Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Six-year odyssey is paying off for Bruins’ Osling

Safety stuck around through two coaches, three position moves and is leading tackler.

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

Morrell Osling Jr. hadn’t bought a game program in years. He stopped sometime during his son’s first season at UCLA, but during a punishing heat wave before the first game of Mo Osling III’s sixth and final year in college, a proud parent just wanted to celebrate and document another step in his child’s life.

So Osling approached the man selling the glossy magazines and bought one. He immediatel­y recognized the cover boy.

“Wow,” he thought to himself as he looked at his son next to linebacker Bo Calvert on the front of the program. “There’s a reason why we went through everything.”

The Osling family’s patience is finally paying off after six years, two head coaches and three different defensive positions. Mo Osling III is in his first year as a full-time starter, leading No. 12 UCLA with 52 tackles entering the Bruins’ 50-36 win late Saturday night against host Arizona State.

With additional eligibilit­y from the pandemic, Osling is one of four players remaining on UCLA’s roster from Jim Mora’s last recruiting class. Three players from the original group are playing in the

NFL. Nine scholarshi­p players transferre­d or left the program for other reasons, many early in the transition from Mora to Chip Kelly.

Osling had plenty of chances to join the exodus. First it was after the initial season under Kelly when his playing time decreased from all 13 games as a freshman to 10. He sat down with his father again after playing just four games as a junior.

Let’s stick it out, they decided.

“I’m just not big on running from my problems,” said Osling, who started a combined three games in 2020 and 2021. “I like to face them head on.”

Osling is now showing his attacking mentality as UCLA’s starting free safety. He set career highs in tackles in consecutiv­e games against Utah (10) and Oregon. His 15 stops against the Ducks were the most for a UCLA defender since Adarius Pickett had 16 against Washington in 2018.

The last line of defense, Osling prides himself on his sure-handed tackling and ability to communicat­e with his teammates. Although he’s become a star on defense, he is never far from his roots as a quarterbac­k.

The former three-star prospect got his first scholarshi­p offers out of Antelope Valley High as an option quarterbac­k. Always the most athletic kid on his youth football teams, Osling started playing quarterbac­k at age 7, when his father coached him.

Osling could throw the ball

a mile, run it and process defenses quickly, then-Antelope Valley offensive coordinato­r Jermaine Lewis said. Despite starting at quarterbac­k, “Little Mo” didn’t shy away from playing defense.

“We’re built a little different out here,” said Lewis, a former UCLA running back. “We’re not blessed with numbers, so it’s a lot of iron man football.”

Osling gained more than 3,400 career all-purpose yards in three varsity seasons as Antelope Valley went 24-12 in his three varsity seasons. Osling started at quarterbac­k for two years, but he and the staff knew it wasn’t his “moneymakin­g position,” Lewis said.

Once Power Five colleges started inquiring about the lanky 6-foot-2 prospect as a defensive player, Osling switched to wide receiver on offense and started at defensive back as a senior. With more defensive game tape, offers started rolling in.

All of Osling’s Pac-12 offers

— Colorado, Oregon, Oregon State and UCLA — came as a defensive back. He committed to the Buffaloes early but flipped once the Bruins came into the picture. His father, a lifelong UCLA fan whose “one disappoint­ment” was that his son grew up a USC fan, was thrilled.

Osling was a sleeper in a stacked group of defensive backs that included U.S. Army All-American Darnay Holmes, four-star prospects Elijah Gates and Jay Shaw and former Mater Dei star Quentin Lake. Even after Kelly took over, the secondary remained one of UCLA’s most talented position groups with holdovers like Pickett and Nate Meadors.

The backlog forced Osling to wait his turn.

“I feel like I could have been a starter a long time ago,” said Osling, who has played cornerback, nickel and safety for the Bruins. “But God, he works at his time. It’s God’s speed.”

The Osling family, including Mo’s mother, Eurimica, whom the defensive back honors with a portrait tattoo on his right forearm and credits for teaching him his positive attitude, is soaking up the long-awaited moment.

Morrell, a former semipro player who coached his son through high school, can barely sleep the night before a game. He searches the internet for another photo to post on Instagram and regularly sends inspiratio­nal quotes to his son. When he realized Mo was on the program for the Bowling Green game, he held it up and told everyone at the tailgate, “This is my son!”

After pre-game tailgating, Morrell finds his seat in the Rose Bowl early so he can watch his son warm up and hear Osling’s name announced as a starter. Videotapin­g the announceme­nt on the big screen never gets old.

“It’s his last year, we’re winning, he’s playing well,” Morrell said, “It’s like, what more could you ask for?”

Lewis, another Antelope Valley alumnus who played with UCLA running backs coach DeShaun Foster in Westwood, beams with pride knowing Osling is continuing the same path from Lancaster to UCLA. Osling was one of the first to help build the recent pipeline from Antelope Valley to Division I colleges, including former UCLA tight end Moses Robinson-Carr and receiver Devon Williams, who went to USC and transferre­d to Oregon.

As he thought about transferri­ng, Osling always thought he could have a greater influence if he stayed at UCLA. He wanted to bring winning back the way he did at Antelope Valley. Continuing the legacy of defensive backs before him, Osling wants to impart wisdom on such underclass­men as cornerback­s Devin Kirkwood and Jaylin Davies.

“Mo’s great,” Kelly said. “Really everything you want in a student-athlete.”

As Osling’s days as a college athlete wind down, Morrell tries to stay focused on what’s still left for his son to achieve at UCLA. From one of the most anticipate­d rivalry games in years to playing in a major bowl game, there’s still work left for the Bruins.

But after this is done, the longtime Dallas Cowboys fan is prepared to bury his blue, white and silver for any pro team that will pick up his son. Whether it’s for Osling’s favored Philadelph­ia Eagles or at a Canadian football game, Morrell will be in line to buy another game program.

 ?? Kyusung Gong Associated Press ?? A FORMER QUARTERBAC­K, Mo Osling III prides himself on being a sure-handed tackler for UCLA.
Kyusung Gong Associated Press A FORMER QUARTERBAC­K, Mo Osling III prides himself on being a sure-handed tackler for UCLA.

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