UCLA Bruins football

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UCLA Bruins Football
2016 UCLA Bruins football team
UCLA Bruins script logo.png
First season 1919
Athletic director Dan Guerrero
Head coach Jim L. Mora
4th year, 29–11 (.725)
Stadium Rose Bowl
Seating capacity 92,542
Field surface Grass
Location Pasadena, California
Conference Pac-12
Division South
All-time record 576–399–37 (.587)
Bowl record 17–17–1 (.500)
Playoff appearances 0
Claimed nat'l titles 1[1]
Conference titles 17
Division titles 2
Heisman winners 1
Consensus All-Americans 39
Current uniform
2015 UCLA Football Jerseys.jpg
Fight song Mighty Bruins
Sons of Westwood
Mascot Joe & Josephine Bruin
Marching band The Solid Gold Sound
Rivals California Golden Bears
USC Trojans

The UCLA Bruins football program represents the University of California, Los Angeles in college football as members of the Pac-12 Conference at the NCAA Division I FBS level. The Bruins have enjoyed several periods of success in their history, having been ranked in the top ten of the AP Poll at least once in every decade since the poll began in the 1930s. Their first major period of success came in the 1950s, under head coach Henry Russell Sanders. Sanders led the Bruins to the Coaches' Poll national championship in 1954, three conference championships, and an overall record of 66–19–1 in nine years. In the 1980s and 1990s, during the tenure of Terry Donahue, the Bruins compiled a 151–74–8 record, including 13 bowl games and an NCAA record eight straight bowl wins. The program has produced 28 first round picks in the NFL Draft, 30 consensus All-Americans, and multiple major award winners, including Heisman winner Gary Beban. The UCLA Bruins' main rival is the USC Trojans. Jim L. Mora is the current head coach.

The Bruins were the Pac-12 Conference South Division champions for two years in a row and played Pac-12 Football Championship Games in both 2011 and 2012.

History

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Early history (1919–1924)

Fred Cozens, UCLA's first head football coach

The first football team fielded by UCLA took the field in 1919.[2] The team was coached by Fred Cozens.[2] That UCLA football team compiled a 2–6 record.[2] UCLA did not participate in an athletic conference until 1920, so the 1919 football team played a schedule full of local high schools and other assorted teams.[2] Cozens was UCLA's athletics director from 1919 to 1942.[3]

Harry Trotter took over the young UCLA football program after Cozens stepped down after guiding the Bruins in their first season.[4] UCLA began to play in the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) in 1920, and competed against Occidental College, California Institute of Technology, University of Redlands, Whittier College, and Pomona College.[4] Coach Trotter's two wins were against Redlands and San Diego State, which did not join the SCIAC until 1926.[4] Trotter left UCLA with a 2–13–1 record in three seasons (1920–1922).[4]

James J. Cline took over the Bruins football program as its third head coach in 1923.[4] Coach Cline's two wins were against Loyola University and San Diego State.[4] Cline was replaced after two seasons and a 2–10–3 record.[4]

William Spaulding era (1925–1938)

Coach Spaulding

William H. Spaulding came to UCLA from Minnesota in 1925. As the Bruins head coach, his overall record in fourteen seasons was 72–51–8.[5] During his tenure in Los Angeles, Spaulding led the Bruins to their first bowl appearance and victory, the 1938 Poi Bowl.[5] Also during Spaulding's tenure, the Bruins left the SCIAC and joined the Pacific Coast Conference beginning in 1928.[6]

Spaulding's 72 wins rank him among the best in head coaching victories in Bruin football history.[7] He retired after a successful fourteen-season tenure ended after the 1938 season.[8]

Edwin Horrell era (1939–1944)

Edwin C. Horrell was promoted to head coach following Spaulding's retirement.[9] His 1942 UCLA Bruins team lost to Georgia in the 1943 Rose Bowl.[10] He was the first coach to lead a UCLA team to defeat the rival USC.[9] It was the first football victory in the UCLA-USC rivalry. The most notable player who played for Horrell at UCLA was Jackie Robinson.[9]

Horrell's 1939 team compiled a 6–0–4 and his 1941 team posted a 5–5–1 record.[10] With the exception of the 1942 season, the combined record of the Bruins during Horrell's tenure outside the aforementioned seasons was 6–22–1.[10] These struggles led to Horrell's firing after six seasons at the helm of UCLA football.[9]

Bert LaBrucherie era (1945–1948)

Coach Bert LaBrucherie was hired by his alma mater to replace Horrell.[9] LaBrucherie's overall record at UCLA was 23–16.[11] In his second year as head coach, the Bruins were Pacific Coast Conference champions, but lost to Illinois in the Rose Bowl.[12] LaBrucherie's Bruins only posted one losing season during his four seasons, a 3–7 1948 season in what turned out to be his final season.[11]

LaBrucherie accepted the position of head football coach at California Institute of Technology after the 1948 season, departing UCLA.[9]

