For years, Chip Kellyâs assistant coaches sounded a weâll-get-back-to-you refrain with high school recruits as part of an agonizing, slow-speed pursuit. The staffâs reluctance to pounce on prospects was among the reasons UCLA ranked last in the nation in scholarship offers and built little buzz in recruiting circles, with the results to match.
Scott Taylor was among the last players to feel that hesitation. Though he was told the Bruins were interested in February, the edge rusher from Loyola High also was cautioned that the staff needed to meet before officially extending a scholarship offer.
Later that week, Kelly was gone and so was the indecision about Taylor. Warmth radiated during a visit to the Wasserman Football Center in early March when everyone the prospect encountered made him feel like they wanted him on the team.
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âI had never met 99.9% of these guys and they all said, âOh, hey, Scott, howâs it going? Good to see you,â â Taylor remembered. âFrom the first second I set foot on campus, it was a whole different type of love they had for me.â
The new staff gave Taylor a lot more to chew on than a 24-ounce New York strip during his official visit. Defensive coordinator Ikaika Malloe discussed his vision for using Taylor as a hybrid linebacker-edge rusher. Recruiting bosses Butler Benton and Chris Carter engaged the prospect in lengthy discussions about his potential major, internship opportunities and the best way to accumulate course credits.
UCLA recruiting bosses Butler Benton, left, and Chris Carter have been at the forefront of the Bruinsâ roster remake under new head coach DeShaun Foster.(UCLA Athletics)
When Taylor told assistant coaches he was ready to commit in April, they brought him and his family up to coach DeShaun Fosterâs spacious third-floor office. Relayed the same message, Foster opened his office door and started yelling indecipherable gibberish as other coaches filled the room.
âJust insane excitement,â Taylor said of the scene.
For the first time in years, thereâs something to celebrate in UCLA high school recruiting. A recruiting staff thatâs tripled in size has aggressively pursued a wider swath of prospects, lending an air of sincerity to the coachesâ mantra of âDo more.â
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âMuch bigger, much more effective, much more hands-on, a lot more outreach than ever before,â Greg Biggins, a national recruiting analyst for 247 Sports, said of the new recruiting staff, âand obviously you see a lot more offers going out now.â
Last year UCLA finished below every team in the Big Ten Conference in high school recruiting, according to 247 Sports, including two schools â Northwestern and Michigan State â that were in the midst of coaching changes. The Bruins were desperately lagging again when Kelly departed, having only one commitment from the Class of 2025.
In five frantic months of playing catch-up against other schools, Fosterâs staff has added 14 commitments â including a quartet of four-star prospects â while boosting UCLAâs ranking to No. 11 in their new conference and No. 37 in the nation. Taylor picked the Bruins after being courted by Arizona, San JosĂŠ State and a slew of Ivy League schools.
From the staffâs perspective, what itâs put together is a start, nothing more.
âWe did a pretty good job of making up some ground with some schools that may have been recruiting guys longer than us,â said Benton, the Bruinsâ general manager of recruiting and personnel. âBut I think thereâs a whole lot of room to grow. Thereâs a whole lot more targets that we want and weâre going to continue to go after.â
The three latest commitments rolled in last week, repeating the new rhythm of UCLA football recruiting.
Quarterback Colton Gumino, long snapper Halakiliangi Muagututia Jr. and edge rusher Epi Sitanilei posted photos of themselves wearing blue-and-gold uniforms as part of their commitment announcements. They thanked not just Foster and their respective position coaches but also the recruiting staff that helped reel them in.
Almost simultaneously, those same coaches and recruiting staffers welcomed the newcomers by tweeting 13-second videos that showed iconic spots around Southern California, including a Rose Bowl filled with cheering fans and the Hollywood sign replaced by one reading Westwood.
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The all-inclusive approach differs from the more monolithic one favored by Kelly, who didnât have social media and would rely on director of player personnel Ethan Young to trumpet every commitment by tweeting âBoom!â By that point, the recruiting staff had navigated what amounted to a self-made minefield.
âChip had to approve every offer,â Biggins said, âand so I think a lot of the staff members were just kind of tired or almost beaten up about, why even offer a guy, being told, âNo, we canât offer him right now.â I think it kind of produced a little bit of a lazy recruiting environment where you just donât even try anymore, you know what I mean?â
It took Kellyâs departure for the Bruins to heavily pursue Karson Cox, even though the speedy running back from Oak Hills High had built a strong relationship with Foster and had long emerged as one of the top players at his position on the West Coast, landing offers from Washington, Oregon, USC, Utah and Oregon State.
