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UCLA coach Chip Kelly on Theo Howard’s transfer: ‘I would do the same thing’

UCLA wide receiver Theo Howard breaks away for a touchdown against Fresno State during a game in 2017.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
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It was one of those difficult conversations that ended up being not so hard.

UCLA senior receiver Theo Howard told his coach that he was leaving and his coach said OK.

“If I was Theo,” Chip Kelly said Sunday, “I would do the same thing.”

Howard announced Thursday that he would enter the transfer portal after appearing in only one game this season because of injuries to his hands. Kelly said Howard wouldn’t be able to play the rest of the season, putting his status at UCLA for 2020 in limbo because he’s graduating in December.

“Grad school’s not guaranteed here, so he’s got to look and see if there are opportunities out there for him,” Kelly said. “ … What if he doesn’t get into grad school here? So then now what does he do? So he’s doing what he should be doing.”

Howard’s departure will deprive the Bruins of one of their most reliable receivers. He did not drop one pass last season and finished with 677 receiving yards and four touchdowns.

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Howard entered training camp with a wrap around an injured wrist that sidelined him for the first two games. He returned against Oklahoma last month but hurt his other hand against the Sooners and has not played since.

“We love and hope for the best for him,” receiver Chase Cota said. “And if he goes, that happens, if he stays, that’s good, but I think we have a good group of guys and we’re excited moving forward either way. … Obviously, we’d love to still have him.”

Taking responsibility

Kelly has mostly pinned his team’s struggles during a second consecutive 1-5 start on a lack of execution and consistency while saying the coaching staff needed to do a better job. But what could Kelly do better individually as the person ultimately responsible for the program?

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“That’s the same exact thing,” Kelly said. “Our ability to understand what our players do well and what they can execute well and do we accentuate that and if there is a weakness that you’ve determined is a weakness, then how do we improve that weakness, because you certainly can’t be one-dimensional in anything that you do.

Smoky air from the nearby Saddleridge fire enveloped UCLA’s campus Saturday, but once a shifting start time was established it seemed to be business as usual.

“You can’t just throw the ball every down, you just can’t say, ‘Hey, we’re really good at throwing it,’ but you’re going to have to run the football, so you’re going to have to work on, why are we not good at running it?”

How would Kelly assess the job he’s done in implementing those sorts of things?

“We don’t come in every day and grade ourselves,” Kelly said. “We continue to say, ‘How do we get better and what do we continue to need to get better at?’ ”

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Start me up

Kelly said he was unsure who would start at quarterback against Stanford on Thursday after Dorian Thompson-Robinson was a full participant in practice Saturday for the first time since suffering a leg injury against Arizona late last month.

UCLA quarterback Dorian Thompson-Robinson runs with the ball against Washington State on Sept. 21.
(Associated Press)

A player isn’t assured of getting his starting job back once he returns from injury, Kelly said, meaning that Austin Burton could make a second consecutive start depending on how things go in practice.

“You can’t paint yourself into a corner with any situation,” Kelly said. “ … There’s nothing guaranteed. You’ve just got to go out and compete and it’s got to happen on a weekly basis.”

Just stop it

Kelly said he was not contemplating any changes on his defensive staff despite the Bruins ranking No. 129 out of 130 major college teams in passing yards allowed (340.7 per game), No. 127 in total defense (503.3 yards allowed per game), No. 127 in yards per play allowed (7.01) and No. 123 in points allowed per game (37.7).

UCLA needs to be better than only one team this week, Kelly noted.

“It’s just, can your defense be good enough to beat Stanford,” Kelly said, “and that’s what the goal in the operation is.”

Etc.

Kelly said defensive lineman Martin Andrus Jr. (torn knee ligament) and guard Michael Alves (back) would miss the rest of the season. Safety Quentin Lake (broken hand) is out against Stanford, but defensive lineman Elijah Gates (undisclosed injury) is considered day to day. … Linebacker Krys Barnes, defensive back Mo Osling III and receiver Delon Hurt worked off to the side of the practice field with a trainer Sunday, signifying that they were recovering from injuries. … Kelly said there was a chance that linebacker Tyree Thompson, who has not played this season after undergoing foot surgery, could return this year. … The air quality on the practice fields improved significantly from Saturday, when it had a smoky smell and was considered unhealthy for sensitive individuals.

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