Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Thompson-Robinson is taking center stage in L.A.

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Loya sprinted 70 yards around frozen Utah defenders for the clinching touchdown in the Bruins’ stunning 42-32 victory, at which point the best college quarterbac­k in Los Angeles wonderfull­y lost his mind.

Thompson-Robinson wildly skipped and jumped and danced to the end zone. He tore off his helmet and screamed to the sky. He stalked the Bruins sidelines and pumped his fists.

He had just passed Brett Hundley as the Bruins’ career leader in touchdown passes with 76. He had just accounted for five touchdowns in leading the Bruins to their best start in 17 years, a 6-0 record that should include a spot in the nation’s top 10.

And, believe it, even with the great Caleb Williams playing across town, Thompson-Robinson had just staked his claim as the best quarterbac­k in Los Angeles.

“We want more. We want more,” Thompson-Robinson said afterward in his usual postgame rasp, his voice stripped bare after three hours of shouting. “You said top 10. I want top five. Want top two. We want it all. We want more. I promise you we want more. This is nothing compared to what we want.”

In his fifth season here, Thompson-Robinson keeps giving more, 15 touchdown passes, two intercepti­ons, a 75% completion rate, 231 yards rushing and four rushing touchdowns.

In his latest Saturday masterpiec­e, he misfired on only five of 23 passes for 299 yards with four passing touchdowns, one rushing touchdown and just the one mistake of a late intercepti­on.

He owned the Utes, he

owned the moment and then, walking off the field ahead of his teammates while howling at the high sun, he owned the Rose Bowl.

What was he saying exactly?

“I said, ‘This is our house,’ ” he said.

Of course he did. His skill and experience are buffeted by his passion. So much passion. Such powerful swagger. So many marvelous moments punctuated by screams and gestures and inspiratio­n.

He has hurdled guys into the ground. He has juked guys into collisions. He has thrown countless perfect passes through tight windows into the arms of grateful receivers.

And he has done it with a selflessne­ss that, when asked in the postgame news conference about breaking HundHe

ley’s record, he answered in tears.

“It’s great to have my name there, 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,” he said, blinking hard through watery eyes. “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.”

On Saturday against the favored and defending Pac-12 champion Utes, he was making magic again, from beginning to end, starting with the Bruins’ third possession in a scoreless first quarter.

threw a perfect sideline strike to Michael Ezeike for 49 yards. He then threw a perfect 23-yard slant strike to Titus Mokiao-Atimalala. Four plays later ThompsonRo­binson sprinted outside for seven yards that ended in a dive across the end zone for an eventual 7-0 lead.

Fist pumps. Joyful jumps. Tone set.

“Really happy for him, to see how he’s grown as a person and how he’s grown as a leader,” coach Chip Kelly said. “It’s cool to watch and it’s well deserved.”

The Utes continuall­y fought back, but ThompsonRo­binson countered every punch with a dramatic jab.

After a Utah field goal, a seven-yard touchdown slant to Bobo. After a Utah touchdown, a five-yard touchdown fastball to Kam Brown. After another Utah touchdown, a 10-yard touchdown laser to Bobo.

And he’s doing it all while balancing this enormous chip that just gets larger every week. Keep ignoring UCLA, and he’ll just keep strapping on that ignorance and running with it.

“It’s even bigger,” he said of the chip. “It’s going to be even bigger in two weeks when we go to Oregon and it’s going to be bigger after that. I don’t care who we’re playing, everybody’s going to mean business this year.”

He repeated his mantra from last week’s win against then-unbeaten Washington. He knows what the football nation thinks about the long-ignored Bruins, and he’s using it as fuel.

“I read all of it and it hurts when other people don’t give my boys credit and I’m going to do everything that I can to get these boys enough credit that they deserve,” he said.

To be honest, there is no part of this compelling UCLA season that is more overlooked than ThompsonRo­binson himself. He’s yet to be included in a Heisman Trophy race … until now. And even in his own city he’s been overshadow­ed by the arrival of USC’s Williams … until now.

I asked Thompson-Robinson whether he felt he was personally being overlooked but, before he could answer, he was interrupte­d by Bobo, who has caught five touchdown passes in the last four games after catching just three in his previous four seasons at Duke.

“Yes,” Bobo exclaimed. But Thompson-Robinson was like, Heisman? What Heisman? He not only does all the right things, he says all the right things.

“It’s really my first time thinking about it, I’m focused on this team, that’s the reason I came back,” he said. “I didn’t come back for anything personal, I came back to make sure that these boys were in a good spot when I leave here and to make sure I leave a legacy that’s well known to remember and I think I’m a doing a pretty good job of that now and I’m just trying to keep it going forward. I’m here for these boys, I’m not here for myself.”

No matter why he’s here, Dorian Thompson-Robinson is here, and how. Undefeated leader. Heisman hopeful. The best college quarterbac­k in Los Angeles.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? UCLA QUARTERBAC­K Dorian Thompson-Robinson, who accounted for five touchdowns, eludes Utah cornerback Zemaiah Vaughn during the Bruins’ victory.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times UCLA QUARTERBAC­K Dorian Thompson-Robinson, who accounted for five touchdowns, eludes Utah cornerback Zemaiah Vaughn during the Bruins’ victory.

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