USC Basketball: ASU's Bobby Hurley Explains How His Club Exploited A Major Trojans Weakness

The Cardinal and Gold have struggled mightily of late.
USC Basketball: ASU's Bobby Hurley Explains How His Club Exploited A Major Trojans Weakness
USC Basketball: ASU's Bobby Hurley Explains How His Club Exploited A Major Trojans Weakness /
In this story:

Your USC Trojans dropped their fourth straight contest Saturday, falling 82-67 to the Arizona State University Sun Devils on the road (the same exact margin, incidentally, by which USC lost to the Arizona Wildcats on Wednesday).

A big element behind the Cardinal and Gold's recent bad luck is clearly the absence of the team's starting backcourt, in freshman Isaiah Collier and fifth-year All-Pac-12 guard Boogie Ellis.

ASU head coach Bobby Hurley accurately pinpointed the loss of USC's two top scorers as a big weakness worth exploiting, writes Devon Henderson of Cronkite Sports.

“[Unfortunate] for USC not having Collier and [Ellis],” Hurley said. “You have to take advantage of that.”

The Trojans' two substitutes for Collier and Ellis, sophomore Oziyah Sellers and freshman Bronny James, each scored a fairly modest seven points. Of the two, only Sellers got to the foul line, splitting his two tries there.

Collier underwent a right hand surgery last week and is expected to miss the next 3-5 weeks of action for the reeling Trojans, while Ellis is considered day-to-day with a hamstring ailment.

Obviously the Trojans are missing some major creation and playmaking in the backcourt. Although James and Sellers are totally competent, they're just a bit raw in comparison to the players they're replacing.

Next up for USC is a bout against another 8-11 Pac-12 Southern California club, the UCLA Bruins, slated for this Saturday.


Published
Alex Kirschenbaum
ALEX KIRSCHENBAUM

Tell Alex, were you in the joint the night Wilt scored 100 points? Or when the Celtics won titles back-to-back and didn't give nobody no kind of slack?