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Los Angeles Times
|September 12, 2025
Massive turnover, poor media access leave Bruins fans disconnected

Photographs by ALLEN J. SCHABEN Los Angeles Times IT'S HARD TO GET to know the Bruins with coach DeShaun Foster, center, restricting the media's access to players and practices.
From his seat inside Allegiant Stadium last weekend, Jorge Morales surrounded himself with the UCLA football gameday essentials.
Pizza. Beer. The Bruins' roster pulled up on his cellphone.
During the game’s first series, the lifelong fan saw No. 15 on the UCLA defense surge into the Nevada Las Vegas backfield. Morales wondered about the identity of this fast, feisty edge rusher and looked him up. It was Anthony Jones, a transfer from Michigan State.
Later, Morales watched No. 3 in coverage and commenced another search. It was defensive back Robert Stafford III, a transfer from Miami (Fla.).
Curious about the starting offensive linemen, Morales went back to his phone once more. He discovered a group that included three new starters in left tackle Courtland Ford and guards Eugene Brooks and Julian Armella — all transfers.
"I didn’t recognize any of the numbers,” Morales said.
Similar bewilderment was playing out in the San Diego living room of Ted Zeigler. Watching the game on his 65-inch television, the self-described hardcore Bruins fan also had the roster pulled up on his phone for ready reference, alternating between one screen and the other.
“This adds another dimension to watching the game that I wasn’t looking for,” Zeigler said. “I just feel disinterested.”
It’s hard to be a UCLA fan these days for reasons that go beyond the team’s 0-2 record. Few recognize more than a handful of names on a roster laden with 57 new players, including 37 transfers in their first season with the team.
The days of starting lineups rife with Bruins who have been in the program for two or three years may have gone the way of New Year's Day bowl appearances for a team stuck in a decade-long funk.
This story is from the September 12, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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