APSAN FRANCISCO - This was the year Southern California actually wanted to stay home for a bowl game.
Instead the Trojans spent the holidays a few hundred miles north, where they will take on Boston College in the Emerald Bowl on Saturday night while the BCS championship will be held in their backyard at the Rose Bowl.
For a school that has known nothing but Bowl Championship Series games the past seven seasons and always has its sights on playing for a national championship, this could be seen as a letdown.
"People have been asking me the past couple of years if we were disappointed to play in the Rose Bowl, and I never understood that," coach Pete Carroll said. "Our players like to work out; they love to play games. I can guarantee you that they're going to play this game like it's the national championship game."
USC (8-4) has played in four straight Rose Bowls, including the last three years when the national championship was decided at the other BCS sites and the trip to Pasadena was seen by some as a consolation prize.
With the championship being held at the Rose Bowl this season for the first time since the Trojans lost to Texas four years ago, they were hoping to stay home again come bowl season.
That looked to be a real possibility early in the season after USC won at Ohio State behind freshman quarterback Matt Barkley. But then came a loss at Washington, blowouts to Oregon and Stanford and a season-ending loss at home to Arizona that dropped the Trojans into a tie for fifth place in the conference and into the Emerald Bowl against Boston College (8-4).
"When we started losing some games we knew we were going to be in a different setting than we'd been in. When it came up that we'd get to go to the Emerald Bowl and San Francisco, that was really exciting," said Carroll, who was born here and spent much of his life in the Bay Area.
The Trojans could be without star running back Joe McKnight, who didn't arrive in San Francisco until Wednesday night because of an investigation into whether he violated rules by using an SUV that doesn't belong to him.
This bowl experience is very different for the Trojans, who were able to sleep in their own beds, practice on their own field and go through their usual routines when their bowl trip consisted of a bus ride to Pasadena.
"Normally, this whole process is in L.A. and it's real familiar to us," senior safety Taylor Mays said. "It's the first time we've really been away — having to go to an away hotel, practicing away, being in a different city than we're accustomed to. I don't know where I'm going here, so I'm going to follow whatever coach P.C. does."
While Carroll took the team to a pair of Orange Bowls and a Las Vegas Bowl early in his tenure at USC, there's only one player on the entire roster who has experienced a bowl game away from campus.
Sixth-year senior offensive lineman Jeff Byers was a freshman when the Trojans went to the Orange Bowl and beat Oklahoma to win the 2004 national championship. Every other year he's been at USC has ended with a Rose Bowl bid.
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