UCLA looks to get well at home
Los Angeles Times
|November 08, 2025
Bruins face Nebraska, which just lost its starting quarterback for rest of the season.
UCLA quarterback Nico Iamaleava (9), celebrating a touchdown with receiver Rico Flores Jr., will have a healthier offensive line this week.
(GINA FERAZZI Los Angeles Times)
Well, it was fun while it lasted... wait, it's not over? There's somehow at least four games left in a UCLA football season that feels like it's already exhausted its story arc and run out of acts.
Act I: The fall of a proud Bruin.
Act II: The rise of a proud (Fresno State) Bulldog-turned-Bruin.
Act III: A 50-point implosion that sucked the air out of the season and didn't please any Bruin.
What's left after an 0-4 start that included the firing of a coach followed by a three-game winning streak and a 56-6 loss to one of the nation's top teams? Somehow, there's still at least a third of a season to go.
A victory over Nebraska on Saturday evening at the Rose Bowl could essentially put the Bruins right back where they were a few weeks ago, giving interim coach Tim Skipper another chance to reclaim the hearts of the college football world with an upset of top-ranked Ohio State the following weekend.
But first they have to get past a Cornhuskers team missing its biggest kernel. Nebraska quarterback Dylan Raiola is out for the season with a broken leg, forcing the team to turn to a true freshman who was throwing passes for Orange Lutheran High this time last year.
Don't expect TJ Lateef or any of his teammates to walk into the Rose Bowl waving a white flag.
“It would just be so average to go out there and be like, well, we've got a freshman quarterback and it is what it is,” Nebraska coach Matt Rhule told reporters this week. “Like, no, we're not doing that. We've got TJ Lateef and we're going to rally around him.”
Here are five things to watch when the Bruins (3-5 overall, 3-2 Big Ten) face the Cornhuskers (6-3, 3-3) in a game that starts at 6 p.m. PST and will be televised by Fox:
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