2017 UCLA Women's Water Polo Information Guide

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

TABLE OF CONTENTS

2017 WOMEN’S WATER POLO SCHEDULE Day, Date

Opponent

Site

Sat., Jan. 14 Sat., Jan. 14 Sat., Jan. 14 Sun., Jan. 15 Sun., Jan. 15

LouStrong Invitational Califonia (exhibition) Saratoga, CA Canadian Nat’l Team (ex.) Saratoga, CA San Jose State Saratoga, CA Stanford (exhibition) Saratoga, CA UC Davis Saratoga, CA

Sat., Jan. 21 Sat., Jan. 21 Sun., Jan. 22 Sun., Jan. 22

UCSB Invitational Pacific Santa Barbara, CA Indiana Santa Barbara, CA Michigan Santa Barbara, CA UC San Diego Santa Barbara, CA

Fri., Feb. 3 Sat., Feb. 4 Fri., Feb. 17

Long Beach State Alumni Game UC Irvine

Long Beach, CA Spieker Aquatics Ctr. Spieker Aquatics Ctr.

UC Irvine Invitational Irvine, CA Irvine, CA Irvine, CA

UCLA HISTORY

Media Roster 2017 Rosters Pronunciation Guide

10 a.m. 1 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 8 a.m. 11 a.m.

2-3 4 4

COACHING STAFF Head Coach Brandon Brooks Assistant Coach Molly Cahill

5 6

THE BRUINS Veteran Profiles Freshmen Profiles

1:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 10:20 a.m. 3 p.m.

7-13 14-15

2016 IN REVIEW 2016 Box Scores 2016 Statistics, Results, and Polls MPSF Standings and Honors

6 p.m. TBD 7 p.m.

TBA TBA TBA

Sat., Mar. 4 Sat., Mar. 11 Sat., Mar. 18

San Jose State CSU Bakersfield California

Thurs., Mar. 30 Fri., Mar. 31 Sat.., Apr. 1

Hawai’i Invitational San Diego State Honolulu, HI Hawai’i Honolulu, HI UC Santa Barbara Honolulu, HI

Sat., Apr. 8 Sat., Apr. 15 Sat., Apr. 22

Arizona State * Stanford * Southern California *

Tempe, AZ Stanford, CA Spieker Aquatics Ctr.

1 p.m. TBD 1 p.m.

Fri.-Sun., Apr. 28-30

MPSF Tournament

Spieker Aquatics Ctr.

All Day

Fri.-Sun., May 12-14

NCAA Championships

Indianapolis, IN

All Day

Year-by-Year Results 19-21 UCLA Records 22 UCLA All-Time Letterwinners 23 UCLA All-Stars 24 NCAA Championship History 25 UCLA’s Championship History 26-27 Team USA and Olympic History 28-29 2016 Olympic Champions 30

GENERAL INFORMATION Athletic Administrators Spieker Aquatics Center

31 32

16 17 18

QUICK FACTS Location

Fri., Feb. 24 Sat., Feb. 25 Sun., Feb. 26

Saratoga, Calif. Spieker Aquatics Ctr. Spieker Aquatics Ctr.

THIS IS UCLA

Time (PT)

J.D. Morgan Center 325 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 Enrollment 43,301 Founded 1919 Colors Blue and Gold Nickname Bruins Affiliation NCAA Division I Athletics Phone (310) 825-8699 Chancellor Dr. Gene Block Director of Athletics Dan Guerrero SWA Dr. Christina Rivera Asso. AD (WWP) Ashley Armstrong Faculty Athletic Rep. Dr. Michael Teitell Facility Spieker Aquatics Center Pool Dirks Pool

All Day All Day All Day 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 11:30 a.m. 10 p.m. 9 p.m. 3 p.m

Conference Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Water Polo Contact Darren Preston Phone (925) 296-0723 Fax (925) 296-0724

Home games in bold. * Indicates MPSF game

1

Head Coach Brandon Brooks Alma Mater UCLA ‘05 Record at UCLA 178-39 (7 years) Phone (310) 794-7412 Assistant Coach Molly Cahill Alma Mater UCLA ‘08 Volunteer Coach Dusty Litvak 2016 Overall Record 26-5 2016 MPSF Record (Finish) 5-1 (2nd) 2016 MPSF Tournament 3rd 2016 NCAA Tournament 3rd Letterwinners Returning/Lost 18/5 National Championships 11 (7 NCAA) NCAA Tournament Appearances 21 Water Polo Contact Andrew Sinatra Office Phone 310-206-8141 E-mail asinatra@athletics.ucla.edu Athletic Comm. Fax (310) 825-8664 Website www.uclabruins.com Water Polo Twitter @UCLAWaterPolo Water Polo Instagram @UCLAWaterPolo Water Polo Facebook www.facebook.com/ uclawomenswaterpolo


MEDIA ROSTER

15

4

18

Alexis Angermund

10

Rachel Fattal

8

Jenna Hurst

1

Center, Junior – 5-7 Long Beach, CA (Wilson)

Attacker, R-Senior – 5-9 Seal Beach, CA (Los Alamitos)

Attacker, Freshman – 5-6 Simi Valley, CA (Royal)

11

Mackenzie Barr

9

Utility, Senior – 5-10 Irvine, CA (Mater Dei)

Devin Grab

25

Carlee Kapana

24

Attacker, Junior – 5-6 So. Pasadena, CA (So. Pasadena)

Goalkeeper, Sophomore – 5-9 Newport Beach, CA (Newport Harbor)

Kelsey O’Brien

Attacker, Senior – 5-9 Santa Barbara, CA (Santa Barbara)

20

Kelsey Blacker

1

Bronte Halligan

13

Brooke Maxson

23

Defender, Sophomore – 6-0 San Diego, CA (Cathedral Catholic)

Utility, Junior – 5-11 Manly, Australia (Stella Maris College)

Attacker, Freshman – 5-8 Santa Ana, CA (Foothill)

Tara Prentice

Utility, Freshman – 6-0 Temecula, CA (Murrieta Valley)

2

6

Donya Dehnad

16

Louise Hazell

3

Aubrie Monahan

7

Goalkeeper , Junior – 5-10 Palo Alto, CA (Menlo School)

Attacker, Sophomore – 5-10 Jarfalla, Sweden (Blackebergs)

Defender, Senior – 5-8 Long Beach, CA (Long Beach Poly)

Grace Reego

Attacker, R-Sophomore – 5-10 Granite Bay, CA (Granite Bay)

12

Haley Evans

Attacker, Freshman – 5-6 Laguna Beach, CA (Laguna Beach)

Kodi Hill

Attacker, R-Senior – 5-9 Santa Barbara, CA (Dos Pueblos)

Maddie Musselman

Attacker, Freshman – 5-11 Newport Beach, CA (Corona del Mar)

Nicole Reynolds Attacker, Junior – 6-1 Burlingame, CA (Burlingame)


MEDIA ROSTER

19

Lizette Rozeboom Attacker, Sophomore – 6-0 Hilversum, Netherlands

21

5

Sarah Sheldon

Center, Sophomore – 6-2 Long Beach, CA (Woodrow Wilson)

Alexa Tielmann

Center, R-Senior – 6-0 Abbotsford, BC, CAN (Yale Secondary)

14

22

Emily Skelly

Attacker, Freshman – 5-7 Irvine, CA (Orange Lutheran)

Rachel Whitelegge

Defender, Sophomore – 5-8 Costa Mesa, CA (Newport Harbor)

17

26

Bridgett Storm

Utility, Freshman – 5-10 Newport Beach, CA (Corona del Mar)

Allie Wieseler

Attacker, Sophomore – 5-10 Highland, CA (Redlands East Valley)

2

1

Hannah Storum

Goalkeeper, Freshman – 5-11 Coronado, CA (Coronado)

Alys Williams

Defender, R-Senior – 5-11 Huntington Beach, CA (Edison)

2017 UCLA Women’s Water Polo Team

Front Row (l-r): Emily Skelly, Jenna Hurst, Brooke Maxson, Devin Grab, Haley Evans. Bridgett Storm; Second Row (l-r): Rachel Whitelegge, Carlee Kapana, Alexis Angermund, Aubrie Monahan, Rachel Fattal, Kodi Hill, Allie Wieseler; Third Row (l-r): Hannah Storum, Lizette Rozeboom, Alys Williams, Kelsey Blacker, Grace Reego, Louise Hazell, Kelsey O’Brien, Mackenzie Barr; Fourth Row (l-r): Maddie Mussleman, Nicole Reynolds, Alexa Tielmann, Sarah Sheldon, Tara Prentice, Savannah Clyde, Bronte Halligan; Back Row (l-r): Bethany Tom, Brett Read Skyhawk, Max Bertman, Meghan Wright, Head Coach Brandon Brooks, Assistant Coach Molly Cahill, Elissia Schilling, Dusty Litvak

3


2017 ROSTERS

NUMERICAL ROSTER No. Name 1 Carlee Kapana 1 Donya Dehnad 1 Hannah Storum 2 Alys Williams 3 Kodi Hill 4 Rachel Fattal 5 Sarah Sheldon 6 Grace Reego 7 Maddie Musselman 8 Devin Grab 9 Kelsey Blacker 10 Mackenzie Barr 11 Kelsey O’Brien 12 Nicole Reynolds 13 Louise Hazell 14 Rachel Whitelegge 15 Alexis Angermund 16 Haley Evans 17 Allie Wieseler 18 Jenna Hurst 19 Lizette Rozeboom 20 Tara Prentice 21 Alexa Tielmann 22 Emily Skelly 23 Aubrie Monahan 24 Brooke Maxson 25 Bronte Halligan 26 Bridgett Storm

ALPHABETICAL ROSTER Pos. GK GK GK D ATK ATK C ATK ATK ATK D UTL ATK ATK ATK D C ATK ATK ATK ATK UTL C ATK D ATK UTL UTL

Ht. 5-9 5-10 5-11 5-11 5-9 5-9 6-2 5-10 5-11 5-6 6-0 5-10 5-9 6-1 5-10 5-8 5-7 5-6 5-10 5-6 6-0 6-0 6-0 5-7 5-8 5-8 5-11 5-10

Yr. So. Jr. Fr. R-Sr. R-Sr. R-Sr. So. R-So. Fr. Jr. So. Sr. Sr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Fr. So. Fr. So. Fr. R-Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Jr. Fr.

Hometown (Previous School) Newport Beach, Calif. (Newport Harbor HS) Palo Alto, Calif. (Menlo School) Coronado, Calif. (Coronado HS) Huntington Beach, Calif. (Edison) Santa Barbara, Calif. (Dos Pueblos) Seal Beach, Calif. (Los Alamitos) Long Beach, Calif. (Woodrow Wilson HS) Granite Bay, Calif. (Granite Bay) Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar) So. Pasadena, Calif. (So. Pasadena) San Diego, Calif. (Cathedral Catholic HS) Irvine, Calif. (Mater Dei) Santa Barbara, Calif. (Santa Barbara) Burlingame, Calif. (Burlingame HS) Jarfalla, Sweden (Blackebergs Gymnasium) Costa Mesa, Calif. (Newport Harbor HS) Long Beach, Calif. (Wilson) Laguna Beach, Calif. (Laguna Beach HS) Highland, Calif. (Redlands East Valley HS) Simi Valley, Calif. (Royal HS) Hilversum, Netherlands (Alberdingk Thijm) Temecula, Calif. (Murrieta Valley HS) Abbotsford, BC (Yale Secondary) Irvine, Calif. (Orange Lutheran HS) Long Beach, Calif. (Long Beach Poly) Santa Ana, Calif. (Foothill HS) Manly, Australia (Stella Maris College) Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar)

No. 15 10 9 1 16 4 8 15 13 3 18 1 24 23 7 11 20 6 12 19 5 22 26 1 21 14 17 2

Name Alexis Angermund Mackenzie Barr Kelsey Blacker Donya Dehnad Haley Evans Rachel Fattal Devin Grab Bronte Halligan Louise Hazell Kodi Hill Jenna Hurst Carlee Kapana Brooke Maxson Aubrie Monahan Maddie Musselman Kelsey O’Brien Tara Prentice Grace Reego Nicole Reynolds Lizette Rozeboom Sarah Sheldon Emily Skelly Bridgett Storm Hannah Storum Alexa Tielmann Rachel Whitelegge Allie Wieseler Alys Williams

COACHING STAFF Head Coach: Brandon Brooks (8th season) Assistant Coach: Molly Cahill (10th season) Volunteer Assistant: Dusty Litvak

PRONUNCIATION GUIDE Rachel Fattal – Fuh-tahl Carlee Kapana – Kuh-paw-nuh Aubrie Monahan – Awe-brie Alexa Tielmann – Till-man Rachel Whitelegge - White-leg Allie Wieseler – Wheeze-ler Alys Williams – Uh-leeze

SUPPORT STAFF Associate Athletic Trainer: Tandi Hawkey Assistant Athletic Trainer: Max Bertman Student Athletic Trainers: Bethany Tom, Brett Read Skyhawk Team Managers: Elissia Schilling, Meghan Wright Performance Coach: Mike Linn

4

Yr. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Fr. R-Sr. Jr. Jr. So. R-Sr. Fr. So. Fr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. R-So. Jr. So. So. Fr. Fr. Fr. R-Sr. So. So. R-Sr.

Pos. C UTL D GK ATK ATK ATK UTL ATK ATK ATK GK ATK D ATK ATK UTL ATK ATK ATK C ATK UTL GK C D ATK D


COACHING STAFF Along the way, Brooks helped with the development of Dement, who set a singleseason UCLA saves record of 264, which was broken in 2013 by Hill. Dement registered a program-record 22 saves in an 8-3 win over UC Davis on Feb. 21, 2010. At seasons’ end, she earned second-team All-MPSF honors.

BRANDON

BROOKS

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.

HEAD COACH • 8th Year Alma Mater: UCLA ’05 Brandon Brooks begins his eighth season as UCLA’s head women’s water polo coach in 2016-17. He was named the third head coach in program history on June 3, 2009, and has compiled a 178-39 record in his first seven seasons.

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 made 237 saves in 2008, a single season school record at the time. The previous season, Feher recorded a 4.96 goals against average in 25 games before securing First-Team ACWPC AllAmerica honors for the third consecutive season.

Brooks, the 2015 MPSF Coach of the Year, has coached UCLA to three MPSF Tournament titles in six seasons (2010, 2012, 2015). In addition, the Bruins have advanced to the MPSF Tournament championship match five times during his tenure.

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.

Last season, UCLA edged Michigan 5-4 in the NCAA Championships third-place game after falling to Stanford 7-4 in the semis. In the conference championships, the Bruins downed Cal 7-5 to finish third in the MPSF. Brooks coached seven Bruins to All-America honors and five to All-MPSF honors. First Team All-American and All-MPSF member Mackenzie Barr was also a 2016 Cutino Award finalist. Excelling out of the pool as well, nine Bruins earned MPSF All-Academic honors.

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.

Two seasons ago, the Bruins edged out Cal, 9-8, in the MPSF Championship. The victory gave the Bruins their third conference title since 2010 and 10th overall, a conference high. The Bruins earned an automatic bid to the 2015 NCAA Championship, where they downed UC San Diego, 9-2, in the quarterfinals and beat Cal, 9-5, in the semis. UCLA’s season ended with a 7-6 loss to Stanford in the NCAA title match. Rachel Fattal and Sami Hill earned first-team All-Tournament accolades, while Emily Donohoe secured second-team acclaim. Brooks guided the Bruins to a 26-3 record on the year (.897).

In the summer of 2008, Brooks and former teammate Adam Wright (UCLA’s current men’s water polo head coach) helped lead the USA Men’s National Team to a silver medal at the Olympic Games in Beijing. Brooks, Wright and former teammate Brett Ormsby also competed in the 2004 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia. 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 2012 U.S. Women’s National Team, alongside Krikorian.

In 2014, the Bruins advanced to the finals of the NCAA Championship before falling in the championship match. UCLA beat UC San Diego in the quarterfinals and USC in the semifinals to play for their first national championship in Brooks’ tenure. UCLA’s runner-up finish marked their fourth consecutive podium finish at the NCAA Championship, and also continued their consecutive appearances at the NCAA Tournament to 11. The Bruins completed the season with an overall record of 27-5, and were ranked No.2 in the final AWCPC rankings. UCLA also finished second in the 2014 MPSF league standings with a 5-1 record.

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

Fourth-year junior Sami Hill emerged as one of the premier goalkeepers in the country, capturing First-Team ACWPC All-America honors, and winning MPSF Player of the Year honors. She led a contingent of UCLA players, five of whom earned All-America acclaim and another five who were named to various All-MPSF Teams.

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).

Academically, the Bruins continued to excel in 2014. Five players received AllAcademic honors from the AWCPC, eight were named to the MPSF All-Academic Team and 31 earned spots on the UCLA Director’s Honor Roll.

Brooks, 35, graduated from UCLA in 2005 with a degree in Sociology. A native of Honolulu, Hawaii, Brooks is the oldest of three children and has 25-year-old twin sisters (Nicole and Jessica). He is married to his wife, Jessica, with whom he has a daughter, Charlotte.

Three years ago, the Bruins finished in third place in the NCAA Tournamnt for the third straight season. UCLA defeated Hawai’i in the third-place match after beating Princeton in the opening round. In the MPSF Tournament that season, the Bruins won two of three matches to record their fourth consecutive podium finish.

THE BROOKS FILE

Individually for the Bruins in 2013, five players earned All-America honors, including first-team selection Rachel Fattal, a freshman. Fattal was also named the 2013 MPSF Freshman of the Year, and three additional UCLA players received All-MPSF acclaim.

Brooks’ Collegiate Head Coaching Record Year 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Totals

In 2012, UCLA finished in third place in the NCAA Tournament, defeating UC Irvine in the third-place match after having downed USC in that contest in 2011. Brooks guided the Bruins to a 23-4 record, including a 5-2 mark in MPSF action. UCLA logged consecutive wins over San Diego State, USC and previously-undefeated Stanford to win its second MPSF Tournament title in three years. In 2011, Brooks guided UCLA to a 26-7 overall record, including a 4-3 mark in conference play. He helped propel the Bruins to the championship match of the MPSF Tournament after UCLA won its final four regular-season matches (including three MPSF contests). UCLA defeated USC, 12-10, in the first round of the MPSF Tournament. The next day, the Bruins handed top-ranked Stanford its first loss of the season, advancing to the tournament’s championship match. Despite losing a 7-6 decision in the title game to California, UCLA had firmly secured an at-large berth to the NCAA Tournament.

