Los Angeles Times

IMMERSION LAYER

Cold (tub) comfort helps Bruins get over Stanford, get on with season

- By Ben Bolch

The hurt washed over Bolu Olorunfunm­i and his UCLA teammates as they lingered in the cold tubs. They had come within 24 seconds of beating Stanford, the team they had fixated on for most of the previous nine months, only to fall short once more.

The Bruins were left with a long stretch of games they would have to win just to possibly earn another chance to face the Cardinal in the Pac-12 Conference championsh­ip game.

In a moment most wanted to forget, UCLA Coach Jim Mora told his players to remember.

“Everyone was sad,” said Olorunfunm­i, the tailback who had been unable to help the Bruins produce a game-clinching first down, “and Coach Mora was telling us to keep that in the back of our minds. Keep the taste of when we were in the tubs.”

The cleansing of frustratio­ns could start Saturday night at the Rose Bowl. UCLA (2-2 overall, 0-1 in Pac-12 play) faces Arizona (2-2, 0-1) in the first of what could be considered eight consecutiv­e must-win situations to get that desired rematch with Stanford.

There’s no denying that the Bruins

have issues. They need to fix their running game and find a handful of reliable receivers. Quarterbac­k Josh Rosen needs to significan­tly boost a touchdown-to-intercepti­on ratio that hovers precarious­ly around one to one.

Yet the most important component of their preparatio­ns for the Wildcats might have been psychologi­cal after what transpired against the Cardinal.

The final 24 seconds, which included touchdowns surrendere­d by UCLA’s defense and its offense, replayed continuous­ly in the Bruins’ minds during their self-imposed 24-hour window for processing a game and letting it go. Mora said his players were as down as he had ever seen them after a defeat.

“Every loss hurts and everything,” defensive lineman Jacob Tuioti-Mariner said, “but this one kind of stood out the most.”

When the team reconvened Sunday, linebacker Jayon Brown, offensive tackle Conor McDermott and center Scott Quessenber­ry were among the players who spoke about letting what happened drive them.

“We let that loss, the last one, feed us into this week and throughout the rest of the season,” Brown said, “because we don’t want to feel like we did last week.”

Players also turned to mantras they developed in the summer with mental conditioni­ng coach Trevor Moawad. There was a focus on staying positive and being resilient amid hardship.

UCLA hasn’t experience­d much recent adversity in its rivalry with Arizona, going 4-0 since Mora became coach. But a mention of that success only triggered another catchphras­e from Mora about history having no bearing on future results.

Whoever loses Saturday is going to be 0-2 in conference play and probably eliminated from contention in the Pac-12’s South Division, upping the urgency factor.

“We’ve been playing good football,” Mora said. “Now what we need to do is have results.”

Rosen implied a spot in the College Football Playoff remained attainable for UCLA because of the quality of its losses to seventhran­ked Stanford and No. 9 Texas A&M. If the Bruins could beat the Cardinal in the conference championsh­ip, it would largely offset a loss to them earlier in the season.

Rosen said the unranked Bruins weren’t far removed from being considered among the nation’s elite because of the nature of their defeats, in overtime to the Aggies and in the final seconds against the Cardinal.

“We’re pretty much two plays away from 4-0, top five [ranking] in the country,” Rosen said, “but we still have the same team and we can’t let that affect us.”

UCLA’s remaining schedule appears favorable. What figures to be its toughest game — against No. 18 Utah, the only ranked opponent left as of this week — is Oct. 22 at the Rose Bowl.

UCLA probably won’t know where it goes from there until after its regular-season finale against California on Nov. 26. The Bruins have mentally penciled in Stanford on Dec. 2 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara for the Pac-12 title game.

But first things first. Actually, eight things are first.

“We’re never going to stop fighting,” Olorunfunm­i said. “We have eight games left and we can still do what we need to do this year.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? QUARTERBAC­K Josh Rosen, trying to evade Stanford’s pass rush last week, has almost as many intercepti­ons (four) as touchdown passes (five). UCLA’s receivers and running game also have been erratic.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times QUARTERBAC­K Josh Rosen, trying to evade Stanford’s pass rush last week, has almost as many intercepti­ons (four) as touchdown passes (five). UCLA’s receivers and running game also have been erratic.
 ?? Rick Bowmer Associated Press ?? UCLA LINEBACKER Jayon Brown (12), covering BYU’s Brayden El-Bakri (35) on Sept. 17, says the sting of last week’s loss to Stanford will motivate Bruins “throughout the rest of the season.”
Rick Bowmer Associated Press UCLA LINEBACKER Jayon Brown (12), covering BYU’s Brayden El-Bakri (35) on Sept. 17, says the sting of last week’s loss to Stanford will motivate Bruins “throughout the rest of the season.”

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