Who is Lincoln Riley wife?

0

 



Lincoln Riley’s Family Had A Role In Oklahoma’s Latest Embarrassing Effort

What Shohei Ohtani’s record-setting contract means for Angels trade rumors by Mark Powell

Bryce Young injury: Slow-motion replay should concern Alabama fans (Video) by Mark Powell

Lincoln Riley continues to haunt the Oklahoma Sooners, as the TCU Horned Frogs defeated them with the help of his brother, offensive coordinator Garrett Riley.

The coaching carousel in college football was a wild ride, as some of the top names were on the move. One of those names was Lincoln Riley, who left the Oklahoma Sooners to take the head coaching job at USC. There was no love lost for Riley from the Sooners, after he left the program. Even though Riley is no longer their head coach, the Sooners were dealt another tough “L.”

On Saturday, Oklahoma got pummeled by the TCU Horned Frogs, losing 55-24. The Horned Frogs offense put up those 55 points and 668 yards of total offense. The offensive coordinator who came up with their plan of attack was Garrett Riley.

Yes, Garrett Riley. The younger brother of Lincoln.

As if the loss could not get any worse for the Sooners.

Prior to joining the Horned Frogs, Riley was the quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator for the SMU Mustangs. Last year, the Mustangs, led by Riley, averaged 466.8 yards of offense (13th in nation) and 38.4 points (10th in nation) per game, via Sports Reference. As you can see, Garrett knows how to coach an offense, and the production of the Horned Frogs on Saturday should not come as a shock.

That, and it showed that even though head coach Brent Venables was an acclaimed defensive coordinator for the Clemson Tigers, the Sooners defense is still an issue.

TCU took a commanding 41-17 lead in the first half. Quarterback Max Duggan threw three touchdown passes and ran for a 67-yard score. Kendre Miller and Emari Demercado also ran for touchdowns of their own.

The total numbers of offensive yards the Horned Frogs put up in the first half? 479 yards!

In the span of one year, a Riley left Oklahoma for another program and another Riley left with a W for TCU. That’s rough.

For more College Football news, analysis, opinion and unique coverage by FanSided, including Heisman Trophy and College Football Playoff rankings, be sure to bookmark these pages.


USC’s Lincoln Riley And Utah’s Cam Rising Almost Wound Up Together At Oklahoma. Instead, They’re Pac-12 Foes

(Marcio Jose Sanchez | AP) Southern California head coach Lincoln Riley runs onto the field during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Washington State Saturday, Oct. 8, 2022, in Los Angeles.

  | Oct. 15, 2022, 12:00 p.M.

When the 20th-ranked University of Utah hosts No. 7 USC on Saturday evening at Rice-Eccles Stadium, first-year Trojans coach Lincoln Riley will need to figure out how to slow down Utes quarterback Cam Rising.

Years ago, Riley and Rising nearly wound up on the same side, albeit 1,300 miles to the east in Norman, Okla.

“He’s a cool kid,” Riley told reporters in Los Angeles earlier this week. “It was good to be able to reconnect with him, it had been a while, reconnect with him at the Pac-12 media day (in late July). He’s a neat kid, he’s got a great family. It’s been cool to see, he bounced around a little bit and he’s obviously found a tremendous home.”

Rising’s recruitment out of Newbury Park (Calif.) High School began picking up steam once he ascended to starting quarterback as a sophomore. Washington State, Cal, Oregon State and USC all offered before Halloween. Michigan, LSU, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Alabama and a host of others came the following winter and spring after Rising threw for 3,213 yards and 40 touchdowns against just one interception, finishing with over 4,000 total yards and 51 total touchdowns.

With those schools among the ones showing early interest, but with more to come if Rising waited it out, he took an unofficial visit to Oklahoma in July 2016. He offered a verbal commitment to the Sooners the next month.

The primary recruiter for Rising? Sooners offensive coordinator Lincoln Riley, who was just 33 at the time and was coming off a 2015 season in which he received the Broyles Award, given annually to the nation’s top assistant coach.

