Maryland Cant Assume UCLA Is The Same Team This Time

The Maryland Terrapins prepare for a challenging conference opener against the revamped UCLA Bruins, who are eager to rebound under new head coach Bob Chesney's leadership.

Maryland’s trip to UCLA last season ended in heartbreak, a 20-17 loss in Pasadena that came down to the final seconds. Now the Bruins come to College Park, and both teams will open conference play at the end of September with a lot more than just a rematch on the line.

UCLA enters 2026 with a completely different look after a rough 2025 campaign. The Bruins stumbled out of the gate at 0-4, including losses to two Group of Six teams, then flipped the script in a way nobody saw coming.

They ripped off three straight wins, with victories over Penn State and Maryland, before Indiana hammered them and sent UCLA into a five-game skid to close the year. The result was a 3-9 finish.

That collapse cost DeShaun Foster his job after the Bruins dropped their first three games. UCLA then turned to former JMU head coach Bob Chesney, who brings a 132-52 career record across four stops and has coached at every level of NCAA football.

At JMU, Chesney went 21-6 in two seasons and guided the Dukes to the CFP in his second year. He’ll be the fourth straight newly signed head coach Maryland faces to begin the 2026 season.

On offense, the Bruins are built around QB Nico Iamaleava, RB Wayne Knight, and WR Landon Ellis. UCLA averaged 18.2 points per game last season, along with 180.3 passing yards and 139.7 rushing yards per game, while turning it over 1.1 times per contest. The numbers were ugly overall, as the Bruins barely cleared 300 yards a game and didn’t even average 20 points.

Iamaleava is back to steer the attack. In 2025, he completed 64.4% of his passes for 1,928 yards, 13 touchdowns, and seven interceptions.

He also added 505 rushing yards and four scores on the ground, though he was sacked 25 times, which ranked third in the Big Ten. With Chesney now in charge, UCLA is trying to rebuild around that dual-threat ability and get the offense moving again.

Knight may be the most important piece Chesney brought with him from JMU. He ran for 1,373 yards last season at 6.6 yards per carry and scored nine rushing touchdowns.

He also caught 40 passes for 397 yards and a touchdown. Knight’s 2025 résumé included second team All-American honors, first team All-SBC recognition, and a spot as a Paul Hornung award finalist.

Paired with Iamaleava, he gives UCLA a backfield that could be dangerous.

Ellis is another key transfer from JMU, and he gives the Bruins another proven target. He finished 2025 with 36 catches for 624 yards and five touchdowns, leading the Dukes in receiving yards and earning third team All-SBC honors. He’ll be part of a receiver group that also includes Mikey Matthews, one of the few top returners from last year’s room.

Defensively, UCLA is leaning heavily on more Chesney additions, starting with edge rusher Sahir West. West, who had a Maryland offer out of Mount St.

Joseph (Md.), was one of the most decorated transfers to follow Chesney from JMU. As a redshirt freshman, he posted 45 total tackles, 14 TFLs, seven sacks, four pass deflections, and a forced fumble.

That season earned him freshman first team All-American honors, Sun Belt freshman of the year, second team All-SBC, and JMU defensive lineman of the year. UCLA’s defense managed just ten sacks last season, so West is expected to help change that quickly.

Linebacker Sammy Omosigho arrives from Oklahoma and is viewed as one of the Bruins’ top incoming transfers. He recorded 50 total tackles in 2025, along with three pass deflections, two sacks, and a fumble recovery. Even though he has only started three games in his career, he’ll be counted on to step into a major role right away.

In the secondary, DJ Barksdale is another Chesney transfer who should matter immediately. He led JMU with 12 pass deflections last season and added 36 total tackles, three TFLs, and two interceptions.

His 2025 season brought third team All-SBC honors and a three-star transfer portal rating. UCLA’s defense had only 38 pass deflections and four interceptions last year, so Barksdale will be asked to help clean that up.

What stands out most about this matchup is how much change both sides are dealing with. UCLA, like Maryland’s first two FBS opponents, has a new head coach and plenty of roster turnover. The Terps, meanwhile, brought in just 12 transfers outside of the quarterback spot and return more than half of their key players on both sides of the ball.

That sets up an interesting early-season test. Maryland should have the edge in continuity, but with so many new faces on the other sideline, preparation becomes tricky. There won’t be much film to lean on, and coaching could end up deciding plenty in a game like this.

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