2019 UCLA Women's Soccer Information Guide

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2019 UCLA WOMEN’S SOCCER

2019 QUICK FACTS Location Athletic Dept. Address

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Los Angeles, CA 325 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 Athletics Phone (310) 825-8699 Ticket Office (310) UCLA-WIN Soccer Office Phone (310) 794-6443 Chancellor Dr. Gene Block Director of Athletics Daniel G. Guerrero Sr. Women’s Administrator Dr. Christina Rivera Faculty Athletic Rep. Dr. Michael Teitell Home Field (Capacity) Wallis Annenberg Stadium (2,145) Enrollment 44,947 Founded 1919 Colors Blue and Gold Nickname Bruins Conference Pac-12 National Affiliation NCAA Division I Head Coach Amanda Cromwell (Virginia ‘92) Record at UCLA (Years) 102-23-13 (6) Career Record (Years) 325-121-40 (22) Asst. Coach Jenny Bindon (Lewis ‘00) Asst. Coach Sam Greene (Northwestern ‘11) Asst. Coach (Volunteer) Jane Alukonis (Duke ‘10) 2018 Record 17-3-2 2018 Pac-12 Record (Finish) 9-2 (2nd) 2018 NCAA Tournament NCAA Quarterfinals 2018 Final National Ranking 5th NCAA Championships 1 (2013) All-Time College Cup Appearances 9 (2000, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2013, 2017) All-Time Conference Championships 11 (1997, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2013, 2014)

The 2019 Bruins Radio/TV Roster Rosters Coaching Staff Player Profiles

2 3 4 6-19

2018 Season in Review Final Statistics & Results Box Scores

20 21-22

History/Records All-Time Letterwinners All-Time Numerical Roster All-Time Player Statistics UCLA Coaching History Bruin Award Winners NSCAA All-Americans

23 24 25-26 26 27-29 30-31

2019 SCHEDULE Date Aug. 16 Aug. 18 Aug. 23 Aug. 25 Aug. 29 Sept. 1 Sept. 5 Sept. 14 Sept. 19 Sept. 22 Sept. 27 Oct. 3 Oct. 6 Oct. 10 Oct. 13 Oct. 19 Oct. 24 Oct. 27 Oct. 31 Nov. 3 Nov. 8

Opponent Loyola Marymount (ex.) at UC Irvine (ex.) Iowa State at Long Beach State Florida State Florida at Santa Clara Wisconsin Pepperdine at Hawai’i California* at Arizona* at Arizona State* Colorado* Utah* at Stanford* Washington* Washington State* at Oregon State* at Oregon* USC*

Location Wallis Annenberg Stadium Irvine, Calif. Wallis Annenberg Stadium Long Beach, Calif. Banc of California Stadium Wallis Annenberg Stadium Santa Clara, Calif. Wallis Annenberg Stadium Honolulu, Hawaii Honolulu, Hawaii Wallis Annenberg Stadium Tucson, Ariz. Tempe, Ariz. Wallis Annenberg Stadium Wallis Annenberg Stadium Stanford, Calif. Wallis Annenberg Stadium Wallis Annenberg Stadium Corvallis, Ore. Eugene, Ore. Wallis Annenberg Stadium

Time (PT) 7 pm 6 pm 7 pm 6 pm 5:30 pm 5 pm 7:30 pm 6 pm 7:30 pm 6:30 pm 7 pm 7 pm 1 pm 5 pm 1 pm 7 pm 8 pm 12 pm 7 pm 1 pm TBD

Home matches in bold / * Pac-12 Conference match

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TV

Pac-12 Networks

Single-Season Records Career Records Team & Miscellaneous Records Yearly Leaders All-Time Game-by-Game Results All-Time NCAA Results 2013 NCAA Champions UCLA’s All-Time Record vs. Opponents Final Rankings (Since 1993) Soccer Facilities National Team Bruins Bruins in Professional Soccer

32 33 34 35 36-38 39 40 41-42 43 44 45 46

General Information Administrator Bios Pac-12 Conference

47 48

MEDIA INFORMATION Soccer Contact: Liza David Phone: 310-206-8140 Fax: 310-825-8664 E-mail: ldavid@athletics.ucla.edu

Pac-12 Networks Pac-12 Networks

Address: 325 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095

Pac-12 Networks Pac-12 Networks

Note: All interviews must be arranged by the Athletic Communications Office. Athletes have been instructed not to grant any interview, in person or by telephone, not arranged by the Athletic Communications Office. Telephone numbers are private and will not be released. Please do not expect team members to be available if you have not made prior arrangements.

Pac-12 Networks Pac-12 Networks Pac-12 Networks Pac-12 Networks Pac-12 Networks Pac-12 Networks Pac-12 Networks

On the Cover: UCLA seniors, l-r: Siri Ervik, Gabrielle Matulich, Zoey Goralski, Claire Winter, Chloe Hemingway, MacKenzie Cerda.


RADIO/TV ROSTER

#1 Lauren BRZYKCY

#2 Ashley SANCHEZ

#3 Chloe CASTANEDA

#4 Rachel LOWE

#5 Kaiya McCULLOUGH

#6 Kennedy FAULKNOR

#7 Anika RODRIGUEZ

5-10/RSo./GK/San Clemente, Calif.

5-4/Jr./F/Monrovia, Calif.

5-3/RSr./F/MF/Encino, Calif.

5-8/Fr./MF/Gordon, NSW, Australia

5-8/Sr./D/Mission Viejo, Calif.

5-8/Jr./F/Markham, Ont., Canada

5-2/RSr./F/MF/Torrance, Calif.

#8 Karina RODRIGUEZ

#9 Shana FLYNN

#10 Mia FISHEL

#11 Maddi DESIANO

#12 Sunny DUNPHY

#13 Viviana VILLACORTA

#14 Olivia ATHENS

5-5/Jr./D/Torrance, Calif.

5-4/RFr./D/Brampton, Ont., Canada

5-7/Fr./F/San Diego, Calif.

5-6/RFr./MF/San Clemente, Calif.

5-10/Sr./D/Carlsbad, Calif

5-7/Jr./MF/Lawndale, Calif.

5-7/Jr./MF/Atherton, Calif.

#15 Lucy PARKER

#16 Sunshine FONTES

#17 Delanie SHEEHAN

#19 Jacey PEDERSON

#20 Teagan MICAH

#21 Jessie FLEMING

#22 Emily MICKELSEN

5-8/Jr./D/Cambridge, England

5-4/Fr./F/Wahiawa, Hawaii

5-6/Jr./D/Brentwood, Calif.

5-5/Sr./D/Palo Alto, Calif.

5-9/Sr./GK/Redcliffe, QLD, Australia

5-4/Sr./MF/London, Ont., Canada

5-6/Fr./MF/Newport Beach, Calif.

#23 Marley CANALES

#24 Maricarmen REYES

#25 Cassidy TSHIMBALANGA

#26 Brecken MOZINGO

#27 Jackie GILDAY

#28 Maki UMEHARA

#29 Kali TREVITHICK

5-4/Jr./MF/San Diego, Calif.

5-7/So./MF/Santa Ana, Calif.

5-4/RFr./F/Alamo, Calif.

5-6/Fr./F/D/Sandy, Utah

5-9/Fr./MF/New Smyrna Beach, Fla..

5-5/Jr./MF/Chiba, Japan

5-8/Fr./F/Temecula, Calif

#30 Taylor MAGLIARDITI

#31 Kylie KERR

#32 Janae DEFAZIO

#34 Brianne RILEY

#35 Idalia SERRANO

#36 Hannah MITCHELL

Amanda CROMWELL

5-8/So./F/D/Newport Beach,.Calif.

5-9/Fr./D/Alamo, Calif.

5-5/Fr./F/MF/El Dorado Hills, Calif.

5-8/Fr./D/San Clemente, Calif.

5-3/So./GK/Mendota, Calif.

5-8/Fr./GK/Clinton, N.J.

Head Coach

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2019 ROSTERS

NUMERICAL ROSTER No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 34 35 36

Name Lauren Brzykcy Ashley Sanchez Chloe Castaneda Rachel Lowe Kaiya McCullough Kennedy Faulknor Anika Rodriguez Karina Rodriguez Shana Flynn Mia Fishel Madelyn Desiano Sunny Dunphy Viviana Villacorta Olivia Athens Lucy Parker Sunshine Fontes Delanie Sheehan Jacey Pederson Teagan Micah Jessie Fleming Emily Mickelsen Marley Canales Maricarmen Reyes Cassidy Tshimbalanga Brecken Mozingo Jackie Gilday Maki Umehara Kali Trevithick Taylor Magliarditi Kylie Kerr Janae DeFazio Brianne Riley Idalia Serrano Hannah Mitchell

Pos. GK F F/MF MF D F F/MF D D F MF D MF MF D F D D GK MF MF MF MF F F/D MF MF F F/D D F/MF D GK GK

Team Staff Ht. 5-10 5-4 5-3 5-6 5-8 5-8 5-2 5-5 5-4 5-7 5-6 5-10 5-7 5-7 5-8 5-4 5-6 5-5 5-9 5-4 5-6 5-4 5-7 5-4 5-6 5-9 5-5 5-8 5-8 5-9 5-5 5-8 5-3 5-8

Yr. RSo Jr. RSr. Fr. Sr. Jr. RSr. Jr. RFr. Fr. RFr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Sr. Sr Sr. Fr. Jr. So. RFr. Fr. Fr. Sr. Fr. So. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr.

Hometown (High School/College) San Clemente, Calif (San Clemente HS) Monrovia, Calif (Mountain Park HS) Encino, Calif. (Harvard-Westlake HS) Gordon, New South Wales, Australia (Pymble Ladies College) Mission Viejo, Calif. (El Toro HS) Markham, ON, Canada (Bill Crothers Secondary School) Torrance, Calif. (Torrance HS) Torrance, Calif. (Torrance HS) Brampton, Ont., Canada (Mayfield Secondary School) San Diego, Calif. (Patrick Henry HS) San Clemente, Calif. (Aliso Niguel HS) Carlsbad, Calif. (Cathedral Catholic HS) Lawndale, Calif. (Mira Costa HS) Atherton, Calif. (Menlo-Atherton HS) Cambridge, England (Coleridge CC/LSU) Wahiawa, Hawaii (Pearl City HS) Brentwood, Calif. (Liberty HS) Palo Alto, Calif. (Palo Alto HS) Redcliffe, QLD, Australia (Redcliffe State HS) London, ON, Canada (H.B. Beal Secondary School) Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar HS) San Diego, Calif. (Westview HS) Santa Ana, Calif. (Segerstrom HS) Alamo, Calif. (Carondelet HS) Sandy, Utah (Alta HS) New Smyrna Beach, Fla. (Spruce Creek HS) Chiba, Japan (Shibuya Makuhari HS) Temecula, Calif. (Rancho Christian HS) Newport Beach, Calif. (Sage Hill HS) Alamo, Calif. (San Ramon Valley HS) El Dorado Hills, Calif. (St. Francis Catholic HS) San Clemente, Calif. (Santa Margarita HS) Mendota, Calif. (Mendota HS) Clinton, N.J. (North Hunterdon HS)

ALPHABETICAL ROSTER No. 14 1 23 3 32 11 12 6 10 21 9 16 27 31 4 30 5 20 22 36 26 15 19 24 34 7 8 2 35 17 29 25 28 13

Name Olivia Athens Lauren Brzykcy Marley Canales Chloe Castaneda Janae DeFazio Madelyn Desiano Sunny Dunphy Kennedy Faulknor Mia Fishel Jessie Fleming Shana Flynn Sunshine Fontes Jackie Gilday Kylie Kerr Rachel Lowe Taylor Magliarditi Kaiya McCullough Teagan Micah Emily Mickelsen Hannah Mitchell Brecken Mozingo Lucy Parker Jacey Pederson Maricarmen Reyes Brianne Riley Anika Rodriguez Karina Rodriguez Ashley Sanchez Idalia Serrano Delanie Sheehan Kali Trevithick Cassidy Tshimbalanga Maki Umehara Viviana Villacorta

Pos. MF GK MF F/MF F/MF MF D F F MF D F MF D MF F/D D GK MF GK F/D D D MF D F/MF D F GK D F F MF MF

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

Yr. Jr. RSo Jr. RSr. Fr. RFr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Sr. RFr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. So. Sr. Sr Fr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Sr. So. Fr. RSr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Fr. RFr. Sr. Jr.

Hometown (High School/College) Atherton, Calif. (Menlo-Atherton HS) San Clemente, Calif (San Clemente HS) San Diego, Calif. (Westview HS) Encino, Calif. (Harvard-Westlake HS) El Dorado Hills, Calif. (St. Francis Catholic HS) San Clemente, Calif. (Aliso Niguel HS) Carlsbad, Calif. (Cathedral Catholic HS) Markham, ON, Canada (Bill Crothers Secondary School) San Diego, Calif. (Patrick Henry HS) London, ON, Canada (H.B. Beal Secondary School) Brampton, Ont., Canada (Mayfield Secondary School) Wahiawa, Hawaii (Pearl City HS) New Smyrna Beach, Fla. (Spruce Creek HS) Alamo, Calif. (San Ramon Valley HS) Gordon, New South Wales, Australia (Pymble Ladies College) Newport Beach, Calif. (Sage Hill HS) Mission Viejo, Calif. (El Toro HS) Redcliffe, QLD, Australia (Redcliffe State HS) Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar HS) Clinton, N.J. (North Hunterdon HS) Sandy, Utah (Alta HS) Cambridge, England (Coleridge CC/LSU) Palo Alto, Calif. (Palo Alto HS) Santa Ana, Calif. (Segerstrom HS) San Clemente, Calif. (Santa Margarita HS) Torrance, Calif. (Torrance HS) Torrance, Calif. (Torrance HS) Monrovia, Calif (Mountain Park HS) Mendota, Calif. (Mendota HS) Brentwood, Calif. (Liberty HS) Temecula, Calif. (Rancho Christian HS) Alamo, Calif. (Carondelet HS) Chiba, Japan (Shibuya Makuhari HS) Lawndale, Calif. (Mira Costa HS) 3

Head Coach: Amanda Cromwell (7th Year at UCLA, 22nd overall, Virginia ‘92) Asst. Coach: Jenny Bindon (3rd Year, Lewis ‘00) Asst. Coach: Sam Greene (3rd Year, Northwestern ‘11) Asst. Coach (Volunteer): Jane Alukonis (2ndt Year, Duke ‘10) Staff Athletic Trainer: Amanda Pruden Athletic Performance Coach: Joseph Geletko Team Managers: Viraj Yadav, Ketzia Jimenez, Anish Vishwakoti

ROSTER BREAKDOWN Height 5-10 .......... Brzykcy, Dunphy 5-9 ......... Gilday, Kerr, Micah 5-8 ......Faulknor, Magliarditi, ...........McCullough, Mitchell, ......... Parker, Riley, Trevithick 5-7 ..... Athens, Fishel, Reyes ...............................Villacorta 5-6 ...............Desiano, Lowe ............ Mickelsen, Mozingo, ............................. Sheehan 5-5 ......... DeFazio, Pederson .........K. Rodriguez, Umehara 5-4 ........... Canales, Fleming .........Flynn, Fontes, Sanchez ......................Tshimbalanga 5-3 ....... Castaneda, Serrano 5-2 ..................A. Rodriguez

Class Freshmen (14): DeFazio, Desiano, Fishel, Flynn, Fontes, Gilday, Kerr, Lowe, Mickelsen, Mitchell, Mozingo, Riley, Trevithick, Tshimbalanga

Defenders (9): Dunphy, Flynn, Kerr, McCullough, Parker, Pederson, Riley, K. Rodriguez, Sheehan Midfielders (10): Athens, Canales, Desiano, Fleming, Gilday, Mickelsen, Lowe, Reyes, Villacorta Forwards (11): Castaneda, DeFazio, Faulknor, Fishel, Fontes, Magliarditi, Mozingo, A. Rodriguez, Sanchez, Trevithick, Tshimbalanga

State California (23): Athens, Brzykcy, Canales, Castaneda, DeFazio, Desiano, Dunphy, Fishel, Kerr, Magliarditi, McCullough, Mickelsen, Pederson, Reyes, Riley, A. Rodriguez, K. Rodriguez, Sanchez, Serrano, Sheehan, Trevithick, Tshimbalanga, Villacorta Florida (1): Gilday

Sophomores (4): Brzykcy, Magliarditi, Reyes, Serrano

Hawaii (1): Fontes

Juniors (8): Athens, Canales, Faulknor, Parker, K. Rodriguez, Sanchez, Sheehan, Villacorta

Utah (1): Mozingo

Seniors (8): Castaneda, Dunphy, Fleming, McCullough, Micah, Pederson, A. Rodriguez, Umehara

Position Goalkeepers (4): Brzykcy, Micah, Mitchell, Serrano

New Jersey (1): Mitchell

International Australia (2): Lowe, Micah Canada (3): Faulknor , Fleming, Flynn England (1): Parker Japan (1): Umehara

Pronunciation Guide Lauren Brzkcy ..........................................................BRISKY Marley Canales ..................................................CANAL-ess Chloe Castaneda....................................... cass-ta-NYED-uh Madelyn Desiano ...........................................des-ee-AH-no Kennedy Faulknor .................................................FOLK-ner Mia Fishel............................................................... FISH-ull Shana Flynn......................................................... SHAY-nuh Sunshine Fontes ................................................ FAWN-tess Jackie Gilday .........................................................GILL-day Taylor Magliarditi.................................... mag-lee-are-DITTY Kaiya McCullough ................................................... KAI-yuh Teagan Micah ......................................................TEEGH-un Brecken Mozingo ............................................. mo-ZING-go Maricarmen Reyes ..........................................Mary Carmen Anika Rodriguez ................................................ AWE-nik-uh Idalia Serrano ..............................................ee-DAHL-ee-ya Delanie Sheehan ....................................................SHE-han Kali Trevithick...................................CAL-ee TREV-uh-THICK Cassidy Tshimbalanga ..........................chim-buh-LONG-guh Maki Umehara .........................MOCK-ee OOH-meh-HAR-uh Viviana Villacorta .................. viv-ee-AH-nuh VEE-ya-CORE-ta


COACHING STAFF

AMANDA

11 NCAA Tournament appearances, four Atlantic Sun Tournament championships, four Conference USA regular-season titles and the 2012 C-USA tournament title. Cromwell’s Knights made a NCAA Elite Eight run in 2011 that included a defeat of North Carolina in the third round. Cromwell’s UCF players earned 96 all-conference honors and 38 National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) All-Region selections. They also amassed nearly 300 conference academic awards during her 14 years in Orlando, including 10 NSCAA Women’s Collegiate Scholar All-American awards and one Senior CLASS Award. Prior to Central Florida, Cromwell was head coach at University of MarylandBaltimore County from 1996-97 and an assistant coach at the University of Virginia from 1992-94. With 325 career victories and a .710 winning percentage at the close of the 2018 season, Cromwell currently ranks among the top-25 winningest active coaches and the top-30 all-time winningest coaches in NCAA history. A native of Annandale, Va. and an inaugural member of the Annendale High School Athletic Hall of Fame, Cromwell attended the University of Virginia and was the captain of the 1991 Cavaliers team that advanced to the Final Four. She was a two-time All-America selection, a finalist for the 1991 Hermann Trophy and a four-time All-Atlantic Coast Conference honoree. Following her standout career in Charlottesville, Cromwell earned 55 caps while representing the U.S. Women’s National Team. She was a member of the United States’ 1995 FIFA Women’s World Cup team and an alternate for the U.S. Olympic team in 1996. She later played professionally for the Washington Freedom, Atlanta Beat and the San Jose CyberRays of the Women’s United Soccer Association and was inducted into the Virginia-DC Soccer Hall of Fame. Cromwell has served as a member of the NCAA Men’s and Women’s Soccer Rules Committee and U.S. Soccer Board of Directors, and from 2002 to 2006, she was a member of the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports. She is also a member of the coaching staff that the State Department sends as an envoy to other countries to empower girls and women through soccer. Cromwell graduated from the University of Virginia in 1992 with a bachelor’s degree in biology.