Overall 22-8 26-7 23-4 28-7 27-5 26-3 26-5 178-39 (.820)

Conf. 4-3 4-3 5-2 3-3 5-1 5-1 5-1 31-14

Finish 5th at NCAA Tourn., 1st at MPSF Tourn. 3rd at NCAA Tourn., 2nd at MPSF Tourn. 3rd at NCAA Tourn., 1st at MPSF Tourn. 3rd at NCAA Tourn., 3rd at MPSF Tourn. 2nd at NCAA Tourn., 2nd at MPSF Tourn 2nd at NCAA Tourn., 1st at MPSF Tourn. 3rd at NCAA Tourn., 3rd at MPSF Tourn. 3 MPSF Tournament Championships

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 • Helped lead UCLA to NCAA Championships in 1999 and 2000 • Named 2012 MPSF Coach of the Year • Ranks second on UCLA’s all-time saves list with 700 stops (1999-2002)

UCLA used a balanced attack in 2011, with Priscilla Orozco (58 goals), KK Clark (50 goals) and Grace Reynolds (35 goals) leading the way. Goalkeepers Caitlin Dement and Sami Hill split time in the cage, with Dement securing second-team All-MPSF honors at the conclusion of the season. In 2010, Brooks helped UCLA post a 22-8 overall record, including a 4-3 MPSF mark. Three players earned All-MPSF Team honors, highlighted by first-team selection Priscilla Orozco. Five players captured ACWPC All-Academic acclaim and five secured MPSF All-Academic honors.

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COACHING STAFF

M O L LY

CAHILL ASSISTANT COACH • 10th Year Alma Mater: UCLA ’08 Molly Cahill enters her 10th season on the UCLA women’s water polo coaching staff and her eighth as a full-time assistant coach under Brandon Brooks. A four-year UCLA women’s water polo letter winner (2004-07), Cahill helped guide the Bruins to the MPSF Tournament title in 2010, 2012, and again in 2015, after having served as an undergraduate assistant coach in 2008. Cahill has helped guide the Bruins to the NCAA Tournament for the last 12 consecutive years. Likewise, she has lifted UCLA to the NCAA championship in five of her 10 previous seasons: three as a student-athlete (2005-07) and one as undergraduate assistant coach in 2008. Last season, UCLA edged Michigan 5-4 in the NCAA Championships third-place game after falling to Stanford 7-4 in the semis. In the conference championships, the Bruins downed Cal 7-5 to finish third in the MPSF. Cahill helped coach seven Bruins to All-America honors and five to All-MPSF honors. First Team All-American and All-MPSF member Mackenzie Barr was also a 2016 Cutino Award finalist. Excelling out of the pool as well, nine Bruins earned MPSF All-Academic honors. Two seasons ago, the Bruins edged out Cal, 9-8, in the MPSF Championship. The victory gave the Bruins their third conference title since 2010 and 10th overall, a conference high. The Bruins earned an automatic bid to the 2015 NCAA Championship, where they downed UC San Diego, 9-2, in the quarterfinals and beat Cal, 9-5, in the semis. UCLA’s season ended with a 7-6 loss to Stanford in the NCAA title match. Rachel Fattal and Sami Hill earned first-team All-Tournament accolades, while Emily Donohoe secured second-team acclaim. Cahill helped guide the Bruins to a 24-2 record on the year (.923).

THE CAHILL FILE

Two years ago, Cahill assisted in the Bruins’ run to the NCAA championship match. UCLA was the runner-up at season’s end, but its 27-5 overall record represented its most successful season with Brooks and Cahill on the staff. The Bruins handed Stanford a 9-6 loss on Feb. 23, and beat USC twice at season’s end, including a 5-3 triumph in the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS • Has helped lead UCLA to the NCAA Tournament in each of her 10 years on campus. • Guided the Bruins to the 2008 NCAA Championship as an undergraduate assistant coach • Won three NCAA titles (2005-07) as a student-athlete. • Played on the Bruins’ undefeated NCAA championship team in 2005 (33-0). • Starred on the Bruins’ 2007 team, which won UCLA’s 100th NCAA team championship.

In 2013, the Bruins recorded a third place national finish and also captured third at the NCAAs that season. The Bruins posted a 28-7 overall record, the highest number of victories in her five seasons as an assistant coach. In 2012, Cahill helped guide the Bruins to a third place finish at the NCAA Championship and their second MPSF Tournament title under Brooks’ tutelage. UCLA posted a 23-4 overall record, 5-2 in the MPSF regular season race. In 2011, Cahill worked alongside head coach Brandon Brooks for the second consecutive year. The Bruins went 26-7, finishing third at the NCAA Tournament after posting a second-place finish at the MPSF Tournament. 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 guide the Bruins to their fourth consecutive NCAA title - a streak that 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. In four seasons as a UCLA student-athlete, Cahill scored 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. 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. Cahill graduated from UCLA in 2008 with a degree in History.

6


VETERAN PROFILES

15

High School — Four-year letterwinner as a center at Mater Dei HS for coaches Chris Segesman and Mike Collins ... Four-year MVP for the Monarchs ... Four-time MVP of the Trinity League ... Three-time all-county, All-CIF in Divisions I and II ... Division II Player of the Year ... In her career, she scored 471 goals, made 225 steals and recorded 140 assists ... Is the first female water polo player in Mater Dei history to have her cap number retired.

ALEXIS

ANGERMUND A

Club — Played for the United and Set Clubs ... Won a gold medal at the Jr. Olympics ... Also a member of the 2012 FINA U.S. World Championships Junior National Team ... 2013 Junior National Team MVP.

Junior • Center • 5-7 Long Beach, Calif. (Wilson) 2016 — Played in 18 games with one start ... Scored seven goals, including two during power plays and three from two-meters or closer ... Also recorded three assists, six steals, and 11 earned exclusions ... Netted a season- and game-high three goals in UCLA’s win over Michigan in the NCAA Championships third-place game (May 15) ... Earned ACWPC and MPSF All-Academic honors.

Personal — Has an older brother Ryan, who played baseball at the University of Portland... Chose UCLA because “it is the perfect fit for who I am and who I want to be” ... Lists her greatest thrill as playing in the 2012 CIF Championship game ... Admires multi-gold medalist Michael Phelps for his humility ... Full name is Mackenzie Rae Barr ... Born in Mission Viejo, CA ... Majoring in geography/environmental studies.

2015 — Earned a spot on the All-MPSF Newcomer team ... Played in 28 games with three starts ... Netted 12 goals, and was 50 percent in power play situations ... Also recorded 16 earned exclusions ... Tallied four steals and one block on defense.

MACKENZIE BARR’S CAREER STATISTICS Year 2014 2015 2016 Totals

Club — Member of the USA Women’s Youth National Team in 2012 and 2013, and served as captain in 2013 ... Represented the USA at the 2013 UANA event in Argentina ... Won gold medals in Pan Am Games qualifiers ... Also plays for the Huntington Beach Water Polo Club, which won the 2011 California State Cup.

GP/GS 32/1 28/24 30/30 90/55

G 25 35 44 104

ATT 59 75 111 245

PCT .424 .467 .396 .424

AST 12 11 28 51

STL 21 31 40 92

BLK 11 8 13 32

EE 15 24 29 68

High School — Four-year varsity water polo and swimming letterwinner at Long Beach Wilson HS ... In water polo, her head coach was Katie Headley and in swimming her coach was Maggie Twinem ... In water polo, she was a two-time First-Team All-Moore League selection (2012 and 2013) and a 2012 Div. II Third-Team All-CIF member ... Two-year captain and Offensive Player of the Year for the Wilson HS water polo team ... Led the Bruins in scoring in 2012 and 2013 ... Earned Long Beach Gazette Athlete of the Week (2/14/13) ... In swimming, she participated in the 50, 100 and 200 Freestyle events. Personal — Has one younger brother ... Chose UCLA for its academics and athletics ... Enjoys wake boarding and surfing as hobbies ... Born in her hometown ... Political Science major.

ALEXIS ANGERMUND’S CAREER STATISTICS Year 2015 2016 Totals

GP/GS 28/3 18/1 46/4

G 12 7 19

10

ATT 26 18 44

PCT .462 .389 .432

AST 1 3 4

STL 4 6 10

BLK 1 0 1

EE 16 11 27

MACKENZIE

9

BARR B

Senior • Utility • 5-10 Irvine, Calif. (Mater Dei)

KELSEY

BLACKER

Sophomore • Defender • 6-0 San Diego, Calif. (Cathedral Catholic)

2016 — Peter J. Cutino Award Finalist ... First Team ACWPC All-American ... Compiled six goals, two assists, and seven steals throughout the NCAA Tournament, earning her a spot on the NCAA All-Tournament First Team ... Played in 30 games with 30 starts ... Led the Bruins offensively with 44 goals and 28 assists ... Posted a season-high four goals in three games ... Was second on the team in steals with 40 ... Also recorded 13 blocks and 29 earned exclusions ... First Team All-MPSF selection.

2016 — Played in five games ... Scored three goals on six attempts for a .500 shot percentage ... Was 2-for-2 on counterattacks ... Also recorded three assists and three steals. High School — Four-year varsity water polo letterwinner at Cathedral Catholic High School ... Also lettered in swimming (2013-14) ... Team MVP in 2015 and 2013 ... She is a three-time All-CIF performer and three times was named to her school’s all-academic team ... Awarded “Best Defender” in 2012 ... Earned the 2015 CareerAthletic Achievement Award.

USA Water Polo, Summer 2015 — Won gold with the USA Water Polo Women’s Junior National Team at the FINA Junior World Championships ... Scored 15 goals throughout the tournament, including five in the opener versus Mexico.

Club — Competed for San Diego Shores Water Polo Club ... Helped the club to a gold medal at the 2012 Junior Olympics and a first-place finish at the 2014 National Club Championships.

2015 — Earned ACWPC All-America honorable mention honors ... Played in 28 games with 24 starts ... Scored 35 goals, including a season-high of four against Long Beach State (1/25) ... Recorded 11 multi-goal games on the season and netted two against Stanford in the NCAA championship game ... Also tallied 11 assists and 24 earned exclusions on offense ... On defense, she recorded 31 steals and eight blocks.

Personal — Daughter of Jonathan and Jennie Blacker ... Has one brother, Ryan, and one sister, Sarah ... Says she chose UCLA because, “I love the campus and the many opportunities offered so that I can learn and grow as a student” ... Major is undecided.

2014 — Selected to the MPSF All-Newcomer Team ... Played in all 32 games with one start ... Scored 25 goals, including a career-high of four against Concordia in her first college game ... 12 of her 25 goals were scored off counter-attacks ... Scored four goals in three NCAA Tournament games ... Recorded 12 assists and 15 earned exclusions during the season ... Also added 21 steals and 11 field blocks on defense ... Voted MPSF Newcomer of the Week, Jan. 20 after scoring eight goals in the UCLA Invitational ... Earned a spot on the Winter Quarter DHR.

KELSEY BLACKER’S CAREER STATISTICS Year 2016

7

GP/GS 5/0

G 3

ATT 6

PCT .500

AST 3

STL 3

BLK 0

EE 0


VETERAN PROFILES

1

Championship after scoring six goals ... Voted MPSF Newcomer of the Week on Apr. 15 ... Played in all 35 games and tied for the team lead with 34 starts ... Led the team with a .544 shooting percentage, netting 68 goals in 125 attempts ... She scored 22 goals in 6x5 situations, 13 on counterattacks and 12 on penalties, where she led the team with 13 attempts ... Scored a career-high of six goals against Cal Baptist (4/13) ... Scored five goals in a 14-7 victory against ASU (2/24) and against Loyola Marymount (4/12) ... Recorded five games in which she scored three goals ... Also on offense, she recorded 29 assists and drew 25 earned exclusions... On defense, she led the team with 40 steals and 28 field blocks.

DONYA

DEHNAD

Junior • Goalkeeper • 5-10 Palo Alto, Calif. (Menlo School) Foothill College — All-American in 2015 ... Coast Conference All-Conference honoree and Nor-Cal first team member in 2015 ... Earned Academic All-Sate honors in 2015 ... Received back-to-back Student-Athlete Awards in 2014-15 and 2015-16 ... Coast Conference honorable mention in 2014.

Club — Competed for SoCal Water Polo Club ...Earned two second place and three third place finishes at the Junior Olympics ... Competed at the 2011 Junior Worlds in Trieste, Italy with the USA Junior National Team ... Participated in the 2010 Four Nations tournament with the junior team ... Was a member of the USA Youth Team at the 2008 Junior Pan-American Games.

High School — Lettered two years in water polo at Menlo School ... Also lettered in basketball three years ... Defensive MVP in water polo (2013) and All-League first team member in 2013-14 ... Received the captains award in 2014 ... In basketball, Dehad earned the Coaches Award in 2011 and was Most Improved in 2010 ... Member of the CCS Championship basketball team in 2013-14 and 2014-15 ... Member of the League Championship basketball team in 2013-14.

High School — Four-year varsity water polo letterwinner at Los Alamitos High School under head coach Dave Carlson ... Also was a four-year varsity swimming and volleyball letterwinner ... Voted the 2012 CIF Division I Player of the Year ... Earned 2011-12 Sunset League Female Athlete of the Year award and the 2011-12 Press Telegram Player of the Year ...In volleyball, helped lead Los Alamitos to the 2012 CIF Division I Championship ... Was Sunset League Co-Champions with Newport Harbor.

Personal — Full name is Donya Gita Dehnad ... Daughter of Mehrdad Sheikhrezai and Gita Dehnad ... Has two older sisters, Tatiana Johnston (25) and Darya Dehnad (24), who both graduated from UCLA ... Member of the UCLA Honors Scholar Club ... Majoring in anthropology with a minor in entrepreneurship.

Personal — Full name is Rachel Ann Fattal... born in her hometown ... Rachel is the daughter of Ron and Maria Fattal ... Has one brother, Ryan ... History major.

4

RACHEL FATTAL’S CAREER STATISTICS Year GP/GS 2013 35/34 2014 32/32 2015 28/27 TOTALS 95/93

RACHEL

G 68 46 56 170

ATT 125 108 99 332

PCT .544 .426 .566 .512

AST 29 44 18 91

STL 40 49 65 154

BLK 28 19 15 62

EE 25 21 16 62

FATTAL

R-Senior • Attacker • 5-9 Seal Beach, Calif. (Los Alamitos) USA Water Polo, Summer 2016 — Won gold with Team USA in Rio ... Scored four goals throughout the Olympic Games. 2016 — Took an Olympic Redshirt year to train with the U.S. National Team for the 2016 Olympics. USA Water Polo, Summer 2015 — Netted 17 goals en route to earning Tournament MVP honors at the 2015 FINA World Championships ... Scored a total of 41 goals for the USA Women’s Senior National Team in four international events ... Found the back of the net five times against Italy in group play and four times against Hungary to reach the quarterfinals of the FINA World Championships ... Led the team to victory with two goals in the final against the Netherlands ... At the FINA World League Super Final, she scored 11 goals in five games ... The USA won the gold medal ... She scored four goals in the Kunshan Cup, which the USA also won. 2015 — Earned First-Team ACWPC All-America honors and First-Team All-MPSF acclaim ... Led the team with 56 goals ... Scored a season-high six goals against USC (4/25) ... Netted four goals three times during the season: at UC Irvine (2/13), at Hawai’i (3/27), and vs. USC (4/18) ... Also recorded 12 other multiple-goal games ... On offense, she added 18 assists and 16 earned exclusions ... On defense, she led the team with 65 steals, which ranks third on the single-season steals list, and 15 field blocks ... Her 154 career steals ranks 3rd on the UCLA list.

8

USA Water Polo, Summer 2014 — Scored a total of 25 goals for the USA Women’s Senior National in three international events ... At the FINA World League Super Final, she scored nine goals in five games, highlighted by three goals each against Australia in the semifinals and Italy in the championship ... The USA won the gold medal ... She scored six goals in the Kinishi Cup, which the USA won ... In the FINA World Cup, she scored 10 goals as the USA won the gold medal.

DEVIN

GRAB

Junior • Attacker • 5-6 So. Pasadena, Calif. (So. Pasadena) 2016 — Second Team ACWPC All-American ... Started in all 31 games this season ... Was second on the team offensively with 42 goals and 26 assists ... Was 4-for-4 on five-meter penalty shots ... Also recorded 34 steals, 14 blocks, and 24 earned exclusions ... Posted a season-high five goals against Pomona Pitzer (Apr. 3) ... Netted a gamehigh four goals in the season finale against Stanford, including the game-winning penalty shot in sudden-victory overtime (Apr. 23) ... MPSF Player of the Week (Apr. 26) ... Earned ACWPC and MPSF All-Academic honors.

2014 — Earned First-Team ACWPC All-America honors and First-Team All-MPSF acclaim ... Started all 32 games ... Scored 46 goals to rank second on the team ... Scored four goals twice during the season: at Cal (3/27) and vs. ASU (4/26) ... Also recorded 11 other multiple-goal games ... On offense, she added 44 assists and 21 earned exclusions ... On defense, she led the team with 49 steals and 19 field blocks ... Her 89 career steals ranks 10th on the UCLA list. USA Water Polo, Summer 2013 — Scored seven goals in helping the Senior National Team to a fifth place finish at the FINA World Championships in Barcelona ... Scored two goals each against Great Britain and Brazil ... Helped lead the United States to the gold medal at the FINA Women’s Junior World Championships in Greece ... Voted tournament MVP after scoring 15 goals, including four against both Italy and Greece ... Featured in Sports Illustrated’s Faces in the Crowd.

2015 — Selected to the MPSF All-Newcomer Team ... Scored 26 goals in 20 games ... On offense, she recorded five assists and 10 earned exclusions ... On defense, she had 12 steals and four field blocks. Club — Plays for the Rose Bowl Water Polo Club ... In 2012, she helped lead the club to a third place finish in the Club Championships and a fifth-place finish at the Jr. Olympics ... Named MVP of the 2013 Club Championships ... Has trained with the U.S. National Team program since 2010 ... Helped lead the Senior team to a first-place finish at the 2013 Canada Cup ... Helped lead the 2011 team to a runner-up finish at the Youth UANA Tournament in Puerto Rico.