Henry Sanders era (1949–1957)

Coach Sanders

Henry Sanders came to UCLA from Vanderbilt.[13] He was arguably the best coach in school history, with an overall record of 66–19–1 (.773) at UCLA and earned the school its only national championship in football in 1954.[14] As head coach of the Bruins, Sanders led them to three Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) titles, two Rose Bowls (1953 and 1955 seasons) and to a 6–3 record over arch-rival USC.[9][14]

Sanders instituted the distinctive football uniforms worn by the Bruins when he replaced the navy blue jerseys with "powderkeg blue," added the shoulder stripe to give the impression of motion, and changed the number style from block to clarendon.[9] Sanders said these changes were made to make it easier to see his Bruins on the grainy black and white game films of the time.[9]

The 1954 Bruins compiled a 9–0 record and climbed to the top of the Coaches' Poll, sharing the national championship with Ohio State, winner of the AP Poll's title.[14] Due to the PCC's early "no repeat" rule, the undefeated Bruins were unable to compete in the Rose Bowl that season despite being the PCC champion.[9] Second-place USC, who the Bruins defeated 34-0, played in the 1955 Rose Bowl instead and lost to Big Ten Conference champion and eventual co-national champion Ohio State, 20-7.[9]

Henry Sanders was also known for intensifying the Bruins' rivalry with USC.[9] His teams were always given a speech before the game against their cross-town rivals that always ended with "Beat SC!" A famous quote was attributed to Sanders regarding the rivalry, "Beating 'SC is not a matter of life or death, it's more important than that."[15][16]

Shortly before the 1958 season was set to begin, Coach Sanders suffered and died from a heart attack in a Los Angeles hotel.[17][18] Assistant coach George W. Dickerson took over the Bruins on an interim basis before suffering a nervous breakdown.[19] Then, a full-time head coach was hired. For his successes, he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1996.[20]

William Barnes era (1958–1964)

William F. Barnes was the head coach for the UCLA Bruins football team for seven seasons.[21] He guided his teams to a 31–34–3 (.478) record.[21] He did have two seven-win seasons in 1960 and 1961, leading the Bruins to the 1962 Rose Bowl.[21] That year, the Bruins finished the season ranked #16 in the final AP poll.[21]

Barnes resigned after the 1964 season after learning that athletics director J.D. Morgan was not going to renew his contract.[22][23]

Tommy Prothro era (1965–1970)

File:Tommy Prothro.jpg
Coach Prothro

On January 11, 1965, Tommy Prothro was hired away from Oregon State as head coach of the UCLA Bruins.[9]

In the 1965 football season, the Bruins lost their season opening game 13-3 at Michigan State, who then rose to become the top-ranked team in the country.[9] The unheralded Bruins would go on a seven-game undefeated streak, surprising the national powers likes of Syracuse and Penn State.[9] Going into the 1965 UCLA-USC rivalry football game ranked #7, the conference championship and 1966 Rose Bowl were on the line.[9] #6 USC, led by Heisman Trophy winner Mike Garrett led 16-6 until UCLA got a touchdown on a pass from Gary Beban to Dick Witcher with four minutes to play.[9] After the two-point conversion made it 16–14, UCLA recovered an onside kick.[9] Beban then hit Kurt Altenberg on a 50-yard bomb and UCLA won, 20-16.[24] Integrated UCLA then faced all-white Tennessee in the newly built Liberty Bowl stadium in Memphis, Prothro's native city.[9] On the last play of the game, Tennessee defensive back Bob Petrella intercepted a UCLA pass to save a Volunteer win by a score of 37-34.[9] Tennessee's winning drive was aided by a controversial pass interference call, the clock had questionably stopped twice, and a dropped pass that appeared to be a lateral was recovered by UCLA but was later ruled an incomplete forward pass.[9] After the game, Prothro stated, "For the first time in my life, I am ashamed to be a Southerner."[25]