CROMWELL Head Coach Seventh Season at UCLA/ 22nd Season overall Virginia ‘92

One would be hard-pressed to find a coach who made as big of an impact in her first season as Amanda Cromwell. Eight months after being hired on Apr. 12, 2013 as the fifth head coach in UCLA women’s soccer history, Cromwell led her team to the program’s first-ever NCAA Championship, and she took her Bruins to a second championship game appearance four years later in 2017. In six seasons as UCLA head coach, she has taken her teams to two College Cups, plus two quarterfinals and one Round of 16 appearance, along with two Pac-12 team titles. On Oct. 5, 2017, she earned her 300th career victory. Academically, her teams have earned the United Soccer Coaches College Team Academic Award in each of her seasons at UCLA. Additionally, the 2018 Bruins won the Pac-12 Sportsmanship Award, and the 2017 squad received a Team Ethics and Sportsmanship Award from the United Soccer Coaches. Six Cromwell-coached Bruins participated in the 2019 World Cup, including three – Abby Dahlkemper, Sam Mewis and Mal Pugh – from the winning U.S. squad. Cromwell’s 2013 Bruins finished the season with a 22-1-3 record and went unbeaten over their last 21 games. They gave up just one goal during the NCAA Tournament and only eight goals all season, leading the nation in goals against average (0.296). In addition to winning the national championship, the team won the Pac-12 title and tied the school record for most victories in a season. Dahlkemper won the Honda Award, and three Bruins earned All-America honors, with five receiving first-team NSCAA All-Region honors. Cromwell herself was named Soccer America’s Coach of the Year, the first-such honor for a UCLA women’s soccer coach. Year two of the Cromwell era was nearly as successful, as the Bruins went undefeated in their first 23 games before falling to Virginia in the NCAA Quarterfinals. Still, the Bruins earned a 21-1-2 record, won a second-straight Pac-12 title, set multiple school records, and accumulated a plethora of awards, including the Honda Award for Mewis and a school-record four NSCAA All-America honors. Cromwell earned NSCAA Pacific Region Coach of the Year honors. Although the 2015 Bruins went 8-10-1 after losing nine starters, Cromwell quickly put the pieces in place to rebuild, signing a blockbuster recruiting class in February 2016 that included three Top 10 players, led by U.S. National Team starter Pugh, Canadian Olympic bronze medalist Jessie Fleming and U.S. Under-20 National Team standout Marley Canales. Although Pugh and Canales sat out the 2016 season while with the U-20s, Fleming and her freshman teammates, six of whom were in the starting lineup in the postseason, led the Bruins to a 15-5-2 record and to the NCAA Round of 16, where they were eliminated on penalty kicks to the No. 1 overall seed West Virginia. Fleming went on to earn NSCAA All-America honors, and senior Darian Jenkins, who suffered a season-ending leg injury in early October, earned NSCAA All-Region acclaim. The 2017 season started out with seven-straight victories and a six-week run at the No. 1 national ranking. UCLA set school and national attendance records, drawing a NCAA regular season all-time record 11,925 fans to their home regular season finale against USC. The Bruins treated the record-setting crowd to a thrilling 3-2 overtime victory over their crosstown rivals. UCLA finished the season with a 19-3-3 record and earned its second College Cup appearance under Cromwell. Cromwell led the 2018 Bruins to a 17-3-2 record and a 13-game unbeaten streak to end the season. UCLA advanced to the NCAA quarterfinals but fell in penalty kicks at North Carolina. Cromwell’s Bruins led the nation in points per game (8.36) and assists per game (2.82) and were tied for first in total goals (61). In addition to coaching, Cromwell was also instrumental in securing a $5-million dollar donation for the transformation of the North Athletic Field into the new home for UCLA Soccer, Wallis Annenberg Stadium. Cromwell came to UCLA in 2013 after 14 years as head coach at the University of Central Florida. From 1999-2012, she guided the Knights to a 203-83-26 record,

Career Coaching Record Year UMBC 1996 1997 UMBC (2 yrs) Central Florida 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 UCF (14 yrs) UCLA 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 UCLA (6 yrs) Totals (21 yrs)

4

Overall Record

Conf. Record/Finish

Postseason

10-6-0 10-9-1 20-15-1

3-2-0/3rd 3-2-0/3rd 6-4-0

— — —

16-6-1 8-11-1 14-6-0 18-5-0 16-5-1 17-4-2 12-10-0 11-6-2 15-4-4 14-6-3 17-5-1 15-5-3 13-5-6 17-5-2 203-83-26

8-0-1/1st 7-2-0/2nd 9-1-0/1st 10-1-0/1st 9-1-0/2nd 8-2-0/2nd 8-1-0/1st 7-1-1/2nd 7-1-1/1st 7-2-2/3rd 10-1-0/1st 8-1-2/1st 6-2-3/4th 8-3-0/3rd 112-19-10

NCAA Second Round — NCAA First Round NCAA First Round NCAA First Round NCAA Second Round — — NCAA Second Round NCAA Second Round NCAA Second Round NCAA Second Round NCAA Elite Eight NCAA Second Round 11 NCAA Appearances

22-1-3 21-1-2 8-10-1 15-5-2 19-3-3 17-3-2 102-23-13 325-121-40

9-0-2/1st 10-0-1/1st 4-6-1/8th 7-3-1/T-4th 8-2-1/T-2nd 9-2-0/2nd 47-13-6 165-36-16

NCAA Champion NCAA Elite Eight — NCAA Round of 16 NCAA Runner-Up NCAA Elite Eight 5 NCAA Appearances 16 NCAA Appearances


COACHING STAFF

JENNY

SAM

BINDON

GREENE

Assistant Coach Third Season Lewis ‘00

Assistant Coach Third Season Northwestern ‘11

Two-time Women’s World Cup player and two-time Olympian Jenny Bindon begins her third season as assistant coach for the Bruins.

Former Northwestern standout Sam Greene begins her third season as a coach and seventh season overall on the UCLA staff. Greene serves as the team’s recruiting coordinator.

Bindon represented New Zealand on the national team for 10 years, and her 77 career caps is the most by a goalkeeper, men’s or women’s, in New Zealand’s history. She competed at the 2007 and 2011 Women’s World Cup and the 2008 and 2012 Olympic Games, playing every minute at the 2012 Olympics to lead the Football Ferns to a program-best quarterfinal finish. Bindon also led New Zealand to runner-up finishes at the 2008 Peace Queen Cup and 2011 Cyprus Cup.

UCLA’s Director of Soccer Operations from 2013-16, Greene moved into a volunteer assistant coach role in the summer of 2017. She has a U.S. Soccer Federation B License and was the head coach of the LA Galaxy South Bay 2000 Elite age group from 201517. In 2018-19, she was selected to the United Soccer Coaches 30 under 30 program. A four-year letterwinner at Northwestern, Greene was a two-time Academic All-Big Ten soccer player and Big Ten Distinguished Scholar during her senior year. She finished her career ranked fourth on Northwestern’s career (16) and single-season (eight) assists lists and fifth on the career games played list (78). Greene graduated from Northwestern in 2011 with a degree in Learning and Organizational Change.

Following her distinguished playing career in which she played every minute of every FIFA Tournament in which she participated, Bindon moved into coaching. She served as the assistant coach and goalkeeper coach for the New Zealand Under-17 Women’s National Team, and was the goalkeeper coach for the Under-20s and the full national team. In 2016, she co-coached the Takapuna senior men’s team in the Northern League Second Division, a third tier competition in the New Zealand club football pyramid, becoming just the second female to coach a men’s team in the 52-year history of the Northern League competition. Bindon was also a head coach at the National Women’s League level in 2014. In 2008, she served on the local organizing committee for the inaugural FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup. Bindon currently works with U.S. Soccer as a Youth National Team scout.

JANE

At UCLA, Bindon coached goalkeeper Teagan Micah to a spot on Australia’s 2019 Women’s World Cup squad.

ALUKONIS

As a student-athlete at SIU-Edwardsville, Bindon played three sports – soccer, tennis and basketball – before enlisting in the U.S. Coast Guard. She finished her collegiate playing career at Lewis University, where she played soccer and basketball. Bindon graduated from Lewis with a bachelor’s degree in sports marketing and management and a minor in coaching and sociology.

Volunteer Assistant Coach Second Season Duke ‘10

Bindon and her husband Grant, a former captain of the New Zealand men’s volleyball team, have a son, Tyler.

Soccer Staff

Amanda Pruden Staff Athletic Trainer

Joseph Geletko Athletic Performance Coach

Viraj Yadav Team Manager

Ketzia Jimenez Team Manager

Anish Vishwakoti Team Manager

Kacey Mathieson Team Manager

Jane Alukonis begins her second season on the UCLA coaching staff in 2018 as a volunteer assistant coach. Alukonis, who has a UEFA B Coaching license, began coaching in 2014 with Space Coast United, where she served as head coach of the U-10, U-11 and U-16 girls and as an assistant coach of the U-15 boys team. She currently coaches the 2006 ECNL LA Breakers team and the 2009 Blue and 2010 White LA Breakers teams, as well as the Harvard-Westlake middle school girls team. Prior to coaching, Alukonis taught for three years in Baltimore City as part of the program Teach for America. A four-year starter at Duke from 2006-09, Alukonis started 76 of her 84 matches and tallied five goals, including one game-winner, and 11 assists for 21 points. She was an ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District III and All-ACC Academic Team selection as a senior team captain with the Blue Devils and finished her standout career as a four-time ACC Honor Roll selection. Alukonis received the ACC Top Six for Service Award as a senior for her volunteer efforts at Duke. She returned to her alma mater in 2015 and 2016 as the Director of Operations. Alukonis, who is a native of Cocoa Beach, Fla., received a Master of Philosophy in social and developmental psychology with honors at the University of Cambridge in 2011. She graduated from Duke in 2010 with a degree in political science and sociology along with a minor in psychology.

5


PLAYER PROFILES

OLIVIA

LAUREN

ATHENS

BRZYKCY

5-7 / Junior Midfielder Atherton, Calif. Menlo-Atherton Prep

5-10 / Redshirt Sophomore Goalkeeper San Clemente, Calif. San Clemente HS

14

1

2018

2018

Scored the game-winning goal in double overtime to defeat USC, 3-2 … Ranked third on the team in scoring with 16 points … Scored four goals, including two game-winners … Recorded eight assists, second-most on the team … Played in 22 games, making 20 starts, including all four NCAA Tournament games … Selected the UCLA/Muscle Milk Student-Athlete of the Week for Nov. 6 after her game-winner against USC … Earned honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic honors.

Selected to the Pac-12 All-Freshman team … Started in eight games and posted two solo and two shared shutouts … Recorded a goals against average of 0.77 and made 13 saves … Made her collegiate debut Sept. 7, starting against Pepperdine and earning a shared shutout … Recorded her first solo shutout Sept. 13 in a 3-0 win at LMU … Made a season-high eight saves while facing 24 shots at Stanford.

2017 Did not play in the regular season.

2017

U.S. National Team

Played in 23 games, making 12 starts, including all six NCAA Tournament games … Scored the game-winning goal in the Bruins’ 3-1 win over Princeton in the NCAA Quarterfinals, her first collegiate goal … Named to the Top Drawer Soccer Team of the Week Nov. 28 … Recorded assists in three of the Bruins’ first four games, including an assist on the game-winner in the season opener against San Diego State.

Member of the U.S. Under-17 National team.

High School/Club Earned NSCAA High School All-American and All-Region honors in 2016 and 2017 … TeamSnap All-Region selection in 2017 … Finalist for the Gatorade Player of the year in 2016 … Earned all-state honors in 2016… Named to Best Xl At the 2015 ECNL National Championships … Played in ECLN National Championships three times, winning one title.

U.S. National Team Member of the U.S. Under-18 National Team, attending seven camps at the Under-18 level … Participated in the 2016 Six Nations Tournament in La Manga, Spain with the U-18s.

Personal Full name is Lauren Ann Brzykcy … Born in Laguna Beach, Calif. … Parents are Bill and Andrea Brzykcy … Has one brother, Christopher… Her grandfather led the University of Wisconsin to its first Big Ten Golf Championship in 1957… Chose UCLA because it has great history, a beautiful campus, a successful soccer program, is close to home, and offers sign language through their linguistics program … Her greatest athletic thrill was winning a national championship… Admires Manuel Neuer … Hobbies include sign language, surfing and playing the ukulele … Sociology major.

High School/Club Played first two years at Sacred Heart Prep and earned first-team all-league honors in 2013-2014 and WBAL Offensive Player of the Year acclaim in 2014-2015 … Tallied 33 goals and 30 assists in two years … Club team also won 2014 Surf Cup.

Personal Full name is Olivia Marie Athens … Born in Stanford, Calif. … Parents are Nick and Candi Athens … Has two older brothers, Angelo and John, and one older sister, Erika … Decided to choose UCLA because it is an amazing institution with one of the best soccer programs in the country alongside its education … Her greatest athletic thrill was representing the U.S. and wearing the crest … Admires Zinedine Zidane and Stephen Curry … Hobbies include cooking/baking and hiking … Economics major.

Career Statistics Year 2018

Career Statistics Year 2017 2018 Totals

GP-GS 23-12 22-20 45-32

Shots 11 26 37

Goals 1 4 5

Assists 4 8 12

Points 6 16 22

GWG 1 2 3

6

GP-GS 9-8

Min. 585

Saves 13

Shutouts 2

GA 5

GAA 0.77

W-L-T 5-2-0


PLAYER PROFILES

MARLEY

CHLOE

CANALES

CASTANEDA

5-4 / Junior Midfielder San Diego, Calif. Westview HS

5-3 / Redshirt Senior Forward / Midfielder Encino, Calif. Harvard-Westlake HS

23

3

2018

2018

Played in 17 games and started 14, including all four NCAA Tournament games … Scored one goal against San Jose State in the NCAA first round … Recorded two assists, including an assist on the game-winner at Washington … Earned honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic honors.

Tied for third on the team in goals scored with five … Scored four of her five goals in the final seven games of the season … Recorded two game-winning goals, at Utah and against Minnesota … Had a two-assist game against Arizona State … Played in all 22 games and started in 13 games, including all four NCAA Tournament games … Won UCLA’s Bruin Leadership Award for 2018-19.

2017 Hit the deciding penalty kick in the NCAA semifinal against Duke to send UCLA to the NCAA Championship game … Played in 12 games and made one start at Weber State … Logged a season-high 55 minutes in the Bruins’ 4-1 win against Oregon State … Enrolled in Winter 2017 after deferring a quarter to play at the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup.

2017 Played in 12 games … Recorded an assist at Weber State … Played a season-best 35 minutes in the win over Santa Clara, where she took two shots.

2016 Her first collegiate goal was the game-winner in the 83rd minute at Texas A&M in a 1-0 victory … Played in all 22 games and made starts against San Diego and Pepperdine … Played in a season-high 67 minutes vs. San Diego.

U.S. National Team Has played with the U-17, U-18, U-20 and U-23 Women’s National Teams … Member of the 2016 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup team … Member of the U.S. team that won the 2015 CONCACAF U-20 Championship … All-Tournament selection at the 2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championships … Called up to U-23 training camp in May 2018 … Earned 27 caps between the U-20 and U-17 teams since 2013.

2015 Redshirted the season.

U.S. National Team Trained with the U.S. Under-17 National Team in 2013 and 2014 … Participated in the U-17 WNT National Training Center Invitational in February 2014.

High School/Club Three-time NSCAA Youth All-American … 2014-15 California Gatorade Player of the Year finalist … 2015 CIF All-San Diego Player of the Year … Member of the 2014 USYS ODP National Championhip squad … Named to 2015 HS Girls Winter All-America Regional first team, Totaled 38 points, 27 goals, and 13 assists in her High School Career … Played club soccer for the San Diego Surf.

High School/Club Played four years as a center attacking midfielder at Harvard-Westlake … Team went undefeated in Mission League play in 2015 and was a CIF Finalist in 2012 and 2013 … Club team LA Premier FC won the California Regional League championship in 2014 and Manchester City Cup championship in 2015 … Participated in ODP since U-12 … Selected the 2016 UWS West Player of the Year while playing with the national champion Santa Clarita Blue Heat … Earned UWS All-Conference honors in 2017.

Personal Full name is Marley Angelina Canales … Born in Salt Lake City, Utah … Greatest athletic thrill was scoring her first international goal for the U-17s … Admires Kobe Bryant … Hobbies include going to the beach and on beach runs, watching the sunset, hanging out with family and friends, and hiking … Parents are Rudy and Kelly … Older sister, Miranda, played college soccer at Concordia … Psychology major.

Personal Full name is Chloe Marie Castaneda … Born in Los Angeles, Calif. … Hobbies are painting, drawing, sketching and hiking … Parents are Lisa and Joe Castaneda … Has two younger sisters, Carissa and Camryn … Physiological Science major … Career aspiration is to be a physical therapist … Served as co-president of UCLA’s StudentAthlete Mentor program and Social Media co-chair for the Bruin Athletic Council … Attended the APPLE Training Institute in 2017 and 2018 … Represented UCLA at the Pac-12 SAAC meeting in 2019 .

Career Statistics Year 2017 2018 Totals

GP-GS 12-1 17-14 29-15

Shots 5 13 18

Goals 0 1 1

Assists 0 2 2

Points 0 4 4

GWG 0 0 0

Career Statistics

7

Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2016 2017 2018 Totals

22-2 12-0 22-13 56-15

3 4 31 38

1 0 5 6

0 1 4 5

2 1 14 17

1 0 2 3


PLAYER PROFILES

JANAE

SUNNY

DEFAZIO

DUNPHY

5-5 / Freshman Forward / Midfielder El Dorado Hills, Calif. St. Francis Catholic HS

5-10 / Senior Defender Carlsbad, Calif. Cathedral Catholic HS

32

12

High School/Club

2018

Won the ECNL league title in 2019 with Davis Legacy Soccer Club and advanced to the ECNL National Championship in 2018 … Attended ODP National Training Camp from 2015-17 and was a member of the ODP State and Regional Teams from 2014-17 … Captained USA Stars Soccer Academy for six years and won four state cups and two regional championships … Totaled 42 goals and 36 assists in four years at St. Francis Catholic High School … Named to the 2019 TDS state all-star team … Selected to the 2017 NSCAA.All West Region team … Two-time all-city and all-league selection.

Earned CoSIDA Academic All-District second-team honors and Pac-12 All-Academic honorable mention acclaim … Played in all 22 games and started eight times … Converted from forward to defender … Scored the game-winning goal at California … Ended the season with UCLA’s longest active streak for games played with 63.

2017 Earned CoSIDA Academic All-District and Pac-12 All-Academic second-team honors with a 3.93 cumulative GPA … Played in all 25 games and started twice, in the season opener against San Diego State and at Weber State … Scored a goal to help the Bruins win at Colorado, 2-0 … Converted a penalty kick in the shootout against Duke in the NCAA semifinal to help UCLA advance to the championship game.

Personal Full name is Janae Allana DeFazio … Born in Folsom, Calif. … Parents are Joe and Judy DeFazio … Has younger siblings Jaden and Jaycee … Admires former UCLA players Hailie Mace and Mal Pugh … Hobbies include hanging out with friends and going to concerts … Played basketball for seven years … Describes her greatest athletic thrill as playing in the 2018 ECNL National Championships … Undeclared major.

2016 Played in 18 games and started five games, including the final four games of the season … Scored the game-winning goal in overtime at Arizona, her first career goal … Assisted on the game-winning goal in the NCAA 1st Round win over Seattle … Played in a career-best 82 minutes at USC.

MADELYN

DESIANO

U.S. National Team Participated in U.S. Youth National Team camps since 2013, most recently with the U-18s in London in July 2016.

