UCLA’s defensive line was a problem all last season, and the numbers made that impossible to ignore. The Bruins finished dead last in the Big Ten in sacks with 10 and tackles for loss with 40, which pushed new head coach Bob Chesney and defensive coordinator Colin Hitschler to attack the position hard in the offseason.
They did exactly that, bringing in players such as Sahir West, Aiden Gobaira, Amier Washington and others to help both the pass rush and the run defense. One of the biggest additions in that group is redshirt junior defensive tackle Tyson Ford, who lands at No. 9 on the Bruins’ top-30 countdown for 2026.
Ford arrives in Westwood after a winding college path that started with a strong high school career at John Burroughs High School in St. Louis, Missouri.
He had a solid sophomore season as a full-time starter, posting 23 total tackles, 10 solo tackles, one sack and a tackle for loss, according to MaxPreps. Then came the breakout.
As a junior, Ford piled up 71 total tackles, 50 solo tackles, 16 tackles for loss and eight sacks.
By his senior year, he had grown into one of the top prospects in Missouri. He finished with 75 total tackles, 58 solo tackles, a career-high 19 tackles for loss and another career-best 10 sacks. That production pushed him into the top tier of the 2022 recruiting class, with 247Sports ranking him No. 120 overall, No. 17 among defensive linemen and No. 2 in Missouri.
Allen Trieu, then a national recruiter for 247Sports and now with On3, described Ford this way:
“Gets off the ball well and gets good penetration. Stays disciplined and finds the football and does not quit on plays.
Has to keep working on his hands and beating blocks when he gets engaged, but has some agility and ability to win with an arm-over or swim move. Dominated his high school competition, so he will have to get used to seeing more offensive linemen who are on his level but have the pre-requisite physical tools as well as motor.”
Ford drew heavy interest from Clemson, Georgia, Michigan, Texas and Missouri before choosing Notre Dame and Marcus Freeman. But the Fighting Irish were built for a championship run and leaned on upperclassmen, which left little room for a freshman to crack the rotation. Ford played in just two games in his true freshman season, then redshirted.
The next year didn’t offer any more runway. Notre Dame kept him out of game action during the 2023-2024 college football season as the program again chased a national title. After two seasons without real playing time, Ford entered the transfer portal looking for a chance to get on the field.
That led him to Cal, where he was viewed as one of the program’s key portal additions. He gave the Golden Bears a decent statistical season and helped along the defensive line, but injuries cut that run short and he missed the final five games.
After that, Ford went back into the portal and stayed in California, landing at UCLA.
His lack of big production so far is exactly why the ranking might catch some people off guard, but the fit is the point here. Ford matches what Colin Hitschler wants from his defensive front, and UCLA believes he can finally take off. At 6-4 and 321 pounds, he has the size to clog running lanes and enough frame to threaten the passer too.
He also steps into a situation where he should have a real chance to start, with little proven depth behind him. Paired with a better defense than the one he played behind at Cal, Ford has a clear path to a bigger season. If he delivers, he could become one of the Bruins’ most important defensive pieces in 2026.
In Other News...
UCLAs Recruiting Surge Suddenly Has The Kind Of Headliner Fans Wanted
UCLAs recruiting momentum has started to look like something more than a hot stretch. The Bruins 2027 class is sitting inside the top 20 in the 247Sports Composite, their first such showing since 2018, and the mix of commitments suggests a staff trying to build both talent and balance. There are blue-chip pieces at the top, depth throughout, and a noticeable local imprint, with California prospects making up a large share of the haul.
For Bob Chesney, it is also an early sign that his first full recruiting cycle in Westwood can translate into roster construction on multiple fronts. UCLA has paired that high school surge with a transfer class that has also drawn national notice, giving the program a broader base as it tries to climb back into the conversation. The next question is whether the Bruins can keep the class together long enough to turn the buzz into something even more meaningful. [Read more 🡒]
UCLA Just Made A Front Office Move Fans Have Wanted
UCLAs basketball operation is getting a more modern front office structure, with Max Feldman promoted to general manager and the program adding Peyton Mortellite and Trey Doty to key player development and scouting roles. It is the kind of staffing move that has become increasingly common in college basketball, especially for programs trying to keep pace in recruiting, roster management and the day-to-day details that now shape a season as much as coaching does.
Feldman had already been a significant figure behind the scenes this offseason, helping the Bruins build out their roster through the transfer market and overseas prospecting. Mortellite will handle player development and recruiting, while Doty steps in as director of scouting and strategy, giving UCLA a deeper bench of personnel around the program as it continues to adapt to the demands of the current college game. [Read more 🡒]
UCLA Faces A Familiar Doubt As Another New Era Begins
UCLAs offseason has been defined by a reset after a 3-9 finish under DeShaun Foster, with the Bruins reworking the roster and trying to give the program a cleaner foundation heading into another new era. The changes have been especially noticeable up front, where the staff has focused on strengthening both lines and bringing in enough new faces to change the feel of the team before camp even opens.
Still, the outside view has not caught up to the optimism inside the building. Some analysts are keeping UCLA near the bottom of the Big Ten projections, a reminder that the Bruins have a lot to prove before anyone starts talking seriously about a turnaround. The hope is that the new pieces can help Bob Chesney stabilize things quickly, but the real test is whether this overhaul can translate into the kind of consistency UCLA has been chasing for years. [Read more 🡒]
