UCLA’s Tino Sunseri vying to make child’s play out of winning
Tino Sunseri is spending the next two weeks in Costa Mesa while a large chunk of his heart resides on the East Coast.
Thatβs where the new UCLA offensive coordinatorβs wife and 3-month-old son are living with one set of grandparents, allowing Tino to focus the best he can on training camp with the Bruins.
The first-time father is buoyed both by what heβs seeing with his team and reports about his infant, who giggled for the first time the other day. Santino Michael Sunseri Jr. already has a nickname β βWeβre calling him Sonny, like βThe Godfather,β β Tino cracked, referring to Santino βSonnyβ Corleone from the movie β and curiously studies his father in FaceTime sessions.
βRight now,β Tino said Saturday morning, βheβs kind of giving me that look, like, βHey, I know your voice, but who are you right here?ββ
Thereβs also plenty of getting to know you between Sunseri and his new quarterback.
Nico Iamaleava enrolled in June after transferring from Tennessee, making this the fifth consecutive season that Sunseri will be working with a new quarterback. In 2021, Sunseriβs first season as quarterbacks coach at James Madison, veteran quarterback Cole Johnson led the Dukes to the semifinals of the Division I-AA playoffs.
A year later, Sunseri worked with Todd Centeio, a transfer from Colorado State who led James Madison to the Sun Belt Conferenceβs East Division title. In 2023, Sunseri and Jordan McCloud, a transfer from Arizona, helped the Dukes notch another division title.
Last season might have been Sunseriβs most impressive working with a newbie quarterback. Kurtis Rourke, a transfer from Ohio, led Indiana to a historic season that included an 11-2 record and appearance in the College Football Playoff.
Sunseriβs first impressions of Iamaleava align with the sort of immediate success heβs enjoyed with other quarterbacks.
βHeβs a self-driven person,β Sunseri said. βHe has a certain standard of how he wants to be able to operate each day. And the great thing about my past is Iβve been around a lot of guys that have the same kind of feel and thought process.
βSo the only thing youβve got to do with these guys is youβve got to be able to give them the information, and youβve got to keep being able to stimulate them to be able to make sure that every single day, thereβs something that theyβre being able to attack and chase, and thereβs not one day that he hasnβt come in here that heβs not focused on being able to become the best player that he can be for UCLA.β
In the limited media viewing period Saturday, Iamaleava had more success on the ground than through the air, faking a handoff and cutting to his right for a touchdown run. The only pass he threw, intended for Ezavier Staples, was broken up by defensive back Jamir Benjamin in the end zone.
Iamaleava has impressed Sunseri with a relentless approach β whenever heβs not practicing or working out, heβs studying the offense.
βItβs infectious to him; he canβt get enough of it,β Sunseri said. βAnd when you have those kind of guys, you can start to be able to see how they can be able to develop, and now you can be able to start to be able to formulate a mindset and starting to be able to see where they think, how they think and start to be able to have it to where you can really understand how to coach them.β
Having such a condensed window to work with Iamaleava before the season opener against Utah on Aug. 30 at the Rose Bowl isnβt a concern to Sunseri.
βItβs not about us being able to install the offense,β Sunseri said, βitβs about being able to make sure that itβs not too much too fast to where he can be able to grasp it, because weβre not playing next week, weβre playing in three weeks β itβs still a ton of time for us to be able to utilize.β
Those wondering what UCLAβs offense will look like might have to wait until the season opener because Sunseri isnβt divulging much besides its goal to stretch a defense so that it must account for βevery single blade of grass.β Sunseri did suggest that there will be an ample amount of running the football.
βLet me say this: Weβre gonna be a physical football team,β said Sunseri, whose first coaching stops came as a quality control coach at Florida State and Tennessee and a graduate assistant at Alabama. βItβs where Iβve always been raised, coming from the SEC, youβve got to run that ball, and me being a Nick Saban disciple, thatβs just my thought process, right?β
A speedy duo
UCLA running back Jaivian Thomas carries the ball during preseason training in Costa Mesa on Friday.
(Nate Donlevy / UCLA Athletics)
Jaivian Thomas, the transfer running back from California, is so fast that his father called him βThe Jetβ growing up.
During informal sprints with his new team, Thomas said fellow running back Anthony Woods stayed with him step for step.
So does that make this a twin-jet offense?
βAnt got gas,β Thomas said of his teammate, βbut I feel like Iβm the fastest in the room.β
The hope is that alongside returners Jalen Berger and Anthony Frias II, the Bruins can spread their carries and wear down defenses. While Thomas and Woods are the speedsters of the group, Berger and Frias might feature slightly more power to their rushing styles.
Berger said he had fully recovered from the sprained ankle he suffered against Iowa last season that hindered him over the seasonβs final four games. Thomas was the Golden Bearsβ leading rusher last season, averaging 6.3 yards per carry while gaining 644 yards and scoring seven touchdowns.
Coach DeShaun Foster called Thomas a threat to score every time he touched the ball. If all goes as planned, multiple running backs will cross the goal line while challenging defenses.
βIt allows those guys to be able to stay fresh, and as those defenses align, theyβre playing 40, 50, 60 snaps in the game, and youβre getting to the fourth quarter, those guys are a little worn out,β Sunseri said of playing a bevy of running backs. βSo then whenever you put a guy in with fresh tires, then he could be able to have it to where heβs running through a couple of those tackles, maybe heβs able to continue to be able to play at a different speed than those [defensive] guys in the game.β