5-6 / Redshirt Freshman Midfielder San Clemente, Calif. Aliso Niguel HS

High School/Club Selected to the USYS National Championship Best 11 team in 2013 … Played on the USYS ODP National Championship teams in 2014 and 2015 … Leading scorer at the 2014 ODP Championships … Named to the Best XI at the 2013 ODP Thanksgiving Interregional … Played club soccer with San Diego Surf … All-CIF selection at Cathedral Catholic in 2014 and 2015 … Gatorade Player of the Year nominee in 2014.

11

Personal

2018

Full name is Sunny Marie Dunphy … Born in Los Angeles at the UCLA Hospital … Parents are Stephen and Nicole Dunphy … Has three younger siblings, sisters Sierra and Sadie and brother Stephen … Father was a 3-time ACC decathlon champion at the University of Virginia … Admires Michael Jordan, Carli Lloyd and Gareth Bale … Hobbies include surfing, yoga, drawing and photography … Lists her greatest athletic thrill as scoring a hat trick in the CIF State Championship game during her junior year to help her team achieve a three-peat … Physiological Science major with career aspirations to become an ER doctor.

Redshirted the season after undergoing knee surgery in the Spring.

U.S. National Team Member of the U.S. Youth National Teams since 2014 when she played with the U-14s … Played with the U-19s in China in Sept. 2017 and with the U-18s in Switzerland in April 2018.

High School/Club Lettered three years at Aliso Niguel HS before graduating early and enrolling at UCLA in January 2018 … Third-team All-American and South Coast League MVP in 2017 … Three-time All-CIF SS and all-league selection … Member of her school’s dance team for three years and was voted the team’s Distinguished Dancer in 2017 … Also helped her team win a national championship in 2015 … Played club soccer with SoCal Blues, which won the U15 ECNL National Championship in 2015 and the Surf Cup Championships in 2015 (U15) and 2017 (U18/U19).

Career Statistics

Personal Full name is Madelyn Marie Desiano … Born in Mission Viejo, Calif. … Parents are Ann-Marie and Tom Desiano … Has one younger brother, Tommy … Both parents are high school teachers and collegiate athletes; her father played basketball at San Jose State, and her mother was a cheerleader at Long Beach State … Decided to choose UCLA for the stellar academics, pristine athletic/women’s soccer program and ideal location … Greatest athletic thrills are winning the ECNL National Championship and every time she gets to represent the United States internationally … Hobbies include dancing, going to the beach and working out… Undeclared major. 8

Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2016 2017 2018 Totals

18-5 25-2 22-8 65-15

15 20 13 48

1 1 1 3

1 2 0 3

3 4 2 9

1 0 1 2


PLAYER PROFILES

KENNEDY

MIA

FAULKNOR

FISHEL

5-8 / Junior Forward Markham, Ontario, Canada Bill Crothers Secondary School

5-7 / Freshman Midfielder / Forward San Diego, Calif. Patrick Henry HS

6

10

2018

U.S. National Team

Played in all 22 games and made seven starts … Scored three goals and added two assists for eight points … Recorded her first collegiate goal in the win at Loyola Marymount … Scored the game-winning goal on a header off a free kick against Oregon.

Scored the opening goal for the U.S. at the 2018 U-17 World Cup … Scored the goahead goal against Haiti at the 2018 U-17 CONCACAF semifinals to send the U.S. to the U-17 World Cup … Helped the U.S. win the 2016 U-15 CONCACAF Championship, winning the Golden Ball … Recorded a hat trick and added three assists in the 2016 U-15 CONCACAF quarterfinals.

2017 Played in five games and made her first collegiate start against Weber State.

High School/Club

Canadian National Team

Played club soccer with San Diego Surf … Named to the U.S. Soccer Development Academy’s Best XI for the West Conference in 2019 … Played two years of high school soccer and basketball at Patrick Henry HS … First-team All-CIF in soccer as a sophomore … Averaged 8.6 points, 8.0 rebounds and 7.6 steals in basketball as a senior and was named to the San Diego Union-Tribune All-Academic Team .

Member of the Canadian National Team and Under-20 National Team … Earned her first cap with the Canadian Women’s National team on Dec. 9, 2015 and has four overall caps … At age 16 years, was the youngest center back ever to play for Canada … Selected the 2015 U17 Canadian Player of the year … Led Canada to the Under-15 CONCACAF Championship in 2014 and was named to the Best XI … Played in the 2016 CONCACAF Women’s Under-17 Championship … Called up to U-20 camp in August 2017.

Personal Full name is Mia Renee Fishel … Born in San Diego, Calif. … Parents are Contay Watson and Patrick Fishel … Has an older brother, Alante, and younger sister, Sage … Lists her greatest athletic thrill as scoring the opening goal for the U.S. at the 2018 U-17 World Cup … Admires Lionel Messi … Relatives David and Andrew Bascome played on Bermuda’s national team … Hobbies include fishing, listening to a variety of music and reading interesting books … Undeclared major.

Personal Full name is Kennedy Jade Faulknor … Born in Scarborough, Canada … Parents are Paula and Glen Faulknor … Has one younger brother, Cole, and an older sister, Sydney…Decided to attend UCLA because it was her dream school, she loved the atmosphere and felt that UCLA would be the best environment to be challenged as a player and person … Lists her greatest athletic thrill as representing Canada for the first time in the Cayman Islands and winning the U15 CONCACAF championship … Admires Serena Williams, Skylar Diggins and Lionel Messi … Hobbies include music, working out and dancing … Sociology major.

Career Statistics Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2017 2018 Totals

5-1 22-7 27-8

0 9 9

0 3 3

0 2 2

0 8 8

0 1 1

9


PLAYER PROFILES

JESSIE

High School/Club Attended London Central Secondary School and graduated from H.B. Beal Secondary School … OFSAA Cross Country Champion in 2012 … Won the OFSAA Track & Field Championships in the 1500m and 3000m in 2013 and the 3000m in 2014.

FLEMING 5-4 / Senior Midfielder London, Ontario, Canada H.B. Beal Secondary

Personal Full name is Jessie Alexandra Fleming … Born in London, Ontario, Canada … Greatest athletic thrill was her first senior international goal for Canada … Admires Muhammad Ali … Enjoys skiing, hiking, photography and travel … Parents are John and Michaele … Has an older brother, Tristan, and younger sister, Elysse … Materials Engineering major.

Career Statistics

21 2018 Earned first-team All-Pac-12 acclaim for the third-straight year and was a second-team all-region selection in an abbreviated season … Played just 11 games due to World Cup qualifying but still scored 15 points on five goals and five assists … Three of her five goals were game-winners, which tied for most on the team … Scored three goals in NCAA Tournament play, including two against NC State in the third round … Earned honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic honors … UCLA team co-captain.

Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2016 2017 2018 Totals

19-16 23-23 11-11 53-50

42 48 23 113

11 6 5 22

5 8 5 18

27 20 15 62

3 3 3 9

SHANA

FLYNN

2017 MAC Hermann Trophy Finalist … Honda Award nominee … First-team All-American, All-West Region and All-Pac-12 honoree … Earned honorable mention Pac-12 AllAcademic honors … Ranked third on the team with eight assists and fourth in scoring with 20 points … Three of her six goals scored were game-winners - San Diego State, Utah and at Washington … Scored a goal in the NCAA Championship match and was named to the College Cup All-Tournament Team … Selected the Top Drawer Soccer Player of the Week after a two-goal, three-assist weekend in Week One … Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Week after scoring the game-winner and recording an assist in the 2-1 win over Utah … Missed two games (USC, NCAA first round) while starting for Team Canada in a home-home series with the U.S. … Named the Player of the Match by ESPN following the 1-1 draw with the U.S. in Vancouver … UCLA team co-captain.

5-4 / Redshirt Freshman Defender Brampton, Ontario, Canada Bill Crothers Secondary School

9 2018 Redshirted the season due to a knee injury.

2016

Canadian National Team

NSCAA Third-Team All-American … Just the fourth UCLA freshman ever to earn NSCAA All-America honors … Top Drawer Soccer’s Freshman of the Year … Firstteam NSCAA All-Pacific Region … First-team All-Pac-12 and All-Freshman selection … UCLA’s leading scorer with 11 goals and 27 points … Started her collegiate career with a four-game goal-scoring streak, including a two-goal game in her debut against Florida … Scored the game-tying goal with under two minutes to play in regulation at West Virginia in the NCAA 3rd Round … Assisted on both goals in the NCAA 2nd Round game vs. Nebraska … Scored both goals in UCLA’s 2-0 win over Arizona State, including a 30-yard golazo … Scored two goals, including the game-winner in overtime, to defeat Washington … Recorded the game-winning goal in overtime against Penn State … Had a one-goal, one-assist game in UCLA’s 3-1 win over San Diego … Named Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Week on Sept. 6 and 27 and also named to Top Drawer Soccer’s National Team of the Week twice … Voted the UCLA/Muscle Milk Student-Athlete of the Week four times … Named the No. 1 player on Top Drawer Soccer’s Midseason Top 100 Freshman list.

Made her debut in the Canadian youth program in 2014 … Won a gold medal with Canada at the 2014 CONCACAF Girls’ U-15 Championship … Won silver at the CONCACAF Women’s U-20 Championship in 2015 and also played for the U-20s at the 2018 Championship, recording a hat trick in a 4-0 win over Haiti … Started every game for Canada at the 2016 CONCACAF U-17 Championship and scored the game-winning goal in the third place game against Haiti … Called up to the U-20 team in July 2019 for an international series in England … Played club for Unionville Miliken Soccer Club.

Personal Full name is Shana Angel Flynn … Born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada … Parents are Jerome and Seanette Flynn … Has three younger siblings, Jenna, Janessa and Jerome, Jr. …Decided to attend UCLA because of its elite soccer program, great engineering program and nice weather … Lists her greatest athletic thrills as coming back to defeat Haiti to win the 2014 CONCACAF U-15 Championship and playing her first international game after recovering from an ACL injury … Admires LeBron James, Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe … Hobbies include dancing, and she was a dance major at a regional arts school in high school … Plans to major in chemical engineering.

Canadian National Team Selected to her second World Cup team in 2019 and played every minute of every game … Scored her first World Cup goal in a 2-0 win over New Zealand and was named FIFA’s Player of the Match … Named to the Best XI at the 2018 CONCACAF Women’s Championships … In 2017, she was awarded Canada’s U-20 Female Player of the Year for the third consecutive year … Also nominated for the 2017 Canadian Women’s National Team Player of the Year award and was a finalist for the CONCACAF Female Player of the Year award … Starter on Canada’s 2016 Olympic team that won a bronze medal … Helped Canada win gold at the 2016 Algarve Cup and silver at the 2015 Cyprus Cup … Played for Team Canada at the 2015 Women’s World Cup and the Pan American Games … Named the 2016 and 2015 U-20 Canadian Player of the Year and the 2014 U-17 Player of the Year … Played in both the U-20 and U-17 Women’s World Cups in 2014 … Won the Golden Ball and a team silver medal at the 2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championships … Made National Team debut in 2013 at age 15.

10


PLAYER PROFILES

SUNSHINE

JACKIE

FONTES

GILDAY

5-4 / Freshman Forward Wahiawa, Hawaii Pearl City HS

5-9 / Freshman Midfielder New Smyrna Beach, Fla. Spruce Creek HS

16

27

U.S. National Team

Nicaragua National Team

All-time leading scorer for U.S. U-17 National Team with 24 goals … 2018 U.S. Soccer Young Female Player of the Year nominee … Scored five goals at the 2018 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, including two in the semifinals to clinch a World Cup berth for the U.S. … Scored twice in the opening game of the 2018 U-17 World Cup … Became the first U.S. female player to score four goals in two international games in the same year when she had four-goal games against Venezuela and Argentina in 2018 … Played with the U-15s at the 2015 CONCACAF Tournament, scoring five goals and recording four assists in seven games.

Led Nicaragua to its first CONCACAF U-20 Championship appearance in 10 years … Became the first player in Nicaragua history to score a goal in a CONCACAF Championship round … Named Player of the Match against Jamaica at the 2018 U-20 CONCACAF Championship … Invited to play with the Nicaragua Full National Team at the 2018 World Cup qualifiers.

High School/Club Played with Orlando City ECNL for two years and in the United Soccer Alliance DA for two years … Participated in Super Y ODP, id2 and ECNL PDP … Ran track & field for two years at Spruce Creek HS, specializing in middle distances and high jump … Awarded the Best Middle Distance Runner award as a freshman.

High School/Club Two-time Gatorade State Player of the Year and Hawaii State Player of the Year who totaled 81 career goals at Pearl City HS … Named to the 2019 TDS All-America team … Inducted into the Hawaii High School Athletic Association Hall of Honor in 2018-19 … State goal-scoring leader as a freshman (29 goals) and senior (25) … Won Hawaii Youth Soccer Association State championships with Hawaii Rush from 2008-14 and with Honolulu Bulls from 2015-17.

Personal Full name is Jaclyn Talia Gilday … Born in Orlando, Fla. … Parents are Jessica and Frank Gilday … Has an older brother, Frankie … Decided to attend UCLA due to its elite soccer program and high-level academics… Describes her greatest athletic thrill as winning in overtime to qualify for the 2018 Championship with Nicaragua … Hobbies include surfing, reading and traveling… Enrolled at UCLA in Winter 2019 … Undeclared major.

Personal Full name is Sunshine Anuhea Fontes … Born in Honolulu, Hawaii … Parents are Aloha and Randy Fontes … Has six siblings - brothers Travis Aiona and Pono Fontes and sisters Randi, Treasure, Chelsey and Abby Fontes … Describes her greatest athletic thrill as representing the U.S. against other countries and being able to travel the world with her best friends … Admires Lionel Messi, Serena Williams and Cristiano Ronaldo … Undeclared major.

KYLIE

KERR 5-9 / Freshman Defender Alamo, Calif. San Ramon Valley HS

31 High School/Club Team captain and leading scorer for San Ramon Valley HS in 2019 with nine goals and four assists … Finished her career with 14 goals and 16 assists … Earned first-team All-NCS honors and was named San Ramon Valley HS Athlete of the Year in 2019 … Earned TDS first-team All-America honors in 2019 … Team won the NCS Championship in 2015 and was a finalist in 2019 … Played club soccer with Mustang, which won the ECNL Northwest championships and were ECNL finalists in 2017 and 2019… Named to the PDP Select team for the Gothia Cup in Sweden in 2017 … Participated in PDP from 2013-2017 and ECNL PDP in 2016 and 2017.

Personal Full name is Kylie Barbara Kerr … Born in San Francisco, Calif. … Parents are Andrew and Mickie Kerr … Has two younger siblings, Lindsey and Jack … Describes her greatest athletic thrill as playing in the championship game and winning the Gothia Cup in Gothenburg, Sweden with her PDP team … Admires U.S. Women’s National Team player Julie Ertz … Hobbies include hanging out with friends, going to the beach, outdoor activities and going to concerts and music festivals … Plays on indoor and futsol leagues for fun … Undeclared major who is looking at pursuing a career in nursing.

11


PLAYER PROFILES

RACHEL

KAIYA

LOWE

McCULLOUGH

5-6 / Freshman Midfielder Gordon, New South Wales, Australia Pymble Ladies College

5-8 / Senior Defender Mission Viejo, Calif. El Toro HS

4

5

Australia National Team

2018

Made her Australian Women’s National Team debut in 2018 against China at the Algarve Cup … Captained Australia’s U-20 National Team and totaled 13 caps … Scored her first international goal with the U-20s against the U.S. … Helped the Young Matildas win the 2019 AFC U-19 Women’s Championship Qualifiers, scoring a goal in the opening game against Nepal … Played with the Young Matildas against senior national teams in the 2018 AFF Women’s Championship and helped Australia advance to the final.

Twice named Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Week (Oct. 9, Nov. 6) … One of two players to start in every game and ended the year having made 52 consecutive starts … Selected to the MAC Hermann Trophy Watch List and the TDS Preseason Best XI Third

High School/Club

2017

Played three years in the W-League as a starter with the Western Sydney Wanderers FC.

Second-team All-West Region and All-Pac-12 honoree … Earned CoSIDA Academic All-District second-team honors with a 3.85 GPA … Pac-12 All-Academic honorable mention … Named Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Week Sept. 26 after helping lead the Bruins to a 2-0 shutout win at Colorado … Scored her first career goal in the Bruins’ 3-2 overtime win against USC … Recorded an assist against Santa Clara and against Oregon State … One of two players to start in every game.

Team … Earned honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic honors for the second-straight year … Received the Athletic Director’s Academic Excellence Award for making the honor roll every quarter at UCLA.

Personal Full name is Rachel Georgia Wehl Lowe … Born in Sydney, Australia … Parents are David and Robyn Lowe … Has a twin brother, Edward … Admires Ada Hegerbeg and Megan Rapinoe … Hobbies include going to the beach, exploring new cafes and hanging out with friends and family … Enrolled at UCLA in Spring 2019 … Undeclared major.

2016 Selected to the Top Drawer Soccer Freshman Best XI first team … Named to the Pac-12 All-Freshman team … Ranked third on the team in minutes played with 1809 … Starter in 21 of 21 games played (did not play vs. Washington State due to illness) … Helped UCLA record nine shutouts … Recorded an assist at San Diego State and assisted in the game-winner at Pepperdine.

TAYLOR

MAGLIARDITI 5-8 / Freshman Forward / Defender Newport Beach, Calif. Sage Hill HS

U.S. National Team Member of U.S. Youth National Teams from U-18 to U-20 levels … Called up to U-20 camp in January 2018 … Saw action with the U-19s in 2017 … Last played with the U-18s in England in July 2016.

High School/Club Earned first-team High School All-America, all-region and all-state honors in 2016 … Named the 2016 Orange County Female Athlete of the Year by the O.C. Athletic Directors Association … Four year varsity starter in soccer and competed four years of varsity track and field (100m, 200m, 400m, 4x100m relay, 4x4000m relay, and long jump) at El Toro HS … Soccer team MVP and track and field co-MVP as a freshman in in 2012-13 … Four-year varsity scholar-athlete Forward and defender for her high school team and club team San Diego Surf.

4 2018 Did not see action.

High School/Club Played soccer and basketball at Sage Hill HS … Recorded 34 goals and 27 assists in four years and served as team captain her junior and senior seasons … Offensive MVP and first-team all-league in back-to-back years … Newport Beach Player of the Year in 2018 and selected to the Daily Pilot’s all-area second team … Led her team to a league title in 2016 … Played with Slammers FC, scoring 28 points in her final season … Participated in State and Regional ODP.

Personal Her full name is Kaiya June McCullough … Parents Abdul McCullough and Amy Thorne were both student-athletes at UCLA … Abdul was a three-year starter for the UCLA football team, a three-year All-Pac-10 honoree and a team captain during his senior season … Amy was a 1993 All-American and the first UCLA gymnast ever to score a perfect 10 … Has two younger brothers, Kevin and Jeren … Hobbies include reading, running, and binge-watching television shows … Selected to participate in a 2019 UCLA panel discussion highlighting athletes, social justice and activism, and the legacy of Jackie Robinson … Born in Irvine, Calif. … Political Science major.

Personal Full name is Taylor Mackenzie Magliarditi … Born in Las Vegas, Nev. … Parents are Joseph and Rosetta Magliarditi … Has one older sister, Lexi, who played soccer at Duke … Grandfather Joseph D. Magliarditi played professional baseball in the San Francisco Giants organization … Father Joseph A. Magliarditi was a professional kickboxer … Uncle Marc was an All-American hockey player from Western Michigan and Chicago Blackhawks draft pick who played professionally from 1997-2006 … Lists her greatest athletic thrill as scoring an overtime goal in the CIF playoffs … Admires Carli Lloyd, Brandi Chastain and Cristiano Ronaldo … Hobbies include reading, running, kayaking and going on adventures … Plans to major in political science or psychology … Career aspiration is to become an attorney … Member of the National Honor Society and National Spanish Honor Society … Founder and active volunteer of No Place for Hate, an anti-bullying organization targeting middle schools and high schools.

