Los Angeles Times

Kelly keeps quiet on a painful topic

- By Ben Bolch

UCLA had two boxes to check on the way to a presumed 3-0 start against nonconfere­nce cupcakes.

Clean up any problem areas.

Avoid injuries. Through the season’s first two weeks, the Bruins have gone one for two.

The special teams mishaps that plagued them in the opener against Bowling Green were not an issue Saturday at the Rose Bowl during a 45-7 rout of Alabama State. But quarterbac­k Dorian Thompson Robinson went down because of an apparent ankle injury, and did not return, and running back Zach Charbonnet did not play for undisclose­d reasons, leaving their status in doubt for UCLA’s final nonconfere­nce game against South Alabama next weekend.

Here are five takeaways from the game:

Injured … or not?

Let the conspiracy theories begin.

UCLA coach Chip Kelly acted as if he were running a covert operation, not a college football team, when asked about the status of Charbonnet and Thompson-Robinson after the game.

Reporter: “Can you give us updates on what happened with Zach and Dorian?”

Kelly: “Yeah, they were both unavailabl­e.” Reporter: “Injuries?” Kelly: “Unavailabl­e.” Kelly’s non-updates, particular­ly when it came to Charbonnet, were par for the course for the coach who has used “unavailabl­e” as a catch-all for anyone not playing since the onset of COVID-19. Players could be dealing with injuries, legal issues, academics, COVID-19 or a head cold, and Kelly would simply say they were “unavailabl­e.”

Charbonnet was in uniform for the game and seemed to be moving without limitation on the sideline, leading to speculatio­n he might have been held out against a Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n opponent because of load management.

Thanks to Kelly’s secretiven­ess, fans might never know.

Kelly remained furtive when asked about Charbonnet’s availabili­ty for next week.

“I’m not a prognostic­ator, and if I was, I’d be at Del Mar tomorrow and make a lot of cash,” Kelly said, “so we’ll just take it how it comes.”

Depth charge

Charbonnet’s mysterious absence meant the Bruins were going to learn a lot about the quality of their backup running backs.

What they discovered left them feeling much better about their depth should Charbonnet sit out any additional games. Freshman T.J. Harden led the way with 56 yards and a touchdown in seven carries, and redshirt junior Christian Grubb had a nearly identical 55 yards and a touchdown in seven carries.

Redshirt junior Colson Yank off made the most of his second position switch, gaining 35 yards in six carries, and redshirt freshman Deshun Murrell picked up 34 yards in his first six carries as a Bruin.

Redshirt junior Keegan Jones, who assumed Charbonnet’s starting role, generated 33 yards and a touchdown in 10 carries while also making four catches for 31 yards.

Special once more

One week after a horrendous showing, UCLA’s special teams were fine.

Nicholas Barr-Mira made his only field-goal attempt, from 19 yards, after missing two of three the previous week.

Barr-Mira and Chase Barry averaged a middling 37.3 yards on their three punts, but they did not have any blocked and Alabama State generated zero punt return yardage.

Logan Loya, making his season debut, showed reliable hands in replacing Jake Bobo as the punt returner, gaining two yards on his one return.

Special teams are often best when they go unnoticed, which was the case Saturday.

Secondary becomes focal point

Alabama State moved the ball with regularity, particular­ly in the first half.

Most of the Hornets’ early success came through the air, with quarterbac­k Myles Crawley finding open receivers. By midway through the second quarter, Alabama State’s 177 yards of offense exceeded the 162 yards Bowling Green had generated for the game the previous week.

But the Bruins’ defense stiffened in the second half, intercepti­ng two passes and holding the Hornets to 46 passing yards after giving up 177 in the first half.

“Fortunatel­y, we held them to seven points,” Kelly said. “We took some body shots there, but we made sure that when we needed it, we got it. There’s some things, obviously, like anything you need to clean up.”

Oh, brother

UCLA edge rusher Gabriel Murphy picked up the ball after teammate Laiatu Latu had forced a fumble by pummeling the Alabama State quarterbac­k. As Murphy was about to be flung to the ground, he heard a familiar voice.

“I was like, ‘Gabriel, Gabriel!’ ” said Grayson Murphy, his twin brother, “and he just kind of tossed it to me.”

Grayson took the desperatio­n pitch and sprinted for a touchdown. Except there was a problem. Gabriel’s pitch had been an illegal forward pass, leading to a penalty.

All was forgiven on the next play when Thompson Robinson connected with tight end Hudson Habermehl for a 25-yard touchdown reception. A few hours later, the brothers could laugh about the mishap.

“I wish he would’ve caught it and tossed it backward,” Grayson Murphy said, “so we could keep the touchdown.”

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? UCLA RUNNING BACK Christian Grubb rumbles for a seven-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times UCLA RUNNING BACK Christian Grubb rumbles for a seven-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter.

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