Los Angeles Times

‘High energy, fast tempo’

Kelly immediatel­y takes a different, speedier, approach in first spring practice.

- By Ben Bolch ben.bolch@latimes.com Twitter @latbbolch

UCLA holds first spring football practice under new coach, Chip Kelly, and he’s changing things up.

Spirited yells filled the chilly morning air as UCLA football players sprinted into orderly rows on the practice field to stretch, their legs and arms moving in unison with military-style precision.

Over the next two hours, there would be no rest for the cheery.

Coach Chip Kelly’s first spring practice guiding the Bruins featured plays that were run quickly, often with only a handful of seconds between snaps. Multiple sets of players worked separately on the same field. There was more repetition than inside an autoworker­s plant.

“High energy, fast tempo,” safety Adarius Pickett said Tuesday when asked what it felt like as the Bruins took what they hope are the first steps back to prominence after going a combined 10-15 the last two seasons. “We haven’t been accustomed to that kind of practice style. … They said it was going to be fast, but it’s one thing between you hearing it and you actually doing it.”

In one drill, five quarterbac­ks lined up about a foot apart before taking snaps and firing passes to different receivers. In another drill, two sets of centers, quarterbac­ks and running backs lined up opposite one another as the quarterbac­k practiced zone-read plays, either handing the ball off to the running back or keeping it himself and darting up the field.

Kelly intently watched the action, occasional­ly twirling a whistle on a string around his hand. He intervened when something displeased him, ordering one player out of a play only moments before the snap.

Kelly did not share his first impression­s of his team with reporters because he addressed the media before practice.

“I have no idea what this team is all about, so that’s what the whole spring will be about, just trying to figure it out,” Kelly said. “I couldn’t tell you a strength or a weakness or whatever just because we haven’t had a chance to be with them.”

Freshman receiver Kyle Phillips was the only member of Kelly’s first recruiting class to participat­e Monday, though Kelly said there could be two or three more arrivals later in the spring. Phillips contribute­d one of the highlights of the day when he made a juggling catch in front of a smattering of fans watching from the edge of an adjacent parking lot.

Position switches were already under way as Boss Tagaloa moved from defensive tackle to center while retaining his No. 75 jersey, necessitat­ing that Andre James take No. 77.

“He’s actually got [No. 75] tattooed on him,” James said of Tagaloa, “so I was like, ‘Ah, I guess if you have it tattooed on you, I’ll give it to you.’ ”

Wearing No. 77 also allowed James, who has moved from right tackle to left tackle, to honor his father who is battling cancer and receiving bone marrow transplant­s; Marcus James was born in 1977.

Kelly said there was open competitio­n for playing time that would not be contingent upon past performanc­e, a hallmark of his teams at Oregon and in the NFL with the Philadelph­ia Eagles and San Francisco 49ers.

“It’s an open deal for everybody,” Kelly said. “Today’s the first day for everybody.”

Players praised Kelly’s sports science program, which includes hydration monitoring, GPS trackers to measure fatigue and an additional meal players are provided every afternoon.

“He’s real big on feeding us,” Pickett said. “We get weekend meals to take home now so players don’t get hungry on the weekends.”

James said he already felt a difference in the quality of his sleep and stamina.

That wasn’t the only change he noted nearly six months before the Bruins’ season opener against Cincinnati on Sept. 1 at the Rose Bowl.

“The energy and the feeling is totally different here,” James said. “You can tell we’re excited to keep going.”

What has triggered that excitement?

“I feel like we’re just tired of losing,” James said. “We’re trying to get back on track and I feel like this coaching staff is what we need right now to get back on track.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? CHIP KELLY, left, leads the first spring practice. “I have no idea what this team is all about,” he said, “so that’s what the whole spring will be about.”
Al Seib Los Angeles Times CHIP KELLY, left, leads the first spring practice. “I have no idea what this team is all about,” he said, “so that’s what the whole spring will be about.”

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