LOS ANGELES — DeShaun Foster knows many expect him to struggle in his first season as UCLA's coach.
Not only is the former Bruins running back and assistant a first-time head coach after Chip Kelly left to become Ohio State's offensive coordinator, but the program is in its first season in the Big Ten Conference.
Foster said his team is taking the low expectations in stride, but the annual Cleveland.com Big Ten media poll that ranked the Bruins as the fourth-worst team in the 18-school conference has lit a fire under his team.
''You just better hope that you didn't say something and I beat you, because it's going to be bad,'' Foster said. ''Trust me, I've got receipts from '98 (when he was a player at UCLA). There's a few people on the list I'm still looking for.''
Foster had been a Bruins assistant for seven years but left in January to become the Las Vegas Raiders' running backs coach. When Kelly left for Ohio State after going 35-34 in six seasons, it took less than 72 hours for athletic director Martin Jarmond to bring Foster back to Westwood.
Foster does have enough returning talent that could help the Bruins contend for a bowl berth for a fourth straight season. Eight starters return on offense from last year's 8-5 squad, including quarterback Ethan Garbers.
The Bruins' biggest addition during the offseason was Eric Bieniemy, who joined the staff as offensive coordinator. Bieniemy was a two-time Super Bowl champion with the Kansas City Chiefs as offensive coordinator but didn't have the same success last year with the Washington Commanders.
Defense remains a concern, though. The Bruins had one of the nation's top units last season but return only two starters, while defensive coordinator D'Anton Lynn went across town to USC.