USC’s silence on O.J. Simpson’s death underscores a complicated legacy – The Mercury News

LOS ANGELES — There is always a red-lettered release, words crafted in remembrance and in glory, when a prominent Trojan dies.

When former USC assistant coach Dave Levy – a four-time national champion a part of the legendary John McKay’s staff – died in November at age 91, it came with an announcement from USC, words honoring Levy as “one of the brightest and most innovative assistant coaches in USC football history.”

When former USC wide receiver Rod Sherman – a captain on McKay’s 1966 team – died in February at age 79, it came with an announcement from USC, words honoring Sherman as the man who’d “caught one of the most famous touchdowns in USC football history” against Notre Dame in 1964.

There were no words Wednesday when O.J. Simpson died.

In the morning, the Pro Football Hall of Famer’s children posted a statement to his Twitter account that Simpson had “succumbed to his battle with cancer.” And still, no announcement from USC has come; the Southern California News Group reached out to USC for comment or to see if the program would be issuing a statement, but no response was given immediately.

His 1968 Heisman Trophy was away from its pedestal in the lobby of USC’s Heritage Hall on Wednesday, along with trophies of past Heisman winners, replaced by signs that read “Heisman on Tour.” And the only physical evidence that Simpson ever existed in a Trojans uniform on the day of his death was the commemorative Heisman banner of his No. 32 jersey underneath the peristyle at the Coliseum.

This has been the story of Simpson’s relationship with USC, ever since the brutal murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, ever since the infamous 1995 trial during which he struggled to put on the killer’s glove and was acquitted, and the 1997 civil trial that found him liable for the grisly deaths. The university has been stuck navigating the unsolvable maze of his legacy for decades, often attempting to preserve and honor Simpson the running back but not Simpson the man, all the way through his death.

The only words spoken publicly on Wednesday, from anyone across USC’s campus, was head football coach Lincoln Riley, who wasn’t yet a teenager for Simpson’s trial in 1995. And Riley notably steered far clear of addressing any of Simpson’s non-football past when asked for his thoughts on Simpson’s death after USC’s spring practice Thursday.

“Yeah, certainly as the head coach here, you obviously know about his history and his legacy, the kind of player that he was here,” Riley said of Simpson. “And we definitely, you know, certainly recognize that, and obviously extend our sympathies to his family on their loss.”

RELATED: O.J. Simpson’s slow-speed chase on June 17, 1994

In 2002, eight years after the police chase in the white Bronco that captivated the nation, Simpson walked into a USC practice in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, before the Orange Bowl, the mood rather jubilant at the return of a former Heisman winner.

“Guys were excited to see him,” USC head coach Pete Carroll said to the media then. “He’s a legend. He’s an ‘SC Heisman Trophy winner (1968). Our guys hold those guys in the highest regard.”

It was the first time Simpson had visited the team since the killings; his visit included a conversation with then-Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Carson Palmer.

“Pete did a great job – had all kinds of different people around the practice,” Palmer recalled. “I don’t remember anyone making a real big deal out of it, or thinking much of it.”

But it became quite a big deal, igniting a firestorm of backlash around USC and Simpson, former Trojans tailback great Anthony Davis told the Los Angeles Times in 2002 that it “took a lot of gall” for Simpson to show up. Fifteen years later, when Simpson was granted parole after nine years in prison for an armed robbery conviction, USC’s administration took a firm position on Simpson: He wouldn’t be invited to practice or a part of any events.

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