‘They were as advertised’: Utah’s offensive line lived up to the hype against the Bruins

Utah’s offensive line entered the season opener amid plenty of fanfare and lived up to the preseason billing against the Bruins.

Perhaps Utah quarterback Devon Dampier wasn’t exaggerating when he said during fall camp that sometimes he had eight seconds in the pocket.

Utah’s offensive line entered the season opener with plenty of hype surrounding them. The Utes returned all five starters from a season ago — left tackle Caleb Lomu, left guard Tanoa Togiai, center Jaren Kump, right guard Michael Mokofisi and right tackle Spencer Fano.

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Fano has been consistently projected as a first-round NFL draft choice — appearing as high as No. 3 — and Lomu has received mock draft love, too, appearing in some as a first-round selection. The two talented tackles anchor the ends of the Utes’ front, with three seniors in the middle in Togiai, Kump and Mokofisi.

All offseason long, we heard about how good this group was going to be. Coach Kyle Whittingham said multiple times that this was the best offensive line he’s had since he took over as Utah’s head coach in 2005.

“I can say with confidence, we should be the best offensive line since I’ve been at the University of Utah, which has been forever,” Whittingham said at this year’s Big 12 media day.

There was reason for Whittingham to be confident.

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All five starters have plenty of experience at Utah and already had chemistry along the offensive line from last season. Unlike in previous seasons, when the offensive line has taken a few or more games to get the right personnel and get into a groove, Utah expected this group to be ready to go from the very first snap.

“Our whole O-line has gone through at least an entire season of starting. A lot of experience in our O-line, so that’s probably helped out a lot. Just not a lot of new things for us right now,” Fano said.

As Utah entered a high-profile matchup against UCLA, one of the key storylines was this — would the offensive line live up to the hype?

There’s still plenty of games left in the season, but Game 1 was a resounding success for Utah’s front five.

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The up-front dominance was on display from the very first drive, as the Utes marched down the field on an 11-play, 75-yard drive that established the offensive tone for the game.

On Saturday, Utah’s offense wasn’t particularly explosive, but it consistently got 5-plus yards per run, grinding UCLA’s defense down, run after run and screen pass after screen pass.

It wasn’t just the offensive line making its presence known on the blocking front, it was the running backs, too. Pro Football Focus gave running back NaQuari Rogers a 77.1 grade for his pass blocking on Saturday, and Wayshawn Parker had a key block on the Utes’ first play of the 2025 season.

Parker cleared the way on the screen pass to Snowden, who ran for 11 yards for a Ute first down.

Source: Utah News