UCLA football announced eight new coaching hires Monday, completing a wholesale staff reconstruction after the program's 4-8 debut season in the Big Ten.
Head coach DeShaun Foster, retained despite last year's result, brought in coordinators and position coaches across offense, defense, and special teams. The names were not disclosed in the initial release, but the scope—eight positions in a standard 10-person on-field staff—indicates only Foster and one other holdover remain. The timing, four months before spring practice, is standard but the scale is not. UCLA Athletic Director Martin Jarmond gave Foster the budget and the mandate: fix it or the next staff rebuild will include the head coach.
The reset matters because UCLA is now competing for $80M+ annual media rights as a full Big Ten member, and the Los Angeles market commands sponsor attention that performance has not justified. The Bruins averaged 37,012 fans per home game in 2025, below the 42,000 threshold that activates certain suite revenue clauses at the Rose Bowl. Season-ticket renewals are due in April. A second losing season jeopardizes the $15M annual apparel deal with Nike that renews in 2027, as brand clauses typically include performance floors for premium inventory allocation.
Foster's staff budget increased roughly 12% from 2025, per two people familiar with the department's operations, part of Jarmond's effort to close the resource gap with conference peers. The football program still operates below Michigan, Ohio State, and Penn State in total coaching compensation, but the additions move UCLA closer to middle-tier Big Ten parity. That matters for recruiting: the Bruins signed the No. 48 class nationally in 2025, worst in the conference. Foster's staff now includes three coaches with prior Big Ten experience and two with recent Pac-12 ties, according to one person briefed on the hires.
The broader question is whether coaching alone solves UCLA's structural issue. The Rose Bowl sits 26 miles from campus, suppressing student attendance and separating the program from Westwood's donor base. Oregon, by contrast, plays on-campus at Autzen Stadium and signed a $60M class in 2025. USC, across town, pulled No. 12 nationally. UCLA has discussed on-campus stadium options since 2022 but no financing plan has emerged. Meanwhile, Foster's new staff inherits a roster with 18 scholarship players in the transfer portal and a spring schedule that includes scrimmages against Oregon and Washington—both top-15 programs.
Watch for coordinator announcements in the next 10 days, likely timed around the February signing period to give position coaches recruiting leverage. Special teams is the likely holdover alongside Foster. Offensive and defensive coordinator names will indicate whether UCLA is hiring up from Group of Five programs or laterally from Power Four schools; the latter costs more but signals Jarmond's willingness to spend into competitiveness.
The first Spring practice is April 1. Foster's seat will be measured in September home attendance, not April optimism.
The takeaway
UCLA's eight-coach overhaul tests whether staff alone can close the Big Ten performance gap before revenue clauses and recruiting fall further behind.
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