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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Zach Helfand

UCLA must find ways to protect quarterback Josh Rosen next season

Dec. 28--Late on Saturday night, after UCLA had lost the Foster Farms Bowl to Nebraska, freshman quarterback Josh Rosen stared straight ahead during the postgame news conference and picked at his fingers.

Rosen had just finished a remarkable season. He threw for 3,670 yards with 23 passing touchdowns and 11 interceptions.

Yet UCLA slid to 8-5, its worst record in Coach Jim Mora's tenure. So where does that leave the Bruins next season?

In the week before the bowl game, Mora declared, "I'm excited about our team in the future."

And why not? No matter how UCLA's gaggle of injured players recover, regardless which underclassmen leave early, Mora knows his most important position is set.

Fairly or not, Rosen will enter his sophomore season with Heisman Trophy hype.

Rosen's season was, in many ways, unprecedented for a true freshmen passer. John Elway and Peyton Manning did not come close to Rosen's numbers. California's Jared Goff, currently a junior, had very similar stats, but in a pass-happy system.

Ohio State's Terrelle Pryor and Baylor's Robert Griffin III were arguably more productive overall, but both relied heavily on their running ability. In the early 1990s, Danny Wuerffel, at Florida, came close, but threw fewer touchdowns than Rosen, with fewer yards and a lower completion percentage.

"Josh has been, I think, incredibly consistent for a true freshman," Mora said.

By the bowl game, Mora had entrusted him with much of the play-calling.

"Just taking over, see if I could muscle us to a victory," Rosen said.

Rosen may already be a championship-caliber quarterback. For UCLA, the question becomes: does it have enough talent and coaching around him to win one?

UCLA will surround Rosen with ample talent at the skill positions. UCLA doesn't have an easy replacement for Jordan Payton, but Mossi Johnson will return from injury at slot receiver. If running back Paul Perkins leaves early for the NFL, Soso Jamabo and Nate Starks would be strong replacements.

The biggest concern for the Bruins, heading into the off-season, is how they will protect Rosen. The departures of guard Alex Redmond and center Fred Ulu-Perry opened cracks in the offensive line in Saturday's bowl game, when the Bruins had just six healthy linemen. They rushed for just 67 yards.

With Ulu-Perry gone, Mora plans to play Scott Quessenberry at center. Quessenberry, injured this season, has started 19 games, mostly at guard. If tackles Caleb Benenoch and Conor McDermott return for their senior seasons, the unit will bring plenty of experience.

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