Gary Patterson is headed west, reshaping the late chapters of one of the most influential coaching careers in modern college football.
The longtime TCU head coach and defensive innovator has agreed to become Southern California’s new defensive coordinator under Lincoln Riley, USC confirmed last week. Patterson, who was named earlier this month to the College Football Hall of Fame’s 2026 class, brings four decades of experience and a résumé that places him among the most accomplished coaches of the modern era.
Patterson spent 22 seasons as the head coach at TCU, compiling a 181–79 record and transforming the Horned Frogs from a regional afterthought into a national brand. During his tenure in Fort Worth, TCU won or shared conference championships in three different leagues and produced 11 double-digit win seasons. Patterson is one of only four coaches to win the Associated Press National Coach of the Year award twice.
The defining moment of the Patterson era came during the 2010 season, when TCU finished 13–0 and defeated Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl, securing a No. 2 final ranking behind Auburn. Under his leadership, the Horned Frogs finished inside the AP Top 10 six times, and his defenses became synonymous with consistency and discipline at a time when offensive innovation dominated the sport.
That era ended abruptly in October 2021, when Patterson and TCU mutually agreed to part ways after a 3–5 start following three straight middling seasons. His departure closed one of the longest tenures in major college football and marked the end of a defining chapter in the program’s history.
Since leaving TCU, Patterson has remained mostly on the periphery of the sport. He served as an on-field analyst at Texas during Steve Sarkisian’s first season in Austin in 2022, took a year away from coaching in 2023, and briefly worked as a consultant at Baylor in 2024 before stepping away again last fall.
Now he resurfaces at USC, replacing D’Anton Lynn, who departed for his alma mater, Penn State, shortly before the Trojans’ loss to TCU in the Alamo Bowl. Lynn had spent the previous two seasons restoring competence to a defense that struggled mightily during Riley’s early tenure in Los Angeles.
Patterson has not served as a defensive coordinator since the early stages of his TCU career, when he worked under Dennis Franchione before being promoted to head coach in 2000. Still, his arrival represents a significant move for Riley, whose tenure at USC has yet to match the expectations that followed his arrival from Oklahoma.
Despite Caleb Williams’ Heisman Trophy-winning season in 2022, the Trojans have not seriously contended for a conference championship or a College Football Playoff berth. USC showed progress last season, finishing 9–4 with three road losses to ranked opponents, but pressure is mounting as Riley enters his fifth year.
USC enters the season with a roster shaped by recent recruiting classes and transfer portal additions, and Patterson’s arrival reflects the program’s continued emphasis on improving defensively. The position marks Patterson’s first full-time on-field role since leaving TCU in 2021.
“As a Hall of Fame coach who is one of the game’s most highly regarded defensive minds, he brings a wealth of success and experience to our program,” Riley said in a statement. “His impact will be immediate, elevating our defense and strengthening the culture we’ve built.”