2013 — Named First-Team All-American by the ACWPC ... Also was a Second-Team All-MPSF selection and the 2013 Necomer of the Year, who finished ninth in league scoring at 1.94 goals per game ... Selected First-Team All-Tournament at the MPSF

8


VETERAN PROFILES High School — Eight-time varsity letterwinner at South Pasadena HS in water polo, swimming and volleyball ... Coached by Robert Echeverria in the aquatic sports ... Three-time First-Team All-CIF selection and a second-team pick in 2010 ... Three-time Rio Hondo League MVP ... Also earned SPHS MVP from 2011-13 ... Named South Pasadena High’s Best Offensive Player in 2010 after scoring 150 goals as a freshman ... Scored more than 450 goals in her high school career.

13

Personal — Has three older brothers ... Brother Sean played water polo at Golden West College, where he was a member of the 2012 state championship team ... Chose UCLA because “it’s the place I will best develop as a student, athlete and person” ... Lists her greatest athletic thrill to date as participating in the youth world championships ... Admires boxing great Muhammad Ali ... Hobbies include making music and singing ... Grandmother attended UCLA ... Born in Simi Valley, CA ... Majoring in sociology. G 26 42 68

ATT 47 93 140

PCT .553 .452 .486

AST 5 26 31

STL 12 34 46

BLK 4 14 18

HAZELL

Sophomore • Attacker • 5-10 Jarfalla, Sweden (Blackebergs) 2016 — Played in 11 games ... Scored five goals, all on counterattacks ... Also recorded five assists and six steals ... Netted a season-high two goals against Pomona Pitzer (Apr. 3).

DEVIN GRAB’S CAREER STATISTICS Year GP/GS 2015 20/2 2016 31/31 TOTALS 51/23

LOUISE

Club — Competed for Järfälla Vattenpolo (2007-15) and for San Diego Shores Water Polo Club (2013-15) ... Was the Swedish Female Water Polo Player of the Year in 2012, 2013, and 2014 ... Nordic Club Champion (2012-13) ... Swedish National Champion (2-10-14) ... Lead scorer in 2012-14 in the National League (Division I) ... With San Diego Shores, she was a U.S. National Club Champion in 2014 and a silver medalist at the 2014 Junior Olympics.

EE 10 24 34

Personal — Daughter of Janne and Charlotte Hazell ... Has two older sisters, Kersti and Sofie ... Says she chose UCLA because, “I strive to achieve academic and athletic excellence and I truly believe UCLA has the tools, environment, and the inspirational people to help me achieve my goals” ... Major is mechanical engineering.

LOUISE HAZELL’S CAREER STATISTICS Year 2016

GP/GS 11/0

G 5

3

ATT 19

PCT .263

AST 5

STL 6

BLK 0

EE 0

KODI

HILL

R-Senior • Attacker • 5-9 Santa Barbara, Calif. (Santa Barbara)

25

2016 — Took an Olympic Redshirt year to train with the U.S. National Team. 2015 — Earned third-team ACWPC All-America honors for the first time in her career ... Earned a spot on the All-MPSF second-team ... Started and played in 31 games ... Scored 29 goals, netting at least one goal in 16 of the team’s 29 contests ... Tied a career-high by scoring three goals on three separate occasions ... Led the team with 45 assists ... On defense, she recorded 39 steals and 11 field blocks ... Earned MPSF All-Academic honors. 2014 — Started and played in 31 games ... Scored 30 goals, 10 of which came on power plays ... Tied a career-high by scoring three goals vs. CSUN (1/25) ... Led the team with 62 assists ... On defense, she reocorded 36 steals and 12 field blocks ... Had five earned exclusions ... Named MPSF/KAP 7 Player of the Week on Jan. 20 ... Earned MPSF All-Academic honors ... Three-time member of the Director’s Honor Roll. USA Water Polo, Summer 2013 — Earned a spot on the U.S. Junior National Team that won a gold medal in July at the World Championships. 2013 — Played in 33 games, starting 14, and scored 15 goals ... Scored a career-high of three goals vs. Concordia (1/26) ... Scored 10 goals on counterattacks and two on 6x5 situations ... Led the team with 36 assists ... Also drew 11 earned ejections ... Defensively, she recored 21 steals and 10 field blocks. High School — Four-year varsity water polo letter winner at Dos Pueblos High School under head coach Danielle Muhr ... Also was a two-year varsity golf and swimming letterwinner ... Was team captain in her senior year ... Earned Channel League Most Valuable Player in 2012 ... Named the 2012 Santa Barbara Round Table Athlete of the Year ... Won three CIF Division I Championships in 2009, 2010 and 2011 ... Recorded two undefeated seasons in 2010 and 2011 ... Was a first-team All-Channel League selection in 2009 ... Earned second team (2008) and third team (2009) All-CIF Division I honors. Club – Competed for the Santa Barbara Water Polo Club ... Was the MVP of the 2010 US Club Championships ... Earned Most Valuable Player acclaim at the 2010 Junior Olympics in the U-16 Girls Division ... Participated in the 2010 and 2012 Junior Olympic Championships ... Was a member of the U.S. Youth National Team. Personal — Born in Provo, Utah ... Daughter of Pe’a and Cindy Hill ... Has two sisters, Sami and Abbi, and one brother, Deacon ... Older sister, Sami, was an All-American goalkeeper at UCLA and a member of the 2016 Olympic team ... Uncle, Brian Battistone, plays professional tennis on the ATP World Tour ... Psychology major.

BRONTE

HALLIGAN H

Junior • Utility • 5-11 Manly, Australia (Stella Maris College) Personal — Full name is Bronte Riley Halligan ... Daughter of Daryl and Linda Halligan ... Has two sisters, Devon and Inde, and one brother, Cooper ... Decided to come to UCLA because she liked the campus and found it a good fit for herself coming from Australia ... Major is undecided.

The UCLA Athletics Department would like to thank Ted & Jennifer Weggeland for endowing a women’s water polo scholarship.

KODI HILL’S CAREER STATISTICS Year GP/GS 2013 31/14 2014 31/31 2015 28/26 TOTALS 92/71

For information on how you can endow a scholarship, call the UCLA Athletic Fund Office (Aaron Sapiro/Emily Lerner) at 310-206-3302.

9

G 15 30 29 74

ATT 52 82 92 226

PCT .288 .386 .315 .330

AST 36 62 45 143

STL 21 36 39 96

BLK 10 12 11 33

EE 11 5 13 29


VETERAN PROFILES

1

CARLEE

23

KAPANA

AUBRIE

MONAHAN M

Senior • Defender • 5-8 Long Beach, Calif. (Long Beach Poly)

Sophomore • Goalkeeper • 5-9 Newport Beach, Calif. (Newport Harbor) 2016 — Played in 18 games (11 starts) and 50 quarters, allowing 61 goals for a goalsagainst average of 4.88 ... Recorded 115 saves on the season, including a season-high 15 against UCSB at the UCSB Winter Invite (Jan. 23) ... Earned MPSF Newcomer of the Week honors for her performance at the UCSB Winter Invite (Jan. 26) ... Tallied 10 steals and five assists. USA Water Polo — Member of the USA Senior National Team that won gold at the 2015 FINA World Championships ... In 2014, she helped the Team USA win a gold medal at the Youth World Championships in Spain, and she was selected best goalkeeper ... Also won gold with the Team USA in the Youth Pan American Games and was named Goalie of the Tournament. High School — Kapana is a four-year letterwinner in goal for Newport Harbor, and helped lead the Sailors to the 2012 CIF championship and a pair of runner-up results in 2013 and 2014 ... First-Team All-American in 2015 ... Two-time First-Team Division I All-CIF selection ... Newport Harbor HS MVP and Sunset League MVP in 2015 ... 2015 OCADA Sunset League Female Athlete of the Year and Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce Top Athlete ... 2015 Newport-Mesa Dream Team Player of the Year ... In 2014, she earned Goalie of the Tournament at the Irvine SoCal Championships ... 2012 JV Defensive Player of the Year at Newport Harbor HS ... Member of the 2012 CIF-SS Division I Championship team ... Also lettered in swimming. Club — Competed for Newport Water Polo Foundation under coach Bill Barnett ... 2014 Junior Olympics All-American honorable mention selection ... 2010 recipient of the Maureen O’Toole Award at the U14 National Championships ... In 2009, Kapana was First-Team All-American Junior Olympics Platinum and made the All-Tournament Team at the San Diego Water Polo Tournament ... 2008 MVP Junior Olympics Gold ... Was the 2007 MVP of the San Diego Water Polo Tournament.

2016 — Played in 31 games with 17 starts ... Recorded 13 blocks and nine steals on defense ... On offense, she tallied eight goals and 11 assists ... Earned MPSF AllAcademic honors. 2015 — Played in 14 games with two starts ... On defense, she recorded 11 steals and four field blocks ... Notched two goals and an assist on offense ... was one for one on power plays. 2014 — Played in 10 games without a start ... Scored five goals, three on counterattacks and two in the set offense ... Scored a career-high of two goals against Concordia and UCSD (5/9) ... Added one assist ... On defense, she recorded three steals and two field blocks ... Member of the Spring Quarter DHR. High School — Eight-time letterwinner in swimming and water polo at Long Beach Poly HS ... Played for coaches Scott Penhilla, Bill Brightenburg and Kalani Caldwell ... Four-time first-team all-league selection and the league MVP in 2013 ... SecondTeam All-CIF selection in 2013, third-team choice in 2012 ... Earned Poly’s MVP in 2012 and ’13, Most Valuable Offensive Player in 2011 and Most Improved in 2010 ... Served as team captain as a senior ... Two-time (2012 and ’13) member of the Long Beach Press Telegram’s Dream Team ... USA Water Polo Academic All-American in 2011 and ‘12. Club — Played for the Huntington Beach Water Polo Club, which earned a silver medal at the 2012 Junior Olympics ... Member of the Youth National Team in 2012 and ’13 ... Particpated in the U.S. National Team training camp ... Competed for the U.S. Junior National Team in the UANA tournament in Montreal and helped the U.S. finish first.

Personal — Daughter of Joseph and Susan Kapana ... Has an older brother, Chase ... Major is undecided.

Personal — Has a twin sister, Madison ... Chose UCLA for its beautiful campus, her relationships with the players and the prestigous academics ... Lists her biggest thrill as winning the gold medal at the UANA tournament ... Was a member of the Poly High Math Team ... Born in her hometown ... Majoring in economics.

CARLEE KAPANA’S CAREER STATISTICS

AUBRIE MONAHAN’S CAREER STATISTICS

Year 2016

GP/GS 18/11

QP 50.00

SV 115

GA 61

GAA 4.88

MP 400:00

Year 2014 2015 2016 Totals

10

GP/GS 10/0 14/2 31/17 55/19

G 5 2 8 15

ATT 9 18 36 63

PCT .556 .111 .333 .238

AST 1 1 11 13

STL 3 11 9 23

BLK 2 4 13 19

EE 0 1 8 9


VETERAN PROFILES

11

KELSEY

6

O’BRIEN

Senior • Attacker • 5-9 Santa Barbara, Calif. (Santa Barbara)

2015 — Played in 20 matches with three starts ... Scored 12 goals, including a careerhigh three goals against Loyola Marymount (1/24) ... On defense, she recorded 12 steals ... Earned MPSF All-Academic honors. 2014 — Played in 26 matches without a start ... Scored eight goals, including three on power plays and three on counterattacks ... Recorded a career-high of two goals against CS Monterey Bay (1/25) ... Added nine assists and four earned exclusions on offense ... On defense, she recorded 10 steals and one field block ... Earned a spot on the Winter and Spring DHR. High School — Eight-time letterwinner in swimming and water polo for Coach Mark Walsh at Santa Barbara High School ... In water polo, she was a three-time First-Team All CIF selection ... Was a four-time First-Team All-Channel League choice ... Led SBHS to a pair of Channel League titles ... Two-time team captain (2012 and ’13) ... In 104 career games played, she scored 249 goals, recorded 296 steals and 217 assists, and drew 100 ejections ... In swimming, she was a two-time CIF Div. I finalist in the 50 Free and a 2012 finalist in the 200 Free ... Also served as captain of the swim team as a senior. Club — Veteran member of the USA Water Polo program ... Six-time USA AllAmerican, two-time co-MVP of the USA National Junior Olympics Team ... Fivetime USA National Junior Olympics champion ... Three-time U.S. Club champion. Personal — Chose UCLA for the “academic and athletic opportunities, and to win a national championship” ... Lists her greatest athletic thrill to date as advancing to seven Junior Olympics finals ... Admires multi-gold medalist Michael Phelps, soccer superstar Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal and the Lakers’ Kobe Bryant ... Enjoys surfing, beach volleyball and traveling as hobbies ... Taught herself how to swim ... Father Patrick coached the UC Santa Barbara water polo team for 10 years ... Born in her hometown ... Geography and environmental studies major.

KELSEY O’BRIEN’S CAREER STATISTICS GP/GS 26/0 20/3 31/31 77/34

G 8 12 25 45

ATT 18 27 66 111

PCT .444 .444 .379 .405

AST 9 6 20 35

STL 10 12 41 63

BLK 1 0 11 11

REEGO

R-Sophomore • Attacker • 5-10 Granite Bay, Calif. (Granite Bay)

2016 — ACWPC All-America honorable mention selection ... Started in all 31 games this season ... Scored 25 goals, including five on counterattacks ... Led the team with 41 steals, while also recording 11 blocks and 20 assists ... Notched three goals against Cal in the MPSF third-place game ... Earned MPSF All-Academic honors.

Year 2014 2015 2016 Totals

GRACE

EE 0 4 9 17

2016 — Reshirted most of the season ... Played in nine games ... Scored eight goals, including five in front-court offense and two on counterattacks ... Also recorded three assists and four steals ... Posted three two-goals games on the season. 2015 — Played in 10 games without a start ... Netted 10 goals on 18 attempts (.556) ... Was 2 for 2 in 6-on-5 situations ... Posted a career-high three goals against Sonoma State (1/25) ... On defense, she recorded two steals and two blocks. Club — Played for Rose Bowl Water Polo in 2014, and previously for Sacramento Water Polo 2012-13 and American River Water Polo 2007-2011 ... Won the 2014 National 18U Junior Olympics, scoring a hat trick in the championship game … Earned Second-Team All-America honors … Leading scorer for SWP 2012-13 and MVP of ARWP 2009-2011. USA Water Polo — Three-year member of the ODP Central Cal A Team, earning Silver at the 2013 ODP Regional Championships ... Participated in the 2013 and 2014 National Training Selection Camps. High School — Earned four varsity letters each in water polo and swimming at Granite Bay HS ... In water polo, she was coached by Mike and Jeanette Saldana and her brother Andrew Reego ... Was a semi-finalist at the DI Sac-Joaquin Section Championships and was a three-time CIF Sac-Joaquin All-Section selection, including first-team and All-America honors in 2013 ... Three-time all-league selection and GBHS MVP... Named 2012 and 2013 All-City Player by the Sacramento Bee … Led GBHS in scoring with 326 career goals ... 2012-2013 USA Water Polo Academic AllAmerican ... In swimming, she was coached by John Sherman and Andrew Reego, and earned the 2013 and 2014 Coaches Award … Helped lead GBHS to the 2014 DI Sac-Joaquin Section Championships after three runner-up finishes. Personal — Has one brother, Andrew, who graduated from USC as a member of the men’s water polo team ... Chose UCLA for its winning tradition, coaching staff, team chemistry and academic reputation ... Athletic highlight to date was winning the 18U JO Championships with Rose Bowl ... Hobbies include paddle-boarding, open water swimming and playing with her dogs... Father Jim played water polo at Indiana and mother Liz has a swimming and golf background ... Volunteered at the Folsom City Zoo Sanctuary one summer ... Born in Roseville, CA ... Majoring in psychology.

GRACE REEGO’S CAREER STATISTICS Year GP/GS 2015 10/0 2016 9/0 TOTALS 19/0

G 10 8 18

12

ATT 18 16 34

PCT .556 .500 .529

AST 0 3 3

STL 2 4 6

BLK 2 0 2

EE 2 2 4

NICOLE

REYNOLDS

Junior • Attacker • 6-1 Burlingame, Calif. (Burlingame) 2016 — Played in 15 games with no starts ... Scored 15 goals on 24 attempts for a shot percentage of .625 ... Netted nine goals on counterattacks and was 3-for-4 in power plays ... Posted a season-high four goals against Redlands (Apr. 3) ... Recorded seven assists, seven steals, and two blocks on the season ... Earned ACWPC and MPSF All-Academic honors. 2015 — Played in eight games with no starts ... Recorded two goals and an assist on offense. High School — Three-year water polo and two-year swimming letterwinner ... Coached by Sean Joy in water polo and Chris Culp in swimming ... 2014 first-team all-league and 2013 second-team all-league honoree in swimming ... 2013 and 2014 Most Improved Swimmer for Burligame HS ... In water polo, she was a three-time first-team all-league selection and a two-time All-CCS second-team choice ... 2013 water polo MVP for Burlingame HS ... In her last two seasons, she scored 178 goals (118 as a senior), and recorded 72 assists and 137 steals (86 as a senior). Club — Played for the Stanford Water Polo Club, which finished fourth in the 2014 U.S. Club Championships ... Also attended training camp with the U.S. National Team.

11


VETERAN PROFILES Personal — Has one older sister, Dani ... Chose UCLA because “it is an amazing university with great athletic programs and facilities” ... Hobbies include skiing, backpacking and basketball ... Loves basketball, and admires point guard Stephen Curry and small forward Draymond Green of the Golden State Warriors ... Born in her hometown ... Political science major.

21

NICOLE REYNOLDS’ CAREER STATISTICS Year GP/GS 2015 8/0 2016 15/0 TOTALS 23/0

G 2 15 17

19

ATT 16 24 40

PCT .333 .625 .425

AST 1 7 8

STL 0 7 7

BLK 0 2 2

EE 1 2 3

LIZETTE

ROZEBOOM R

ALEXA

TIELMANN

R-Senior • Center • 6-0 Abbotsford, BC, CAN (Yale Secondary) 2016 — ACWPC All-America honorable mention selection ... Played in 28 games (six starts) ... Was fifth on the team in scoring with 35 goals, including 30 from 2-meters or closer ... Posted a .538 shot percentage and earned 21 exclusions ... Also recorded 11 steals and eight assists ... Netted a season-high four goals twice, first against Pomona Pitzer (Apr. 3) and later against Arizona State (Apr. 15) ... Earned MPSF Player of the Week honors for her performance against the Sun Devils (Apr. 19) ... Second Team All-MPSF selection ... MPSF All-Academic selection. 2015 — Redshirted while training with the Canadian Women’s National Team ... Competed for Canada at the 2015 World University Games in Gwangju, Korea ... As the starting center for her team, Alexa helped Canada earn a silver medal -- the country’s first medal in women’s water polo at the Universiade ... Their only loss came in the gold medal match against Australia, which was decided by a shoot-out.

