The UCLA Bruins (2-4, 2-1 Big Ten) are one of the hottest teams in college football, and are looking to make it three in a row against the Maryland Terrapins, who are reeling after two consecutive losses.
It's not going to be easy for the hosting Bruins; the Terps may have lost their last two games while conceding leads, but the losses were close affairs to No. 25 Nebraska and Washington, which also received votes in last week's AP Top 25.
The two are matching up for the first time in 70 years. So, as is tradition every week, let's look back on the history of this matching and how the two have played each other in the past.
This is one of those Big Ten matchups that a large sector of the population was not alive to witness. UCLA and Maryland have played against each other two times in history and they were in 1954 and 1955.
The series is split, with the Bruins winning the inaugural class, 12-7, and the Terrapins getting revenge the next season, 7-0.
UCLA was a member of the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) back then and Maryland was part of the ACC. Their reunion, 70 years in the making this season, is sure to be a conference clash.
In preparation for what Tim Skipper hopes to be another big week, the Bruins' interim head coach eloquently broke down his Maryland scouting report on his weekly appearance on the Bruin Insider Show.
As he does every week, Skipper started with his in-depth breakdown of the opposing offense.
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