Career Statistics

12

Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2016 2017 2018 Totals

21-21 25-25 22-22 68-68

1 2 2 5

0 1 0 1

2 2 0 4

2 4 0 6

0 0 0 0


PLAYER PROFILES

TEAGAN

Career Statistics Year 2016 2017 2018 Totals

MICAH 5-9 / Senior Goalkeeper Redcliffe, Queensland, Australia Redcliffe State HS

GP-GS 22-22 25-24 17-14 64-60

Min. 2064 2268 1450 5782

Saves 93 61 45 199

Shutouts 9 9 8 26

GA 22 19 12 53

GAA 0.96 0.76 0.74 0.79

W-L-T 15-5-2 19-3-3 12-1-2 46-9-7

EMILY

MICKELSEN

20

5-6 / Freshman Midfielder Newport Beach, Calif. Corona del Mar HS

2018 Played in 17 games, starting 14 games, and posted a 12-1-2 record … Recorded a 0.74 goals against average with eight solo shutouts, two shared shutouts and 45 saves … Nabbed a season-high eight saves in the Bruins’ double-overtime win over USC … Posted three shutouts in the NCAA Tournament … Finished the season ranked fourth on UCLA’s career lists for wins (46), saves (199) and shutouts (26) … Earned honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic honors for the second-straight year.

22 High School/Club

2017

Played four years at Corona del Mar HS … Played on the two-time ECNL National Champion SoCal Blues … Helped her club team win two regional championships, five league titles, five Blues Cup championships, and four Surf Cups.

Played in all 25 games and started in all but one, only missing the start on senior day vs. USC … Named Pac-12 Goalkeeper of the Week Aug. 29 after posting a win against Santa Clara … Made a season-high six saves three times, against Stanford in the NCAA Championship game, at BYU and at Washington State … Posted nine shutouts, including a shutout of Duke in the NCAA semifinals and back-to-back road shutouts at BYU and Weber State … Saved one penalty kick to help UCLA win the shootout over Duke in the NCAA semifinals ... Made four saves, including two in the final minute to preserve the win at Virginia … Moved up to fifth on UCLA’s career shutout list with 18 … Led the nation in goalkeeper minutes played with 2268 … Pac-12 All-Academic honorable mention.

Personal Full name is Emily Grace Mickelsen … Born in Newport Beach, Calif. … Parents are Maxine and Daniel Mickelsen … Has two older brothers, Connor and Liam … Father is a UCLA alum, and her brother Liam is a current UCLA student … Admires Sydney Leroux and Alex Morgan … Lists her greatest athletic thrill as winning her first national championship with her club team in 2016 … Hobbies include art, photography, writing and cinema … Psychobiology major whose career objective is to be a doctor.

2016

HANNAH

Selected to the Top Drawer Soccer Freshman Best XI first team … Earned the starting job in preseason and became the first true freshman goalkeeper to start in goal on opening day since Valerie Henderson in 2004 … Played in every minute of every game, leading the team in minutes played with 2064 … Recorded nine shutouts to rank third in the Pac-12 … Recorded 93 saves during the season, the second-most in UCLA history … Made a career-high nine saves in the NCAA 3rd Round match at West Virginia … Earned shutouts in her first two games and in three of her first four games … Made seven saves in the 1-0 shutout win at USC … Had five or more saves in 10 of 22 games played … Named the Pac-12 Goalkeeper of the Week three times (Aug. 23, Sept. 20, Nov. 8) … Recorded an assist in the win against Washington State.

MITCHELL 5-8 / Freshman Goalkeeper Clinton, N.J.. North Hunterdon HS

36

Australian National Team Selected to Australia’s 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup squad … Called up to the Australian National Team for the final match of the Tournament of Nations in August 2017 … Member of Westfield Young Matilda’s U-20 national team and the Mini Matildas U-17 national team … Selected to the U-19 Young Matildas team for the 2015 AFC Women’s Championships … Competed at the AFC U-17 Championship … Team captain of Westfield Australian’s U13 team … Won Goalkeeper of the Tournament honors at the 2014 NTC Challenge.

Scotland National Team Called up to the U-19 Scotland National Team in May 2019.

High School/Club Played with Cedar Stars Academy in the Development Academy … Led PDA Storm to the 2015 ECNL Championship … Three-year New Jersey ODP member and regional pool call-up … Named to the Best XI Team at ECNL NJ and Phoenix … Earned two varsity letters at North Hunterdon HS.

High School/Club Played with the Western Sydney Wanderers in the W-League in 2015-16 and with the Brisbane Roar from 2013-15 … Member of the Australian Goalkeeping Academy Hall of Fame.

Personal Full name is Hannah Margaret Mitchell … Born in Flemington, N.J. … Parents are Sara and Graham Mitchell … Has two older brothers, Sophie and Jessica … Admires Hope Solo and Inky Johnson … Decided to attend UCLA because of the academic rigor, successful soccer program, community within campus and to live in a new part of the country … Hobbies include traveling, cooking, biking and swimming … President of the Interact Club at her high school and helped raise over $100,000 for their annual Relay for Life event … Plan to major in business-economics.

Personal Full name is Teagan Jade Micah … Born in Victoria, Australia … Greatest athletic thrill is representing her country and making her W-League Debut … Parents are Yvonne and Stephen … Has two sisters, Hayley and Kaitlyn … Hobbies include going to the beach and traveling … Psychology major.

13


PLAYER PROFILES

BRECKEN

LUCY

MOZINGO

PARKER

5-6 / Freshman Forward / Defender Sandy, Utah Alta HS

5-8 / Junior Defender Cambridge, England LSU / Coleridge CC

26

15

U.S. National Team

2018 (LSU)

Called up twice to U.S. U-17 Training Camp in 2017.

United Soccer Coaches third-team All-American and first-team All-SEC and AllSoutheast Region honoree … Started all 24 games for LSU and logged 2,286 minutes … Contributed to 10 shutouts from the center back position and scored three goals, two of which were game-winners … Scored goals in the 89th and 106th minute to upset No. 8 South Carolina, 2-1 … Converted the game-winning penalty kick against Boston University to send LSU to the NCAA second round … Helped LSU’s backline hold opponents scoreless for 558 minutes, the second longest stretch in school history… The Tigers’ 10 shutouts were the second-most in school history … Named the SEC Defender of the Week Sept. 10 … Selected to the 2018 SEC Community Service Team … LSWA first-team honoree.

High School/Club Selected the 2019 UYSA/Tosh Female Athlete of the Year … Named to the USYS 01 All-Star Team in 2016 … Captain of the Far West Region IV team from 2015-17 … Won two Utah State Cup championships with Celtic FC and one with Sparta … Two-time Region IV champion … Starter at Alta HS in 2015 and 2016 and set a school record with 38 goals in 2016 … Earned first-team all-state honors in 2016 … Ran sprints on the track and field team as a freshman.

Personal Full name is Brecken Inga Mozingo … Born in Salt Lake City, Utah … Parents are Trev and Carly Mozingo … Has three younger brothers, Stein, Titan and Jager … Admires Lionel Messi and Steph Curry … Hobbies include skiing, hiking, fishing, camping, going to the beach, helping people and playing with babies and puppies … Played violin for seven years … Undeclared major who is interested in getting into the medical field.

2017 (LSU) Started all 18 games for the Tigers and was tied for third on the team in scoring with 10 points on three goals and four assists … Scored a goal and assisted on the gamewinner against Georgia … Recorded the game-winning goal in the 87th minute in a 1-0 win over Liberty.

England National Team A mainstay in England’s Youth National Team program from the U-15-U-21 level … Has 22 international caps … Helped the U-19 squad win the 2016 Women’s International Cup … Played in two European Championship qualification tournaments with the U-17 team … Played for 10 years with Arsenal Ladies … Three-time Arsenal Player of the Year … Two-time FA Youth Cup winner … Ran track and field in high school and was a youth county and regional 800m champion and a national qualifier in the 1500m.

Personal Full name is Lucy Michelle Parker … Born in Cambridge, England … Mother is Jane Packman … Has two older sisters, Katie and Hollie … Sister Hollie ran track & field at LSU … Admires Carlos Puyol, Sergio Ramos and Jessica Ennis … Lists her greatest athletic thrills as winning the SEC Championship with LSU in 2018 and playing in the European Championships with England … Hobbies include traveling and exploring new places … Psychology major.

Career Statistics

14

Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2017 2018 Totals

18-18 24-24 42-42

38 26 64

3 3 6

4 0 4

10 6 16

1 2 3


PLAYER PROFILES

JACEY

MARICARMEN

PEDERSON

REYES

5-5 / Senior Defender Palo Alto, Calif. Palo Alto HS

5-7 / Sophomore Midfielder Orange, Calif. Segerstrom HS

19

24

2018

2018

Earned honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic honors for the second-straight year … Played in nine games total with four starts … Started three of the season’s first four games before being sidelined with injury … Returned for the final five games of the regular season but injured her knee just before the start of postseason.

Named to the Pac-12 All-Freshman team … Played in 21 games, missing only the season opener due to the U-20 Women’s World Cup, and started 10 games … Scored three goals, including a goal 75 seconds into the contest against Arizona State… Selected to the TDS Preseason Freshman Best XI.

2017

Mexican National Team

Played in 12 games and earned starts at Weber State and against Oregon State … Assisted on the game-winning goal against San Diego State in the NCAA first round … Played in a season-high 68 minutes vs. Oregon State … Had two shots on goal against USC … Honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic selection.

Starter for Mexico in all three games at the 2018 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup … Helped lead Mexico to gold at the 2018 CONCACAF U-20 Championship and to a silver medal at the 2015 CONCACAF U-17 Championships.

2016

Played one year of high school soccer at Segerstrom HS and earned all-league and Rookie of the Year honors … Played club soccer at West Coast Academy.

High School/Club

Played in 17 games and earned six starts, including starts in the last four games … Helped UCLA record three shutouts in its last four games … Assisted on the game-tying goal with less than two minutes to play in regulation in the NCAA 3rd Round game at West Virginia … Played the full 90 against Washington State and a career-high 92 minutes at West Virginia.

Personal Full name is Maricarmen Reyes … Born in Fountain Valley, Calif. … Greatest athletic thrill is winning the 2018 CONCACAF Championships … Parents are Jorge and Carmen Reyes … Has two older brothers, Jorge and Oscar … Father and both brothers played professional soccer … Brother Oscar played soccer at UCLA from 2008-11 and is a member of the U.S. Beach Soccer National Team … Hobbies include hanging out with family and friends and going to the beach … Undeclared major whose career objective is social work.

U.S. National Team Member of the U.S. Youth National Team program from 2012-16 … Most recently represented the U.S. U-19 team in New Zealand in June 2016.

High School/Club

Career Statistics

High school All-American, all-region and all-state selection at Palo Alto High School … NSCAA Youth All-American in 2015 … Played four years of soccer as a defender and midfielder and two years of track & field, competing in the long jump, triple jump, 4x400m relay, and 200m … SCVAL Defensive MVP for the 2012-13 season and league MVP as a junior and senior … San Jose Mercury Player of the Year for the Central Coast Section as a junior … Played club soccer for PSV Union FC, which won the Surf College Cup in 2014.

Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2018

21-10

24

3

0

6

0

BRIANNE

RILEY

Personal

5-8 / Freshman Defender San Clemente, Calif. Santa Margarita HS

Full name is Jacey Pederson … Born in Palo Alto, Calif. … Greatest athletic thrill was representing the U.S. at national training camps … Hobbies include cooking/baking, listening to music, hiking, and yoga … Parents are Shelly and Stu Pederson … Stu played 14 years of professional baseball for the Los Angeles Dodgers and Toronto Blue Jays … Has three brothers, Champ, Tyger, and Joc … Joc is an All-Star center fielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Tyger played within the Dodgers organization from 2013-14, and Champ was enshrined into the Little League Hall of Excellence in 2017 … Admires Stephen Curry … Majoring in sociology.

34 High School/Club

Career Statistics Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2016 2017 2018 Totals

17-6 12-2 9-4 38-12

2 4 0 6

0 0 0 0

1 1 0 1

1 1 0 2

0 0 0 0

NSCAA High School All-American in 2019 … Two-time All-CIF, All-Orange County and all-league first-team honoree … Trinity League Defensive MVP in 2019 and MVP in 2018 … Two-time Santa Margarita HS Defensive Player of the Year and the 2019 Team MVP … Played club soccer most recently with Strikers FC … Helped lead West Coast FC to the 2016 ECNL Final Four.

Personal Full name is Brianne Allene Riley … Born in Newport Beach, Calif. … Parents are Kelly and Gary Riley … Has an older brother, Connor … Describes her greatest athletic thrill as making it to the ECNL Final Four with her club team … Admires Julie Ertz and Mike Trout … Hobbies include traveling, going to the beach, wake boarding, and skiing … Sociology major.

15


PLAYER PROFILES

ANIKA

KARINA

RODRIGUEZ

RODRIGUEZ

5-2 / Redshirt Senior Forward / Midfielder Torrance, Calif. Torrance HS

5-5 / Junior Defender Torrance, Calif. Torrance HS

7

8

2018

2018

Played in 11 games and started 10 before succumbing to a season-ending knee injury in October … Recorded four goals, including two at California … Received third-team All-Pac-12 honors … Scored the game-winning goals against Pepperdine and Arizona State … Assisted on the game-winner with two seconds remaining against Long Beach State … Had a one goal, one assist game against Pepperdine.

Earned United Soccer Coaches second-team All-Pacific Region honors … All-Pac-12 third-team selection … Honorable mention Pac-12 All-Academic honoree … One of just two players to start all 22 games … Led UCLA in minutes played with 1,978 out of 2,035 … Contributed to 12 shutouts and scored three goals … Scored her first collegiate goal at San Diego State … Also scored off set pieces at Utah and against North Carolina State … Assisted on the game-winner with two seconds left against Long Beach State … Two-time Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Week honoree.

2017 Scored late game-winning goals in the NCAA second round vs. Northwestern in overtime and in the NCAA third round vs. Virginia in the 89th minute … Ranked second on the team in all scoring categories with career-highs of 25 points, nine assists and three game-winning goals … Named the Pac-12 Offensive Playerr of the Week Nov. 7 after scoring the game-tying goal and assisting on the game-winner in the 3-2 overtime win over USC … Selected to the Top Drawer Soccer Team of the Week after her NCAA 2nd and 3rd round heroics … Twice named the UCLA/Muscle Milk Student-Athlete of the Week (Nov. 7 and 20) … Recorded the game-winning goal and an assist in the 2-0 win over Oregon and totaled four one-goal, one-assist games on the year.

2017 Selected to Top Drawer Soccer’s Freshman Best XI Second Team … Played in all 25 games, making 23 starts … Ranked second among field players in minutes played with 2041 … Contributed to nine shutouts.

U.S. National Team Member of U.S. squad at 2018 CONCACAF U-20 Women’s Championship … Participated in the 2016 FIFA Under-17 Women’s World Cup … Started and played in all four matches at the 2016 CONCACAF U-17 Women’s Championship and picked up one assist in helping the USA to the regional title and a Under-17 Women’s World Cup berth … Also trained with the U.S. Under-19 National Team in 2016 and the Under-20s in 2017 … Played with the Under-15 National Team in 2014.

2016 Earned second-team All-Pac-12 honors and first-team Pac-12 All-Freshman acclaim … Selected to the Top Drawer Soccer Freshman Best XI first team … Played in all 22 games and made 20 starts … Led the team and ranked second in the Pac-12 in assists with eight … Ranked fourth on the team in scoring with 14 points … Scored the game-winning goal in the NCAA First Round vs. Seattle … Had two-assist games against Long Beach State and Washington … Assisted on the game-winners against San Diego State, Texas A&M, Long Beach State and Washington … Scored her first collegiate goal against San Diego and also had a goal at Arizona … Ranks seventh in Top Drawer Soccer’s Midseason Top 100 Freshman list.

High School/Club Member of the So Cal Blues and was named to the Best XI as the Blues won the 2016 U-19 U.S. Club Soccer National Championship … Two-time youth All-American … Nominee for 2016 player of the year … Played two seasons of soccer at Torrance HS.

Personal Full name is Karina Anais Rodriguez … Born in Torrance, Calif. … Parents are Rafael and Elia Rodriguez … Older sister Anika is also on the UCLA soccer team … Has three younger siblings, Cristian, Nikaela and Nicolas … States that getting to play college soccer and experience college life alongside her sister is a dream come true … Lists her greatest athletic thrill as representing the U.S. at the Under-17 Women’s World Cup … Political Science major.

2015 Redshirted due to injury.

U.S. National Team Played on U.S. Youth National Teams from U-14 to U-17 … Scored a goal in the opening match of the 2013 CONCACAF U-17 Tournament … Called up to training camp with the U-23s in May 2018.

Career Statistics

High School/Club Two-year All-American and All-CIF player at Torrance HS … Earned all-league honors four years … Competed on the track and field team as a sprinter for two seasons … Played club soccer with SoCal Blues, which won the 2016 USYS national title … Named to Best Eleven at the 2016 USYS National Championships.

Personal Full name is Anika Elia Rodriguez … Born in Torrance, Calif. … Parents are Rafael and Elia Rodriguez … Has two younger sisters, Karina and Nikaela, and two younger brothers, Cristian and Nicolas … Karina is a junior on the UCLA soccer team … Political Science major.

Career Statistics Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2016 2017 2018 Totals

22-20 24-14 11-10 57-44

42 48 25 115

3 8 4 15

8 9 5 22

14 25 13 52

1 3 2 6

16

Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2017 2018 Totals

25-23 22-22 47-45

3 11 14

0 3 3

0 1 1

0 7 7

0 0 0


PLAYER PROFILES

ASHLEY

Admires Lionel Messi, LeBron James and Kobe Bryant … Hobbies include hiking and playing with her two dogs … Political Science major.

SANCHEZ

Career Statistics

5-4 / Junior Forward Monrovia, Calif. Mountain Park HS

Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2017 2018 Totals

24-23 21-20 45-43

35 78 113

6 10 16

12 15 27

24 35 59

3 2 5

IDALIA

2

SERRANO

2018 First-team United Soccer Coaches All-American … Earned first-team All-West Region and All-Pac-12 honors for the second consecutive year … MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist … Led UCLA in all scoring categories with 10 goals, 15 assists and 35 points … Ranked second in the nation in total assists and 12th in total points … Set four new school records - single-game assists (four), consecutive games with a goal or assist (13 and counting), assists in a NCAA Tournament (seven) and career NCAA Tournament assists (11) … Tied the school record for single-season assists with 15 … After just two seasons, she ranks sixth on UCLA’s career assist chart with 27 … Scored two goals and assisted on another in UCLA’s 6-0 win over Oregon State … Recorded another two-goal game with two against San Jose State in the first round of the NCAA Tournament … Set the school record for assists in a game with four in the NCAA second-round game against Minnesota … Added two more assists in the NCAA third round against NC State.

5-3 / Sophomore Goalkeeper Mendota, Calif. Mendota HS

35 2018 Did not see action.

High School/Club Attended Mendota HS and ran cross country for three years … Played club soccer with Sacramento United and Santa Clara Sporting.

2017 Selected to Top Drawer Soccer’s Best XI Third Team … First-team All-West Region and All-Pac-12 selection … Named to the Pac-12 All-Freshman team … Set a new UCLA freshman record with 12 assists, a total that ranks fourth all-time on UCLA’s single-season list … Her four NCAA Tournament assists tie for third on UCLA’s singleseason list … Third on the team in scoring with 24 points on six goals and 12 assists …Recorded three game-winning goals … Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Week and Top Drawer Soccer National Player of the Week after scoring a goal and assisting on the game-winner at Virginia … Scored the game-winner in overtime to beat USC, 3-2 … Scored the game-winner in the win over Cal … Had two assists against Santa Clara.

Personal Full name is Idalia E. Serrano … Born in Fresno, Calif. … Mother is Socorro Franco … Has three older brothers, Oscar, Jose and Jonathan, and a younger sister, Nadia … Always dreamed of attending UCLA from a young age … Greatest athletic thrill was keeping a clean sheet during the entirety of the Surf Cup … Admires Mia Hamm and Lionel Messi … Hobbies include reading about politics and helping animals …Political Science major whose career aspiration is to become a lawyer.

