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Wednesday practice report: Blake, Edwards and Reed awarded scholarships

Defensive end Tom Blake, linebacker Josh Edwards and offensive guard Micah Reed got cheers from their teammates on Spaulding Field on Wednesday as head coach Karl Dorrell announced that each has been selected to receive a one-year scholarship.

"Those are the three that we announced today, that the team is excited about," said Dorrell. "It’s unfortunate; I don’t have enough to go around for everybody. I will keep in mind the other walk-ons in our program that have done a great job: [defensive back] Chris Meadows, [quarterback] McLeod Bethel-Thompson, those guys have done a great job [and] Trevor Theriot, our fullback. Those three guys are worth mentioning, but I just don’t have enough at this point in time; but they’ll be the next that we’re looking to."

Dorrell noted that the possibility of a scholarship award is " something we recruit with with our walk-ons."

On the field, quarterback Ben Olson looked sharp and Patrick Cowan's hamstring has improved enough that he was able to walk along the sideline without crutches. The Bruin first-team offense and defense practiced with amplified crowd noise for about 17 minutes, probably a lot louder that they will hear at Stanford this weekend.

The Bruins will leave on Friday around noon, but will concentrate on meetings upon arrival in Palo Alto on Friday and will not have a walk-through at Stanford Stadium prior to gameday.

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Josh Edwards is number three on the depth chart, Trevor Theriot is the starting fullback. According to my inside sources, Theriot did not recieve a scholarship because he was out from a hamstring injury. Theriot had a hamstring strain during the scrimmage, but before was a starter on three different special teams before the injury and still remains the starter at fullback. Theriot has been in the program for more than two years and Edwards has been with the Bruin for less than a year. IT is upsetting when a football team has a starter that is playing for free. Sounds just like the Matt Willis/Andrew Baumgartner situation where once again scholarships deserved were not given and walk-ons played for free. Can anyone see a pattern here? Perhaps they should rethink their recruiting and give more scholarships to players who deserve them, rather than mediocre players who play on scout team for 3-4 years.

Leave it to Coach Dorell to once again screw over one of his walk-ons. Theriot is the STARTER. The others issued scholarships are not. Imagine what this kid has to go through when the rest of the starting offense is going to go eat training table and Theriot is unable to join them. I bet the kid is demoralized. Congrats to the 3 walk-ons who were awarded scholarships.

Baumgartner and now Theriot...any racial overtones here?

Bruins’ Theriot makes his dream come true
FOOTBALL: Walk-on, a former Newport Harbor standout, now starting at fullback for UCLA, which will face USC Saturday.

By Barry Faulkner
Reader Feedback - Currently 8 comment(s) Comments
At the point of impact, when helmets and the combined energy of close to 500 pounds of highly motivated humanity converge in one of society’s last sanctioned acts of savagery, the paperwork matters not.

So it is that UCLA sophomore fullback Trevor Theriot, the rarest of athletic anomalies as a walk-on starter, struggles for supremacy every Saturday with defenders who are rewarded for their football performance with a free education at their institution of choice.

But where some might find irony in the aforementioned matchup, Theriot, the 2004 Newport-Mesa Player of the Year as a senior at Newport Harbor High, finds mostly inspiration.

“I love not being recruited and playing against a school like Oregon,” said Theriot, who will direct the visceral chip on his shoulder pads toward cross-town rival USC Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at the Los Angeles Coliseum, “It’s kind of fun to lead up on a scholarship linebacker, who is maybe even a Parade [Magazine] All-American.”

Theriot, a 6-foot, 230-pound battering ram whose next rushing attempt will be his first, does have three receptions for 11 yards this season, in which he has played all 11 games. But if personal glory were high on his wish list, he would never have come to Westwood, where his father, Brian, a football and track and field star Newport Harbor, ran on the track and field team in the late 1970s.

“I grew up a UCLA fan with an extreme dislike for the school across town,” said Trevor Theriot, who is more commonly known as Moose, a nickname from his youth football days that has stuck. “I took a [recruiting] trip to San Jose State, I made an unofficial visit to Stanford and I even went to some USC games [as a potential recruit], if you can believe that. But, having grown up a Bruin, when UCLA said I was more than welcome to walk on here and try and earn a spot, I told them I’d do it in a second.”

Theriot, named CIF Southern Section Division VI Co-Offensive Player of the Year in 2004, when he amassed 1,328 rushing yards and seven touchdowns to help the Sailors finish 12-1-1 and advance to the Division VI title game at Angel Stadium, redshirted the 2005 season.

Having added strength and speed, he made his way onto the field in four games in 2006, including a stint on goal-line offense in the Bruins’ 13-9 upset of the Trojans at the Rose Bowl.

“That was probably my best moment ever in sports,” Theriot said of last season’s stunning triumph over the Trojans, which, if repeated, combined with an Arizona State loss to Arizona, would propel the Bruins into the Rose Bowl.

“We’ve been pretty good this year against ranked opponents,” said Theriot, who helped UCLA (6-5, 5-3 in the Pac-10) blank then-No. 9-ranked Oregon, 16-0, last week. “Our goal of going to the Rose Bowl is still pretty much in our hands.”

Any walk-on assumes ascending to a starting spot is out of their hands, but things have fallen right for Theriot. Returning senior starter Michael Pitre entered the season with a bone bruise in his knee and has never recovered.

“I worked hard in spring ball and came into the season doing the same,” said Theriot, who was named the starter before the season opener. “I was given my opportunity and I’ve tried to make the most of it. Being the starter at UCLA is just a huge, huge honor and I’m very happy. It’s really exciting to get the chance to help this team on offense and special teams.”

Theriot is currently the personal protector on the punt team and helps set the wedge on the kickoff return unit. It is in the latter role that he absorbed his biggest hit this season.

“This guy from Oregon State just buried his head into me and my whole left side went numb,” Theriot recalled of the injury. “It was kind of amazing. I have no clue who the guy was.”

Most have little clue of Theriot’s contribution to the offense, for which he is on the field about 40% of the time, he said.

“Fullback is an unselfish position,” he said. “I take pride in making a good block, instead of a 10- or 20-yard run. In our offense, my role is to lead up on a linebacker, kick out on a defensive end, or get out and bury a cornerback on a toss play. I’ve had the ball thrown to me three or four times, but I don’t worry too much about that. It’s kind of surreal, to be honest with you. I’m living my childhood dream.”


GIVE THIS KID A SCHOLARSHIP ALREADY!!!

As the attention shifts from KD it now focuses on DG. This is a very important time for ucla football. Who will be next? If I may coin a fraise from Jurasic park,
DON"T GET CHEAP ON ME DAWSON! DG ,is at his and I do mean his defining moment as A.D. Ucla must get a coach that will counter Pete Carroll. Ucla doesn't have to take a back seat to any college they have location, location, location. Please take your time. this is the 21st century lets turn ucla football into a power house. What ever it takes lets use every resource that can be mustered. How about going after the Tampa bay Bucaneers coach? No more in house hires outside only.

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Our Blogger
Adam Rose grew up in a house divided between UCLA and USC ... now he's writing about both. He served as Sports Editor for LAist (covering a wide range of local action) and is also a regular on KNBC 4's News Raw. Adam manages special events in the sports community when he isn't participating himself (he staggered through the LA Marathon and can often be found on local soccer fields). If you have a question about the Bruins, Trojans, or just want to give him a piece of your mind, email: adam@laist.com.

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