The UCLA Football team has thrown the ball for an average of 305 yards in the first two games of the season and quarterback Josh Rosen is currently tied for 17th place in the 2016 season in passing yards.
While both metrics are well above average, the stats don’t tell the story of how UCLA’s offense isn’t clicking as well as it could be. Dropped passes and missed throws are keeping UCLA’s offense from being elite.
Growing Pains
Against Texas A&M in particular dropped/tipped passes lead to drives being stalled, a turnover, and points crucially being left of of the board.