Rising, the No. 22 overall quarterback and No. 11 pro-style QB in the class of 2018 according to 247sports, was committed to Oklahoma for all of eight and a half months. On April 22, 2017, he decommitted from Oklahoma and committed to Texas. This was less than two months before longtime Sooners head coach Bob Stoops retired and Riley was promoted to head coach.

(Ashley Landis | AP) Utah quarterback Cameron Rising (7) throws during the first half of an NCAA college football game against UCLA in Pasadena, Calif., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2022.

“I think at the time, it was a great decision for myself, but things changed,” Rising said during a phone interview last fall when asked if, in hindsight, he thought he committed to Oklahoma too early.

Added Cam’s father, Nicko, last fall: “I don’t know how he would have worked out at Oklahoma, I think he would’ve been fine. Lincoln told us he handpicked Cam over anyone in that recruiting class. That could just be recruiting talk, but that was Trevor Lawrence, that was Matt Corral, there were a bunch of good quarterbacks in that class.”

The lone high school quarterback Oklahoma signed for its 2018 class was Tanner Mordecai, whose 247sports grade was similar to that of Rising. Mordecai never started a game for the Sooners. He backed up Kyler Murray in 2018, then lost camp quarterback competitions to Jalen Hurts and Spencer Rattler before transferring to SMU, where he has started 17 consecutive games.

It is worth noting that in late-November 2016, at which point Rising had been committed for almost four months, Riley was linked to the head-coach opening at Oregon, which had just fired Mark Helfrich after four seasons. Leaving for Oregon never gained much traction, at least not publicly. Riley remained at Oklahoma, but in discussing that situation last fall, Nicko Rising called it “a little bit of a violation of the trust,” while indicating that had Riley left, Cam would not have gone to Oklahoma.

When reached via text message this week, Nicko Rising declined to elaborate on what happened at Oklahoma that facilitated his son’s decommitment.

Ultimately, it is fair to say that things have panned out for both Riley and Rising. Riley is one of the game’s elite young head coaches, having taken Oklahoma to the College Football Playoff three times, with a fourth trip possible in his first season with USC.

Rising wound up at Texas as a freshman in 2018, then transferred to Utah, where a detour-filled road led him to last season’s legacy-defining run to the Rose Bowl.

“It seems like he’s really been a great fit there for the team and what they’ve done offensively,” Riley said. “He’s run it very well and then you can see this year just his evolution, right? He’s more experienced, they’re doing more things I think through him, which is no surprise. Running the ball well, throwing it well. That’s why I recruited him coming out, I thought he was a really good player, and he’s been a really good player. Obviously not on the same side as him this week, but I’m excited for his career and how it’s gone and how it’ll go after this.”


Lincoln Riley Reveals How Culture-building Takes Place Inside A College Football Program

On a broad and very general level, one can see that Lincoln Riley is earning high marks as USC head coach. Crucially, he isn’t always hitting the target as a play-caller, as shown against Oregon State. Yet, the Trojans still won that game. Riley the play-caller has been good this year. Riley the leader has been great, getting all these transfers and new faces to play well as a group. Riley’s assistant coaches, most notably defensive coordinator Alex Grinch, have done well in bringing players along and creation cohesion on the roster.

We can all see this is what a winning culture looks like, the kind of culture many skeptics felt USC wouldn’t be able to develop in Year 1 of Riley’s tenure. How has this all come together so quickly?

Riley offered some insights when answering questions from assembled media earlier this week. He discussed his approach to playing receivers and non-QB skill position players:

Riley noted how Travis Dye has been a central helper of the coaching staff in building culture and setting an example for teammates in the locker room and on the field:

Riley then emphasized the importance of his role — not in micro-managing players himself, but in making sure his coaches are coaching their position groups the right way, so that the caliber of instruction in all phases of play is up to standard:

This is how culture is built. So far, it’s a winning formula for Lincoln Riley at USC.

Story originally appeared on Trojans Wire

Tags

Post a Comment

0Comments
Post a Comment (0)