Heading into the final game of the 1966 season vs. USC, UCLA was 2–1 in conference games, 8–1 overall and ranked #5 in the country.[9] The Bruins, featuring a "dream backfield" of All-Americans Gary Beban and Mel Farr, lost only one game, at rainy Washington, 16-3, where Huskies' head coach Jim Owens had devoted his entire season to beating Prothro.[9] UCLA had beaten UW the season before, 28-24, with Prothro's trick play, the Z-streak in which a receiver trots towards the sideline like he's going out of the game and then runs a streak pattern unguarded by the inattentive defender.[9] USC was 4–0 in conference and 7–1 overall, having lost to unranked Miami.[9] The Bruins and Trojans played a different number of conference due to uneven scheduling caused by new AAWU members Oregon and Oregon State and schedules made years in advance.[9] It was widely assumed that only losses would be considered and the winner of the 1966 UCLA-USC game would go to the 1967 Rose Bowl. UCLA star quarterback Gary Beban broke his ankle the week before in a win over Stanford, but backup Norman Dow, making his first and only start at quarterback, led UCLA to a 14-7 win.[26][27] That left USC with a 4–1 conference record (7–2 overall) and #5 UCLA with a 3–1 conference record (9–1) overall. Due to their win over USC, it was widely assumed UCLA would get the Rose Bowl berth. However, a vote the next Monday among the AAWU conference athletic directors awarded USC the Rose Bowl berth.[9] It was speculated that the directors believed Beban could not play for UCLA in the Rose Bowl due to the broken ankle, thereby giving the Big Ten Conference representative, Purdue, a better chance to win. As it turned out, Beban could have played. But a bigger reason was that this was to make up for 1964 when Oregon State was voted in ahead of USC. The coach of Oregon State in 1964 was Prothro.[9][28] Another speculation was the vote was against UCLA out of pure jealousy by the rest of the conference, which voted 7–1 for the clearly inferior team. This vote deprived Prothro of being the first coach to earn three consecutive Rose Bowl berths and UCLA athletic director J.D. Morgan called it a "gross injustice" and the "a dark day in UCLA and AAWU Athletic history." Inflamed UCLA students who had gathered for the Rose Bowl celebration rally, took to the streets of Westwood in protest and actually blocked the 405 Freeway for a short time.[9] Ironically, Morgan was the force behind establishing a tie-breaking method adopted by the conference one year later in which only loss column counted; the first tiebreaker was head-to-head results, followed by overall record. If there was still a tie, the Rose Bowl berth would go to the team that had not played in the Rose Bowl the longest. But it was too late for UCLA. In their final game, USC made the AAWU decision look bad by losing to Notre Dame, 51-0. They went on to lose the Rose Bowl as well to Purdue, 14-13, finishing the season at 7–4.

In 1967, Prothro helped a second quarterback capture the Heisman Trophy when Gary Beban was awarded the trophy after the regular season.[9] He would bring his #1 ranked UCLA Bruin team to face #2 USC in one of the "Games of the Century". Despite playing with cracked ribs, Beban threw for 301 yards, but UCLA lost, 21-20, on a spectacular 64-yard run by O. J. Simpson in the 1967 USC vs. UCLA football game.[9] Another big factor was UCLA's acclaimed sophomore kicker Zenon Andusyshyn missing a chip shot field goal, and having two field goals and an extra point attempt blocked.[9]

In what was acknowledged to be a rebuilding year, the Bruins opened the 1968 season with a 63-7 defeat of Pittsburgh and a win over Washington State.[29] The season ground to a halt at Syracuse and with the season-ending injury of quarterback Billy Bolden, and UCLA would win only one more game, over Stanford 20–17. The Bruins gave #1 USC and Heisman Trophy winner O. J. Simpson a scare in a 28–16 loss;[29] UCLA trailed 21–16 late in the fourth quarter and had the ball inside USC's 10-yard line, but USC recovered a fumble and then used almost all of the remaining time in driving for their insurance touchdown.

1969 was the year Prothro had geared his recruiting efforts towards as he believed this was his best team and was capable of contending for the national championship.[9] The Bruins, quarterbacked by a sensational Junior College transfer Dennis Dummit discovered by Prothro, were undefeated until they faced #10 Stanford in Palo Alto.[30] Once again, Prothro was let down by now senior kicker Zenon Andrusyshyn as he missed a short field goal late in the game with the score tied 20–20.[9] Suddenly, two long Jim Plunkett passes had Stanford in field goal range in the final seconds, but UCLA blocked Steve Horowitz's attempt to preserve the tie.[9] One again, the UCLA-USC game would decide the Pac-8 title and the 1970 Rose Bowl berth. UCLA was ranked 6th with a 5–0–1 record in conference and 8–0–1 overall USC was #5 and was 6–0 in conference and 8–0–1 overall (tied Notre Dame in South Bend, 14-14); UCLA and USC were both unbeaten coming into their rivalry game for the first time since 1952. UCLA scored midway through the fourth quarter to take a 12-7 lead (knowing he need a win and not a tie to advance to the Rose Bowl, Prothro had the Bruins go for two after each touchdown and each attempt failed).[9] USC then drove to the winning touchdown with 1:38 to play to win 14-12. The Trojans were aided by two controversial calls; the first was a dubious pass interference call on UCLA's Danny Graham on a 4th-and-10 incompletion. Secondly, on the winning touchdown pass reception, USC receiver Sam Dickerson appeared to be either out of bounds, out of the back of the end zone, or both. This loss supposedly was harder for Prothro to take than the 1967 loss and the freak officiating calls resembled the debacle at Tennessee in 1965.[9][31]

