Getty ImagesUSC coach Pete Carroll said Tuesday his team will violate a NCAA rule and wear their red home jerseys Saturday against crosstown rival UCLA, thus forfeiting a timeout since as the visiting team they are required to wear white, ESPN reported.
It was initially thought USC would lose one timeout per half, but according to the Orange County Register, the NCAA says one one timeout total will be taken away.
"I don't care about it right now," Carroll said, in reference to losing the timeout. "I think it's the fun thing to do, and I think the fans will appreciate it over time."
The schools haven't both worn their home jerseys since 1982, when the Trojans wore red and the Bruins blue in the Los Angeles Coliseum.
"I just thought it was a really cool tradition," Carroll told ESPN.
Carroll added that he isn't suggesting that UCLA will be a pushover and that he talked with former UCLA coach Karl Dorrell and current coach Rick Neuheisel about the move.
"It's exciting," Neuheisel said. "I think wearing the home jerseys is a great tradition."
To show their approval, a UCLA spokesman says the Bruins will call a timeout to even the playing field Saturday after USC is penalized.
No. 5 USC must beat its crosstown rival UCLA to reach the Rose Bowl again. The Trojans are already assured of at least a share of their record seventh consecutive conference title.
"Our only concern is going up to Pasadena next week and taking care of the Pac-10,'' USC linebacker Brian Cushing said after the Trojans crushed intersectional rival Notre Dame 38-3 on Saturday night.
Barring big upsets, the Trojans (10-1, 7-1 Pac-10) will face No. 6 Penn State (11-1) on New Year's Day in Pasadena for the second time. USC won a 14-3 decision in the 1923 Rose Bowl in the first of eight games between the schools. Each has won four, with the Nittany Lions prevailing 22-15 in the most recent matchup at Giants Stadium in the 2000 Kickoff Classic.
Then-No. 1 USC fell behind Oregon State 21-0 in the first half of its conference opener Sept. 25 before losing a 27-21 to the Beavers. USC has won eight straight since then, outscoring the opposition 314-49. But the weakness of the Pac-10 and strength of the Southeastern and Big 12 Conferences have almost surely made that one loss one too many.
In all likelihood, those conferences will produce the opponents in the BCS championship game Jan. 8.
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"We're not done yet,'' Carroll said. "We get one more chance to go across town. We just keep playing. We're going to the Rose Bowl, one way or another.''
USC needed a victory over UCLA two years ago in Pasadena to advance to the BCS title game, but the Bruins upset the Trojans 13-9. So USC shouldn't enter the game overconfident, although the Bruins (4-7, 3-5) don't appear to have the talent required to spring that kind of an upset again. The Trojans have won eight of the last nine games between the teams.
The Trojans, 27-0 in November games under Carroll, extended their winning streak over Notre Dame to seven - their longest in the 80-game intersectional series between two of college football's storied programs. They've won those seven games by an average of 27 points.
Mark Sanchez passed for 267 yards and two touchdowns, but the story for USC, as it's been all season, was the defense. The Fighting Irish didn't get a first down until the final play of the third quarter and finished with only four first downs and 91 yards of total offense.
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"Is this the best group we have had? Well, it's the best we've ever played on defense,'' said Carroll, whose team has allowed just 10 touchdowns in 11 games and an NCAA low 7.8 points per game. "We just didn't give up many yards tonight. We continually controlled the line of scrimmage.
"Notre Dame is a very good passing team and it just seemed like series after series, it just wasn't happening for them. We played a very well-rounded game.''
USC has an 86-15 record since Carroll became coach in 2001, and the Trojans have won 44 of their last 45 at the Los Angeles Coliseum.
Miami coach Al Golden says the worst is behind him, but his headaches figure to continue now that former booster Nevin Shapiro, now in jail, says his involvement with the Hurricanes program will result in stiff penalties.
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