2011 UCLA Women's Water Polo Media Guide

Page 1


TABLE OF CONTENTS

UCLA won the MPSF Tournament in 2010, hosting the yearly conference tournament for the first time in program history.

TABLE OF CONTENTS This Is UCLA

2010 IN REVIEW

Radio/TV Roster Spieker Aquatics Center 2011 Roster Season Outlook

3 4 6 7

Coaching Staff Head Coach Brandon Brooks Assistant Coach Molly Cahill

8 9

The Bruins Barker, Bresee Burmeister Clark, Dement Dorst, Easterday Greenwood, Hafferkamp, Hill Kaczmarek, Kent, Krumpholz, Martin McGinley, Naranjo P. Orozco, S. Orozco Reynolds, Ronimus, Schulman Sebenaler, Simonds Todisco, Trella Umphrey

Kelly Easterday (left) and Grace Reynolds enter the 2011 season as two of the conference’s premier players. Reynolds led UCLA with 43 goals in 2010.

2011 WOMEN’S water polo schedule Day

Date Opponent Site

Sat. Jan. 22 Sun. Jan. 23 Sat. Jan. 29 Sat. Feb. 5 Sun. Feb. 6 Sat. Feb. 12 Sun. Feb. 13 Sat. Feb. 19 Thu. Feb. 24 Sat. Feb. 26 Sun. Feb. 27 Sat. March 5 Sat. March 5 Sat. March 12 Sat. March 26 Sat. April 2 Sat. April 9 Thu. April 14 Sat. April 16 Fri-Sun. April 29-May 1 Sat.-Sun. May 13-15

Michigan Invitational Michigan Invitational Long Beach State Stanford Invitational Stanford Invitational Triton Invitational Triton Invitational UC Irvine Hawai’i* UC Irvine Invitational UC Irvine Invitational at Arizona State* vs. Cal Baptist California* at Stanford* at San Jose State* USC* Loyola Marymount San Diego State* MPSF Tournament NCAA Tournament

Time

Ann Arbor, Mich. All Day Ann Arbor, Mich. All Day Spieker Aquatics Center 1 p.m. Stanford, Calif. All Day Stanford, Calif. All Day La Jolla, Calif. All Day La Jolla, Calif. All Day Spieker Aquatics Center 1 p.m. Spieker Aquatics Center 7 p.m. Irvine, Calif. All Day Irvine, Calif. All Day Tempe, Ariz. 11 a.m. Tempe, Ariz. 1:30 p.m. Spieker Aquatics Center 1 p.m. Stanford, Calif. 4 p.m. San Jose, Calif. 12 p.m. Spieker Aquatics Center 1 p.m. Spieker Aquatics Center 7 p.m. Spieker Aquatics Center 1 p.m. San Jose, Calif. All Day Ann Arbor, Mich. All Day

10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21

Season in Review Statistics and Results MPSF Standings and Honors

22 23 24

UCLA History Game-by-Game Results Records All-Time Letterwinners, Awards Team USA and UCLA NCAA Championship History

26 27 28 29 30

GENERAL INFORMATION Media Information Athletic Administrators The UCLA Experience

33 34 i

Credits

The 2011 UCLA women’s water polo media guide was written, edited and designed by Alex Timiraos, Sports Information Assistant. Photography by ASUCLA Campus Studio (Don Liebig), Allen Lorentzen, Jeff Sipsey and Brock Scott Photography. Special thanks to ASUCLA Photography, Berliner Studios, Andrew Bernstein, Ruth Chambers, the Los Angeles Visitors and Convention Bureau and Scott Quintard for their photos in the UCLA Experience.

quick facts Location J.D. Morgan Center 325 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 Athletics Phone (310) 825-8699 Chancellor Gene Block Director of Athletics Dan Guerrero Senior Woman’s Administrator Petrina Long Faculty Athletic Rep. Donald Morrison Home Pool Spieker AquatIcs Center Enrollment 39,900 Founded 1919 Colors Blue and Gold Nickname Bruins Conference Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Conference Water Polo Contact Al Beaird Conference Phone (925) 296-0723 Conference Fax (925) 296-0724 National Affiliation NCAA Division I Head Coach Brandon Brooks (UCLA ‘05) Record at UCLA 22-8 (1 year)

All game times are Pacific *indicates MPSF game 1 Triton Invitational (hosted by UC San Diego) 2 MPSF Tournament (hosted by San Jose State) 3 NCAA Tournament (hosted by Michigan)

Coach’s Phone (310) 794-7412 2010 Record 22-8 2010 MPSF Record (Finish) 4-3 (t-3rd) 2010 MPSF Tournament 1st 2010 NCAA Tournament 5th Letterwinners Returning/Lost 15/5 National Championships 11 (7 NCAA) NCAA Tournament Appearances 15 Women’s Water Polo SID Alex Timiraos Timiraos’ Phone (310) 206-0524 Sports Information Fax (310) 825-8664 Timiraos’ E-mail atimiraos@athletics.ucla.edu Sports Information Director Marc Dellins Web Site www.uclabruins.com


RADIO/TV ROSTER

1

Caitlin Dement

1

Sami Hill

5

Sarah Orozco

6

Priscilla Orozco

11

Kelly Easterday

12

Jr. – 6-0 Chino, CA (Ayala)

Jr. – 5-6 Commerce, CA (Montebello)

Sr. – 5-11 Santa Barbara, CA (Santa Barbara)

17

Gisselle Naranjo

So. – 5-5 Commerce, CA (Whittier)

23

Fr. – 5-11 Santa Barbara, CA (Dos Pueblos)

Sr. – 5-7 Commerce, CA (Montebello)

Hannah Sebenaler

Jr. – 5-7 Coronado, CA (Coronado)

18

Leah Trella

So. – 5-10 Huntington Beach, CA (Huntington Beach)

Victoria Kent

Fr. – 5-8 Newport Beach, CA (Corona del Mar)

24

1

Kristen Simonds

2

7

KK Clark

8

13

Nicole Barker

14

Kelly Ronimus

20

Jr. – 6-2 San Jose, CA (Archbishop Mitty)

Jr. – 6-2 Atherton, CA (Sacred Heart Prep)

RS So. – 5-10 Huntington Beach, CA (Huntington Beach)

19

Fr. – 5-10 Coronado, CA (Coronado)

Larissa Todisco

So. – 5-6 Lake Forest, CA (El Toro)

25

Emily Greenwood

3

Brooke Martin

9

So. – 6-0 Sanger, CA (Buchanan)

So. – 5-10 Temecula, CA (Chaparral)

Noel Umphrey

Sr. – 5-5 Santa Ana, CA (Foothill)

Kelsey Hafferkamp

Sr. – 5-11 Piedmont, CA (Piedmont)

Becca Dorst

Fr. – 6-0 Menlo Park, CA (Menlo-Atherton)

Megan Burmeister

Sr. – 5-8 Menlo Park, CA (Menlo)

Katie Estrada

Sr. – 5-8 Coronado, CA (Coronado)

Randi Bresee

15

Jr. – 5-11 Rancho Cucamonga, CA (Los Osos)

21

Kari Krumpholz

So. – 5-10 Santa Ana, CA (Foothill)

Brandon Brooks

Head Coach – 2nd Season Alma Mater – UCLA ’05

4

Kelsey McGinley

Sr. – 5-7 Laguna Hills, CA (Laguna Hills)

10

Grace Reynolds

Sr. – 5-8 Santa Ana, CA (California)

16

Leslee Kaczmarek

22

Natasha Schulman

So. – 5-11 Corona del Mar, CA (Corona del Mar)

So. – 5-9 Laguna Beach, CA (Laguna Beach)

Molly Cahill

Assistant Coach – 3rd Season Alma Mater – UCLA ’08


SPIEKER AQUATICS CENTER

now in its second season as UCLA’s home . . .

SPIEKER AQUATICS CENTER The long-awaited new home to UCLA’s aquatics program has become a reality. The Spieker Aquatics Center opened in September 2009, in time for the men’s water polo season that fall. PCL Construction broke ground on the facility in July 2008.

The pool also has four platforms on a diving tower, at heights of three, five seven and one half, and 10-meter platforms, as well as one and three-meter springboards. In addition, the aquatics center features a warming pool for divers directly behind the tower.

In 2011, UCLA has seven matches on its schedule at Spieker Aquatics Center. Last season, the Bruins enjoyed playing four regular-season matches at their new home before hosting the MPSF Tournament the weekend of April 30-May 2. UCLA became the conference’s first-ever No. 5-seed team to win the MPSF Tournament, earning victories over Hawai’i, Stanford and USC.

Adjacent to Sunset Canyon Recreation Center on the northwest portion of campus, the Spieker Aquatics Center was made possible thanks to a generous lead gift from former student-athlete Tod Spieker and his wife, Catherine. Tod, a 1971 UCLA graduate and All-American, swam for the Bruins from 1968-71 and still competes successfully in Master’s Swimming.

The athletics department opened its newest facility on Sept. 26, 2009, as the men’s water polo team defeated UC Irvine, 10-4, after a dedication ceremony that evening. The women’s water polo program earned a 95 victory over Cal State Northridge on Feb. 13, 2010, in its first-ever game at Spieker Aquatics Center. Currently in its second full season as UCLA’s home pool, Spieker Aquatics Center features a 52-meter by 25-yard all-deep water pool with a dividing bulkhead, allowing races to take place at varying distances (meters, versus yards).

The main pool, Dirks Pool, is named after Carolyn Dirks, who provided the lead gift for the swimming pool. Dirks Pool has also been used for special use events and Masters Swim meets. The signature feature of the Spieker Aquatics Center is the diving tower, which sits at the west end of the pool. The east end of the pool houses the new scoreboard, an LED, state-of-the-art piece of electronics, making scores, statistics and messages easily visible to all in attendance. Next to the scoreboard is the “Wall of Champions”, showcasing all of UCLA’s water polo, swimming and

diving national championship teams, as well as all individual student-athletes’ achievements, record-holders and Olympians. Separate men’s and women’s locker rooms house enough lockers for all team members, with shower space and bathroom stalls and sinks for each team. Equipment needed for meets and matches have storage capacity on the facility’s south side. When walking through the public entryway to the center, visitors first notice the Donor Wall. All donors who generously made gifts to the Spieker Aquatics Center are recognized on this wall. Additionally, over 50 former UCLA water polo players, swimmers and divers made gifts to “name” a locker. Those names will forever be part of the locker rooms in the new facility. The state-of-the-art facility brings together all three of UCLA’s intercollegiate aquatic sports – water polo, swimming and diving – to one venue. The aquatics center features event lighting and permanent seating with the possibility of additional temporary seating for larger events.


SPIEKER AQUATICS CENTER

TIMELINE: CONSTRUCTION OF SPIEKER AQUATICS CENTER August 2009

2011 HOME SCHEDULE LONG BEACH STATE Saturday, Jan. 29 1 p.m.

UC IRVINE

Saturday, Feb. 19 1 p.m.

July 2008 June 2009 August 2008

HAWAI’I

Thursday, Feb. 24 7 p.m.

CALIFORNIA

Saturday, March 12 1 p.m.

November 2008

USC

April 2009

Saturday, April 9 1 p.m.

LOYOLA MARYMOUNT Thursday, April 14 7 p.m.

SAN DIEGO STATE February 2009

March 2009

Saturday, April 16 1 p.m.


SEASON OUTLOOK

UCLA Encouraged by Team Depth, Experience in 2011 Led by eight seniors and six juniors, the Bruins enter their 2011 campaign eager to succeed

A motivated UCLA women’s water polo team returns to the water in 2011 encouraged by its depth, team chemistry and experience. Eight seniors return this season, one year after the Bruins missed the NCAA title game on a team without any seniors. The Bruins’ senior class helped lead the program to backto-back NCAA Championships as freshmen in 2008 and sophomores in 2009. Priscilla Orozco, Kelly Easterday and Megan Burmeister played instrumental roles on those two teams, and with a supporting cast of six juniors, nine sophomores and four freshmen, the veterans are looking to lead UCLA to its sixth NCAA title in the last seven seasons. Head coach Brandon Brooks enters his second year at the helm of UCLA’s women’s water polo program. A twotime Olympian (2004, 2008) and a four-year men’s water polo letterwinner for the Bruins (1999-2002), Brooks is most encouraged by the talent throughout UCLA’s roster in 2011. “I think the most exciting aspect about this team is that we have depth everywhere,” Brooks said. “Not only do we have three really solid goalies, but we’ve got multiple skilled players at all the key positions. We have a pair of really strong centers, four players who can defend very well, a group of five quality drivers and three talented left-handers.” Among the most encouraging signs for Brooks and assistant coach Molly Cahill is that every starter and significant contributor returns from last season. In fact, UCLA brings back over 96 percent of its total offensive output from one year ago. Additionally, Brooks recruited four talented freshmen who are expected to push for playing time in 2011. UCLA’s offense will focus on the return of the program’s top two goal scorers – Priscilla Orozco and Grace Reynolds. Orozco secured first-team ACWPC All-America acclaim in 2010, totaling 40 goals and a team-high 27 steals as a junior. The native of Commerce, Calif., enters her fourth season in Westwood having recorded 107 career goals at a 43.9 percent clip. “Priscilla has been a mainstay for us for the last three seasons,” Brooks said. “She got stronger in the offseason, which will help her put more power into her shot. She looks to have a great senior year for us.” Reynolds led the Bruins with 43 goals last year, her first season with the Bruins. A two-year standout center at California in 2007 and 2008, Reynolds transferred to UCLA for the 2010 season and thrived from the start. The native of Santa Ana, Calif., scored four goals in her first match for the Bruins, finishing the season with 14 multiple-goal efforts. She earned second-team ACWPC All-America and secondteam All-MPSF honors. “Grace brings a ton of experience to our program and is as talented as anyone in the country,” Brooks said. “We are looking for her to be a huge presence for us, and we’re excited to see how she elevates her game as a senior.”

Another key scorer from the past two seasons, junior Sarah Orozco, looks to help UCLA as both an attacker and center. She has played in all 61 matches the last two seasons, having scored 21 goals on 51 attempts as a sophomore last season. The sister of teammate Priscilla Orozco, Sarah ranked third on the team with 25 earned exclusions in 2010. “Sarah has been a tremendous part of our success the last two years,” Brooks said. “She is such a versatile player because she can play center, she is a good driver and she has improved on the defensive end.” Other key scoring threats for UCLA include senior Kelsey McGinley and sophomore Leah Trella. McGinley has been a solid contributor the last three seasons, registering 22 goals on 50 attempts in 44 matches. The native of Laguna Hills, Calif., scored in the Bruins’ 8-7 win over USC in the MPSF Tournament title match last spring before adding goals in the team’s first two NCAA Tournament matches. “We’re looking for Kelsey to add quality minutes in each game for us this season,” Brooks said. “She’s been a very solid player for us as a reserve, but we know that she can carry a bigger role as a senior. She has the ability to make a very positive impact with her shooting and her quickness.” Trella, a sophomore from Huntington Beach, Calif., made consistent contributions as a freshman in 2010. She finished her rookie campaign with 14 goals and 19 steals in 21 matches. With one year of experience playing at the college level, Trella looks to have an even stronger season as a sophomore. “Leah is very talented, very strong and very hard working,” Brooks said. “She was hampered by an injury last year and had a hard time getting back in the pool. But I think we’re going to be able to get more consistency from her this year. We’re very excited to see what she will be able to do for us.” UCLA’s defense will be anchored by Easterday and Burmeister, two stalwart defenders who have played major minutes over the past three seasons. Helping Easterday and Burmeister on the defensive end includes junior KK Clark, a 6-foot-2 product from Atherton, Calif., and sophomore Emily Greenwood, a 6-foot utility player hailing from Sanger, Calif. Easterday has played in all 94 matches over the past three seasons, recording 41 goals, 37 steals, 16 assists and 10 blocks. The resident of Santa Barbara, Calif., was an honorable mention ACWPC All-America selection in 2010 and has captured ACWPC All-Academic Team accolades the past three seasons. Burmeister enters her senior season having totaled 37 goals and 43 steals in 88 matches. The native of Menlo Park, Calif., has twice secured ACWPC All-Academic Team honors. “Kelly and Megan have been keys for us, defensively, the last three years,” Brooks said. “Those two players have emerged as very strong, powerful defenders. They can hold their own against anybody. They’re great communicators who can provide a lot of senior leadership on defense. They’ve been very consistent every day about putting in their work.” Clark made an immediate impact as a freshman in 2009, scoring 30 goals on 72 attempts. She followed her rookie year with 31 goals in 2010, the third-highest total on the team. In addition, Clark accrued 22 steals, 12 blocks and 19 earned exclusions last spring as a sophomore. “KK Clark is going to impact every phase of the game for us,” Brooks said. “She’s tall, fast and has long arms. I think she will be much more consistent this year, in terms of putting shots away and have a higher percentage of shots on the cage. We look for her to be one of our leaders this season.” Greenwood was a consistent contributor as a freshman in 2010, totaling 17 goals and 10 steals in all 30 matches. A former standout on the USA Junior National Team, Greenwood had experience in the offseason training with the USA National Team.

SARAH OROZCO

“We used Emily a lot last season, and we look for her role to increase this year,” Brooks said. “She communicates really well in the pool. Her experience with the national team is only going to help her improve. She’s always a huge asset with her speed, and she has put in a lot of work on the offensive end.”

CAITLIN DEMENT At the center position, the Bruins will rely on Reynolds, Becca Dorst and Katie Estrada. Dorst, a 6-foot freshman from Menlo Park, Calif., thrived at Menlo-Atherton High School as a four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner. Estrada has played in 40 games the past three seasons, adding 13 goals and three steals. Hailing from Coronado, Calif., Estrada is expected to push Reynolds and Dorst for playing time at center. “While we expected Grace Reynolds to be a huge presence for us, Becca Dorst should challenge for playing time at that position,” Brooks said. “She showed us in fall workouts that her water polo IQ is very high, especially for a freshman. She has a very good work ethic and a positive attitude toward putting in the work required at the collegiate level.” UCLA returns its primary two goalkeepers from last season – juniors Caitlin Dement and Kristen Simonds – and welcomes freshman Sami Hill. Dement established UCLA’s single-season saves record with 264 stops in 2010. Hill enters the program having been a starting goalkeeper for the USA Junior National Team. “Caitlin and Sami are two fantastic goalkeepers, and it’s an open race at that position as we head into the season,” Brooks said. “Caitlin was in her first year as the team’s starting goalkeeper last season, and she broke the school’s single-season saves record. On top of that, she returns one year stronger and one year wiser. Sami is very athletic and is determined to be the best that she can be. We’ve got a good situation in the cage this season.” The Bruins look toward 2011 with excitement, as the MPSF again promises to be the nation’s toughest conference. UCLA, along with last season’s NCAA Tournament finalists – Stanford and USC – are expected to contend for the national title. California, Hawai’i and San Diego State each defeated UCLA in 2010 and should pose threats as challengers again this spring. “The MPSF is the strongest conference in the country, and nothing is going to change there,” Brooks said. “The sport is getting a higher level of coaching. Anytime one of those jobs opens, whether from the MPSF or a neighboring program, you’re going to get a more competitive applicant pool and that’s only going to make our sport stronger.” As for what to expect in his second year as UCLA’s head coach, Brooks cannot wait for the challenges that lie ahead. “Year two has been much more stable,” Brooks said. “There were a lot of ups and downs last year, which were to be expected as a first-year head coach on a team with a lot of youth. But when you’re going through it, that’s when you learn to adapt and react to certain situations. Our team is very excited for this year. We’ve been excited since the last day of last season to get back.”


2011 ROSTER No. Name 1 Caitlin Dement 1 Sami Hill 1 Kristen Simonds 2 Emily Greenwood 3 Megan Burmeister 4 Kelsey McGinley 5 Sarah Orozco 6 Priscilla Orozco 7 KK Clark 8 Brooke Martin 9 Katie Estrada 10 Grace Reynolds 11 Kelly Easterday 12 Hannah Sebenaler 13 Nicole Barker 14 Noel Umphrey 15 Randi Bresee 16 Leslee Kaczmarek 17 Gisselle Naranjo 18 Leah Trella 19 Kelly Ronimus 20 Kelsey Hafferkamp 21 Kari Krumpholz 22 Natasha Schulman 23 Victoria Kent 24 Larissa Todisco 25 Becca Dorst

Pos. Yr. Ht. Hometown (Previous School) GK Jr. 6-0 Chino, Calif. (Ayala) GK Fr. 5-11 Santa Barbara, Calif. (Dos Pueblos) GK Jr. 6-2 San Jose, Calif. (Archbishop Mitty) Utl. So. 6-0 Sanger, Calif. (Buchanan) Def. Sr. 5-8 Menlo Park, Calif. (Menlo) Att. Sr. 5-7 Laguna Hills, Calif. (Laguna Hills) Att. Jr. 5-6 Commerce, Calif. (Montebello) Att. Sr. 5-7 Commerce, Calif. (Montebello) Utl. Jr. 6-2 Atherton, Calif. (Sacred Heart Prep) Att. So. 5-10 Temecula, Calif. (Chaparral) Ctr. Sr. 5-8 Coronado, Calif. (Coronado) Ctr. Sr. 5-11 Santa Ana, Calif. (California) Utl. Sr. 5-11 Santa Barbara, Calif. (Santa Barbara) Att. Jr. 5-7 Coronado, Calif. (Coronado) Att. So.* 5-10 Huntington Beach, Calif. (Huntington Beach) Att. Sr. 5-5 Santa Ana, Calif. (Foothill) Ctr. Jr. 5-11 Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. (Los Osos) Ctr. So. 5-11 Corona del Mar, Calif. (Corona del Mar) Att. So. 5-5 Commerce, Calif. (Whittier) Att. So. 5-10 Huntington Beach, Calif. (Huntington Beach) Att. Fr. 5-10 Coronado, Calif. (Coronado) Att. Sr. 5-11 Piedmont, Calif. (Piedmont) Utl. So. 5-10 Santa Ana, Calif. (Foothill) Def. So. 5-9 Laguna Beach, Calif. (Laguna Beach) Att. Fr. 5-8 Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar) Att. So. 5-6 Lake Forest, Calif. (El Toro) Utl. Fr. 6-0 Menlo Park, Calif. (Menlo-Atherton)

ALPHABETICAL ROSTER No. Name 13 Nicole Barker 15 Randi Bresee 3 Megan Burmeister 7 KK Clark 1 Caitlin Dement 25 Becca Dorst 11 Kelly Easterday 9 Katie Estrada 2 Emily Greenwood 20 Kelsey Hafferkamp 1 Sami Hill 16 Leslee Kaczmarek 23 Victoria Kent 21 Kari Krumpholz 8 Brooke Martin 4 Kelsey McGinley 17 Gisselle Naranjo 6 Priscilla Orozco 5 Sarah Orozco 10 Grace Reynolds 19 Kelly Ronimus 22 Natasha Schulman 12 Hannah Sebenaler 1 Kristen Simonds 24 Larissa Todisco 18 Leah Trella 14 Noel Umphrey

Pos. Yr. Ht. Att. *So. 5-10 Ctr. Jr. 5-11 Def. Sr. 5-8 Utl. Jr. 6-2 GK Jr. 6-0 Utl. Fr. 6-0 Utl. Sr. 5-11 Ctr. Sr. 5-8 Utl. So. 6-0 Att. Sr. 5-11 GK Fr. 5-11 Ctr. So. 5-11 Att. Fr. 5-8 Utl. So. 5-10 Att. So. 5-10 Att. Sr. 5-7 Att. So. 5-5 Att. Sr. 5-7 Att. Jr. 5-6 Ctr. Sr. 5-11 Att. Fr. 5-10 Def. So. 5-9 Att. Jr. 5-7 GK Jr. 6-2 Att. So. 5-6 Att. So. 5-10 Att. Sr. 5-5

*indicates player has utilized redshirt year

COACHING STAFF Head Coach Assistant Coach

Brandon Brooks (2nd season) Molly Cahill (3rd season)

Back row (left to right): Staff athletic trainer Laef Morris, Randi Bresee, Caitlin Dement, Kelly Easterday, Becca Dorst, Kristen Simonds, KK Clark, Grace Reynolds, Kelsey Hafferkamp. Middle row: Student athletic trainer Andrea Aguirre, Sami Hill, Nicole Barker, Kari Krumpholz, Leah Trella, Kelsey McGinley, Katie Estrada, Megan Burmeister, Brooke Martin, Leslee Kaczmarek, Emily Greenwood, head coach Brandon Brooks. Front row: Natasha Schulman, Kelly Ronimus, Victoria Kent, Gisselle Naranjo, Noel Umphrey, Priscilla Orozco, Hannah Sebenaler, Sarah Orozco, Larissa Todisco, assistant coach Molly Cahill.

PRONUNCIATION GUIDE Bresee – BREE-zee Burmeister – BER-my-ster Dement – deh-MENT Kaczmarek – KAZ-mare-ik

Naranjo – Nah-RAHN-ho Orozco – Oh-ROZ-coh Ronimus – RAH-neh-miss Schulman – SHOOL-mun

GUIDE TO WATER POLO POSITIONS Sebenaler – SEE-ben-ah-ler Simonds – SY-mondz Umphrey – UM-free

GK – goalkeeper, ATT – attacker/driver, CTR – center, DEF – defender, UTL – utility Attacker: Similar to the guard and forward positions in basketball. These players shoot often and create offensive chances for their teammates, as well as disrupt the opponents’ offense. Also known as “driver.”

Center Offense/Defense: Similar to the post position in basketball. These players station themselves in front of goal, engaging in physical battles for position. Defenders are similar to football safeties by preventing opponent breakaways on counterattack.


COACHING STAFF brandon

BROOKS HEAD COACH • 2nd Year Alma Mater: UCLA ’05 Brandon Brooks begins his second season as UCLA’s head women’s water polo coach in 2011. The former standout UCLA and Team USA goalkeeper was named the third head coach in program history on June 3, 2009. Brooks coached the Bruins to the MPSF Tournament title in 2010, as UCLA earned an automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament for the second time in three years. UCLA advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the seventh straight season, becoming the first MPSF team to win the conference tournament title as the fifth seed. Along the way, Brooks helped with the development of goalkeeper Caitlin Dement, who set UCLA’s single-season saves record (264). Dement ranked fourth among MPSF goalkeepers with a 9.10 saves per game average and registered a program-record 22 saves in an 8-3 win over UC Davis on Feb. 21, 2010. At the end of the season, she earned second-team All-MPSF honors. UCLA finished its 2010 campaign with a 22-8 overall record, including a 4-3 mark in MPSF action. In all, three players earned All-MPSF Team honors, highlighted by first-team selection Priscilla Orozco. The Bruins had five players selected as ACWPC All-Academic selections and five named MPSF All-Academic honorees (four players received both academic awards). Brooks served as an assistant coach with the UCLA men’s and women’s water polo teams for three seasons prior to his appointment as the head coach of the women’s program (men’s assistant in 2006, 2007 and 2008; women’s assistant in 2007, 2008 and 2009). He also served as an undergraduate assistant coach with the men’s program in 2004. Brooks helped lead the women’s program to NCAA Championships each spring and guided the men’s program to the 2004 NCAA title. In his three seasons as an assistant coach with the women’s program, Brooks’ work with goalkeepers Emily Feher (2007) and Brittany Fullen (2008, 2009) proved instrumental to UCLA’s national championship finishes. Fullen established a new single-season saves record as a junior, totaling 237 stops in 2008 (that record was eclipsed by Dement in 2010). The previous season, Feher recorded a 4.96 goals against average in 25 games before securing first-team All-America honors for the third consecutive season. An undergraduate assistant on the men’s water polo coaching staff in 2004, Brooks helped Joe Axelrad develop into the one of the nation’s premier goalkeepers, leading UCLA to the NCAA Championship that fall. Brooks starred on the men’s water polo team from 1999-2002, leading the Bruins to back-to-back NCAA championships in 1999 and 2000, before excelling in the international water polo ranks and participating in the 2004 and 2008 Olympic Games for the USA Men’s National Team.