In what turned out to be his final season at UCLA, Prothro's team suffered a rash of key injuries and finished 6–5, yet they were three close games from a 9–2 season and Rose Bowl berth.[32] Before those injuries set in, UCLA took a 3–0 record into Austin to play defending national champ and top ranked Texas.[32] Trailing 13-3 at the half, UCLA rallied and had a 17-13 lead in the final minute. But with 12 seconds left, Texas completed a long pass when their receiver caught the ball between two UCLA defenders, who then collided, allowing the receiver to score. UCLA also blew a 20-point fourth quarter lead against Oregon, when Ducks sophomore quarterback Dan Fouts rallied his team to three touchdowns and a 41–40 win.[32] Finally, there came the showdown with Stanford; the game was expected to be a shootout between UCLA quarterback Dennis Dummit and Heisman winner Jim Plunkett. But the defenses ruled as UCLA took a 7-6 lead into the 4th quarter. Stanford took a 9-7 lead on a field goal, but UCLA was driving to a potential game winning field goal or touchdown themselves when they completed a pass inside the Stanford 10-yard-line, only to have the receiver get sandwiched by two defenders on the tackle and fumble. This game ultimately decided the Pac-8 championship and 1971 Rose Bowl representative. The season ended on a high note however, when UCLA beat rival USC, 45–20, in a game that was not that close. This would end up being Prothro's final game at UCLA. Prothro was frustrated by bizarre officiating at critical moments, numerous last minute narrow losses, and losing out of the Rose Bowl by the conference vote in 1966.[9] Prothro also decried the Pac-8 rule that only allowed the conference champion to go to a bowl game; he witnessed many lower ranked inferior teams (often ones he defeated during the season) go to bowl games while his Bruins stayed home.[9]

After George Allen was fired by the Los Angeles Rams, Prothro accepted that job,[9] leaving the Bruins after six seasons and a 41–18–3 record.[28] Prothro was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1991.[33]

Pepper Rodgers era (1971–1973)

Pepper Rodgers came to UCLA from Kansas after the departure of Prothro. In Rodgers' three seasons at the helm of the Bruins, UCLA finished 2–7–1, 8–3 and 9–2.[34] In 1972, the Bruins finished the season ranked #17 and #15 in the final Coaches' and AP polls, respectively.[34] In 1973, the Bruins finished ranked #9 and #12 in the final Coaches' and AP polls, respectively.[34]

Rodgers surprised UCLA fans, players and administration by deciding to accept the head football coach position at his alma mater, Georgia Tech after the 1973 season.[35] He left the Bruins after compiling a 19–12–1 overall record.[34]

Dick Vermeil era (1974–1975)

As head coach at UCLA, Dick Vermeil compiled a 15–5–3 record in two seasons (1974–75), including a 9–2–1 record in 1975 when he led the Bruins to their first conference championship in 10 years, and a win in the Rose Bowl over undefeated and number 1 ranked Ohio State.[36] Vermeil won Pac-10 Coach of the Year honors in 1975.[36]

Vermeil became to second out of three UCLA head coaches (and third in a row to leave UCLA for another job) to leave for the NFL when he accepted on offer to become head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles.[37] His final record as head coach of the Bruins is 15–5–3.[36]

Terry Donahue era (1976–1995)

Terry Donahue was promoted from assistant coach to head coach of the Bruins football team following Vermeil's departure.[38] Donahue has the most conference wins of any head coach in Pacific-10 Conference history (98) and also the most wins in UCLA football history (151).[38] His teams compiled a record of 8–4–1 in bowl games and were the first to win a bowl game in seven consecutive seasons.[39] Donahue's UCLA teams won or shared five Pacific-10 Conference championships and won three Rose Bowls (1983, 1984, and 1986).[39] Donahue's record was 10–9–1 against USC in the UCLA–USC rivalry.[38][40] His teams won four New Year's Day bowl games in a row from 1983 to 1986.[38]

Donahue retired from coaching after twenty seasons and was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 2000.[38] His final record is 151–74–8.[39]

Bob Toledo era (1996–2002)

Bob Toledo was promoted from offensive coordinator to head coach of the Bruins after Donahue's retirement.[9] In 1996, his first season as head coach, the Bruins finished with a 5–6 record.[41] The highlight of the season was a comeback win over USC.

The 1997 team finished as co-champions of the Pacific-10 Conference with Washington State.[41] However, with Washington State defeating the Bruins in the season opener, the Cougars earned the right to play in the Rose Bowl.[9] The highlights of that season were a 66-3 win over the Texas and a victory at the Cotton Bowl Classic over Texas A&M, and a victory over USC.[9]

The 1998 season started out as one of the best in the history of UCLA football.[9] The team was high enough in the BCS standings to merit entry to the national championship game, and all UCLA needed to do was beat unranked University of Miami, who were major underdogs after a 66-13 loss to Syracuse the week before.[9] UCLA was also coming off of their eighth consecutive victory over USC and 20th straight win overall. However, Miami won 49-45, ending UCLA's chances of playing in the national championship game.[9] They instead settled for a trip to the Rose Bowl as Pac-10 champions, but lost to Wisconsin.[41] This is seen as the turning point for the UCLA football program.[9]

