Los Angeles Times

Pickett on pace for career year

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

Adarius Pickett removed a white headband with “PICK SIX” stitched in black letters across the front so he could read the inscriptio­n sewn into the back.

“I can do all things through Christ who strengthen­s me,” the UCLA safety said Monday, repeating the words while standing in front of a group of reporters.

The headband is just one of a small drawer’s worth that Pickett can choose from, all sewn by his mother, Angie. He has other versions for practices and games in blue, black and gray, among other colors.

Each bears Pickett’s nickname across the front along with an inspiratio­nal saying inside the back lining.

Pickett reads the inscriptio­n before he puts on his headband every Saturday as part of his pregame routine. He takes the field feeling his own special boost.

“I got my little special powers,” Pickett said, “when I put the headband on.”

Those powers have intensifie­d during a senior season in which Pickett leads the Bruins with 61 tackles and ranks second in the Pac-12 Conference with 12.2 tackles per game, trailing only Washington linebacker Ben Burr-Kirven’s 12.3.

Pickett said his dramatic uptick in tackles — he’s on pace to shatter the careerhigh 85 he logged last season — is partially the result of a new defensive scheme that allows the secondary to be more involved in stopping the run. Three of the team’s top four tacklers are defensive backs, with linebacker Krys Barnes the exception.

“We’ve been able to fly around and run to the ball,” Pickett said of the secondary.

Pickett bowled over Washington tailback Myles Gaskin on a third-and-two play in the second quarter Saturday at the Rose Bowl, holding him to one yard. Unfortunat­ely for the Bruins (0-5 overall, 0-2 Pac-12), the Huskies converted the resulting fourth down on the way to a 31-24 victory.

Pickett finished the game with a career-high 16 tackles and his first intercepti­on of the season, continuing a strong start in which he’s reached double digits in tackles in four of five games.

“He brings a lot of energy, a lot of juice,” UCLA coach Chip Kelly said. “He’s a really, really smart football player. He helps get the whole group aligned over there, not only the secondary but the linebacker­s, so I’m really happy with how he’s played so far and he keeps getting better, which is a positive thing.”

Pickett has six intercepti­ons in his college career but hasn’t lived up to his nickname by returning one for a touchdown. He already knows what he would do afterward in that scenario: start running so that he could display his headband without drawing a penalty for removing his helmet on the field.

“I would be pretty fast to get to the sideline,” he said.

Pickett’s parents attend most of his games, but their presence at California Memorial Stadium in Berkeley on Saturday when UCLA faces Cal (3-2, 0-2) will be special because the family is from nearby Richmond. An aunt who was recently diagnosed with cancer will also be in attendance. Pickett wore a headband in practice Monday that included a pink ribbon, one his mother had made to help raise awareness for breast cancer.

“I just know it takes a lot of time and precision,” Pickett said of his mother’s handiwork. “She’s excellent at that.”

A real keeper?

UCLA quarterbac­k Dorian Thompson-Robinson displayed excellent footwork and timing on both of his runs against Washington. He paused momentaril­y near the first-down marker on his first run, making a couple of defenders miss tackles before cutting back for the first down. He also faked out a few defenders on his second run.

Would Kelly like to showcase his quarterbac­k’s running ability more?

“I think if you have a quarterbac­k that can affect games with his feet then you do that,” Kelly said, “but we’ve never been a team and I’ve never been a guy that’s said, ‘Hey, let’s run the quarterbac­k.’

“We’re not going to run quarterbac­k power and things like that where people have designed quarterbac­k runs because I’ve always believed the best ability is dependabil­ity and is he going to be in there the next snap, so to have him be a running back isn’t what we’re trying to do.”

Etc.

Receiver Kyle Philips and linebacker Jaelan Phillips, who did not suit up for the Washington game, were not on the field Monday during the portion of practice the media was allowed to attend. Kelly said only that Phillips was out and that Philips’ status for this week remained uncertain. … Tackle Justin Murphy, who sat out the game against the Huskies because of an unspecifie­d injury, wore a yellow noncontact jersey during practice and worked with the strength and conditioni­ng staff. … UCLA’s game against Arizona on Oct. 20 at the Rose Bowl will start at 7:30 p.m. and will be televised by ESPN2.

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