THE BROOKS FILE

In the summer of 2008, Brooks and former teammate Adam Wright (UCLA’s men’s water polo head coach) helped lead the USA Men’s National Team to the silver medal at the Olympic Games in Beijing. Brooks, Wright and former teammate Brett Ormsby competed in the 2004 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.

Brooks’ Head Coaching Record (W. Water Polo)

Brooks was head coach of the Los Angeles Water Polo Club’s boys 16-and-under team from 2006-08. In 2006, he coached the club team to an undefeated season, culminating in the Junior Olympic Championship. He helped develop 15 Division I men’s water polo student-athletes in his tenure as head coach. Additionally, Brooks served on the coaching staff of the U.S. Women’s National Team in the summer of 2009, alongside former UCLA head coach Adam Krikorian.

Brooks’ Assistant Coaching Record (W. Water Polo)

One of the nation’s premier goalkeepers in four seasons at UCLA, Brooks helped lead the Bruins to back-to-back NCAA titles in his first two years (1999, 2000). He continued his stellar play in his final two seasons, earning All-America and All-MPSF honors each year. Brooks ranks second on UCLA’s all-time saves list with 700 stops in four seasons.

Year 2004 2006 2007 2008 Totals

Year 2010 Totals Year 2007 2008 2009 Totals

Overall 22-8 22-8 Overall 28-2 33-0 25-6 86-8

Conf. 4-3 4-3 Conf. 11-1 12-0 5-2 28-3

Finish 5th at NCAA Tourn., 1st at MPSF Tourn. 1 MPSF Tournament Championship Finish NCAA Champions NCAA Champions NCAA Champions 3 NCAA Championships

Brooks’ Assistant Coaching Record (M. Water Polo)

A key goalkeeper on the USA National Team, Brooks led Team USA to the gold medal at the 2001 and 2003 Pan American Games. He served as the starting goalkeeper at the 2003 FINA World Championships (Barcelona), the 2004 Olympics (Athens) and the 2005 FINA World Championships (Montreal).

Overall 25-3 17-6 21-7 16-8 79-24

Conf. 8-0 6-2 5-3 5-3 24-8

Finish NCAA Champions 3rd 5th 4th 1 NCAA Championship

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS •Two-time USA Olympic participant (2004, Athens; 2008, Beijing) •Member of silver-medal winning USA team at 2008 Beijing Olympics •Starting goalie for USA National Team at 2004 Athens Olympics •Led Team USA to second place finish at 2008 FINA World League Finals •Competed for USA on 2003 and 2005 World Championship squads •Helped lead UCLA to NCAA Championships in 1999 and 2000 •Earned All-America and All-MPSF honors at UCLA in 2000, 2001 and 2002 •Ranks second on UCLA’s all-time saves list with 700 stops (1999-2002)

Brooks, 29, graduated from UCLA in 2005 with a degree in sociology. A native of Honolulu, Hawaii, Brooks is the oldest of three children and has 24-year-old twin sisters (Nicole and Jessica).


COACHING STAFF molly

CAHILL ASSISTANT COACH • 3rd Year Alma Mater: UCLA ’08 Molly Cahill enters her third season as an assistant coach with the UCLA women’s water polo program in 2011. A four-year UCLA women’s water polo letterwinner (2004-07), Cahill helped lead the Bruins to the MPSF Tournament title in 2010 after having served as an undergraduate assistant coach in 2008. Cahill has guided the Bruins to the NCAA Tournament in each of her six years associated with the program. Likewise, she has lifted UCLA to the NCAA Championship in four of her six seasons – three as a student-athlete (2005-07) and one as undergraduate assistant coach in 2008. In 2010, Cahill helped a young team, devoid of any seniors on the roster, improve over the course of the season and win the MPSF Tournament title as the conference’s fifth-seeded team. The Bruins defeated No. 4-seed Hawai’i and No. 1-seed Stanford before taking down No. 2-seed USC in the tournament’s title match at UCLA’s Spieker Aquatics Center. Serving as an undergraduate assistant coach in 2008, Cahill helped the Bruins win their fourth consecutive NCAA title – a streak with which she helped start during her sophomore season in 2005. UCLA posted a perfect 33-0 record that season, duplicating a feat the program had accomplished in 2005.

THE CAHILL FILE

In four seasons as a UCLA student-athlete, Cahill registered 95 goals on 260 attempts and played in all 123 matches. She earned MPSF All-Academic Team honors her final three seasons (2005-07). Cahill was recognized as an ACWPC All-Academic “excellent” selection in 2005.

Cahill’s Assistant Coaching Record Year 2008 2010 Totals

Overall 33-0 22-8 22-8

Conf. 12-0 4-3 4-3

Finish NCAA Champions 5th 1 NCAA Championship

A senior in 2007, Cahill logged 26 goals on 52 attempts, collecting 12 steals and 11 assists. She scored 14 goals on 35 attempts her junior season (2006) and added 17 goals on 38 attempts as a sophomore (2005). The native of Santa Barbara, Calif., registered a career-best 38 goals on 135 attempts as a freshman (2004) before earning MPSF All-Freshman Team honors that spring.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS •Has led UCLA to the NCAA Tournament in each of her six years with the program •Guided the Bruins to the 2008 NCAA Championship as an assistant coach •As a student-athlete at UCLA, won three NCAA titles (2005-07) •Starred on the Bruins’ undefeated NCAA Championship team in 2005 (33-0)

Cahill, 25, graduated from UCLA in 2008 with a degree in history.

WOMEN’S WATER POLO SUPPORT STAFF

Don Morrison

Faculty Athletic Representative

Pete Maglieri

Equipment Room

Laef Morris

Staff Athletic Trainer

Mike Sondheimer

Assoc. A.D., Academic Admissions Services

Andrea Aguirre

Student Athletic Trainer

Aaron Giacosa

Alex Timiraos

Academic Advisor

Jill Robinson

Athletic Performance

Sports Information

Krsto Sbutega

Graduate Student Manager

Jana Suko Marketing

Tina Johnson

Administrative Assistant


PLAYER PROFILES

13

nicole

BARKER

RS Sophomore • Defender • 5-10 Huntington Beach, Calif. (Huntington Beach) 2010 – Redshirted. 2009 – Played in 13 matches…scored seven goals on 13 attempts (53.8 percent)…collected two assists and three steals…registered a season-high two goals in two games – scored first two collegiate goals against Long Beach State at the UC Irvine Invitational (Feb. 21); also added two goals against Cal Lutheran (March 8)…scored one goal against Michigan in the first round of the NCAA Tournament at the University of Maryland (May 8). High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Huntington Beach High School under head coach Stalin Reyes…served as team co-captain as a senior, totaling 46 goals, a league-best 57 assists and 73 steals as a senior (2008)…guided Huntington Beach to a CIF playoff berth each season…earned team MVP honors as a senior and first-team All-Sea View League accolades…as a junior (2007), totaled 24 goals, 26 assists and 29 steals…recipient of the team’s “Coaches Award”…as a sophomore (2006), totaled 17 goals, 27 assists and 26 steals as the team’s “Most Improved Player”…as a freshman (2005), contributed nine goals, 21 assists and 19 steals…as a swimmer, established school records in the 200-meter freestyle and 4x50 freestyle relay…served as team captain as a senior and earned team MVP honors as a junior. Club – Competed for the SET Water Polo Club…helped lead SET’s 20-and-under club to the national championship in 2008…led the 18-and-under team to a second-place finish at the 2008 U.S. Club Championship…member of the 2007 Southern Pacific Zone Team and Youth National Team. Personal – Full name: Nicole Leeann Barker…born June 12, 1990 in Torrance, Calif…Nicole is the younger of Guy and Brenda Barker’s two children… older brother, Dustin, graduated from UCLA in 2009…lists greatest athletic thrill to date as leading her 20-and-under SET Water Polo Club team to the national title in the summer of 2008…political science major.

NICOLE BARKER’S CAREER Statistics Year 2009 Totals

GP/GS 13/0 13/0

G 7 7

ATT 13 13

PCT .538 .538

AST 2 2

STL 3 3

BLK 0 0

EE 3 3

15

randi

BRESEE

Junior • Center • 5-11 Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. (Los Osos) 2010 – Played in three matches…had one shot attempt. 2009 – Played in 29 matches…scored 17 goals on 30 attempts (56.7 percent)…added 17 earned exclusions, four steals, one assist and one block…tied for sixth on the team with 17 goals…recorded a season-high four goals at Cal Lutheran (March 8)…finished the season having collected five multiplegoal efforts – one four-goal game and four two-goal performances…scored two goals in collegiate debut against Bucknell at the University of Michigan (season opener, Jan. 24)…also had one pair of goals against Hawai’i (Feb. 7), Long Beach State (Feb. 21) and Brown (March 26). High School – Four-year varsity water polo and three-year varsity swimming letterwinner at Los Osos High School under head coaches Eric Cypher and David Merryman, respectively…served as team captain and captured team MVP honors as a junior and senior…finished the 2007 and 2008 seasons as the team’s leading scorer and assists leader before earning first-team All-CIF honors…captured All-CIF Player of the Year accolades in 2008…fifth-team All-America honors as a senior; fourth-team All-Southern California selection…was a California All-America honorable mention selection as a junior…captured second All-CIF and All-Baseline League honors as a sophomore…named team’s best offensive player as a sophomore…helped lead Los Osos to four consecutive Baseline League titles. Personal – Full name: Randi Taylor Bresee (last name pronounced BREE-zee)…born May 1, 1990 in Upland, Calif…Randi is the youngest of Bret and Diana Bresee’s three children…has one sister, Bailey, and one brother, Jared…lists winning at the Junior Olympics in 2008 as her biggest athletic thrill…sociology major.

RANDI BRESEE’S CAREER Statistics Year 2009 2010 Totals

10

GP/GS 29/0 3/0 32/0

G 17 0 17

ATT 30 1 31

PCT .567 .000 .548

AST 1 0 1

STL 4 0 4

BLK 1 0 1

EE 17 0 17


PLAYER PROFILES

3

megan

BURMEISTER

Senior • Defender • 5-8 Menlo Park, Calif. (Menlo) 2010 – Played in all 30 matches, making 28 starts…scored 16 goals on 66 attempts…earned ACWPC All-Academic honors as an “excellent” selection…also secured MPSF All-Academic honors…finished third on the team with 20 steals…also collected five assists, three earned exclusions and two blocks…scored in 14 matches, including a season-high two goals in two games – versus Cal State Northridge (Feb. 13) and against Arizona State (March 13)…scored one goal in UCLA’s 7-6 win over Stanford in a semifinal match at the MPSF Tournament. 2009 – Played in all 31 matches, making two starts…scored 11 goals on 38 attempts (28.9 percent)…collected 14 steals, seven earned exclusions, three blocks and three assists…scored UCLA’s most dramatic goal of the season, converting on a 6-on-5 opportunity with one second to play in a 12-11 victory over Stanford (May 9) in the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament…finished that game with two goals…totaled three two-goal efforts and scored at least one goal in eight matches – also scored two goals against Long Beach State at the UC Irvine Invitational (Feb. 21) and against Hartwick (March 26). 2008 – Played in 27 matches…scored 10 goals on 22 attempts (45.5 percent)…recorded nine steals and seven assists…tallied a season-high two goals against San Diego State (April 12)…scored in nine matches…recorded first collegiate goal against Colorado State at the Michigan Invitational (Jan. 27). High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner under head coaches Kyle Utsumi and Jenny Booth (water polo) and Terrence O’Malley (swimming)…four-time Menlo School Female Athlete of the Year…helped lead Menlo to CIF-CCS titles in 2004, 2005 and 2006 and Peninsula Athletic League championships in 2003, 2004 and 2005…earned all-league honors in 2004 and 2005; captured All-CIF accolades in 2006, in addition to being named Peninsula Athletic League and CIF-CCS Player of the Year…gained first-team high school All-American honors in 2006-07…led Menlo with 80 goals her senior season…as a swimmer, finished 10th in the 100-yard breastroke in the CIF-CCS in 2006, placed 11th in 2007. Club – Competed for the Stanford Water Polo Club…helped win a bronze medal at the 2005 and 2007 Junior Olympics…earned Junior Olympic All-America honors in 2003, 2004, 2006 and 2007…led club team to the 2006 and 2007 J.O. National Championship…also competed for the Youth National Training Team in 2005 and 2006. Personal – Full name: Megan J Burmeister…born July 25, 1989 in Palo Alto, Calif…Megan is the youngest of Bob and Laurie Burmeister’s three children…has one older sister, Allison, and one older brother, Robbie…political science major.

megan burmeister’S CAREER Statistics Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

GP/GS 27/0 31/2 30/28 88/30

G 10 11 16 37

ATT 22 38 66 120

PCT .455 .289 .242 .308

AST 7 3 5 15

STL 9 14 20 43

BLK 0 3 2 5

EE 1 7 3 11

UCLA vs. the MPSF in 2011

Arizona State

California

Hawai’i

San Diego State

Saturday, March 5 at Arizona State, 11 a.m. (PT)

Saturday, March 12 at UCLA, 1 p.m.

Thursday, February 24 at UCLA, 7 p.m.

Saturday, April 16 at UCLA, 1 p.m.

UCLA received four goals from Priscilla Orozco in a 13-6 victory over Arizona State in the two teams’ MPSF match on March 13 last season. The Bruins won the season series against ASU, 2-0.

The Bruins won their MPSF contest at California, 7-6, last year. UCLA won two of three games against the Golden Bears, including a 7-6 decision in an NCAArecord eight overtimes at the UCI Invitational.

UCLA lost at Hawai’i, 9-8, in six overtimes in the annual MPSF meeting last March. The Bruins won the other two contests against Hawai’i, including an 8-6 victory in the first round of the MPSF Tournament.

UCLA avenged an early-season loss to San Diego State by defeating the Aztecs on the road, 7-5, in last year’s MPSF match. The two teams went 1-1 against each other in the season series in 2010.

San Jose State

Stanford

USC

Saturday, April 2 at San Jose State, 12 p.m.

Saturday, March 26 at Stanford, 4 p.m.

Saturday, April 9 at UCLA, 1 p.m.

The Bruins recieved a game-high three goals from KK Clark to defeat San Jose State at home, 12-5, in their only meeting against the Spartans in 2010. Four players each added two goals for UCLA.

Stanford downed UCLA, 11-6, in Westwood in the two teams’ MPSF meeting. The Bruins won one of three games against the Cardinal in 2010, a 7-6 triumph in the semifinals of the MPSF Tournament.

After dropping a 14-5 decision to USC in MPSF action, UCLA rebounded with an 8-7 win over the Women of Troy in the MPSF Championship match. USC won two of three games against UCLA last season.

11


PLAYER PROFILES

7

kk

CLARK

Junior • Utility • 6-2 Atherton, Calif. (Sacred Heart) 2010 – Played in all 30 matches, making 14 starts…scored 31 goals on 101 attempts (30.7 percent)…finished third on the team with 31 goals…secured honorable mention All-MPSF Team accolades…also earned ACWPC All-Academic honors as an “excellent” selection…named an MPSF All-Academic Team honoree…named a second-team All-NCAA Tournament selection, scoring eight goals in three NCAA Tournament matches…totaled 22 steals, 19 earned exclusions, 12 blocks and 10 assists…won a team-leading 30 sprints…scored in 17 games, including a career-high four goals against Marist (May 15) in the NCAA Tournament…also registered two three-goal games – versus UC Santa Barbara (Feb. 27) and San Jose State (March 28)…scored in each of the Bruins’ final five matches, totaling 11 goals in that span. 2009 – Played in all 31 matches, making two starts…scored 30 goals on 72 attempts (41.7 percent)…finished fifth on the team with 30 goals…earned All-MPSF Freshman Team honors…collected 22 steals, 10 blocks, seven earned exclusions and three assists…also won eight sprints…scored a season-high three goals in three matches – in her collegiate debut against Bucknell at the Michigan Invitational (season opener, Jan. 24), against Long Beach State (Feb. 5) and versus USC (April 11)…netted seven multiple-goal efforts…registered a nine-game scoring streak from Feb. 22-March 26…scored two goals in UCLA’s first round victory in the NCAA Tournament against Michigan at the University of Maryland (May 8). High School – Two-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Sacred Heart Prep under head coaches Ed Samuels and Jon Burke (water polo) and Kevin Morris (swimming)…captured firstteam All-America honors as a senior (2007)…a two-time first-team All-CIF Central Coast section honoree, scored 60 goals in 24 regular-season matches as a senior (including 14 goals in six WCAL contests)…total of 60 goals ranked second most among all WCAL scoring leaders…scored two goals in the 2007 CIF Central Coast Section Division II Championship, leading Sacred Heart Prep past St. Francis, 6-1; Sacred Heart Prep had never advanced to the CIF championship match…led team to a 28-1 record in 2007…also guided Sacred Heart Prep to the 2007 Amanda MacDonald Invitational title, scoring three goals in a 12-1 win over Palo Alto…totaled 141 goals through her junior and senior seasons…twice honored as the Sacred Heart Prep female co-athlete of the year (junior and senior)…three-time All-America swimmer as member of Sacred Heart Prep’s 200 and 400-meter relay teams…competed for the Norcal Water Polo Club…was a member of the 2007 U.S. Youth Team and 2008 U.S. 20-and-under team.

Personal – Full name: Caroline Archer Clark…born June 28, 1990 in Palo Alto, Calif…KK is the youngest of Peter Clark and Jane Dorst Clark’s three daughters…oldest sister, Zizi, played water polo at UC Santa Barbara…sister, Christie, currently competes for the UC Santa Barbara women’s water polo team…aunt, Marybeth Dorst, was a member of the 1980 U.S. Olympic Women’s Swimming Team…uncle, Chris Dorst, was a member of the 1980 U.S. Olympic Men’s Water Polo Team and competed for Team USA at the 1984 Olympics (Los Angeles)…history major.

KK CLARK’S CAREER Statistics Year 2009 2010 Totals

GP/GS 31/2 30/14 61/16

1

G 30 31 61

ATT 72 101 173

PCT .417 .307 .353

AST 3 10 13

STL 22 22 44

BLK 10 12 22

EE 7 19 26

caitlin

DEMENT

Junior • Goalkeeper • 6-0 Chino, Calif. (Ayala) 2010 – Played in 29 matches, making 28 starts in goal…set the school single-season record with 264 saves…posted a 6.21 goals against average in 114 quarters (956 minutes, 30 seconds, including overtime)…secured second-team All-MPSF accolades… scored one goal (at USC, April 17), registered one assist and had 16 steals…logged 10 saves or more in 10 matches, including a career-high 22 saves in an 8-3 victory over UC Davis (Feb. 21) at Sonoma State…had 16 saves in an NCAA-record eight-overtime win over California in the third-place match of the UC Irvine Invitational…totaled 14 saves in a six-overtime loss at Hawai’i (March 6)…registered 31 saves in UCLA’s three MPSF Tournament victories – nine versus Hawai’i and 11 against Stanford and USC. 2009 – Played in five matches, making two starts in goal…recorded a 3.20 goals against average and 19 saves in over 10 quarters (84:00 minutes)…also collected three steals…registered a season-high 13 saves in UCLA’s 18-2 win against Long Beach State at the UC Irvine Invitational (Feb. 21)…tallied two saves in the fourth quarter of UCLA’s season opener against Bucknell at the University of Michigan (Feb. 24)…also started in goal against Brown (March 26). High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Ayala High School under head coaches Vincent Makuch and Bob Mount, respectively…earned first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division III honors as a senior, junior and sophomore…served as team captain as a senior (2008)…also captured team MVP honors as a senior…helped lead Ayala as the 2007 CIF Division III runner-up as a junior…Ayala finished the 2007 season with a 27-6 overall record…guided Ayala to the 2006 CIF-SS Division II Championship as a sophomore. Club – Competed for the Chino Hills Area Water Polo (CHAWP) Club…earned MVP honors at the 2008 U.S. Junior Olympics…earned All-America selection at the 2007 U.S. Junior Olympics…named a “best goalkeeper” at the U.S. Top-40 Tournament…earned honorable mention distinct in 2007 and 2008 at the 20-and-under competition…competed in 2005 for the U.S. Youth National Team.

CAITLIN DEMENT’S CAREER Statistics Year 2009 2010 Totals

GP/GS 5/2 29/28 34/30

QP 10.5 114.0 124.5

SV 19 264 283

GA 16 180 196

GAA 3.20 6.21 5.76

MP 84:00 956:30 1040:30

Personal – Full name: Caitlin Anne-Marie Dement…born September 23, 1990 in Anaheim, Calif…Caitlin is the third of Rick and Jo Ann Dement’s four children…has two older brothers, Jonathan and Jason, and one younger sister, Chelsea…sociology major.

12


PLAYER PROFILES

25

of her four seasons at Menlo-Atherton (2006-2009)…led Menlo-Atherton to the 2007 CIF CCS title…advanced to the CIF CCS championship match as a junior and senior, falling to St. Francis in overtime both years…captured honorable mention All-Central Coast Section acclaim as a freshman (2006)…as a swimmer, secured first-team NISCA All-America honors in 2008 and 2009..

becca

DORST

Club – Competed for NorCal Water Polo…was a first-team All-America selection at the 2009 Junior Olympics, finishing fourth in the 18-U platinum division…earned tournament MVP accolades at the 2010 British Columbia Open…was an honorable mention All-American at the 2008 and 2009 Junior Olympics (platinum division).

Freshman • Utility • 6-0 Menlo Park, Calif. (Menlo-Atherton) High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Menlo-Atherton under head coaches Chris Rubin and Tom McCrae, respectively…secured CIF Central Coast Section Division I Player of the Year honors her final three seasons (2007-2009)…was named Peninsula Athletic League (PAL) MVP as a sophomore, junior and senior…secured first-team All-PAL accolades each

11

Personal – Full name: Rebecca Archer Dorst…born June 4, 1992 in Palo Alto, Calif…Becca is the middle of Chris and Maryberth Dorst’s three daughters…has two sisters, Lindsay and Emily… mother, Marybeth, was a member of the 1980 U.S. Olympic Women’s Swimming Team…father, Chris, was a member of the 1980 U.S. Olympic Men’s Water Polo Team and competed for Team USA at the 1984 Olympics (Los Angeles)…sister, Lindsay, is a sophomore goalkeeper for the California women’s water polo team…cousin, KK Clark, is a junior on the UCLA women’s water polo team…undeclared major.

kelly

EASTERDAY

Senior • Defender • 5-11 Santa Barbara, Calif. (Santa Barbara) 2010 – Started all 30 matches…scored 23 goals on 80 attempts (28.8 percent)…also registered 27 earned exclusions, 12 steals, nine assists and seven blocks…secured honorable mention All-MPSF accolades…named an ACWPC All-Academic “excellent” selection for the third consecutive season…also captured MPSF All-Academic Team honors…scored in 17 matches, including a career-high four goals in a six-overtime loss to Hawai’i (March 6)…also netted three two-goal games. 2009 – Played in 31 matches, making 29 starts…scored 11 goals on 29 attempts (37.9 percent)… added 24 earned exclusions, 12 steals, two blocks and two assists…named an “excellent” ACWPC All-Academic selection for the second straight year…also earned Academic All-MPSF honors…scored a season-high two goals in UCLA’s 14-7 win against Loyola Marymount (Feb. 14)…scored in 10 total matches…registered one goal in each of UCLA’s first two NCAA Tournament matches (vs. Michigan, May 8; vs. Stanford, May 9). 2008 – Played in all 33 matches…scored seven goals on 22 attempts (31.8 percent)… recorded 16 earned exclusions, 13 steals and five assists…secured ACWPC All-Academic acclaim as an “excellent” selection…earned All-MPSF Freshman Team honors…twice scored a season-high two goals (vs. Colorado State, Jan. 27; at Loyola Marymount, Feb. 2)…scored in five matches…scored first two collegiate goals against Colorado State at the Michigan Invitational (Jan. 27). High School – Four-year varsity water polo letterwinner under head coach Mark Walsh at Santa Barbara High School…also was a four-year swimming letterwinner and two-year volleyball letterwinner…helped lead Santa Barbara to the CIF-SS Division IV title in 2004 and 2005…earned CIF-SS Division IV CoMVP honors in and 2006; CIF-SS Division II Co-MVP accolades in 2007.

KELLY EASTERDAY’S CAREER Statistics Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

Club – Competed for the Santa Barbara Waterpolo Foundation…helped lead club team to 2007 Junior Olympic National Championship; earned Junior Olympic MVP accolades in 2007. Personal – Full name: Kelly Jane Easterday…born July 30, 1989 in Santa Barbara, Calif…Kelly is the youngest of Phil Easterday and Libby McClure’s three children…has two older sisters, Shane and Dena…geography/environmental science major.

9

GP/GS 33/0 31/29 30/30 94/0

G 7 11 23 41

ATT 22 29 80 131

PCT .318 .379 .288 .313

AST 5 2 9 16

STL 13 12 12 37

BLK 1 2 7 10

EE 16 24 27 67

katie

ESTRADA

Senior • Center • 5-8 Coronado, Calif. (Coronado) 2010 – Played in 16 matches…scored five goals on 13 attempts (38.5 percent)…earned ACWPC All-Academic honors as a “superior” selection for the second consecutive season…also captured MPSF All-Academic Team acclaim…registered three steals, two blocks, two earned exclusions and one assist…scored a season-high two goals against Marist (May 15) in an NCAA Tournament contest. 2009 – Played in 20 games…scored eight goals on 15 attempts (53.3 percent)…secured ACWPC All-Academic honors as a “superior” selection…twice scored a career-high two goals…scored her first two collegiate goals in UCLA’s season opener against Bucknell at the University of Michigan (Jan. 24); also registered two goals at Cal Lutheran (March 8)…scored in six total matches. 2008 – Played in four games, making four shots on goal.

KATIE ESTRADA’S CAREER Statistics Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

GP/GS 4/0 20/0 16/0 40/0

G 0 8 5 13

ATT 4 15 13 35

PCT .000 .533 .385 .371

AST 0 0 1 1

STL 0 1 2 3

BLK 0 1 2 3

EE 3 5 2 10

High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner under head coaches David Throop and Randall Burgess, respectively…earned All-CIF and all-league honors each of four seasons playing water polo…served as co-captain in 2007…gained team offensive MVP honors in 2005, 2006 and 2007…named to the all-academic team her senior season…earned all-tournament recognition at the Santa Barbara Tournament of Champions and the Irvine Invitational…named most valuable player at the America’s Finest City Tournament…earned the Captains Award in 2007...also competed for Coronado Peninsula Water Polo Club. Personal – Full name: Katelynn Noel Estrada…both Dec. 17, 1988…Katie is the middle of Samuel and Jaime Estrada’s three daughters…has two sisters, Brittany and Hillary…history major.

13


PLAYER PROFILES

2

emily

GREENWOOD

Sophomore • Utility • 6-0 Sanger, Calif. (Buchanan) 2010 – Played in all 30 matches, making three starts…scored 17 goals on 79 attempts, totaling 10 steals, eight earned exclusions, four assists and four blocks…earned All-MPSF Freshman Team accolades…won 16 sprints…scored in 15 matches, including a season-high three goals against Arizona State in an MPSF victory (March 13)…scored in each of UCLA’s first three matches and in each MPSF Tournament contest. High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Buchanan High School under head coaches Mark Greenwood and Dave Pickford…secured first-team All-CIF Central Section Division I honors and first-team Fresno Bee All-Valley accolades as a senior (2008)…also was a first-team California-Hawaii All-America selection as a junior and senior; third-team selection as a sophomore and fourth-team selection as a freshman…served as Buchanan’s team captain as a senior; was named team MVP as a junior and senior…guided Buchanan to the 2008 CIF Central Section Division I final; led Buchanan with two goals in the title match, a 9-5 loss to Clovis West…helped lead Buchanan to the 2007 CIF Central Section Division I Championship with a victory in the title match against Clovis Water Polo Club…has played on the Cadet National Team for two seasons…spent the summer of 2008 competing for the USA Junior National Team in Australia…as a varsity swimmer, earned All-America honors in the 200-freestyle as a senior; 200-freestyle as a junior and sophomore; 500-freestyle as a freshman…secured first-team All-CIF Central Section accolades as a swimmer…named Buchanan High School’s Athlete of the Year as a senior (2008-09)…competed for Clovis Waterpolo Club.

