Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Bear witness to the Bruins’ rise

Best college quarterbac­k in L.A. is a Bruin

- BILL PLASCHKE

Convincing win over Utes shows they might have a case as best in Pac-12, and they’re hungry for more.

NO. 18 UCLA 42 NO. 11 UTAH 32

By Ben Bolch

The best college quarterbac­k in Los Angeles? After a victory over Utah, it’s UCLA’s Thompson-Robinson.

The best college quarterbac­k in Los Angeles threw the ball against a harrowing blitz, threw it while furiously backpedali­ng, threw it perfectly and poetically.

In a warm Saturday afternoon glow at the Rose Bowl, Dorian Thompson-Robinson dumped the ball to Logan Loya and into UCLA history.

Plaschke,

After UCLA won every nonconfere­nce game, it was dismissed as having persevered through a soft schedule.

After UCLA beat winless Colorado, the college football world continued to shrug.

After UCLA toppled nationally ranked Washington, some buzz finally started to build.

On Saturday afternoon, a new narrative might have formed: Maybe there’s no better team in the Pac-12 Conference.

Having gone from disregarde­d to dominant, the No. 18 Bruins

knocked off the defending conference champions in convincing fashion, their 42-32 victory over No. 11 Utah at the Rose Bowl not fully reflected in the final score.

On the day he became UCLA’s all-time leader in touchdown passes, Dorian Thompson-Robinson’s final throw was intercepte­d and returned for a Utes touchdown. No matter.

This was all Bruins. Their offense was so unstoppabl­e from late in the first quarter onward that it almost seemed a surprise when it didn’t score. Their defense forced two turnovers and got the stops it needed. Their special teams produced two kickoff returns that almost went for touchdowns.

It added up to the biggest victory of the Chip Kelly era, just eight days after the same thing could have been said. Kelly was so cheery afterward that he accommodat­ed reporters for extra questions after a spokesman tried to end the interview session.

Who could blame him when every topic was upbeat?

What might have qualified as UCLA’s best performanc­e followed what Kelly called its best week of practice.

“I told them, ‘If you fall in love with the process, the process will love you back,’ ” Kelly said of his message to his players. “And that’s what was on display.”

The Bruins (6-0 overall, 3-0 Pac-12) are now bowl-eligible but covet greater success than the top-10 ranking that one reporter suggested might be coming their way after their best start since winning their first eight games in 2005.

“We want more,” said Thompson-Robinson, who remained fiery in his postgame comments for a second consecutiv­e week. “You said top 10. I want top five. Want top two. We want it all.”

UCLA continued its ascent in the record books, its nine-game winning streak going back to last season its longest since it won a schoolreco­rd 20 in a row over the 1997-98 seasons. The Bruins also put an end to a five-game losing streak against the Utes (4-2, 2-1), beating them for the first time since 2015.

Utah had no answers for an offense that scored 35 points over the final three quarters thanks to the dual dominance of ThompsonRo­binson and running back Zach Charbonnet.

In another nearly flawless performanc­e that could launch him into Heisman Trophy considerat­ion, Thompson-Robinson completed 18 of 23 passes for 299 yards and four touchdowns and running for one score. ThompsonRo­binson’s final touchdown, a short pass to Logan Loya that went for 70 yards after Loya turned on the afterburne­rs, gave him 76 touchdowns for his career to top the school record of 75 that Brett Hundley had compiled from 2012 to 2014.

“It’s great to have my name there,” Thompson-Robinson said before tears began to well in his eyes, his voice catching, “but I think the thing, the one that’s made me most emotional from right now, is seeing how happy my guys in my locker room were for me, the coaching staff, everybody that’s been here since I was a freshman, just rethinking all the hard times that I went through, all the bickering back and forth, all the transition­ing going on throughout the program, again, I just can’t say how thankful I am and how grateful I am to be on this team right now.”

Charbonnet added a career-high 198 yards rushing and a touchdown in 22 carries, benefiting from sturdy blocking and his own shifty moves after breaking into the open field. Wide receiver Jake Bobo caught two touchdown passes, including one that he snagged just before planting a foot in the back of the end zone.

“Dorian dropped it in a bucket,” Bobo said, “where only I could get it.”

UCLA’s defense overcame the loss of safety Stephan Blaylock in the first quarter on a bizarre targeting penalty after Bruins linebacker Darius Muasau intercepte­d a pass, ending a Utah drive when the game looked like it might be a defensive battle.

Craving another highlight, Muasau ended Utah’s final hopes of a comeback early in the fourth quarter when he stuck his helmet into quarterbac­k Cam Rising’s midsection to force a fumble. Bruins cornerback Jaylin Davies picked up the ball and raced 37 yards to the Utah one, setting up a Charbonnet touchdown on the next play that increased UCLA’s lead to 42-25.

From there the Bruins could have been forgiven for looking ahead to their next big game, at Oregon in two weeks following a bye.

Those objects that were behind UCLA in the rearview mirror not so long ago are no longer there.

For those who haven’t noticed, the Bruins appear to have turned the corner under Kelly.

 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? ZACH CHARBONNET breaks off a big chunk of his career-high 198 yards, in 22 carries, in UCLA’s biggest win of the Chip Kelly era.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ZACH CHARBONNET breaks off a big chunk of his career-high 198 yards, in 22 carries, in UCLA’s biggest win of the Chip Kelly era.
 ?? ?? DORIAN THOMPSON-ROBINSON, right, became the school’s all-time leader in touchdown passes (76), passing Brett Hundley.
DORIAN THOMPSON-ROBINSON, right, became the school’s all-time leader in touchdown passes (76), passing Brett Hundley.
 ?? ??
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? DARIUS MUASAU intercepts a pass intended for Thomas Yassmin to end an early Utah drive.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times DARIUS MUASAU intercepts a pass intended for Thomas Yassmin to end an early Utah drive.

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