Dec. 30--Clay Helton has not slowed down since October, when he was named USC's interim coach.
His responsibilities intensified after Athletic Director Pat Haden gave him a five-year contract before the Pac-12 Conference championship game. They ratcheted even higher after Helton fired several assistants and began searching for new ones while monitoring recruiting and preparing the Trojans for the Holiday Bowl.
"It's a juggling act," Helton said Tuesday, "and thank God I know how to juggle."
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Helton joked that he might finally take a nap after national signing day in February. He will doze more soundly if USC can finish one of its most tumultuous football seasons with a victory over Wisconsin on Wednesday night at Qualcomm Stadium.
The Trojans weathered the firing of Steve Sarkisian, embraced Helton and defeated rival UCLA for the first time in four years to win the Pac-12 South.
Now they are attempting to rebound from a title-game loss against Stanford and enter the off-season on a high note.
"It helps with recruiting," Helton said of momentum created by a bowl victory. "It helps with the way you feel going into spring ball."
A victory also might quiet critics of Haden's decision to hire Helton before the season ended. A loss to the Badgers would make Helton 0-2 as the permanent head coach heading into the 2016 opener against Alabama.
The Trojans team and coaching staff that faces the Crimson Tide in Texas will look different than the group playing and scheming against Wisconsin.
Quarterback Cody Kessler, a three-year starter, is among the USC seniors playing their final college game. Kessler said he intended to take advantage of the opportunity and "end my career the right way."
That will be a challenge against a Wisconsin program that also experienced coaching upheaval.
First-year Coach Paul Chryst was Wisconsin's offensive coordinator for seven years before leaving to become head coach at Pittsburgh after the 2011 season. Former Badgers coach Bret Bielema left for Arkansas a year later and was replaced by Gary Andersen, who spent two seasons with the Badgers before leaving for Oregon State.
That paved the way for Chryst's return to a program that is making its 14th consecutive bowl appearance.
Chryst has guided Wisconsin to a 9-3 record, but the Badgers remain something of a mystery.
They rank first nationally in scoring defense and in the top six in rushing defense and pass defense. Wisconsin's losses came against Alabama, Iowa and Northwestern, who are playing in the College Football Playoff semifinals, the Rose Bowl and the Outback Bowl, respectively.