Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

New rules make future uncertain

- By Ben Bolch

Seniors could be staying, freshmen could be leaving, high school prospects could be wondering how they fit in amid all the turnover.

College football roster management will be one giant headache over the next few years amid an eligibilit­y extension that could bloat rosters and a proposed transfer rule that could allow players to depart in waves.

“You could say, ‘Hey, we’ve got a ton of depth now,’ ” UCLA coach Chip Kelly said, “and then if that [transfer] rule passes in January, you don’t have the depth that you thought you had.”

Kelly said there’s so much uncertaint­y that he hasn’t begun to ponder how he’ll manage his roster beyond this season.

UCLA’s seven seniors and four graduate transfers could opt to return in 2021 after the NCAA granted oneyear eligibilit­y extensions in response to the disruption­s to the college sports calendar caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

That doesn’t guarantee anyone will come back. The players with expiring eligibilit­y could opt for the NFL. They could say they were done with football. Or they could enter the transfer portal, capitalizi­ng on the NCAA’s expected approval of a one-time transfer waiver that would grant them immediate eligibilit­y elsewhere for a final college season.

Players with expiring eligibilit­y will be allowed to return next season and not count against a school’s maximum of 85 scholarshi­ps, but the NCAA has not said it would boost scholarshi­p limits after the 2021-22 academic year, when underclass­men who also have extra eligibilit­y might say they want to return.

There’s also the matter of who’s going to pay for all those extra scholarshi­ps. Kelly said his understand­ing was that UCLA would foot the bill, but the school has not unveiled a formal plan.

“We’ll cross that bridge when we have an exact number of who’s coming back and how to manage all that stuff,” Kelly said.

The Bruins have 13 high school players committed as part of what could be a 25player 2021 class, but they might have to winnow future classes if underclass­men on their current roster say they want to come back for an extra year and are counted against scholarshi­p limits.

In the meantime, they’ll assess the ways they will be allowed to proceed.

A shaggy bunch

UCLA’s tight ends were treated to a surprise virtual visit from former teammates Devin Asiasi and Caleb Wilson over the offseason, but what the departed Bruins saw on Zoom might have been even more startling.

Most of the current Bruins were sporting long hair and mustaches as part of a bonding ritual.

“This has been like however long quarantine’s been,” redshirt sophomore Greg Dulcich said, “so I’m not very good at growing it.”

As hairy situations go, redshirt sophomore David Priebe won universal praise for growing the longest mustache and sophomore Mike Martinez, well, not so much.

“I would say mine’s probably the weakest in the group,” Martinez said, his wisp of lip hair barely visible.

If Martinez appears more assertive on the field than he did as a freshman, it’s not a mirage. He said route concepts and blocking schemes are starting to come easier after he delved deeper into the playbook during the extra months off.

Dulcich might make a bigger leap than just going from walk-on to scholarshi­p player; receiver Kyle Philips said he could be one of the best tight ends in the nation based on his ability to get separation and make catches. He’s also bulked up, going from 220 pounds to around 240.

Now all Dulcich needs to do is work on his mustache.

“This is all I can grow at this point,” he said. “Maybe someday I’ll get it nice and thick.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States