UCLA finally ran a reverse in its pursuit of Cox after Foster replaced Kelly, inviting the prospect to campus and extending an offer. Cox accepted it during his official visit in May, won over by a coaching, recruiting and development staff full of former running backs, not to mention the Bruinsâ history of sending players at the position to the NFL.
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âIf you want to play running back,â Cox said, âitâs the place to be.â
Fosterâs nine-person recruiting staff is composed of three leaders with extensive experience plus three analysts and three more staffers who help with the various details of setting up on-campus visits and other recruiting coordination needs.
Benton had spent more than 10 years on the recruiting staffs at Notre Dame, Arkansas, Georgia Southern and Michigan State, building a vast network of contacts across the country. Carter, the assistant general manager of recruiting and personnel, was director of player personnel at USC, following coach Lincoln Riley from Oklahoma. Stacey Ford, the director of player personnel, served in a similar role at Washington State, where he developed a reputation as a dogged recruiter.
âAlmost every kid I talked to who was looking at Washington State and asked, âHey, whoâs the coach you talk to the most?â â Biggins said, âthey said it was Stacey Ford.â
UCLAâs core recruiting pitch hasnât changed much under its new staff â the school remains the top-ranked public university in the nation, nestled in an affluent area with a massive media market providing unparalleled networking opportunities. But itâs not the same old spiel. The move to the Big Ten will allow the Bruins to play on a bigger college football stage under a coaching staff that now includes more extensive NFL experience.
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As far as Benton sees it, heâs not selling UCLA so much as heâs dispensing facts to help recruits and their families make the best decision.
âBy the time weâre done providing information,â Benton said, âit should be pretty heavily leaning in our favor based on what we have and what we probably already know about the kid prior to them coming to campus, which is theyâre a good student and we think theyâre a fit at UCLA.â
All those built-in advantages make the Bruinsâ recruiting staff bullish on their prospects to forge a high school recruiting juggernaut that no longer has to rely as heavily on the transfer portal as it did under Kelly.
âIf you have the ability to attract elite high school talent â which we do â thatâs where you want to build the majority of your roster from,â Benton said. âThose are your draft picks, in a sense, the guys that youâre building with.â
That doesnât mean every high school player with a decent highlight tape will land a UCLA offer. Benton said the Bruins will remain selective, the recruiting staff poring over footage of 12 to 14 varsity games while deciding whom to recruit. (Insider tip for those wanting an offer: Benton and the UCLA assistant coaches will personally watch a playerâs toughest two or three games to see how he fares against top competition.)
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Those who make the cut might find themselves staying at the Luskin Center or the swanky W Hotel near campus as part of an official visit. By that point, the recruiting staff has gathered intelligence on a playerâs favorite foods and other preferences to best tailor his visit.
Thatâs how Taylor found himself having breakfast near the Hollywood sign, strolling the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica and biting into that New York strip â âthe thickest steak they had,â he said â at Meat on Ocean in addition to enjoying the standard private tour of the Rose Bowl.
More important was the authenticity he felt from players and coaches. While hanging out with edge rusher Jacob Busic, his player host and a recent arrival as a transfer from the Naval Academy, Taylor heard about how much everyone had embraced Foster and the new staff.
âItâs great to hear that stuff from the guys as well,â Taylor said, âbecause you never really know if you come in and have a great visit, but thatâs not really how life is on a daily basis.â
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The recruiting staff already has put Taylor to work, asking him to reach out to friends who also happen to be prospects the team is pursuing. Heâs happy to do it, wanting to be a bigger part of what the Bruins are building.
âI think this is just the beginning stages of the momentum in terms of UCLA football,â Taylor said. âI think itâs on a crazy rise and itâs trending now for sure, but I donât think thatâs fake hype or superficial stuff thatâs going to go away. I think the buzz is going to be around for a while.â
Ben Bolch has been a Los Angeles Times staff writer since 1999. He is serving his second stint as the UCLA beat writer, which seems fitting since he has covered almost every sports beat except hockey and horse racing. Bolch is also the author of the recently released book â100 Things UCLA Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die.â He previously covered UCLA basketball from 2010-11 before going on to cover the NBA and the Clippers for five years. He happily traded in gobs of hotel points and airline miles to return to cover UCLA basketball and football in the summer of 2016. Bolch was once selected by NBA TVâs âThe Startersâ as the âWorst of the Weekâ after questioning their celebrity journalism-style questions at an NBA All-Star game and considers it one of his finer moments.