Ben Bolch has been a Los Angeles Times staff writer since 1999. He is serving his second stint as the UCLA beat writer, which seems fitting since he has covered almost every sports beat except hockey and horse racing. Bolch is also the author of the recently released book “100 Things UCLA Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die.” He previously covered UCLA basketball from 2010-11 before going on to cover the NBA and the Clippers for five years. He happily traded in gobs of hotel points and airline miles to return to cover UCLA basketball and football in the summer of 2016. Bolch was once selected by NBA TV’s “The Starters” as the “Worst of the Week” after questioning their celebrity journalism-style questions at an NBA All-Star game and considers it one of his finer moments.
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Seventeen seconds into an interview, the usual everything-is-fine, we-will-get-this-fixed player pablum was abandoned Monday when UCLA linebacker Oluwafemi Oladejo revealed a rift between the Bruins’ offense and defense.
“I think slowly by slowly,” Oladejo said Monday, referring to the team’s 27-10 loss to Arizona last weekend, “we just started to kind of get disunified.”
It wasn’t a slip-up; Oladejo went on to repeat the theme multiple times while acknowledging that the Bruins’ struggling offense was irritating their better half.
Confirmation came a day later when edge rusher Jake Heimlicher said basically the same thing.
“We need to come together as a group, give a full team effort in order to win football games,” Heimlicher said. “It’s not one side or the other, we can’t be divisive, it takes a whole unit to win.”
Coach Chip Kelly suggested his players’ comments were based on the framing of reporters’ questions, which was an interesting perspective if he listened to the interviews.
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The question that prompted Oladeo’s quote: When you looked at the film, did your impressions about the defense from the game change?
The question that prompted Heimlicher’s quote: What did you learn from the tough loss?
Neither player was exactly baited.
After falling out of the national rankings, UCLA clearly has some issues to resolve. Here are five things to watch when the Bruins (6-3 overall, 3-3 Pac-12) face Arizona State (2-7, 1-5) on Saturday evening at the Rose Bowl.
So about that disunity
To their credit, Oladejo and Heimlicher showed courage in not only acknowledging the rift but also offering suggestions for how to fix it.
Said Oladejo: “Just positive self-talk, just staying confident with each other, lifting each other up, using words and encouraging your teammates.”
Said Heimlicher: “It’s about bringing the energy in practice every single day, it’s about moving forward every single day and not taking any days off.… Monday through Friday in practice is how we’re going to come together and win this game on Saturday.”
UCLA’s struggles on offense in its loss to Arizona created motivational and focus issues for the defense, Oluwafemi Oladejo says.
Defensive coordinator D’Anton Lynn showed his players a video about the Baltimore Ravens pulling together amid the legal brouhaha surrounding linebacker Ray Lewis during the team’s 2000 season that ended with a Super Bowl championship.
Will any of that work? Body language will be something to watch closely on the sideline Saturday after anything goes wrong.
This again?
UCLA fans are back to wondering who will be the starting quarterback.
Ethan Garbers started the season opener, lost the job to Dante Moore and regained it after Moore struggled over the first three conference games.
Both quarterbacks left the game against Arizona in the fourth quarter with injuries. Both also returned to practice this week, but Moore seemed much further ahead in his recovery by midweek given that Garbers moved awkwardly with a heavy wrap around his right foot.
UCLA struggled in all phases of the game against Arizona on Saturday, losing 27-10 and plummeting to seventh place in the Pac-12 standings.
Center Duke Clemens said at least one of the quarterbacks was expected to play against Arizona State. The only sure thing is that Collin Schlee will get his share of time as the running quarterback mixed in to challenge the Sun Devils defense.
Wounded Sun Devils
Arizona State’s injury situation might be among the worst in the country.
The Sun Devils are expected to be down 14 players this week, including 11 starters. Five offensive linemen are likely to miss the game as well as quarterbacks Drew Pyne and Jaden Rashada. A sixth offensive lineman is questionable and a seventh recently announced his intention to sit out the rest of the season and transfer.
Third-string quarterback Trenton Bourguet departed Arizona State’s 55-3 loss to Utah last weekend with an injury, though he did return to practice this week. If Bourguet is unable to play, the team would probably go with fourth-stringer Jacob Conover.
Kelly said the Bruins would prepare for every possible quarterback in addition to coach Kenny Dillingham’s unconventional offense.
“They’re going to give you a lot of exotic looks, they’re going to attack you in all sorts of different ways,” Kelly said. “They run speed sweeps, they run unbalanced formations, they’re going to give you a lot of different things to make you kind of be off base a little bit.”
Special help, please
UCLA changed kickers last week and it made no difference.
Blake Glessner missed two of his three field-goal attempts against Arizona, continuing his team’s pattern of inaccuracy. Predecessor R.J. Lopez had missed five of his last eight attempts before Kelly reopened the competition in practice, switching to Glessner.
For the season, UCLA has made seven of 14 field goals, bearing no resemblance to the days when the Bruins’ kicking game was something nobody worried about thanks to Norm Johnson, John Lee, Justin Medlock, Chris Sailer, Ka’imi Fairbairn and Kai Forbath.
In six seasons, Kelly has not landed a scholarship kicker out of high school, though he said he brought some he wanted to camps before they chose to go elsewhere.
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“We’ve offered kids,” Kelly said. “If they don’t come here, that’s their decision.”
On the other hand …
UCLA’s defense has been so good that it’s almost become an afterthought.
How good? The Bruins are on pace to post their best season in school history for rushing yards allowed per game (70.4) and sacks per game (3.8). Giving up just 16.3 points per game puts them on track for their best mark since they allowed 15.8 in 1991.
Surrendering 294.3 yards per game leaves UCLA on pace for its best season in that category since giving up 273.8 in 1988.
All those figures could improve Saturday considering that Arizona State managed just 83 yards of offense last weekend against Utah.