EMILY GREENWOOD’S CAREER Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP/GS 30/3 30/3

G 17 17

ATT 79 79

PCT .215 .215

AST 4 4

STL 10 10

BLK 4 4

EE 8 8

Personal – Full name: Emily Glyn Greenwood…born February 1, 1991 in Clovis, Calif…Emily is one of Mark and Miriam Greenwood’s four children…has one brother (Zachary) and two sisters (Ashley and Erinn)…her siblings all play water polo in college (Ashley at UC Davis, Erinn at San Diego State, and Zachary at California)…undeclared major.

20 HAFFERKAMP kelsey

Senior • Attacker • 5-11 Piedmont, Calif. (Piedmont) 2010 – Did not play. 2009 – Played in two games…registered one assist, one steal and one block. 2008 – Played in four games…scored one goal on one attempt against Hartwick (Feb. 5) in her collegiate debut, UCLA’s home-opening contest. High School – Three-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Piedmont High School under head coaches Aileen Finney and Helen Salcedo…also was a one-year varsity volleyball letterwinner (freshman season)…led the team in scoring and assists as a senior and junior…as a senior, captured second-team All-CIF-NCS accolades…earned All-League and team MVP honors as a senior and junior…named to the CIF-NCS Senior All-Star Team…captured second-team All-League honors as a sophomore…as a swimmer, earned first-team all-league honors as a junior and sophomore…earned the Varsity Coaches’ Award her senior season…led the swim team to the BSAL Championship each of her senior, junior and sophomore years…received Piedmont’s scholar-athlete award all four years... also competed for Diablo Water Polo…earned the Mauren O’Toole’s Coaches Award with Diablo Water Polo in 2004 and 2006.

KELSEY HAFFERKAMP’S CAREER Statistics Year 2008 2009 Totals

Personal – Full name: Kelsey Taylor Hafferkamp…born July 2, 1989 in San Francisco, Calif…Kelsey is the older of Russ Hafferkamp and Kate Morrow’s two daughters…has one younger sister, Molly…father, Russ, played water polo for UC Santa Barbara and competed on the U.S. National Team…communication studies major.

1

GP/GS 4/0 2/0 6/0

G 1 0 1

ATT 1 1 2

PCT 1.000 .000 .500

AST 0 1 1

STL 0 1 1

BLK 0 1 1

EE 0 0 0

30 steals, 29 assists and two goals as a senior…led Dos Pueblos to three Channel League titles (2008-10)…also helped Dos Pueblos win the CIF-SS Div. I title in 2009 and the Div. II championship in 2008…collected 259 saves, 28 steals and 12 assists as a junior…recorded 337 saves, 39 steals and 23 assists as a sophomore…netted 225 saves and five goals as a freshman…as a swimmer, was a three-time CIF qualifier in the 50-freestyle and 100-backstroke…on the golf course, was a two-time Channel League qualifier.

sami

HILL

Club – Competed for Santa Barbara Water Polo Club…twice led Santa Barbara to the Junior Olympics championship…was a two-time Junior Olympics MVP…also was a member of the Cadet, Youth and Junior National Teams for USA Water Polo…won the bronze medal at the 2009 Junior World Championships in Siberia.

Freshman • Goalkeeper • 5-11 Santa Barbara, Calif. (Dos Pueblos) High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Dos Pueblos High School under head coach Danielle Little…also was a three-year varsity golf letterwinner at Dos Pueblos under head coach Rob Schiff…earned first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division I honors as a senior (2010), helping lead Dos Pueblos to a perfect 31-0 record and CIF-SS Div. I championship…was named the Santa Barbara and Dos Pueblos Female Athlete of the Year in 2009-10…totaled 269 saves,

Personal – Full name: Samantha Nan Sieni Hill…born June 8, 1992 in Honolulu, Hawaii…Sami is the oldest of William and Cynthia Hill’s four children…has two younger sisters, Kodi and Abbi, and one younger brother, Deacon…uncle, Brian Battistone, plays professional tennis on the ATP World Tour…undeclared major.

14


PLAYER PROFILES 2010 – Did not play.

16

High School – Two-year varsity water polo letterwinner at Corona del Mar High School under head coach Aaron Cheney…was also a four-year varsity softball letterwinner under head coach John Felicetti…helped lead Foothill to the Pacific League title in 2008 and 2009…guided Foothill to a CIF Southern Section Division I runner-up finish each season…earned third-team All-CIF Division I honors as a senior (2009)…named the team’s most improved player as a junior (2008)…on the softball field, earned All-Pacific League honors all four seasons…named the team’s best offensive player, serving as team captain in 2009…earned Foothill’s most outstanding player award in 2008 and was receipient of the Coaches’ Award in 2007…a talented student-athlete, was a California Scholarship Federation (CSF) seal bearer…competed for Corona del Mar Polo Club from 2005-08 and for SoCal Waterpolo Club in 2009.

lesley

KACZMAREK

Sophomore • Center • 5-11 Laguna Beach, Calif. (Laguna Beach)

Personal – Full name: Leslee Kristine Kaczmarek…born December 13, 1990 in Laguna Beach, Calif…Leslee is the middle of Robert and Patty Kaczmarek’s three daughters…has two sisters, Katherine and Kelsey…psychology major.

High School – Three-year varsity water polo and four-year varsity swimming letterwinner at Corona del Mar High School under head coaches Aaron Chaney (water polo) and Doug Volding and Barry O’Dea (swimming)…secured first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division I honors as a senior…named Co-MVP of the Pacific League as a senior (2010) and served as a co-captain for Corona del Mar in 2010…finished her senior season with 33 goals, 21 assists and 26 steals…helped lead Corona del Mar to back-to-back CIF Southern Section title game appearances in 2008 and 2009.

23

Personal – Full name: Victoria Anne Kent…born May 22, 1992 in Newport Beach, Calif…Victoria is the daughter of Robert and Anne Kent…has two brothers, Tyler and Ryan…both her parents attended UCLA…undeclared major…interested in pursuing a degree in communication studies.

victoria

KENT

Freshman • Attacker • 5-8 Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar)

2010 – Did not play.

21

High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Foothill High School under head coaches Dave Mikesell and Dione Oliver, respectively...earned second-team All-CIF Southern Section Division I accolades as a senior (2009)...also was named a first-team All-Sea View League selection...gained second-team All-Sea View League honors as a junior (2008)...named the Foothill High School Co-Knight of the Year in 2009...earned All-Tournament Team honors at the 2009 Tournament of Champions...helped lead Foothill to the 2007 CIF Southern Section Division I Championship...scored 53 goals from 2007 through 2009...registered 96 earned exclusions as a senior.

kari

KRUMPHOLZ

Sophomore • Utility • 5-10 Santa Ana, Calif. (Foothill)

Club – Competed for SoCal Water Polo...was a member of the 2007 SOPAC Cadet Team...helped lead SoCal Water Polo to the gold medal at the 2006 Junior Olympics (18-and-under) and to the silver medal in the 16-and-under division. Personal – Full name: Karoline Christine Krumpholz…born October 22, 1991 in Orange, Calif...Kari is the youngest of Kurt and Debra Krumpholz’s three children...has one older sister, Katy, who played for UCLA in 2005...has one older brother, J.W., who played at USC and was an Olympic silver medalist (2008, Beijing)...father, Kurt, played men’s water polo at UCLA (1971-74) and was a three-time All-America selection; was inducted into UCLA’s Hall of Fame in 2008...psychology major.

8

brooke

MARTIN

Sophomore • Attacker • 5-10 Temecula, Calif. (Chaparral) 2010 – Played in 21 matches, making four starts…scored 17 goals on 46 attempts (37.0 percent), collecting five assists, five steals, four blocks and one earned exclusion…scored in 10 matches, including a season-high three goals at Sonoma State (Feb. 21)…also registered two goals in five matches. High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Temecula High School under head coaches Tyson Cleveland and Craig Winger, respectively…secured first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division V honors as a junior (2008) and a sophomore (2007); named a second-team selection as a senior (2009)…earned All Southwestern League MVP accolades as a senior; was named a first-team All-League selection as a junior and second-team honoree as a sophomore…registered 112 goals, 52 assists and 46 steals as a senior…named the 2009 Citrus Belt Area Athlete of the Year as a senior, as well as the Chaparral High School Female Athlete of the Year…secured team MVP honors as a junior and senior…collected 99 goals, 72 assists and 65 steals as a junior…as a sophomore, netted 50 goals, 62 assists and 30 steals…as a freshman, registered 16 goals, 22 assists and 18 steals…as a swimmer, earned first-team All-Southwestern League accolades as a junior and senior…was an All-Valley selection her final three seasons (2007-09)…secured All-America honors in the 50-yard freestyle as a sophomore…led Chaparral to the Southwestern League title in 2008 and 2009…finished first at League Finals her final three seasons in the 50-yard free style and 400-yard freestyle relay; finished first as a senior and sophomore in the 100-yard freestyle; finished first as a junior and sophomore in the 200-yard freestyle relay.

BROOKE MARTIN’S CAREER Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP/GS 21/4 21/4

G 17 17

ATT 46 46

PCT .370 .370

AST 5 5

STL 5 5

BLK 4 4

EE 1 1

Club – Competed for SET Water Polo…finished fifth at 2008 Junior Olympics (18-and-under) as a junior; third at 2007 Junior Olympics (16-and-under) as a sophomore…led SET to a second place at 2009 Club Championships…guided SET to first place at 20U Nationals in 2008…finished second at 2007 Speedo Top-40 as a sophomore…competed for the USA Junior National Team from 2007-09; finished third at 2009 Junior World Championships in Russia; finished first at 2008 Global Championships in Brisbane, Australia...competed at the 2007 Cadet National Team Training Camp. Personal – Full name: Brooke Lynn Martin…born April 19, 1991 in San Diego, Calif…Brooke is the younger of David and Sue Martin’s two daughters…has one older sister, Kristi…undeclared major.

15


PLAYER PROFILES

4

kelsey

McGINLEY

Senior • Attacker • 5-7 Laguna Hills, Calif. (Laguna Hills) 2010 – Played in 15 matches, making one start at Sonoma State (Feb. 21)…scored seven goals on 26 attempts…registered five steals, one block and one assist…earned MPSF All-Academic Team acclaim…scored in six matches, including a season-high two goals at Sonoma State (Feb. 21)…scored one goal in UCLA’s 8-7 win over USC (May 2) in the MPSF Tournament title match…also added one goal in each of UCLA’s games in the NCAA Tournament against Loyola Marymount (May 14) and Marist (May 15). 2009 – Played in 15 matches, making one start at Santa Clara (March 13)…scored 11 goals on 16 attempts (68.8 percent) and recorded one steal…scored a career-high three goals at Cal Lutheran (March 8)…twice scored two goals in one match – versus Long Beach State at the UC Irvine Invitational (Feb. 21) and at UC Irvine (March 12)…scored in seven total matches. 2008 – Played in 14 matches…scored four goals on eight attempts…also registered eight steals and two assists…scored one goal in each of four matches, including UCLA’s first two games of the NCAA Tournament (vs. Pomona-Pitzer, May 9; vs. UC Davis, May 10)…registered her first career goal against Colorado State in the Michigan Invitational (Jan. 27). High School – Four-year varsity letterwinner in water polo and swimming at Laguna Hills High School under head coach Blake Corbin…served as water polo team captain her junior and senior seasons…set the school record for single-season goals with 96 (senior year) and career goals with 262…also totaled 86 steals as a senior…two-time second-team All-CIF selection…also twice earned all-county and all-league honors…served as swim team captain her senior year…helped set the school record in the 4x100 relay.

KELSEY McGINLEY’S CAREER STATISTICS Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

Club – Competed for the SET Water Polo Club (Saddleback and El Toro)…helped lead club team to a third-place finish at the 2006 Junior Olympics; second-place finish at the 2005 Junior Olympics…also competed with the U.S. Youth National Training Team. Personal – Full name: Kelsey Victoria McGinley…born April 23, 1989 in Mission Viejo, Calif…Kelsey is the youngest of Timothy and Andrea McGinley’s three daughters…has two older sisters, Taylor and Brittany…sister, Brittany, played water polo at Colorado State…sociology major.

GP/GS 14/0 15/1 15/1 44/2

17

G 4 11 7 22

ATT 8 16 26 50

PCT .500 .688 .269 .440

AST 2 0 1 3

STL 8 1 5 14

BLK 0 0 1 1

EE 0 2 0 2

gisselle

NARANJO

Sophomore • Attacker • 5-5 Commerce, Calif. (Whittier) 2010 – Played in three matches…scored three goals on three attempts and collected two steals… scored a season-high two goals at Sonoma State (Feb. 21) and added one goal against San Jose State (March 28) in the Bruins’ final regular-season home match of the season. High School – Four-year varsity water polo and three-year varsity swimming letterwinner…competed her first three seasons at Whittier High School under head coach Chris Schneider and her senior season at Montebello High School under head coach David Keys (graduated from Montebello)…as a senior (2009), earned first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division II accolades…also secured third-team California-Hawaii All-America honors as a senior…helped lead Whittier to the 2007 CIF Southern Section Championship (sophomore season)…named a second-team all-area selection in 2007 by the Los Angeles Daily News. Club – Competed for Commerce Water Polo…played for Commerce at the 2009 Junior Olympics (18-and-under)…competed for the 2007 Youth Pan-American Games (USA Junior National Team)…also played for the USA Cadet National Team. Personal – Full name: Gisselle Naranjo…born May 29, 1991 in Los Angeles…Gisselle is one of Bela and Maria Naranjo’s three children…has one brother (Mark) and one sister (Veralie)...undeclared major.

gisselle naranjo’S CAREER Statistics Year 2010 Totals

16

GP/GS 3/0 3/0

G 3 3

ATT 3 3

PCT 1.000 1.000

AST 0 0

STL 2 2

BLK 0 0

EE 0 0


PLAYER PROFILES

6

priscilla

OROZCO

Senior • Attacker • 5-7 Commerce, Calif. (Montebello) 2010 – Started 26 matches…finished second on the team with 40 goals…took 92 shots, scoring at a 42.6 percent clip…earned first-team All-MPSF honors for the first time in her career…collected a team-leading 27 steals and 11 assists…also netted 11 blocks and 11 earned exclusions…scored in 20 matches, including a career-high four goals in four matches – at Michigan (Jan. 24), in back-to-back matches against UC Irvine (March 11) and Arizona State (March 13), and in the fifth-place match of the NCAA Tournament against Michigan (May 16)…totaled two goals in 12 matches…scored in seven consecutive games midway through the season (March 11-April 17), logging 16 goals in that span…scored in 11 of the team’s final 13 matches, including five goals at the NCAA Tournament. 2009 – Played in all 31 matches, making 28 starts…ranked fourth on the team with 42 goals and 96 attempts (43.8 percent)…earned honorable mention ACWPC All-America accolades…recorded 20 steals, 20 earned exclusions, six blocks and six assists…also won eight sprints…scored a careerhigh four goals at Hawai’i in a first-round match at the MPSF Tournament…totaled 14 multiple-goal games, including four three-goal efforts…scored in 22 total matches…scored two goals in the NCAA Tournament – one versus Michigan in a first-round match, and one versus USC in UCLA’s 5-4 win in the NCAA Championship (May 10). 2008 – Played in all 33 matches…scored 25 goals on 56 attempts (44.6 percent)…recorded 31 steals, 18 assts, seven blocks and seven earned exclusions…earned All-MPSF Freshman Team honors…scored at least one goal in 18 contests…registered a season-high two goals in seven matches…tallied her first collegiate goal against UC San Diego in the Michigan Invitational (Jan. 26)…scored two goals in the Bruins’ NCAA Tournament first-round win against Pomona-Pitzer (May 9)…also added one goal in the NCAA Championship match, a 6-3 win over USC (May 11). High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Montebello High School under head coaches Kenneth Clements and Sergio Macias (sophomore, freshman seasons)…earned first-team All-CIF honors in each of her four seasons playing water polo…served as team captain her senior year…helped lead Montebello to the CIF Division I championship game in 2006 and 2007... guided Montebello to the Almont League title four consecutive years…earned Montebello High School Female Athlete of the Year accolades her final three years…named MVP of the Almont League in 2006 and 2007; team MVP in 2004, 2006 and 2007. Club – Competed for the Commerce Club Team under head coach Gabriel Martinez…led club team to a silver medal at the 2007 Junior Olympics…earned the Sportsmanship Award in 2005 and 2007…captured All-America honors in 2003, 2004 and 2005…also participated on the Youth National Team from 2004-06; helped the Youth National Team win the Pan Pacific Games in New Zealand in 2004…served as the team captain in 2006; won the Junior Pan Pacific Games that year.

priscilla orozco’S CAREER Statistics Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

5

GP/GS 33/0 31/28 26/26 90/54

G 25 42 40 107

ATT 56 96 92 244

PCT .446 .438 .435 .439

AST 18 6 11 35

STL 31 20 27 78

BLK 7 6 11 24

EE 7 20 11 38

Personal – Full name: Priscilla Megan Orozco…born Feb. 6, 1989…Priscilla is the oldest of Salvador and Patricia’s four children…has one younger brother, Salvador, and two younger sisters, Sarah and Salma…sister, Sarah, is a junior on UCLA’s women’s water polo team…history major.

sarah

OROZCO

Junior • Attacker • 5-6 Commerce, Calif. (Montebello) 2010 – Played in all 30 matches, making 25 starts…scored 21 goals on 51 attempts (41.2 percent)…had 25 earned exclusions, 11 steals, seven assists and seven blocks…scored in 13 matches, including a career-high four goals at UC Davis (Feb. 21)…had three goals at Michigan (Jan. 24) and two goals in three matches. 2009 – Started all 31 matches…scored 17 goals on 42 attempts (40.5 percent)… earned All-MPSF Freshman Team honors…led UCLA with 41 earned exclusions…recorded five steals, two blocks and two assists…scored a season-high three goals against Brown (March 26)…netted two goals against San Jose State at the Stanford Invitational (Feb. 7)…scored in 14 matches. High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Montebello High School under head coaches Kenneth Clements and Sergio Macias (water polo) and David Keys (swimming)…was a four-time first-team All-Almont League selection…named the 2008 Almont League MVP and Montebello team MVP (team captain as a senior)…earned All-CIF Division I honors from 2006-08…was MVP of the 2008 All-San Gabriel Valley All-Star Game…led Montebello to the Almont League Championship all four seasons and to the CIF Division title match (runner-up) in 2006 and 2007…as a swimmer, competed in the 200-meter IM, 100-meter breastroke and 200-meter freestyle. Club – Competed for the Commerce Club Team…helped lead Commerce to four national Junior Olympic Club Championships…was a four-time Junior Olympics All-America selection…twice earned national Junior Olympics MVP honors…won three national Speedo Cup Championship and two Commerce Club Water Polo Club MVP awards…was a member of the U.S. Youth National Team in 2005 and 2007. Personal – Full name: Sarah Magdalena Orozco…born February 21, 1990 in Beverly Hills, Calif…Sarah is the second of Salvador and Patricia Orozco’s four children…has two sisters, Priscilla and Salma and one younger brother, Salvador…sister, Priscilla, is currently a senior on the UCLA women’s water polo team...history major.

17

SARAH orozco’S CAREER Statistics Year 2009 2010 Totals

GP/GS 31/31 30/25 61/56

G 17 21 38

ATT 42 51 93

PCT .405 .412 .409

AST 2 7 9

STL 5 11 16

BLK 2 7 9

EE 41 25 66


PLAYER PROFILES

10

grace

REYNOLDS

Senior • Center • 5-11 Santa Ana, Calif. (California/Foothill HS) 2010 – Started 27 matches…led the team with 43 goals…attempted 90 shots, scoring at a 47.8 percent clip…earned second-team All-MPSF acclaim…registered a team-leading 61 earned exclusions, 14 steals, six blocks and two assists…scored in 23 matches, including a season-high four goals in two matches – against Indiana (Jan. 23) in the season opener and in a first-round MPSF Tournament win over Hawai’i (April 30)…scored three goals against UC San Diego (Jan. 24) and in the fifth-place match of the NCAA Tournament against Michigan (May 16)…finished the season having scored two or more goals in 14 games…scored in each of the Bruins’ final seven matches, logging 14 goals in that span…registered six goals in three NCAA Tournament contests and seven goals in three MPSF Tournament victories…had at least one goal in 13 of the Bruins’ first 16 games. 2009 – Did not play…sat out the season due to NCAA transfer eligibility rules. 2008 (at California) – Scored a team-high 52 goals…led California in scoring for the second consecutive season…registered a season-high four goals in three games – versus Sonoma State (Feb. 3), at Hawai’i (Feb. 23) and against Cal State Northridge (March 22)…finished her sophomore campaign having registered 15 multiple-goal games…California finished the season with an 18-11 overall record, including a 6-6 mark in MPSF play. 2007 (at California) – Scored a team-high 43 goals…led California in scoring as a true freshman… registered a season-high five goals in two matches – versus Pacific in her collegiate debut (Jan. 31) and versus Cal State Northridge in the MPSF Tournament (April 28)…led California in scoring in seven games…had two goals in a 12-8 loss to UCLA (Feb. 16)…California finished the season with a 12-11 record, including a 6-6 mark in MPSF action. High School – Four-year varsity water polo letterwinner at Foothill Hill High School under head coach Dave Mikesell…was a four-time first-team All-America selection, netting 402 career goals at Foothill…helped lead Foothill to CIF Division I championships in 2003 and 2005…secured first-team All-CIF Southern Section honors and first-team US Water Polo All-America honors in 2005…competed for the USA Junior National Team, traveling to play in Italy and Greece…was also a member of the USA National Youth Team in addition to being a three-time Junior Olympics Most Valuable Player.

GRACE REYNOLDS’ CAREER Statistics (at UCLA) Year 2010 Totals

GP/GS 27/27 27/27

G 43 43

ATT 90 90

PCT .478 .478

AST 2 2

STL 14 14

BLK 6 6

EE 61 61

Personal – Full name: Grace Marie Reynolds…born January 12, 1988 in Santa Ana, Calif…Grace is the middle of Ed Reynolds, Jr. and Karin Reynolds’ three children…has two brothers (Frank and Paul)…history major.

High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Coronado High School under head coach David Throop…helped lead Coronado to the CIF Championship in 2008, 2009 and 2010…twice secured All-CIF San Diego Section honors and first-team All-Western League acclaim (2009, 2010)…was named a second-team All-San Diego selection in 2009 and first-team All-San Diego honoree in 2010…earned Coronado’s “Most Outstanding Swimmer” award as a freshman in 2007…named the program’s “Most Valuable Swimmer” in 2008, 2009 and 2010…named to the San Diego Union Tribune’s All-Academic Team in 2009 and 2010. Club – Competed for Coronado Aquatics Club…earned MVP honors at the 18-U National State Challenge in 2009…was an honorable mention All-California-Hawaii selection in 2009…also competed for San Diego Pacific Zone from 2006-2008.

19

kelly

RONIMUS

Freshman • Attacker • 5-10 Coronado, Calif. (Coronado)

Personal – Full name: Kelly Ann Ronimus…born July 5, 1992 in Coronado, Calif…Kelly is the younger of Andrew and Maurren Ronimus’ two daughters…has one older sister, Morgan, who spent three seasons (2008-2010) as a goalkeeper on the UCLA women’s water polo team…undeclared major.

22 SCHULMAN natasha

Sophomore • Defender • 5-9 Laguna Beach, Calif. (Laguna Beach) 2010 – Played in six matches…attempted four shots and registered one steal. High School – Four-year varsity water polo and three-year varsity swimming letterwinner at Laguna Beach High School under head coach Ethan Damato…was a first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division II selection as a senior (2009) and junior (2008)…was a first-team All-Orange Coast League selection as a senior, junior and sophomore…finished her senior campaign with 63 goals, 41 assists and 55 steals…named the Laguna Beach High School defensive player of the year as a junior…also selected a third-team All-Orange County selection her junior year…named to the Santa Barbara Tournament of Champions All-Tournament Team as a junior…secured seventh-team California-Hawaii All-America accolades as a junior…guided Laguna Beach High School to a runner-up finish in the 2008 CIF Southern Section Division II playoffs…earned the Coaches’ Award at Laguna Beach as a sophomore... also competed for SET Water Polo…named the 2009 Junior Olympics Co-MVP. Personal – Full name: Natasha Leanne Schulman…born February 14, 1991 in Long Beach, Calif… Natasha is the youngest of Michael and Sherry Schulman’s four children…has two sisters (Danielle Schulman and Annie Cremer) and one brother (Bryant Schulman)…psychology major.

18

NATASHA SCHULMAN’S CAREER STATISTICS Year 2010 Totals

GP/GS 6/0 6/0

G 0 0

ATT 4 4

PCT .000 .000

AST 0 0

STL 1 1

BLK 0 0

EE 1 1


PLAYER PROFILES

12 SEBENALER hannah

Junior • Attacker • 5-7 Coronado, Calif. (Coronado) 2010 – Played in six matches…scored three goals on 10 attempts (30.0 percent)…collected two steals…scored in each of UCLA’s victories at Sonoma State (Feb. 21), at Loyola Marymount (April 8) and at the NCAA Tournament against Marist (May 15). 2009 – Played in 25 matches, making two starts…scored nine goals on 25 attempts (36.0 percent)…totaled four assists, four steals and two blocks…earned ACWPC Academic All-America honors as an “excellent” selection…registered a season-high two goals against San Diego State (Feb. 13)…scored in eight total matches…had one goal in UCLA’s first-round NCAA Tournament victory against Michigan at the University of Maryland (May 8)…scored first collegiate goal against Bucknell at the Michigan Invitational in UCLA’s season opener (Jan. 24). High School – Four-year varsity water polo and lacrosse letterwinner at Coronado High School under head coaches Randy Burgess and David Throop (water polo) and Jessica Battle (lacrosse)…named the 2008 San Diego Union Tribune and CIF Division II Women’s Water Polo Player of the Year…also earned first-team All-County honors from the San Diego Union Tribune and first-team All-Western League accolades in 2007 and 2008…selected as a first-team All-Academic Water Polo selection by the San Diego Tribune in 2007 and 2008…earned Coronado team MVP honors as a senior… captured second-team All-CIF Division II honors and second-team All-Western League accolades in 2006…named the Coronado team offensive MVP as a freshman in 2005…helped lead Coronado to the CIF Finals each of her four seasons – Coronado won the 2008 CIF Division II title…a talented lacrosse player, earned first-team All-League and All-Section honors in 2007 and 2008…also gained first All-League accolades in 2006. Club – Competed for the Coronado Water Polo Club and San Diego Shores Water Polo Club… competed at the 2008 U.S. national Junior Olympics (18-and-under), earning All-America honorable mention accolades…earned All-America honors at the 2006 U.S. National Junior Olympics (16-andunder)…recipient of the Maureen O’Toole Award at the 2003 Speedo Cup, leading Coronado to a bronze medal finish…captured All-America honors at the 2002 U.S. National Junior Olympics, leading Coronado to a bronze medal finish.

