logo
USC football countdown to kickoff continues—Claude Pelon in focus

USC football countdown to kickoff continues—Claude Pelon in focus

USA Today2 days ago

USC football countdown to kickoff continues—Claude Pelon in focus
The countdown to USC's 2025 football season is officially on! The Trojans kick off their new campaign 90 days from today. You need something to help you while away the days and hours in the spring and summer. This is one way to do so. In this new series, countdown to kickoff, we will be counting down the days by highlighting a notable Trojan who wore each number. Today, we take a look back at former USC defensive lineman Claude Pelon.
Position: Defensive line
Years played at USC: 2014-2015
Career highlights: Originally from Orlando, Florida, Pelon spent the first three years of his collegiate career at junior college, before transferring to USC in 2014. In two seasons with the Trojans, he recorded 46 tackles and four sacks.
Pelon made two particularly memorable plays during his time in Cardinal and Gold. In a 2014 game at Arizona, he blocked a field goal that proved to be massive in the Trojans' upset of the No, 10 Wildcats. Then in the 2015 Crosstown Showdown vs. UCLA, Pelon had a strip sack of Bruins' quarterback Josh Rosen that teammate Rasheem Green picked up and ran back for a Trojans touchdown.
After USC: Pelon signed with the New York Jets as an undrafted free agent following the 2016 NFL Draft. He appeared in one game for the team in 2017, recording two tackles. Pelon also briefly spent time with the Tennessee Titans.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Recap: LSU wins Game 7, will face West Virginia in Baton Rouge Super Regional
Recap: LSU wins Game 7, will face West Virginia in Baton Rouge Super Regional

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Recap: LSU wins Game 7, will face West Virginia in Baton Rouge Super Regional

Recap: LSU wins Game 7, will face West Virginia in Baton Rouge Super Regional LSU baseball entered Monday night's matchup against the Little Rock Trojans with no margin for error. After losing to the Trojans 10-4 on Sunday, Monday's contest was a winner-take-all Game 7. The winner would advance to face West Virginia in the Super Regionals. LSU made a big comeback to win this game 10-6. LSU was once again the visiting team, and the Tigers once again took an early lead as Ethan Frey hit a solo shot in the top of the first to give LSU a 1-0 lead. Entering the game tonight, LSU had Zac Cowan and Casan Evans fresh to pitch, so I felt good about LSU's odds. Cowan got the start, and he worked through the first inning unscathed. Unfortunately, the wheels fell off for LSU in the bottom of the second inning. The Trojans scored five runs against Cowan as they kept stringing together hits to give Little Rock a 5-1 lead. Casan Evans was called out of the bullpen to try to save the day for LSU. He got the Tigers out of the inning, but the Trojans had done a ton of damage. At this point, anxiety had set in for the LSU faithful. They saw this same script play out last night, and it did not end well for LSU. I understand that things looked bleak, but there was still a lot of baseball left. This team still had enough pop in their sticks to make a comeback. That comeback began in the top of the fourth inning. LSU loaded the bases, and Frey hit a three-RBI double to cut the lead to 5-4. Evans was able to keep the Trojans off the scoreboard and keep the Tigers in the game. In the top of the sixth inning, Indiana State transfer Luis Hernandez came through with a solo homer to tie the game 5-5! In the top of the seventh inning, Frey led off the inning with a double and then advanced to third on a wild pitch. An RBI groundout by Stephen Milam would score Frey and give LSU their first lead since the first inning! With LSU clinging to a one-run lead in the bottom of the seventh inning, Evans remained on the mound. He found himself in a jam as three walks loaded the bases with two outs. Anthony Eyanson began to warm up in the bullpen. There is no tomorrow if the Tigers lose this game, so Jay Johnson was preparing to bring in one of his two aces to try to win. Evans then struck out the next hitter he faced to strand all three runners and get LSU out of the inning with a 6-5 lead. One thing that would make LSU fans feel better at this moment would be some insurance runs. Hernandez would be the leadoff hitter in the top of the eighth inning, and he had homered in his last at-bat to tie the game 5-5. On the first pitch he saw in the top of the eighth inning, he hit ANOTHER homer to extend the LSU lead to 7-5. In the bottom of the eighth inning, Evans passed the century mark as he had thrown over 100 pitches. Back-to-back hits put the tying run on first base with no outs, and Eyanson began ramping up his activity in the bullpen again. The next Trojan hitter laid down a bunt to try to put the tying run at second base, but Evans fielded the ball and got the out at third to spoil the bunt. Evans was then pulled from the game as Eyanson entered with one out and runners on first and second. The first hitter Eyanson faced hit an RBI single up the middle to cut the lead to 7-6. The next hitter was retired via the strikeout for out number two. Tanner Reaves then made a great play at third, and Jared Jones made a stretch to get out number three. We would head to the ninth inning with the Tigers leading 7-6. Jake Brown walked to start the top of the ninth inning to bring up Jones. It is no secret that Jared Jones had been in hibernation during this regional. Entering this at-bat, Jones was 1-for-14 (.071) in three games in the Baton Rouge Regional. Finally, the "Bear" got the proverbial monkey off of his back as he hit a two-run bomb to extend the LSU lead to 9-6. An RBI single from Hernandez would score Chris Stanfield and make it 10-6, Tigers. Bear Jones has The Box ROCKIN' ⚡️@bearjones_3 | ESPN — LSU Baseball (@LSUbaseball) June 3, 2025 Eyanson went out to pitch the ninth inning and close out the win for the Tigers. He retired the Trojans 1-2-3, and LSU advances to face West Virginia in a Super Regional at Alex Box Stadium. It was not easy, but Ethan Frey, Casan Evans, and Luis Hernandez came through when LSU needed them the most. The Tigers will welcome the Mountaineers into Alex Box Stadium.

