Los Angeles Times

Bruins rising to the challenge

Desiano’s recovery coincides with team’s No. 1 soccer ranking

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

Out with the knee brace, in with the shin guards. Madelyn Desiano is finally equipped to lead UCLA’s defensive renaissanc­e.

UCLA is the top-ranked team in the country for the first time since 2017 thanks, in part, to first-year head coach Margueritt­e Aozasa’s defense-first philosophy based on discipline, fitness and hard work. The engine is Desiano, a fifth-year senior defender who knows hard work better than most. The San Clemente native has overcome two ACL injuries and three knee surgeries to become one of only two field players to start every game for the Bruins (6-0) this season.

Playing without the bulky knee brace around her left leg for the first time since she sat out the 2018 and 2019

look at it afterward?” Kelly asked a reporter inquiring about removing the message that was scrubbed later in the day. “I’m not in that world, so if you want it off, I’ll take it off.”

Kelly said there was some validity to the thrust of the post, that UCLA was among the teams dominating the transfer market, but that he would continue to blend transfers with his high school recruits.

“I think what their point is, we’ve been very efficient with our [transfer] portal,” Kelly said. “I think the kids we bring in here play and that’s a credit to how we do that. We’ve always approached it like it’s free agency in the National Football League, so how can they contribute to the program?”

Kelly has unabashedl­y embraced what he described as a year-to-year approach to roster constructi­on in the transfer portal era, calling it “team-building” instead of recruiting and acknowledg­ing he was less inclined to take high school players who would require significan­t developmen­t.

Among Pac-12 starting quarterbac­ks, Kelly noted only UCLA’s Dorian Thompson-Robinson and Stanford’s Tanner McKee joined their respective teams directly out of high school.

UCLA started nine transfers in its season opener, including running back Zach Charbonnet, left tackle Raiqwon O’Neal and twin edge rushers Gabriel and Grayson Murphy. Transfer linebacker Laiatu Latu was the defensive star of the Bruins’ 45-7 victory over Alabama State last weekend, forcing a fumble and logging two sacks.

But can UCLA continue to bring in similar high-end transfer talent in future seasons given what appears to be a growing disparity between the name, image and likeness success of its players versus those who are getting more lucrative deals at other schools?

“The best of the best are not going to UCLA because those elite kids are going to get NIL deals,” said Greg Biggins, a national recruiting analyst for 247 Sports. “The only way they would come to UCLA is if they’re from Southern California and they want to come home or maybe it’s a player who wants to be a brain surgeon, but those are few and far between, right?”

UCLA’s Twitter post anointing itself as the king of the transfer market provided numbers but not backstorie­s involving the other teams it included. Arizona State, which has had 18 transfer starters since 2020, had no choice but to go that route given its difficulti­es in high school recruiting with coach Herm Edwards’ future in doubt. Rutgers (16 transfer starters since 2020) resides in an area largely lacking top-tier high school talent. Mississipp­i (16) and Florida State (15) are in their third seasons with new coaches.

USC also brought in a slew of transfers this season, albeit with an easy explanatio­n. Craving a swift makeover, new Trojans coach Lincoln Riley imported quarterbac­k Caleb Williams, receiver Jordan Addison and other widely coveted stars who could transform the team into an instant winner.

By contrast, Kelly has stockpiled transfers to plug roster holes created by mass defections and his own undistingu­ished high school recruiting. UCLA’s high school recruiting classes have shrunk in each of Kelly’s seasons, from a high of 27 players in 2018 to 11 in 2022. Conversely, the number of transfers has ballooned, from two in his first season to 13 this season.

Maybe UCLA really is Transfer U. Instead of sprinkling in transfers, the Bruins are piling them higher and higher.

“I would say actions speak louder than words,” Biggins said of the Bruins’ roster constructi­on.

It might feel as if Kelly has all but abandoned high school recruiting given his team has only six players who have orally committed for the class of 2023. That figure may not rise appreciabl­y because the Bruins have extended just 56 scholarshi­p offers, according to 247 Sports, the fewest among Pac-12 schools.

UCLA is also lagging when it comes to scholarshi­p offers given to high school freshmen and sophomores that are so freely dispensed by other teams.

“Chip Kelly has a process in how he’s recruiting high school athletes,” West Hills Chaminade High coach David Machuca said, alluding to Kelly’s deliberate evaluation of players. “I respect that. The process they are following is slower. [But] kids today want to be offered earlier.”

UCLA’s labeling of itself as Transfer U — even erroneousl­y — did not appear to spark an internal divide between players who arrived from high school and those who came from other colleges.

“Everybody here is UCLA Bruins,” said cornerback Azizi Hearn, a transfer from Wyoming. “That’s how I view it, you know what I mean? Regardless of where they were at before here, whether it was a different university or a high school, you know what I mean? Once we’re here, we’re all brothers, we’re all Bruins.”

 ?? Jesus Ramirez ?? UCLA DEFENDER Madelyn Desiano has overcome two ACL injuries and returned for a fifth season after embracing the team’s defense-first philosophy.
Jesus Ramirez UCLA DEFENDER Madelyn Desiano has overcome two ACL injuries and returned for a fifth season after embracing the team’s defense-first philosophy.
 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? CHIP KELLY said he will continue to blend transfers with high school recruits to build his football team.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press CHIP KELLY said he will continue to blend transfers with high school recruits to build his football team.

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