‘Jack’ of all trades leads UCLA

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PASADENA, Calif. — Linebacker Myles Jack ran for four touchdowns, defensive end Cassius Marsh caught a scoring pass, and No. 13 UCLA stayed in control of its destiny in the Pac-12 South race with a 41-31 victory over Washington on Friday night.

PASADENA, Calif. — Linebacker Myles Jack ran for four touchdowns, defensive end Cassius Marsh caught a scoring pass, and No. 13 UCLA stayed in control of its destiny in the Pac-12 South race with a 41-31 victory over Washington on Friday night.

Devin Lucien turned a short pass into a 40-yard TD with 9:57 to play, and the Bruins (8-2, 5-2 Pac-12) got creative to hold off a lively challenge from the Huskies (6-4, 3-4), who lost starting quarterback Keith Price to a shoulder injury right before halftime.

Jack followed up his 120-yard debut at running back last week by becoming the 13th player in UCLA history to score four touchdowns.

Cyler Miles passed for 149 yards after replacing Price, but the Huskies have lost nine of their last 12 Pac-12 road games.

Damore’ea Stringfellow, Jaydon Mickens and Austin Seferian-Jenkins caught TD passes for Washington, which hasn’t beaten UCLA at the Rose Bowl since 1995.

For the second straight week, Bruins offensive coordinator Noel Mazzone dipped into the defense’s roster to win an exhilarating meeting of two bowl-bound teams with prolific offenses.

Jack, the Bruins’ remarkable freshman from a Seattle suburb, finished with the most rushing TDs since Maurice Jones-Drew set the school record with five scores in 2004. Jack and the hulking Marsh scored the Bruins’ first five touchdowns as UCLA stayed right behind division leader Arizona State, which visits Pasadena next weekend.

UCLA coach Jim Mora had been coy about whether Jack would even play offense again, but the freshman jumped in during the Bruins’ opening series, rushing for an 8-yard score on his first carry. Used mostly as a short-yardage back, he added two more scores in the first half and finished with 60 yards on 12 carries.

Oh, and he also made five tackles.

Brett Hundley passed for 159 yards for the Bruins, who led 27-7 early in the second quarter and were up 34-24 heading to the fourth. The Huskies kept it close despite losing their starting quarterback on a hit late in the second quarter.

Miles, a redshirt freshman, had played only sparingly this season behind Price, a three-year starter who holds Washington’s career record for touchdown passes. Miles went 15 for 22, but threw two interceptions on consecutive throws in the final minutes.

Stringfellow, a freshman with three catches all year, had eight receptions for 147 yards and a score with 8:01 to play. He also had a long TD catch wiped out in the first half by one of Washington’s 11 penalties for 113 yards.

Bishop Sankey rushed for 91 yards and a score for the Huskies, who dropped to 7-20 on the road during coach Steve Sarkisian’s five seasons.

The Bruins wore their black “L.A. Midnight” uniforms on a rare Friday night game at the Rose Bowl, but the stadium was roughly half-full at kickoff while fans struggled through Los Angeles’ usual Friday traffic.

UCLA still led 14-0 less than six minutes in on two short scoring drives set up by Huskies turnovers.

Jordan Zumwalt forced Seferian-Jenkins’ fumble on Washington’s opening series, and Jack rumbled for UCLA’s first score just 2:38 in. Marsh then caught his 2-yard play-action TD pass on a short drive set up by Sankey’s fumble near midfield.

After the Huskies made a 95-yard scoring drive capped by Sankey’s TD run, Washington could have recovered a fumble by Jack after a 25-yard run — but Shaq Thompson failed to fall on the ball. Two plays later, Jack scored from 1 yard out.

Jack’s third TD surge put the Bruins up by 20 points, but the Huskies finally answered with Mickens’ short TD catch 6:11 before halftime set up by Malcolm Jones’ fumble.

Price left the field grimacing after his final snap of the first half, and he returned to the sideline in the third quarter in a warmup suit and cap.

Miles showed no nerves while leading the Huskies on a 26-yard scoring drive after UCLA fumbled the second-half kickoff, hitting Seferian-Jenkins for a score. But UCLA answered with Jack’s fourth TD run, this time from 2 yards out.

UCLA’s Pasquale

was drunk

LOS ANGELES — Authorities say UCLA receiver Nick Pasquale was drunk when he was hit by a car and killed while walking in Southern California in September.

Orange County sheriff’s Lt. Jeff Hallock says the 20-year-old Pasquale had a .26 blood alcohol content when he was killed. The level is more than three times the legal limit for California drivers.

Hallock says the finding came through a routine toxicology test in the death investigation, and there’s no way to determine whether the alcohol was a factor in his death. There were no drugs in Pasquale’s system.

The redshirt freshman and walk-on receiver was walking home Sept. 8 from a friend’s house in his hometown of San Clemente when he died.

His death has become a rallying point for the 13th-ranked Bruins this season.

Cal suspends player

BERKELEY, Calif. — California has suspended an unidentified football player for instigating a locker room altercation that sent freshman running back Fabiano Hale to the hospital.

Coach Sonny Dykes announced Friday that after an internal examination of the incident on Nov. 1, the player will be suspended indefinitely from all team activities, will attend counseling and must perform 25 hours of community service to be considered for reinstatement.

Hale, a walk-on from Santa Cruz, told the Santa Cruz Sentinel he suffered a concussion and had stitches around one of his ears. Hale has not played this season.

The decision is independent of an ongoing campus police investigation and any campus student conduct measures that may be taken.

BY WIRE SOURCES