Los Angeles Times

Rebels give Bruins a run for it

Underdog UNLV is within seven in fourth before Rosen rallies UCLA to late TDs.

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

The fixes were in exactly where UCLA needed them after its clunker of a season opener and three underwhelm­ing quarters Saturday evening.

An offense beleaguere­d by dropped passes caught on when there was no alternativ­e, generating two long touchdown drives to start the fourth quarter.

A defense that softened after tackle Eddie Vanderdoes injured his right knee in the first half stiffened late.

A quarterbac­k who had piled on the self-criticism bulldozed ahead one yard for the final touchdown.

UCLA’s 42-21 victory over Nevada Las Vegas at the Rose Bowl qualified as more of a sigh of relief than a bold declaratio­n, though the distinctio­n seemed insignific­ant after the Bruins avoided further disappoint­ment to start their season.

Nervous time stretched into the opening minutes of the fourth quarter. That’s when quarterbac­k Josh Rosen guided the Bruins on the 73-yard drive that provided a two-touchdown advantage on Bolu Olorunfunm­i’s one-yard scoring run. Rosen then plunged ahead for a one-yard touchdown on the Bruins’ next drive to secure a triumph that evened their record at 1-1.

In a strong rebuttal to his three-intercepti­on performanc­e against Texas A&M, Rosen completed 23 of 38 passes for 267 yards and one touchdown with no intercepti­ons. He was also sacked only once.

A large chunk of Rosen’s incompleti­ons should have been charged to his receivers. There were dropped passes galore in a third quarter in which UCLA gained only 48 yards, but Coach Jim Mora was able to momentaril­y shrug.

“I don’t notice them until I look at the film, honestly,” Mora said.

UCLA has beaten UNLV by the aggregate score of 79-24 over the last two seasons, though the margin Saturday was highly deceiving.

The Rebels (1-1) were in solid position for an upset after quarterbac­k Johnny Stanton scored on an 11-yard draw late in the third quarter to cut the Bruins’ lead to 28-21. UNLV had converted eight of 12 third downs when it lined up for third and 18 to start the fourth quarter.

But UCLA held and got the ball back for the drive that swung the momentum back squarely in the Bruins’ favor. UCLA benefited from a personal foul on UNLV safety Kenny Keys for targeting receiver Eldridge Massington on third down, leading to Keys’ ejection and a first down for the Bruins on the way to Olorunfunm­i’s touchdown.

Rosen wasn’t the only thing working for UCLA’s offense. Tailback Soso Jamabo ran for three touchdowns in the first half and finished with 90 yards rushing to lead a ground game that amassed 219 yards.

“He’s turning into a bigtime back,” Mora said.

UCLA safety Randall Goforth made two intercepti­ons and cornerback Fabian Moreau had a pass breakup on third down to thwart a drive.

“We made the adjustment­s we needed to make and that’s all you can do,” said Bruins linebacker Kenny Young, who sacked Stanton for an eight-yard loss late in the third quarter.

The Bruins defense wasn’t as sturdy after Vanderdoes strained his knee in the first half and was forced to watch the balance of the game in street clothes.

UNLV briefly turned into a new version of the Runnin’ Rebels against a defense that had spent all off-season gearing itself to stop the run. Stanton fooled the defense with a quarterbac­k draw on third and 13, gaining 14 yards. He then sprung Lexington Thomas for a 12-yard touchdown run by flinging his body into UCLA defensive tackle Eli Ankou.

The Rebels churned out 64 yards on the ground during the 70-yard drive and there was audible unease in the Rose Bowl with the score tied 7-7 late in the first quarter. Why worry? Rosen led the Bruins to touchdowns on each of their next two drives, with his arm and his right shoulder. When Jamabo ran into a wall of defenders on one side of the field, he cut back the other way and picked up a block from Rosen, who threw his shoulder into 280-pound defensive tackle Salanoa-Alo Wily on the way to a 23-yard touchdown run.

“Making something out of nothing,” Jamabo said. “I guess you could say there was a lot of traffic and I was just going back to high school, I guess, and trying to make a play out of nothing. Josh came up with the block that was awesome.”

Rosen’s 29-yard touchdown pass to Mossi Johnson over the middle then put UCLA up 21-7. The Bruins would add to their lead after Goforth intercepte­d a pass Stanton had thrown under duress and returned it 52 yards to the UNLV 21-yard line. Jamabo’s seven-yard touchdown run made it 28-7.

Things would get scary for a while before the Bruins reassured themselves with their late play.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? A NASTY BREAKUP is administer­ed by UNLV safety Kenny Keys to Eldridge Massington (82), the intended target of a Josh Rosen pass.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times A NASTY BREAKUP is administer­ed by UNLV safety Kenny Keys to Eldridge Massington (82), the intended target of a Josh Rosen pass.

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