The 1999 season was a major disappointment, with the team finishing 4–7.[41] This was the first year that USC had defeated them in the annual Battle for the Victory Bell since 1990.[42] The year also had the dubious distinction of a 55–7 loss to Pac-10 foe Oregon State, the worst defeat of the Bruins in 69 years.[42]

In 2000, the Bruins finished 6–6 with a loss in the Sun Bowl, again against Wisconsin.[43]

The 2001 season started with promise as the Bruins got off to a fast start with a 6–0 record.[44] However, four straight losses to Stanford, Washington State, Oregon, and USC, the Bruins faded out of postseason contention.[44]

UCLA finished off 8–5 in Toledo's final season in 2002.[45] The team finished 7–5 in the regular season, but Toledo was fired after a fourth straight loss to USC.[46] The Bruins did reach the Las Vegas Bowl and interim coach Ed Kezirian coached—and won—his only game in charge of the program.[45]

Toledo finished with a record of 49–32, for a winning percentage of .605, including one winning streak of 20 consecutive victories, a school record.[41] Toledo's greatest accomplishment with the team may have been in the 1997 season, where the team finished 10–2 with a victory over Texas A&M in the Cotton Bowl Classic.[41] Toledo's Bruins were 3–4 against UCLA's cross-town archrival, the USC Trojans.[9]

Karl Dorrell era (2003–2007)

Longtime college and NFL assistant Karl Dorrell was brought in to revive the glory of the UCLA football program, his alma mater, after Toledo was fired.[47] Dorrell also was brought in to UCLA to clean up a program marred by off-the-field problems in the final years of Bob Toledo's tenure.[48] He was the first African American head football coach in UCLA football history.

Dorrell's UCLA Bruins team recorded a mark of 6–7 in his first season as head coach in 2003, with an appearance in the Silicon Valley Bowl, and a loss to Fresno State.[49] In 2004, his second season, the team finished with a record of 6–6 an appearance in the Las Vegas Bowl, with a loss to Wyoming.[50]

In 2005, his third season as head football coach, Dorrell was able get his first win against a ranked opponent, No. 21 Oklahoma, featuring Adrian Peterson.[51] On October 1, 2005, head coach Tyrone Willingham and his Washington Huskies came to the Rose Bowl for a Pacific-10 Conference game to play UCLA. This was the first time two black head coaches faced each other in a Pac-10 conference game. At the time, Sylvester Croom of Mississippi State was the only other black coach heading an NCAA Division I football program. Dorrell achieved his first win against a top-ten opponent with a 47-40 upset win over No. 10-ranked rival California.[51] Three Bruin wins in the 2005 season set new school records for biggest comebacks earning the nickname "The Cardiac Kids." They came thanks largely to the heroics of quarterback Drew Olson and tailback Maurice Jones-Drew. In the regular season the Bruins came from down 21 points to win in overtime against both Washington State and Stanford.[51] In the Stanford comeback, the Bruins scored 21 points in the final 7:04 of the fourth quarter.[52] In the Sun Bowl, the Bruins set the record again by coming back from 22 points down.[51] The Bruins were ranked No. 7 in the nation until a 52–14 blowout loss to a 3–8 Arizona team.[51] The Bruins came into the UCLA-USC rivalry last regular season game ranked No. 11. They suffered a 66–19 defeat to the No. 1 2005 USC Trojans football team.[51] This was the largest margin of defeat since the series began in 1929 with a 76-0 defeat. The Bruins finished third in the Pac-10 standings. On December 30, 2005 his Bruins defeated the Northwestern Wildcats in the Sun Bowl, 50-38, finishing the season with a 10–2 record.[51] At the end of the 2005 season, Dorrell received pay bonuses for coaching successful seasons. He was named Pac-10 co-coach of the year along with USC head coach Pete Carroll.[53]

In 2006, Dorrell's fourth season, the Bruins finished the season 7–6 (5–4 in conference) and finished fourth-place in the Pac-10.[54] UCLA played its first game at the University of Notre Dame since the 1960s and was leading 17-13, but the Irish scored a touchdown in the final minute to win.[55] The most notable victory of his coaching career at UCLA was a 13–9 defeat of No. 2-ranked and Bowl Championship Series title-game-bound USC on December 2, 2006.[54] The win kept the Trojans out of the title game and broke a seven-game UCLA losing streak to the Trojans, thereby preserving the Bruins' eight-game win streak over USC from 1991 to 1998 as the longest run in the history of the rivalry. The victory also clinched a winning season for UCLA. The Bruins played in the Emerald Bowl in San Francisco against a Bobby Bowden-coached Florida State team on December 27, 2006 and lost, 44-27.[54]