Highland's Caden Quigg kick-starts the sectional final. Then he achieves ‘something my dad was able to do.'
Highland's Caden Quigg kick-starts the sectional final. Then he achieves ‘something my dad was able to do.'

Chicago Tribune

time3 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Highland's Caden Quigg kick-starts the sectional final. Then he achieves ‘something my dad was able to do.'

As is often the case, Caden Quigg got things going for Highland on Monday night. The senior center fielder said that was part of the plan against Bishop Noll in the Class 3A East Chicago Central Sectional championship game at Block Stadium. 'We knew from the jump, right away, we had to put it on them, and we weren't going to let go,' he said. Quigg led off the first inning with a single and scored the game's first run. Later in the inning, he walked with the bases loaded to force in another run. By the end of the first, Highland led 10-0. That was more than enough for the Trojans, who won their first sectional title since 2000 with a 13-0 victory in five innings. 'That first inning, we put it on them, and we did not let go at all,' Quigg said. 'We knew if we kept going, it was ours, and we did it right from the start.' It all started with Quigg. 'I was just ready to hit (Monday),' he said. 'I knew my job up there was just to do what I know how to do. Going up to the plate, I just had a clear, clean mind and just attacked the ball.' Quigg is batting .298 with 16 RBIs for Highland (17-13), which will play Andrean (27-3) in the regional championship game on Saturday. He also has 29 stolen bases, the single-season program record he set against East Chicago Central in the sectional semifinals. 'Q, I love him to death,' Highland coach Zak Pizer said. 'For him to set the goal of 29, to get that stolen base record and for him to achieve it and to put God first, it's just a testament to the man he is, the young man he is.' The record has been icing on the cake for Quigg. 'It's awesome,' he said. 'The No. 1 goal always was to win sectionals. But at the start of the year, I was looking through the record book, and I saw that I could get those steals. That was my goal. I made that my goal. I told myself I could get it, and I went after it.' Highland senior Caden VanderMeyden nearly pitched a no-hitter against the Warriors (16-10), who lost 6-5 in the regular-season matchup between the teams on May 22. VanderMeyden allowed only a double with two outs in the fifth to junior infielder Aston Orozco and matched that with a two-run double of his own. VanderMeyden struck out 11 and walked five. VanderMeyden and Quigg, a three-sport athlete who also competed in cross country and basketball for the Trojans, intend to play baseball and room together at Trinity Christian. 'He means a lot,' VanderMeyden said. 'I'm just happy to win it with him. To be with him and jumping on each other after we won it, it means a lot.' The sectional championship also means a lot to Quigg's family. His parents, Jason and Courtney, are longtime coaches in the Region. Jason Quigg, a 1992 Highland graduate, was part of the boys basketball team that reached the state semifinals in 1991 and is an assistant for the team. Courtney Quigg is an assistant for Highland's girls baseball team. 'It's amazing,' Caden Quigg said. 'I've been waiting. Ever since I was a freshman, all I wanted to do was just win a sectional. Now I'm able to do it and have something my dad was able to do.' Jason Quigg was emotional as the Trojans celebrated on the historic field. 'I wanted this for him so much,' he said. 'It's so cool. It's awesome.' Pizer collected himself before putting the sectional title in perspective. The second-year coach and former assistant graduated from Highland in 2018. 'A long time coming,' Pizer said. 'Twenty-five years — I'm 25 years old. I was probably three weeks the last time we won this. To be a 4-10 team and to win the last 10 of 13 games to keep it going with this team, it's just the resilience they have. 'It just goes to show it's our time.'

USC Running Back Makes Major NIL Announcement on Monday
USC Running Back Makes Major NIL Announcement on Monday

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

USC Running Back Makes Major NIL Announcement on Monday

USC Running Back Makes Major NIL Announcement on Monday originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The USC Trojans' 2025 college football recruiting class was one of the best in the country, ranking No. 15 nationally according to On3. Advertisement Headlined by five-star quarterback Husan Longstreet, they also signed the No. 1 junior college running back in the country Waymond Jordan. After winning the NJCAA D1 Football Offensive Player of the Year in 2024, Jordan makes his way to one of the most prestigious schools in the country to continue his football career. He ran for 1,614 rushing yards and 20 touchdowns in 12 games, both of which led the nation. On Monday, the top-ranked running back signed a massive NIL deal, where he is officially an athlete under C4 Energy. Waymond Jordan Jr. playing in high school.© Tony Giberson/tgiberson@ via Imagn Content Services, LLC C4 Energy has recently had some big names in college football sign NIL deals with them, most notably former Texas Longhorns quarterback Quinn Ewers as well as current Georgia Bulldogs wide receiver Zachariah Branch. Advertisement The first big move for Jordan, the No. 12 ranked junior college player in the 2025 recruiting cycle, as he prepares for his jump to Big Ten football. Head coach Lincoln Riley looks to improve on what was a disappointing season for the Trojans' standards. Finishing with a 7-6 record in their first season in a new and difficult Big Ten leaves USC lots of room for improvement, and could use the explosiveness of Jordan. The likely starting running back, as he and New Mexico Lobos transfer Eli Sanders will be their top two backs, will look to relieve the pressure off quarterback Jayden Maiava, and a solid wide receiver core to help him as well. Boise State transfer Prince Strachan is a tall, physical receiver who can win 50/50 balls downfield, and returning receivers Ja'Kobi Lane and Makai Lemon look to improve on solid campaigns in 2024. Advertisement Related: USC Trojans 2026 Recruiting Numbers Reveal Dominant Statistic Related: Historic Big Ten Program is Dominating 2026 Recruiting This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 2, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store