Sophomore • Attacker • 6-0 Hilversum, Netherlands (Alberdingk Thijm) Dutch Junior National Team, Summer 2016 — Won gold with the Dutch Women’s Junior National Team at the LEN Junior European Championships U19 in The Hague ... Leading scorer on her team with 18 goals throughout the tournament, including two goals in the gold medal match against Spain.

2014 — Played in 31 games without a start ... Scored 14 goals in 44 attempts, including 11 from 2-meters or closer ... Scored at least two goals three times ... Recorded 29 earned exclusions, third most on the team ... On defense, she made eight steals ... Earned a spot on the Winter Quarter DHR.

2016 — Played in 27 games with two starts ... Was third on the squad in scoring with 40 goals, including a season-high seven against George Washington (Mar. 5) ... Posted a .563 shot percentage ... Also recorded 10 assists, 12 steals, and two blocks ... Selected to the MPSF All-Newcomer Team.

2013 — Played 33 games with one start, and scored 29 goals, to rank third on the team ... Recorded a shooting percntage of .507 ... Scored 22 goals from the twometer area and five on counterattacks ... Scored a career-high of three goals vs. UCI (2/15) ... Recorded eight other multiple-goal games ... Drew 19 earned exclusions ... Defensively, she recorded one steal and six blocks ... Earned a spot on the Fall 2012 Director’s Honor Roll.

Club — Competed with Widex GZC Donk, one of the top clubs in the Netherlands ... Helped lead WGZCD to U17 National Championships in 2013 and 2014 ... Was the top goal-scorer in 2013 and 2014 while earning MVP honors in 2013 ... A member of the WGZCD senior team that won the National Championship in 2015 ... Was sixth on the top-scorers list in 2015 ... Trained with the Dutch National Youth Team and competed with the Youth and Junior Teams ... Helped lead the Youth Team to bronze at EYC in Istanbul. Personal — Daughter of Marco and Leonie Rozeboom ... Has a younger brother, Giovanni ... Chose UCLA because it “offers a top-notch education in addition to being an athletic powerhouse. It’s a great chance to join this team with their high quality standards, while getting a quality degree at the same time” ... Born in Hilversum, Netherlands.

LIZETTE ROZEBOOM’S CAREER STATISTICS Year 2016

GP/GS 27/2

G 40

5

ATT 71

PCT .563

AST 10

STL 12

BLK 2

EE 3

SARAH

SHELDON

High School — Was a member of the water polo team at the Yale Secondary School ... Was a three-year Elite Athlete Award winner in high school ... Named team MVP in 2010 and 2012 ... Helped lead her team to a second place finish at the 2012 British Columbia high School Championships ... Also guided her team to second and third place finishes at the 2010 and 2011 British Columbia High School Championships ... Was named to the Championship All-Star Team in 2010, 2011 and 2012 ... Inducted into the Abbotsford Sports Wall of Fame in 2012. Club — Competed for the Fraser Valley Water Polo Club ... Finished third at the Canadian National Club Championships in 2010, 2011 and 2012 ... Named to the All-Star National Team in 2010, 2011 and 2012 ... Was the top scorer at the 2012 Canadian National Club Championships ... Awarded the 2010-11 and 2011-12 Most Valuable U-18 Athlete at the Fraser Valley Water Polo Club ... With Team BC, was a member of the U-16 team that won bronze in 2009 and gold in 2010 at the Hawaiian Invitational ... Helped the Canadian National Team win the gold medal in 2011 at the Youth Pan-Am Games in Puerto Rico and to finish in fifth place at the 2012 Youth World Championships in Australia ... Was a member of the 2012 Junior Canadian National Team which earned a second place finish at the Junior Pan-Am Games in Montreal ... Also competed with the Canadian Senior National Team at the 2012 FINA Women’s Water Polo World League Super Final in China. Personal — Born in her hometown ... Daughter of Henry and Leanne Tielmann ... Has one brother, Ryan ... Lists her greatest athletic thrill to date as winning the 2011 Youth Pan-Am Games by one goal over the USA.

Sophomore • Center • 6-2 Long Beach, Calif. (Woodrow Wilson) 2016 — Played in 5 games ... Scored seven goals on 11 attempts for a .636 shot percentage ... Was 3-for-3 on counterattacks and netted three from two-meters or closer ... Also recorded four assists and five steals ... Notched a season-high three goals against Bucknell (Mar. 6). High School — Four-year varsity water polo letter winner at Woodrow Wilson High School ... Also lettered in swimming all four years ... Helped lead the Bruins to four straight Moore League titles, while earning first-team all-league honors three times ... Moore League Player of the Year (2014-15) ... First-Team All-CIF selection (201415) ... First-Team All-League (2013-14) and Second-Team All-League (2012-13) ... Team captain (2014-15) ... In swimming, earned Moore League honorable mention nod all four years.

ALEXA TIELMANN’S CAREER STATISTICS Year 2013 2014 2016 Totals

Club — Competed for Huntington Beach Water Polo Club under coaches Natalie and Eric Benson and Jim Crowther ... Helped lead the squad to the 2013 Kap7 Tournament title and a runner-up finish in the 2012 National Club Championships. Personal — Daughter of Mark and Karen Sheldon ... Has a younger sister, Samantha ... Says she chose UCLA because of its prestigious academic and athletic repuation ... Major is undecided.

SARAH SHELDON’S CAREER STATISTICS Year 2016

GP/GS 5/0

G 7

ATT 11

PCT .636

AST 4

STL 5

BLK 0

EE 5

12

GP/GS 33/1 31/0 28/6 92/7

G 29 14 35 78

ATT 57 44 65 166

PCT .509 .318 .538 .470

AST 0 0 8 8

STL 1 8 11 20

BLK 6 0 2 8

EE 19 29 21 69


VETERAN PROFILES

14

RACHEL

2

WHITELEGGE W

Sophomore • Defender • 5-8 Costa Mesa, Calif. (Newport Harbor)

USA Water Polo — Played on the U.S. Youth National Team that won the FINA Youth World Championship in Madrid last summer ... She was also a member of the 2013 USA Team that won the gold medal at the UANA Pan American Games in Argentina High School — Letter winner in water polo (2012-15) and swimming (2014-15) at Newport Harbor High School ... Second-Team All-American in 2015 ... All-Sunset League First Team member (2015) and Second Team member (2013, 2014) ... All-CIF DI First Team member in 2015 and Third Team selection in 2013 and 2014) ... Was a member of the Newport-Mesa Dream Team in 2014 and 2015 and of the Orange County Dream Team in 2015 ... Team was the Sunset League Champion in 2013 and 2015, and the CIF Division I runner-up in 2013 and 2014 ... NISCA All-American Second Team selection (2015). Club — Played for Newport Water Polo Foundation. Personal — Daughter of Julian and Maena Whitelegge ... Has an older brother, Chris, and a younger brother, John ... Says she chose UCLA because, “It has some of the top programs academically and athletically, it’s relatively close to home, and it’s been a goal of mine since I was a little kid to attend UCLA” ... Born in Santa Ana, Calif. ... Undeclared major.

RACHEL WHITELEGGE’S CAREER STATISTICS GP/GS 24/0

G 12

17

ATT 34

PCT .353

AST 9

STL 11

BLK 1

EE 4

ALLIE

WIESELER W

2016 — Played in five games ... Scored four goals on eight attempts ... Was 2-for-2 on counterattacks ... Posted a season-high two goals against Redlands (Apr. 3) ... Recorded three assists and four steals on the season. High School — Wieseler scored more than 400 goals for Redlands East Valley HS, and earned All-CIF honors three times ... A four-time all-league performer in swimming and water polo ... Earned Academic All-America honors and Junior Olympics AllAmerica acclaim ... Lettered all four years in water polo and swimming ... Citrus Belt Area Athlete of the Year ... Named MVP in 2014 and co-MVP in 2015. Club — Competed for Foothill Club Water Polo. Personal — Daughter of Dave and Jill Wieseler ... Has two sisters, Alexis and Madison ... Says she chose UCLA because she was raised a Bruin and it has always been her dream school ... Major is pre-human biology and society.

ALLIE WIESELER’S CAREER STATISTICS GP/GS 5/0

G 4

ATT 8

PCT .500

AST 3

STL 4

BLK 0

2016 – Took an Olympic Redshirt year to train with the U.S. National Team. USA Water Polo, Summer 2015 – Helped the USA Women’s Senior National Team to win the World Championships ... Also helped team USA win the Kunshan Cup, scoring four goals throughout the tournament, including one in the championship game against the Netherlands. 2015 – Earned third-team ACWPC All-America honors for the first time in her career ... Selected to the All-MPSF honorable mention team ... Scored 38 goals, tied for second-most on the squad with Emily Donohoe ... Played 28 games games (26 starts), scoring 15 goals ... Scored a season-high four goals vs. Cal (1/31) ... Scored two goals vs. Cal (5/9) in the NCAA semifinal... Added 23 assists and 10 earned exclusions ... On defense, she recorded 39 steals and 10 field blocks ... Named to the MPSF All-Academic team. USA Water Polo, Summer 2014 – Helped the USA to championships in three international events: the FINA World League Super Final, the Kinishi Cup and that FINA World Cup ... Scored eight total goals in three events ... At the World League Super Final, she scored four goals in a game against Canada. 2014 – Earned Honorable Mention ACWPC All-America and All-MPSF honors ... Started all 32 games, scoring 35 goals ... Scored a career-high of five goals vs. CS Monterey Bay ... Scored three goals vs. UCSD (5/9) in the NCAA quarterfinal ... Also recorded five other multiple-goal games ... Added 26 assists and 11 earned exclusions ... On defense, she recorded 40 steals and five field blocks ... Named to the MPSF All-Academic team. USA Water Polo, Summer 2013 – Played on the USA Junior National Team that won the gold medal at the Junior World Championships in Greece ... Scored three goals, one each vs. Italy, New Zealand and Greece. 2013 – Earned ACWPC All-America Honorable Mention honors after placing fifth in team scoring with 27 goals ... Eight of her goals came on 6x5 opportunities and 10 came on counterattacks ... Also recorded 15 assists and 17 earned exclusions ... On defense, she recorded eight field blocks and 29 steals, second most on the team ... Scored a season-high of four goals vs. Cal Lutheran (2/9) ... Netted three goals vs Hawaii (2/2) ... Recorded four other multiple-goal games ... Played in 35 games, starting 14 ... Recorded a shooting percentage of .370 ...Winter and Spring member of the Director’s Honor Roll.

Sophomore • Attacker • 5-10 Highland, Calif. (Redlands East Valley)

Year 2016

WILLIAMS

R-Senior • Defender • 5-11 Huntington Beach, Calif. (Edison)

2016 — Played in 24 games with no starts ... Scored 12 goals, including six on counterattacks and two on power plays ... Posted four two-goal games on the season ... Also recorded nine assists, 11 steals, and one block.

Year 2016

ALYS

EE 1

High School – Four-year varsity water polo letter winner at Edison High School under Head Coach Diggy Riley ... Also was a four-year varsity swimming letterwinner ... Was the 2012 Edison High School Athlete of the Year and Hall of Fame inductee ... Selected First-Team All-CIF Division I in 2011 and 2012 ... Earned first-team allleague honors in 2010, 2011 and 2012 ... Chosen all-county in 2010, 2011 and 2012 ... Was an Academic All-American in 2012 ... In 2012, she set Edison school records for goals (113) and assists (64) ... Holds all-time career record for total goals (353) and assists (214). Club – Competed for Huntington Beach Club...was a first-team All-American for USA Water Polo at the Junior Olympics in 2009, 2010 and 2012 ... Finished first in 2011 and second in 2012 with Huntington Beach Club at Junior Olympics ... Was a member of the U.S. Youth National Team and competed at the Youth Worlds in 2012. Personal – Born in Fountain Valley ... Alys is the daughter of Robert and Constance Williams ... Has two sisters, Chelsea and Lyndsie ... First name is pronounced: a-LEASE ... Lists her greatest athletic achievement to date as winning the World Championships in 2015... Psychology major.

ALYS WILLIAMS’ CAREER STATISTICS Year GP/GS 2013 35/14 2014 32/32 2015 28/26 TOTALS 95/72

13

G 27 35 38 100

ATT 73 69 97 241

PCT .370 .507 .392 .423

AST 15 26 23 64

STL 29 40 39 108

BLK 8 5 10 23

EE 17 11 10 38


FRESHMEN PROFILES

16

HALEY

24

EVANS E

Freshman • Attacker • 5-6 Laguna Beach, Calif. (Laguna Beach)

MAXSON M

Freshman • Attacker • 5-8 Santa Ana, Calif. (Foothill)

High School — Lettered all four years in water polo and swimming at Laguna Beach High School ... Earned first team USA Water Polo All-American 18U Girls honors in 2016 and second team honors in 2015 ... Varsity co-captain her junior and senior years ... Earned second team Orange Coast All-League honors in 2013, 2014, and 2015 ... Selected to the Orange Coast All-League first team in 2016 ... All-CIF second team selection in 2015 and third team selection in 2014 and 2016 ... Member of the CIF Southern Section Division 1 Championship team (2014, 2015) ... Helped lead Laguna Beach HS to four first-place Orange Coast League finishes. Club — Played for the Saddleback El Toro Water Polo Club ... Member of the Junior Olympic 16U Championship team in 2013 and 2014. Personal — Daughter of Scott and Esmé Evans ... Has a younger sister, Alana ... Says she chose UCLA because “I love everything about the school and the people here, and I knew the minute I walked down Bruin Walk that I wanted to come here. Everything that is UCLA is great, and I wanted more than anything to be part of it all.” ... major is undecided.

18

BROOKE

High School — Lettered all four years in water polo and swimming at Foothill High School ... Member of the Century League Championship team (2012-2016) ...Century League first team selection for the 2014-2015 season ... Century League MVP (2016) ... All-County Team selection (2016) ... 2015 Defensive Player of the Year ... 2015-16 Knight of the Year ... Two-time All-American in swimming (2015, 2016). Club — Played for SOCAL Water Polo Foundation ... Junior Olympic 18U Champion in 2016 ... First team All-American in 2016. Personal — Daughter of Ric and Pamela Maxson ... Has an older brother Jake and an older sister Hillary ... Her mother attended UCLA ... Says she chose UCLA because “I attended UCLA because I love the spirit and pride people carry for this school. Growing up in a Bruin household I loved being around someone who truly loved a place so much. UCLA offers the perfect balance to me of athletics, academics, and fun.”

JENNA

7

HURST

MADDIE

MUSSELMAN

Freshman • Attacker • 5-11 Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar)

Freshman • Attacker • 5-6 Simi Valley, Calif. (Royal) High School — Lettered all four years in water polo and swimming at Royal High School ... A two-time All-American in water polo in 2015 and 2016 ... Helped lead Royal High School to back-to-back CIF Southern Section titles (2015, 2016) ... Twotime CIF-SS Division 4 Player of the Year ... Coastal Canyon League MVP ... Royal’s all-time leading goal-scorer with 364 goals, including 103 as a senior ... Also tallied 110 assists and 69 steals. Personal — Daughter of Devin and Autumn Hurst ... Has two sisters, Sydney and Gracie ... major is undecided.

USA Water Polo, Summer 2016 — Won gold with Team USA in Rio ... Tallied 12 goals throughout the Olympic Games, including a game-high four goals against China in pool play ... Olympic All-Tournament Team selection. USA Water Polo, Summer 2015 — Won gold with Team USA at the FINA World Championships and at the Pan Am Games. High School — Three-time letter winner in water polo at Corona del Mar High School ... Attended Laurel Springs Online Academy her senior season in order to train with the U.S. Women’s Senior National Team ... Two-time Pacific Coast League All-League selection ... Pacific Coast League MVP in 2014 ... Member of the Newport-Mesa Dream Team in 2014 and 2015 ... 2014 Newport-Mesa Player of the Year ... Two-time All-CIF first team selection (2014, 2015) ... Helped lead CDM to three Pacific Coast League titles (2013-2015) ... Member of the 2013 CIF Division 1 State Championship team. Club — Played for CDM Aquatics ... Won gold with the Team USA Youth Team at the 2014 Youth World Championships and the 2013 Youth Pan Am Games. Personal — Daughter of Jeff and Karen Musselman ... Older sister Alex played water polo for UCLA (2012-2016) ... Has a younger sister, Ella ... Admires former Bruin Courtney Mathewson ... Musselman’s father played baseball for Harvard (1981-1985) and for the Toronto Blue Jays and Mets (1986-1990) ... Her mother played soccer at Rutgers ... Says she chose UCLA because “UCLA has the best combination of water polo, academics, and campus life.”

14


FRESHMEN PROFILES

20

TARA

26

PRENTICE P

Freshman • Utility • 6-0 Temecula, Calif. (Murrieta Valley)

STORM S

Freshman • Utility • 5-10 Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar)

High School — Lettered all four years in water polo and swimming at Murrieta Valley High School ... Two-time All-CIF first team selection ... First team All-League selection in 2016 ... CIF State Champion in 2016. Club — Played for SOCAL Water Polo Foundation... Junior Olympic Champion in 2016 ... First team All-American in 2016. Personal — Daughter of Samuel and Michelle Prentice ... Has a younger brother Daniel and a younger sister Ciara ... Says she chose UCLA because “It has been my dream school since freshman year. I love Westwood and all the school has to offer. The combination of athletics and academics is so special and I’m honored to be a Bruin.” ... plans to major in political science.

22

BRIDGETT

High School — Lettered all four years in water polo and swimming at Corona del Mar ... First team All-Pacific Coast League selection ... Second team All-CIF Division 1 selection ... CDM Scholar Athlete ... member of the U.S. Youth National Team ... Recipient of the Nick Johnson Inspiration Award ... Was co-captain her senior year. Club — Played for SOCAL Water Polo Foundation. Personal — Daughter of Tim and Nora Storm ... Has an older brother Nick and a younger sister Mackenzie ... Her grandfather and uncle both attended UCLA.