In Dorrell's fifth season at UCLA, with 20 returning starters and a team of his own recruits, hopes were high for the Bruins in 2007.[9] After starting the season with a couple of wins over Stanford and BYU, and achieving a No. 11 AP Poll ranking, however, UCLA stumbled against an injured, winless, and unranked Utah team, 44-6.[56] Four weeks later, Dorrell's Bruins fell again; this time 20–6 to an unranked, winless Notre Dame team.[57] The Bruins did, however, post wins against seemingly more difficult PAC-10 opponents, including a No. 10 Cal team. However; the bad taste of losses to teams the Bruins were favored to beat (including an embarrassing 27-7 loss to Washington State) raised questions about Dorrell's play-calling and ability to motivate his players.[9] After the Washington State loss, UCLA Athletic Director Dan Guerrero addressed UCLA's inconsistent football performances for the first time, stating "I will be very interested to see how we finish the season. And you can use that."[9] Many took this as a hint that Dorrell's job might be in serious jeopardy.[58] The Bruins would go on to lose to Arizona and Arizona State by a combined score of 58–47, but surprisingly shut out an Oregon Ducks team that a week earlier lost starting quarterback and Heisman Trophy Candidate Dennis Dixon to a knee injury. Heading into the final game of the regular season against crosstown-rival USC, the Bruins still had an outside chance at a Rose Bowl berth that might have saved Dorrell's job; with a victory over USC and some help from Arizona (with a win over ASU), the Bruins could have been the first-ever five-loss team to play in the Rose Bowl. It wasn't to be, however, and the Bruins finished the 2007 Regular season with a miserable offensive performance in a 24–7 loss to USC and a record of 6–6.[59]

On December 3, 2007, Los Angeles papers and the Associated Press reported that Karl Dorrell was fired during a meeting with athletic director Dan Guerrero.[60] Dorrell was offered the choice, but decided not to coach in the Las Vegas Bowl. Defensive coordinator DeWayne Walker served as interim coach for the game, where UCLA lost to BYU.[61]

Rick Neuheisel era (2008–2011)

Coach Neuheisel

On December 29, 2007, Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Rick Neuheisel, formerly head coach at Colorado and Washington, was brought back to his alma mater and hired as UCLA's 15th head football coach after his former Bruins teammate Dorrell was fired.[62] Neuheisel coined the phrase "Passion Bucket" during an interview on The Dan Patrick Show by saying, "When you’re at UCLA, you have to have your passion bucket full when you play the Trojans."[63]

Neuheisel had his first win on September 1 as the Bruins' head coach as they defeated #18 Tennessee, 27-24.[64] The win came in overtime as Tennessee's field goal try sailed wide left.[65] However, the team's momentum came to a halt in successive weeks. A brutal 59–0 defeat on the road at the hands of #15 BYU was followed by a disappointing 31–10 loss at home to unranked Arizona in the Bruins' Pac-10 opener.[64] The UCLA offense failed to score a touchdown in either contest. The team finished the season 4–8 overall and 3–6 in conference.[64]

Despite this record, Neuheisel was still able secure the fifth-best recruiting class in the nation in 2009 as rated by Scout.com. The class was headlined by Morrell Presley, Randall Carroll, offensive linemen Xavier Sua-Filo and Stan Hasiak, and running back Damien Thigpen. Nevertheless, the Bruins fell to 4–8 in 2010, losing six of their last seven games and failing to receive a bowl berth. Player injuries and other attrition depleted UCLA of its roster depth, while true freshmen were forced into action and seniors who were previously reserves became starters; a quarterback who had attempted only 17 passes in his career became the starter.[66] At the end of the season Neuheisel fired two assistant coaches, including Chow, and said he would “be crushed ... if we’re not going to a bowl game a year from now.” [67]

The 2011 season brought about continued mediocre performance, although the team's record improved to 6–6 in regular season play.[68] Despite the lackluster overall record, the Bruins won the first Pac-12 South Division title, as crosstown rival USC was ineligible due to NCAA sanctions.[68] A 50-0 shutout loss to USC to end the regular season—UCLA's fifth consecutive loss to the Trojans—prompted speculation that Neuheisel would be fired.

Neuheisel was fired as head coach of UCLA on November 28, 2011.[69] He was allowed to coach his final game at the December 2 Pac-12 Conference football Championship game, where the team lost 49-31 to the Oregon Ducks.[70]

Jim Mora era (2012–present)

Coach Mora

On December 10, 2011, UCLA athletics director Dan Guerrero announced the hiring of former Atlanta Falcons and Seattle Seahawks head coach, Jim L. Mora, as the Bruins' 16th head football coach.[71] Mora signed a three-year contract.[72]

The results of the new regime came early, as UCLA landed a consensus #12 ranked recruiting class in 2012 after having a class ranked in the high 40s at Rick Neuheisel's departure.[73][74] In Mora's first season, the Bruins finished 9–5 capped with a loss in the 2012 Holiday Bowl.[75]

In Mora's second season, the Bruins improved to 10–3, capping the season with a victory in the 2013 Sun Bowl.[75] Behind the leadership of quarterback Brett Hundley, the Bruins came within one game of reaching the Pac-12 championship game and beat crosstown rivals USC for the second straight year.[72]

In Mora's third season, the Bruins finished 10-3 again. The team beat rival Southern Cal for the third straight year and won the Alamo Bowl against Kansas State. Paul Perkins led the Pac-12 in rushing with 1,575 yards.