HANNAH SEBENALER’S CAREER Statistics Year 2009 2010 Totals

Personal – Full name: Hannah Rose Sebenaler (last name pronounced SEE-ben-ah-ler)…born July 10, 1990 in Coronado, Calif…Hannah is the daughter of Brian and Suzanne Sebenaler…lists her greatest athletic thrill to date as helping lead Coronado High School to the 2008 CIF Division II title…Spanish and community and culture major.

1

GP/GS 25/2 6/0 31/2

G 9 3 12

ATT 25 10 35

PCT .360 .300 .343

AST 4 0 4

STL 4 2 6

BLK 2 0 2

EE 2 0 2

kristen

SIMONDS

Junior • Goalkeeper • 6-2 San Jose, Calif. (Archbishop Mitty) 2010 – Played in two matches, making one start in goal…registered a 3.00 goals against average and 10 saves in five quarters (40 minutes)…recorded a career-high eight saves in the start against Sonoma State, leading the Bruins to a 24-4 victory (Feb. 21)…also collected two saves in the fourth quarter against San Jose State (March 28) in the Bruins’ final regular-season home match. 2009 – Played in three matches, making two starts in goal…recorded a 3.00 goals against average and 12 saves in eight quarters (64 minutes)…totaled a season-high five saves in each of her two starts – at Cal Lutheran (March 8) in her collegiate debut, and at Santa Clara (March 13)…also made two stops against UC Irvine (March 12). High School – Four-year varsity water polo letterwinner at Archbishop Mitty High School…served as the varsity goalkeeper for two seasons…named the San Jose Mercury News Player of the Year as a senior in 2007…captured NICSA third-team All-America honors and fourth-team California-Hawaii All-America accolades as a senior…helped lead Archbishop Mitty to the 2006 CIF Central Coast Section Division I championship as a junior…Archbishop Mitty posted a 21-10 record and finished second in the WCAL in 2006…earned first-team Western Catholic Athletic League (WCAL) honors in 2006 and was named an honorable mention California-Hawaii All-America selection…competed for Nordic Water Polo. Personal – Full name: Kristen Nicole Simonds (last name pronounced SY-mondz)…born December 7, 1989 in Los Gatos, Calif…Kristen is the youngest of Michael and Marilyn Simonds’ three children…has one brother, Aaron, and one sister, Shannon…father, Michael, played goalkeeper for the water polo team at California…political science major.

KRISTEN SIMONDS’ CAREER Statistics Year 2009 2010 Totals

GP/GS 3/2 2/1 5/3

QP 8 5 13

SV 12 10 22

GA 9 6 15

GAA 3.00 3.00 3.00

MP 64:00 40:00 104:00

19


PLAYER PROFILES

24

junior year…was a three-time All-CalHi-Sports Team selection (2007-09)…named the 2009 Sea View League MVP…was a three-time first-team All-Sea View League selection (2007-09)…also selected the El Toro High School Offensive Player of the Year for three seasons (2007-09)…secured secondteam All-CIF Division I honors as a sophomore…as a varsity swimmer, competed at the CIF Dvision I Final for four seasons in the 50-yard freestyle and 100-yard free style.

larissa

TODISCO

Club – Competed for SET Water Polo...finished first at the 2009 Junior Olympics (18-and-under)… competed for the SET 20U Team from 2007-09…competed for the SET Speedo Top-40 Team from 2005-08…also was a member of the USA Junior National Team in 2008 and 2009…was on the USA Cadet National Team from 2005-07.

Sophomore • Attacker • 5-6 Lake Forest, Calif. (El Toro) 2010 – Played in three matches…won two sprints, one earned exclusion and one assist. High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at El Toro High School under head coaches Don Stoll and Matt Tilton…served as water polo team captain her senior season…established school records with 342 career goals and 126 single-season goals (2009, senior year)…twice earned first-team All-CIF Southern Section Division I accolades (2008, 2009)…also was a two-time All-Orange County Team selection (2008, 2009)…totaled 119 goals as a junior, averaging 4.5 goals per match (28 games)…captured third-team California-Hawaii All-America accolades her

Personal – Full name: Larissa Marie Todisco…born February 28, 1991 in Huntington Beach, Calif…Larissa is the younger of Gary and Vicki Todisco’s two daughters…international development studies major.

LARISSA TODISCO’s CAREER Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP/GS 3/0 3/0

18

G 0 0

ATT 0 0

PCT .000 .000

AST 1 1

STL 0 0

BLK 0 0

EE 1 1

leah

TRELLA

Sophomore • Attacker • 5-10 Huntington Beach, Calif. (Huntington Beach) 2010 – Played in 21 matches, making two starts…scored 14 goals on 52 attempts…also recorded 19 steals, five assists, five blocks and two earned exclusions…earned ACWPC All-Academic honors as an “excellent” selection…scored in eight matches, including six goals in the team’s first four matches…totaled a season-high three goals in two contests – versus UC San Diego (Jan. 24) and at Sonoma State (Feb. 21)…also scored two goals against Indiana (Jan. 23) and Arizona State (Feb. 7). High School – Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Huntington Beach High School under head coaches Brian Anderson and Bryce Elser, respectively…serving as Huntington Beach team captain, secured first-team All-Sea View League accolades as a senior…scored 73 goals and registered 29 assists as a junior (2008)…earned third-team All-Southern California honors as a junior…gained second-team All-Sunset League accolades as a freshman (2006)…as a swimmer, finished 13th overall in the 50-yard freestyle (24.55 seconds) at the 2008 CIF Southern Section Division I Championships. Club – Competed for SET Water Polo…helped lead SET to the Junior Olympic championship in 2009 (18-and-under)…also competed for the USA Junior National Team, playing in Australia in the summer of 2008. Personal – Full name: Leah Marie Trella…born April 21, 1991 in Newport Beach, Calif…Leah is the middle of Stephen Trella, Jr. and Katherine Trella’s three chidren…has two brothers, Stephen and Nick…political science major.

LEAH TRELLA’s CAREER Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP/GS 21/2 21/2

G 14 14

ATT 52 52

PCT .269 .269

AST 5 5

STL 19 19

The UCLA Athletics Department wishes to express its gratitude to Ted & Jennifer Weggeland for endowing a women’s water polo scholarship.

— For information on how you can endow a scholarship, call the UCLA Athletic Fund Office (Scott Wandzilak) at 310-206-3302. 20

BLK 5 5

EE 2 2


PLAYER PROFILES

14

noel

UMPHREY

Senior • Attacker • 5-5 Santa Ana, Calif. (Foothill) 2010 – Played in 13 matches…scored two goals on 15 attempts…also netted four assists, four steals and one block…scored one goal at San Diego State (April 10) in an MPSF victory and against Hawai’i (April 30) in the Bruins’ first-round MPSF Tournament win. 2009 – Played in 28 matches…scored four goals on 17 attempts (23.5 percent)…totaled eight steals, two assists and two blocks…scored one goal in each of four games – versus Loyola Marymount (Feb. 14), versus Long Beach State (Feb. 21), versus Hartwick (March 26) and versus Brown (March 26). 2008 – Played in 13 matches…scored three goals on six attempts (50.0 percent)…totaled seven steals, two assists and two blocks…scored her first collegiate goal against UC San Diego in the Michigan Invitational (Feb. 26)…also registered one goal against Colorado State and Indiana in the Michgian Invitational (Feb. 27). High School – Four-year varsity water polo letterwinner at Foothill High School under head coach Dave Mikesell…also was a two-year varsity swimming letterwinner under head coach Vicky Oland…helped lead Foothill to the CIF Division I Championship in 2005 and 2007…was a part of the 2007 Masters Championship team…guided Foothill to the Sea View League titles in 2004 and 2007…earned firstteam All-CIF honors in 2006 and 2007; second-team All-CIF recognition in 2005…set the school record for single-season assists in 2007 with 120. Club – Competed for the SoCal Water Polo Club…also was a member of the Youth National Team in 2006…helped lead team to the 2006 Junior Pan American Games title. Personal – Full name: Noel Annette Umphrey…born July 10, 1989…Noel is the younger of Richard and Jackie Umphrey’s two children…has one older brother, Justin…father, Richard, played center for the New York Giants and San Diego Chargers…political science major.

NOEL UMPHREY’s CAREER Statistics Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

GP/GS 13/0 28/0 13/0 54/0

G 3 4 2 9

ATT 6 17 15 38

PCT .500 .235 .133 .237

AST 2 2 4 8

STL 7 8 4 19

BLK 2 2 1 5

EE 2 2 0 4

BRUIN HONOR ROLL (2010 Awards, Current Players)

Megan Burmeister

- ACWPC All-Academic selection - All-MPSF academic selection

Emily Greenwood

- All-MPSF Freshman Team honoree

KK Clark

Caitlin Dement

- ACWPC All-America honorable mention - ACWPC All-America honorable mention - All-MPSF honorable mention - All-MPSF second team - ACWPC All-Academic selection - All-MPSF academic selection

Kelsey McGinley

- All-MPSF academic selection

Priscilla Orozco

- ACWPC All-America first team - All-MPSF first team

21

Kelly Easterday

- ACWPC All-America honorable mention - All-MPSF honorable mention - ACWPC All-Academic selection - All-MPSF academic selection

Grace Reynolds

- ACWPC All-America second team - All-MPSF second team

Katie Estrada

- ACWPC All-Academic selection - All-MPSF academic selection

Leah Trella

- ACWPC All-Academic selection


2010 IN REVIEW Jan. 23 (at Michigan) – UCLA 12, Indiana 6 No. 19 Indiana No. 3 UCLA

1 2 3

2 0 1

3 1 4

4 3 4

F 6 12

Goals – UCLA (Reynolds 4, Clark 2, P. Orozco 2, Trella 2, Easterday, Greenwood). IND (Kohli 3, Black, Temeris, Wyckoff). Saves – UCLA (Dement 6). IND (Carson 9).

Jan. 23 (at Michigan) – San Diego State 7, UCLA 6 (OT) No. 7 San Diego State No. 3 UCLA

1 1 0

2 1 5

3 2 1

4 2 0

OT1 OT2 F 1 0 7 0 0 6

Goals – UCLA (Reynolds 2, Easterday, Greenwood, Van Hiel, Trella); SDSU (Brady, deJonckheere, Ford, Gaatchi, Novak, Pizzolla, Wheland. Saves – UCLA (Dement 9).

Jan. 24 (at Michigan) – UCLA 10, Michigan 7 No. 3 UCLA No. 10 Michigan

1 2 1

2 4 4

3 2 0

4 2 2

F 10 7

Goals – UCLA (P. Orozco 4, S. Orozco 3, Burmeister, Easterday, Greenwood); MICH (Robertson 2, Colton, Felt, Golden, Roberts). Saves – UCLA (Dement 10); MICH (May 3, Andrews 1).

Jan. 24 (at Michigan) – UCLA 10, UC San Diego 4 UC San Diego No. 3 UCLA

1 2 1

2 1 3

3 1 4

4 0 2

F 4 10

Goals – UCLA (Reynolds 3, Trella 3, Clark, Martin, P. Orozco, S. Orozco); UCSD (Heinrich 2, Bates, Bloom). Saves – UCLA (Dement 6).

Feb. 6 (at Stanford) – California 4, UCLA 3 No. 5 UCLA No. 4 California

1 1 2

2 0 1

3 2 1

4 0 0

F 3 4

Goals – UCLA (Greenwood, Martin, S. Orozco); CAL (Csikos 3, Schnugg). Saves – UCLA (Dement 6); CAL (Peckham 7).

1 2 2

2 3 1

3 0 3

4 4 2

F 9 8

Goals – UCLA (P. Orozco 2, Reynolds 2, Clark, Easterday, Estrada, Greenwood, Van Hiel); HAW (M. Eggens 2, Van Der Molen, C. Eggens, Genee, Slagter). Saves – UCLA (Dement 5); HAW (Bredin 5).

Feb. 7 (at Stanford) – UCLA 7, Arizona State 6 No. 9 Arizona State No. 5 UCLA

1 1 2

2 3 2

3 0 2

4 2 1

F 6 7

Goals – UCLA (Reynolds 2, Trella 2, Burmeister, Clark, Estrada); ASU (Harris 2, Miles 2, White 2). Saves – UCLA (Dement 5); ASU (Greenberg 6).

Feb. 7 (at Stanford) – USC 13, UCLA 3 No. 5 UCLA No. 2 USC

1 0 4

2 1 4

3 1 1

4 1 4

F 3 13

Goals – UCLA (Martin 2, Reynolds); USC (Dronberge 2, Jancso 2, Kiss 2, Lucas 2, Van Norman 2, Bekhazi, Craig, Davies). Saves – UCLA (Dement 10); USC (Anae 11).

Feb. 13 (at UCLA) – UCLA 9, Cal State Northridge 5 No. 13 Cal State Northridge No. 4 UCLA

1 1 2

2 1 3

3 1 2

4 2 2

F 5 9

Goals – UCLA (Burmeister 2, P. Orozco 2, Clark, Easterday, Greenwood, Reynolds, Van Hiel); CSUN (Delgado 3, McLaughlin, Pierce). Saves – UCLA (Dement 11); CSUN (Stapf 10).

Feb. 20 (at California) – UCLA 7, California 6 No. 4 UCLA No. 3 California

1 1 2

2 2 1

3 1 2

4 3 1

F 7 6

Goals – UCLA (Martin 2, P. Orozco 2, Easterday, S. Orozco, Reynolds); CAL (Csikos 5, Hewko). Saves – UCLA (Dement 5); CAL (Peckham 8).

Feb. 21 (at Sonoma State) – UCLA 8, UC Davis 3 No. 4 UCLA No. 15 UC Davis

1 3 0

2 2 2

3 2 0

April 8 (at LMU) – UCLA 8, Loyola Marymount 4 No. 4 UCLA No. 7 Loyola Marymount

1 6 2

2 6 1

3 9 0

4 3 1

F 24 4

4 1 1

F 8 3

2 1 1

3 4 1

4 1 2

F 8 4

Goals – UCLA (P. Orozco 2, Reynolds 2, Greenwood, McGinley, Sebenaler, Van Hiel); LMU (Campos, Carrillo, Manke, Romero). Saves – UCLA (Dement 8); LMU (Cato 10).

Feb. 27 (at CdMHS) – UCLA 9, UC Santa Barbara 3

No. 4 UCLA No. 14 San Diego State

No. 14 UC Santa Barbara No. 3 UCLA

1 1 2

2 0 0

3 1 3

4 1 4

F 3 9

Goals – UCLA (Clark 3, Martin 2, S. Orozco 2, Burmeister, P. Orozco); UCSB (Clark, Haroldson, Rouleau). Saves – UCLA (Dement 8); UCSB (Milne 8).

Feb. 27 (at CdMHS) – UCLA 7, Michigan 5 No. 5 Michigan No. 3 UCLA

1 0 2

2 1 2

3 1 3

4 3 0

F 5 7

Goals – UCLA (P. Orozco 2, Reynolds 2, Burmeister, Easterday, Martin); MICH (Golden 3, Bukofzer, Orth). Saves – UCLA (Dement 9); MICH (Turner 6, May 3).

Feb. 28 (at UC Irvine) – Stanford 10, UCLA 4 No. 3 UCLA No. 1 Stanford

1 1 3

2 0 2

3 1 2

4 2 3

F 4 10

Goals – UCLA (Reynolds 2, Burmeister, Easterday); STAN (Holshouser 2, Krueger 2, Steffens 2, Eaton, Lo, Menon, Seidemann). Saves – UCLA (Dement 6); STAN (Oland 6, Baldoni 4).

Feb. 28 (at UC Irvine) – UCLA 7, California 6 (8OT) No. 4 California No. 3 UCLA

1 2 3 4 OT 2OT 3OT 4OT 5OT 6OT 7OT 8OT F 2 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 2 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 7

March 6 (at Hawai’i) – Hawai’i 9, UCLA 8 (6OT) No. 3 UCLA No. 5 Hawai’i

1 2 3 4 OT 2OT 3OT 4OT 5OT 6OT F 2 2 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 8 3 0 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 9

Goals – UCLA (Easterday 4, Clark 2, Burmeister, Trella); HAW (C. Eggens 5, Van Der Molen, Genee, M. Eggens, Majuri). Saves – UCLA (Dement 14); HAW (Bredin 16).

March 11 (at UC Irvine) – UCLA 8, UC Irvine 5 No. 4 UCLA No. 13 UC Irvine

1 2 0

2 3 2

3 2 3

4 1 0

F 8 5

Goals – UCLA (P. Orozco 4, Greenwood, Martin, S. Orozco, Van Hiel); UCI (Plummer 2, Croghan, Collyer, Klatt). Saves – UCLA (Dement 11); UCI (Vickers 7).

March 13 (at UCLA) – UCLA 13, Arizona State 6 No. 6 Arizona State No. 4 UCLA

1 1 4

2 1 3

3 4 2

4 0 4

F 6 13

Goals – UCLA (P. Orozco 4, Greenwood 3, Burmeister 2, Martin 2, Clark, Van Hiel); ASU (Haas, Harris, Smith, Walsh, White). Saves – UCLA (Dement 13); ASU (Young 5, Harvey 1).

March 27 (at UCLA) – Stanford 11, UCLA 6 No. 2 Stanford No. 4 UCLA

1 4 2

2 3 1

3 2 1

4 2 2

F 11 6

Goals – UCLA (P. Orozco 2, Burmeister, Greenwood, Reynolds, Trella); STAN (Seidemann 4, Eaton 2, Holshouser 2, Menon 2, Dries). Saves – UCLA (Dement 5); STAN (Oland 10).

April 10 (at SDSU) – UCLA 7, San Diego State 5

1 1 3

2 2 4

3 0 4

4 2 1

No. 4 UCLA No. 1 USC

22

3 3 1

4 1 0

F 7 5

1 2 2

2 0 7

3 2 2

4 1 3

F 5 14

Goals – UCLA (Easterday, Dement, Greenwood, P. Orozco, Reynolds); USC (Craig 3, Kiss 3, Dronberger 2, Jancso 2, Lucas 2, Bekhazi, Dan). Saves – UCLA (Dement 8); USC (Anae 14).

April 30 (at UCLA, MPSF Tournament) – UCLA 8, Hawai’i 6 No. 5-seed UCLA No. 4-seed Hawai’i

1 2 0

2 3 3

3 0 2

4 3 1

F 8 6

Goals – UCLA (Reynolds 4, Easterday, Greenwood, S. Orozco, Umphrey); HAW (M. Eggens 3, C. Eggens, A. Genee, D. Genee). Saves – UCLA (Dement 9); HAW (Bredin 6).

May 1 (at UCLA, MPSF Tournament) – UCLA 1 2 No. 5-seed UCLA 2 1 No. 1-seed Stanford 3 1

7, Stanford 6 3 3 1

4 1 1

F 7 6

Goals – UCLA (Burmeister, Clark, Easterday, Greenwood, P. Orozco, S. Orozco, Reynolds); STAN (Seidemann 2, Holshouser, Koran, Menon, Steffens). Saves – UCLA (Dement 11), STAN (Oland 9).

May 2 (at UCLA, MPSF Tournament) – UCLA 8, USC 7 No. 5-seed UCLA No. 2-seed USC

1 3 1

2 1 1

3 3 2

4 1 3

F 8 7

Goals – UCLA (Clark 2, Reynolds 2, Easterday, Greenwood, McGinley, P. Orozco); USC (Jancso 4, Craig, Kiss, Lucas). Saves – UCLA (Dement 11); USC (Anae 12).

May 14 (at SDSU) – Loyola Marymount 5, UCLA 4 1 No. 6-seed Loyola Marymount 2 No. 3-seed UCLA 3

2 2 0

3 1 0

4 0 1

F 5 4

Goals – UCLA (Clark 2, McGinley, Reynolds); LMU (Scott 2, Campos, Carrillo, Manke) Saves – UCLA (Dement 7); LMU (Cato 11).

May 15 (at SDSU) – UCLA 14, Marist 3 No. 7-seed Marist No. 3-seed UCLA

1 0 4

2 0 3

3 0 4

4 3 3

F 3 14

Goals – UCLA (Clark 4, Estrada 2, Reynolds 2, Burmeister, Greenwood, McGinley, P. Orozco, S. Orozco, Sebenaler); MAR (Swartz 2, Rampton). Saves – UCLA (Dement 9, Ronimus 1); MAR (Getchius 11).

May 16 (at SDSU) – UCLA 9, Michigan 6 No. 5-seed Michigan No. 3-seed UCLA

1 2 6

2 0 1

3 2 1

4 2 1

F 6 9

Goals – UCLA (P. Orozco 4, Reynolds 3, Clark 2); MICH (Colton, Golden, Mantle, Orth, Reitz, Robertson) Saves – UCLA (Dement 9); MICH (Turner 5, Adamson 1).

F 5 12

Goals – UCLA (Clark 3, Easterday 2, Martin 2, P. Orozco 2, Reynolds 2, Naranjo); SJSU (Vogt 2, Hannum, McKee, Methvin). Saves – UCLA (Dement 8, Simonds 2); SJSU (Minson 8).

EMILY GREENWOOD

2 1 2

April 17 (at USC) – USC 14, UCLA 5

March 28 (at UCLA) – UCLA 12, San Jose State 5 No. 6 San Jose State No. 4 UCLA

1 2 2

Goals – UCLA (Easterday 2, Burmeister, Clark, McGinley, P. Orozco, Umphrey); SDSU (Ford 2, de Jonckheere, Pedersen, Poland). Saves – UCLA (Dement 7); SDSU (Campoli 9).

Goals – UCLA (S. Orozco 4, Easterday 2, Burmeister, Reynolds); UCD (Bailey, Began, Hook). Saves – UCLA (Dement 22); UCD (Hines 10).

KK CLARK

1 2 0

Goals – UCLA (Clark 2, Martin 2, McGinley 2, Naranjo 2, S. Orozco 2, Powers 2, Reynolds 2, Sullivan 2, Trella 2, Burmeister, Estrada, P. Orozco, Sebenaler). SSU (Stricklin 2, Del Carlo, Rangel). Saves – UCLA (Simonds 8); SSU (Uliana 8).

Goals – UCLA (Clark 2, P. Orozco 2, S. Orozco, Reynolds, Trella); CAL (Csikos 3, Corso 2, Schnugg). Saves – UCLA (Dement 16); CAL (Peckham 19).

Feb. 6 (at Stanford) – UCLA 9, Hawai’i 8 No. 5 UCLA No. 3 Hawai’i

Feb. 21 (at Sonoma State) – UCLA 24, Sonoma State 4 No. 4 UCLA Sonoma State

LEAH TRELLA


2010 IN REVIEW 2010 STATISTICS – Record: 22-8 Overall, 4-3 MPSF Name

GP/GS

Randi Bresee Megan Burmeister KK Clark Caitlin Dement Kelly Easterday Katie Estrada Emily Greenwood Brooke Martin Kelsey McGinley Gisselle Naranjo Priscilla Orozco Sarah Orozco Monica Powers Grace Reynolds Natasha Schulman Hannah Sebenaler Kristen Simonds Camy Sullivan Larissa Todisco Leah Trella Noel Umphrey Heather Van Hiel

G

3/0 30/28 30/14 29/29 30/30 16/0 30/3 21/4 14/1 3/0 26/26 30/25 2/0 27/27 6/0 6/0 2/1 11/1 3/0 21/2 13/0 24/19

0 16 31 1 23 5 17 17 7 3 40 21 1 43 0 3 0 2 0 14 2 6

TOTALS

30/30

252

Goalkeepers

GP/GS

Caitlin Dement Morgan Ronimus Kristen Simonds

.000 .242 .307 1.000 .288 .385 .215 .370 .269 1.000 .426 .412 .333 .478 .000 .300 .000 .333 .000 .269 .133 .333

759

.332 SV

114 5 1

30/30

PCT

1 66 101 1 80 13 79 46 26 3 94 51 3 90 4 10 0 6 0 52 15 18

QP

29/29 1/0 2/1

TOTALS

ATT

264 10 1

120

275

AST

0 5 10 1 9 1 4 5 1 0 11 7 0 2 0 0 1 3 1 5 4 1

71

STL

EE

0 20 22 16 12 3 10 5 5 2 27 11 1 14 1 2 0 3 0 19 4 11

0 3 19 0 27 2 8 1 0 0 11 25 1 61 1 0 0 1 1 2 0 6

188

169

GA

GAA

180 6 3

6.21 3.00 3.00

189

6.30

UCLA Team Leaders BLK

PF

0 2 12 -- 7 2 4 4 1 0 11 7 0 6 0 0 -- 0 0 5 1 2

1 35 37 0 34 7 34 11 2 0 23 28 1 24 1 2 0 3 1 12 8 7

64

MP

956:30 40:00 8:00

1004:30

2010 RESULTS 1/23 MI 1/23 MI 1/24 MI 1/24 MI 2/6 SI 2/6 SI 2/7 SI 2/7 SI 2/13 2/20* 2/21 2/21 2/27 UCI 2/27 UCI 2/28 UCI 2/28 UCI 3/6* 3/11 3/13* 3/27* 3/28* 4/8 4/10* 4/17* 4/30 MPSF 5/1 MPSF 5/2 MPSF 5/14 NCAA 5/15 NCAA 5/16 NCAA

W/L

W L (OT) W W L W W L W W W W W W L W (8-OT) L (6-OT) W W L W W W L W W W L W W

TOTALS

UCLA 12 6 10 10 3 9 7 3 9 7 8 24 9 7 4 7 8 8 13 6 12 8 7 5 8 7 8 4 14 9

Opp.

252

6 7 7 4 4 8 6 13 5 6 3 4 3 5 10 6 9 5 6 11 5 4 5 14 6 6 7 5 3 6

Opponent

vs. No. 19 Indiana vs. No. 7 San Diego State at No. 10 Michigan vs. UC San Diego vs. No. 4 California vs. No. 3 Hawai’i vs. No. 9 Arizona State vs. No. 2 USC No. 13 Cal State Northridge at No. 3 California vs. No. 15 UC Davis at Sonoma State vs. No. 14 UC Santa Barbara vs. No. 5 Michigan vs. No. 1 Stanford vs. No. 4 California at No. 5 Hawai’i at No. 13 UC Irvine No. 6 Arizona State No. 2 Stanford No. 6 San Jose State No. 7 Loyola Marymount No. 14 San Diego State at No. 1 USC No. 5 Hawai’i No. 1 Stanford No. 2 USC vs. No. 7 Loyola Marymount vs. No. 20 Marist vs. No. 6 Michigan

RecORD

MPSF

1-0 1-1 2-1 3-1 3-2 4-2 5-2 5-3 6-3 7-3 1-0 8-3 9-3 10-3 11-3 11-4 12-4 12-5 1-1 13-5 14-5 2-1 14-6 2-2 15-6 3-2 16-6 17-6 4-2 17-7 4-3 18-7 19-7 20-7 20-8 21-8 22-8

189

22-8

*

MPSF match MI Michigan Invitational (hosted by Michigan) SI Stanford Invitational (hosted by Stanford) – 2nd place UCI UCI Invitational (hosted by UC Irvine) – 3rd place MPSF MPSF Tournament (hosted by UCLA) – 1st place NCAA NCAA Tournament (hosted by San Diego State) – 5th place

KELLY EASTERDAY

4-3

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Grace Reynolds Priscilla Orozco KK Clark Kelly Easterday Sarah Orozco

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

KK Clark Priscilla Orozco Grace Reynolds Kelly Easterday Emily Greenwood

101 94 90 80 79

Assists

1. 2. 2.

Priscilla Orozco KK Clark Kelly Easterday

11 10 9

Priscilla Orozco KK Clark Megan Burmeister

27 22 20

Steals

1. 2. 2.

Final 2010 Top 20 Poll No.

