USC to move on from Lincoln Riley

USC Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley received another significant recruiting win on Friday. For a coach potentially on the hot seat entering 2025, it could make it harder for USC to part ways.

Wide receiver Ethan "Boobie" Feaster, an ESPN 300 four-star recruit, reclassified for the 2026 class in February after originally being slated as a 2027 recruit. At the start of the long U.S. holiday weekend, he selected USC over a trio of SEC programs: Alabama Crimson Tide, LSU Tigers and Texas A&M Aggies.

When explaining his decision, Feaster told ESPN's Eli Lederman, "They're going to put me in the best position to go in the first round."

Considering the massive success of LSU receivers in the pros in recent years, Feaster's claim could be considered bold. However, USC is no slouch at producing NFL wide receivers, with Jordan Addison, Drake London, Michael Pittman and Amon-Ra St. Brown among the talented former Trojans receivers to carve out successful careers this decade.

Feaster specifically mentioned Riley as a selling point for choosing USC, adding, "I know coach Riley. No matter what, he's going to throw the ball and get it to his best player, and they're always going to have a quarterback."

Per ESPN, the Trojans rank No. 1 in the 2026 high-school recruiting cycle, which would be their first first-place finish since 2007.

The promising future prospects could leave USC administrators with a difficult decision should Riley underwhelm again in Year 4.

Riley has posted a progressively worse record in each of his three seasons as Trojans head coach after being poached from Oklahoma.

He led USC to an 11-3 record, its best in five seasons, in his first year, before falling to 8-5 in 2023. Last season, USC's first as a Big Ten member, the program went 7-6, including 4-5 in conference.

Because USC is a private institution, details of Riley's contract were never publicized, although federal tax returns obtained by USA Today showed he made $11.5M in total earnings in 2023.

USC hasn't gotten its money's worth from hiring Riley, and in the difficult Big Ten, it might not reap many rewards this fall. Per ESPN's Football Power Index, the Trojans are the conference's projected fifth-best team and expected to go 8-4.

USC might not be satisfied with those results, but parting with Riley could already be off the table. Considering the program's incoming talent, the best days of the Riley era could be in the future. The big question is whether the Trojans will have enough patience to reach that point.

Eric Smithling

Eric Smithling is a writer based in New Orleans, LA, whose byline also appears on Athlon Sports. He has been with Yardbarker since September 2022, primarily covering the NFL and college football, but also the NBA, WNBA, men’s and women’s college basketball, NHL, tennis and golf. He holds a film studies degree from the University of New Orleans

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