The fourth season brought the arrival of freshman quarterback Josh Rosen, a rash of injuries, and erratic play by the offense. The Bruins finished 8-5, including a loss to Nebraska in the Foster Farms Bowl.

Rivalries

USC

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UCLA's rivalry with USC is unusual in that they are one of a few pairs of Division I FBS programs that share a major city. Both are within the Los Angeles city limits, approximately 10 miles (16 km) apart. Until 1982, the two schools also shared the same stadium: the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

The crosstown rivals play each year for city bragging rights and the Victory Bell; and often for the right to go to the Rose Bowl. The USC rivalry tends to draw the focus of student supporters since many UCLA students have friends or family members attending "that other school" (of course, many USC students refer to their UCLA friends in the same manner) and many Southern California families are evenly divided between Trojan Cardinal and Bruin Blue. USC leads the all-time series 44–30–7 (2 Southern Cal victories vacated by the NCAA).[76]

California

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The Bruins also enjoy an annual rivalry with another in-state conference foe, the California Golden Bears. The rivals have faced each other 84 times, every year starting in 1933.[77] UCLA leads the all-time series against Cal, 51-32-1.[77]

Facilities

Rose Bowl, panorama
Fall football practices at Spaulding Field

Rose Bowl

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The Rose Bowl is a National Historic Landmark located in Pasadena, California with an official capacity of 92,542. It has been the home football field for the UCLA Bruins since the 1982 season. The Bruins had played their home games at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum after joining the Pacific Coast Conference in 1928. The Coliseum is also the home of the rival USC Trojans. As the Coliseum is located across the street from the USC campus, Bruin officials long sought to move out from under the Trojans' shadow. An on-campus facility was discussed, but UCLA's location is not conducive to adequate traffic flow, and the campus lacks room for sufficient parking. There was an attempt to build a 44,000 seat stadium on campus, at the site where Drake Stadium eventually was built. However, the proposal was blocked by influential area residents, as well as other politicians.[78][79] In addition, the Coliseum already was constructed by and is a facility of the State of California. When the Oakland Raiders became the Los Angeles Raiders, in 1982, and after arduous negotiations with the city of Pasadena, UCLA decided to move out of the Coliseum, relocating its home games to the Rose Bowl Stadium.[80] UCLA has participated in five Rose Bowl games since moving to the stadium, including the 1983 Rose Bowl at the end of the Bruins' first season there. From 1919 to 1927, the Bruins (then known as the Cubs) used Moore Field at the Vermont Ave. campus of the "Southern Branch of the University of California."[81]

Acosta Athletic Complex

Training room, weight room, football facilities, and locker rooms are all located in the Acosta Athletic Complex, just west of Pauley Pavilion.

Spaulding Field

The on campus practice facility for the football team is Spaulding Field, which has two football fields, one grass and one artificial turf, or synthetic turf. Because of space constraints, the Bruins don't have a complete 100 yard field for practice.

Wasserman Football Center

The Wasserman Football Center will be built immediately west of Spaulding Field, the football team’s practice field.

Uniforms

Bruin on Bruin scrimmage

The UCLA athletic colors are "True Blue" and gold. The "True Blue" is a slightly darker shade than the previous powder blue worn by teams.[82]

In the early days of the school, UCLA had the same colors as the California Golden Bears: Yale Blue and California Gold.[83] Blue symbolized the ocean, while gold represented the state of California, known as the "Golden State".[84]

When football coach Red Sanders came to UCLA for the 1949 season he redesigned the football uniforms. The Yale Blue was changed to a lighter shade of blue. Sanders figured that the baby blue would look better on the field and in film. He would dub the baby blue uniform "Powderkeg blue", powder blue with an explosive kick.[84][85] For the 1954 season, Sanders added the now familiar loop on the shoulders, the UCLA Stripe, to give an impression of motion.[86] The away uniforms became white, with a navy blue and gold shoulder stripe and gold pants. The helmets became gold.

At times, beginning with the 1954 football season, the font for the numbers on the uniforms has been Clarendon typeface. Otherwise it has been block numerals.[86] In the 1980s the uniform pants became yellow to look better in color publications, the jerseys a lighter blue, and the UCLA script was added to the helmets. In the 1990s, the uniform pants became gold again.

In 2003, the True Blue colors were adopted.[82] The away uniforms got true blue shoulder stripes and numbers in 2006,[87] but were replaced by navy blue again in 2010.[88]

In 2009, the Bruins wore a 1967 throwback uniform against Washington and USC, though against USC the team's normal helmet was worn.

