UCLA Fires Head Coach DeShaun Foster Following Miserable 0-3 Start
Well, folks, the Deshaun Foster era at UCLA is officially over. It was a short, strange trip that ended about as well as a screen pass on 4th and long. After a disastrous 0-3 start to the 2025 season, the Bruins administration decided they’d seen enough and gave Foster his walking papers. The final nail in the coffin? A 35-10 shellacking at home against New Mexico. Yikes.
It’s a tough scene in Pasadena. The Bruins are now on the hook for a cool $6 million buyout for Foster, a reminder that breaking up is, indeed, hard (and expensive) to do. Special Assistant Tim Skipper gets the unenviable task of stepping in as the interim coach, trying to right a ship that’s currently taking on water faster than the Titanic.
What Went Wrong For Foster?
Remember the optimism? It feels like a lifetime ago. After a so-so 5-7 debut season, big things were expected. The arrival of former Tennessee Quarterback Nico Iamaleava through the transfer portal was supposed to be the spark. Instead, the offense sputtered like a 1985 Yugo. The Bruins haven’t held a lead at all this season. They’re putting up a measly 16.5 points per game while the defense is giving up over 36. That’s a recipe for disaster, my friends. They’ve been outscored by a whopping 68 points in just three games.
The Rose Bowl, once a fortress of college football, now has more empty seats than a Nickelback concert. Attendance has cratered, with tarps covering vast sections of the stadium. It’s a sad sight for a once-proud program struggling to find its footing in the cutthroat Big Ten.
A Gamble That Didn’t Pay Off
Hiring Foster was a roll of the dice from the start. When Chip Kelly bolted for Ohio State, UCLA promoted Foster, a beloved alum and longtime running backs coach. It was a feel-good story, but feel-good stories don’t win football games. With no head coaching experience, Foster was thrown into the deep end, and unfortunately, he couldn’t swim.
His final record stands at a dismal 5-10. Now, UCLA is back to the drawing board, searching for its third head coach in just four seasons. For Bruins fans, it’s another painful reset in a cycle that feels all too familiar. The question now is, where do they go from here?
