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UCLA football

UCLA Bruins Football
2017 UCLA Bruins football team
UCLA Bruins logo.svg
First season 1919; 98 years ago (1919)
Athletic director Dan Guerrero
Head coach Jim L. Mora
5th year, 41–24 (.631)
Stadium Rose Bowl
Seating capacity 92,542
Field surface Grass
Location Pasadena, California
NCAA division Division I FBS
Conference Pac-12 Conference
Division South
Past conferences Independent (1919)
SCIAC (1920–1927)
PCC (1928–1958)
All-time record 576–399–37 (.587)
Bowl record 16–18–1 (.471)
Claimed nat'l titles 1 (1954)
Conference titles 17
Division titles 2
Heisman winners 1
Consensus All-Americans 39
Current uniform
UCLA Football Uniform 2016.jpg
Colors True Blue and Gold
         
Fight song Mighty Bruins
Sons of Westwood
Mascot Joe & Josephine Bruin
Marching band The Solid Gold Sound
Rivals USC Trojans (rivalry)
California Golden Bears (rivalry)
Website UCLABruins.com

The UCLA Bruins football program represents the University of California, Los Angeles in college football as members of the Pac-12 Conference at the NCAA Division I FBS level. The Bruins have enjoyed several periods of success in their history, having been ranked in the top ten of the AP Poll at least once in every decade since the poll began in the 1930s. Their first major period of success came in the 1950s, under head coach Henry Russell Sanders. Sanders led the Bruins to the Coaches' Poll national championship in 1954, three conference championships, and an overall record of 66–19–1 in nine years. In the 1980s and 1990s, during the tenure of Terry Donahue, the Bruins compiled a 151–74–8 record, including 13 bowl games and an NCAA record eight straight bowl wins. The program has produced 28 first round picks in the NFL Draft, 30 consensus All-Americans, and multiple major award winners, including Heisman winner Gary Beban. The UCLA Bruins' main rival is the USC Trojans. Jim L. Mora is the current head coach.

The Bruins were the Pac-12 Conference South Division champions for two years in a row and played Pac-12 Football Championship Games in both 2011 and 2012.

The first football team fielded by UCLA took the field in 1919. The team was coached by Fred Cozens. That UCLA football team compiled a 2–6 record. UCLA did not participate in an athletic conference until 1920, so the 1919 football team played a schedule full of local high schools and other assorted teams. Cozens was UCLA's athletics director from 1919 to 1942.


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