U.S. National Team Has participated in National Team camps since 2013 … Trained with the full U.S. Women’s National Team during a camp in Orlando, Fla. in April 2016 … Member of U.S. team at 2018 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup … Captain of the USA team at the 2016 FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup … Won the Golden Ball as the best player in the tournament at the 2016 CONCACAF U-17 Women’s Championships in Grenada and was also named to the Best XI … Was the only player from the U.S. U-17 Women’s World Cup Team to make the U-20 Women’s World Cup Team … Became the first USA Player in history to play in two Women’s World Cups in the same year … Helped the U-20s qualify for the 2016 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup at the Championship … Was awarded the Cal South Youth Female Player of the Year in 2016 … NSCAA Youth Girls All-American Player of the Year in 2016 and US Soccer Young Female Player of the Year in 2016 … Played with the U-23s in 2019.

High School/Club Attended Mountain Park High School for three years and Monrovia High School for one year … Earned a varsity letter in 2013 as a forward … NSCAA Youth Girls All-American Player of the Year in 2016 … Played club team for the SoCal Blues … Participated in the CAL South ODP, Region IV ODP and iD2 during club career … Cal South Youth Female Player of the year 2016.

Personal Full name is Ashley Nicole Sanchez … Born in Pasadena, Calif. … Parents are Ralph and Julie Sanchez … Has two older siblings, Evan and Sierra … Grandfather John Shirk played football for USC … Decided to attend UCLA because of the great tradition of women’s soccer, strong academics and beautiful campus … Selected as the U.S. team flag-bearer at the opening ceremonies of the 2019 World University Games … Describes her greatest athletic thrill as playing in the U-17 and U-20 World Cups … 17


PLAYER PROFILES

DELANIE

KALI

SHEEHAN

TREVITHICK

5-6 / Junior Defender Brentwood, Calif. Liberty HS

5-8 / Freshman Forward Temecula, Calif. Rancho Christian HS

17

29

2018

U.S. National Team

Earned All-Pac-12 third-team honors … Played and started in 21 games …Converted to defender early in the season and contributed to 12 shutouts … Named the Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Week for Oct. 16 after a 2-0 shutout at Washington during which she helped hold the Huskies to four shots on goal and scored a goal in the 83rd minute … Finished the year with four goals, including the game-winner at Penn State … Ranked third on the team with seven assists … Tied for fourth in scoring with 15 points … Had a one goal, one assist game at Utah … Recorded four assists in the NCAA Tournament.

Participated in U.S. Youth National Team camps since 2013, playing with every USA Team age group from U-14 to U-20 … Scored her first international goal in South Korea with the U-17s in 2014.

High School/Club Named to the U.S. Soccer Development Academy’s Best XI for the West Conference in 2019 … Leading scorer in the USDA Southwest Division and ranked second in the nation with 33 goals … Played club soccer with Legends FC … Earned two varsity letters in soccer and basketball and four in track and field at Rancho Christian HS … First-team all-league honoree and averaged three goals per game her senior season.

2017 Earned Pac-12 All-Freshman honors … Selected to Top Drawer Soccer’s Freshman Best XI First Team … Played in all 25 games, making 10 starts … Ranked second among UCLA freshmen in scoring with five goals and 13 points … Scored gamewinning goals at Long Beach State and against UC Santa Barbara … Scored two goals in the win at Long Beach State … Scored the tying goal against Stanford in the NCAA championship game.

Personal Full name is Kali Rian Trevithick … Born in Anchorage, Alaska … Says that UCLA was her dream school ever since she was young because of its stellar soccer program and academics … Admires Mesut Ozil and Megan Rapinoe … Parents are Bobbi and Eric Trevitihick … Has two younger sisters, Olivia and Ellie … Father Eric played hockey and is in the Alaska Hall of Fame … Hobbies include snowboarding and drawing … Undeclared major.

U.S. National Team Member of the U.S. Under-19 and Under-18 National Teams … Alternate for the U.S. at the 2018 Under-20 FIFA Women’s World Cup.

High School/Club Earned TeamSnap All-America and all-region honors in 2017 … Finalist for Gatorade State Player of the Year … BVAL League MVP in 2015 and 2016 and a three-time NCS first-team honoree … Twice named to the Best of NEPS All-Tournament team … Member of the National Championship club squad West Coast SC.

Personal Full name is Delanie Breann Sheehan … Born in Walnut Creek, Calif. … Chose UCLA because she always desired a program that would push her to her full potential in every aspect of life … Admires Carli Lloyd because of her humbleness and work ethic … Hobbies include soccer, going to the beach with friends, going on the boat, reading self-motivating books, yoga, and hiking … Economics major.

Career Statistics Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2017 2018 Totals

25-10 21-21 46-31

26 16 42

5 4 9

3 7 10

13 15 28

2 1 3

18


PLAYER PROFILES

CASSIDY

High School/Club Played at Scarsdale High School in New York in 2012 … Graduated from Shibuya Makuhari High School in Japan … Played club soccer for FC Chiba Nanohana.

TSHIMBALANGA

Personal

5-4 / Redshirt Freshman Forward Alamo, Calif. Carondelet HS

Full name is Maki Cynthia Umehara … Parents are Kazuma and Motoko Umehara … Has an older brother, Taiki, an older sister, Ayaka, and a younger sister, Nanoka … Born in New York … Admires Cristiano Ronaldo … Hobbies are walking and watching movies … Economics major whose career interest is to be an international lawyer.

Career Statistics

25

Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2018

4-0

0

0

0

0

0

2018 Redshirted the season due to a knee injury.

VIVIANA

High School/Club

VILLACORTA

Four-year starter at Carondelet HS … Won the 2018 Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame Student-Athlete Award … High school All-American in 2017 and 2018 … Two-time Team MVP and Offensive Player of the Year … Won the 2017 Wendy’s High School Heisman … Three-time NCS Scholar Athlete … 2018 Carondelet High School Athlete of the Year after setting the school’s single-season record for goals scored … Named to the SOCCERLIST top 100 players in America List … Winner of the 2018 U.S. Youth Soccer William J. “Billy” Goaziou Award … Participated in U.S. Soccer National Training ID camp in 2013 … Member of state and regional PDP teams (2012-14) and ODP teams (2014-16) … Played club soccer with California Thorns and DeAnza Force.

13

Personal

2018

5-7 / Junior Midfielder Lawndale, Calif. Mira Costa HS

Earned second-team All-Pac-12 honors … Played in all 22 games and started all but the season opener … Scored four goals and recorded four assists for 12 points … Had a hand in each goal in a 2-0 win over Arizona, assisting on the first goal and scoring the second … Recorded a goal and assist at Cal … First career goal was at Stanford.

Full name is Cassidy K. Tshimbalanga … Born in California … Parents are Didier and Cheree Tshimbalanga … Has an older sister, Sydney … Father attended UCLA … Uncle Keidane McAlpine is the head women’s soccer coach at USC … Aunt Kanika McAlpine played soccer at the University of South Carolina … Wanted to attend UCLA since she first visited the campus with her family at age 7 … Lists her greatest athletic thrill as getting the blue and gold jersey with No. 25 … Admires Megan Rapinoe, Serena Williams and Kylian Mbappe … Interests are tourism, community service and live music … Founder and director of ASISTERSPROJECT.org, which is devoted to women and children living in poverty and violence globally … Has won many major service awards, including the nation’s highest award for service, the US President’s Volunteer Service Award, and the nation’s oldest award for service, the Jefferson Award … Global Studies major.

2017 Played in all 25 games and started 15, including all six in the NCAA Tournament … Recorded four assists.

U.S. National Team Starter for the U.S. at the 2018 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup … Previously played on the Under-19 and Under-18 teams.

High School/Club Played four years at Mira Costa HS … Named to the Daily Breeze All-Area teams from her last three seasons … Earned Bay League second team honors as a freshman and first team her last three … Won USYS National Championships in 2015 and 2016 with Cal South ODP teams … Member of 2016 National Champion Santa Clarita Blue Heat.

MAKI

UMEHARA

Personal

5-5 / Senior Midfielder Chiba, Japan Shibuya Makuhari HS

Full name is Viviana Venezia Villacorta … Born in Torrance, Calif. … Parents are Julio and Sonia Villacorta … Has two older sisters, Vanessa and Veronica, who played intercollegiate soccer at UC Merced, and a younger brother, Leonardo … Father won a state championship with El Camino College’s soccer team … Chose UCLA to be in an environment where she will be challenged both academically and athletically … Lists her greatest thrill as earning her first start with the U.S. U-18 National Team in the National Football Stadium in Northern Ireland … Admires Andres Iniesta, Carli Lloyd and Lionel Messi … Hobbies include baking, hanging out with family and friends, and singing … Sociology major.

28 2018 Played in four games … Played in a season-best 10 minutes at San Diego State … Also played at LMU, against Oregon State and in the postseason against San Jose State.

Career Statistics Year

GP-GS

Shots

Goals

Assists

Points

GWG

2017

2017 2018 Totals

25-15 22-21 47-36

8 33 41

0 4 4

4 4 8

4 12 16

0 0 0

Did not see action in regular season play …. Saw action in the Bruins’ exhibition match against CSU Bakersfield.

2016 Did not see action in regular season play …. Played 32 minutes in the Bruins’ exhibition win over Beijing Normal.

19


2018 FINAL STATISTICS AND RESULTS

Scoring & Results Date Aug. 17 Aug. 25 Aug. 31 Sept. 2 Sept. 7

Sept. 13

Sept. 16

Sept. 21 Sept. 27 Sept. 30

Oct. 4

Hailie Mace

Individual Statistics

Oct. 7

Overall Record: 17-3-2 (Home: 9-1 Away: 8-2-2; Neutral: 0-0) Pac-12 Record/Finish: 9-2/2nd NCAA Finish/Final NSCAA Ranking: 5th Player Ashley Sanchez Hailie Mace Olivia Athens Jessie Fleming Delanie Sheehan Chloe Castaneda Anika Rodriguez Viviana Villacorta Julia Hernandez Kennedy Faulknor Karina Rodriguez Maricarmen Reyes Marley Canales Sunny Dunphy Dani Satterwhite Meghan Scudero Kaiya McCullough Jacey Pederson Olivia de Moraes Issy Bellinghausen Maki Umehara Hannah Sharts UCLA Totals Opponent Totals

Oct. 12

GP-GS 21-20 13-12 22-20 11-11 21-21 22-13 11-10 22-21 22-5 22-7 22-22 21-10 17-14 22-8 5-0 11-0 22-22 9-4 2-0 9-0 4-0 6-0

G 10 9 4 5 4 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

A 15 6 8 5 7 4 5 4 3 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Pts. 35 24 16 15 15 14 13 12 11 8 7 6 4 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Shots 78 36 26 23 16 31 25 33 33 9 11 24 13 13 2 2 2 1 1 1 0 0

GWG 2 3 2 3 1 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

22 22

61 17

62 16

184 50

380 176

17 3

Oct. 18

YC-RC 3-0 2-0 2-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 1-0 0-0 3-0 0-0 2-0 0-0 0-0 2-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0

Oct. 21

Oct. 25

Oct. 26 Nov. 2

Nov. 9

Nov. 16

19-0 17-0

Goalkeeping Player Teagan Micah Lauren Brzykcy

GP-GS 17-14 9-8

Min. 1450 585

Saves 45 13

SHO 8(2) 2(2)

GA 12 5

GAA 0.74 0.77

W-L-T 12-1-2 5-2-0

UCLA Totals Opponent Totals

22 22

2035 2035

60 145

12 2

17 61

0.74 2.70

17-3-2 3-17-2

Nov. 18

Nov. 24

Opponent LONG BEACH STATE at #3 Penn State

Result, Score Scoring W, 1-0 MACE (A. Rodriguez, K. Rodriguez) W, 2-1 Sanchez (un) Sheehan (Athens, Castaneda) at #22 Florida T, 0-0 (2OT) none at #4 Florida State L, 1-4 Reyes (un) PEPPERDINE W, 3-0 A. RODRIGUEZ (Mace) Reyes (Sanchez) Sanchez (A. Rodriguez) at Loyola Marymount W, 3-0 FLEMING (A. Rodriguez) Castaneda (Mace, Sheehan) Faulknor (Mace) at San Diego State W, 3-0 MACE (A. Rodriguez) K. Rodriguez (Mace) Sheehan (un) #14 WASHINGTON STATE* L, 0-1 none at #1 Stanford* L, 2-3 Athens (pk) Villacorta (Hernandez, A. Rodriguez) at California* W, 4-0 DUNPHY (Sanchez) A. Rodriguez (Castaneda) Villacorta (un) A. Rodriguez (Villacorta) ARIZONA STATE* W, 3-1 Reyes (Castaneda) A. RODRIGUEZ (Castaneda) Sanchez (un) ARIZONA* W, 2-0 ATHENS (Faulknor, Villacorta) Villacorta (Sanchez) at Washington* W 2-0 Sanchez (Athens, Canales) Sheehan (un) OREGON* W, 2-1 Sanchez (Villacorta) FAULKNOR (Sanchez) OREGON STATE* W, 6-0 MACE (Athens) Hernandez (pk) Sanchez (Athens, Fleming) Mace (un) Hernandez (Sheehan, Sanchez) Sanchez (un) at Utah* W, 5-1 K. Rodriguez (Sanchez) CASTANEDA (Sheehan) Sheehan (Hernandez) Fleming (pk) Satterwhite (Athens) at #20 Colorado* W, 2-1 Castaneda (Sanchez, Athens) SANCHEZ (un) at #2 USC* W, 3-2 (2OT) Hernandez (Fleming) Mace (Sanchez) ATHENS (Fleming) SAN JOSE STATE W, 5-0 FLEMING (Mace) (NCAA 1st Rd.) Sanchez (Fleming, Mace) Villacorta (Sheehan) Sanchez (Fleming, Hernandez) Canales (pk) MINNESOTA W, 5-0 CASTANEDA (Villacorta, Sheehan) (NCAA 2nd Rd.) Athens (Sanchez) Mace (Sanchez) Hernandez (Athens, Sanchez) Faulknor (Sanchez) NC STATE W, 5-0 FLEMING (Sanchez, Athens) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) Fleming (Sanchez) K. Rodriguez (Sheehan) Castaneda (Faulknor) Mace (Canales) at #3 North Carolina T, 2-2 (2OT) Mace (Sanchez) (NCAA Quarterfinals) (UNC advances on PKs, 4-2) Mae (Sheehan)

Home matches and game-winning goals in ALL CAPS.* Denotes Pac-12 Match 20


2018 BOX SCORES

The 2018 Bruins

#2 UCLA 1, Long Beach State 0

#4 Florida State 4, #2 UCLA 1

#8 UCLA 3, Loyola Marymount 0

#14 Washington State 1, #8 UCLA 0

Aug. 17, 2018 @ Wallis Annenberg Stadium

Sept. 2, 2018 @ Tallahassee, Fla.

Sept. 13, 2018 @ Los Angeles, Calif.

Sept. 21, 2018, Wallis Annenberg Stadium

Scoring LBSU UCLA

Scoring UCLA Florida State

Scoring UCLA LMU

Scoring WSU UCLA

1st 2nd F 0 0 0 0 1 1

Scoring Summary UCLA: Mace (A. Rodriguez, K. Rodriguez) - 89:58

1st 2nd F 1 0 1 2 2 4

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) LBSU: McDonald (7/90) UCLA: Micah (2/90)

Scoring Summary FSU: Patten (Zhao) - 11:05 FSU: Pavlisko (un) - 35:57 UCLA: Reyes (un) - 37:27 FSU: McFarland (Zhao, Berkely) - 49:00 FSU: Zhao (Edwards) - 88:22

Shots: LBSU 4, UCLA 13; Corners: LBSU 0, UCLA 7; Fouls: LBSU 9, UCLA 8. Attendance: 1,214

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Micah (6/90) FSU: Bollinger (4/90)

#2 UCLA 2, #3 Penn State 1

Shots: UCLA 7, FSU 11; Corners: UCLA 7, FSU 4; Fouls: UCLA 6, FSU 10. Attendance: 1941

Aug. 25, 2018 @ University Park, Pa. Scoring UCLA Penn State

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) PSU: Dennis (5/90) UCLA: Micah (5/90)

Scoring Pepperdine Penn State

Shots: UCLA 21, LMU 3; Corners: UCLA 9, LMU 2; Fouls: UCLA 8, LMU 7. Attendance: 922

#8 UCLA 3, San Diego State 0 Sept. 16, 2018 @ San Diego, Calif. Scoring UCLA San Diego State

1st 2nd F 0 0 0 1 2 3

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Brzykcy (0/45), Micah (2/45) PEP: Preece (6/90)

#2 UCLA 0, #22 Florida 0

Shots: UCLA 16, PEP 6; Corners: UCLA 4, PEP 2; Fouls: UCLA 6, PEP 10. Attendance: 1104

Aug. 31, 2018 @ Gainesville, Fla.

1st 2nd F 2 1 3 0 0 0

Scoring Summary UCLA: Mace (A. Rodriguez) - 27:54 UCLA: K. Rodriguez (Mace) - 44:14 UCLA: Sheehan (un) - 45:27

Scoring Summary UCLA: A. Rodriguez (Mace) - 4:54 UCLA: Reyes (Sanchez) - 57:56 UCLA: Sanchez (A. Rodriguez) - 83:42

Shots: UCLA 13, PSU 9; Corners: UCLA 5, PSU 2; Fouls: UCLA 15, PSU 6. Attendance: 2899

1st 2nd OT1 OT2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Brzykcy (0/90) LMU: Pruitt (5/90)

Sept. 7, 2018 @ Wallis Annenberg Stadium

Scoring Summary UCLA: Sanchez - 28:10 PSU: Ogle (Penalty Kick)- 29:57 UCLA: Sheehan (Athens, Castaneda) - 69:35

Scoring UCLA Florida

Scoring Summary UCLA: Fleming (A. Rodriguez) - 38:02 UCLA: Castaneda (Mace, Sheehan) - 54:16 UCLA: Faulknor (Mace) - 58:06

#7 UCLA 3, Pepperdine 0

1st 2nd F 1 1 2 1 0 1

1st 2nd F 1 2 3 0 0 0

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Micah (0/90) SDSU: English (6/90) Shots: UCLA 20, SDSU 1; Corners: UCLA 13, SDSU 2; Fouls: UCLA 9, SDSU 10. Attendance: 1314

F 0 0

Scoring Summary None Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Micah (1/110) FL: Marckese (8/110) Shots: UCLA 17, FL 5; Corners: UCLA 6, FL 3; Fouls: UCLA 7, FL 5. Attendance: 658

21

1st 2nd F 0 1 1 0 0 0

Scoring Summary WSU: Weaver (McLyn) - 60:53 Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) WSU: Thompson (9/90) UCLA: Brzykcy (2/90) Shots: WSU 6, UCLA 19; Corners: WSU 0, UCLA 8; Fouls: WSU 14, UCLA 14. Attendance: 2496

#1 Stanford 3, #16 UCLA 2 Sept. 27, 2018 @ Stanford Scoring UCLA Stanford

1st 2nd F 1 1 2 1 2 3

Scoring Summary UCLA: Athens (pk) - 11:52 STAN: Macario (Haley) - 19:21 STAN: Macario (un) - 45:33 STAN: Smith (un) - 77:29 UCLA: Villacorta (Hernandez, A. Rodriguez) - 78:08 Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Brzykcy (8/90) STAN: Jahansouz (4/90) Shots: UCLA 12, STAN 24; Corners: UCLA 5, STAN 7; Fouls: UCLA 9, STAN 7. Attendance: 1791


2018 BOX SCORES

#16 UCLA 4, California 0

#9 UCLA 2, Oregon 1

#8 UCLA 2, Colorado 1

#4 UCLA 5, Minnesota 0

Sept. 30, 2018 @ Berkeley, Calif.

Oct. 12, 2018 @ Seattle, Wash.

Oct. 28, 2018 @ Boulder, Colo.