EMILY

1

SKELLY S

Freshman • Attacker • 5-7 Irvine, Calif. (Orange Lutheran)

HANNAH

STORUM

Freshman • Goalkeeper • 5-11 Coronado, Calif. (Coronado)

High School — Lettered all four years in water polo and swimming at Orange Lutheran High School ... Two-time All-American ... Two-time first team All-CIF and first team All-County selection ... Trinity League MVP in 2015 and first team selection in 2016 ... Member of the 2016 CIF Southern Section Division 1 Championship team ... LHSOC Lancer Award recipient in 2016 ... LHSOC Athlete of the Year in 2015 ... Member of the 2015 Trinity League Championship team ... Earned second team All-League honors in 2013 and 2014 ... Third team All-CIF as a freshman. Club — Played for Northwood Water Polo Club under coach Steve Carrera. Personal — Daughter of Steven and Kristen Skelly ... Has an older brother Cody and an older sister Erin ... Her uncle Tim Skelly attended UCLA ... Says she chose UCLA because of the level of competition in athletics and the outstanding academic opportunities it provides.

High School — Lettered all four years in water polo at Coronado High School... Also lettered in swimming three years ... Two-time Defense MVP (2013, 2015) ... Two-time selection to the CIF San Diego All-Academic Team and UT-San Diego All-Academic Team (2015, 2016) ... USA Water Polo Academic All-American in 2015 ... Pacific Southwest Region Olympic Development Program Team (2014-15) ... Swim team MVP in 2015. Personal — Daughter of William and Pauline Storum ... Has a younger brother William ... Says she chose UCLA because “I love everything about it! The academic and athletic programs, the campus, and the amount of opportunity it offers.” ... Her mother played basketball for Navy and her grandfather played football and competed in track and field at Stanford ... Her aunt Marie Mitchell graduated from UCLA in 1986, and her cousin Scott Mitchell is a freshman on the men’s golf team this year.

15


2016 IN REVIEW

2016 BOX SCORES UCLA 13, Hawai’i 8 (Jan. 23)

UCLA 11, UC Irvine (Feb. 19)

UCLA 9, Michigan 5 (Mar. 6)

UCLA 16, ASU 6 (Apr. 15)

No. 2 UCLA (4, 3, 5, 1 – 13) Grab – 3; Forster, Reego, Tielmann – 2; Zwirner, Barr, Pratt, Monahan – 1 No 7. Hawai’i (1, 2, 2, 3 – 8) Aan – 4, Abellan – 2, Barton, Bell – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 5); Hawai’i (n/a)

No. 2 UCLA (6, 2, 0, 3 – 11) Rozeboom, Grab, Barr, Pratt, Tielmann – 2; Forster –1 No. 9 UC Irvine (2, 0, 2, 2 – 6) Brooks – 3; Toledo, Eldridge, Pierandozzi – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 8; Kapana – 4); UC Irvine (Phreaner – 5)

No. 2 UCLA (2, 3, 3, 1 – 9) Grab, Forster – 3; Barr, O’Brien, Whitelegge – 1 No. 5 Michigan (0, 3, 2, 0 – 5) Thomason – 2; Martin, D. Johnson, K. Johnson – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 4, Kapana – 3); Michigan (Campbell – 6)

No. 2 UCLA (4, 3, 6, 3 – 16) Tielmann – 4; Grab – 3; Rozeboom, Forster, O’Brien – 2; Zwirner, Schilling, Barr – 1 No. 4 ASU (2, 2, 2, 0 – 6) Sverchek – 2; Carter, Koopman, Gao, Kerth – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 8); ASU (Rycraw – 4)

UCLA 8, UCSB 5 (Jan. 23) No. 2 UCLA (3, 2, 2, 1 – 8) Forster – 3; Tielmann – 2; Barr, O’Brien, Pratt – 1 No. 14 UCSB (1, 1, 2, 1 – 5) Murphy – 2; Martin, Schrader, Trabucco – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana – 15); UCSB (Brokaw – 6)

UCLA 11, LBSU 4 (Jan. 24) No. 2 UCLA (2, 2, 3, 4 – 11) Barr – 4; Pratt, Grab – 2; O’Brien, Zwirner, Reego –1 No. 17 LBSU (0, 1, 1, 2 – 4) Auth, Matheson, Smith, Morrissey – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 5); LBSU (n/a)

UCLA 11, Michigan 7 (Jan. 24) No. 2 UCLA (3, 3, 4, 1 – 11) Grab, Forster, Barr, Reego – 2; Zwirner, O’Brien, Tielmann – 1 No. 12 Michigan (1, 2, 3, 1 – 7) Thomason – 4; Martin, Sellers, Johnson – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana – 12); Michigan (Campbell – 6)

UCLA 17, Sonoma State 1 (Feb. 13) No. 1 UCLA (4, 6, 3, 4 – 17) Rozeboom, Barr, O’Brien, Reynolds, Whitelegge, Reego – 2; Zwirner, Grab, Forster, Pratt, Tielmann –1 Sonoma State (0, 1, 0, 0 – 1) Lewis – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana - 10); Sonoma State (n/a)

UCLA 14, LMU 7 (Feb. 13) No. 1 UCLA (3, 3, 5, 3 – 14) Forster – 3; Zwirner, Pratt – 2; Grab, Barr, O’Brien, Reynolds, Whitelegge, Reego, Tielmann – 1 No. 16 LMU (0, 2, 3, 2 – 7) Alvarez – 2; Emily Byrne, Owens, Erin Byrne, Nelson, Hill – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman - 6); LMU (n/a)

UCLA 5, UC Davis 1 (Feb. 14) No. 1 UCLA (2, 3, 0, 0 – 5) Barr – 2; Grab, Pratt, Monahan – 1 No. 7 UC Davis (0, 0, 0, 1 – 1) Lutz – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana – 7; Musselman – 4); UC Davis (n/a)

USC 8, UCLA 6 (Feb. 14) No. 2 USC (2, 3, 3, 0 – 8) Daboub, S. Haralabidis – 3; I. Haralabidis, Games –1 No. 1 UCLA (0, 3, 2, 1 – 6) Zwirner – 2; Forster, Barr, O’Brien, Monahan – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana - 9); USC (n/a)

UCLA 6, SDSU 5 (Feb. 27)

UCLA 20, Bucknell 5 (Mar. 6)

No. 2 UCLA (2, 2, 0, 2 – 6) Tielmann – 2; Grab, Forster, Barr, Pratt – 1 No. 19 SDSU (0, 3, 1, 1 – 5) Behekou –2; Walsh, Magro, Diacono – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 12); SDSU (Mitchell – 6)

No. 2 UCLA (4, 4, 5, 7 – 20) Sheldon, Zwirner, Reynolds – 3; Rozeboom, Grab, Forster, Barr, Tielmann – 2; Blacker – 1 Bucknell (0, 2, 2, 1 – 5) Konishi, Sunday, McCarthy, Marrs, Considine – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana – 4, Musselman – 7); Bucknell (Derrod – 3)

UCLA 14, Michigan 8 (Feb. 27)

UCLA 6, CSUB 1 (Mar. 20)

No. 2 UCLA (3, 4, 1, 6 – 14) Barr – 4; Zwirner, Tielmann – 3; Whitelegge – 2; Grab, Forster – 1 No. 7 Michigan (3, 2, 2, 1 – 8) Thomason – 3; Anderson, Skaggs, D. Johnson, Ridge, K. Johnson – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana – 11); Michigan (Campbell – 2)

No. 2 UCLA (2, 1, 3, 0 – 6) Forster – 2; Schilling, Grab, Rozeboom, Tielmann –1 No. 24 CSU Bakersfield (1, 0, 0, 0 – 1) Barrett – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 4, Kapana – 5); CSUB (Wahlstrom – 7; Benson – 1)

UCLA 4, Cal 3 (Mar. 25) UCLA 10, Hawai’i 6 (Feb. 28) No. 2 UCLA (4, 0, 5, 1 – 10) Zwirner, Grab, Pratt, Tielmann – 2; Rozeboom, Forster – 1 No. 6 Hawai’i (2, 1, 2, 1 – 6) Abellan, Gonzalez – 2; Aan, Bell – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana – 8); Hawai’i (n/a)

USC 10, UCLA 7 (Feb. 28) No. 1 USC (3, 2, 4, 1 – 10) S. Haralabidis – 3; Stansfield, Peterson – 2; I. Haralabidis, McKelvey, Games – 1 No. 2 UCLA (2, 1, 3, 1 – 7) Rozeboom, Zwirner, Schilling, Grab, Forster, O’Brien, Pratt – 1 Saves: USC (Longan – 10); UCLA (Musselman – 10)

UCLA 17, LMU 4 (Mar. 5) No. 2 UCLA (5, 3, 6, 3 – 17) Rozeboom – 3; Zwirner, Grab, Forster, Barr – 2; Schilling, O’Brien, Reynolds, Whitelegge, Angermund, Tielmann – 1 No. 15 LMU (1, 1, 1, 1 – 4) Alvarez, Castro, Schaefer, Vilanova – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana – 5, Musselman – 4); LMU (Flores – 5)

UCLA 22, GWU 5 (Mar. 5) No. 2 UCLA (7, 4, 4, 7 – 22) Rozeboom – 7; Sheldon, Forster, Reynolds – 2; Hazell, Blacker, Schilling, Barr, Whitelegge, Wieseler, Pratt, Tielmann, Monahan – 1 George Washington (2, 2, 0, 1 – 5) Hallahan – 3; Bywater, Goodell – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 4; Kapana – 3); GWU (Colona – 7)

No. 2 UCLA (0, 1, 3, 0 – 4) Rozeboom, Forster, O’Brien, Pratt – 1 No. 8 Cal (1, 0, 2, 0 – 3) Carrega – 2, Vowell – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 9); Cal (Tagg – 9)

UCLA 13, SJSU 6 (Apr. 2) No. 2 UCLA (4, 3, 3, 3 – 13) Barr – 4; O’Brien – 3; Rozeboom, Zwirner, Grab, Forster, Pratt, Monahan – 1 No. 11 SJSU (1, 2, 1, 2 – 6) Lekness, Momen – 2; Robinson, Toha Vilanova – 1 Saves: UCLA (Kapana – 13); SJSU (Magliocco – 8)

UCLA 23, Redlands 2 (Apr. 3) No. 2 UCLA (3, 8, 4, 8 – 23) Rozeboom, Grab – 5; Reynolds – 4; Sheldon, Whitelegge, Wieseler – 2; Hazell, Blacker, Schilling –1 Redlands (0, 0, 2, 0 – 2) Kinney – 2 Saves: UCLA (Kapana – 3); Redlands (Lopez – 5; Gardner – 4)

UCLA 9, Stanford 8 (3OT) (Apr. 23) No. 2 UCLA (2, 1, 1, 2, 2, 0, 1 – 9) Grab – 4; Barr, Forster – 2; Monahan – 1 No. 3 Stanford (0, 3, 2, 1, 2, 0, 0 – 8) Neushul – 4; Klass, Jackovich – 2 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 8); Stanford (Hermann – 9)

UCLA 10, CSUB 3 (Apr. 29) No. 2 UCLA (2, 2, 3, 3 – 10) Rozeboom, Zwirner, Grab – 2; Hazell, Barr, O’Brien, Tielmann – 1 No. 25 CSUB (1, 2, 0, 0 – 3) Jensen, Barrett, Paz – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 5); CSUB (Wahlstrom – 14)

Stanford 6, UCLA 3 (Apr. 30) No. 3 Stanford (2, 2, 1, 1 – 6) Jackovich, Neushul – 2; Raney, Klass – 1 No. 2 UCLA (2, 1, 0, 0 – 3) Angermund, Tielmann, Monahan – 1 Saves: Stanford (Hermann – 14); UCLA (Musselman – 4)

UCLA 7, Cal 5 (May 1) No. 2 UCLA (2, 3, 1, 1 – 7) O’Brien – 3; Rozeboom – 2; Barr, Pratt – 1 No. 6 Cal (1, 1, 1, 2 – 5) Carrega, Paul – 2; Loughlin – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 11); Cal (Trabucco – 1; Tagg – 3)

UCLA 17, UCSD 4 (May 13) No. 3 UCLA (2, 5, 7, 3 – 17) Rozeboom – 4; Tielmann – 3; Zwirner, Barr, O’Brien, Angermund – 2; Schilling, Monahan – 1 No. 10 UCSD (1, 2, 0, 1 – 4) A. Wieseler – 2; Kistler, Wu – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 9; Kapana – 1); UCSD (Miller – 5; Scholz – 3)

UCLA 25, Pomona-Pitzer 3 (Apr. 3)

Stanford 7, UCLA 4 (May 14)

No. 2 UCLA (6, 9, 7, 3 – 25) Tielmann – 4; Rozeboom, O’Brien – 3; Hazell, Zwirner, Schilling, Forster, Reynolds, Whitelegge – 2; Grab, Barr, Wieseler – 1 Pomona-Pitzer (0, 0, 1, 2 – 3) Yu, Williamson, Hill – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 8; Kapana – 2); Pomona-Pitzer (Earwood – 1; Stockham – 2)

UCLA 5, Michigan 4 (May 15)

USC 8, UCLA 5 (Apr. 9) No. 1 USC (2, 2, 3, 1 – 8) Games, S. Haralabidis – 2; I. Haralabidis, Bergesen, Daboub, Peterson – 1 No. 2 UCLA (1, 1, 2, 1 – 5) Rozeboom, Zwirner, Forster, Barr, Pratt – 1 Saves: USC (Longan – 13); UCLA (Musselman – 3; Kapana – 1)

16

No. 2 Stanford (1, 3, 1, 2 – 7) Neushul – 3; Jackovich, Sohi, Klass, Berggren – 1 No. 3 UCLA (1, 1, 2, 0 – 4) Barr – 2; Grab, Tielmann – 1 Saves: Stanford (Hermann – 8); UCLA (Musselman – 4)

No. 3 UCLA (2, 1, 2, 0 – 5) Angermund – 3; Barr – 2 No. 4 Michigan (0, 1, 2, 1 – 4) Anderson – 2; Martin, Ridge – 1 Saves: UCLA (Musselman – 8); Michigan (Campbell – 7)


2016 IN REVIEW

2016 STATISTICS – Overall Record: 26-5; MPSF Record: 5-1 (2nd) Name #1 Alex Musselman #1A Carlee Kapana #2 Louise Hazell #3 Lizette Rozeboom #4 Kelsey Blacker #5 Sarah Sheldon #6 Ashley Zwirner #7 Elissia Schilling #8 Devin Grab #9 India Forster #10 Mackenzie Barr #11 Kelsey O’Brien #12 Nicole Reynolds #14 Rachel Whitelegge #15 Alexis Angermund #16 Grace Reego #17 Allie Wieseler #19 Charlotte Pratt #21 Alexa Tielmann #23 Aubrie Monahan Totals

GP/GS

G

ATT

PCT

AST

STL

EE

BLK

23/20 18/11 11/05 27/2 5/0 5/0 29/29 26/1 31/31 25/24 30/30 31/31 15/0 24/0 18/1 9/0 5/0 29/14 28/6 31/17 —

0 0 19 40 3 7 28 9 42 37 44 25 15 12 7 8 4 19 35 8 348

4 0 .263 71 6 11 68 22 93 72 111 66 24 34 18 16 8 71 65 36 815

.000 .000 5 .563 .500 .636 .412 .409 .452 .514 .396 .379 .625 .353 .389 .500 .500 .268 .538 .222 .427

11 5 6 10 3 4 20 8 26 2 28 20 7 9 3 3 3 18 8 11 204

14 10 0 12 3 5 12 16 34 15 40 41 7 11 8 4 4 20 11 9 280

0 0 0 3 0 5 15 9 24 43 29 9 2 4 11 2 1 13 21 8 199

0 0 0 2 0 0 1 3 14 3 13 11 2 1 0 0 0 15 2 13 80

UCLA TEAM LEADERS Goals 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Mackenzie Barr Devin Grab Lizette Rozeboom India Forster Alexa Tielmann

44 42 40 37 35

Mackenzie Barr Devin Grab Kelsey O’Brien Ashley Zwirner Charlotte Pratt

28 26 20 20 18

Kelsey O’Brien Mackenzie Barr Devin Grab Charlotte Pratt Elissia Schilling

41 40 34 20 16

Assists 1. 2. 3. 5.

Steals 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

FINAL 2016 ACWPC POLL Goalkeepers Alex Musselman Carlee Kapana TOTALS

GP/GS

QP

SV

GA

GAA

MP

23/20 18/11 —

75.13 50 125.13

151 115 266

100 61 161

5.32 4.88 5.19

600:28 400:00 1000:28

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

2016 RESULTS Date

OPP.

Jan. 23 Jan. 23 Jan. 24 Jan. 24 Feb. 13 Feb. 13 Feb. 14 Feb. 14 Feb. 19 Feb. 27 Feb. 27 Feb. 28 Feb. 28 Mar. 5 Mar. 5 Mar. 6 Mar. 6 Mar. 20 Mar. 25 Apr. 2 Apr. 3 Apr. 3 Apr. 9 Apr. 15 Apr. 23 Apr. 29 Apr. 30 May 1 May 13 May 14 May 15

vs. Hawai’i 1 at UCSB 1 vs. LBSU 1 vs. Michigan 1 vs. Sonoma State 2 vs. LMU 2 vs. UC Davis 2 vs. USC 2 at UC Irvine vs. SDSU 3 vs. Michigan 3 vs. Hawai’i 3 vs. USC 3 vs. LMU 4 vs. George Washington 4 at Michigan 4 vs. Bucknell 4 at CSU Bakersfield * at California * vs. San Jose State * vs. Redlands 5 vs. Pomona-Pitzer 5 at USC * vs. Arizona State * vs. Stanford * at CSU Bakersfield 6 vs. Stanford 6 vs. California 6 vs. UCSD 7 vs. Stanford 7 vs. Michigan 7

W/L

SCORE

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

13-8 8-5 11-4 11-7 17-1 14-7 5-1 6-8 11-6 6-5 14-8 10-6 7-10 17-4 22-5 9-5 20-5 6-1 4-3 13-6 23-2 25-3 5-8 16-6 9-8(3OT) 10-3 6-3 7-5 17-4 7-4 5-4

RECORD

MPSF

1-0 2-0 3-0 4-0 5-0 6-0 7-0 7-1 8-1 9-1 10-1 11-1 11-2 12-2 13-2 14-2 15-2 16-2 17-2 18-2 19-2 20-2 20-3 21-3 22-3 23-3 23-4 24-4 25-4 25-5 26-5

No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.

