Anticipation continues to grow for UCLA's season opener against Utah at The Rose Bowl on Saturday.
With anticipation comes preparation, and the Bruins' revamped offense, headlined by transfer quarterback Nico Iamaleava and offensive coordinator Tino Sunseri, has had weeks to prepare for a defense that Utah has hung its hat on for years.
"This is a team that's not going to beat themselves," Foster said during Monday's media availability. "The kind of take on coach [Whittingham]'s personality. Hard-nosed team, going to work hard. I think they were probably one of the least-penalized teams last season, so we got to make sure that we're not in there beating ourselves and continue to execute and things should go our way."
Despite dealing with countless injuries last season, Morgan Scalley's Utes defense was one of the more solid defenses in college football. It's up to Foster, Sunseri and Iamaleava to stay poised and initiate the run game if they want to pick apart the opposition.
Want to know more about the Utes going into the season? Well, ESPN's Bill Connelly previewed them, here's what he had to say:
"In May, I looked at three types of luck or fortune that could lead to a turnaround (good or bad) the following season and came up with ways to grade teams in each category. For turnovers luck, Utah ranked 121st nationally. For close-game fortune, the Utes ranked 99th. For lineup stability, they ranked 128th. Add those rankings together, and they were quite comfortably the least fortunate team in the power conferences, second worst among all FBS teams (ahead of only Florida Atlantic).
"Even with quarterback Cam Rising injured once again, they began the season 4-0, rising to 13th in SP+ with what ended up being their best defense in five years. But the hits kept coming: They ended up starting four different QBs at least once, along with 11 different receivers and tight ends and eight different linemen. The result: a collapse to 96th in offensive SP+ and a seven-game losing streak that included tight scores of 27-19, 13-7, 17-14, 22-21 and 31-28. They were 40th in SP+ but missed a bowl.
"Long story short: Kyle Whittingham's Utes are major turnaround candidates in 2025. But it will require a total offensive facelift to work out well. He hired creative offensive coordinator Jason Beck -- who led New Mexico's best offense in eight years in 2024 -- and brought in three new quarterbacks (including New Mexico's Devon Dampier), four running backs and six wide receivers. He didn't need to sign more than one lineman because last year's top six are all back, including All-America tackle Spencer Fano. Dampier is a dynamite rusher (1,187 pre-sack rushing yards and 19 TDs), and with backs such as Wayshawn Parker (Washington State) and NaQuari Rogers (UNM) and the aforementioned line, Utah should immediately have one of the best run games in the league. Passing? We'll see. Dampier is hit-or-miss, but Ryan Davis (UNM) and Larry Simmons (Southern Miss) could be play-action deep threats.
"Morgan Scalley's defense dealt with its own injury issues, with 22 guys starting at least once. But the Utes still finished sixth in success rate allowed (13th rushing, 10th passing), allowing some pretty costly big plays but playing mostly excellent ball. It was maybe Scalley's best coordinator performance to date.
"Only 10 of those 22 part- or full-time starters return, including only three of nine linemen. Whittingham went mostly young with his incoming transfers, and I'm not sure of the defensive end depth beyond star Logan Fano. But linebackers Lander Barton (12 run stops) and Levani Damuni (injured in 2024) are excellent, and junior corners Smith Snowden and Elijah Davis could be ready for star turns. Utah defenses are always solid, but to clear the bar that was set last year, quite a few new linemen will need to break through. I do figure there's some defensive regression coming, but offensive improvement could offset that. If that flips some close games, Utah will be a contender."
More must-reads:
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!