Bruin test that measures everything

UCLA at No. 1 Ohio State: The Bruin test that measures everything
By Jason Burrell | South Bay Black Journal
The assignment is simple to describe and hard to execute: walk into the Horseshoe on Saturday night and trade blows with the defending national champions. Ohio State is No. 1, deep at the skill spots, violent up front, and as complete as any team in the country. The polls and computers agree.
A quick note on the home front:
Bruin Report Online recently reported that UCLA is nearing a move from the Rose Bowl to SoFi Stadium. Meanwhile, Pasadena and the Rose Bowl Operating Company have already filed suit to block any relocation, and UCLA has said no final decision has been made, and discussions don’t breach the lease. It’s a dispute about money, facilities, and the program’s long-term health, and it’s not going away.
What Tim Skipper is really emphasizing this week:
Tim, keep the message tight:
- Start fast. The last big road trip snowballed early; this one can’t.
- Win 1-on-1s to affect the QB. The scheme helps, but sacks come from beating your man and fitting rush lanes when they slide the protection.
- Create 3rd-and-long. UCLA’s defense has lived in too many 3rd-and-shorts; the call sheet opens only when it’s behind the chains.
- Fundamentals over noise. Eyes, feet, hands; finish plays; strain for four quarters.
That’s Skipper’s plan, and it fits a trip where composure will decide the first quarter. Skipper also praised his QB’s toughness as a true dual-threat and asked the OL to stick on blocks through all the pre-snap stemming they’ve been seeing. “He’s dangerous with the ball in his hands… every now and then you might want to slide, but when you have a natural runner like he is, you kind of let him do his thing.” Coach, is it about Ohio State or about the Bruins? “It’s always going to come back to us just doing what we’re supposed to do… Once again, the big message… “will be starting fast,” Skipper said. “Every single play has a life and history of its own… we have to strain to finish for four quarters.”
Why Ohio State is #1:
Their supreme talent is obvious; it’s their synergy is why they’re undefeated and sitting atop the rankings in mid-November. If the Bruins don’t win early downs, Ryan Day (Ohio State Head Coach) will live in 3rd-and-manageable and keep the full playbook, and the Buckeye defense is built to keep everything in front of them and force teams into 3rd and long situations.
Lessons from the Indiana blowout that might help the Bruins:
Two weeks earlier, then-No. 2 Indiana thumped UCLA 56–6, and the film wasn’t subtle: missed fits, missed tackles, and poor sudden-change responses. Skipper’s answer has been to manufacture 3rd-and-long, emphasize one-on-one wins in the rush even when coverage shells change, and anchor the week in fundamentals. If those boxes aren’t checked, Ohio State will suffocate the Bruins.
The Reality:
You don’t beat a No. 1 team by admiring it. UCLA has to shrink the game, drag it deep, and make Ohio State win a street fight. The Bruins’ path is narrow, but the ingredients start fast, own early downs, use the QB as a runner, and kick the ball clean. Ohio State will win by two to four scores, with UCLA needing a special-teams swing and a takeaway to keep it inside the number. The odds makers may be right about the spread, but football, not Vegas, decides it.
Moving On Up!:
Per Bruin Report Online, UCLA’s move to SoFi is considered “near” by some around the program; Pasadena/Rose Bowl have already sued to stop it, and UCLA says it hasn’t made a final decision and that exploring options doesn’t violate the lease. The outcome of the Rose Bowl vs. SoFi battle will influence more than venue logistics; it will determine how UCLA competes, recruits, and rebuilds its football relevance in a changing college landscape.



