Knight Moves: UCLA Lands JMU Elite Running Back
If you thought UCLA head coach Bob Chesney was going to leave his favorite toys behind in Harrisonburg, think again. The Bruins just picked up a commitment from James Madison transfer running back Wayne Knight, proving once again that in college football, you absolutely can take it with you.
Knight becomes the seventh former Duke to follow Chesney out West, joining a caravan thatโs starting to look less like a transfer portal haul and more like a family reunion. But this isn’t just about familiarity; itโs about a 5-foot-6 firecracker who spent last season absolutely torching defenses in the Sun Belt.
For anyone worrying about the Bruins’ ground game in Year 1 of the new regime, you can probably exhale now.
Small Stature, Big Numbers

Letโs address the elephant in the room, or rather, the mouse. At 5-foot-6 and roughly 190 pounds, Knight isn’t exactly built like your prototypical Big Ten punisher. But if you think his size is a problem, you clearly didn’t watch him rack up 2,039 all-purpose yards last season. Thatโs not a typo. The guy was a one-man wrecking crew, setting a single-season school record at JMU while snagging First Team All-Sun Belt honors.
Knight isn’t just a runner; he’s a Swiss Army knife. He rushed for 1,373 yards (leading his conference), caught 40 passes for nearly 400 more, and made opposing special teams coaches lose sleep as a return specialist. He even dared to run for 110 yards against Oregon in the College Football Playoff. So, yeah, he can handle Power 4 competition just fine.
His piรจce de rรฉsistance? A 211-yard performance against Troy in the conference championship game earned him MVP honors. Heโs fast, heโs tough, and he breaks tackles like heโs greased up.
The Chesney Connection
Itโs no secret that new coaching staffs love a security blanket, and Chesney clearly views Knight as a 1,000-thread-count comforter.
The transition to a new program is always rocky. New playbook, new culture, new teammates. Having a guy in the backfield who already knows the system inside and out is a luxury most first-year coaches don’t get. Knight knows the tempo, he knows the expectations, and he already has chemistry with the six other JMU transfers heading to Westwood.
UCLA already has some bodies in the running back room, including senior Jaivian Thomas and Anthony Woods. But letโs be real, you don’t bring in an AP Second Team All-American all-purpose player to sit on the bench and wave a towel. Knight is coming to LA to play, and with only one year of eligibility left, heโs not wasting any time.
What This Means for the Bruins
For UCLA, this is a massive get. The offense needs a spark plug, and they just found one. Pairing Knight with quarterback Nico Iamaleava gives the Bruins a backfield that is, at the very least, going to be incredibly annoying for defensive coordinators to game plan against.
The Bruins have been busy in the portal, grabbing talent from Michigan, Florida, and Boise State. But Knight feels different. This is a proven commodity who has already thrived under this specific coaching staff. It eliminates the guesswork.
So, get ready, UCLA fans. You might need a pair of binoculars to find him behind the offensive line, but once Wayne Knight pops through the hole, you won’t be able to miss him.
