What’s next for Arizona State? Utah is what’s next.
Days after the upheaval caused by their coaching change, the Sun Devils must prepare for the worst possible opponent to face under the circumstances.
No team inflicts more punishment, no team intends greater brutality or makes opponents fight for every inch of turf quite like the Utes.
The defending Pac-12 champions have won nine of their past 10 conference games — and by an average margin of 21 points. The stretch includes a second-half steamrollering of ASU in the middle of last season that gave Utah control of the South division.
How will ASU handle the inevitable assault Saturday night, less than one week after Herm Edwards “relinquished” his post atop the program?
For that matter, how will the Sun Devils handle the next two months?
Fortunately, two in-season coaching changes a year ago provide us with a broad framework from which to observe.
On one end of the spectrum: USC.
The Trojans canned Clay Helton after a Week Two loss to Stanford, promoted assistant Donte Williams to the role of interim coach and proceeded to flounder and flail.
After a brief post-tumult bounce (a blowout win at Washington State), the Trojans dropped seven of nine and were embarrassed repeatedly.
Meanwhile, Washington State followed a different path. The school fired Nick Rolovich in mid-October for failing to comply with the state vaccine mandate.
After an emotional week and close loss to BYU, the Cougars won three of their last four, smacked Washington around, nearly claimed the North title and went bowling.
One team won immediately after parting ways with its coach, then regressed.
The other struggled initially, then finished with a flourish.
We won’t attempt to guess how the Sun Devils react under interim coach Shaun Aguano, except to caution against quick conclusions.
The schedule is rugged, with three consecutive games against ranked opponents: No. 13 Utah, No. 7 USC and No. 18 Washington.
At the end of the triple-whammy comes a bye, at which point Aguano will be able to step back, assess his team’s psyche, reset expectations (if necessary), and prepare for the stretch run.
Like Washington State, the Sun Devils have plenty to play for — win five of nine, and they’re bowl-eligible.
But as we saw with USC, urgency can disappear quickly when the players know the current boss isn’t the future boss.
To the picks …
Last week: 4-5
Season: 9-15
Five-star special: 2-1
Spreads taken from BetMGM (as of 6:30 a.m. Wednesday)
Game totals in parenthesis
All times Pacific
UCLA at Colorado
Kickoff: 11 a.m. on Pac-12 Networks
Line: UCLA -22.5 (total: 57.5)
Comment: After the narrow escape from South Alabama and with Washington coming to town next Friday night, the Bruins would be facing a classic trap situation here — except CU doesn’t have the teeth to take advantage. We’re most intrigued by the Buffaloes’ choice of quarterbacks and whether promising freshman Owen McCown can inject life into the program and the season.
Pick: UCLA
Oregon at Washington State
Kickoff: 1 p.m. on FOX
Line: Oregon -6.5 (total: 57.5)
Comment: WSU’s ownership of the Ducks disappeared when Mike Leach departed for Mississippi State, but this stacks up as a closer game than we’ve witnessed in either of the past two years (both Oregon wins). Two new quarterbacks plus two stout defenses plus two teams with designs on a berth in the conference championship equals one must-see affair. Our guess: It comes down to the kicking game.
Pick: Washington State
Arizona at Cal
Kickoff: 2:30 p.m. on Pac-12 Networks
Line: Cal -3 (total: 50.5)
Comment: This has quietly been one of the best series in the conference dating to the four-overtime epic in 1996. Each of the past seven meetings has been decided by one possession, and this edition should make it eight in a row. The line opened with the Bears as a 4.5-point favorite and has understandably moved toward even. The quarterbacks (Cal’s Jack Plummer and Arizona’s Jayden de Laura) are just erratic enough to make mayhem possible.
Pick: Arizona
USC at Oregon State
Kickoff: 6:30 p.m. on Pac-12 Networks
Line: USC -6.5 (total: 70.5)
Comment: The only game of the week matching undefeated teams was passed over by ESPN and Fox, hence its unfortunate position on the Pac-12 Networks. The Beavers’ hot start has created circumstances similar to 2006 and 2008, when OSU toppled the mighty Carroll-era Trojans. But this strikes us as the perfect opportunity for USC’s sensational offense and disruptive defense to produce a crowd-silencing show of force.
Pick: USC
Stanford at Washington
Kickoff: 7:30 p.m. on FS1
Line: Washington -14 (total: 63.5)
Comment: The Cardinal had two weeks to prepare while Washington must recalibrate after a stirring win over Michigan State — a significant edge in preparation for the visitors. Add Stanford’s first-rate passing game and recent history of success against UW, and we view the point spread as being too high by a touchdown. (The line opened at 9.5, by the way.) The best play here is the Over. Neither team will stop the other.
Pick: Stanford
Utah at Arizona State
Kickoff: 7:30 p.m. on ESPN
Line: Utah -14.5 (total: 54)
Comment: The initial line had Utah favored by 5.5 points, then Edwards was fired and the betting public heaved money in Utah’s direction. ASU’s emotional state adds an element of the unknown, but this much is apparent: The same defense that allowed Eastern Michigan to rush for 305 yards last weekend now must stop the most physical running game in the conference. We don’t see ASU holding up for four quarters, and maybe not for three.
Pick: Utah
Straight-up winners: UCLA, Oregon, Cal, USC, Stanford and Utah
Five-star special: Stanford. There will be no middle ground in Seattle: Either the Cardinal conjures a major upset or the Huskies keep rolling and end it early. We like the former.