School

Points

USC Stanford UCLA Michigan Arizona State California Hawai’i UC Irvine UC San Diego UC Santa Barbara San Jose State Long Beach State Indiana San Diego State Pacific UC Davis Princeton Wagner Hartwick Bucknell Harvard

100 96 91 88 82 80 75 70 66 66 59 56 49 48 43 41 36 31 26 21 21

UCLA IN THE 2016 POLLS

1-0 2-0 3-0 3-0 3-0 3-1 4-1 5-1

1 - UCSB Invitational; 2 - Triton Invitational; 3 - UC Irvine Invitational; 4 - Wolverine Invitational; 5 - UCLA Invitational; 6 MPSF Tournament (hosted by CSUB); 7 - NCAA Tournament (hosted by UCLA); * MPSF contest. Home games in bold.

17

Wk.

Release Date

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

Preseason (Jan. 14) Jan. 20 Jan. 27 Feb. 3 Feb. 10 Feb. 17 Feb. 24 March 2 March 9 March 16 March 23 March 30 April 6 April 13 April 20 April 27 May 4 May 11 May 18

Rank 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3


MOUNTAIN PACIFIC SPORTS FEDERATION FINAL 2016 MPSF STANDINGS SCHOOL USC (1) ^^ * UCLA (3) ^ Stanford (2) ^ Arizona State (5) ^ California (6) ^ San Jose State (11) CSU Bakersfield

MPSF W 6 5 4 3 2 1 0

L 0 1 2 3 4 5 6

PCT 1.000 .833 .667 .500 .333 .167 .000

OVERALL HOME 3-0 3-0 2-1 2-1 2-1 0-3 0-3

AWAY 3-0 2-1 2-1 1-2 0-3 1-2 0-3

W 26 26 23 21 21 18 13

L 0 5 6 8 10 15 21

PCT 1.000 .839 .793 .724 .677 .545 .382

HOME 7-0 7-1 6-2 10-1 4-1 5-4 1-4

AWAY 8-0 6-1 7-1 2-3 2-4 3-3 3-3

NEUT 11-0 13-3 10-3 9-4 15-5 10-8 8-10

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

2016 MPSF TOURNAMENT RESULTS May 1 @ CSUB 1st Place: USC 8, Stanford 5 3rd Place: UCLA 7, California 5 5th Place: ASU 12, SJSU 5

Apr. 30 Game 6: USC 6, California 5 Game 5: Stanford 6, UCLA 3 Game 4: SJSU 12, CSUB 8

Apr. 29 Game 3: California 4, ASU 3 Game 2: Stanford 10, SJSU 6 Game 1: UCLA 10, CS Bakersfield 3

Final 2016 MPSF Women’s Water Polo Statistics Goals Name 1. Rae Lekness, SJSU 2. Stephania Haralabidis, USC 3. Carla Carrega, CAL 4. Brigitta Games, USC 5. Jamie Neushul, STAN 6. Emily Loughlin, CAL Carla Toha Vilanova, SJSU 8. Kat Klass, STAN 9. Ashley Paz, CSUB 10. Lizette Rozeboom, UCLA India Forster, UCLA

GPG 2.97 2.52 1.81 1.72 1.69 1.61 1.61 1.59 1.53 1.48 1.48

Goalkeeper Saves Name 1. Courtney Wahlstrom, CSUB 2. Mia Rycraw, ASU 3. Amanda Longan, USC 4. Carlee Kapana, UCLA 5. Julia Hermann, STAN 6. Brittany Tyra, CSUB 7. Alex Musselman, UCLA 8. Taylor Peters, SJSU

SPG 12.16 12.04 10.36 9.20 8.81 8.06 8.04 7.68

Goals Against Average Name 1. Victoria Chamorro, USC 2. Amanda Longan, USC 3. Carlee Kapana, UCLA 4. Alex Musselman, UCLA 5. Madison Tagg, CAL 6. Madeline Trabucco, CAL 7. Mia Rycraw, ASU 8. Julia Hermann, STAN

GAA 4.70 4.71 4.88 5.32 5.36 5.55 5.62 5.67

Team Goals (Offense) School 1. USC 2. Stanford 3. UCLA 4. SJSU 5. Arizona State 6. California 7. CSU Bakersfield

GPG 11.81 11.31 11.23 10.12 8.93 8.84 8.41

Team Goals (Defense) School 1. USC 2. UCLA 3. Arizona State 4. California 5. Stanford 6. San Jose State 7. CSU Bakersfield

GPG 4.50 5.19 5.31 5.52 5.55 9.12 9.94

Alex Musselman

2016 ALL-MPSF SELECTIONS First Team

Yr.

Stephania Haralabidis Jamie Neushul Rae Lekness Mackenzie Barr Ioanna Haralabidis Carla Carrega Jordan Raney Amanda Longan

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

Second Team

Yr.

Brigitta Games India Forster Emily Loughlin Pippa Saunders Alexa Tielmann Abbey Kerth Mia Rycraw

Jr. Sr. Jr. Sr. R-Jr. Sr. R-So.

Honorable Mention Brianna Daboub Nicola Barrett Avery Peterson Carla Toha Vilanova Charlotte Pratt

Yr.

So. R-Jr. Jr. Fr. Sr.

Lizette Rozeboom

18

Pos. School

Dri Dri 2M Utl Dri Dri D GK

USC Stanford SJSU UCLA USC California Stanford USC

Pos. School

2M C C Dri Att C GK

USC UCLA California California UCLA ASU ASU

Pos. School

Dri Dri 2M Dri 2M/D

USC CSUB USC SJSU UCLA

Ao Gao Anna Yelizarova Julia Hermann

R-Sr. C/D Sr. D R-So. GK

All-Newcomer Team Yr. Kat Klass Amanda Longan Lizette Rozeboom Madison Berggren Carla Toha Vilanova Maud Koopman Sarah Siepker

Player of the Year Stephania Haralabidis

Newcomer of the Year Kat Klass

Coach of the Year Jovan Vavic

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

Yr.

Jr.

Yr.

ASU Stanford Stanford

Pos. School

2M/Dri GK Att Dri Dri Att Dri

Stanford USC UCLA Stanford SJSU ASU California

Pos. School

Dri

USC

Pos.

School

Fr.

2M/Dri Stanford

Yr.

School

22nd USC


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

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

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 Score

W 14-1 W 20-0 W 8-5 W 8-2 L 8-7 W 11-4 L 6-3 W 7-3 W 10-2 L 10-5 W 15-2 W 8-2 L 12-4 L 8-3 W 12-2 W 8-5 W 13-2 L 9-3 L 7-1 L 7-4 L 9-7 W 14-1 W 9-2 W (3ot) 7-6

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

* 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

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

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

2/14 2/15 2/15 2/16 2/16

USC1 UC Santa Barbara1 California1 Stanford1 California1

Result Score

W W L W W

11-3 12-6 4-3 7-6 8-5

Head Coach: Guy Baker National Champions Date Opponent

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

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 Score

W 18-5 W 13-4 W 14-3 W 11-4 W 11-4 W 14-2 W 21-0 W 18-2 W 10-2 L (sv-ot) 9-8 W 10-1 W 15-5 W 10-3 W 13-6 W 11-3 W 18-0 W 14-3 W 10-3 W 18-5 W 12-1 W 24-0 W 7-4 W 10-3 W 14-2 W 10-4 W 12-1 W 12-3 W 6-4 W 16-1 W 13-2 W 9-1 W 7-4 W 15-1 W 11-5 W 10-3 W 7-3

1999 (24-10, 6-3 MPSF, 3rd) Head Coach: Guy Baker Interim Head Coach: Adam Krikorian Date Opponent Result Score

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 6-5

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

L 4-3 W 6-1 W 12-7 W 10-5 W 7-4 L 5-3 L 6-4 W 13-3 W 11-4 L 7-6 L 8-5 W 10-4 L (ot) 7-6 W 8-5 W 6-2 L (ot) 10-9 W 14-3 W 6-3 W 11-2 W 11-4 W 8-2 W 5-4 W 7-1 W 14-5 L 7-5 W (ot) 7-6 W 9-6 L 11-1 W 12-5 W 9-3 W 12-2 W 7-1 L 5-4 W (sv-ot)

* 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

2000 (30-5, 8-1 MPSF, 3rd) Head Coach: Adam Krikorian National Champions Date Opponent Result Score

2/4 2/5 2/5 2/11 2/11 2/12 2/12 2/13 2/13 2/26 2/26 2/27

UC San Diego1 UC Santa Barbara1 Hawai’i1 UC Santa Barbara2 UC San Diego2 San Jose State2 Stanford2 USC3 California3 La Verne4 UC Davis4 Stanford4

* 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

Jillian Krauss

19

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

16-4 16-4 12-2 12-2 16-3 12-2 5-3 10-3 6-5 17-0 13-3 5-4

2/27 3/3 3/4 3/4 3/9 3/17 3/19 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

USC4 at Long Beach State* at San Diego State* at UC San Diego* at USC* at UC Santa Barbara* Stanford* 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

W W W W W W L 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

15-12 11-5 8-6 13-6 10-8 12-1 9-7 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) Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions Date Opponent Result Score

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

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

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

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


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS 2002 (22-4, 10-1 MPSF, 2nd) Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Runner-up Date Opponent Result Score

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

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

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

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 Opponent Result Score

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

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

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

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

Head Coach: Adam Krikorian Date Opponent Result Score

Hawai’i1 California1 Santa Clara1 USC1

W W W L

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

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

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

2005 (33-0, 12-0 MPSF, 1st) Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions Date Opponent Result Score

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

6-2 6-5 13-1 12-4

Head Coach: Adam Krikorian NCAA Champions Date Opponent Result Score

2/3 2/3 2/5 2/11 2/11

Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Northridge* UC Santa Barbara* California1 Hawai’i1

W W W W W

22-2 20-2 10-7 6-4 10-3

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

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

1/26 1/26 1/27 1/27

20

Arizona State1 UC San Diego1 Colorado State1 Indiana1

W W W W

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

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

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

2006 (29-4, 11-1 MPSF, 2nd)

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

14-5 14-5 15-2 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

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

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

Bucknell1 Indiana1 at Michigan1 at Long Beach State San Jose State2 Hawai’i2 Stanford2 San Diego State* Loyola Marymount Hawai’i* Long Beach State3 California3 USC3 Hawai’i3 at Arizona State California* at Cal Lutheran Cal State Northridge (at CLU) UC Irvine at Santa Clara at San Jose State* Hartwick Brown at Stanford* USC* at Hawai’i4 Stanford4 California4 Michigan5 Stanford5 USC5

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

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

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

2010 (22-8, 4-3 MPSF, 3rd) Head Coach: Brandon Brooks Date Opponent Result Score

1/23 Indiana1 1/23 San Diego State1

W 12-6 L (OT) 7-6


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

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

W 10-7 W 10-4 L 4-3 W 9-8 W 7-6 L 13-3 W 9-5 W 7-6 W 8-3 W 24-4 W 9-3 W 7-5 L 10-4 W (8-ot) 7-6 L (6-ot) 9-8 W 8-5 W 13-6 L 11-6 W 12-5 W 8-4 W 7-5 L 14-5 W 8-6 W 7-6 W 8-7 L 5-4 W 14-3 W 9-6

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

Head Coach: Brandon Brooks Date Opponent Result Score

Colorado State1 Hartwick1 at Michigan1 Cal State Northridge1 Long Beach State Hawai’i2 USC2 Indiana2 California2 Santa Clara3 Hartwick3 San Diego State3 Loyola Marymount3 UC Irvine Hawai’i* UC Davis4 Loyola Marymount4 USC4 Hawai’i4 at Arizona State* Cal Baptist (at ASU) California* at Stanford* at San Jose State* USC* Loyola Marymount San Diego State* USC5 Stanford5 California5 Indiana6 California6 USC6

* indicates MPSF game 1 Michigan Invitational 2 Stanford Invitational 3 Triton Invitational 4 UC Irvine Invitational 5 MPSF Championships (second place) 6 NCAA Championships (third place)

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

2014 (27-5, 5-1 MPSF, 2nd)

2016 (26-5, 5-1 MPSF, 2nd)

Head Coach: Brandon Brooks Date Opponent Result Score

Head Coach: Brandon Brooks Date Opponent Result Score

Head Coach: Brandon Brooks Date Opponent Result Score

1/21 1/21 1/22 2/4 2/4 2/5 2/5 2/11 2/18 2/25 2/25 2/26 2/26 3/3 3/10 3/17 3/31 4/7 4/14 4/15 4/21 4/27 4/28 4/29 5/11 5/12 5/13

vs. Colorado State1 vs. Indiana1 at Michigan1 vs. Hawai’i2 vs. California2 vs. Michigan2 at Stanford2 vs. Cal-Baptist at San Diego State* vs. CS Northridge3 vs. Michigan3 vs. USC3 vs. Stanford3 at USC* vs. San Jose State* vs. Arizona State* at Hawai’i* at California* at UC Irvine at Loyola Marymount vs. Stanford* vs. San Diego State4 vs. USC4 at Stanford4 vs. Iona5 vs. USC5 UC Irvine5

W 9-4 W 10-5 W 10-8 W 6-5 W 4-3 W 10-3 L 9-5 W 11-5 W 9-4 W 13-4 W 13-3 W 8-7 W 5-4 W 6-5 W 7-5 W 8-6 W 8-4 L 8-6 W 10-6 W (ot) 7-6 L 8-1 W 9-5 W 4-3 W (ot) 8-7 W 14-3 L 12-10 W 10-9

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

2011 (26-7, 4-3 MPSF, 3rd) 1/22 1/22 1/23 1/23 1/29 2/5 2/5 2/6 2/6 2/12 2/12 2/13 2/13 2/19 2/24 2/26 2/26 2/27 2/27 3/5 3/5 3/12 3/26 4/2 4/9 4/14 4/16 4/29 4/30 5/1 5/13 5/14 5/15

2012 (23-4, 5-2 MPSF, 2nd)

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

2013 (28-7, 3-3 MPSF, 4th) Head Coach: Brandon Brooks Date Opponent Result Score

1/19 1/19 1/20 1/20 1/26 1/26 1/27 1/27 1/2 2/2 2/3 2/3 2/9 2/15 2/23 2/23 2/24 2/24 3/2 3/9 3/10 3/24 3/29 3/29 4/6 4/12 4/13 4/13 4/19 4/26 4/27 4/28 5/10 5/11 5/12

vs. San Diego State1 at Michigan1 vs. Colorado State1 vs. Indiana1 vs. Pacific2 vs. Concordia2 at UC Santa Barbara2 vs. Claremont-MS2 vs. Hawai’i3 vs. California3 vs. Indiana3 at Stanford3 vs. Cal Lutheran vs. UC Irvine vs. UC San Diego4 at UC Irvine4 vs. USC4 vs. Arizona State4 at Arizona State* vs. California* vs.San Diego State CSU Bakersfield* at San Jose State* at Santa Clara at Stanford* vs. Loyola Marymount Cal Baptist Pomona-Pitzer vs. USC* at California5 vs. Stanford5 vs. Arizona State6 vs. Princeton6 vs. Stanford6 vs. Hawai’i6

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

* indicates MPSF game 1 Michigan Invitational 2 UC Santa Barbara Invitational 3 Stanford Invitational 4 UC Irvine Invitational 5 MPSF Tournament (hosted by California) 6 NCAA Tournament (hosted by Harvard)

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

1/18 1/18 1/19 1/19 1/25 1/25 1/26 1/26 2/1 2/1 2/2 2/2 2/13 2/22 2/22 2/23 2/23 3/1 3/1 3/21 3/27 3/29 4/5 4/11 4/12 4/16 4/25 4/26. 4/27 5/9 5/10 5/11

vs. Concordia (Irvine)1 vs. Cal Baptist1 vs. CS Bakersfield1 vs. Loyola Marymount1 vs. CS Monterey Bay2 vs. CS Northridge2 vs. UC Santa Barbara2 vs. Pacific2 vs. Michigan3 vs. California3 vs. San Jose State3 vs. Stanford3 vs. UC Irvine vs. San Diego State4 vs. UC San Diego4 vs. Stanford4 vs. USC4 at Loyola Marymount vs. Arizona State* vs. Harvard at California* at Hawai’i at CS Bakersfield* vs. Stanford* vs. San Jose State* at USC* vs. CS Bakersfield5 vs. Arizona State5 vs. Stanford5 vs. UC San Diego6 vs. USC6 vs. Stanford6

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

25-6 15-4 14-3 15-6 15-2 14-6 14-6 11-7 12-3 10-9 14-6 4-8 6-5 7-1 8-6 9-6 6-7 14-6 11-7 18-7 11-8 5-4 14-8 8-9 8-6 6-4 12-3 10-7 5-6 12-8 5-3 5-9

* indicates MPSF contest 1 UCLA Invitational 2 UC Santa Barbara Invitational 3 Stanford Invitational 4 UC Irvine Invitational 5 MPSF Tournament (second place) 6 NCAA Tournament (second place)

2015 (26-3, 5-1 MPSF, 1st) Head Coach: Brandon Brooks Date Opponent Result Score 1/17 vs. California Baptist1 W 16-5 1/17 vs. LMU1 W 21-5 2 1/24 vs. UCSB W 20-8 1/24 vs. California Baptist2 W 20-2 1/25 vs. Sonoma State2 W 16-2 1/25 vs. LBSU2 W 15-2 3 1/31 vs. Hawai’i W 12-4 1/31 vs. California3 W 10-5 2/1 vs. Indiana3 W 11-4 2/1 vs. Stanford3 L 10-6 2/13 vs. UC Irvine W 8-5 2/21 vs. LMU4 W 12-3 2/21 vs. Hawai’i4 W 10-4 2/22 vs. USC4 W 5-3 4 2/22 vs. Stanford W 7-6 (OT) 3/1 at San Jose State* W 7-3 3/8 vs. California* W 10-3 3/14 vs. CSU Bakersfield* W 17-3 3/27 at Hawai’i W 11-6 3/28 at San Diego State W 13-4 4/4 at Arizona State* W 11-5 4/11 vs. Stanford* L 8-7 4/18 vs. USC* W 9-5 4/24 vs. CSU Bakersfield5 W 17-6 4/25 vs. USC5 W 9-7 4/26 vs. California5 W 9-8 6 5/8 vs. UC San Diego W 9-2 5/9 vs. California6 W 9-5 5/10 vs. Stanford6 L 7-6 * indicates MPSF contest 1 UCLA Invitational 2 UC Santa Barbara Invitational 3 Stanford Invitational 4 UC Irvine Invitational 5 MPSF Tournament (first place) 6 NCAA Tournament (second place)

