If It’s Friday, It’s Time For A USC Notes Column

USC pitcher Ben Cushnie has entered the transfer portal. He pitched 22 innings last season and had a 1.64 ERA with 13 strikeouts. Another pitcher, Garren Rizzo, who pitched only nine innings before getting injured, entered the portal. Freshman pitcher Jake Sekany, who redshirted, entered the portal this morning.

  • Geoffrey Garrett, the dean of USC’s Marshall School of Business, was ousted by a faculty coup on Wednesday, according to LAMaterial.com. And in a delicious irony, the popular former dean, Jim Ellis, who was forced out and replaced by Garrett, is going to be advisor to the interim dean.

Garrett had been hired with a lot of fanfare by Carol Folt.

The faculty had been upset over declining enrollment and cuts to graduate programs.

  • When is the last time a USC game at the Coliseum had this energy?
  • And now for some history:
  • There was intense speculation in May, 1975, that John McKay might leave USC for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. That was about six months before McKay was hired.

It was probably crazy he remained the coach at USC after taking the job. But the Trojans were 7–0 and ranked No. 3 in the nation when Tampa Bay hired him. USC then lost four straight games.

Some players felt McKay lost interest. He fell asleep in his office during a bowl practice and student managers had to wake him up and get him out to the field.

  • When USC played Michigan in the 1977 Rose Bowl, USC president John Hubbard made a $10 bet with President Gerald Ford, who played for the Wolverines.
  • There are so many great stories of past USC figures that don’t get spotlighted enough.

Virgil Lubberden was the student editor of the USC yearbook in 1949. Under his editorship, the largest number of female staffers worked for the yearbook.

Lubberden eventually returned to USC to become business manager of the athletic dept. and then associate athletic director for more than 25 years. He was also the first permanent game manager of the Rose Bowl, serving from 1972-85 and he was inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame in 2008.

Virgil and his twin brother, Verle, were drafted during World War II and placed in the same military unit. On Nov. 14, 1944, the twins were part of a drive to Strasbourg, France, when a mortar exploded and injured Verle’s leg and arm. Virgil tended his brother, who was then taken to the hospital.

The next day, Virgil, no longer with his injured brother, was struck by a mortar round that injured his arm and leg. The brothers ended up in beds next to each in the hospital. After multiple surgeries and a long recovery process, the brothers, who grew up in Iowa, decided to return to California where they went to army training.

They enrolled at USC in the fall of 1945 and were devout Trojan fans for the rest of their lives. The brothers still lived together well into their late 80’s.

Virgil Lubberden
  • When Virgil worked in the athletic dept., he was famous for always being the first one in the office. One morning in 1971, he saw two caretakers approach what they thought was a drunk student laying in the baseball infield at Bovard Field.

Lubberden went to see what was going on and the trio discovered it was former USC pitcher Bruce Gardner.

“He was sprawled out, face down,” Lubberden told Inside Sports. “I didn’t realize at first it was Bruce. It was just unbelievable when I found out who it was.”

Gardner had walked out to the infield and shot himself in the head. He had three plaques with him when he died: A baseball All-American certificate, his USC diploma and a suicide note.

Gardner had a 40-5 record at USC from 1958-60 with a 2.72 ERA. His 40 career victories was a USC record for nearly 40 years. He won a school-record 18 games in 1960 and was named national player of the year. He was even 10-0 on the USC freshmen team.

But he never got over the fact his mother refused to let him sign with the Chicago White Sox after his freshman year at USC for $66,500. By the time he signed a pro contract in 1960 after playing at USC, his stock had dropped and it was for a $12,000 bonus. He then had arm problems and was out of baseball after three years in the minors.

Bruce Gardner

PICTURES OF THE WEEK

Victoria Principal

Beverly Adams

VIDEO OF THE WEEK

You might have seen everything but you have you seen Johnny Bench on Hee Haw?

Bench sang the Jim Croce classic, “You Don’t Mess Around With Jim” in January, 1973 (the video incorrectly says 1969). This was just a couple months after he won his second National League MVP award after he hit ,270 with 40 home runs and 125 RBI.

Can you imagine an MVP doing this today? But then they couldn’t sing like Bench.

12 thoughts on “If It’s Friday, It’s Time For A USC Notes Column

  1. KAM:: So a lot of the SC pitchers are bailing

    DON: : A pitcher in baseball commands the most NIL, similar to football quarterbacks only at a lesser amount

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Tragic about Gardner. People forget that irrespective of outward appearances, you may never really know what a person is dealing with.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. KAM: :The T r u m p administration has found at least 146,000 i l l e g a l a l i e n children that were unaccounted for during the Senile J o e B i d e n administration.

      DON: A total of 450,000 went missing under Senile J o e B i d e n — and “nearly 300,000” are still unaccounted for. Mainstream Moderate D e m o c r a t s who used to lecture us about “The Children” actually like child slavery and p r o s t i t u t i o n .

      Like

  3. Bruce Gardner turned down a small fortune of nearly $70,000 in 1960 when a good salary was $10,000. It appears he knew he’d never make that kind of money again outside baseball, and so he couldn’t take it

    SC’s twins, Virgil and Verle remind us that even the men that return home alive from wars can be physically battered

    Like

    1. KAM: Riddle me this LA: If it’s illegal for non-citizens to vote, why the Hell does the West LA Library have a display for non citizens that includes a VOTER REGISTRATION specifically for non citizens that allows them to “preregister” to vote. They even have a special section on the registration that allows you to vote ANONYMOUSLY if you don’t feel “safe” putting your address. Gee what could possibly go wrong?! Seems it’s be pretty easy to send in that form and get a ballot even if you legally can’t vote in California and no one would ever know if you do it anonymously and the worst part is…

      DON: LA has apparently made this “legal” despite it being against federal law. Found at: West Los Angeles Public Library 11360 Santa Monica Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90025…

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  4. DON: I always believed that Americans have not universally embraced soccer because there is too little scoring in the game

    KAM: Maybe that is part of soccer’s charm– because goals are so hard to come by, each one is worthy of independent celebration

    Like

    1. KAM: After MASSIVE FRAUD Was Found, Los Angeles D e m o c r a t s’ “Homeless Agency” DEFUNDED by P r e s i d e n t T r u m p ’ s Administration .

      DON: Tens of Millions in Taxpayer Funding CUT!!

      Like

  5. DON: But it is frustrating when a team has a nice march down the field and still ends up with nothing.

    KAM: Perhaps they could instill something akin to the ‘field goal in football, where a team that is goal-thwarted still gets some point credit

    DON: –Like having 3-points for a goal and 1-point for a free kick. But soccer fans are traditionalists and will never agree to that

    Like

    1. KAM: F B I Raids Ohio D e m o c r a t B a l l o t Harvesting Group’s Headquarters

      This Follows Thousands of Suspect Registrations in 2024 Election

      DON: Weird how there are no R e p u b l i c a n B a l l o t Harvesting scandals. It’s as if D e m o c r a t s have to cheat to win.

      Like

  6. wow, bench looks appropriately awkward…i wonder how in the world they got him to do this?? you whipper-snappers weren’t around back in the 70’s when they tried to turn everyone of some notable fame into singers: i am reminded of the painfully stiff Mark Spitz who was forced onto variety shows to do comedy and singing. he even had a short-lived show at one of the local theme parks! ugh.

    #OnlyWolfCouldPullThatOff

    Liked by 1 person

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