Nov. 16, 2018 @ Wallis Annenberg Stadium

Scoring UCLA California

Scoring Oregon UCLA

Scoring UCLA Colorado

Scoring Minnesota UCLA

1st 2nd F 2 2 4 0 0 0

Scoring Summary UCLA: Dunphy (Sanchez) - 17:31 UCLA: A. Rodriguez (Castaneda) - 30:54 UCLA: Villacorta (unassisted) - 65:25 UCLA: A. Rodriguez (Villacorta) - 73:49 Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Brzykcy (0/45), Micah (3/45) CAL: Zodikoff (8/78), Sekany (0/12) Shots: UCLA 21, CAL 4; Corners: UCLA 12, CAL 2; Fouls: UCLA 3, CAL 4. Attendance: 1263

#15 UCLA 3, Arizona State 1 Oct. 4, 2018 @ Wallis Annenberg Stadium Scoring Arizona State UCLA

1st 2nd F 0 1 1 2 1 3

Scoring Summary UCLA: Reyes (Castaneda) - 1:15 UCLA: A. Rodriguez (Castaneda) - 16:07 UCLA: Sanchez (un) - 60:12 ASU: Purfield (Van Deursen) - 72:55 Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Brzykcy (3/90) ASU: Day (2/90) Shots: ASU 9, UCLA 16; Corners: ASU 5, UCLA 1; Fouls: ASU 3, UCLA 10. Attendance: 1811

#15 UCLA 2, Arizona 0 Oct. 7, 2018 @ Wallis Annenberg Stadium Scoring Arizona UCLA

1st 2nd F 0 0 0 0 2 2

Scoring Summary UCLA: Athens (Faulknor, Villacorta) - 48:08 UCLA: Villacorta (Sanchez) - 85:33 Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) ARIZ: Burdett (5/90) UCLA: Micah (2/90) Shots: ARIZ 10, UCLA 13; Corners: ARIZ 5, UCLA 6; Fouls: ARIZ 6, UCLA 3. Attendance: 1823

#10 UCLA 2, Washington 0 Oct. 12, 2018 @ Seattle, Wash. Scoring Washington UCLA

1st 2nd F 0 0 0 1 1 2

1st 2nd F 1 0 1 2 0 2

1st 2nd F 1 1 2 0 1 1

Scoring Summary UCLA: Sanchez (Villacorta) - 4:51 ORE: Jackmon (Bruner) - 5:12 UCLA: Faulknor (Sanchez) - 38:13

Scoring Summary UCLA: Castaneda (Athens, Sanchez) - 19:50 CU: Kornieck (Kingsbury, Aaknes) - 68:45 UCLA: Sanchez (un) - 77:33

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) ORE: Hinriksdottir (6/90) UCLA: Micah (1/90)

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Brzykcy (0/45), Micah (1/45) CU: Tompkins (3/90)

Shots: ORE 6, UCLA 13; Corners: ORE 4, UCLA 4; Fouls: ORE 11, UCLA 11. Attendance: 1435

Shots: UCLA 14, CU 15; Corners: UCLA 4, CU 2; Fouls: UCLA 10, CU 19. Attendance: 1683

#6 UCLA 3, #2 USC 2

1st 2nd F 0 0 0 3 2 5

Scoring Summary UCLA: Castaneda (Villacorta, Sheehan) - 3:16 UCLA: Athens (Sanchez) - 27:12 UCLA: Mace (Sanchez) - 34:52 UCLA: Hernandez (Athens, Sanchez) - 69:09 UCLA: Faulknor (Sanchez) - 85:53 Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) MN: Nielsen (9/90) UCLA: Micah (2/90) Shots: MN 4, UCLA 21; Corners: MN 1, UCLA 4; Fouls: MN 6, UCLA 8. Attendance: 1209

Nov. 2, 2018 @ Carson, Calif. (StubHub Center)

#4 UCLA 5, North Carolina State 0

Oct. 21, 2018 @ Wallis Annenberg Stadium Scoring Oregon State UCLA

Scoring UCLA USC

Scoring NCST UCLA

#9 UCLA 6, Oregon State 0 1st 2nd F 0 0 0 4 2 6

Scoring Summary UCLA: Mace (Athens) - 7:10 UCLA: Hernandez (pk) - 15:45 UCLA: Sanchez (Athens, Fleming) - 19:49 UCLA: Mace (un) - 28:03 UCLA: Hernandez (Sheehan, Sanchez) - 61:37 UCLA: Sanchez (un) - 88:15 Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) OSU: Lamont (9/90) UCLA: Brzykcy (0/90)

1st 2nd 1OT 2OT 0 2 0 1 1 1 0 0

F 3 2

Scoring Summary UCLA: Fleming (Sanchez, Athens) - 5:11 UCLA: Fleming (Sanchez) - 21:49 UCLA: K. Rodriguez (Sheehan) - 41:10 UCLA: Castaneda (Faulknor) - 82:07 UCLA: Mace (Canales) - 84:17

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Micah (8/105) USC: Collins (10/105)

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) NCST: Wootten (9/90) UCLA: Micah (2/90)

#4 UCLA 5, San Jose State 0

#8 UCLA 5, Utah 1

Nov. 9, 2018 @ Wallis Annenberg Stadium

Oct. 25, 2018 @ Salt Lake City, Utah

Scoring SJSU UCLA

Scoring UCLA Utah

1st 2nd F 2 3 5 0 1 1

1st 2nd F 0 0 0 4 1 5

Scoring Summary UCLA: Fleming (Mace) - 12:19 UCLA: Sanchez (Fleming, Mace) - 17:45 UCLA: Villacorta (Sheehan) - 30:23 UCLA: Sanchez (Fleming, Hernandez) - 31:38 UCLA: Canales (pk) - 48:12

Scoring Summary UCLA: K. Rodriguez (Sanchez) - 3:56 UCLA: Castaneda (Sheehan) - 27:08 Utah: Cacciacarne (Dunn, Flom) - 47:14 UCLA: Sheehan (Hernandez) - 51:11 UCLA: Fleming (pk) - 58:23 UCLA: Satterwhite (Athens) - 87:23

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) SJSU: Simoneau (9/90) UCLA: Micah (2/90)

Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Micah (0/90) Utah: Nelson (6/90)

Shots: SJSU 2, UCLA 24; Corners: SJSU 0, UCLA 5; Fouls: SJSU 18, UCLA 5. Attendance: 1509

Shots: UCLA 17, Utah 3; Corners: UCLA 6, Utah 4; Fouls: UCLA 6, Utah 9. Attendance: 1388

Scoring Summary UCLA: Sanchez (Athens, Canales) - 26:36 UCLA: Sheehan - 82:47 Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) WASH: Ruelas (6/90) UCLA: Micah (4/90) Shots: UCLA 18, WASH 11; Corners: UCLA 3, WASH 6; Fouls: UCLA 7, WASH 9. Attendance: 1096

22

1st 2nd F 0 0 0 3 2 5

Scoring Summary USC: DeMelo (Hocking) - 35:42 UCLA: Hernandez (Fleming) - 51:50 USC: Hocking (Hyatt) - 86:26 UCLA: Mace (Sanchez) - 86:32 UCLA: Athens (Fleming) - 104:45

Shots: UCLA 21, USC 18; Corners: UCLA 4, USC 6; Fouls: UCLA 8, USC 14. Attendance: 8555

Shots: OSU 1, UCLA 21; Corners: OSU 1, UCLA 13; Fouls: OSU 11, UCLA 10. Attendance: 1281

Nov. 18, 2018 @ Wallis Annenberg Stadium

Shots: NCST 5, UCLA 26; Corners: NCST 0, UCLA 9; Fouls: NCST 6, UCLA 8. Attendance: 1554

#4 UCLA 2, #3 UNC 2 Nov. 24, 2018 @ Cary, N.C. Scoring UCLA USC

1st 2nd 1OT 2OT 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 0

F 2 2

Scoring Summary UNC: Ashley (Wubben-Moy) - 2:26 UNC: Bailey (Schultz) - 52:04 UCLA: Mace (Sanchez) - 56:10 UCLA: Mace (Sheehan) - 57:03 Goalkeepers (Saves/Min.) UCLA: Micah (4/110), Brzykcy (0/0) UNC: Leshnak (6/110) Shots: UCLA 17, UNC 19; Corners: UCLA 1, UNC 11; Fouls: UCLA 15, UNC 15. Attendance: 904


ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS

A Adams, Danesha Alarab, Alyssa Alderete, Taylor Altman, Janine Alvarado, Annie Appezzato, Lindsey Arkenberg, Traci Arnstein, Mikaela Arrigo, Courtney Athens, Olivia

2004-07 2013-16 2012-15 1997-98 2013-16 2004 1994-97 2013 1999 2017-18

B Bakken, Inga Barnes, Lauren Barnes, Molly Bartling, Sherice Bean, Meredith Bearde, Iman Belcher, Jenna Bellinghausen, Issy Billingsley, Kendal Bjazevich, Katherine Blankinship, Kristi Bloom, Victoria Bogart, Bethany Boling, Breana Boling, Krista Braun, Chelsea Britt, Elise Brittingham, Kristine Brown, Tiffany Brzykcy, Lauren Burk, Charney Bywaters, Zakiya Bzeih, Reema

2015 2007-10 1993-94 1995-96 1993 2009-10 2007-09 2018 2001-04 2000-03 1993 2000-02 1998-2001 1998-2001 1998-2001 2010-13 2007-10 2000-01 1994-97 2018 2010-11 2009-12 2015

2005-08 2017-18 2002 1993 2016-18 2003-06 2014-17 2006-09 1998-99 2009-12 2007-10 1994-97 2006-09 1998-99 2011-14 2003-04 1996-99

D Dahlkemper, Abby Dankworth, Brittany Dartt, Gina Davis, Bristyn Davis, Kelsey de Moraes, Olivia Devine, Kim DiMartino, Christina Dimmitt, Yiana Dragoo, Tayler Duncan, Staci Durbin, Kelly Dunphy, Sunny Dutto, Allie Dutton, Robyn Dydasco, Caprice

2011-14 2004 1993-95 2003-06 2005 2018 2004-04 2005-08 2008-10 2013 1998-2001 2001 2016-18 2015 2008-09 2011-14

E Edwards, Bree Elliott, Chrysta Emblem, Lauren

M

1993-94 2000-02 2014-17 2003 1994

F Facinerlli, Kylie Faulknor, Kennedy Fazio, Amy Flamson, Brooke Fleming, Jessie Friedberg, Nicki

2010 2017-18 2001-04 1999 2016-18 2007

G Gil, Barbie Gleason, Michelle Goralski, Zoey Greco, Lindsay

1993-94 2003-06 2014-17 2000-04

H Hammoud, Sommer Hampton, Karissa Hardy, Erin Harris, Jessica Harwood, Jaclyn Hemingway, Chloe Henderson, Valerie Hernandez, Julia Hom, Melanie Hoshizaki, Julie Howard, Kristy

1997-98 1997-2000 2005-08 2003-06 2000-03 2015-17 2004-07 2016-18 1994-95 2004 1993

James, Crystal James, Venus Jenkins, Darian Jones, Julia Jones, Whitney

2015-18 2009-10 2005-08 2008 2018 2001-02 1993 2010-11 2008-11 2014-17 2011-15 2016-18 2004 1993-96 2009 2011-14 2016-18 2001 1998-2000 1994-97 2013-16 2001 2002-05 1999-2000 1993 2015-16 2010-13

Nolin, Amy Norris, Kerry

O

Sarah-Gayle Swanson

Oakes, Jill Oda-Burns, Theresa Oliver, Taome Ouchi, Rochelle Overgaard, Gretchen Oyster, Megan

1993

2001-04 1997-2000 2013-16 2002 2000-03

1997-98 1994-95 2013-16 2011-14 1995-98 2005-08 2012-15 1994-96 2012-13 2003-06 2006

2002-05 2005-06 2015 1996-99 1994-95 2011-14

Shannon Thomas

T Tanaka, Rhiannon Thomas, Shannon Thompson, Ashley Thompson, Beth Toney, Camille True, Allie Tully, Christy Tye, Madison

1996-97 1994-97 2005-08 1996-99 2004-05 2002 1993 2012-15

U Sarah Morgan

Umehara, Maki Ursini, Caitlin

Alma Playle

Palmer, Amy Parsa, Miriam Pederson, Jacey Peterson, CiCi Playle, Alma Polnaszek, Wendy Proctor, Courtney Pryce, Nandi

2005-09 2006-09 2012-15 1998 2010 2000-03 2009-12 2008-11 1995-98 1994-96 2002-06 1996-99 1993 2001-03 2012-15 2009-10 1996

1993 1994-95 2016-18 1998-2001 2004-07 1996 2011, 13-16 2000-03

Q Quinlivan, Joanna Quinn, Megan

1994-95 1998

R Ratner, Jill Reyes, Maricarmen Richmond, Jenna Rigamat, Stephanie Rivera, Katie Robson, Kelly Rodriguez, Anika Rodriguez, Karina Rodriguez, Lauren Rowland, Katelyn

1996-99 1998 1998-2001 23

2016-18 2003-06

V

P

L Lang, Kara Larsen, Kristina Lavrusky, Kodi Lazaro, Sarah Ledezma, Natalia Lee, Kathryn Lee, Lucretia Leroux, Sydney Lieberman, Louise Lieberman, Michele Lindstrom, Stacy Little, Skylar Loeffler, Jodi Lombardo, Sarah Long, Belden Lovelace, Courtney Luke, Anne

2007 2017-18 1993-95 2009-11 2018 2004-06 2006-07 2015 2018 2018 2011-13 2008-09 2018 2017-18 1993-96 2009-11 2012-15 2001 2013-15 2011-13 1999 2000-03 2007-08 2006

1994-95 1997

K Kapcala, Julie Kaping, Michelle Kaskie, Lauren Killion, Sarah Kiremidjian, Larisa Kleinert, Coco Konkol-Mroczkowski, Kristiana Koudelka, Julie Krakowsky, Ari Kron, Stephanie Kruger, Molly

Salazar, Sarah Sanchez, Ashley Sanders, Christine Sandiford, Chante’ Satterwhite, Dani Sayles, Jennifer Scannell, Britney Schechtman, Arielle Scudero, Meghan Serrano, Idalia Shaffie, Crystal Sharpe, Whitney Sharts, Hannah Sheehan, Delanie Skenderian, Sue Smith, Ahsha Smith, Taylor Stamp, Jessica Sternbach, Cassie Stewart, Chelsea Stuart, Mary Swanson, Sarah-Gayle Sweetman, Nicole Switzer, Lauren

N

I Inlay, Erika

S

Mace, Hailie Mack, Sierra Mac Kechnie, Caitlyn Mac Kechnie, Hannah Magliarditi, Taylor Mangiardi, Michelle Manwaring, Adrienne Martinez, Ariana Mathis, Amelia Matulich, Gabrielle McCarthy, Kylie McCullough, Kaiya McGrath, Brynn Meinhart, Mari Metz, Sophie Mewis, Sam Micah, Teagan Mikacenic, Nancy Milburn, Tracey Miller, Sarah Miranda, Gabbi Monroe, Mary-Frances Mora, Iris Morgan, Sarah Munevar, Sonja Munerlyn, Amber Munger, Alana

J

C Calvert, Catherine Canales, Marley Cargnoni, Jayme Carlson, Jennifer Castaneda, Chloe Castelanelli, Mary Cerda, MacKenzie Cheney, Lauren Clark, Vanessa Cline, Chelsea Cochran, Taylor Connell, Sarah Cook, Dea Cosso, Courteney Courtnall, Ally Criscione, Arianna Culp, Lindsay

Eng, Shanelle Ernsdorf, Emily Ervik, Siri Eskridge, Christina Everett, Mary

1993 2018 2010-13 2000-01 2002-03 1993-95 2016-18 2017-18 2013 2011-14

Vandenberg, Rose Villacorta, Viviana Viloria, Paige

2005 2017-18 1993

W Wall, Dana West, Allison Whalen, Brittany Whalen, Chrissy White, Rosie Willemse, Liz Williams, Cheryl Williams, Summer Wilmoth, Lauren Winter, Claire Winton, Jessica Winzen, Tracey Wright, Courtney Wright, Kylie

2007-10 1993-94 2000-01 1994-97 2011-14 1995-98 1994-95 2008-11 2006-09 2013, 15-17 1999 1999-2002 2000 2007-10

Z Zadro, Liz Zaplatosch, Emily Zappaterreno, Cassie Zerboni, Blake Zerboni, McCall

2007-109 2003 1993 2005-07 2005-08


ALL-TIME JERSEY NUMBER HISTORY

00 Amy Moreno (1995-96) Leila Duren (1997) Arielle Schechtman (2014-15) Lauren Brzkcy (2017)

0 Joanna Quinlivan (1995) Maria Jeffers (1996) Katelyn Rowland (2011-14)

1 Amy Palmer (1993) Joanna Quinlivan (1994) Gretchen Overgaard (1994-95) Amy Moreno (1994) Shanelle Eng (1993, 94, 96) Julie Kapcala (1997-98) Emily Koch (1999) Sarah Lombardo (2001-04) Valerie Henderson (2005-07) Yiana Dimmitt (2008-10) Kylie McCarthy (2011-14) Anika Rodriguez (2015) Siri Ervik (2016-17) Lauren Brzykcy (2018)

2 Jennifer Carlson (1993) Carrie Templin (1994) Lari Kiremidjian (1996-98) Stephanie Rigamat (1999-01) Stacy Lindstrom (2002-05-06) Sarah Salazar (2007) Sydney Leroux (2008-11) Annie Alvarado (2013-16) Ashley Sanchez (2017-18)

3 Sue Skenderian (1993) Shannon Thomas (1994-97) Krista Boling (1998-01) Kim Devine (2002-2004) Mary Castelanelli (2005-06) Lauren Barnes (2007-10) Caprice Dydasco (2011-14) Chloe Castaneda (2015-18)

4 Allison West (1993-94) Louise Lieberman (1995) Rochelle Ouchi (1996-97) Bethany Bogart (1998-01) Kendal Billingsley (2002-04) Blake Zerboni (2005-07) Natalia Ledezma (2010) Summer Williams (2008-09-11) Ari Krakowsky (2013) Gabrielle Matulcih (2014-17) Taylor Magliarditi (2018)

5 Kristy Howard (1993) Miriam Parsa (1994-95) Sarah Connell (1996) Liz Willemse (1997-98) Rochelle Ouchi (1999) Sarah-Gayle Swanson (2000-03) Jennifer Sayles (2004) Christina DiMartino (2005-08) Zakiya Bywaters (2009-12) Belden Long (2013-15) Kaiya McCullough (2016-18)

6 Jodi Loeffler (1993) Kelly Robson (1994-95) Louise Lieberman (1996-98)

Tracey Winzen (1999-02) Stephanie Kron (2003-04) McCall Zerboni (2005-07) Amelia Mathis (2008-11) Lauren Kaskie (2013-16) Kennedy Faulknor (2017-18)

Brittany Dankworth (2004) Erin Hardy (2005-08) Sophie Metz (2009) Chelsea Braun (2010-13) Taylor Alderete (2014-15) Sunny Dunphy (2016-18)

7

13

Meredith Bean (1993) Michele Lieberman (1994-96) Sarah Connell (1997) Lauren Emblem (1998-01) Amy Fazio (2002-2004) Alma Playle (2005-07) McCall Zerboni (2008) Jenna Richmond (2010-13) Gabbi Miranda (2014-16) Anika Rodriguez (2017-18)

Sonja Munevar (1993) Chrissy Whalen (1994-95) Kerry Norris (1996-97) Tracey Milburn (1998-2000) Nancy Mikacenic (2001) Allie True (2002) Christina Eskridge (2003) Julie Hoshizaki (2004) Coco Kleinert (2005-08) Courtney Lovelace (2009-10) Rosie White (2011-14) Taome Oliver (2015) Anika Rodriguez (2016) Viviana Villacorta (2017-18)