21

1/23 1/23 1/24 1/24 2/13 2/13 2/14 2/14 2/19 2/27 2/27 2/28 2/28 3/5 3/5 3/6 3/6 3/20 3/25 4/2 4/3 4/3 4/9 4/15 4/23 4/29 4/30 5/1 5/13 5/14 5/15

vs. Hawai’i 1 at UCSB 1 vs. LBSU 1 vs. Michigan 1 vs. Sonoma State 2 vs. LMU 2 vs. UC Davis 2 vs. USC 2 at UC Irvine vs. SDSU 3 vs. Michigan 3 vs. Hawai’i 3 vs. USC 3 vs. LMU 4 vs. GWU4 at Michigan 4 vs. Bucknell 4 at CSU Bakersfield * at California * vs. San Jose State * vs. Redlands 5 vs. Pomona-Pitzer 5 at USC * vs. Arizona State * vs. Stanford * at CSU Bakersfield 6 vs. Stanford 6 vs. California 6 vs. UCSD 7 vs. Stanford 7 vs. Michigan 7

* indicates MPSF contest 1 UCSB Invitational 2 Triton Invitational 3 UC Irvine Invitational 4 Wolverine Invitational 5 UCLA Invitational 6 MPSF Tournament (third place) 7 NCAA Tournament (third place)

W 13-8 W 8-5 W 11-4 W 11-7 W 17-1 W 14-7 W 5-1 L 6-8 W 11-6 W 6-5 W 14-8 W 10-6 L 7-10 W 17-4 W 22-5 W 9-5 W 20-5 W 6-1 W 4-3 W 13-6 W 23-2 W 25-3 L 5-8 W 16-6 W 9-8(3OT) W 10-3 L 6-3 W 7-5 W 17-4 L 7-4 W 5-4


UCLA RECORDS UCLA’S ALL-TIME RECORDS VS. OPPONENTS Arizona State Brown Bucknell Cal Baptist Cal Lutheran Cal State San Bernardino Cal State Bakersfield Cal State Northridge California Claremont Colorado State Concordia (Irvine) Club

18-1 2-0 2-0 7-0 2-0 1-0 7-0 11-0 48-10 2-0 5-0 1-0 1-0

George Washington Golden West Hartwick Harvard Hawai’i Indiana Iona La Verne Long Beach State Loyola Marymount Marist Maryland Massachusetts

1-0 0-1 5-0 1-0 47-3 10-0 1-0 1-0 33-0 23-1 1-0 6-0 3-0

Michigan Pacific Pomona-Pitzer Princeton Occidental Redlands San Diego State San Jose State Santa Clara Slippery Rock Sonoma State

19-0 18-0 5-0 6-0 2-0 2-0 39-4 33-0 5-0 0-1 4-0

Stanford Sunset UMass UC Davis UC Irvine UC Santa Cruz UC San Diego UC Santa Barbara USC Wagner

32-41 0-1 1-0 15-1 20-0 1-0 24-3 37-1 47-24 1-0

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) 216 (2013) 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)

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

INDIVIDUAL SEASON RECORDS

INDIVIDUAL CAREER RECORDS

Goals 1. Tanya Gandy (2009) 2. Coralie Simmons (1998) 3. Emily Donohoe (2013) Kelly Rulon (2007) Kelly Rulon (2006) Kelly Rulon (2005) 7. Rachel Fattal (2013) 8. Erin Golaboski (1998) Elaine Zivich (1999) 10. Katie Rulon (2008)

79 74 70 70 70 70 68 65 65 62

Goals 1. Kelly Rulon 2. Coralie Simmons 3. Katie Rulon 4. Tanya Gandy 5. Catharine von Schwarz 6. Jillian Kraus Emily Donohoe 8. Rachel Fattal 9. KK Clark 10. Priscilla Orozco

237 235 201 187 186 178 178 170 169 165

Steals 1. Kelly Rulon (2006) 2. Thalia Munto (2006) 3. Rachel Fattal (2015) 4. Kelly Rulon (2007) 5. Katie Rulon (2008) 6. Courtney Mathewson (2008) 7. Kelly Rulon (2005) 8. Rachel Fattal (2014) 9. Thalia Munro (2005) 10. Anne Belden (2008)

72 69 65 57 55 53 52 49 48 44

Steals 1. Kelly Rulon 2. Katie Rulon 3. Rachel Fattal 4. Jillian Kraus 5. Tanya Gandy 6. KK Clark 7. Thalia Munro 8. Anne Belden 9. Courtney Mathewson 10. Gabrielle Dominic

181 167 154 129 126 123 117 115 114 92

Saves 1. Sami Hill 2. Nicolle Payne 3. Emily Feher 4. Caitlin Dement 5. Jaime Hipp 6. Brittany Fullen

950 746 713 697 685 531

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

3.79 4.05 4.58 4.61 4.68

Saves 1. Sami Hill (2013) 2. Sami Hill (2014) 3. Caitlin Dement (2010) 4. Brittany Fullen (2008) 5. Sami Hill (2015) 6. Brittany Fullen (2009) Nicolle Payne (1998) 8. Emily Feher (2005) Erin Golaboski (1999)

320 280 264 237 227 225 225 210 210

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

2.77 3.07 3.14 3.77 4.00

Katie Rulon

Brittany Fullen

22


HONORS AND AWARDS All-Time UCLA Women’s Water Polo Letterwinners A Azizians, Harriet 1995 Angermund, Alexis 2015-16 B Barker, Nicole 2009, 2011-12 Barnes, Molly 1995-97 Barr, Mackenzie 2014-16 Barth, Brianne 1999 Barth, Kristin 1997-98 Beauregard, Robin 1998, 2001-03 Beebe, Erica 2012-13 Belden, Anne 2006-09 Belden, Katherine 2003-06 Bhesenia, Kim 1995 Blacker, Kelsey 2016 Blanchard, Monique 2005-06 Borchelt, Sarah 1997 Bowlus, Brittney 2004-05 Bresee, Randi 2009-11 Brewer, Devon 1995-96 Buckley, Jill 1995-96 Burmeister, Megan 2008-11 C Cady, Jennifer 1995-98 Cahill, Molly 2004-07 Carreras, Rosie 2004 Clark, KK 2009-12 Couture, Shelby 2013-15 Crowell, Kamaile 2005-08

Grab, Devin 2015-16 Grams, Nicolette 2002, 2004-05 Greenlaw, Kim 1995 Greenwood, Emily 2010-13 Guerin, Kristin 1998-01 H Hafferkamp, Kelsey 2008-11 Hall, Kelly 2000-01 Hayes, Erin 1999 Hazell, Louise 2016 Heineck, Lauren 2003-06 Herrera, Carly 1997-00 Heuchan, Kelly 2000-02 Hill, Kodi 2013-15 Hill, Sami 2011, 2013-15 Hipp, Jaime 2000-03 Hirose-Hulbert, Brailey 2015 Hubbs, Bryna 1999 Humphrey, Erin 1997 Hunter, Leslie 1995-96 J Joyce, Mari 2000-03 Juarez, Gabby 2012 K Kaczmarek, Leslee 2011-13 Kapana, Carlee 2016 Kay, Serela 1997-00 Kent, Victoria 2011, 2013-14 Kerr, Tahlia 2003-05 Kraus, Jillian 2005-08 Krumpholz, Kari 2011 Krumpholz, Kathryn 2005 Kunkel, Kacy 2004-07 Kunkel, Kristina 2003-06

Reynolds, Nicole 20116 Ronimus, Morgan 2008-10 Ronimus, Kelly 2011-14 Rowe, Brittany 2005-08 Rozeboom, Lizette 2016 Rudolph, Catherine 1995 Rulon, Katie 2006-09 Rulon, Kelly 2003, 2005-07 S Schilling, Elissia 2015-16 Schmidt, Jody 2002-03 Schulman, Natasha 2010-13 Sears, Samantha 2008 Sebenaler, Hannah 2009-12 Sheldon, Sarah 2016 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 T Tenenbaum, Katie 1996-99 Tielmann, Alexa 2013-14, 2016 Todisco, Larissa 2010-11 Trella, Leah 2010-11 U Umphrey, Noel 2008-11 V Van Hiel, Heather 2010 von Schwarz, Catharine 1996-98, 2000

L LaBonte, Alison 1998-99 Lamb, Jenny 1999-02 Lee, Michelle 1998-99 Liu, Lisa 1996 Lopez, Jessica 2000-03

Molly Cahill D Dement, Caitlin 2009-12 Dindinger, Stacey 1996 Domanic, Gabrielle 2005-08 Donohoe, Emily 2012-15 Dorst, Becca 2011-14 Duffield, Shanta 1995 Easterday, Kelly 2008-11 Epstien, Elizabeth 1995 Ericksen, Paige 1995-97 Estrada, Katie 2008-11 F Fattal, Rachel 2013-15 Feher, Emily 2004-07 Ferraro, Danielle 2012-15 Flanagan, Katie 2003-05 Flanagan, Maureen 2000-03 Forster, India 2013-16 Franks, Emily 1997 Fullen, Brittany, 2006-09 G Gall, Amanda 1996-99 Gandy, Tanya 2006-09 Gimbel, Beth 1995 Golaboski, Erin 1997-00 Golda, Natalie 2001-03, 2005

M Martin, Brooke 2010-12 Mathewson, Courtney 2005-08 Mazziliano, Leah 2004 McAloon, Mandy 1996-99 McFerrin, Jennifer 1995-96 McGinley, Kelsey 2008-11 McIntyre, Devon 2000-03 McLaren, Maddy 2013-14 Miller, Rebecca 1999-00 Monahan, Aubrie 2014-16 Moran, Kelly 2015 Mordell, Melissa 2007-08 Munro, Thalia 2001-02, 2005-06 Murphy, Eleanor 1999-02 Murphy, Jenna 2004, 2006-07 Musselman, Alex 2013-16 N Naranjo, Giselle 2010-12 Natcher, Stephanie 1995-97 Nelson, Jessica 1995-96 Nelson, Kim 2006-08 Neste, Alexandra 2008 Norris, Jane 1995 O O’Brien, Kelsey 2014-16 Oesting, Megan 1995-96 Orozco, Priscilla 2008-11 Orozco, Sarah 2009-12 P Parsa, Natalie 1995 Payne, Nicolle 1995-98 Povey, Jessica 1999-00 Powers, Monica 2008-10 Pratt, Charlotte 2013-16 Pulver, Kristyn 2002-03 R Reego, Grace 2015 Reynolds, Grace 2010-11

23

Katie Tenenbaum W Wallace, Laura 1997 Whitelegge, Rachel 2016 Wieseler, Allie 2016 Wilkey, Sarah 2012 Williams, Alys 2013-15 Wilson, Leah 2002-03 Wright, Heather 1995-96 Y Yacenda, Sunny 2000 Z Zivich, Elaine, 1999-01 Zwirner, Ashley 2015-26


UCLA ALL-STARS

UCLA’s All-America Selections 1995 Stephanie Natcher, 2nd Team Nicolle Payne, 2nd Team 1996 Nicolle Payne, POY Jennifer McFerrin, 1st Team Coralie Simmons, 1st Team Catharine von Schwarz, 2nd Team Mandy McAloon, HM 1997 Guy Baker, COY Coralie Simmons, POY Nicolle Payne, 1st Team Amanda Gall, 2nd Team Catharine von Schwarz, 2nd Team Katie Tenenbaum, HM 1998 Guy Baker, COY Coralie Simmons, POY Nicolle Payne, 1st Team Catharine von Schwarz, 1st Team Robin Beauregard, 2nd Team Erin Golaboski, 3rd Team Katie Tenenbaum, HM 1999 Elaine Zivich, 1st Team Erin Golaboski, 3rd Team Katie Tenenbaum, 3rd Team Jenny Lamb, HM 2000 Elaine Zivich, POY Catharine von Schwarz, 1st Team Kelly Heuchan, 2nd Team Jessica Lopez, 2nd Team Jaime Hipp, 3rd Team Erin Golaboski, HM

2001 Coralie Simmons, 1st Team Robin Beauregard, 1st Team Kelly Heuchan, 3rd Team Jaime Hipp, 3rd Team 2002 Robin Beauregard, 1st Team Amber Stachowski, 1st Team Jaime Hipp, 3rd Team Natalie Golda, HM 2003 Robin Beauregard, 1st Team Natalie Golda, 1st Team Jaime Hipp, 2nd Team Jessica Lopez, 3rd Team Maureen Flanagan, 3rd Team 2004 Kristina Kunkel, 1st Team Lauren Heineck, 3rd Team Emily Feher, 3rd Team 2005 Adam Krikorian, COY Natalie Golda, POY Thalia Munro, 1st Team Kelly Rulon, 1st Team Emily Feher, 1st Team 2006 Adam Krikorian, COY Kelly Rulon, POY Thalia Munro, 1st Team Emily Feher, 1st Team Kristina Kunkel, 3rd Team Gabrielle Domanic, HM

2007 Adam Krikorian, COY Kelly Rulon, POY Emily Feher, 1st Team Jillian Kraus, 1st Team Courtney Mathewson, 2nd Team Kacy Kunkel, 3rd Team Gabrielle Domanic, HM Brittany Rowe, HM 2008 Adam Krikorian, COY Courtney Mathewson, POY Jillian Kraus, 1st Team Brittany Fullen, 2nd Team Tanya Gandy, 2nd Team Brittany Rowe, 3rd Team Katie Rulon, 3rd Team Gabrielle Domanic, HM 2009 Adam Krikorian, COY Tanya Gandy, POY Anne Belden, 2nd Team Brittany Fullen, 2nd Team Katie Rulon, 2nd Team Priscilla Orozco, HM 2010 Priscilla Orozco, 1st Team Grace Reynolds, 2nd Team KK Clark, HM Caitlin Dement, HM Kelly Easterday, HM 2011 Priscilla Orozco, 1st Team Grace Reynolds, 2nd Team KK Clark, 3rd Team Caitlin Dement, 3rd Team Megan Burmeister, HM Kelly Easterday, HM

2012 KK Clark, 1st Team Caitlin Dement, 1st Team Emily Greenwood, 3rd Team Becca Dorst, HM Sarah Orozco, HM 2013 Rachel Fattal, 1st Team Sami Hill, 2nd Team Emily Donohoe, 3rd Team Natasha Schulman, HM Alys Williams, HM 2014 Rachel Fattal, 1st Team Sami Hill, 1st Team Emily Donohoe, 2nd Team Becca Dorst, HM Alys Williams, HM 2015 Rachel Fattal, 1st Team Sami Hill, 1st Team Emily Donohoe, 2nd Team Alys Williams, 3rd Team Kodi Hill, 3rd Team Mackenzie Barr, HM 2016 Mackenzie Barr, 1st Team Devin Grab, 2nd Team India Forster, 3rd Team Alex Musselman, HM Kelsey O’Brien, HM Charlotte Pratt, HM Alexa Tielmann, HM

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

Jillian Kraus Kristina Kunkel Thalia Munro Kelly Rulon

2002 Robin Beauregard Kelly Heuchan Jaime Hipp Amber Stachowski

2007 Jillian Kraus (1st) Kelly Rulon (1st) Emily Feher (2nd) Courtney Mathewson (2nd) Brittany Rowe (HM)

2003 Robin Beauregard Maureen Flanagan Natalie Golda Jaime Hipp Jessica Lopez 2004 Emily Feher Lauren Heineck Kristina Kunkel 2005 Gabrielle Domanic Emily Feher Natalie Golda Kristina Kunkel Thalia Munro Kelly Rulon 2006 Anne Belden Emily Feher

2008 Courtney Mathewson (1st) Jillian Kraus (1st) Brittany Fullen (2nd) Tanya Gandy (HM) Brittany Rowe (HM) Katie Rulon (HM) 2009 Tanya Gandy (1st) Anne Belden (2nd) Brittany Fullen (2nd) Katie Rulon (2nd) 2010 Priscilla Orozco (1st) Caitlin Dement (2nd) Grace Reynolds (2nd) KK Clark (HM) Kelly Easterday (HM)

2011 Priscilla Orozco (1st) Caitlin Dement (2nd) KK Clark (HM) Kelly Easterday (HM) Grace Reynolds (HM) 2012 Caitlin Dement (1st,POY) KK Clark (1st) Emily Greenwood (HM) Becca Dorst (HM) Sarah Orozco (HM) Emily Donohoe (newcomer)

Kodi Hill (2nd) Alys Williams (HM) Devin Grab (newcomer) Alexis Angermund (newcomer) 2016 Mackenzie Barr (1st) India Forster (2nd) Alexa Tielmann (2nd) Charlotte Pratt (HM) Lizette Rozeboom (newcomer)

2013 Rachel Fattal (2nd, NOY) Emily Donohoe (2nd) Sami Hill (2nd) Gigi Naranjo (HM) 2014 Sami Hill (1st, POY) Emily Donohoe (1st) sRachel Fattal (1st) Becca Dorst (2nd) Alys Williams (HM) Mackenzie Barr (newcomer) 2015 Rachel Fattal (1st) Sami Hill (1st) Emily Donohoe (2nd)

24

Mackenzie Barr


NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY 1995 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) 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 2003 (1st) UCLA 8, Loyola Marymount 2 UCLA 4, Stanford 3 NCAA Champions: UCLA 2005 (1st) UCLA 22, Wagner 2 UCLA 7, Hawai’i 6 UCLA 3, Stanford 2 NCAA Champions: UCLA

2011 (3rd) UCLA 8, Indiana 5 California 7, UCLA 4 UCLA 6, USC 5 NCAA Champions: Stanford 2012 (3rd) UCLA 14, Iona 3 USC 12, UCLA 10 UCLA 10, UC Irvine 9 NCAA Champions: Stanford 2013 (3rd) UCLA 8, Princeton 6 Stanford 5, UCLA 3 UCLA 13, Hawai’i 8 NCAA Champions: USC 2014 (2nd) UCLA 12, UC San Diego 6 UCLA 5, USC 3 Stanford 9, UCLA 5 NCAA Champions: Stanford 2015 (2nd) UCLA 9, UC San Diego 2 UCLA 5, California 5 Stanford 7, UCLA 6 NCAA Champions: Stanford

2003 NCAA Champions

2016 (3rd) UCLA 17, UC San Diego 4 Stanford 7, UCLA 4 UCLA 5, Michigan 4 NCAA Champions: USC

All-National Championship Tournament Team Selections

Note: From 2001-03, 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 21 NCAA Tournament Appearances 15 Total Won-Lost Record 57-11 NCAA Won-Lost Record 34-8 Shutouts in Tournament Games 2 Record in Championship Games 11-3 Total National Championships 11 NCAA Championships 7 2nd Place Finishes 2 3rd Place Finishes 5 Total Goals Scored 624 Total Goals Allowed 291 NCAA Tournament Goals Scored 380 NCAA Tournament Goals Allowed 210

Mackenzie Barr, 2016 Robin Beauregard, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003^ Anne Belden, 2008, 2009 KK Clark, 2010, 2011, 2012 Emily Donohoe, 2015 Becca Dorst, 2014 Kelly Easterday, 2011 Rachel Fattal, 2013, 2014, 2015 Emily Feher, 2005, 2006, 2007 Maureen Flanagan, 2003 Brittany Fullen, 2008, 2009 Amanda Gall, 1998 Tanya Gandy, 2008^, 2009^ Natalie Golda, 2002, 2003, 2005^ Emily Greenwood, 2012 Kristin Guerin, 2001 Kelly Heuchan, 2001 Sami Hill, 2014, 2015 Jaime Hipp, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 Jillian Kraus, 2007, 2008 Kacy Kunkel, 2006, 2007

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 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

Robin Beauregard

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Jenny Lamb, 1999, 2001 Jessica Lopez, 2000, 2003 Courtney Mathewson, 2007, 2008 Jennifer McFerrin, 1996 Thalia Munro, 2002, 2005, 2006 Stephanie Natcher, 1995 Priscilla Orozco, 2011 Sarah Orozco, 2012 Nicolle Payne, 1995, 1996*, 1997*, 1998 Brittany Rowe, 2008 Katie Rulon, 2009 Kelly Rulon, 2003, 2005, 2006^, 2007^ Coralie Simmons, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001^ Amber Stachowski, 2002 Katie Tenenbaum, 1999 Catharine von Schwarz, 1996, 1997, 2000 Elaine Zivich, 1999, 2000^, 2001 Tournaments from 1995-2000 were not NCAA affiliated. Players in boldface are current team members. ^Tournament most valuable player *Tournament most valuable goalkeeper


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 stopped 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 during the year, 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, logging a 29-game win streak. UCLA captured its 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 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 in 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 studentathlete 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 Jaime 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 title. 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.