School

USC Stanford California Loyola Marymount UCLA Hawai’i Michigan San Jose State San Diego State UC Irvine Arizona State Indiana Cal State Northridge Pacific UC Santa Barbara Hartwick Princeton UC San Diego UC Davis Marist

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. t-9. t-9. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.

Points 100 95 90 84 82 75 70 63 57 57 53 44 43 34 29 21 19 15 13 5

UCLA in the 2010 Polls Wk.

Release Date

--- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Final

Preseason Jan. 27 Feb. 3 Feb. 10 Feb. 17 Feb. 24 March 3 March 10 March 17 March 24 March 31 April 7 April 14 April 21 April 28 May 5 May 12 May 19

megan burmeister 23

43 40 31 23 21

Attempts

271

LEGEND: GP/GS – Games played/Games Started, G – Goals, ATT – Attempts, PCT – Scoring Percentage, AST – Assists, STL – Steals, EE – Earned Ejections, PF – Personal Fouls, QP – Quarter Played, SV – Saves, GA – Goals Against, GAA – Goals Against Average, MP – Minutes Played

Date

Goals

Rank 3 5 5 4 4 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 t-1 t-1 5


MOUNTAIN PACIFIC SPORTS FEDERATION The Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) was established during the 1992-1993 season to serve the competitive needs of member institutions from the Big West, Pacific-10 and Western Athletic Conferences, as well as other selected universities in the western United States; and to provide championships competition for Division I intercollegiate Olympic sports in a conference setting. The founding principles on which the MPSF was originally formed were to provide enhanced competition and championship opportunities for sports without conference affiliation; to contain the costs of competition; and to ensure the survival of sports impacted by Title IX and other fiscal pressures. The Federation has also served as an incubator for emerging women’s sports and as a safe harbor for sports impacted by conference realignments. Since its inaugural season the Federation has seen its primary conference membership grow by the addition of the Mountain West and West Coast Conferences and their respective member institutions, as well as the addition of women’s water polo, women’s gymnastics, women’s lacrosse and men’s and women’s swimming. As a testament to its viability, the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation continues to successfully navigate the ever-changing sea of college sports by fostering contraction and expansion of its sports portfolio to meet the dynamic needs of its members. As the MPSF begins its 19th year in 2010-2011 and continues its legacy of championship competition, it affirms the vision of its founders and the relevance of its three founding principles, particularly during today’s tumultuous economic times. In 2010-2011, the MPSF will sponsor competition in 11 intercollegiate Olympic sports, adding men’s and women’s swimming for the first time, while serving approximately 1,800 student-athletes on 86 teams from 38 universities in 12 western states. All MPSF teams compete at the NCAA Division I level in men’s soccer, men’s and women’s water polo, men’s and women’s indoor track and field, men’s and women’s gymnastics, men’s and women’s swimming, women’s lacrosse and men’s volleyball. MPSF champions are eligible to compete in NCAA

Championships with MPSF men’s soccer, men’s and women’s water polo, and men’s volleyball champions earning automatic qualification into NCAA championship events. Joining the Federation for the first-time in women’s swimming is Northern Colorado and University of San Diego, while former MPSF members Loyola Marymount and Cal Poly have also elected compete for the Federation’s women’s swimming championship. UC Irvine will rejoin the MPSF in women’s indoor track and field after a half-decade absence. During the 2009-2010 season, the MPSF teams won four NCAA championship team titles, bringing the Federation’s total to 61 since the first season of competition in 1992-93. In 2009-10 USC led the charge by winning both the NCAA men’s and women’s water polo titles while Stanford took the NCAA men’s volleyball crown with Oregon’s women’s indoor track and field team winning its first-ever NCAA Championship team title. UCLA won three MPSF titles including men’s and women’s water polo, as well as men’s indoor track and field. In addition to its men’s volleyball title, Stanford won its sixth consecutive women’s lacrosse championship. Oregon also took the women’s indoor track and field crown while Oklahoma won its 10th MPSF men’s gymnastics championship in 12 years. Sacramento State grabbed it’s first-ever MPSF men’s soccer title while UC Davis nabbed its second women’s gymnastics title in three seasons. Al Beaird has been the Federation’s only executive director, taking the reins after being selected by the MPSF Administrative Committee in December 1997 after a national search. Beaird’s position was established as a result of the Federation’s continued growth and emerging tradition of NCAA and national championship caliber play, including 43 NCAA team championships during his tenure. Beaird, who formerly served on the athletics staff at his alma mater, UC Davis, where the integration of student and athlete is a longrooted philosophy, oversees the administration of all Federation

sports, having worked closely with administrators and coaches from more than 45 different universities over the course of his administration. Beaird presided over the transition of the Federation from what was initially a scheduling alliance to what is now nationally recognized as the most successful NCAA Division I Olympic sports conference. Beaird directs all aspects of MPSF competition, including championships, officiating, rules compliance, scheduling, media relations, broadcasting, sponsorships and NCAA relations, while also shaping conference legislation, facilitating annual meetings and providing direction and communication for the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Administrative and Executive Committees. In 2004, Beaird completed a four-year term, three years as chair, on the NCAA Men’s Water Polo Championships Committee and one year as chair of the inaugural NCAA Men’s and Women’s Water Polo Rules Committee. Beaird feels privileged to work with coaches and student-athletes who compete at the highest levels, including those who compete on USA national teams as coaches or players in international and Olympic competition. With his in NCAA Olympic sports, Beaird has been called upon to serve as liaison to the national governing bodies for amateur athletics in the United States and the United States Olympic Committee. Beaird received his undergraduate degree in physical education from UC Davis before attaining his Masters of Business Administration from California State University, Sacramento. Beaird, who lives in Woodland, California, has two daughters who have been active in high school and club sports.

2010 MPSF Tournament Results 1st Place: UCLA 8, USC 7 3rd Place: Stanford 10, California 3 5th Place: Hawaii 7, San Diego State 6 7th Place: San Jose State 10, Arizona State 9

2010 MPSF Standings mpsf overall School Stanford (2) ^ USC (1) ^^ California (3) ^ Hawaii (6) UCLA (5) ^* San Jose State (8) San Diego State (t-9) Arizona State (11)

W 7 6 4 4 4 2 1 0

L 0 1 3 3 3 5 6 7

PCT 1.000 .857 .571 .571 .571 .286 .143 .000

Home 4-0 4-0 2-1 2-1 2-1 2-2 0-3 0-4

Away 3-0 2-1 2-2 2-2 2-2 0-3 1-3 0-3

W 26 25 26 18 22 17 21 16

L 3 3 9 8 8 14 15 15

PCT .897 .893 .743 .692 .682 .538 .583 .516

Home 10-0 9-0 7-1 2-1 2-1 5-2 6-3 4-4

Away 5-1 4-3 3-3 4-3 4-3 0-5 3-6 2-3

Neut 11-2 12-0 16-5 12-4 12-4 12-7 12-6 10-8

Final National Ranking in Parenthesis, ^^ NCAA Champions, ^ NCAA Tournament Qualifier, * MPSF Champion

2010 ALL-MPSF SELECTIONS First Team Yr. Pos. School Tumua Anae Kami Craig Emily Csikos Kelly Eaton Camille Hewko Monika Eggens Priscilla Orozco Jessica Steffens

Sr. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Sr.

GK 2M Att. Att. 2M Att. Att. 2M-D

USC USC California Stanford California Hawaii UCLA Stanford

Second Team Yr. Pos. School Joelle Bekhazi Forel Davies Caitlin Dement Carmen Eggens Amber Pezzolla Grace Reynolds Leonie Van Der Molen Adriana Vogt

PRISCILLA OROZCO

Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Jr.

Utl. 2M-D GK Ctr. Utl. Ctr. Ctr. Utl.

USC USC UCLA Hawaii SDSU UCLA Hawaii SJSU

Sarah Harris Patricia Jancso Stephanie Peckham Kelly Phelps Stephanie Schnugg Melissa Seidemann

Jr. Fr. So. Sr. Sr. So.

Att. 2M-D GK Ctr. 2M 2M

All-Freshman Team Yr. Pos. School Annika Dries Amarens Genee Emily Greenwood Shannon Haas Patricia Jancso Dana Ochsner Amber Pezzolla

Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr.

2M Ctr. Def. Ctr. 2M-D 2M Utl.

Tumua Anae

Sr.

GK

Patricia Jancso

Coach of the Year Yr. School

24

SDSU UCLA SJSU Stanford UCLA Arizona St.

USC

Newcomer of the Year Yr. Pos. School

Kelly Campoli KK Clark Dani Curran Annika Dries Kelly Easterday Shannon Haas

GK Utl. Att. 2M Utl. Ctr.

Stanford Hawaii UCLA Ariozna St. USC California SDSU

Player of the Year Yr. Pos. School

Honorable Mention Yr. Pos. School So. So. So. Fr. Jr. Fr.

Arizona St. USC California Arizona St. California Stanford

Jovan Vavic

Fr.

2M-D USC

16th USC



GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 1995 (13-11, 5th) Head Coach: Guy Baker

Date

2/3 2/4 2/5 2/6 2/17 2/17 2/18 2/19 2/24 3/18 4/1 4/11 4/15 4/15 4/21 4/21 4/22 4/22 4/23 5/12 5/12 5/13 5/13 5/14

Opponent

Golden West1 Sunset1 Club1 UC Irvine1 UC Santa Barbara2 UC Irvine2 UC San Diego2 UC Santa Barbara2 at USC San Diego State Claremont USC at San Diego State at UC San Diego Loyola Marymount3 UC Santa Barbara3 Pacific3 UC Davis3 UC San Diego3 San Diego State4 Slippery Rock4 Harvard4 Maryland4 Michigan4

Result

W W W W L W L W W L W W L L W W W L L L L W W W (3ot)

Score

14-1 20-0 8-5 8-2 8-7 11-4 6-3 7-3 10-2 10-5 15-2 8-2 12-4 8-3 12-2 8-5 13-2 9-3 7-1 7-4 9-7 14-1 9-2 7-6

1 Women’s Winter Nationals 2 UC San Diego Tournament 3 Western Zone Qualifier 4 National Collegiate Championships (at Virginia)

1996 (29-1, 7-0 MPSF, 2nd) Head Coach: Guy Baker National Champions

Date

2/16 2/17 2/17 2/18 2/23 2/24 3/8 3/9 3/9 3/10 3/10 3/16 3/17 3/29 3/30 4/6 4/12 4/13 4/13 4/14 4/26 4/26 4/27 4/27 4/28 5/10 5/10 5/11 5/11 5/12

Opponent

USC1 UC San Diego1 UC Davis1 San Diego State1 USC* UC Santa Barbara* at Stanford* UC Santa Barbara ‘A’2 UC Davis ‘A’2 UC Santa Barbara ‘B’2 California at UC San Diego at San Diego State* at USC* San Diego State* at UC Santa Barbara* UC Santa Barbara3 Stanford3 California3 San Diego State3 USC4 UC Irvine4 UC Davis4 Stanford4 California4 Maryland5 UC Santa Barbara5 Stanford5 San Diego State5 California5

Result

W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W L W W W W W

Score

17-3 13-2 7-2 12-4 18-8 8-4 5-1 12-2 7-2 13-1 10-8 10-5 7-2 10-1 5-4 10-5 11-3 6-1 6-3 6-5 13-2 14-5 7-2 7-1 8-7 13-1 9-1 8-1 12-6 8-4

* indicates MPSF game 1 UC San Diego Triton Invitational 2 Stanford Invitational Tournament 3 MPSF Championships 4 Western Regional Qualification Tournament 5 National Collegiate Championships

1997 (31-1, 6-0 MPSF, 1st) Head Coach: Guy Baker National Champions

Date

2/14 2/15 2/15 2/16 2/16 2/22 3/6 3/7 3/8 3/8 3/9 3/9 3/13 3/14 3/16 3/20 4/4 4/5 4/5 4/11 4/12 4/12 4/13 4/25 4/25 4/26 4/26 4/27 5/9 5/9 5/10 5/11

Opponent

USC1 UC Santa Barbara1 California1 Stanford1 California1 UC Santa Barbara* California Stanford Pacific2 California ‘B’2 San Diego State2 Stanford2 at UC Santa Barbara* San Diego State* at USC* Massachusetts USC* at UC San Diego at San Diego State* UC Santa Barbara3 California3 San Diego State3 California3 UC San Diego4 Pacific4 UC Davis4 San Diego State4 California4 UC San Diego5 Maryland5 San Diego State5 California5

3/26 3/27 3/31 4/1 4/7 4/7 4/8 4/8 4/9 4/21 4/21 4/22 5/5 5/5 5/6 5/7

1998 (35-1, 9-0 MPSF, 1st)

Result

W W L W W W W W (ot) W W W W W W (ot) W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W

* indicates MPSF game 1 UC San Diego Triton Invitational 2 Stanford Invitational Tournament 3 MPSF Championships 4 Western Regional Qualification Tournament 5 National Collegiate Championships

Score

11-3 12-6 4-3 7-6 8-5 11-8 7-5 10-9 10-3 13-4 9-7 6-4 9-3 8-7 7-4 16-6 7-2 10-2 9-4 14-4 10-4 8-6 8-6 8-3 12-3 13-1 13-4 8-6 9-1 10-0 10-3 6-3

Head Coach: Guy Baker National Champions

Date

2/6 2/7 2/7 2/8 2/8 2/13 2/28 2/28 3/1 3/1 3/5 3/6 3/7 3/7 3/14 3/15 3/17 3/21 3/22 3/27 4/3 4/4 4/4 4/10 4/10 4/11 4/11 4/12 4/25 4/25 4/26 4/27 5/8 5/8 5/9 5/10

Opponent

San Jose State1 UC San Diego1 San Diego State1 UC Santa Barbara1 California1 Hawai’i1 Occidental2 UC San Diego2 UC Santa Barbara2 California2 USC* Michigan3 UC Santa Barbara3 Hawai’i3* Stanford* San Jose State* Massachusetts California* Pacific* UC Santa Barbara* Long Beach State* San Diego State* UC San Diego Pacific4 UC Santa Barbara4 San Jose State4 San Diego State4 Stanford4 UC Davis5 UC San Diego5 Hawai’i5 Stanford5 Maryland6 UC Santa Barbara6 Hawai’i6 California6

Result

W W W W W W W W W L (sv-ot) W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W

Score

18-5 13-4 14-3 11-4 11-4 14-2 21-0 18-2 10-2 9-8 10-1 15-5 10-3 13-6 11-3 18-0 14-3 10-3 18-5 12-1 24-0 7-4 10-3 14-2 10-4 12-1 12-3 6-4 16-1 13-2 9-1 7-4 15-1 11-5 10-3 7-3

2/6 2/7 2/12 2/13 2/13 2/14 2/14 2/27 2/27 2/28 2/28 3/5 3/6 3/7 3/16 3/20 3/21 3/27 3/28 4/1 4/2 4/9 4/9 4/10 4/10 4/11 4/24 4/24 4/25 4/25 5/7 5/7 5/8 5/9

Opponent

at Stanford* at San Jose State* UC San Diego1 UC Davis1 Hawai’i1 USC1 Stanford Loyola Marymount2 San Diego State2 USC2 California2 Hawai’i USC* Hawai’i Massachusetts at California* at Pacific* UC Davis UC Santa Barbara* Long Beach State* San Diego State* Long Beach State3 San Jose State3 Hawai’i3 USC3 Stanford3 San Diego State4 USC4 Long Beach State4 San Diego State4 Maryland5 Hawai’i5 USC5 California5

Result

L W W W W L L W W L L W L (ot) W W L (ot) W W W W W W W W L W (ot) W L W W W W L W (sv-ot)

Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions

Date

2/10 2/11 2/11 2/17 2/24 2/24 2/25 2/25 3/3 3/4 3/9 3/10 3/11 3/30 4/6 4/7 4/20 4/27 4/28 4/29 5/12 5/13

Score

4-3 6-1 12-7 10-5 7-4 5-3 6-4 13-3 11-4 7-6 8-5 10-4 7-6 8-5 6-2 10-9 14-3 6-3 11-2 11-4 8-2 5-4 7-1 14-5 7-5 7-6 9-6 11-1 12-5 9-3 12-2 7-1 5-4 6-5

2/4 2/5 2/5 2/11 2/11 2/12 2/12 2/13 2/13 2/26 2/26 2/27 2/27 3/3 3/4 3/4 3/9 3/17 3/19

Opponent

UC San Diego UC Santa Barbara1 Hawai’i1 UC Santa Barbara2 UC San Diego2 San Jose State2 Stanford2 USC3 California3 La Verne4 UC Davis4 Stanford4 USC4 at Long Beach State* at San Diego State* at UC San Diego* at USC* at UC Santa Barbara* Stanford* 1

Result

W W W W W W L W W W W L W W W W W W L

San Jose State1 California1 Stanford1 San Diego State* UC Irvine2 UC Santa Barbara2 California2 Stanford2 at California* at Pacific* USC* Hawai’i* Long Beach State* UC Santa Barbara* at Stanford* at San Jose State* at UC Irvine* UC Santa Barbara3 USC3 Stanford3 Loyola Marymount4 Stanford4

Result

W W L W W W W L W W W W W W L W W W W L W W

15-4 6-4 7-6 21-3 16-3 12-2 6-2 10-7 7-5 16-4 13-6 14-3 18-2 14-1 7-4 10-4 13-4 17-3 9-8 8-5 11-1 5-4

2/7 2/7 2/8 2/8 2/22 2/28 2/28 2/29 2/29 3/6 3/7 3/11 3/13 3/13 3/28 3/28 3/30 4/3 4/4 4/7 4/8 4/10 4/17 4/18 4/30 5/1 5/2

Opponent

Hawai’i1 California1 Santa Clara1 USC1 at UC Santa Barbara* Pacific2 Hawai’i2 Stanford2 Long Beach State2 California* Pacific* at USC* at UC San Diego vs. Princeton (at UCSD) San Jose State3 UC Santa Barbara3 Hawai’i* San Diego State* Arizona State* at Loyola Marymount* at UC Irvine* at Long Beach State* San Jose State* Stanford* California4 Stanford4 Long Beach State4

Result

W W W L W W W L W W (ot) W L W W W W W W W W W W W L W L W

Score

6-2 6-5 13-1 12-4 5-2 14-3 10-5 6-5 9-7 6-5 15-3 9-4 11-2 9-8 12-6 4-3 5-4 8-5 13-5 4-3 9-5 5-3 9-4 5-3 8-4 3-2 6-4

* indicates MPSF game 1 Stanford Invitational (second place) 2 Gaucho Tournament (third place) 3 Rainbow Classic (first place) 4 MPSF Championships (third place)

2002 (22-4, 10-1 MPSF, 2nd)

1/29 1/30 1/31 2/12 2/12 2/13 2/13 2/20 2/24 2/25 2/25 2/26 2/26 2/27 3/5 3/9 3/11 3/12 3/12 3/17 3/31 4/2 4/9 4/10 4/15 4/16 4/20 4/29 4/30 5/1 5/13 5/14 5/15

Opponent

UC Irvine Massachusetts1 California1 San Jose State1 Stanford1 Cal Baptist2 San Diego State2 USC2 Stanford2 San Jose State* Stanford* at Cal State Northridge* at Long Beach State* at San Diego State* at UC San Diego vs. Princeton (at UCSD) Pacific* California* at USC* at Hawai’i* at UC Santa Barbara* San Jose State3 USC3 Stanford3 Loyola Marymount4 Stanford4

Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions

Date

Result

W W W W L W W W L W L W W W W W W W W W W W W W W L

Score

16-4 14-2 5-4 11-3 9-4 14-5 8-2 4-2 6-5 10-3 6-4 17-0 6-4 12-5 10-1 16-6 20-4 8-4 9-8 17-5 14-2 12-5 7-6 11-7 12-2 8-4

2003 (23-4, 8-2 MPSF, 3rd) Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions

Date

2/8 2/8 2/9 2/9 2/12 2/21 2/22 2/28 3/1 3/8 3/8 3/9 3/9 3/13 3/14 3/15 3/15 3/27 3/28 4/5

26

18-3 3-2 12-0 12-3 7-6 3-2 8-2 4-3

2004 (22-5, 9-2 MPSF, 3rd) Date

Score

W W W W W (ot) L (ot) W W

* indicates MPSF game ^ match played at UC San Diego # exhibition game (does not count in record) 1 Stanford Invitational 2 UC Santa Barbara Invitational 3 MPSF Championships 4 NCAA Championships

Head Coach: Adam Krikorian

* indicates MPSF game 1 Stanford Invitational 2 UCSB Tournament 3 MPSF Championships 4 NCAA Championships

16-4 16-4 12-2 12-2 16-3 12-2 5-3 10-3 6-5 17-0 13-3 5-4 15-12 11-5 8-6 13-6 10-8 12-1 9-7

at Pacific* U.S. National Team# UC Santa Barbara* Hawai’i3 USC3 Stanford3 Loyola Marymount4 Stanford4

2005 (33-0, 12-0 MPSF, 1st)

2/7 2/9 2/9 2/10 2/10 2/23 2/23 2/24 2/24 3/2 3/3 3/8 3/9 3/15 3/16 3/16 3/29 3/30 4/5 4/6 4/20 4/26 4/27 4/28 5/11 5/12

Score

4/6 4/12 4/19 4/25 4/26 4/27 5/10 5/11

* indicates MPSF game 1 NorCal Tournament 2 Santa Barbara Tournament 3 MPSF Championships 4 NCAA Championships

Date

2000 (30-5, 8-1 MPSF, 3rd) Date

Opponent

Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Runner-up

* indicates MPSF game 1 UC San Diego Tournament 2 UC Santa Barbara Tournament 3 MPSF Championships 4 Western Regional Qualification Tournament 5 National Collegiate Championships

Head Coach: Adam Krikorian National Champions

10-1 14-6 7-6 16-2 20-1 14-9 9-2 7-6 7-4 13-1 10-2 9-7 15-2 15-2 5-3 11-4

2001 (18-4, 9-1 MPSF, 2nd)

1999 (24-10, 6-3 MPSF, 3rd) Date

W W W W W W W L W W W L W W W W

* indicates MPSF game 1 Rainbow Wahine Tournament 2 UC San Diego Triton Invitational 3 UC San Diego Tournament 4 UC Santa Barbara Tournament 5 MPSF Tournament 6 Western Regional Qualification Tournament 7 National Collegiate Championships

* indicates MPSF game 1 UC San Diego Triton Invitational 2 Stanford Invitational Tournament 3 Michigan Tournament 4 MPSF Tournament 5 Western Regional Qualification Tournament 6 National Collegiate Championships

Head Coach: Guy Baker Interim Head Coach: Adam Krikorian

UC Davis San Jose State* California* Pacific* Pacific5 San Diego State5 Hawai’i5 Stanford5 USC5 Cal Baptist6 Long Beach State6 USC6 Michigan7 UC Davis7 California7 USC7

Opponent

Hawai’i1 USC1 UC Santa Cruz1 Stanford1 at UC Irvine* USC* Hawai’i* at Stanford* at San Jose State* Redlands2 Loyola Marymount2 USC2 Stanford2 Loyola Marymount Long Beach State* at UC San Diego vs. Princeton^ Brown San Diego State* at California*

Result

W W W L W L W L W W W W W W W W W W W W

Score

7-3 8-4 19-0 4-3 18-1 8-6 12-5 5-3 10-3 14-2 12-5 7-3 7-3 7-3 10-4 11-1 10-1 12-1 10-2 6-1

Opponent

Indiana1 Colorado State1 Michigan1 UC Davis2 Stanford2 San Jose State2 USC2 UC Santa Barbara* Hawai’i* Princeton3 Arizona State3 Hawai’i3 Long Beach State3 USC3 USC* Cal State Northridge* at UC San Diego at San Diego State* vs. Princeton (at UCSD) Loyola Marymount UC Irvine* at Arizona State* at California* at Pacific* at Stanford* at San Jose State* Long Beach State* Cal State Northridge4 Hawai’i4 Stanford4 Wagner5 Hawai’i5 Stanford5

Result

W W W W W W W W W W W W W W (OT) W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W

Score

14-2 22-0 13-3 13-4 6-5 9-4 8-6 13-4 13-8 16-1 20-8 6-5 7-3 10-6 11-6 14-4 10-3 12-3 17-5 12-5 14-4 12-0 15-6 15-1 7-5 8-3 12-7 14-4 10-5 9-5 22-2 7-6 3-2

* indicates MPSF game 1 Michigan Invitational 2 Stanford Invitational 3 Gaucho Invitational 4 MPSF Championships (first place) 5 NCAA Championships (frst place)

2006 (29-4, 11-1 MPSF, 2nd) Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions

Date

2/3 2/3 2/5 2/11 2/11 2/12 2/12 2/18 2/19 2/25 2/25 2/26 2/26 3/3 3/4 3/4 3/11

Opponent

Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Northridge* UC Santa Barbara* California1 Hawai’i1 Arizona State1 USC1 San Jose State* UC Irvine* UC Davis2 San Jose State2 Stanford2 Hawai’i2 California* Cal State San Bernardino UC San Diego Arizona State*

Result

W W W W W W L W W W W L W W W W W

Score

22-2 20-2 10-7 6-4 10-3 14-5 10-8 15-5 15-5 10-1 12-2 4-2 8-6 6-4 13-1 7-1 9-3


GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS 3/12 3/19 3/25 3/26 3/29 3/31 4/8 4/14 4/15 4/20 4/28 4/29 4/30 5/12 5/13 5/14

San Diego State* Loyola Marymount Maryland Occidental Hartwick Hawai’i* USC* Pacific* Stanford* Long Beach State* Arizona State3 Stanford3 USC3 Hartwick4 Stanford4 USC4

W W W W W W L W W W W L W W W W

12-3 8-2 18-3 22-2 16-3 6-4 6-4 19-1 9-8 11-4 11-7 5-4 10-7 15-2 8-5 9-8

* indicates MPSF game 1 Stanford Invitational 2 Gaucho Invitational 3 MPSF Championships (third place) 4 NCAA Championships (first place)

2007 (28-2, 11-1 MPSF, 2nd) Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions

Date

2/3 2/3 2/4 2/4 2/16 2/17 2/22 2/24 2/24 2/25 2/25 3/1 3/2 3/3 3/10 3/11 3/15 3/16 3/24 3/31 4/7 4/14 4/15 4/20 4/27 4/28 4/29 5/11 5/12 5/13

Opponent

California1 Hawai’i1 Indiana1 USC1 at California* at Pacific* Hawai’i* Santa Clara2 UC Irvine2 California2 Stanford2 UC Irvine* Cal State Northridge Pomona-Pitzer at Arizona State* UC Santa Barbara* Long Beach State* at UC San Diego Cal State Bakersfield Loyola Marymount USC* at Stanford* at San Jose State* at San Diego State* Long Beach State3 USC3 Stanford3 Pomona-Pitzer4 USC4 Stanford4

Result

W W W W W W W W W W L W W W W W W W W W W L W W W W W W W W

Score

10-2 12-4 10-3 11-10 12-8 30-5 16-7 17-6 11-7 7-3 8-4 22-7 14-3 14-3 15-9 21-8 21-3 21-3 25-0 17-3 8-7 7-6 14-6 14-6 17-5 10-9 9-3 22-0 7-6 5-4

* indicates MPSF game 1 Stanford Invitational 2 UC Irvine Tournament 3 MPSF Championships (first place) 4 NCAA Championships (first place)

2008 (33-0, 12-0 MPSF, 1st) Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions

Date

1/26 1/26 1/27 1/27 2/2 2/5 2/9 2/9 2/10 2/10 2/15 2/16 2/17 2/23 2/23 2/24 2/24 3/1 3/8 3/9 3/14 3/28 4/5 4/6 4/12 4/12 4/13 4/25 4/26 4/27 5/9 5/10 5/11