8 Jodi Linker (1993) Tiffany Brown (1994-97) Breana Boling (1998-01) Vicky Bloom (2002) Julia Jones (2003) Lindsey Appezzato (2004) Jennifer Sayles (2005) Lauren Cheney (2006-09) Summer Williams (2010) Abby Dahlkemper (2011-14) Amber Munerlyn (2015-16) Karina Rodriguez (2017-18)

9 Christy Tully (1993) Traci Arkenberg (1994-97) Staci Duncan (1998-01) Katherine Bjazevich (2002-03) Bristyn Davis (2004-05-06) Danesha Adams (2007) Ahsha Smith (2009-11) Kristiana Konkol-Mrcozkowski (2012-15)

Shana Flynn (2018)

10 Adrienne Manwaring (1993) Julie Koudelka (1994-96) Sommer Hammoud (1997-98) Jessica Winton (1999) Brittany Whalen (2000-01) Iris Mora (2002-2005) Molly Kruger (2006) Lauren Wilmoth (2007-09) Charney Burk (2010-11) Kodi Lavrusky (2012-15) Julia Hernandez (2016-18)

11 Erika Inlay (1993) Melanie Hom (1994-95) Beth Thompson (1996) Janine Altman (1997-99) Nandi Pryce (2000-03) Brynn McGrath (2004) Caitlin Mac Kechnie (2005-08) Chelsea Cline (2009-12) Darian Jenkins (2013-16) Issy Bellinghausen (2017-18)

12 Kendra Mayfield (1993) Molly Barnes (1994) Cheryl Williams (1995) Anne Luke (1996-97) Mary Stuart (1999) Courtney Wright (2000) Kelly Durbin (2001) Katie Rivera (2002-03)

14 Cassie Zappaterreno (1993) Sue Skenderian (1994-96) Karissa Hampton (1997-00) Emily Ernsdorf (2001-02) Mary Castelanelli (2003-04) Catherine Calvert (2005-08) Sierra Mack (2009-10) Taylor Smith (2012-15) Olivia Athens (2017-18)

15 Marisol Meinhart (1993-96) Beth Thompson (1997-99) Jessica Stamp (2000) Kristine Brittingham (2001) Jayme Cargnoni (2002) Kara Lang (2005-09) Crystal Shaffie (2011-13) MacKenzie Cerda (2014-17) Olivia de Moraes (2018)

16 Sarah Harrison (1993) Amy Nolin (1994-95) Wendy Polnaszek (1996) Venus James (1997-00) Jessica Stamp (2001) Bristyn Davis (2003) Rose Vandenberg (2005) Lauren Switzer (2006) Liz Zadro (2007-10) Sarah Killion (2011-14) Hailie Mace (2015-18)

17 Barbie Gill (1993-94) Sherice Bartling (1995-96) Megan Quinn (1997-98) Brooke Flamson (1999) Michelle Mangiardi (2000-02) Caitlin Ursini (2003-05-06) Ashley Thompson (2007-08) Lucretia Lee (2009-12) Alyssa Alarab (2013-16) Delanie Sheehan (2017-18)

18 Jill Ratner (1993) Sarah Miller (1994-97) Vanessa Clark (1998-99) Lindsay Greco (2000-2004) Stephanie Kron (2005-06) Kylie Wright (2007-10) Ally Courtnall (2011) Taylor Alderete (2012-13) 24

Chloe Hemingway (2014-17) Maddi Desiano (2018)

19 Christine Sanders (1993-95) Chrissy Whalen (1996-97) Courteney Cosso (1998-99) Emily Ernsdorf (2000) Mary-Frances Monroe (2001) Jill Oakes (2002-05) Lauren Wilmoth (2006) Jenna Belcher (2007-09) Jalissa Freeman (2012) Chelsea Stewart (2013) Madison Tye (2014-15) Jacey Pederson (2016-18)

20 Kelly Robson (1993) Cheryl Williams (1994) Lari Kiremidjian (1995) Lindsay Culp (1996-99) Jaclyn Harwood (2000-03) Valerie Henderson (2004) Kristina Larsen (2006-09) Kylie Facinelli (2010) Chelsea Stewart (2011-12) Lauren Rodriguez (2013) Teagan Micah (2016-18)

21 Gina Dartt (1993-95) Bree Edwards (1996-99) Whitney Jones (2000-03) Theresa Oda-Burns (2005-06) Elise Britt (2007-10) Megan Oyster (2011-14) Mollie Clinton (2015) Jessie Fleming (2016-18)

22 Kristi Blankinship (1993) Katie Bernacchi (1994) Liz Willemse (1995-96) CiCi Peterson (1997-01) Arianna Criscione (2003-2004) Kelsey Davis (2005) Jennifer Sayles (2006) Dana Wall (2007-10) Sam Mewis (2011-14) Inga Bakken (2015) Dani Satterwhite (2017-18)

23 Paige Viloria (1993) Jessie Skenderian (1994-95) Skylar Little (1996-99) Kathryn Lee (2000-03) Camille Toney (2004-05) Dea Cook (2006-09) Ariana Martinez (2010-11) Ally Courtnall (2012) Tayler Dragoo (2013) Marley Canales (2017-18)

24 Molly Barnes (1993) Mary Everett (1994) Shanelle Eng (1995) Rhi Tanaka (1996-97) Sarah Lazaro (1998-99) Victoria Bloom (2000-01) Michelle Gleason (2003-05-06) Hannah Mac Kechnie (2008) Iman Bearde (2009-10) Madison Tye (2012-13) Siri Ervik (2014-15) Maricarmen Reyes (2018)

25 Kellie Williams (1994) Cassie Campbell (1995) Chrysta Elliott (1998) Katherine Bjazevich (2000-01) Danesha Adams (2004-07) Taylor Cochran (2007-10) Tayler Dragoo (2012) Claire Winter (2013-17) Cassidy Tshimbalanga (2018)

26 Michelle Kaping (1994-95) Courtney Arrigo (1998-99) Alma Playle (2004) Whitney Sharpe (2008-09) Erin Cole (2012) Zoey Goralski (2013-16) Meghan Scudero (2018)

27 Kristy Kirkeide (1994) Sarah Morgan (1998-00) Amy Fazio (2001) Britney Scannell (2006-07) Iman Bearde (2009) Chante’ Sandiford (2010-11) Ari Krakowsky (2012) Gabbi Miranda (2013) Hannah Sharts (2017)

28 Sarah Connell (1994-95) Kristine Brittingham (2000) Kendal Billingsley (2001) Julia Jones (2002) Jessica Harris (2003-05-06) Nicki Friedberg (2007) Robyn Dutton (2008-09) Allie Dutto (2014-15) Makie Umehara (2016-18)

29 Crystal James (2001-2004) Nicole Sweetman (2007-08) Mikaela Arnstein (2013) Emily Weintraub (2018)

30 Katie Greenwood (1999-00) Ashley Thompson (2004-06)

31 Sam Kokoska (2014)

32 Alana Munger (2010-13)

33 Cassie Sternbach (2012-15)

35 Idalia Serrano (2018)

42 Ally Courtnall (2013-14)

55 Belden Long (2012)

66 Reema Bzeih (2014)

77 Courtney Proctor (2011-16)


ALL-TIME PLAYER STATISTICS

Player

GP

GS

Sh

G

GWG

A

Pts

Player

Danesha Adams (2004-07) Alyssa Alarab (2013-16) Taylor Alderete (2012-15) Janine Altman (1997-98) Annie Alvarado (2013-16) Lindsey Appezzato (2004) Traci Arkenberg (1994-97) Mikaela Arnstein (2013) Courtney Arrigo (1999) Olivia Athens (2017-18) Lauren Barnes (2007-10) Molly Barnes (1993-94) Sherice Bartling (1995-96) Meredith Bean (1993) Iman Bearde (2009-10) Jenna Belcher (2007-09) Issy Bellinghausen (2018) Kendal Billingsley (2001-04) Katherine Bjazevich (2000-03) Kristi Blankinship (1993) Victoria Bloom (2000-02) Bethany Bogart (1998-01) Breana Boling (1998-01) Krista Boling (1998-01) Chelsea Braun (2010-13) Elise Britt (2007-10) Kristine Brittingham (2000-01) Tiffany Brown (1994-97) Charney Burk (2010-11) Zakiya Bywaters (2009-12) Reema Bzeih (2015) Catherine Calvert (2005-08) Marley Canales (2017-18) Jayme Cargnoni (2002) Jennifer Carlson (1993) Chloe Castaneda (2016-18) Mary Castelanelli (2003-06) MacKenzie Cerda (2014-17) Lauren Cheney (2006-09) Vanessa Clark (1998-99) Chelsea Cline (2009-12) Taylor Cochran (2007-10) Sarah Connell (1994-97) Dea Cook (2006-09) Courteney Cosso (1998-99) Ally Courtnall (2011-14) Abby Dahlkemper (2011-14) Brittany Dankworth (2004) Gina Dartt (1993-95) Bristyn Davis (2003-06) Olivia de Moraes (2018) Kim Devine (2002-04) Christina DiMartino (2005-08) Staci Duncan (1998-01) Sunny Dunphy (2016-18) Kelly Durbin (2001) Robyn Dutton (2008) Caprice Dydasco (2011-14) Bree Edwards (1996-99) Lauren Emblem (1998-01) Emily Ernsdorf (2000-02) Christina Eskridge (2003) Mary Everett (1994) Kylie Facinelli (2010) Kennedy Faulknor (2017-18) Amy Fazio (2001-03) Jessie Fleming (2016-18) Brooke Flamson (1999) Nicki Friedberg (2007) Barbie Gil (1993-94) Michelle Gleason (2003-06) Zoey Goralski (2014-17) Lindsay Greco (2000-04) Sommer Hammoud (1997-98) Karissa Hampton (1997-00) Erin Hardy (2005-08) Jessica Harris (2003-06) Chloe Hemingway (2015-17)

94 23 19 30 85 6 78 1 2 45 96 25 38 13 35 32 9 95 54 17 30 89 90 87 50 53 2 79 39 92 9 86 29 3 4 56 62 78 89 32 89 17 46 96 21 89 93 2 51 93 2 72 96 89 65 8 1 94 73 58 20 3 1 3 27 86 53 8 2 15 57 88 97 43 78 85 32 4

92 2 1 11 63 0 78 0 0 32 95 22 24 13 0 26 0 59 1 17 0 75 87 80 9 16 0 79 20 99 7 39 15 0 0 15 56 54 86 23 41 0 16 86 0 65 92 0 24 82 0 37 95 59 15 0 0 89 51 12 0 0 0 0 8 56 50 2 0 5 11 62 85 41 67 85 3 1

320 0 9 5 55 1 451 0 0 37 65 9 68 14 6 11 1 69 35 16 18 40 160 12 16 26 0 17 19 205 1 10 18 0 1 38 35 95 381 23 65 5 36 20 14 125 76 0 35 227 1 97 176 197 48 1 1 70 22 38 6 0 0 0 9 18 113 2 0 36 19 33 213 37 41 5 5 0

60 0 1 0 7 0 71 0 0 5 8 0 7 3 1 1 0 12 4 3 2 3 18 2 2 1 0 1 0 23 0 1 1 0 0 6 3 6 71 2 9 0 2 4 2 13 5 0 2 26 0 16 22 35 3 0 0 5 1 6 0 0 0 0 3 1 22 0 0 6 0 3 29 2 1 0 0 0

26 0 0 0 5 0 26 0 0 3 3 0 2 0 1 1 0 5 0 1 0 2 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 2 28 1 2 0 1 2 0 4 3 0 1 4 0 6 6 13 2 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 9 0 0 2 0 0 7 0 0 0 0 0

20 0 1 3 10 0 27 0 0 12 25 0 11 1 2 7 0 5 4 0 1 16 9 3 0 5 0 7 5 21 0 2 2 0 1 5 12 11 31 3 14 0 5 2 0 16 10 0 3 17 0 5 30 18 3 0 0 23 7 3 1 0 0 0 2 10 18 1 0 2 2 16 19 4 5 2 0 0

140 0 3 3 24 0 169 0 0 22 41 0 25 7 4 9 0 29 12 0 5 22 45 7 4 7 0 9 5 67 0 4 4 0 1 17 18 23 173 7 32 0 9 10 4 42 20 0 7 69 0 37 74 88 9 0 0 33 9 15 1 0 0 0 8 12 62 1 0 14 2 22 77 8 7 2 0 0

Julia Hernandez (2016-18) Melanie Hom (1994-95) Julie Hoshizaki (2004) Kristy Howard (1993) Erika Inlay (1993) Venus James (1997-00) Crystal James (2001-04) Darian Jenkins (2013-16) Julia Jones (2002) Whitney Jones (2000-03) Michelle Kaping (1994-95) Lauren Kaskie (2013-16) Sarah Killion (2011-13) Larisa Kiremidjian (1995-98) Coco Kleinert (2005-08)

25

GP

GS

Sh

G

GWG

A

Pts

64 26 16 17 7 89 45 76 3 92 18 91 64 74 8 Kristiana Konkol-Mroczkowski (2012-15) 54 Julie Koudelka (1994-96) 41 Ari Krakowsky (2012-13) 6 Stephanie Kron (2003-06) 57 Molly Kruger (2006) 19 Kara Lang (2005-09) 74 Kristina Larsen (2006-09) 92 Kodi Lavrusky (2012-15) 71 Natalia Ledezma (2010) 18 Kathryn Lee (2000-03) 91 Lucretia Lee (2009-12) 88 Sydney Leroux (2008-11) 84 Louise Lieberman (1995-98) 78 Michele Lieberman (1994-96) 41 Stacy Lindstrom (2002-06) 95 Skylar Little (1996-99) 84 Jodi Loeffler (1993) 11 Belden Long (2012-15) 13 Courtney Lovelace (2010) 8 Anne Luke (1996) 6 Hailie Mace (2015-18) 79 Sierra Mack (2010) 3 Caitlyn Mac Kechnie (2005-08) 61 Hannah Mac Kechnie (2008) 1 Michelle Mangiardi (2001-02) 20 Adrienne Manwaring (1993) 8 Arianna Martinez (2010-11) 42 Gabrielle Matulich (2014-17) 68 Kylie McCarthy (2011-14) 66 Kaiya McCullough (2016-18) 68 Brynn McGrath (2004) 12 Amelia Mathis (2008-11) 53 Mari Meinhart (1993-96) 72 Sophie Metz (2009) 19 Sam Mewis (2011-14) 87 Teagan Micah (2016-17) 47 Nancy Mikacenic (2001) 12 Tracey Milburn (1998-00) 67 Sarah Miller (1994-97) 72 Gabbi Miranda (2013-16) 73 Mary-Frances Monroe (2001) 23 Iris Mora (2002-05) 84 Sarah Morgan (1999-00) 28 Amber Munerlyn (2015-16) 41 Sonja Munevar (1993) 17 Amy Nolin (1994-95) 12 Kerry Norris (1996-97) 1 Jill Oakes (2002-05) 89 Theresa Oda-Burns (2005-06) 3 Taome Oliver (2015) 7 Rochelle Ouchi (1996-97, 99) 33 Megan Oyster (2011-14) 90 Miriam Parsa (1994-95) 11 Jacey Pederson (2016-18) 38 Wendy Polnaszek (1996) 8 Alma Playle (2004-07) 60 Courtney Proctor (2011-16) 72 Nandi Pryce (2000-03) 65 Megan Quinn (1998) 2 Jill Ratner (1993) 4 Maricarmen Reyes (2018) 21 Jenna Richmond (2010-13) 91 Stephanie Rigamat (2000-01) 47

12 16 0 16 1 63 16 64 0 88 10 25 53 63 0 8 39 1 15 2 72 53 29 10 84 73 83 37 33 83 68 0 2 0 0 74 0 5 0 0 8 16 22 14 68 6 1 56 5 86 25 0 60 46 40 23 73 0 19 16 0 0 87 1 0 23 49 1 12 2 8 17 62 0 0 10 90 41

61 28 0 35 4 192 38 127 0 146 12 75 45 95 3 28 10 1 60 10 264 225 80 3 5 16 314 101 38 118 13 6 1 1 3 148 0 36 0 12 3 30 12 56 5 1 7 74 6 252 0 4 199 63 14 106 157 13 41 49 9 0 132 0 1 15 42 4 7 1 19 46 56 1 0 24 105 122

11 3 0 3 1 30 4 29 0 11 0 3 4 14 0 2 0 0 5 0 32 30 14 0 0 1 57 7 5 9 0 2 0 0 0 24 0 5 0 1 0 0 4 12 1 1 1 8 0 31 0 0 33 7 5 12 33 0 9 13 1 0 10 0 0 3 2 1 0 0 0 5 1 0 0 3 12 26

1 1 0 1 0 10 3 14 0 3 0 2 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 11 5 0 0 0 23 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 2 0 11 0 0 5 3 2 6 14 0 2 3 0 0 4 0 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 12

4 2 1 10 1 21 10 12 0 12 3 2 20 7 0 1 2 0 8 0 19 11 6 0 3 2 12 17 6 16 5 0 0 0 0 12 0 13 0 0 0 3 5 6 4 0 2 7 2 32 1 0 15 5 6 4 38 3 4 6 0 0 14 0 0 5 3 0 1 1 1 4 7 0 0 0 23 15

26 8 1 16 3 81 18 70 0 34 3 8 28 35 0 5 2 0 18 0 83 71 34 0 3 4 126 31 16 34 5 4 0 0 0 60 0 23 0 2 0 3 13 30 6 2 4 23 2 94 1 0 81 19 16 28 104 3 22 32 2 0 34 0 0 11 7 2 1 1 1 14 9 0 0 6 47 67


ALL-TIME PLAYER STATISTICS / HEAD COACHING HISTORY

Player

GP

GS

Sh

G

GWG

A

Pts

Katie Rivera (2002-03) Kelly Robson (1993-95) Anika Rodriguez (2016-18) Karina Rodriguez (2017-18) Katelyn Rowland (2011-14) Sarah Salazar (2007) Ashley Sanchez (2017-18) Christine Sanders (1993-95) Dani Satterwhite (2018) Jennifer Sayles (2004-06) Britney Scannell (2006-07) Crystal Shaffie (2011-13) Whitney Sharpe (2008-09) Delanie Sheehan (2017-18) Sue Skenderian (1993-96) Ahsha Smith (2009-11) Taylor Smith (2012-15) Jessica Stamp (2001) Chelsea Stewart (2011-13) Mary Stuart (1999) Sarah-Gayle Swanson (2000-03) Nicole Sweetman (2007-08) Lauren Switzer (2006) Rhiannon Tanaka (1996-97) Shannon Thomas (1994-97) Beth Thompson (1996-99) Camille Toney (2004-05) Allie True (2002) Madison Tye (2012-15) Maki Umehara (2016-18) Caitlin Ursini (2003-05) Rose Vandenberg (2005) Viviana Villacorta (2017-18) Paige Viloria (1993) Dana Wall (2007-10) Allison West (1993-94) Brittany Whalen (2000-01) Chrissy Whalen (1994-97) Rosie White (2011-14) Liz Willemse (1995-98) Cheryl Williams (1994-95) Summer Williams (2008-11) Lauren Wilmoth (2006-09) Claire Winter (2013-17) Jessica Winton (1999) Tracey Winzen (1999-02) Courtney Wright (2000) Kylie Wright (2007-10)

23 38 57 47 90 10 45 25 5 17 18 28 34 46 65 40 87 9 66 2 88 2 21 35 72 56 13 22 32 4 54 1 47 16 74 10 21 12 83 42 29 72 96 54 20 67 12 90

6 21 44 45 89 0 43 7 0 0 0 1 6 31 57 5 80 0 41 0 70 0 13 34 71 39 0 17 19 0 28 0 36 2 18 1 4 3 55 8 17 9 95 27 10 41 1 89

20 44 115 14 0 2 113 20 2 3 1 5 5 42 18 21 186 3 33 1 180 0 15 7 93 38 4 30 3 0 33 0 41 5 32 1 4 11 157 47 9 24 69 20 42 59 1 92

