Los Angeles Times

Boos, cruise for the Bruins

They hear from crowd in ragged first half but change narrative, and fans’ tune, to win big.

- By Ben Bolch

UCLA fans were relentless in expressing their feelings in the first half Saturday night.

They booed the Bruins when they punted on fourth and one near midfield. They booed tailback Soso Jamabo when he followed a sixyard loss with a run for no gain. They booed receiver Mossi Johnson after he dropped a pass. They booed their team when it took a knee in the final seconds before halftime.

The soundtrack changed appreciabl­y in the third quarter.

There were cheers when Nate Starks, the newly featured tailback who had gone mostly nowhere in the game’s early going, ripped off a 29-yard run. Roars followed when Theo Howard, a largely forgotten receiver, turned a short completion into a 19-yard touchdown.

The melodic shift continued for the rest of UCLA’s 45-24 victory over Arizona at the Rose Bowl, which fulfilled Bruins Coach Jim Mora’s mandate heading into the game.

“I like this football team and I like the direction we’re headed,” Mora said earlier in the week, “but we’ve got to win.”

That hasn’t been a problem recently against Arizona. Mora improved to 5-0 against the Wildcats since

taking the UCLA job after quarterbac­k Josh Rosen completed 20 of 37 passes for 350 yards and three touchdowns and rushed for another score.

UCLA (3-2 overall, 1-1 Pac-12 Conference) prevailed easily over Arizona (2-3, 0-2) thanks largely to Rosen’s breakthrou­gh and another stout performanc­e from its defense, which held the Wildcats to four of 17 on third-down conversion­s.

Starks won the battle to become the Bruins’ No. 1 tailback and looked worthy of the designatio­n after a dreadful start, finishing with 80 yards in 17 carries with a touchdown.

Neverthele­ss, UCLA’s running game largely resembled the one that had been among the worst in the nation through the season’s first month, gaining 125 yards and averaging 3.9 per carry. The Bruins entered the game averaging 117.8 yards per game, ranking 113th out of 128 major college teams.

Drops continued to plague UCLA’s receivers, but speed certainly wasn’t an issue. Kenneth Walker III flashed his sprinter’s accelerati­on on the final play of the first quarter, turning a short completion into a 62yard touchdown that gave the Bruins a 14-7 lead. Walker added a 29-yard touchdown catch midway through the fourth quarter that made it 38-17.

Howard’s touchdown catch was somewhat unexpected because Mora seemed to indicate that the prized freshman had fallen out of the rotation after failing to execute a play that was designed for him against Brigham Young two weeks ago.

He performed perfectly on his touchdown catch, giving the Bruins a 21-7 lead and triggering the start of a runaway.

This had the feel of an eliminatio­n game after UCLA and Arizona had both dropped their Pac-12 openers because it seemed hard to envision either team rebounding from an 0-2 conference record. Then again, Colorado, of all teams, is the only division team still unbeaten in conference play.

UCLA’s running-backs rotation wasn’t its only change. The Bruins also shook up their return game, turning to Adarius Pickett after Ishmael Adams had averaged only 3.08 yards on punt returns and fumbled twice through the first four games.

They were certainly glad they stuck with Adams on kickoff returns. He brought the ball back 52 yards to the Arizona 40-yard line on the Wildcats’ first kickoff but was hurt trying to pull in a deep pass late in the second quarter.

UCLA had Randall Goforth return kickoffs in the second half, one of which he brought back for 50 yards.

The Bruins’ biggest blunder in the first quarter might have belonged to Mora. The coach screamed at an official near the sideline, gesturing toward the field about something that had irked him, and earned an unsportsma­nlike conduct penalty that sustained an Arizona drive with the Wildcats lined up to punt on third down.

Arizona eventually turned the ball over on downs later in the drive, allowing Mora to breathe easier.

The Wildcats rotated three quarterbac­ks, with Brandon Dawkins, Zach Werlinger and Khalil Tate struggling to sustain momentum until UCLA had built a considerab­le lead.

Bruins linebacker Kenny Young and defensive end Takkarist McKinley each recorded a sack and Arizona scored its first touchdown only after Goforth was badly beaten on Dawkins’ 12-yard pass to Samajie Grant in the corner of the end zone on Arizona’s second drive of the game.

 ?? Sean M. Haffey Getty Images ?? ARIZONA’S Trey Griffey gets behind UCLA’s Randall Goforth to haul in a 34-yard pass in the first quarter.
Sean M. Haffey Getty Images ARIZONA’S Trey Griffey gets behind UCLA’s Randall Goforth to haul in a 34-yard pass in the first quarter.

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