Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

These Bruins can no longer be ignored

- BILL PLASCHKE

Their season has been ignored, but no longer.

Their record has been minimized, but no more.

Their presence on this fall’s Los Angeles college football scene was completely overshadow­ed until Friday night, when the UCLA Bruins emerged from a cool darkness into the blinding brightness of legitimacy.

Dorian Thompson-Robinson hurdling. Zach Charbonnet sprinting. Jake Bobo bobbing. A defense swarming and slamming and suffocatin­g.

Yeah, they’re pretty good.

And, yeah, it’s time to start paying attention.

At a Rose Bowl that rocked, against a team that had not previously cracked, UCLA stormed to the biggest win of the five-year Chip Kelly era, grabbing a 24-point lead then hanging on to beat undefeated No. 15 Washington.

The 40-32 victory was a game not only about Chip, but chips.

“I’m reading through all the articles throughout the whole week, people are saying that we’re the worst 4-0 team out there, they’re writing us off,” a hoarse quarterbac­k Thompson-Robinson said after three hours of brilliance. “My boys came in here with a chip on their shoulder. I think I told y’all on Monday, see if Washington can run with us, not the other way around. So that’s my answer. That’s my answer.”

It was truly quite the response.

In their first game against a credible Power Five opponent, the Bruins hurdled skepticism like ThompsonRo­binson leaped over a stunned Washington defender.

In their first game on national television, the Bruins blew past the jokes like Thompson-Robinson juked two Washington defenders into colliding into an embarrassi­ng heap on a two-yard touchdown run. In yet another opportunit­y to blow a big moment as this program has done so often, the Bruins held firm, converting two third downs in the final minutes while rolling downfield for a final drive to end it.

Their game-clinching play? On third and five? Would you believe a six-yard pass from Thompson-Robinson to Hudson Habermehl? It was one last daring act of trust in a veteran quarterbac­k who is five seasons old and all grown up, going 24for-33 passing for 315 yards and three touchdowns and no glaring mistakes.

“He doesn’t get fazed, doesn’t get rattled, he’s as tough as they come,” Kelly said, later adding, “It was really cool … to see the way it ended.”

It’s equally cool to see the way these Bruins have started, now that their season is officially underway after four games against North-South-Alabama Something-or-Anothers.

It’s early, but they are 5-0 and have won eight consecutiv­e games dating to last season, their longest winning streak in 17 years.

It’s a small sample size, but they did just beat a team that had not trailed this year while dominating a quarterbac­k who led the country in passing.

“This game is a race to maturity, you’re going to get tested, but competitor­s respond to those situations,” Kelly said. “There’s a resilience to this group, they’ve been through a lot. … Each week, they get a little bit better.”

Hop on the bandwagon with caution, as they host powerful Utah next week and then travel to formidable Oregon two weeks later.

And, of course, as always, believe in Kelly at your own risk, as his teams have never survived success, witness his 23-25 career record here with only two victories against teams that finished the season with winning records.

But, hey, give them this: In this season’s first chance to show up and show off, the Bruins were huge.

There was ThompsonRo­binson, shrugging off first-possession wildness to show every bit of his veteran savvy with smart decisions, fearless sprints, 60 yards rushing, leadership everywhere. His hurdle will be a neat memory. His juking of the two Huskies defenders will be a viral video.

Said Kelly: “We really have total confidence in everything Dorian does. I think he’s got a great grasp of what we’re trying to do.”

Rasped Thompson-Robinson: “I’m honestly getting more hoarse by the game.”

Then there was an offensive line that opened huge holes leading to 184 yards rushing, including 124 yards and a touchdown from Charbonnet. The Huskies sacked Thompson-Robinson only once, and were frustrated such that Duke transfer Bobo was able to wrangle free for 142 yards receiving and two touchdowns.

“All those guys are starting to jell as a group,” Kelly said of a line that has three veterans in the middle surrounded by two newcomers. “I was proud of how those guys handled it.”

There was also a muchmalign­ed Bruins defense that hounded star quarterbac­k Michael Penix Jr. with firsthalf intercepti­ons by Stephan Blaylock and JonJon Vaughns and all kinds of pressure from everywhere. They allowed 410 total yards, but much of that was gained after the Bruins had taken their big lead.

“For us to kind of hold them at bay a little bit, I think, was the difference,” Kelly said.

Hmm, here’s guessing that in this week’s Associated Press poll, they will receive more than the one vote they received last week. Although they have clearly learned to feed on the disrespect.

“I love it. I love it,” Thompson-Robinson said. “You know, I don’t stay on social media 24/7, all day every day like maybe most people think, but I do read it. I do read it. I get notificati­ons just like everybody else does. And if you think words don’t hurt, they do. They do and I always remember even if I don’t say nothing.”

Besides their soft early schedule, before Friday the Bruins were also criticized for their minuscule support. In a small way, perhaps, that narrative for this season is also starting to change.

After three home games in front of empty seats that included two of the smallest crowds in UCLA’s Rose Bowl history, Friday’s game drew an actual crowd that made actual noise, so much that they even forced the confused Washington offense into an early timeout. The announced attendance was 41,343, which still isn’t great but is about double the average early crowds, and it mattered.

“It’s really important. … Friday night game in L.A. traffic, I saw three accidents on the way to the game. I’ll give credit to our police escort, they were weaving and dodging,” Kelly said. “For the people that came out ... hopefully we’ll continue to get more of that.”

And to think, UCLA started out so badly, midway through the first quarter they were being booed.

First, there was Washington’s game-opening 75-yard touchdown drive that ended with a fourth-down, 33-yard pass from Penix to a wideopen Rome Odunze. It didn’t get any prettier after UCLA’s ensuing possession, when the Bruins failed three times from the Huskies’ three-yard line on three overthrown passes from a pressured Thompson Robinson.

The final miss was on fourth down, and here came those boos. But the anger didn’t last. The game changed two plays later when Washington running back Wayne Taulapapa dropped a short pitch from Penix at the goal line, leading to a UCLA safety that started a run during which the Bruins outscored the Huskies 33-3. Yeah, they’re pretty good. Next week, once again, with defending Pac-12 champion Utah coming to Pasadena, the football world will find out just how good.

“So that’ll get your eyes up, getting ready for that one,” Kelly said.

The eyes are indeed up, and opened.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? LINEBACKER JonJon Vaughns (21) and the Bruins are off to a 5-0 start and will meet No. 12 Utah next.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times LINEBACKER JonJon Vaughns (21) and the Bruins are off to a 5-0 start and will meet No. 12 Utah next.
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