Opponent

Arizona State1 UC San Diego1 Colorado State1 Indiana1 at Loyola Marymount Hartwick Michigan2 Hawai’i2 San Jose State2 USC2 at UC Irvine* at Cal State Northridge* at Long Beach State* Cal State Northridge3 Loyola Marymount3 California3 Stanford3 at UC Santa Barbara* Stanford* San Jose State* at USC* at Hawai’i* California* Pacific* San Diego State* Sonoma State Arizona State* San Jose State4 Hawai’i4 USC4 Pomona-Pitzer5 UC Davis5 USC5

Result

Score

W 14-5 W 14-5 W 15-2 W 15-6 W 13-6 W 19-7 W 16-0 W 15-10 W 12-7 W 8-4 W 13-3 W 10-5 W 19-7 W 12-4 W 11-6 W 9-4 W (SV-OT) 8-7 W 12-0 W 9-7 W 15-5 W 8-7 W 9-5 W 10-4 W 13-6 W 17-5 W 14-7 W 14-4 W 12-1 W 8-6 W 8-7 W 19-6 W 11-4 W 6-3

UCLA’S ALL-TIME RECORDS VS. OPPONENTS

2009 (25-6, 5-2 MPSF, 3rd) Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions

Date

1/24 1/24 1/25 2/5 2/7 2/7 2/8 2/13 2/14 2/19 2/21 2/21 2/22 2/22 2/28 3/7 3/8 3/8 3/12 3/13 3/14 3/26 3/26 4/3 4/11 4/24 4/25 4/26 5/8 5/9 5/10

Opponent

Result

Bucknell W Indiana1 W W at Michigan1 at Long Beach State W W San Jose State2 Hawai’i2 L Stanford2 L San Diego State* W Loyola Marymount W Hawai’i* W W Long Beach State3 California3 W USC3 L Hawai’i3 W at Arizona State W California* W at Cal Lutheran W Cal State Northridge (at CLU) W UC Irvine W at Santa Clara W at San Jose State* W Hartwick W Brown W at Stanford* L USC* L W at Hawai’i4 Stanford4 L (OT) California4 W Michigan5 W Stanford5 W USC5 W 1

Arizona State Brown Bucknell Cal Baptist Cal Lutheran Cal State San Bernardino Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Northridge California Colorado State Claremont Club Golden West Hartwick Harvard

Score

17-0 10-3 10-4 13-4 13-6 13-12 10-5 14-7 14-7 11-8 18-2 9-4 8-7 12-7 10-5 11-5 22-3 9-3 18-4 14-6 10-6 15-6 15-9 9-8 11-10 8-7 11-10 8-7 13-6 12-11 5-4

Individual Season Records

Saves 1. Caitlin Dement (2010) 2. Brittany Fullen (2008) 3. Brittany Fullen (2009) Nicolle Payne (1998) 5. Emily Feher (2005) Erin Golaboski (1999)

2010 (22-8, 4-3 MPSF, 3rd) Date

1/23 1/23 1/24 1/24 2/6 2/6 2/7 2/7 2/13 2/20 2/21 2/21 2/27 2/27 2/28 2/28 3/6 3/11 3/13 3/27 3/28 4/8 4/10 4/17 4/30 5/1 5/2 5/14 5/15 5/16

Opponent

Indiana1 San Diego State1 at Michigan1 UC San Diego1 California2 Hawai’i2 Arizona State2 USC2 Cal State Northridge at California* vs. UC Davis (at Sonoma State) at Sonoma State UC Santa Barbara3 Michigan3 Stanford3 California3 at Hawai’i* at UC Irvine Arizona State* Stanford* San Jose State* Loyola Marymount San Diego State* at USC* Hawai’i4 Stanford4 USC4 Loyola Marymount5 Marist5 Michigan5

Result

W L (OT) W W L W W L W W W W W W L W (8-OT) L (6-OT) W W L W W W L W W W L W W

Hawai’i Indiana La Verne Long Beach State Loyola Marymount Marist Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Pacific Pomona-Pitzer Princeton Occidental Redlands San Diego State

Goals 1. Tanya Gandy (2009) 2. Coralie Simmons (1998) 3. Kelly Rulon (2007) Kelly Rulon (2006) Kelly Rulon (2005) 6. Erin Golaboski (1998) 7. Elaine Zivich (1999) 8. Katie Rulon (2008) 9. Coralie Simmons (1996) Coralie Simmons (1997)

* indicates MPSF game 1 Michigan Invitational 2 Stanford Invitational 3 UC Irvine Invitational 4 MPSF Championships (third place) 5 NCAA Championships (first place)

Head Coach: Brandon Brooks

12-0 2-0 1-0 2-0 1-0 1-0 2-0 9-0 37-6 2-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 3-0 1-0

Score

79 74 70 70 70 65 65 62 60 60 264 237 225 225 210 210

Goals Against Average (min 500 MP) 1. Nicolle Payne (1998) 2.77 2. Nicolle Payne (1996) 3.07 3. Jaime Hipp (2003) 3.14 4. Nicolle Payne (1997) 3.77 5. Jaime Hipp (2002) 4.00

12-6 7-6 10-7 10-4 4-3 9-8 7-6 13-3 9-5 7-6 8-3 24-4 9-3 7-5 10-4 7-6 9-8 8-5 13-6 11-6 12-5 8-4 7-5 14-5 8-6 7-6 8-7 5-4 14-3 9-6

36-2 5-0 1-0 30-0 15-1 1-0 6-0 3-0 10-0 17-0 3-0 5-0 2-0 1-0 31-4

San Jose State Santa Clara Slippery Rock Sonoma State Stanford Sunset UMass UC Davis UC Irvine UC Santa Cruz UC San Diego UC Santa Barbara USC Wagner

28-0 3-0 0-1 2-0 27-29 0-1 1-0 14-1 14-0 1-0 21-3 34-1 38-16 1-0

Individual CAREER Records

Goals 1. Kelly Rulon 2. Coralie Simmons 3. Katie Rulon 4. Tanya Gandy 5. Catharine von Schwarz

237 235 201 187 186

Saves 1. Nicolle Payne 2. Emily Feher 3. Jaime Hipp 4. Brittany Fullen 5. Erin Golaboski

746 713 685 531 280

Goals Against Average (min 500 MP) 1. Nicolle Payne 3.79 2. Jaime Hipp 4.05 3. Erin Golaboski 4.58 4. Emily Feher 4.61 5. Brittany Fullen 4.68

TEAM Records Most Goals Scored (game) 30 at Pacific (2/17/07) Most Goals Scored (season) 451 (1998) Fewest Goals Scored (season) 168 (1995) Fewest Goals Allowed (season) 82 (2003) Most Goals Allowed (season) 196 (2009) Best Won-Loss Percentage (season) 1.000 in 2005 and 2008 (33-0) Worst Won-Lost Percentage (season) .542 (1995, 13-11) Most Shutouts (season) 3 (1998) Longest Season Winning Streak 33 matches, twice (2005 and 2008) Longest Interseason Winning Streak 46 matches (2007-2009) Longest Losing Streak 4 matches TEAM SINGLE-SEASON Records Offense (Goals/Game) 1. 14.03 (2007) 2. 12.53 (1998) 3. 12.36 (2008) 4. 11.94 (2005) 5. 11.71 (2009)

* indicates MPSF game 1 Michigan Invitational 2 Stanford Invitational 3 UC Irvine Invitational 4 MPSF Championships (first place) 5 NCAA Championships (five place)

Defense (Goals Against Average) 1. 2.86 (2003) 2. 2.89 (1998) 3. 3.23 (1996) 4. 4.06 (2005) 5. 4.06 (2006)

Emily Feher (2004-2007)

* indicates MPSF game 1 Michigan Invitational 2 Stanford Invitational 3 UC Irvine Invitational 4 MPSF Championships (first place) 5 NCAA Championships (first place)

Tanya Gandy (2006-2009)

27


HONORS AND AWARDS All-Time UCLA Women’s Water Polo Letterwinners Azizians, Harriet 1995 Barker, Nicole 2009 Barnes, Molly 1995-97 Barth, Brianne 1999 Barth, Kristin 1997-98 Beauregard, Robin 1998, 2001-03 Belden, Anne 2006-09 Belden, Katherine 2003-06 Bhesenia, Kim 1995 Blanchard, Monique 2005-06 Borchelt, Sarah 1997 Bowlus, Brittney 2004-05 Bresee, Randi 2009-10 Brewer, Devon 1995-96 Buckley, Jill 1995-96 Burmeister, Megan 2008-10 Cady, Jennifer 1995-98 Cahill, Molly 2004-07 Carreras, Rosie 2004 Clark, KK 2009-10 Crowell, Kamaile 2005-08 Dement, Caitlin 2009-10 Dindinger, Stacey 1996 Domanic, Gabrielle 2005-08 Duffield, Shanta 1995

Easterday, Kelly 2008-10 Epstien, Elizabeth 1995 Ericksen, Paige 1995-97 Estrada, Katie 2008-10 Feher, Emily 2004-07 Flanagan, Katie 2003-05 Flanagan, Maureen 2000-03 Franks, Emily 1997 Fullen, Brittany, 2006-09 Gall, Amanda 1996-99 Gandy, Tanya 2006-09 Gimbel, Beth 1995 Golaboski, Erin 1997-00 Golda, Natalie 2001-03, 2005 Grams, Nicolette 2002, 2004-05 Greenlaw, Kim 1995 Greenwood, Emily 2010 Guerin, Kristin 1998-01 Hafferkamp, Kelsey 2008-09 Hall, Kelly 2000-01 Hayes, Erin 1999 Heineck, Lauren 2003-06 Herrera, Carly 1997-00 Heuchan, Kelly 2000-02 Hipp, Jaime 2000-03

Hubbs, Bryna 1999 Humphrey, Erin 1997 Hunter, Leslie 1995-96 Joyce, Mari 2000-03 Kay, Serela 1997-00 Kerr, Tahlia 2003-05 Kraus, Jillian 2005-08 Krumpholz, Kathryn 2005 Kunkel, Kacy 2004-07 Kunkel, Kristina 2003-06 LaBonte, Alison 1998-99 Lamb, Jenny 1999-02 Lee, Michelle 1998-99 Liu, Lisa 1996 Lopez, Jessica 2000-03 Martin, Brooke 2010 Mathewson, Courtney 2005-08 Mazziliano, Leah 2004 McAloon, Mandy 1996-99 McFerrin, Jennifer 1995-96 McGinley, Kelsey 2008-10 McIntyre, Devon 2000-03 Miller, Rebecca 1999-00 Mordell, Melissa 2007-08 Munro, Thalia 2001-02, 2005-06

Murphy, Eleanor 1999-02 Murphy, Jenna 2004, 2006-07 Naranjo, Giselle 2010 Natcher, Stephanie 1995-97 Nelson, Jessica 1995-96 Nelson, Kim 2006-08 Neste, Alexandra 2008 Norris, Jane 1995 Oesting, Megan 1995-96 Orozco, Priscilla 2008-10 Orozco, Sarah 2009-10 Parsa, Natalie 1995 Payne, Nicolle 1995-98 Povey, Jessica 1999-00 Powers, Monica 2008-10 Pulver, Kristyn 2002-03 Reynolds, Grace 2010 Ronimus, Morgan 2008-10 Rowe, Brittany 2005-08 Rudolph, Catherine 1995 Rulon, Katie 2006-09 Rulon, Kelly 2003, 2005-07 Schmidt, Jody 2002-03 Schulman, Natasha 2010 Sears, Samantha 2008

Sebenaler, Hannah 2009-10 Simmons, Coralie 1996-98, 2001 Simonds, Kristen 2009-10 Slezak, Paloma 2003-04 Solheim, Aubrey 1995 Stachowski, Amber 2002 Stachowski, Ashley 2000-03 Stewart, Jessica 1997-99 Sullivan, Camy 2008-10 Tenenbaum, Katie 1996-99 Todisco, Larissa 2010 Trella, Leah 2010 Umphrey, Noel 2008-10 Van Hiel, Heather 2010 von Schwarz, Catharine 1996-98, 2000 Wallace, Laura 1997 Wilson, Leah 2002-03 Wright, Heather 1995-96 Yacenda, Sunny 2000 Zivich, Elaine, 1999-01

UCLA’s All-America Selections 2005

2000

1995

Stephanie Natcher, Second Team Nicolle Payne, Second Team

1996

Nicolle Payne, Player of the Year Jennifer McFerrin, First Team Coralie Simmons, First Team Catharine von Schwarz, Second Team Mandy McAloon, Honorable Mention

1997

Guy Baker, Coach of the Year Coralie Simmons, Player of the Year Nicolle Payne, First Team Amanda Gall, Second Team Catharine von Schwarz, Second Team Katie Tenenbaum, Honorable Mention

1998

2006

2001

Adam Krikorian, Coach of the Year Kelly Rulon, Player of the Year Thalia Munro, First Team Emily Feher, First Team Kristina Kunkel, Third Team Gabrielle Domanic, Honorable Mention

Coralie Simmons, First Team Robin Beauregard, First Team Kelly Heuchan, Third Team Jaime Hipp, Third Team

2002

2007

Robin Beauregard, First Team Amber Stachowski, First Team Jaime Hipp, Third Team Natalie Golda, Honorable Mention

Guy Baker, Coach of the Year Coralie Simmons, Player of the Year Nicolle Payne, First Team Catharine von Schwarz, First Team Robin Beauregard, Second Team Erin Golaboski, Third Team Katie Tenenbaum, Honorable Mention

2003

1999

Kristina Kunkel, First Team Lauren Heineck, Third Team Emily Feher, Third Team

Elaine Zivich, First Team Erin Golaboski, Third Team Katie Tenenbaum, Third Team Jenny Lamb, Honorable Mention

Adam Krikorian, Coach of the Year Natalie Golda, Player of the Year Thalia Munro, First Team Kelly Rulon, First Team Emily Feher, First Team

Elaine Zivich, Player of the Year Catharine von Schwarz, FirstTeam Kelly Heuchan, Second Team Jessica Lopez, Second Team Jaime Hipp, Third Team Erin Golaboski, Honorable Mention

Adam Krikorian, Coach of the Year Kelly Rulon, Player of the Year Emily Feher, First Team Jillian Kraus, First Team Courtney Mathewson, Second Team Kacy Kunkel, Third Team Gabrielle Domanic, Honorable Mention Brittany Rowe, Honorable Mention

Robin Beauregard, First Team Natalie Golda, First Team Jaime Hipp, Second Team Jessica Lopez, Third Team Maureen Flanagan, Third Team

2008

Adam Krikorian, Coach of the Year Courtney Mathewson, Player of the Year Jillian Kraus, First Team Brittany Fullen, Second Team Tanya Gandy, Second Team Brittany Rowe, Third Team Katie Rulon, Third Team Gabrielle Domanic, Honorable Mention

2009

Adam Krikorian, Coach of the Year Tanya Gandy, Player of the Year Anne Belden, Second Team Brittany Fullen, Second Team Katie Rulon, Second Team Priscilla Orozco, Honorable Mention

2010

Priscilla Orozco, First Team Grace Reynolds, Second Team KK Clark, Honorable Mention Caitlin Dement, Honorable Mention Kelly Easterday, Honorable Mention

2004

UCLA’s All-MPSF Team Selections 1996

Amanda Gall Jennifer McFerrin Nicolle Payne Coralie Simmons Catharine von Schwartz

1997

Amanda Gall Mandy McAloon Nicolle Payne Coralie Simmons Catharine von Schwarz

1998

Robin Beauregard Erin Golaboski Nicolle Payne Coralie Simmons Catharine von Schwarz

1999

Amanda Gall Jenny Lamb Mandy McAloon Katie Tenenbaum Elaine Zivich

2000

Erin Golaboski Kelly Heuchan Jessica Lopez Catharine von Schwarz Elaine Zivich

2001

Robin Beauregard Kelly Heuchan Coralie Simmons

2002

Robin Beauregard Kelly Heuchan Jaime Hipp Amber Stachowski

2003

Robin Beauregard Maureen Flanagan Natalie Golda Jaime Hipp Jessica Lopez

2004

2008

Emily Feher Lauren Heineck Kristina Kunkel

Courtney Mathewson (first) Jillian Kraus (first) Brittany Fullen (second) Tanya Gandy (hm) Brittany Rowe (hm) Katie Rulon (hm)

2005

Gabrielle Domanic Emily Feher Natalie Golda Kristina Kunkel Thalia Munro Kelly Rulon

Jaime Hipp (2000-2003)

2009

Tanya Gandy (first) Anne Belden (second) Brittany Fullen (second) Katie Rulon (second)

2006

2010

Anne Belden Emily Feher Jillian Kraus Kristina Kunkel Thalia Munro Kelly Rulon

Priscilla Orozco (first) Caitlin Dement (second) Grace Reynolds (second) KK Clark (hm) Kelly Easterday (hm)

2007

Jillian Kraus (first) Kelly Rulon (first) Emily Feher (second) Courtney Mathewson (second) Brittany Rowe (hm)

28

Courtney Mathewson (2005-2008)


UCLA AND TEAM USA UCLA at the Summer Olympics

UCLA’s Water Polo Olympians

Under the tutelage of former UCLA men’s and women’s head water polo coach Guy Baker, the U.S. women’s water polo team earned a silver medal at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. Aided by former UCLA standouts Natalie Golda and Jaime Hipp, the U.S. team earned its third medal since the sport’s Olympic inception in 2000.

1920 – Antwerp Clyde A. Swendson 1936 – Berlin Clyde A. Swendson Dixon Fiske

In the gold medal match against Hungary, Team USA rallied from an early 4-0 deficit to tie the match, 5-5, before halftime. Golda scored one goal in the match, helping reduce the Americans’ deficit to 5-3. The U.S. team advanced to the gold medal match after sinking Australia, 9-8, to assure itself of finishing the Olympics with a medal.

1948 – London Dixon Fiske Eddie Knox Devere Christianson

The U.S. team won a tiebreaker against Italy to win Group A (both teams finished with 2-0-1 preliminary records). In the U.S. team’s final preliminary-round contest, Golda scored a game-high three goals to lead the Americans past Russia, 12-7.

1952 – Helsinki John A. Spargo Pete Strange Urho Saari (Coach)

The 2008 Games in Beijing marked the second Olympic appearance for Golda and the first for Hipp. Baker has served as the U.S. women’s team’s head coach in all three Olympics. In 2004, seven players and Baker represented the UCLA women’s water polo program at the Olympics in Athens, Greece. Six former and current Bruins helped lead Team USA to the bronze medal, and one former Bruin (Kelly Heuchan) competed for Australia, which finished fourth. Then-current Bruins Natalie Golda, Thalia Munro, Amber Stachowski, Kelly Rulon and Gabrielle Domanic (alternate) competed alongside Payne and Beauregard. Baker helped lead the U.S. team to its second medal in as many Olympics.

photo courtesy of Getty Images

Natalie Golda led Team USA to a silver medal in 2008

Team USA captured a narrow 7-6 win over Hungary in both teams’ first match of the 2004 Olympics, as Rulon scored the game-winning goal. Rulon finished that game with two goals and Golda scored one goal. In a 6-5 loss to Canada during preliminary round play, Team USA received one goal each from Rulon and Beauregard. In the Americans’ final preliminary-round match, an 8-4 win over Russia, Beauregard scored two goals and Rulon and Stachowski each added one.

In the 2004 bronze medal contest, the U.S. team defeated host Australia by a 6-5 margin. UCLA’s athletes scored three of Team USA’s six goals in that contest – Beauregard, Golda and Stachowski each netted one goal.

Overall in the 2004 Olympics, UCLA ranked among the nation’s most successful universities. UCLA finished No. 1 among all universities in the number of different medalists (19) and the number of total Olympians (56). Current and former Bruins earned a total of 19 medals, including eight gold medals. UCLA’s athletes also claimed three silver and eight bronze medals.

Similar to 2008, the 2004 U.S. team won a tiebreaker against Russia to win its preliminary group and punch a ticket directly to the semifinals. The Americans dropped a 6-5 decision to Italy in a semifinal match before winning the bronze medal match.

The new millennium brought women’s water polo to the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia. Nearly 17,000 fans watched the gold medal match between the United States and host Australia in Sydney. In its first year as an Olympic sport, women’s water polo included six countries that each rounded up their top 11 players to compete. In a wild gold medal contest between Australia and Team USA, Australia scored a controversial last-second goal to win, 4-3, and send the U.S. team home with the silver medal. In 2000, then-current Bruins Coralie Simmons and Beauregard, former Bruin standout Nicolle Payne and Coach Baker helped lead Team USA on its quest for a gold medal. While competing at UCLA, both Simmons and Beauregard spent the year away from UCLA. Simmons led Team USA with nine goals in the Olympics, and Beauregard finished the tournament with six goals.

photo courtesy of Getty Images

Team USA at the 2004 Olympic medal ceremony

UCLA was the most represented university in the 2000 Olympics. In all, 58 Olympians from UCLA (current and former Bruins) competed for the United States and six foreign countries. Studentathletes from UCLA finished the summer with 18 medals – eight gold, five silver, and five bronze.

1956 – Melbourne Robert M. Horn 1960 – Rome Robert M. Horn James W. Kelsey Urho Saari (coach) 1964 – Tokyo Dave Ashleigh Stan Cole Daniel Drown Urho Saari (coach) 1968 – Mexico City Robert M. Horn (coach) Dave Ashleigh Bruce Bradley Russell Webb Stan Cole Monte Nitzkowski (coach) Munich – 1972 (Bronze Medal) Bruce Bradley Stan Cole Russell Webb James M. Ferguson James Slatton Eric Lindroth Monte Nitzkowski (coach)

Los Angeles – 1984^ Fernando Carsalade (Brazil) Rich Corso (coach) Monte Nitzkowski (coach) Joe Vargas Barcelona – 1992 Alex Rousseau Guy Baker (coach) Atlanta – 1996 Rich Corso (head coach) Dan Hackett Alex Rousseau Sydney – 2000 Women’s ^ Guy Baker (coach) Robin Beauregard Nicolle Payne Coralie Simmons Men’s Dan Hackett Sean Kern Athens – 2004 Women’s # Guy Baker (head coach) Robin Beauregard Natalie Golda Thalia Munro Nicolle Payne Kelly Rulon Amber Stachowski Kelly Heuchan (Australia) Men’s Brandon Brooks Adam Wright Brett Ormsby

Beijing – 2008 Women’s ^ Guy Baker (head coach) Natalie Golda Jaime Hipp Men’s ^ Moscow – 1980 (boycott) Brandon Brooks Adam Wright Jeff Stites Joe Vargas ^ indicates silver medal Eric Lindroth # indicates bronze medal Monte Nitzkowski (coach)

U.S. National Team Experience UCLA women’s water polo players have been well represented on the USA Junior and Senior National Teams. Both teams have had recent success in international competition. Most recently, current UCLA freshmen Emily Greenwood, Brooke Martin, Natasha Schulman and Larissa Todisco played for the 2009 USA Junior National Team. In the summer of 2007, former UCLA attacker Tanya Gandy and Team USA finished fourth at the FINA Women’s Junior World Championships in Porto, Portugal. Gandy scored 19 goals in seven games. The Senior National Team won the Holiday Cup in December 2006. Former Bruins Natalie Golda and Jamie Hipp and thencurrent Bruin Emily Feher competed in the Senior National Team event. Natalie Golda scored in every one of six games for Team USA, while Jamie Hipp contributed 21 saves. Team USA had also won the 2006 FINA World Championships in Italy. At the 2006 Pythia Cup in Greece, Gandy and current Bruin goalkeeper Brittany Fullen competed for the U.S. Junior National Team. Gandy registered eight goals and Fullen totaled 14 saves in the cage over three games, leading Team USA to the silver medal.

In December 2001, the U.S. Junior National Team captured the nation’s first ever FINA Junior World Championship in a 10-9 overtime win. Amber Stachowski led the United States with four goals and Thalia Munro added one goal. The Bruins turned in great performances at the Junior World Championships. UCLA players accounted for 48 percent of U.S. scoring with 38 of Team USA’s 80 goals. In the 2003 FINA Junior World Championships, Emily Feher, Lauren Heineck, Kristina Kunkel and Kelly Rulon all saw significant playing time for the United States. In 2004, the Junior National Team won the gold medal at the Pan-American Games. UCLA players have been key members of the Senior National Team in previous years. Each player has contributed to Team USA’s international success. At the 2003 FINA World Championships, Robin Beauregard scored the game-winning goal in Team USA’s 86 victory over Italy in the title game. The victory over Italy gave the U.S. women’s water polo team its first ever-gold medal. Following the FINA World Championships, Team USA headed to the Pan American Games in hopes of earning an Olympic Berth. The Senior National team went on to compete in the 2004 Athens Olympics, placing third.

photo by Donald Miralle

Amber Stachowski competed in Athens in 2004

29


CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY

1996 National Champions (29-1, 7-0 MPSF), Head Coach: Guy Baker

In only the second year of existence, UCLA women’s water polo captured the National Collegiate Championship, making Bruin water polo the first water polo program to win national titles in both men’s and women’s competition. Under the guidance of head coach Guy Baker, the Bruins lost only one game during the 1996 campaign, an 8-7 heartbreaker to California in the championship game of the Western Regional Qualification Tournament. But the Bruins turned the tables on the Golden Bears in the season’s final match and handed Cal an 8-4 defeat for the national title. Goals were scored by Jennifer McFerrin (3), Catharine von Schwarz (2), Megan Oesting, Coralie Simmons, and Katie Tenenbaum. Goalkeeper Nicolle Payne pulled down 15 of Cal’s shots on goal.

1997 National Champions (31-1, 6-0 MPSF), Head Coach: Guy Baker The Bruins brought home their second consecutive national championship and gave head coach Guy Baker four titles in a row (men’s 1995, women’s 1996, men’s 1996, women’s 1997). UCLA lost just one game throughout the entire season, a 4-3 heartbreaker at the hands of California in the third game of the season. The Bruins stormed through the rest of the spring, loggin a 29-game win streak. UCLA captured their second title in a row with a 6-3 victory over California. The title did not come easily, as the Bruins held on to a shaky 3-2 lead heading into the final quarter of play. But UCLA outscored Cal, 3-1, in the final seven minutes, ensuring both the national championship. Payne saved 11 attempts and earned her second consecutive Most Valuable Tournament Goalkeeper award. Goals were netted by Amanda Gall (2), Coralie Simmons (2), Serela Mansur, and Katie Tenenbaum.

1998 National Champions (35-1, 9-0 MPSF), Head Coach: Guy Baker In their fourth year of varsity status, the Bruins took home a third consecutive national title under head coach Guy Baker. UCLA lost only one game the entire season to top-ranked Cal in the first place match of the Santa Barbara Tournament. But the defeat would not go unanswered, as the Bruins would defeat the Golden Bears 7-3 in the national championship match. While Cal was held scoreless for two quarters, the Bruins came on strong, notching at least one goal every quarter. In Payne’s last match as a Bruin, the goalkeeper recorded 13 saves and was named Tournament MVP. Goals were scored by Coralie Simmons (3), Robin Beauregard, Amanda Gall, Erin Golaboski, and Catharine von Schwarz.

2000 National Champions (30-5, 8-1 MPSF), Head Coaches: Guy Baker, Adam Krikorian The 2000 season brought the Bruins back to championship status after a one-year hiatus in 1999. Sparked by the return of Catharine von Schwarz from the U.S. National Team, the Bruins finished 30-5 (8-1 MPSF) and won their fourth national championship in five years. The championship was the first under new head coach Adam Krikorian, who took over full time after the 1998 season. In the title game of the 2000 Collegiate Nationals, UCLA downed defending champion USC, 11-4. The Bruins jumped out to a 3-1 first quarter lead and never looked back. Catharine von Schwarz netted a hat trick and became the first UCLA female student-athlete to win four team championships. Elaine Zivich added a goal and was named Tournament MVP. Goals were also scored by Kelly Heuchan (2), Serela Kay, Jenny Lamb, Jessica Lopez, Eleanor Murphy and Ashley Stachowski. Goalkeeper Jaime Hipp grabbed 10 saves to secure the victory for the Bruins.