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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 as the 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 369-134 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 UCLA 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 over USC 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 2007, senior Kelly Rulon broke the UCLA career scoring record, totaling 237 goals.

2008

in

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 Krauss, 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, downing rival USC 5-4 in the title match, but did not score any goals in the second half. Playing lockdown defense against a USC squad that had beaten them twice, 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,12-11. UCLA entered the 2009 campaign riding a 41-game win streak before losing six games during the year. In his final season as head coach, Adam Krikorian made sure the Bruins peaked at the right time. Senior Tanya Gandy was named the NCAA Division I Player of the Year after shattering 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.

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UCLA AND TEAM USA UCLA at the Summer Olympics Guided by former UCLA head coach Adam Krikorian, Team USA won back-to-back gold medals for the first time in women’s water polo history. The defending gold medalists, Team USA romped to a 12-5 win over Italy in the 2016 Rio Games for its fifth consecutive Olympic medal in women’s water polo. Krikorian assumed head coaching responsibilities of the U.S. Women’s Water Polo National Team in the summer of 2009 after winning his fifth consecutive NCAA Championship at the helm of the UCLA women’s program. In his 17 years with the Bruins’ water polo programs as both a player and a coach, Krikorian won an unprecedented 15 national titles - 11 as a head coach, three as an assistant coach and one as a student-athlete. Team USA has long been a power in women’s water polo, but the Americans had never translated their success at other major competitions to the Olympics, claiming bronze in 2004 and silver in 2000 and 2008. Like in Beijing, the U.S. women were ranked No. 1 and were gold medal favorites. But this time, they would not be denied what had long eluded them. Maggie Steffens scored five goals on the day capping a binge of seven-straight goals for the U.S. that turned a 2-1 deficit with 6:44 left in the second period into an 8-2 lead with 7:20 remaining in the fourth quarter. Spain scored the final three goals of the match, but the Americans had built an insurmountable lead. The U.S. was 8-for-17 on shots (compared to Spain’s 5-for-28 performance) and dominated the game despite losing out on time of possession, 16:58 to 15:02. U.S. goalkeeper, Betsey Armstrong, finished with eight saves, including a huge stop on a penalty shot in the fourth period. Mathewson recorded one shot in seven minutes of action against Spain. Rulon played 15 minutes, winning one sprint for Team USA. Mathewson, a former Cutino Award winner (2008), won four national titles at UCLA (2005-08) and made her first Olympic appearance in the 2012 London Olympics. Rulon, the 2007 Cutino Award winner, also won four national championships at UCLA (2003, 2005-07) and was part of the bronze-medal winning team in the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece. 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. 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. The 2008 Games in Beijing marked the second Olympic appearance for Golda and the first for Hipp. Baker served as the U.S. women’s team’s head coach

photo courtesy of Getty Images

UCLA’s Water Polo Olympians 1920 – Antwerp Clyde A. Swendson 1936 – Berlin Clyde A. Swendson Dixon Fiske 1948 – London Dixon Fiske Eddie Knox Devere Christianson 1952 – Helsinki John A. Spargo Pete Strange Urho Saari (Coach)

Team USA at the 2004 Olympic medal ceremony in the first three Olympiads of the 21st Century. 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. 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. The new millennium brought women’s water polo to the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia. In a wild gold medal contest between Australia and Team USA, Australia scored a controversial lastsecond goal to win, 4-3, and send the U.S. team home with the silver medal. Bruins Coralie Simmons,

Nicolle Payne, Beauregard, 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 campus. Simmons led Team USA with nine goals in the Olympics, and Beauregard added six. In 2012, Krikorian guided Team USA to its first-ever gold medal. Four-time NCAA champions Kelly Rulon and Courtney Mathewson were key players for the U.S. in London. Rulon’s medal was the second in her career, as she has previously won bronze in 2004. Of the eight players to find the back of the net against Italy in the 2016 gold medal match, three were Bruins. Redshirt senior Rachel Fattal led the charge with two goals while former Bruin and two-time gold medalist Courtney Mathewson netted one in the opening minutes of play. In the fourth quarter, incoming freshman Maddie Musselman rocketed a penalty shot past the Italian keeper to give Team USA an 11-4 lead.

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) Moscow – 1980 (boycott) Jeff Stites Joe Vargas 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

One of the team’s leading scorers, Musselman tallied 12 goals throughout the Olympic Games, including a game-high four goals against China in pool play. Overall, Mathewson photo courtesy of Getty Images notched seven for Team USA while Fattal scored four. Rounding out the Bruins’ scoring efforts, defender KK Clark put away two of her own. In the cage, Hill recorded six saves in three games. The U.S. finished the Rio Games with a goal differential of 41 after scoring 73 goals and allowing just 32 in six games played. Since women’s water polo was added to Olympic program in 2000, the United States has never missed the podium. It won silver in 2000 and 2008 and bronze in 2004 before capturing back-to-back gold medals in London and Rio.

Adam Krikorian and Team USA win gold in 2012

Adam Krikorian

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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 ^ Brandon Brooks Adam Wright London – 2012 Women’s * Adam Krikorian (head coach) Courtney Mathewson Kelly Rulon Men’s Chay Lapin Adam Wright Rio – 2016 Women’s * Adam Krikorian (head coach) Courtney Mathewson Sami Hill KK Clark Rachel Fattal Maddie Musselman

Men’s Alex Roelse Josh Samuels * indicates gold medal ^ indicates silver medal # indicates bronze medal


UCLA AND TEAM USA

U.S. National Team Experience The USA National Team program has a rich history of selecting UCLA players and coaches, who most recently won a gold medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics. This past summer, the USA Women’s Water Polo Senior National Team won its third consecutive gold medal at the FINA World League Super Final. The U.S. defeated Spain in the championship match, 13-9, in Beijing, China to capture its 10th overall WLSF title. UCLA alumna Rachel Fattal Courtney Mathewson (2005-08) was named Tournament MVP. Two summers ago, the USA Senior National Team won gold at the FINA Intercontinental Tournament, the FINA World League Super Final, the Pan American Games, and the FINA World Championships. Rachel Fattal earned MVP honors at the latter event, scoring 18 goals en route to gold. In the summer of 2014, the USA Senior National Team won three international events: the FINA World League Super Final, the Kinishi Cup and the FINA World Cup. Bruins Sami Hill, Rachel Fattall, Alys Williams, KK Clark and Jillian Kraus scored a total of 17 goals in the tournament as the United States marched to the gold medal. Fattal led all Bruins with nine goals, including three against Italy in the championship match. Hill added seven saves in the final. At the Kinishi Cup, Bruins scored 12 goals for the USA. Hill was a mainstay in the cage, making 14 saves against Italy and 11 vs. Hungary in group play, while Fattal scored five total goals to help lead the Americans to the championship. In addition to Hill

and Fattal, UCLA was represented by Clark, Willaims, Kraus and Courtney Mathewson. At the FINA World Cup, the USA won another gold medal on the backs of Hill, Fattal and Mathewson. Hill recorded 16 saves in the championship victory over Australia. Fattal (10 goals) and Mathewson (six goals) were major forces on offense for the Stars and Stripes. Clark, Willaims and Kraus were also key players in the USA’s drive to an undefeated tournament. In the summer of 2013, the U.S. Women’s Junior National Team won the gold medal at the FINA Junior World Championships in Greece by defeating Spain, 9-7. UCLA players participating were Fattal, Emily Donohoe, Kodi Hill and Williams. Fattal was named the MVP of the tournament after scoring 15 goals. Later that summer, the Senior National Team placed fifth at the FINA World Championships in Spain. Players representing UCLA were Fattal, Mathewson, Kraus, Kelly Rulon and Clark. In December 2013, Fattal, Sami Hill, Williams, Kraus, Clark, Mathewson and Priscilla Orozco beat Canada in a best-of-three series to qualify for the 2014 World Cup. In 2009 UCLA players Brooke Martin and Natasha Schulman played for the 2009 USA Junior National Team and Sami Hill redshirted the 2012 season to train with the U.S. Senior 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 then-current Bruin Emily Feher competed in the Senior National Team event. Golda scored in every one of six games for Team USA, while Hipp contributed 21 saves in the cage. Team USA had also won the 2006 FINA World Championships in Italy.

The 2015 FINA World Cup Champions (Photo courtesy Getty Images)

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At the 2006 Pythia Cup in Greece, Gandy and Brittany Fullen, then a sophomore on the Bruins’ roster, 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 FINA Junior World Championship in a 10-9 overtime win. Amber Stachowski led the United States with four goals and Thalia Munro added one. UCLA players accounted for 48 percent of U.S. scoring with 38 of Team USA’s Kelly Rulon 80 goals. In the 2003 FINA Junior World Championships, 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 PanAmerican 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 the United States’ 8-6 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.


UCLA AT THE 2016 OLYMPICS

2016 OLYMPIC CHAMPIONS

2016 UCLA Olympic gold medalists KK Clark, Maddie Musselman, Rachel Fattal, Courtney Mathewson and Sami Hill

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UCLA ADMINISTRATION cal science in the College of Letters and Science. A fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, he specializes in circadian biology, which deals with the functioning of 24-hour rhythms in higher organisms.

GENE

BLOCK CHANCELLOR • 10th Year Alma Mater: Stanford ’70 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 called for UCLA to deepen its engagement with Los Angeles, a city that offers a microcosm of the global community, and to increase access for students from underrepresented populations. An advocate of interdisciplinary scholarship, he emphasizes broad-based, campus-wide planning.

Previously, Chancellor Block served as vice president and provost of the University of Virginia, where he held the Alumni Council Thomas Jefferson Professorship in Biology and directed the National Science Foundation’s Science and Technology Center for Biological Timing. He also headed an NIH graduate training program aimed at increasing the number of scientists from underrepresented groups. A native of Monticello, N.Y., Chancellor Block holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Stanford University and a master’s and Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Oregon. The inventor of a number of devices, Chancellor Block holds a patent for a non-contact respiratory monitor for the prevention of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, and he is an avid collector of vacuum-tube radios. Chancellor Block and his wife, Carol, have two children.

Chancellor Block holds UCLA faculty appointments in psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences in the David Geffen School of Medicine and in physiologiBruins representing their respective countries at the Games, eight athletes won medals, and an additional five Bruins were coaches or staff members of medal-winning teams. UCLA’s all-time medal count now stands at 261 medals - 133 gold, 66 silver, and 62 bronze.

DAN

GUERRERO ATHLETIC DIRECTOR • 15th Year Alma Mater: UCLA ’74 In 14 years, Dan Guerrero has clearly established a pattern of “image and substance” that few in his profession can match. UCLA has won 113 NCAA team championships, a figure unmatched by any institution in the nation. UCLA teams have won 27 NCAA championships since his appointment, another national leader, finished second 26 times and have enjoyed an additional 56 Top Five finishes. More than 80% of UCLA teams have qualified for NCAA post-season competition since 2002. The football team has appeared in 12 bowl games, while the men’s basketball team advanced to consecutive Final Fours from 2006-08 and has made five trips to the Sweet 16. The program has also won 62 conference championships in 15 different sports, produced over 600 AllAmericans and featured eight Honda Award winners, including the 2003-04 Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year. Furthermore, a total of 36 UCLA Bruins made Olympic rosters for the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, including 29 current, incoming, or former studentathletes, four UCLA alumni/students, and three current or former coaches. UCLA Bruins won a total of nine medals, including six gold. Of the 36

Guerrero, recently named the 2014 NACDA Under Armour Athletic Director of the Year award, is the only athletic director at the NCAA Division I level (FBS, FCS and NCAA Division I-AAA) to earn three such awards (2006-07 at UCLA, 2001-02 at UC Irvine). In his 14 years at UCLA, the Bruins have finished second four times and third four times in the race for the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup. UCLA’s academic success under Guerrero is equally noteworthy. Over 14 years and 42 quarters, student-athletes have earned nearly 9,500 spots on the Director’s Honor Roll. UCLA’s Graduation Success Rate (GSR) and Academic Progress Rates (APR) continued to remain high nation-wide. The Bruin student-athlete GSR is currently at 86%, and every Bruin team maintained multi-year APR rates over 960, including three who achieved perfect scores of 1000 (women’s golf for the seventh consecutive year, men’s water polo and men’s volleyball). Guerrero came to UCLA in 2002 from UC Irvine, where he had served as UC Irvine’s fifth Director of Athletics for 10 years. Prior to arriving at UCI, he was the Athletic Director for five years at Cal State Dominguez Hills (198892). He received his Bachelor’s degree from UCLA in 1974 and played second base in the Bruin baseball program for four years. Guerrero was raised in Wilmington, CA. He is married to the former Anne Marie Aniello and they have two grown daughters.

strong began her tenure at UCLA as the Director of Life Skills and Championships.

ASHLEY

Prior to arriving at UCLA, Armstrong served as an Assistant Athletic Director at the University of Louisville where her responsibilities included administration, studentathlete development programming, marketing, championships and compliance. During her stint with the Cardinals, she assisted in developing curriculum for a life skills course and served as a lecturer for the College of Education. She started her career as an academic counselor and tutorial coordinator for the women’s athletic department at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

ARMSTRONG ASSOCIATE ATHLETIC DIRECTOR • 13th Year • Alma Mater: UC DAVIS ‘95 Ashley Armstrong joined the staff at UCLA in 2004 and currently serves as the Associate Athletic Director, Sports and Administration. As a member of the senior management team, she has direct oversight of men’s and women’s volleyball, women’s beach volleyball, men’s and women’s water polo, and women’s rowing. In addition, she is responsible for coordinating coaches development programs, athletic department policies and procedures, year-end sport evaluations, and currently serves on the NCAA Division I Women’s Rowing committee. Armstrong previously served as the Assistant Athletic Director for Student-Athlete Development where she had oversight of the Bruin Student-Athlete Development program. Her broad range of responsibilities included creating the Wooden Academy (leadership development program), serving as an advisor to the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, coordinating community outreach and professional development programs, chairing the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics Health and Wellness Committee and sport supervision of women’s rowing and women’s volleyball. Arm-

Armstrong was recently appointed to serve on the Advisory Board of the Los Angeles Sports and Entertainment Commission, and is a member of the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators (NACWAA). Armstrong served as a lead consultant for the NCAA from 2007-2013 where she was responsible for writing and developing curriculum, and training athletics professionals to facilitate the annual NCAA Student-Athlete Leadership Forum. She has presented on various leadership and student well-being issues at national and regional conferences that include the NCAA/NACWAA Institute for Administrative Advancement, NCAA Leadership Conferences, CHAMPS/Life Skills Continuing Education Conferences and NCAA Diversity Education. Armstrong is a 2009 graduate of the Sports Management Institute’s executive program. A native of Southern California, Armstrong earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology from the University of California, Davis, where she was a member of the women’s volleyball team. She earned a Master of Science in Sport Management from the University of Tennessee.

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SPIEKER AQUATICS CENTER

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

SPIEKER AQUATICS CENTER The UCLA women’s water polo team begins its eighth season playing at Spieker Aquatics Center, which is part of the Jackie Robinson Athletics and Recreation Complex. Over the past six seasons, UCLA has logged a 43-7 record at its modern, state-of-the-art home facility. Spieker Aquatics Center opened in September 2009, in time for the start of the men’s water polo season that fall. PCL Construction broke ground on the facility in July 2008. The athletics department officially opened Spieker Aquatics Center on Sept. 26, 2009, as the men’s water polo team defeated UC Irvine, 10-4, after a dedication ceremony that evening. In 2016, UCLA has scheduled six games at SAC and it will host the 2016 NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championship. The facility hosted the 2010 MPSF Women’s Water Polo Tournament, the 2011 MPSF Men’s Water Polo Tournament, the 2013, 2014, and 2015 UCLA Invitationals, and the 2015 NCAA Men’s Water Polo Championship. UCLA’s programs won each tournament. Entering its seventh 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 or yards). 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 threemeter springboards. In addition, the aquatics center features a warming pool for divers directly behind the tower. 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 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 events and Masters Swim meets. The signature feature of the Spieker Aquatics Center is the diving tower, which stands at the west end of the pool. The east end of the pool houses the 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’

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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 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.


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