Hereâs everything you need to know:
â Beating Oregon could help Chip Kelly finally take flight at UCLA
â How UCLA and USC used the transfer portal to transform their football rosters
â Dorian Thompson-Robinson helps UCLA regroup late, defeat Washington
To slide or not to slide? Dual-threat QB Dorian Thompson-Robinson confronts key question
To maximize his running ability and preserve his body, Dorian Thompson-Robinson is looking for different ways to perfect his slide. In the past, the UCLA quarterback leaned on tips from his high school baseball team in Las Vegas, joining Bishop Gormanâs squad for a week to get a personal lesson. Perhaps Bruins baseball coach John Savage should stay by the phone this fall.
Thompson-Robinson is UCLAâs rushing X factor, using mature decision-making and dynamic athleticism to help round out one of the most potent running games in the Pac-12 Conference.
The Bruins (5-2, 3-1 Pac-12) have the conferenceâs second-best rushing offense, averaging 219.9 yards per game entering Saturdayâs much-anticipated matchup with No. 10 Oregon (5-1, 2-1) at the Rose Bowl.
Running backs Zach Charbonnet and Brittain Brown, who rank second and seventh in the Pac-12, respectively, in rushing yards per game, lead the way, but their dual-threat quarterback is showing how he can take the Bruins to a different level after rushing for 87 yards in UCLAâs 24-17 win at Washington on Saturday night.
âThe fact that you have a quarterback that you have to defend is a difficult thing in college football,â Bruins coach Chip Kelly said Monday. âA lot of times, some of those rushing yards are maybe on designed pass play-calls where people are in coverage and itâs actually not their rush defense, but itâs the ability to contain the quarterback. Dorianâs done a really good job of understanding where his receivers are, and if the first, second and third option are covered, he may give you a chance to get out and use his legs.â
While Thompson-Robinson, a former four-star recruit, has always been celebrated as a running threat, the senior is showing his maturity by unleashing his athleticism in smart spurts. He was scolded for boldly hurdling a defender in a blowout season-opening win against Hawaii on Aug. 28 and has replaced the highlight-reel leaps with more conservative slides. Simply running out of bounds after getting a first down wonât land Thompson-Robinson on âSportsCenter,â but it will keep him on the field for the next play. The latter is much more important for the quarterback who has yet to make it through a season without missing a start.
âWe always preach to our quarterbacks, âtouchdown, first down, get down,â â Kelly said. âYou donât want him to take a hit on every play. One of the abilities everyone talks about for a quarterback is availability, and you donât want him to take some of those shots.â
Thompson-Robinson suffered a shoulder injury Sept. 25 at Stanford and was bothered by it for weeks, despite not missing any time. Kelly said the quarterback was âclose to back to normalâ against Washington. It showed.
Thompson-Robinson was 21-for-26 passing for 183 yards and two touchdowns and also rushed for a touchdown. He has accounted for 18 touchdowns (13 passing, five rushing) this season with just three turnovers (two interceptions and one lost fumble).
For Thompson-Robinson, the recent surge is coming from a perfect mix of coaching, preparation and just plain time.
âAll that stuffâs just starting to accumulate,â said Thompson-Robinson, who started only one season at quarterback in high school before coming to UCLA. âMe getting more reps and feeling more comfortable back there, I think thatâs whatâs leading to all the success weâre having right now.â
Etc.
Wide receiver Kyle Philips, who missed Saturdayâs game at Washington, was back on the field Monday. He spent special-team periods catching passes by himself on the sideline but joined the receivers for individual offensive drills. ⌠Defensive back Mo Osling III participated in non-contact drills during practice after being limited to individual conditioning in recent weeks. ⌠Defensive back Qwuantrezz Knight limped off the field in the middle of a defensive drill after appearing to sustain a right lower leg injury. He returned to the field shortly after working with a trainer.
How UCLA and USC used the transfer portal to transform their football rosters
A three-star prospect out of San Diegoâs Cathedral Catholic High, Jordan Genmark Heath drew interest from dozens of schools in 2016. UCLA, with former coach Jim Mora, was one. The Bruin coaches who molded Anthony Barr and Eric Kendricks into first- and second-round draft picks, respectively, pitched Genmark Heath the possibility of growing into the schoolâs latest linebacking star.
Thanks, but no thanks, he said. Genmark Heath was a âsafety at heart.â
âFour years later, Iâm playing linebacker here,â the Notre Dame graduate transfer said while sitting on a chair on the side of UCLAâs Spaulding Field. âSo I guess it was always meant to be.â
Transfers like Genmark Heath are getting a second lease on their football careers. What used to be one-off additions are now critical building blocks for UCLA and USC as the transfer trend only grows in college football.
The Bruins (5-2, 3-1 Pac-12 Conference) have 16 transfers, including nine in their starting lineup. Seven, including Genmark Health, are defensive starters. They are preparing to host No. 10 Oregon on Saturday, with ESPNâs âCollege GameDayâ broadcasting from Los Angeles ahead of the contest.
Beating Oregon could help Chip Kelly finally take flight at UCLA
Almost a decade after he left that giddy success behind, the narrative about what makes him brilliant remains unchanged. Itâs all about past innovation, about all those points scored in a hurry, about what he once did with shiny helmets and speedy offense.
That could change Saturday at the Rose Bowl. This is Chip Kellyâs chance to blur his way to a new path against his old team.
Want to be known for more than what you did at Oregon? Beat Oregon.
Want to erase the rancid taste of those NFL failures? Beat Oregon.