Season-by-season results

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Bowl games

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UCLA has played in 35 bowl games in its history, compiling a record of 17–17–1. From 1946 to 1974, no team could participate in the Rose Bowl two years in a row. This is why the 1954 team, which won the conference, did not participate in the 1955 Rose Bowl.

Head coaching history

Years Coach Record
1919 Fred Cozens 2–6
1920–1922 Harry Trotter 2–13–1
1923–1924 James J. Cline 2–10–3
1925–1938 William H. Spaulding 72–51–8
1939–1944 Edwin C. Horrell 24–31–6
1945–1948 Bert LaBrucherie 23–16
1949–1957 Henry Russell Sanders 66–19–1
1958–1964 William F. Barnes 31–34–3
1965–1970 Tommy Prothro 41–18–3
1971–1973 Pepper Rodgers 19–12–1
1974–1975 Dick Vermeil 15–5–3
1976–1995 Terry Donahue 151–74–8
1996–2002 Bob Toledo 49–32
2003–2007 Karl Dorrell 35–27
2008–2011 Rick Neuheisel 21–29
2012–present Jim L. Mora 37–16

Achievements and awards

Team achievements

National championships

Year Coach Selector Record Bowl
1954 Henry Russell Sanders UPI, FWAA 9–0 (6–0) none
Total national championships 1

Conference championships

Year Coach Conference Overall Record Conference Record
1935 William H. Spaulding PCC 8–2 4–1
1942 Edwin C. Horrell PCC 7–4 6–1
1946 Bert LaBrucherie PCC 10–1 7–0
1953 Henry Russell Sanders PCC 8–2 6–1
1954 Henry Russell Sanders PCC 9–0 6–0
1955 Henry Russell Sanders PCC 9–2 6–0
1959 William F. Barnes AAWU 5-4-1 3-1
1961 William F. Barnes AAWU 7-4 3-1
1965 Tommy Prothro AAWU 8–2–1 4–0
1975 Dick Vermeil Pac-8 9–2-1 6–1
1982 Terry Donahue Pac-10 10–1–1 5–1–1
1983 Terry Donahue Pac-10 7–4–1 6–1–1
1985 Terry Donahue Pac-10 9–2–1 6–2
1987 Terry Donahue Pac-10 10–2 7–1
1993 Terry Donahue Pac-10 8–4 6–2
1997 Bob Toledo Pac-10 10–2 7–1
1998 Bob Toledo Pac-10 10–2 8–0
Total conference championships: 17

Individual award winners

UCLA became the first school to have a top winner in both basketball and football in the same year with Gary Beban winning the Heisman Trophy and Lew Alcindor (now Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) winning the U.S. Basketball Writers Association player of the year award in 1968.

College Football Hall of Famers

The following former Bruins have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

Pro Football Hall of Famers

Five former Bruins have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

UCLA football team's Rose Bowl records

Rose Bowl MVPs

Rose Bowl Hall of Fame

UCLA Bruins currently in the NFL

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[93]

All-Century UCLA Bruin Team

Retired numbers

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The following players have been honored with retired numbers.

School records

Team records

  • Consecutive wins: 20 (1997–1998)
  • Consecutive wins at home: 12 (1946–1947)
  • Consecutive games without being shut out: 245 (1971–1992)
  • Consecutive shutouts of opponents: 3 (1954–1955)

Individual records

Source[97]

Media

KLAC 570-AM in Los Angeles ("AM 570") is the current flagship radio station for UCLA football. Bill Roth and Matt Stevens are the current broadcast team in the booth, along with sideline reporter Wayne Cook, who is a former Bruin quarterback.

Former play-by-play announcers include John Rebenstorf (1991),[98] Paul Olden (1989–1990),[99] Joel Meyers (1984–1988),[100] Kent Derdivanis (1983–1985),[100] Fred Hessler (1961–1982),[101] and Roy Storey. Former UCLA football analysts include Billy Ray Smith (1997–2000), Steve Hartman (1996),[102] David Norrie (1991–1995),[103] John Rebenstorf (1990),[104] Bob Steinbrinck (1972–1989), Bob Waterfield (1959), Sam Balter (1950–1958).

Future non-conference opponents

Announced schedules as of December 21, 2015

2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026
at Texas A&M vs Texas A&M at Oklahoma vs San Diego State vs Rutgers vs LSU at Michigan vs Michigan at LSU vs Georgia at Georgia
vs UNLV vs Hawaii vs Fresno State vs Oklahoma at San Diego State at Rutgers vs South Alabama vs Coastal Carolina
at BYU at Memphis vs Cincinnati at Cincinnati vs Fresno State

[105]

Footnotes

  1. As a UCLA football player, Robinson wore #28; however, the school chose to retire #42, which became indelibly identified with him because it was the number he wore throughout his Hall of Fame baseball career with the Brooklyn Dodgers, which included his becoming the first African American player in the modern era of professional baseball.[95]

References

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Additional sources

  • ESPN College Football Encyclopedia (Pages 908–915)

External links