UCLA lost 23-20 to Arizona State on Saturday night, but the Bruins bigger concern might be the health of sophomore quarterback Josh Rosen, who suffered a pair of injuries in the game.Rosen first left the game late in the second quarter with an apparent leg injury and was replaced by former walk-on Mike Fafaul, who finished the first half and started the second. After two drives to start the second half -- one resulted in an interception and the other in a punt -- Rosen returned in the third quarter, and the offense began to click.The Bruins scored on three of their four possessions after Rosen returned, but he was knocked out of the game again late in the fourth quarter after being sacked by Koron Crump. Television cameras showed Rosen favoring his right, throwing shoulder on the sideline, and he did not return for the Bruins final drive.UCLA took over at its own 31-yard line down by three with 48 seconds left, and Fafaul was sacked twice and intercepted.The seriousness of Rosens injuries remains unclear.?Josh is beat up. He is beat up, UCLA coach Jim Mora said. He has taken some horrible hits because we cant protect for him.It didnt help that the Bruins couldnt run the ball at all, finishing with minus-1 yard rushing on 23 carries.With no running threat to worry about, Arizona State was able to ramp up its pressure on Rosen, repeatedly knocking him to the ground.We cant run the football at all, Mora said. When you cant run the football and you have to throw every down then they can pin their ears back and come after you, which they do. Unfortunately we couldnt protect tonight, either.During the game, Rosen passed Troy Aikman for sixth on the schools career passing yards list. Rosen completed 24 of 43 passes for 400 yards with two touchdowns and an interception against ASU. Fafaul was 3-for-11 for 44 yards with two picks.The Associated Press contributed to this report.? Durham 79 for 2 trail Hampshire 472 for 9 dec (Ervine 93, Adams 86, Smith 67, Berg 56) by 393 runsScorecard Hampshire continued to dominate their Specsavers County Championship match against Durham at Chester-le-Street, only for rain to wipe out most of the final session on the second day.Division Ones bottom club, seeking their first win, declared on 472 for 9 before Ryan McLaren bowled England aspirants Mark Stoneman and Scott Borthwick to leave Durham on 79 for 2.Stoneman offered no stroke and lost his off bail then Borthwick fell for five when he tried too late to withdraw his bat and edged into his stumps, following on from his two failures in the previous Championship match against Yorkshire.A change in conditions didnt help Durham as the openers had 35 on the board after five overs. Light rain was starting to fall when Stoneman departed for 17 in the sixth over. It passed quickly enough for play to continue, but the thickening cloud made batting trickier, prompting Keaton Jennings to drop anchor.He had raced to 20 off 16 balls, then added only three in facing a further 40 before bad light prompted tea to be taken an over early. Gareth Berg had conceded one run in six overs, but on tthe resumption following heavy rain in the interval Jennings and Jack Burnham added 22 in six overs before the rain returned.ddddddddddddThe three wickets Durham took as Hampshire progressed from their overnight 319 for 6 were handed to them.Lewis McManus departed for five when he skied a pull off Graham Onions to be caught at mid-wicket by academy boy Alasdair Appleby, on as a substitute for Chris Rushworth.Sean Ervine and Berg then put on 95 in 22 overs with Berg becoming the dominant partner as he made 56 off 74 balls before lofting Jennings to long-on.Berg had gone to his 50 by following a six over extra cover off Ryan Pringle with a back-foot four to the same area off the next ball. With the declaration looming after lunch, Gareth Andrew drove a straight six off Borthwick and Ervine tried to hurry to his century. On 72 he pulled Paul Coughlin for six and had sped to 93 when he attempted a scoop off the same bowler and was bowled.At the start of Durhams reply McLarens first two overs went for 16 and Tino Best conceded 19 in three before making way for Berg. ' ' '