2001 NCAA Champions (18-4, 9-1 MPSF), Head Coach: Adam Krikorian The Bruins captured the inaugural NCAA women’s water polo title in 2001. Seniors Coralie Simmons and Kristin Guerin led the Bruins to their fourth title in five years. Throughout the season, UCLA dominated opponents, posting an 18-4 overall record and going 9-1 in MPSF action. The Stanford Cardinal proved to be the toughest challenge for the Bruins, handing them each of the four losses, including an 8-5 loss in the MPSF Championship game. UCLA rebounded from the loss at the MPSF Championships to defeat Loyola Marymount 11-1 in the NCAA semifinal match. In the title game, UCLA defeated Stanford 5-4. The win came off of a Coralie Simmons goal with 1:28 remaining in the game. Goals were scored by Simmons (2), Robin Beauregard, Kelly Heuchan, and Ashley Stachowski. Jaime Hipp recorded six saves. For her efforts, Simmons received MVP honors and was joined on the All-Tournament team by Beauregard, Heuchan, Hipp, Kristin Guerin, Jenny Lamb, and Elaine Zivich.

2003 NCAA Champions (23-4, 8-2 MPSF), Head Coach: Adam Krikorian The Bruins continued their championship tradition by taking the 2003 NCAA Championship. All-Americans Robin Beauregard and Jamie Hipp provided veteran leadership as head coach Adam Krikorian won his third national championship. UCLA posted an overall record of 23-4, including an 8-2 MPSF mark. Ranked No. 1 nationally entering the MPSF Tournament, the Bruins picked up a No. 3 seed due to losses to Stanford and USC. The Bruins easily dispatched Hawaii before narrowly defeating USC, 7-6, in sudden-victory overtime. In the MPSF title match, UCLA fell to Stanford. The Bruins earned an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, where they defeated Loyola Marymount in the semifinals. UCLA advanced to the championship game against Stanford for the third consecutive time. The Bruins fell behind 2-0 at halftime, but stormed back with four straight goals to win the match, 4-3, and capture the NCAA Championship. Goals were scored by Jessica Lopez, Kelly Rulon, Lauren Heineck, and Robin Beauregard, and Jaime Hipp finished with six saves. Senior Robin Beauregard was named Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA Touranment.

30


CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY

2005 NCAA Champions (33-0, 12-0 MPSF), Head Coach: Adam Krikorian UCLA’s 2005 squad enjoyed what was considered by many at the time to be the greatest season in collegiate women’s water polo history. Led by Cutino Award winner Natalie Golda, the Bruins posted a perfect 33-0 mark to win the NCAA Championship. UCLA’s 33-0 record marked the best NCAA finish and longest single-season winning streak. The team outscored its opponents 394-134, and 121 -31 in the first quarter. Few teams held their ground against UCLA in the first quarter, much less the entire game. This championship team started three Olympians – Natalie Golda, Kelly Rulon, and Thalia Munro. The Bruins entered the NCAA Tournament ast he No. 1 seed at the University of Michigan’s Canham Natatorium. After defeating Wagner in their first match, the Bruins downed Hawai’i, 7-6, in the semifinals. Kristina Kunkel scored the winning goal with 1:43 left in the fourth quarter. UCLA concluded its remarkable season by winning the 2005 NCAA Championship, defeating third-seeded Stanford, 3-2. UCLA led the entire way against the Cardinal, as Brittany Rowe led the Bruins with two goals in that game.

2006 NCAA Champions (29-4, 11-1 MPSF), Head Coach: Adam Krikorian The 2006 Bruins returned nearly every player aside from Natalie Golda, the 2005 Cutino Award winner who helped lead UCLA to a 33-0 record in 2005. The Bruins had the talent, experience, and determination necessary to win their second consecutive NCAA title, their fourth in the last six seasons. While not nearly as dominant as the 2005 version, the 2006 women’s water polo team outscored its opponents by a 369134 margin. UCLA allowed just 4.1 goals per game, the best average in the nation. The Bruins finished their 2006 campaign with a 29-4 overall record and an 11-1 MPSF mark. UCLA earned the No. 3 seed entering the NCAA Tournament at UC Davis. In game one, UCLA dispatched No. 6 seed Hartwick College, 15-2. Then next day, goalkeeper Emily Feher made nine saves in the cage and Kelly Rulon added three goals to lead UCAL past Stanford, 8-5, in both teams’ fourth meeting of the spring. UCLA concluded its stellar season in the most exciting fashion. Sophomore Courtney Mathewson’s last-second five-meter shot found the back of the cage, handing UCLA a 9-8 victory and their second NCAA title in as many seasons.

2007 NCAA Champions (28-2, 11-1 MPSF), Head Coach: Adam Krikorian UCLA’s 2007 squad will be most remembered as the team that won UCLA’s 100th NCAA team championship. The women’s water polo team initiated the “race” to 100 when the Bruins captured the 2006 NCAA title. Equally impressive, the Bruins’ 2007 title marked the program’s third consecutive NCAA Championship. Led by seniors Molly Cahill, Emily Feher, Kacy Kunkel and Kelly Rulon, the 2007 team had little trouble taking care of business. UCLA suffered two regular-season losses to Stanford, but defeated the Cardinal when it mattered most. The Bruins downed Long Beach State on the first day of the MPSF Tournament before edging USC, 10-9, in the semifinals. UCLA punched its ticket to the NCAA Tournament with a 9-3 rout of Stanford. After a 22-0 victory over Pomona-Pitzer in round one, the Bruins defeated USC, 7-6, to set up a pivotal rematch with Stanford in the NCAA Championship. UCLA built a 4-1 lead after three quarters and held off a furious Stanford rally to win, 5-4. Along the way in 2007, senior Kelly Rulon broke the UCLA career scoring record, totaling 237 goals.

2008 NCAA Champions (33-0, 12-0 MPSF), Head Coach: Adam Krikorian For the second time in four years, the UCLA women’s water polo team posted a perfect 33-0 record en route to capturing the NCAA Championship. Duplicating the Bruins’ perfect record from 2005, UCLA secured the 2008 NCAA title with a 6-3 victory over crosstown rival USC. Seniors Kamaile Crowell, Gabrielle Domanic, Jillian Kraus, Courtney Mathewson and Brittany Rowe became the first female student-athletes in school history to capture four NCAA titles in four seasons. Kraus and Mathewson earned Co-MPSF Player of the Year honors by season’s end, and Mathewson was the recipient of the Peter J. Cutino Award, the sport’s most prestigious honor bestowed upon the top male and female player. In his 10th season at the helm, head coach Adam Krikorian earned ACWPC Coach of the Year accolades for the fourth consecutive season, and Mathewson captured ACWPC Player of the Year honors. Aside from the leadership of UCLA’s five seniors, the Bruins received substantial contributions from juniors Brittany Fullen, Anne Belden, Katie Rulon and Tanya Gandy. Fullen finished her junior campaign having started as the goalkeeper in all 33 matches and totaled a school single-season record 237 saves.

2009 NCAA Champions (25-6, 5-2 MPSF), Head Coach: Adam Krikorian UCLA won its fifth consecutive NCAA title in 2009, and may have done so in the most improbable of fashions. The Bruins downed crosstown rival USC by a 5-4 margin in the title match, but did not score any goals in the second half. Playing lockdown defense against a USC squad that UCLA had yet to beat in two previous meetings, the Bruins prevailed behind the stellar play of senior goalkeeper Brittany Fullen (12 saves). One day earlier, the Bruins won an equally thrilling contest, using a last-second goal from sophomore Megan Burmeister to edge Stanford by a 12-11 margin. UCLA entered its 2009 campaign riding a 41-game win streak before losing six games throughout the year. In his final season as the women’s water polo team’s head coach, Adam Krikorian made his the Bruins peaked at the right time of the season. Senior Tanya Gandy was named the NCAA Division I Player of the Year at season’s end, having shattered UCLA’s single-season scoring record with 79 goals. Fellow seniors Anne Belden, Katie Rulon and Fullen were named All-NCAA Tournament Team selections in addition to earning second-team All-America honors.

31


NCAA TOURNAMENT HISTORY 1995

2005 (1st)

San Diego State 7, UCLA 4 Slippery Rock 9, UCLA 7 UCLA 14, Harvard 1 UCLA 9, Maryland 2 UCLA 7, Michigan 6 (3OT) National Champions: Slippery Rock (PA)

UCLA 22, Wagner 2 UCLA 7, Hawai’i 6 UCLA 3, Stanford 2 NCAA Champions: UCLA

1996 (1st) UCLA 13, Maryland 1 UCLA 9, UC Santa Barbara 1 UCLA 8, Stanford 1 UCLA 12, San Diego State 6 UCLA 8, California 4 National Champions: UCLA

1997 (1st) UCLA 9, UC San Diego 1 UCLA 10, Maryland 0 UCLA 10, San Diego State 3 UCLA 6, California 3 National Champions: UCLA

1998 (1st) UCLA 15, Maryland 1 UCLA 11, UC Santa Barbara 5 UCLA 10, Hawai’i 3 UCLA 7, California 3 National Champions: UCLA

1999 (3rd) UCLA 12, Maryland 2 UCLA 7, Hawai’i 1 USC 5, UCLA 4 UCLA 6, California 5 (SV-OT) National Champions: USC

2000 (1st) UCLA 15, Michigan 2 UCLA 15, UC Davis 2 UCLA 5, California 3 UCLA 11, USC 4 National Champions: UCLA

2001 (1st) UCLA 11, Loyola Marymount 1 UCLA 5, Stanford 4 NCAA Champions: UCLA

2002 (2nd) UCLA 12, Loyola Marymount 2 Stanford 8, UCLA 4 NCAA Champions: Stanford

2006 (1st) UCLA 15, Hartwick 2 UCLA 8, Stanford 5 UCLA 9, USC 8 NCAA Champions: UCLA

2007 (1st) UCLA 22, Pomona-Pitzer 0 UCLA 7, USC 6 UCLA 5, Stanford 4 NCAA Champions: UCLA

2008 (1st) UCLA 19, Pomona-Pitzer 6 UCLA 11, UC Davis 4 UCLA 6, USC 3 NCAA Champions: UCLA

2003 NCAA CHAMPIONS

All-National Championship Tournament Team Selections

2009 (1st) UCLA 13, Michigan 6 UCLA 12, Stanford 11 UCLA 5, USC 4 NCAA Champions: UCLA

2010 (5th) Loyola Marymount 5, UCLA 4 UCLA 14, Marist 3 UCLA 9, Michigan 6 NCAA Champions: USC Note: From 2001 through 2003, the NCAA Tournament comprised four teams. Since 2004, the NCAA Tournament has comprised eight teams. Women’s water polo was not an NCAA sport until the 2001 season.

TOURNAMENT TOTALS Total Tournament Appearances NCAA Tournament Appearances Total Won-Lost Record NCAA Won-Lost Record Total National Championships NCAA Championships 2nd Place Finishes 3rd Place Finishes Total Goals Scored Total Goals Allowed NCAA Tournament Goals Scored NCAA Tournament Goals Allowed

16 9 45-5 22-2 11 7 1 1 479 184 219 103

2003 (1st) UCLA 8, Loyola Marymount 2 UCLA 4, Stanford 3 NCAA Champions: UCLA

Robin Beauregard Anne Belden KK Clark Emily Feher Maureen Flanagan Brittany Fullen Amanda Gall Tanya Gandy Natalie Golda Kristin Guerin Kelly Heuchan Jaime Hipp Jillian Kraus Kacy Kunkel Jenny Lamb Jessica Lopez Courtney Mathewson Jennifer McFerrin Thalia Munro Stephanie Natcher Nicolle Payne Brittany Rowe Katie Rulon Kelly Rulon Coralie Simmons Amber Stachowski Katie Tenenbaum Catharine von Schwarz Elaine Zivich

1998, 2001, 2002, 2003^ 2008, 2009 2010 2005, 2006, 2007 2003 2008, 2009 1998 2008^, 2009^ 2002, 2003, 2005^ 2001 2001 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 2007, 2008 2006, 2007 1999, 2001 2000, 2003 2007, 2008 1996 2002, 2005, 2006 1995 1995, 1996@, 1997@, 1998 2008 2009 2003, 2005, 2006^, 2007^ 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001^ 2002 1999 1996, 1997, 2000 1999, 2000^, 2001

Tournaments from 1995-2000 were not NCAA affiliated ^ Tournament most valuable player @ Tournament most valuable goalkeeper

2005 NCAA CHAMPIONS

32


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South Bay Daily Breeze 5215 Torrance Blvd. Torrance, CA 90509 310/540-4201, 310/540-3067 (f) www.dailybreeze.com

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Ventura Star 550 Camarillo Center Drive Camarillo, CA 93010 805/437-0275, 805/437-6167 (f) www.venturacountystar.com

UCLA Daily Bruin 308 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90024 310/825-9851, 310/206-0906 (f) www.dailybruin.ucla.edu

NATIONAL PUBLICATIONS

ABC-7 500 Circle Seven Drive Glendale, CA 91201 818/863-7677, 818/863-7889 (f)

Associated Press 221 So. Figueroa, Suite 300 Los Angeles, CA 90012 213/626-1200, 213/346-0200 (f) www.ap.org

KTLA (Ch. 5) 5800 Sunset Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90028 323/460-5907, 323/460-5333 (f)

USA Today 10866 Wilshire Blvd., #890 Los Angeles, CA 90024 310/882-2400, 310/882-1901 (f) www.usatoday.com

KCAL (Ch. 9) 4200 Radford Ave. Studio City, CA 91604 818/655-2400, 818/655-2221 (f)

TELEVISION

KTTV (Ch. 11), KCOP (Ch. 13)

CBS-2

1999 S. Bundy Drive Los Angeles, CA 90025-5235 310/584-2030, 310/584-2450 (f)

4200 Radford Ave. Studio City, CA 91604 818/655-2400, 818/655-2221 (f)

FS West, Prime Ticket 1150 South Olive, Suite 350 Los Angeles, CA 90015 213/743-7800, 213/763-4633 (f)

NBC-4 3000 W. Alameda Ave. Burbank, CA 91523 818/840-4237, 818/840-3535 (f)

ESPN ESPN Plaza Bristol, CT 06010 860/766-2000

RADIO STATIONS KLAC Sports 570 3400 W. Olive Ave. #550 Burbank, CA 91505 818/559-2252, 818/566-6105 (f)

uclaradio.com 308 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90024 (UCLA Student Station) 310/825-9104

Press Credentials Media and photography credentials for UCLA home matches may be obtained by working press only by e-mailing or calling Alex Timiraos (phone: 310-206-0524, e-mail: atimiraos@athletics.ucla. edu). All requests should be submitted at least 24 hours in advance.

Photography Television and photo credentials entitle video and still photographers to shoot from designated areas only. Please consult with Sports Information or Event Management staff for those locations.

Interview Policies All interviews must be arranged by UCLA’s Sports Information Office. Please do not expect players to be available if you have not made prior arrangements with the Sports Information Office (men’s water polo SID Alex Timiraos).

Interview Availability The UCLA team practices Monday through Friday from 4-7 p.m. at Spieker Aquatics Center. Players and coaches are available before or after practice. Arrangements for pool access must be made in advance with the Sports Information Office. The best time to reach head coach Adam Wright is weekday mornings.

Travel Information For security purposes, the UCLA does not release to the general public any travel information for UCLA athletic teams. If you would like to reach a member of the UCLA water polo team on the road, please contact the Sports Information Office.

UCLA celebrates winning the 2009 NCAA Championship against USC.

33


UCLA ADMINISTRATION Chancellor Block holds UCLA faculty appointments in psychiatry and bio-behavioral sciences in the David Geffen School of Medicine and in physiological science in the College of Letters and Science. He also heads a research laboratory on campus that is funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

gene

BLOCK

Previously, he served as vice president and provost of the University of Virginia. He holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Stanford University and a master’s and Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Oregon.

CHANCELLOR • 4th Year Alma Mater: Stanford ’70

Chancellor Block and his wife, Carol, have two adult children. The Blocks are avid Bruin fans and attend the competitions of various Bruin athletic programs.

Dr. Gene Block became chancellor of UCLA in August 2007. As chief executive officer, he oversees all aspects of the university’s three-part mission of education, research and service. A champion of public universities, Chancellor Block has set four major priorities for UCLA during his administration: academic excellence, diversity, civic engagement and financial security. He has called for UCLA to deepen its engagement with the Los Angeles region and to increase access for students from underrepresented populations.

dan

GUERRERO ATHLETIC DIRECTOR • 9th Year Alma Mater: UCLA ’74 In eight years as UCLA’s Director of Athletics, Daniel G. Guerrero has boldly placed his imprint on the school’s highly-successful athletic program. Guerrero, one of the most respected and talented administrators in intercollegiate athletics, has placed his mark on the program as the director of athletics at UCLA. He is currently serving as president of the Division I Athletic Directors Association. In addition, he is the first vice-president of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) and a member of the NACDA Executive Committee. This past June, Guerrero competed a five-year term on the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee. In addition, he serves on the NACDA Executive Committee and is also on the executive board of the Division I Athletic Directors Association. In June of 2007, he was named NACDA Division I West Region Athletic Director of the Year.

In his first eight years, Guerrero has clearly established a pattern of “image and substance” that few in his profession can match. UCLA stands as the No. 1 University in the nation for NCAA team championships (106) won, a number that continues to grow under his direction. In those eight years, UCLA teams have won 20 NCAA team titles (the highest total in the nation in that span) in 11 different sports, finished second 16 times and have had an additional 28 Top Five finishes. A staggering 152 teams (of 184 possible) have qualified for NCAA postseason competition and the football team has appeared in seven bowl games. The program has also won 45 conference championships in 15 different sports, produced 400 All-Americans and featured four Honda Award winners, including the 2003-04 Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year. Guerrero came to UCLA in 2002 from UC Irvine, where he had served as UCI’s fifth Director of Athletics for 10 years. Prior to arriving at UC Irvine, he was the Athletic Director for five years at Cal State Dominguez Hills (1988-92). He received his Bachelor’s degree from UCLA in 1974 and played second base in the Bruin baseball program for four years. Born on November 10, 1951 in Tucson, AZ, he is married to the former Anne Marie Aniello and they have two daughters: Jenna and Katie.

Weiner is responsible for major capital improvements for Athletics. Project include the renovated J.D. Morgan Intercollegiate Athletics Center and Acosta Student Athlete Training Center and Knapp Football Center, the new Hall of Fame, the Jackie Robinson baseball and Easton softball clubhouse construction and stadium renovations, the Drake Track/Marshall Field renovation, a new golf practice facility, Pauley Pavilion interior upgrades and the North soccer field construction. Future projects include a major renovation of the historic Pauley Pavilion, upgrade of the baseball stadium clubhouse and practice facilities and construction of a new Academic Studies Center.

ken

WEINER SR. ASSOC. ATH. DIRECTOR • 17th Year Alma Mater: UCLA ’78 Ken Weiner enters his 17th year overseeing the business operations for the UCLA Athletic Department and is in his 31st year overall with the university. His duties include the administration and supervision of six Bruin sport programs, including baseball, men’s and women’s soccer, women’s swimming and diving, and men’s and women’s water polo. During his tenure at UCLA Athletics, his sports have garnered 14 national championships and numerous conference championship titles. He also oversees new business and project development, and capital improvements for the department.

Weiner is a member of NACDA and IAAM. He has served on various committees for the NCAA, most recently as chairman of the Men’s Water Polo Committee. Prior to his appointment at UCLA Athletics, Weiner co-founded and served as Associate Director of the UCLA Central Ticket Office and continues to serve as the liaison between the Athletic Department and the CTO. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from UCLA in 1978. He and his wife, Caren, have two children, Nicole, 23, and Kevin, 20.

Weiner spearheaded the negotiations that resulted in a 20-year agreement between UCLA and the Rose Bowl, including much needed facilities improvements for the football program. In addition, he supervises the athletic facilities division, the operations of UCLA’s sports practice and competition venues, game and event operations, department and team travel and UCLA Camps and Clinics.

34


Nation’s #1 Overall College Experience 10 SIGNIFICANT Reasons to Attend UCLA 1. #1 in NCAA Titles (106) 1st ever to reach the 100 title milestone; 20 NCAA Titles in the last 8 years (#1 nationally) since Dan Guerrero became UCLA Athletic Director; #1 in Olympians and Olympic Gold Medals from 1984-2008; leader in producing professional athletes; nation’s finest overall combined academic, athletic and career resources for student-athletes; the best is possible at UCLA!

2. Prestigious Academic Degree / A National Leader in Producing Top Students Ranked in the top ten among universities in most academic surveys; professional schools ranked among top five in most areas and top ten in others; #1 in the nation for undergraduate student applications every year since 1999; among all-time leaders in producing NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship winners; #1 in Kaplan Report survey of student resources for the college experience

3. Highest Quality of Life/Best Place to Live Best in West and #2 overall public university in ‘Princeton Review’ in on-campus housing options and dorm food; 334 sunshine days a year; average year-round temperature of 74 degrees F.; 5 miles from the beach; thriving campus community of Westwood as part of UCLA; surrounded by Bel Air, Beverly Hills, Century City, Brentwood, and Santa Monica

4. World Class Facilities Historic Pauley Pavilion; the Rose Bowl (SI’s #1 venue of all college sites); Los Angeles Tennis Center; Drake Stadium for track & soccer; Jackie Robinson Stadium; Easton Stadium; the new Spieker Aquatic Center; Sunset Canyon Recreation Center; numerous championship golf courses; on-campus golf practice facility; Acosta Athletic Training Complex for the best in sports medicine, athletic performance, and finest training equipment

5. Legendary Coaching, Tremendous Sport Stability, Consistently Training Winners UCLA has Olympic, National and USA Team coaches on its staff and individuals who have trained at the highest level and know how to win! No university can match UCLA’s coaching stability in that only one Bruin head coach has left for another Division I head coaching position over the past 40 years

6. Exceptional Academic Support for All Student-Athletes 12 full-time staff working in academic and student services. This includes academic counseling, learning specialist, life skills coordinator, priority pre-enrollment in classes, academic mentors, individual and group tutoring, academic awards banquet, lecture notes, laptop lending program and career guidance

7. Your Future at the Highest Level USA’s #1 Career Center for full-time, part-time or internship positions; average personal income for a UCLA graduate is $77,500; average home value for UCLA grads is over $500,000; the UCLA degree means success across the world

8. Complete National Sports Media Coverage/ L.A. is the Place More overall national, regional and local television team exposure than any other college in the nation; numerous daily newspapers; #1 in former student-athletes and students in sportscasting, news broadcasting, sports writing, acting, etc. to act as contacts for current athletes; #1 in Sports Illustrated cover appearances; Major media outlets like ESPN, Fox Sports and USA Today have offices in L.A.

9. Nation’s #1 Tradition of Athletic Excellence With Historic Long-Term Success Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Troy Aikman, Arthur Ashe, Lauren Cheney, Jimmy Connors, Lisa Fernandez, Troy Glaus, Natalie Golda, Rafer Johnson, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Karch Kiraly, Liz Masakayan, Ann Meyers, Jonathan Ogden, Corey Pavin, Jackie Robinson, Al Scates, Sharon Shapiro, Chase Utley, Bill Walton, and John Wooden are just a few of the most significant people that have attended/coached at UCLA. UCLA is the #1 school world-wide in name recognition

10. UCLA Intangibles/Best College Location UCLA’s overall success combining prestigious academics, top athletic finishes and tremendous social life cannot be matched by any other university. UCLA has great resources available on a daily basis for our studentathletes to be the best in any area they select. UCLA’s axiom is Champions Made Here!

Web Site: UCLABruins.com   Facebook: facebook.com/uclaathletics   Twitter: twitter.com/UCLAAthletics


UCLA Top National, International Sports Power NCAA Division I Team Championships by School (Through Spring 2010)   School

Men

Women

Total

1.

UCLA

71

35

106

2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

Stanford USC Oklahoma St. Arkansas LSU Texas Penn State No. Carolina Michigan

60 77 49 43 17 18 29 10 31

39 14 0 0 25 22 9 26 2

99 91 49 43 42 40 38 36 33

Top Countries in Olympic Gold Medals (1984-2008) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 6.

USA USSR/Russia China Germany UCLA Athletes Italy Australia

UCLA’s Hall of Champions includes NCAA titles in 17 different sports among its nation-leading 106 total. Since Dan Guerrero became Athletic Director in 2002-03, UCLA has won a nationleading 20 NCAA crowns over the past 8 years.

UCLA #1 for Overall Program Awards (men began in 1971; women in 1977; combined in 1993; NACDA in 1994)   School

#1 Titles

1. UCLA

UCLA’s Previous National Finishes in Overall Athletic Program Surveys FIRST PLACE FINISHES: Men: 1973, 76, 78, 79, 81, 83, 86, 87, 88, 89, 92 Women: 1978, 79, 80, 81, 82, 85, 88, 89, 90, 91

2. Stanford 20 3. Texas 8 4. USC 6 5. No. Carolina, 1 Michigan, Arkansas, Arizona St.

SECOND PLACE FINISHES: Men: 1971, 72, 74, 75, 77, 80, 82 Women: 1977. 83, 84, 86, 87, 92, 93 OTHER PLACES: Men: 4th 84; 3rd 85; 6th 90; 10th 91; 5th 93 COMBINED FINISHES: First: 1993 Second: 1996, 2000, 2001, 2006, 2007, 2008 Third: 1994, 95, 97, 2004, 2005 Fourth: 1998, 2010 Fifth: 1999, 2002 Sixth: 2003

2 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

22

NCAA Titles Since 2002-03 School

#1 Titles Won

1. UCLA

20

2. Stanford

18

3. USC

14

4. Auburn

11

5. Penn State

9

6. Georgia

8

6. North Carolina

8

NACDA Director’s Cup Athletic Program Overall Rankings (1994-2010) (Schools ranked in the top 6 every year of the athletic poll)   School

Years Ranked Top 6 Nationally

1. Stanford

17

2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 8. 8.

16 13 12 10 7 5 3 3 3

UCLA Florida Michigan No. Carolina Texas Arizona Georgia USC Virginia

Only 23 schools have ever been ranked in top ten of the survey—other schools are Duke, Arizona State, Washington, Minnesota, Notre Dame, Florida State and Texas A&M.


2010 Women’s Gymnastics

WOMEN’S Additional Titles: Golf – 1971; Crew – 1974; Volleyball – 1972, 1974, 1975; Track & Field – 1975, 1977; Badminton – 1977; Basketball – 1978; Softball – 1978; Tennis – 1981; Water Polo – 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000

2010 Women’s Softball

3 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


UCLA: Simply The Best Overall! UCLA ‘Most Complete’ Athletic Program

UCLA ‘Most Interesting College’

From Sports Illustrated on Campus in, April 2005: “UCLA has the most complete athletic program in the country.”

The 2003 Kaplan Publication on ‘Most Interesting Colleges’, has UCLA #1 overall blending their 6 categories of Academic Facilities, Freshman Housing, Career Services, Highest Academic Standards, Hot & Trendy Universities and Best Value.

Bruin Weather Helps Athletic Success US Weather Service records for the Westwood area indicate the UCLA campus averages 334 ‘Sun Days’ a year with an average year round temperature of 74 degrees.

‘Dream College’ Where Parents & Students Want to Attend The 2010 Princeton Review survey of parents and future college students had UCLA ranked #6 nationally by parents and #7 by students as their ‘Dream College’ to attend. UCLA was the only public university in the top 10.

