Keyshawn Johnson Unloads On State Of USC Trojans Football Program
If you listen closely, you can hear the sound of tradition shattering in Los Angeles. The news that the USC Trojans and Notre Dame Fighting Irish, a rivalry that has survived wars and spanned nearly a century, are taking a “break” starting in 2026. Keyshawn Johnson isn’t buying what the sides are selling. Administrators cite scheduling logistics and College Football Playoff positioning. What did Johnson have to say?
Johnson Says the Quiet Part Out Loud
When the news broke that the Trojans would be pausing the series, reportedly due to concerns about how a late-season loss to the Irish might hurt their playoff chances, Johnson took to social media with a reaction that was equal parts heartbreak and fury. He didn’t offer a PR-friendly statement. He didn’t ask for patience. He went straight for the jugular.
“Just say we scared,” Johnson posted. “Iโll accept that at least itโs the truth.”
It is a sentiment that resonates with a lot of old-school fans. The idea that a powerhouse program like USC needs to curate a softer schedule to sneak into the playoffs feels wrong to the alumni who built the brand. For Johnson, it is an admission of inferiority. If you have to dodge the fight to win the war, do you really deserve the trophy?
Calling Out the “Imposters” In Charge
Johnson didn’t stop at calling the team scared. He aimed his sights directly at the athletic department and Head Coach Lincoln Riley, accusing the current leadership of failing to understand the DNA of the program.
“Weโve got people in there that are not Trojans, that donโt know anything about being Trojans,” Johnson ranted in a video response. “We running from teams now? We running from Notre Dame? Hell, why donโt we run from Oregon and Michigan and Ohio State?”
The frustration is palpable. For a legend who played in an era where you lined up against the best to prove you were the best, this strategic maneuvering feels like a betrayal. Johnson even took a direct shot at Rileyโs job security, referencing the coach’s hesitation to play Notre Dame. “You ain’t gonna be here in the future,” Johnson warned, noting that missing the playoffs usually leads to a moving van in Los Angeles.
Is This the End Of Gridiron Tradition?
The reality is that Johnson is voicing a fear shared by fans across the nation: that the soul of college football is being sold for television rights and playoff brackets. He compared the situation to other sacred rivalries, noting youโd never see Ohio State and Michigan call it quits just because the schedule got tough.
“It makes zero sense,” Johnson said, summing up the confusion of the fanbase. “Itโs hard to support this program when we keep doing this type of behavior.”
While the suits in the boardrooms crunch the numbers on strength-of-schedule metrics, icons are reminding us what actually makes college football special. It isn’t the algorithms; it’s the Saturday clashes that mean everything. And right now, USC looks like they are taking their ball and going home.
