UCLA Bruins football
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| UCLA Bruins football | |||
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| Head Coach | Karl Dorrell | ||
| 3rd Year, 29-20 | |||
| Home Stadium | Rose Bowl (stadium) | ||
| Capacity 92,542 - Grass | |||
| Conference | Pac-10 | ||
| First Year | 1919 | ||
| Team Records | |||
| All-time Record | 514-345-37 | ||
| Postseason Bowl Record |
13-13-1 | ||
| Awards | |||
| Wire National Titles | 1 | ||
| Conference Titles | 17 | ||
| Heisman Winners | 1 | ||
| Pageantry | |||
| Colors | Blue and Gold | ||
| Fight song | Sons of Westwood | ||
| Mascot | Joe & Josephine Bruin | ||
| Marching Band | UCLA Bruin Marching Band | ||
| Rivals | USC Trojans | ||
The UCLA Bruins football program competes in NCAA Division I-A and is a member of the Pac-10 Conference. The Bruins have enjoyed several periods of success in their history, having been ranked in the top 10 of the AP Poll at least once in every decade since the poll began in the 1930s. Their first major period of success came in the 1950's, under head coach Red Sanders. Sanders led the Bruins to a shared national championship in 1954, three league championships, and an overall record of 66-19-1 in 9 years. In the 1980's and 1990's, during the tenure of Terry Donahue, the Bruins compiled a 151-74-8 record, including 13 bowl games and an NCAA record eight straight bowl wins. The program has produced 28 first round draft picks, 30 consensus All-Americans, and multiple major award winners.
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- Gary Beban
- Terry Donahue
- Kenny Easley
- Tom Fears
- Billy Kilmer
- Donn Moomaw
- Tommy Prothro
- Jerry Robinson
- Red Sanders
- Al Sparlis
- Kenny Washington[1]
- Brendon Ayanbadejo
- Dave Ball
- Jason Bell
- Drew Bennett
- Ed Blanton
- Ryan Boschetti
- Craig Bragg
- Brandon Chillar
- Kenyon Coleman
- Maurice Drew
- Donnie Edwards
- Mike Flanagan
- Bryan Fletcher
- DeShaun Foster
- Travis Kirschke
- Chris Kluwe
- Rodney Leisle
- Marcedes Lewis
- Ricky Manning, Jr.
- Ryan Nece
- Ryan Neufeld
- Jonathan Ogden
- Jarrad Page
- Tab Perry
- Marcus Reese
- Mike Seidman
- Robert Thomas
- Steven Vieira
- Matt Ware
- Manuel White
- Shaun Williams[3]
- Abdul-Karim al-Jabbar (Karim Abdul-Jabbar)
- Flipper Anderson
- Steve Bono
- Rick Neuheisel
- Lynn Compton
- Randy Cross
- Mel Farr
- Mark Harmon
- Norm Johnson
- Carnell Lake
- Tommy Maddox
- Freddie Mitchell
- Ken Norton, Jr.
- Roman Phifer
- Jackie Robinson
- J.J. Stokes
- Eric Turner
Consecutive wins: 20, 1997-1998;
Consecutive wins at Home: 12, 1946-1947;
Consecutive games without being shutout: 60, 1994-1999
Consecutive shutouts of opponents: 3, 1954-1955
Most rushing yards(game): 322 Maurice Drew against University of Washington
Most rushing yards(season): 1,571 Karim Abdul-Jabbar in the 1995 season
Most rushing yards(career): 3,731 Gaston Green 1984-1987
Most passing yards(game): 513 Drew Olson against Arizona State
Most passing yards(season): 3,470 Cade McNown in the 1998 season
Most passing yards(career): 10,708 Cade McNown 1995-1998
Most receiving yards(game): 263 J.J. Stokes against USC
Most receiving yards(season): 1,494 Freddie Mitchell in the 2000 season
Most receiving yards(career): 3,020 Danny Farmer 1996-1999
- ESPN College Football Encyclopedia(Pages 908-915)