UCLA ‘Most Popular’ College for Applications UCLA continues as the ‘Most Popular’ college for students to apply for admission in the 21st century. UCLA annually receives over 50,000 applications for 5,000 admission spots. It has been that way every year since 1999.

UCLA ‘Hottest University’ to Attend Newsweek ’08 College Guide: UCLA is selected as the ‘Hottest University’ to attend in the major college category.

UCLA One of 25 ‘New Ivies’ Newsweek magazine article in 2006 on the 25 ‘New Ivies’ among colleges: “The nation’s elite colleges include more than the top Ivies. A range of schools are getting fresh bragging rights like UCLA.”

UCLA Campus Receives Most Media Attention Scenic parts of the UCLA campus are utilized for more movies, television shows, and commercials than any other college. The UCLA name appears daily in more publications than any other school according to Newswatch Magazine.

4 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

UCLA #1 Hospital in West Since 1989 UCLA was ranked #5 overall and again #1 in the West (every year since 1989) by U.S. News. The Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, which opened in 2008, is a one million square foot facility. It has been labeled as ‘the hospital of the future.’

UCLA #1 in Female ‘Athlete of the Year’ Awards UCLA is #1 all-time in women’s collegiate history in Honda-Broderick Female Athlete of the Year Awards. Ann Meyers, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Lisa Fernandez and Natasha Watley have all won from UCLA.

‘Public Good’ and ‘Eco-Friendly’ National Leader Washington Monthly Magazine for 2010 rated UCLA #3 nationally among colleges in its contributions to the nation’s ‘Public Good’ through Service, Social Mobility, and Research. The Sierra Club’s 2010 list of top colleges committed to advancing sustainability on their campuses had UCLA #9 overall in having an ‘eco-friendly’ environment.

UCLA ‘Coolest’ School to Experience Seventeen Magazine ranked UCLA as one of the ’10 coolest schools’ where you can get the best college experience. The criteria included professor’s involvement, great shopping, campus safety and parties.

UCLA Has #1 Career Center Business Week magazine has ranked the UCLA Career Center as #1 in the nation when blending opportunities for students for internships, parttime work, full-time jobs, and other needed services to prepare a person for today’s job market.


5 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


UCLA: A Prestigious & Influential University UCLA ranks as one of the Top Ten Universities according

to the American Council of Education and Gourman Report of national educational ratings.

UCLA Ranks in the Top Ten Academic Departments among all American Universities Anthropology Applied Science j Art & Design j Asian Studies j Bacteriology/Microbiology j Biochemistry j Biology j Chemistry j Economics/Business j Engineering/ Computer Science j French j Geography j Geology j German

Linguistics Music j Philosophy j Physiology j Physiological Science j Pre-Business Education j Pre-Education Field j Pre-Legal Education j Pre-Medical Education j Psychology j Sociology j Spanish j Theater Arts/ Communications

j

j

j

j

Kaplan Survey of 320 Most Interesting Colleges (Based on academic facilities, housing, career services, value, highest academic standards & being trendy)

1. UCLA* 2. Stanford 3. Texas A & M 4. Texas 5. Penn State *UCLA was the only institution ranked in the top 15 in all six categories

“Leading Universities” in terms of influence, according to CHANGE Magazine • UCLA • Chicago University • Columbia University • Harvard University • Michigan University • MIT • Stanford University • UC Berkeley • Virginia University

UCLA Ranked among Top Ten Professional Schools—Cartier Report (alphabetical order after UCLA) Business Schools UCLA Carnegie–Mellon University Chicago University Cornell University Harvard University MIT Northwestern University Pennsylvania University Stanford University UC Berkeley

Medicine UCLA Columbia University Cornell University Harvard University Illinois University John Hopkins University Michigan University Stanford University UC Berkeley Yale University

School of Education UCLA Chicago University Columbia University Harvard University Michigan University Pennsylvania University Stanford University UC Berkeley Wisconsin University Yale University

Law Schools UCLA Chicago University Columbia University Harvard University Michigan University Pennsylvania University Stanford University UC Berkeley Virginia University Yale University

Quality Institutions UCLA Chicago University Cornell University Harvard University Michigan University Princeton University Stanford University UC Berkeley Wisconsin University Yale University

CURRICULUM UCLA Chicago University Harvard University Michigan University Pennsylvania University Princeton University Stanford University UC Berkeley Wisconsin University Yale University

6 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


UCLA-NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners (65)

Elisabeth Bachman Volleyball, 2001

Kate Richardson Gymnastics, 2005

Chris Joseph Football, 2008

Drew Shackleton Track/CC, 2009

Kyle Shackleton Track/CC, 2009

NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners (65) Football (17) 1966-67 Ray Armstrong* 1966-67 Dallas Grider 1969-70 Greg Jones 1973-74 Steve Klosterman 1975-76 John Sciarra 1976-77 Jeff Dankworth 1977-78 John Fowler 1982-83 Cormac Carney 1983-84 Rick Neuheisel 1985-86 Mike Hartmeier 1989-90 Rick Meyer 1992-93 Carlton Gray 1995-96 George Kase 1998-99 Chris Sailer Shawn Stuart 1999-00 Danny Farmer 2007-08 Chris Joseph

Men’s Basketball (5) 1968-69 Kenny Heitz 1970-71 Terry Schofield 1979-80 Kiki Vandeweghe 1992-93 Richard Petruska 1994-95 George Zidek*

Men’s Gymnastics (1) 1991-92 Scott Keswick

Men’s Track and Field (5) 1977-78 Willie Banks 1994-95 John Godina 1997-98 Josh Johnson 2008-09 Drew & Kyle Shackleton

Men’s Soccer (1) 1997-98 Josh Keller

Men’s Swimming (8) 1975-76 Tim McDonnell 1978-79 Dan Stephenson 1984-85 Bruce Hayes 1984-85 Pat Thomas 1985-86 Steve Martz 1986-87 Brian Jones 1991-92 Andrea Cecchi 1992-93 David Fleck (diving) Men’s Tennis (1) 1995-96 Srdjan Muskatirovic

ESPN The Magazine All-American Hall of Fame (7) 1988 1990 1994 1994 1999 2005 2009

Donn Moomaw, FB Jamaal Wilkes, BB Bill Walton, BB Coach John Wooden, BB John Fowler, BB Cormac Carney, FB Karch Kiraly, VB

NCAA Silver Anniversary Award (8) 1978 Rev. Donn Moomaw, Football ‘53 1981 Willie Naulls, Basketball ‘56 1994 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Basketball ‘69 1999 Bill Walton, Basketball ‘74 2003 Ann Meyers, Basketball ‘78 2008 Dot Richardson, Softball, ’82 Cormac Carney, Football, ’82 2010 Jackie Joyner-Kersee, BB-Track, ‘85

Men’s Volleyball (4) 1970-71 Ed Machado 1981-82 Karch Kiraly 1986-87 Asbjorn Volstad 1996-97 Trong Nguyen* Men’s Water Polo (4) 1982-83 Brian Black 1995-96 Thomas Wong 1999-00 Parsa Bonderson 2000-01 Sean Kern Women’s Basketball (1) 1985-86 Anne Dean Women’s Golf (1) 1985-86 Kay Cockerill Women’s Gymnastics (4) 1989-90 Jill Andrews 2002-03 Kristin Parker 2002-03 Onnie Willis 2005-06 Kate Richardson

Softball (2) 1992-93 Lisa Fernandez 1994-95 Jennifer Brundage Women’s Swimming (5) 1995-96 Annette Salmeen 1999-00 Keiko Price 2000-01 Brigid Dwyer 2001-02 Katie Younglove 2003-04 Kristen Lewis Women’s Tennis (1) 1983-84 Karen Dewis Women’s Track and Field (3) 1996-97 Amy Acuff 1997-98 Nada Kawar 2006-07 Jacqueline Nguyen Women’s Volleyball (2) 1993-94 Julie Bremner 2000-01 Elisabeth Bachman

*Alternate Selections

Rhodes Scholarships (5)

NCAA Top Eight Award (14)

1925 1962 1969 1996 2008

1975-76 1976-77 1981-82 1982-83 1988-89 1989-90 1992-93 1992-93 1993-94 1993-94 1996-97 2001-02 2003-04 2006-07

John Olmsted, Tennis William Zeltonoga, Wrestling Harold Griffin, Football Annette Salmeen, Swimming Chris Joseph, Football

NCAA Theodore Roosevelt Award (4) 1977 Tom Bradley, Former LA Mayor 1984 Rafer Johnson, Calif. Special Olympics 1996 John Wooden, Former UCLA BB Coach 2003 Donna de Varona, Commission on Title IX

7 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

John Sciarra, FB Jeff Dankworth, FB Karch Kiraly, VB Cormac Carney, FB Carnell Lake, FB Jill Andrews, GYM Carlton Gray, FB Scott Keswick, GYM Lisa Fernandez, SB Julie Bremner, VB Annette Salmeen, SW Stacey Nuveman, SB Onnie Willis, GYM Kate Richardson, GYM


All UCLA head coaches stress involvement with the campus and the community. Whether it’s volunteering at an inner-city youth clinic, speaking to children at elementary and middle schools in the area, or assisting in campus programs such as ‘Marathon Kids’ and ‘I’m Going to College,’ community service is an important aspect of being a Bruin. These outreach opportunities give student-athletes a chance to mentor youth, give back to the community and serve as ambassadors for UCLA Athletics.

Community Outreach Bruin student-athletes, coaches and staff have the opportunity to participate in community service activities on campus and throughout the Los Angeles area. Examples of these events include; • Marathon Kids • Dribble for the Cure • Mattel Children’s Hospital • Elementary/Middle School Visits • Team Prime Time/Prime Time Games • UCLA Lab School Jogathon • I’m Going to College • Adopt a Classroom • Special Requests/Events These outreach opportunities give student-athletes a chance to mentor youth, give back to the community and serve as ambassadors for UCLA Athletics.

8 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

Wooden Academy: Teamwork, Leadership and Character The Wooden Academy is a comprehensive leadership development program designed to educate and support the standards of leadership for Bruin student-athletes. The pillars of the Wooden Academy are teamwork, leadership and character. The program is named after legendary Coach John Wooden, and strives to teach the values and principles of his Pyramid of Success. We believe that these skills will assist student-athletes in their pursuit to be successful leaders and teammates at UCLA, and as they prepare to be champions in life. Student-athletes will have the opportunity to participate in the Wooden Academy each year by attending seminars and learning practical leadership lessons from coaches, administrators and Bruin alumni.


Websites, Quarter System, UCLA Weather UCLA MAIN WEBSITES FOR RECRUITS UCLA Official Sports Site: www.uclabruins.com UCLA Internet Broadcasts: www.uclabruins.com/multimedia/ucla-stretch.html Bruin Cam/Wooden Tribute: http://www.spotlight.ucla.edu/john-wooden http://maps.ucla.edu/camtest.htm?d=d&d=d&d=d&d=d UCLA University Official Site: www.ucla.edu UCLA Facebook Site: http://www.facebook.com/uclaathletics UCLA Sports Nutrition Site: www.fuelingbruins.blogspot.com

UCLA TWITTER SITES UCLA Athletics: http://twitter.com/UCLAAthletics UCLA Football Coach Rick Neuheisel on Twitter: http://twitter.com/CoachNeuheisel UCLA Basketball Coach Ben Howland On Twitter: http://twitter.com/Ben_Howland UCLA Basketball Coach Nikki Caldwell on Twitter: http://twitter.com/NikkiCaldwell UCLA Gymnastics Coach Valorie Kondos Field on Twitter: http://twitter.com/uclagymnastics

Softball won UCLA’s record 106th NCAA Team Title. All student-athletes receive free tickets to UCLA home regular season sports events to support our great teams.

UCLA Academic Quarter System Dates

UCLA Men’s Golf on Twitter: http://twitter.com/UCLA_bruin18

Fall Quarter: Late September-Mid-December

UCLA Women’s Golf On Twitter: http://twitter.com/uclawomensgolf

Spring Quarter: Late March-Mid-June

UCLA Men’s Tennis on Twitter: http://twitter.com/uclatennis

* Quarters are 10 weeks of instruction with a final exam in week 11

UCLA Women’s Tennis on Twitter: http://twitter.com/uclawtennis UCLA Women’s Volleyball on Twitter: http://twitter.com/UCLAWomensVB UCLA Water Polo On Twitter: http://twitter.com/uclawaterpolo

9 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

Winter Quarter: Early January-Mid-March Summer Sessions: Late June-Mid-September

UCLA Weather • 74 degrees average year-round high temperature • 55 degrees average year-round low temperature • 334 average sun days a year


10 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


11 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


The Best On-Campus Housing Options; plus Great Food UCLA On-Campus Housing Options:

The UCLA Residential Community

All include up to 19 meals a week between 7 am and 2 am and student-athletes are guaranteed priority housing all 4 years if they desire A. R esidence Halls (Dykstra, Sproul, Rieber, Hedrick as traditional high-rises) 1. Have separate showers for men and women, community bathrooms, study lounges, and laundry facilities on each floor;

BUILDING TYPES

Residence Halls Residential Plazas Residential Suites Proposed Construction

B. R esidential Plazas (Sunset Village, De Neve, Hedrick Summit, Rieber Terrace and Rieber Vista) 1. Single/double/triple rooms with two shared bathrooms, air conditioning, study space, lounges, laundry;

Scholarship student-athletes are guaranteed a two person dorm room for as long as they want to stay on campus

C. Residential Suites (Hitch, Saxon) 1. Furnished two-bedrooms with own entrance, living room, shared bathroom. Each has its own laundry room and sundeck/recreation area;

Standard On-Campus Housing Amenities: • Basic Cable Television • High Speed Internet

Numerous amenities are available for student-athletes

• Student Technological Center • O vernight Shipping and Full Copying Services • Recreation/Game Rooms • F ree access to basketball, volleyball, pools, tennis • E arly morning/late night restaurants • ‘To-Go’ Meals • Bruin Card Charge Services • Weekly Maid Services

12 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

Student-athletes live in both high rise dorms and apartment-style suites


13 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


The UCLA campus is home to numerous first class facilities for student-athletes of all sports. •  Spaulding Field — practice home for the Bruin football team, features SPRINTURF field, along with one natural grass field •  Rose Gilbert Learning Center — located in the J.D. Morgan Center, has 24 computers and numerous printers for all of the academic needs of student-athletes •  Acosta Center — houses locker rooms, the Athletic Performance Center and Sports Medicine Center •  Easton Stadium — houses the 11-time NCAA Championship softball team •  Drake Stadium & Marshall Field — home to the nationally-ranked soccer and track and field teams •  Jackie Robinson Stadium — home to the Bruin baseball team and was recently renovated with new batting areas and playing surface •  Pauley Pavilion — home to the Bruin basketball, gymnastics and volleyball teams •  Spieker Aquatics Center — opened in the Fall of 2009, this state-of-the-art aquatics center is the home to the water polo and swimming and diving teams •  Gifford Golf Facility — A 3,000 square-foot bermuda bentgrass putting green, greenside/fairway bunker, and a 3,000 square foot tee-box to hit balls onto the field for the golf teams to use.

14 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


15 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


16 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


17 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


UCLA: The #1 Tradition in College Sports

Top Row (L to R) – Reggie Miller, basketball; Troy Aikman, football; Jimmy Connors, tennis; Cobi Jones, soccer; Amy Acuff, track & field. Second Row (L to R) – Troy Glaus, baseball; Liz Masakayan, volleyball; Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, basketball; Florence Griffith-Joyner, track & field; Karch Kiraly, volleyball.

18 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

Third Row (L to R) – Jackie Robinson, football, baseball, track & field and basketball; Lisa Fernandez, softball; Arthur Ashe, tennis; Bill Walton, basketball; Jackie Joyner-Kersee, track & field. Bottom Row (L to R) – Kim Hamilton, gymnastics; John Godina, track & field; Dot Richardson, softball; Denise Curry, basketball; Ken Norton, football.


UCLA Student-Athletes Have Job Market Success

Cormac Carney, Football U.S. District Court Judge

wName, Sport

Position

Gary Beban, Football

Sr. Exec. Dir., CB Richard Ellis

Eric Biefeld, Soccer

Firefighter, La Habra, CA

Pete Blackman, Basketball

UCLA Vice-Chancellor

Bethany Bogart, Soccer

Lawyer, Los Angeles

Ato Boldon, Track & Field

Announcer NBC, Universal Sports

Jamie Brown, Basketball

L.A. County Fire Captain

Cormac Carney, Football

US Dist. Court Judge (So. Calif)

Kay Cockerill, Golf

Golf Analyst, NBC-Golf Channel

Alex Decret, Tennis

Landscape Architect, Los Angeles

Roy Hamilton, Basketball; VP Production, Fox Sports

Maura Driscoll-Farden, Gymnastics Broadcaster Lifetime, USA Network

Ato Boldon, Track & Field Announcer NBC, Universal Sports

Joel Farkas, Golf

Chairman, JF Real Estate Dev.

Lisa Fernandez, Softball

Broadcaster, ESPN; UCLA Coach

Jen Gardner, Softball

Real Estate Attorney, No. Calif.

Roy Hamilton, Basketball

VP of Production, Fox Sports Net

Tim Harris, Soccer

Sr. VP of Business, Los Angeles Lakers

Melanie Hom, Soccer

Ophthalmologist, San Francisco

Tim Kelly, Volleyball

President, Bring It Promotions

Eric Lin, Tennis

Residency, UCLA Medical Center

Ryan McGuire, Baseball

UCLA MBA; Manager, Bus. Dev.

Bob Myers, Basketball

Attorney, Sports Agent for WMG

Heidi Moneymaker, Gymnastics

Hollywood Stunt Woman, TV-Movies

Heath Montgomery, Tennis

Dentist, Santa Barbara, CA

Paul Nihipali, Volleyball

Movie Director, Video Producer

Anita Ortega, Basketball

Captain, Los Angeles Police Dept.

Doug Partie, Volleyball

President, A.B. Technical Systems

Tim Harris, Soccer Los Angeles Lakers VP

James Puffer, Water Polo Exec. Dir. Amer. Family Practice, Louisville

Eric Lin, Tennis Medical Doctor

Paula Rasmussen, Gymnastics

Pediatrician, Cedar-Sinai Med. Ctr.

Jill Ratner, Soccer

VP of Litigation, Fox Broadcasting

Mike Reider, Golf

Sr. VP/Manager, Union Bank of Calif.

Mary Ricks, Softball President; Commercial Real Estate, Beverly Hills Dr. Julie Romias, Volleyball

Doctor, Kaiser, Los Angeles

Sinjin Smith, Volleyball

Broadcaster, Fox Sports Net

Heidi Moneymaker, Gymnastics Movie Stuntwoman

LaRee Sugg, Golf Senior Women’s Admin., Richmond Univ. Tasha Schwikert, Gymnastics ABC Family ‘Make It or Break It’, Sports Broadcasting

Anita Ortega, Basketball LAPD Captain

Stacy Sunny, Softball

Production Manager, Fox Sports Net

Necie Thompson, Basketball

FBI Agent, California

Kevin Walker, Basketball

UCLA MBA; GM Amer. Assoc Hockey

Jeff Williams, Volleyball

Sr. Acct. Executive, EMC Corp.

Chuck White, Golf

Voice-over Actor, Bus. Consultant

Dr. Bryan Wiley, Football

Orthopaedic Surgeon

Joel Wolfe, Baseball

Attorney, Sports Agent for WMG

19 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

Chuck White, Golf Voice-Over Actor


UCLA Alumni Span The World / Job Market A Key List of Significant UCLA Alumni Accomplishments   Name

Sean Astin Samwise Gamgee in “Lord of the Rings” Trilogy

Francis Ford Coppola Six-time Academy Award winner (The Godfather I, II, III)

Carrie Ann Inaba Judge for “Dancing with the Stars’

Gabrielle Union Movie Actress “Bring It On”

Significant Accomplishment

Val Ackerman Former WNBA President; US Olympic Committee Sean Astin Samwise Gamgee in “Lord of the Rings” Trilogy, Actor in other major roles, “24” Catherine Bell Actress; movies and TV Show “Jag”, “Army Wives” Sara Bareilles Singer/Composer; Grammy Nominee for “Love Song” Howard L. Berman Calif. Congressman in U.S. House of Rep. Jack Black Actor; “School of Rock”, “Nacho Libre” Gina Prince-Bythewood Wrote ‘Love & Basketball’, ‘Secret Life of Bees’ Ran track Brooke Burke TV Host; Winner ‘Dancing With the Stars’ Carol Burnett Actress, Emmy Award Winner Nancy Cartwright Voice of Bart Simpson on “The Simpsons” Ted Chen Co-Anchor KNBC “Today in LA” Francis Ford Coppola 6 Academy Awards (The Godfather I, II, III) Marilyn McCoo Davis 7-time Grammy Award winner (Fifth Dimension) Brad Delson Lead Guitarist, ‘Linkin Park’; Multi-Grammy winner Giada DeLaurentis Food Network “Everyday Italian” Rick Dickert Skyfox, Fox-11 Meteorologist, Emmy Winner Brenda Ross Dulan Sr. VP Wells Fargo Bank; Nat. Spokesperson James Franco Actor; “Milk”, “Spiderman”, “Fly Boys” Brad Garrett Won Emmy as Robert in “Everybody Loves Raymond;” 1st Star Search $100,000 winner Mariska Hargitay Actress: “Law & Order”; 2005 Golden Globe winner, Emmy nominee Mark Harmon Actor and Producer; CBS “Navy NCIS”; People Magazine “Man of the Year” Carrie Ann Inaba Choreographer; Judge on “Dancing w/the Stars” Heather Locklear Actress: “Dynasty,” “Melrose Place,” “Spin City” Frank Marshall President of Kennedy-Marshall; helped produce “Indiana Jones” and “Back to the Future” series Megan McArthur Astronaut; Space Shuttle Atlantis Danica McKellar Actress: Winnie in “The Wonder Years;” Featured in TV’s “West Wing;” Published for mathematics research Billy Mills 1st black graduate, UCLA Law School; 1st black elected to L.A. City Council: Superior Court Judge Michael Nash Presiding Judge, L.A. Juvenile Court Michael Ovitz Former CEO, Disney Corporation Kal Penn Obama advisor; actor ‘House’, ‘Harold-Kumar’ Tim Robbins Actor/Producer; 2003 Academy Award winner “Mystic River”; 2003 UCLA Alumnus of the Year Nobutada Saji CEO, Suntory, Ltd.; Int. Businessman Henry Samueli UCLA Samueli Engineering School; Owner 2007 Stanley Cup Champion Anaheim Ducks Darren Star Golden Globe, Emmy nominee as producer of HBO’s “Sex In The City;” Assisted “BH 90210” and “Melrose Place” Robert R. Takasugi Judge, U.S. District Court; 1st JapaneseAmerican appointed Fed. Court Judge Antonio Villaraigosa Mayor of Los Angeles; former Speaker of the California Assembly Gabrielle Union Actress; “Bring It On”, “Breakin’ All the Rules”, “Daddy’s Little Girl”, “Meet Dave” Casey Wasserman President, Owner WMG, Businessman Jaleel White Actor: Urkel in “Family Matters”, Director Jane Yamamoto Newscaster-Field Reporter for Fox News-LA Zev Yaroslavsky Los Angeles County Supervisor, 3rd District

20 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

Kal Penn Obama Advisor, Actor

Mark Harmon Actor, Former Football Player People Mag. “Man of Year” Star of Navy NCIS

Heather Locklear Actress Melrose Place, Spin City

Antonio Villaraigosa Mayor of Los Angeles; former Speaker of the Calif Assembly


UCLA Alumni Networks Cover The World UCLA Alumni in the United States (3% live in foreign countries) W ashington

North Dakota

M ontana

M aine Vermont M innesota

Oregon Idaho

New Hampshire

S outh Dakota

W isconsin

New York

M assachusetts

M ichigan

W yoming

R hode Island Connecticut

Nebraska

Nevada

P ennsylvania

Iowa

New Jersey Ohio

Utah

Indiana

Illinois

Delaware W est Virginia

Colorado

California

Kansas

M aryland Virginia

M issouri

District of Columbia

Kentucky

North Carolina Tennessee

Arizona

Oklahoma Arkansas

New M exico

S outh Carolina

M ississippi

Texas

Alabama

Georgia

TOTAL UCLA ALUMNI IN THE U.S.

259,544 4,000 – 6,000

Louisiana

2,000 – 3,999 1,000 – 1,999

Alaska Florida

500 – 999 300 – 499

Hawaii

200 – 299 100 – 199 less than 99

UCLA Alumni Groups Exist World-Wide (www.UCLAlumni.net/FindBruins)

In California • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Los Angeles’ Westside Downtown Los Angeles LA-South Bay/Beach Cities Lake Arrowhead Area Orange County Greater Pasadena Palm Springs Inland Empire (San Bernardino and Riverside Counties) Sacramento San Diego County San Fernando Valley San Francisco/Bay Area Santa Clarita Ventura County Whittier

Outside California • • • • • • • •

Boston, MA Chicago, IL Honolulu, HI New York City Phoenix, AZ Portland, OR Seattle, WA Washington DC

International • • • • • • •

China Hong Kong Japan Korea Singapore Taiwan Thailand

The Portfolio of the Typical UCLA Graduate (almost 300,000 alumni were utilized for the figures below along with career center and local area housing statistics)

$77,500 Average yearly personal income $765,355 Average investment portfolio value $522,500 Average value of home ownership 92% Own their own homes or condominiums 51% Own other real estate properties 68% Hold management/professional positions 67% Have done postgraduate studies after UCLA 65% Donate up to 10% of income to charity 75% Have traveled outside U.S. in last 2 years

Where UCLA Graduates Live 45% Live in Los Angeles County 62% Live in Southern California 77% Live in the State of California 97% Live in the United States

21 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


22 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


23 — Nation’s #1 College Experience


UCLA’s Community is Where Everybody Wants To Live Mulholland Drive (5 miles from UCLA) 14

8

17 16 22

10 15

Sunset Blv

12

ff

d

ee

5

cc dd

23

aa

bb

24

29

27

C

26

34 36

30

13

B

28

31

35

9

1 2

11

21

4

3

19 20

25

32 33

gg

A D

E

Santa Monica 10 Fwy (5 miles from UCLA) 1

Clint Eastwood

12 Dr. Phil McGraw

24 Jay Leno

2

Tom Cruise/Katie Holmes

13 Samuel L. Jackson

25 Charlie Sheen

3

Tom Hanks/Rita Wilson

14 Jack Nicholson

26 Antonio Banderas

4 Pete Sampras/ Bridgette Wilson

15 Ben Affleck/ Jennifer Garner

27 Billy Crystal

5

16 Kirsten Dunst

29 Jackie Chan

6 Nicolas Cage

17 Al Pacino

30 Arnold Schwarzenegger

7 Courteney Cox/ David Arquette

18 Eddie Murphy

31 Michael Douglas/ Catherine Zeta-Jones

8 Warren Beatty/ Annette Bening

20 Harrison Ford/ Calista Flockhart

32 Whoopi Golberg

9 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

21 John Lithgow

10 Lionel Richie

34 Mark Harmon

22 Paris Hilton

11 Brad Pitt/Angelina Jolie

35 David Beckham

23 Casey Wasserman

36. Reese Witherspoon

Sean Astin

19 Halle Berry

24 — Nation’s #1 College Experience

28 Jim Carrey

33 Lindsay Lohan

Adjacent Sites A Westwood Village, UCLA’s Mall B Bel Air Country Club C Beverly Center D Century City Mall E Santa Monica Promenade UCLA Sites aa Morgan Center bb Pauley Pavilion cc Drake Stadium dd LA Tennis Center ee Spieker Aquatics ff Easton Stadium gg Robinson Stadium

Hollywood / The Grove (10 miles from UCLA)

6

Beaches / Pacific Ocean (5 miles from UCLA)

18

7


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