Los Angeles Times

Players see benefits after position moves

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

Boss Tagaloa was willing to bolster UCLA’s depleted offensive line by moving to center after spending the last two years at defensive tackle.

He wasn’t so agreeable when it came to giving up No. 75, the jersey number tattooed near his right elbow. So he started lobbying

Andre James, the Bruins’ left tackle and owner of the coveted number on offense.

“I went in and the first thing I said to him was like, ‘Hey, bro, what year was your dad born?’ ” Tagaloa recalled Saturday. “Just trying to ease my way into the conversati­on because I knew that would get him right away.”

Fortunatel­y for Tagaloa, the last two digits of Marcus

James’ birth year, 1977, were available thanks to the departure of left tackle Kolton

Miller. Andre James was also eager to honor his father at a time when he was undergoing a bone marrow transplant for cancer.

That’s how one of the early position switches of spring practice came to be a win-win propositio­n for the Bruins. The same could be said of

Moses Robinson-Carr’s move from tight end to defensive end, which increased the likelihood of the sophomore getting significan­t playing time while including a side benefit. “I love being able to eat more,” said the 6foot-5 sophomore, who is pushing 280 pounds after gaining about 10 pounds since last season.

Coach Chip Kelly said Robinson-Carr’s massive size and standing as the fifth or sixth tight end on the depth chart made him suited to the switch.

Tagaloa’s move was prompted by a different set of numbers: the loss of three starters along the offensive line. Another starter, guard Michael Alves, has been limited in practices because of an unspecifie­d injury.

The move led to a reunion of sorts with tight end Devin Asiasi, a former teammate of Tagaloa’s at Concord De La Salle High when Tagaloa played tackle.

Tagaloa has struggled with his snaps in recent practices as part of an adjustment that he said has increased his responsibi­lities from having to “just put my hand in the ground and run. But now, I really gotta find out, locate the defense, the linebacker­s, the down front and everything.”

As part of his new position, Tagaloa has packed on 11 pounds while shedding 3% body fat. He now stands at 6-2 and 323 pounds, a heightto-weight ratio that Tagaloa said should work as long as his body-fat compositio­n remains low.

Tagaloa might have contribute­d to some weight gain by James when Tagaloa let him borrow his meal card as a thank-you gesture for the number switch, giving James access to a variety of fast-food options.

“I don’t know what he got,” Tagaloa said of his teammate’s culinary selection, “but he got something.”

Ache no more?

Frank Wintrich, UCLA’s new director of football performanc­e, could boast of a distinctio­n at his most recent stop that was the strength and conditioni­ng equivalent of going to the Rose Bowl in back-to-back seasons.

“I think they went two years where they didn’t have anybody injured from a softtissue standpoint,” Kelly said of Wintrich’s work at Virginia, where he spent the 2016 and 2017 seasons.

That means no sprains, strains or bruises. But Kelly said Wintrich and his assistants excel in more than injury prevention.

“They teach a complete package,” Kelly said. “It’s not just strength, it’s not just conditioni­ng; it’s improvemen­t in speed, improvemen­t in body compositio­n.”

Kelly said players spent their entire allotment of eight hours per week with coaches in the offseason getting bigger, faster and stronger as opposed to mastering the minutiae of a new offense and defense.

“It doesn’t matter if they were in the classroom and they learned your scheme,” Kelly said. “If they go out there on Day 1 and pull a hamstring, it doesn’t help them.”

Etc.

Kelly said running back Jalen Starks, linebacker DeChaun Holiday, offensive lineman Stephan Zabie and

defensive backs Will Lockett, Denzel Fisher and Octavius Spencer had left the team. Offensive lineman Paco Perez has also been absent from spring practice. … Alves, tight end Caleb Wilson, defensive end Jaelan Phillips, linebacker Josh Woods, offensive lineman Jax Wacaser, linebacker Lokeni Toailoa and defensive backs Colin Samuel and Keyon Riley were all wearing yellow jerseys, meaning they were recovering from injuries and limited in their practice participat­ion. … Defensive end Marcus Moore on the defense’s new mantra: “Violence. That’s the word right there. That explains our defense: violence.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? BOSS TAGALOA (75) switched to center after spending the last two seasons at defensive tackle. He was able to keep his number after lobbying another player.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times BOSS TAGALOA (75) switched to center after spending the last two seasons at defensive tackle. He was able to keep his number after lobbying another player.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States