6 5 15 3 0 0 16 3 1 0 0 1 0 9 1 2 27 0 2 0 35 0 1 1 12 2 0 1 0 0 3 0 4 0 2 0 1 2 17 8 0 1 5 3 12 6 1 5

2 2 6 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 9 0 2 0 14 0 0 0 6 1 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 0 0 1 1 3 1 1 1

4 0 22 1 2 1 27 1 0 0 0 0 2 10 4 4 22 0 12 0 17 1 4 1 8 2 0 4 1 0 3 0 8 0 4 0 0 1 12 6 1 5 23 1 5 6 0 5

16 10 52 7 2 1 59 7 2 0 0 2 2 28 6 8 76 0 16 0 87 1 6 3 32 6 0 6 1 0 9 0 16 0 8 0 2 5 46 22 1 7 33 7 29 18 2 15

Goalkeeping Statistics Player Lauren Brzykcy (2018) Arianna Criscione (2003-04) Lindsay Culp (1996-99) Kelsey Davis (2005) Yiana Dimmitt (2008-10) Shanelle Eng (1993-94) Siri Ervik (2015-17) Jaclyn Harwood (2000-02) Val Henderson (2004-07) Julie Kapcala (1997-98) Sarah Lombardo (2001-03) Teagan Micah (2016-18) Alana Munger (2011-13) Gretchen Overgaard (1994-95) Amy Palmer (1993) CiCi Peterson (1998-01) Joanna Quinlivan (1994-95) Katelyn Rowland (2011-14) Chante’ Sandiford (2009-11) Arielle Schechtman (2015) Cassie Sternbach (2012-15) Ashley Thompson (2005-2008) Emily Zaplatosch (2003)

UCLA Head Coaching History Joy Fawcett (1993-97) Year 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 Totals

Record 10-6-1 11-4-3 14-4-2 11-7-1 19-3 65-24-7

NCAA — — T-17th — T-5th

Pac-10 Rec. — — 5-2/2nd 4-3/T-4th 9-0/1st 18-5

NCAA T-17th

Pac-10 Rec. 7-2/T-1st

NCAA T-9th 2nd T-5th T-9th T-3rd 2nd 2nd T-3rd T-3rd T-3rd T-3rd T-9th

Pac-10 Rec. 6-2-1/3rd 6-2-1/3rd 8-1/1st 8-1/2nd 8-0-1/1st 6-3/T-1st 7-0-2/1st 8-1-0/1st 9-0/1st 9-0/1st 8-1/2nd 5-4/4th 88-15-5

NCAA T-17th T-5th

Pac-12 Rec. 8-1-2/2nd 8-2-1/2nd 16-3-3

Todd Saldana (1998) Year 1998

Record 17-4-1

Jillian Ellis (1999-2010) Year 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Totals

Record 15-5-1 19-4-1 20-3 18-4 20-2-3 18-7 22-2-2 21-4-0 20-2-2 22-1-2 21-3-1 13-8-2 229-45-14

B.J. Snow (2011-12) Year 2011 2012 Totals

Record 16-1-4 18-3-2 34-4-6

Amanda Cromwell (2013-present) GP-GS Min 9-8 22-15 73-69 8-2 14-2 7-5 10-9 9-2 95-94 7-2 39-31 64-60 14-4 31-31 16-15 64-58 5-4 90-89 50-47 5-3 8-0 41-28 2-1

585 1493 6255 298 333 438 785 276 8305 309 2967 5782 681 3014 1482 5178 466 7870 4413 360 642 2778 78

Year 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Totals

Sv Sho GA GAA W-L-T 13 39 265 8 16 7 22 8 240 7 54 199 16 160 70 177 18 202 128 26 19 100 3

2 7 31 1 0 1 2 0 38 1 14 26 1 15 5 26 2 55 18 2 1 16 0

5 11 67 0 7 4 18 1 58 5 21 53 3 22 23 44 5 35 36 6 10 12 1

0.77 0.66 0.96 0.00 1.89 0.82 2.06 0.33 0.63 1.46 0.64 0.79 0.40 0.66 1.39 0.76 0.97 0.40 0.73 1.50 1.40 0.39 1.13

5-2-0 14-1-0 52-15-2 2-0-0 0-1-1 3-1-0 3-4-1 0-0-0 76-14-4 2-0-0 26-6-3 46-9-7 1-0-2 20-5-5 9-6-1 45-10-2 3-2-0 73-6-9 37-10-3 2-2-0 3-4-0 25-2-1 0-0-0

Record 22-1-3 21-1-2 8-10-1 15-5-2 19-3-3 17-3-2 102-23-13

NCAA 1st T-5th — T-9th 2nd T-5th

Pac-12 Rec. 9-0-2/1st 10-0-1/1st 4-6-1/8th 7-3-1/T-4th 8-2-1/T-2nd 9-2/2nd 47-13-3

All-Time Assistant Coaches Jane Alukonis Jenny Bindon Mark Carr Merry Eyman Michelle French Samantha Greene Drew Leonard Louise Lieberman Shannon MacMillan Joe Mallia

26

2018-present 2017-present 2003-2006 1994 2002 2017-present 1993 2009-16 2007-2008 2005-2006

Manny Martins Katherine Mertz Paul Ratcliffe Aline Reis Todd Saldana Lisa Shattuck B.J. Snow David Vanole Josh Walters

2011-12 2000-04 1995-97 2013-16 1993 1997-2001 2007-2010 1995-99 2013-17


BRUIN AWARD WINNERS

Honda Award 2013 2014

1999

Abby Dahlkemper Sam Mewis

2000

NSCAA All-Americans 1997 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

2016 2017 2018

Traci Arkenberg Rhiannon Tanaka (3rd) Tracey Milburn (2nd) Mary-Frances Monroe Stephanie Rigamat (2nd) Nandi Pryce Nandi Pryce Iris Mora Jill Oakes (2nd) Iris Mora (3rd) Jill Oakes Danesha Adams (2nd) Valerie Henderson (2nd) Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino Danesha Adams (3rd) Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino (2nd) Danesha Adams (3rd) Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino Erin Hardy (2nd) Lauren Cheney Sydney Leroux (3rd) Sydney Leroux (3rd) Lauren Barnes (3rd) Sydney Leroux Abby Dahlkemper (3rd) Zakiya Bywaters Abby Dahlkemper (2nd) Abby Dahlkemper Katelyn Rowland (2nd) Darian Jenkins (3rd) Abby Dahlkemper Sam Mewis Katelyn Rowland (2nd) Sarah Killion (3rd) Jessie Fleming (3rd) Jessie Fleming Hailie Mace Ashley Sanchez

Soccer America MVPs 1997 2000 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Traci Arkenberg Stephanie Rigamat Nandi Pryce Nandi Pryce Kendal Billingsley Jill Oakes Danesha Adams Christina DiMartino Lauren Cheney Danesha Adams (2nd) Christina DiMartino (2nd) Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino Lauren Cheney Sydney Leroux (2nd) Sydney Leroux Sydney Leroux Zakiya Bywaters Abby Dahlkemper Katelyn Rowland Abby Dahlkemper Sarah Killion Sam Mewis Katelyn Rowland

Soccer Buzz All-Americans 2000 2002 2003

Krista Boling Nandi Pryce Jill Oakes Nandi Pryce Iris Mora

2001

2002 2003

2004 2005

Kara Lang

2004 2005 2006

2007 2008

Jill Oakes (2nd) Bristyn Davis (HM) Jill Oakes Danesha Adams Kara Lang Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino Danesha Adams (2nd) Erin Hardy (4th) Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino (2nd) Danesha Adams (3rd) Christina DiMartino Erin Hardy Lauren Cheney (2nd)

NSCAA Scholastic All-Region 2013

2014

CoSIDA Academic All-District 1997 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2011 2012 2013

Freshman All-Americans 2000 2002 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2011 2013 2014

Kathryn Lee (SB) Sarah-Gayle Swanson (SA, SB) Jill Oakes (SA, SB) Danesha Adams (SA, SB) Valerie Henderson (SA, SB 3rd) Kara Lang (SB) Christina DiMartino (SB) Lauren Cheney (SB)* Lauren Wilmoth (SB 2nd) Lauren Barnes (SA, SB 2nd) Kylie Wright (SB 2nd) Sydney Leroux (SB 3rd) Zakiya Bywaters (SA 2nd) Chelsea Cline (SA 2nd) Sam Mewis (SA) Abby Dahlkemer (SA) Darian Jenkins (SA) Zoey Goralski (SA)

2014 2016 2017 2018

First-team unless indicated SB - Soccer Buzz, SA - Soccer America * Indicates National Freshman of the Year

2013

2014

2007

2008

2009

2010 2011

2012

2013

Amanda Cromwell

NSCAA Coach of the Year 2000

Sarah Lombardo Ally Courtnall Sam Mewis

2014

Jillian Ellis

NSCAA Regional Coach of the Year 2014

NSCAA Scholastic All-American 2007 2013

Shannon Thomas Sarah Lombardo (2nd) Sarah Lombardo Kendal Billingsley (2nd) Mary Castelanelli Mary Castelanelli (3rd) Valerie Henderson Kara Lang (2nd) Jenna Belcher (3rd) Charney Burk Chelsea Stewart Abby Dahlkemper (2nd) Sarah Killion (2nd) Chelsea Stewart (2nd) Ally Courtnall Sam Mewis Sarah Killion (2nd) Darian Jenkins Julia Hernandez Sunny Dunphy (2nd) Kaiya McCullough (2nd) Sunny Dunphy (2nd) Julia Hernandez (2nd)

2006

Soccer America Coach of the Year

CoSIDA Academic All-American 2003 2014

Abby Dahlkemper Sarah Killion Jenna Richmond Ally Courtnall (2nd) Sam Mewis (2nd) Sarah Killion Sam Mewis Ally Courtnall (2nd) Rosie White (3rd)

Amanda Cromwell

NSCAA All-Region

Valerie Henderson Abby Dahlkemper* Sarah Killion Jenna Richmond Sarah Killion Sam Mewis

1996 1997 1998

* Indicates Scholastic All-American of the Year

27

Traci Arkenberg Rhiannon Tanaka (2nd) Traci Arkenberg Rhiannon Tanaka Shannon Thomas (2nd) Skylar Little Staci Duncan (2nd) Lindsay Culp (3rd) Sommer Hammoud (3rd)

2015 2016 2017

2018

Venus James (3rd) Venus James (3rd) Skylar Little (3rd) Tracey Milburn (HM) Tracey Milburn Krista Boling (2nd) Venus James (3rd) Mary-Frances Monroe Stephanie Rigamat Krista Boling (2nd) Sarah-Gayle Swanson (2nd) Nandi Pryce Jill Oakes (2nd) Whitney Jones (3rd) Nandi Pryce Iris Mora Sarah-Gayle Swanson (2nd) Whitney Jones (2nd) Jill Oakes (3rd) Iris Mora Jill Oakes Bristyn Davis (3rd) Danesha Adams Jill Oakes Valerie Henderson Iris Mora (2nd) Mary Castelanelli (3rd) Christina DiMartino Lauren Cheney Danesha Adams Valerie Henderson (3rd) Danesha Adams Christina DiMartino Lauren Cheney Erin Hardy (2nd) Valerie Henderson (3rd) Lauren Cheney Ashley Thompson Christina DiMartino Erin Hardy McCall Zerboni (3rd) Lauren Cheney Sydney Leroux Lauren Barnes (2nd) Kristina Larsen (2nd) Lauren Wilmoth (3rd) Lauren Barnes Sydney Leroux Kylie Wright (2nd) Abby Dahlkemper Sam Mewis Sydney Leroux Zakiya Bywaters Zakiya Bywaters Abby Dahlkemper Sarah Killion Jenna Richmond (3rd) Katelyn Rowland (3rd) Abby Dahlkemper Darian Jenkins Sarah Killion Jenna Richmond Katelyn Rowland Abby Dahlkemper Sarah Killion Sam Mewis Katelyn Rowland Taylor Smith (2nd) Kodi Lavrusky (2nd) Jessie Fleming Darian Jenkins (2nd) Jessie Fleming Hailie Mace Ashley Sanchez Kaiya McCullough (2nd) Ashley Sanchez Jessie Fleming (2nd) Hailie Mace (2nd) Karina Rodriguez (2nd)


BRUIN AWARD WINNERS

Soccer Buzz All-Region

Pac-12 Coach of the Year

1997

1997 2003 2007 2014

1998

1999 2000

2001

2002 2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

Traci Arkenberg^ Rhi Tanaka Shannon Thomas (2nd) Sommer Hammoud (3rd)* Skylar Little Lindsay Culp (2nd) Staci Duncan (3rd) Breana Boling (3rd) Venus James (3rd) Tracey Milburn (2nd) Skylar Little (3rd) Tracey Milburn Krista Boling (2nd) Stephanie Rigamat (3rd) Karissa Hampton (3rd) Stephanie Rigamat Mary-Frances Monroe Krista Boling (2nd) Sarah-Gayle Swanson (3rd) Nandi Pryce Whitney Jones (2nd) Jill Oakes (2nd) Iris Mora Nandi Pryce^ Sarah-Gayle Swanson (2nd) Whitney Jones (2nd) Bristyn Davis Jill Oakes Iris Mora (2nd) Kendal Billingsley (3rd) Danesha Adams Jill Oakes Kara Lang (2nd) Iris Mora (3rd) Mary Castelanelli (3rd) Lauren Cheney^* Danesha Adams Christina DiMartino Erin Hardy Valerie Henderson (3rd) Danesha Adams Lauren Cheney^ Christina DiMartino Erin Hardy (2nd) Valerie Henderson (2nd) Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino Erin Hardy Lauren Wilmoth (2nd) Ashley Thompson (2nd) Kylie Wright (3rd)

Pac-12 Player of the Year 1997 2000 2003 2007 2008 2012 2014 2014

2003 2004

2005 2007 2008 2009 2013

2017

Abby Dahlkemper

Cici Peterson

Pac-12 Goalkeeper of the Year 2014

2005

Katelyn Rowland

Pac-12 Freshman of the Year 1997 1999 2006 2013

Sommer Hammoud Jessica Winton (co) Lauren Cheney Darian Jenkins

2006

Pac-12 Scholar-Athlete of the Year 2014

Sarah Killion

All-Pac-12 Selections 1995

1996 1997

1998

1999

2000

NCAA All-Tournament Karissa Hampton Venus James Nandi Pryce Kendal Billingsley Danesha Adams Iris Mora Valerie Henderson Bristyn Davis Danesha Adams Jill Oakes Iris Mora Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino Lauren Cheney Lauren Cheney Sydney Leroux Ally Courtnall (Defensive MVP) Sarah Killion Katelyn Rowland Megan Oyster Jessie Fleming Zoey Goralski Hailie Mace

Traci Arkenberg Tracey Milburn Nandi Pryce (co) Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino Zakiya Bywaters Sam Mewis

Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year

^ West Region Player of the Year * West Region Freshman of the Year

2000

Joy Fawcett Jillian Ellis Jillian Ellis Amanda Cromwell

2001

2002

2003

2004

Traci Arkenberg Shannon Thomas Tiffany Brown (2nd) Louise Lieberman (2nd) Traci Arkenberg Rhiannon Tanaka (2nd) Shannon Thomas (2nd) Traci Arkenberg Rhiannon Tanaka Shannon Thomas Sommer Hammoud (2nd) Beth Thompson (2nd) Staci Duncan Tracey Milburn Breana Boling (2nd) Venus James (2nd) Tracy Milburn Staci Duncan (2nd) Venus James (2nd) Skylar Little (2nd) Krista Boling Karissa Hampton Tracey Milburn Breana Boling (2nd) CiCi Peterson (HM) Krista Boling Mary-Frances Monroe Stephanie Rigamat Sarah-Gayle Swanson Whitney Jones (2nd) Nandi Pryce (2nd) Breana Boling (HM) Bethany Bogart (HM) Whitney Jones Jill Oakes Nandi Pryce Iris Mora (2nd) Sarah-Gayle Swanson (2nd) Kat Lee (HM) Nandi Pryce Iris Mora Whitney Jones Sarah-Gayle Swanson Jill Oakes (2nd) Iris Mora Jill Oakes Bristyn Davis (2nd) Kendal Billingsley (HM)

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

28

Danesha Adams Jill Oakes Valerie Henderson Iris Mora (2nd) Mary Castelanelli (HM) Kara Lang (HM) Christina DiMartino (HM) Lauren Cheney Danesha Adams Christina DiMartino Valerie Henderson (2nd) Erin Hardy (HM) Stacy Lindstrom (HM) Lauren Cheney Danesha Adams Christina DiMartino Valerie Henderson Erin Hardy (2nd) Kara Lang (2nd) Kylie Wright (HM) Lauren Cheney Christina DiMartino Erin Hardy Ashley Thompson Lauren Wilmoth (2nd) Kylie Wright (2nd) McCall Zerboni (HM) Lauren Cheney Sydney Leroux (2nd) Lauren Wilmoth (2nd) Lauren Barnes (2nd) Kristina Larsen (HM) Dea Cook (HM) Sydney Leroux Lauren Barnes Kylie Wright Zakiya Bywaters (HM) Jenna Richmond (HM) Sydney Leroux Zakiya Bywaters Abby Dahlkemper Sam Mewis (2nd) Zakiya Bywaters Abby Dahlkemper Sarah Killion Lucretia Lee (2nd) Sam Mewis (2nd) Katelyn Rowland (2nd) Caprice Dydasco (HM) Jenna Richmond (HM) Abby Dahlkemper Darian Jenkins Sarah Killion Katelyn Rowland Jenna Richmond Taylor Smith Sam Mewis (2nd) Abby Dahlkemper Sarah Killion Sam Mewis Katelyn Rowland

2015 2016

2017

2018

Ally Courtnall (2nd) Taylor Smith (2nd) Megan Oyster (HM) Kodi Lavrusky (2nd) Darian Jenkins (HM) Jessie Fleming Darian Jenkins (2nd) Anika Rodriguez (2nd) Hailie Mace (HM) Jessie Fleming Hailie Mace Ashley Sanchez Kaiya McCullough (2nd) MacKenzie Cerda (3rd) Jessie Fleming Ashley Sanchez Hailie Mace (2nd) Viviana Villacorta (2nd) Anika Rodriguez (3rd) Karina Rodriguez (3rd) Delanie Sheehan (3rd)

Pac-12 All-Freshman Team 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

2012 2013 2014 2016 2017 2018

Kara Lang Christina DiMartino Erin Hardy Lauren Cheney Kristina Larsen Lauren Barnes Kylie Wright Sydney Leroux Zakiya Bywaters Chelsea Cline Jenna Richmond Natalia Ledezma Sam Mewis Abby Dahlkemper Kately Rowland Caprice Dydasco Taylor Smith Darian Jenkins Lauren Kaskie Gabbi Miranda Zoey Goralski Jessie Fleming Kaiya McCullough Anika Rodriguez Ashley Sanchez Delanie Sheehan Lauren Brzykcy Maricarmen Reyes

Pac-12 All-Academic 1994 1995

Kelly Robson (2nd) Mari Meinhart (HM) Shannon Thomas Tiffany Brown (2nd) Melanie Hom (HM) Mari Meinhart (HM) Gretchen Overgaard (HM)


BRUIN AWARD WINNERS

1996

1997

1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003

2004

Miriam Parsa (HM) Cheryl Williams (HM) Shannon Thomas Sarah Connell (2nd) Tiffany Brown (HM) Larisa Kiremidjian (HM) Mari Meinhart (HM) Shannon Thomas Lindsay Culp (2nd) Tiffany Brown (HM) Larisa Kiremidjian (HM) Beth Thompson (HM) Lindsay Culp Larisa Kiremidjian (2nd) Lindsay Culp Bethany Bogart (HM) Bethany Bogart (HM) Brittany Whalen (HM) Bethany Bogart (HM) Sarah-Gayle Swanson (HM) Brittany Whalen (HM) Sarah Lombardo Kendal Billingsley (HM) Sarah Lombardo Jill Oakes (HM) Kathryn Lee (HM) Kendal Billingsley (HM) Kim Devine (HM) Kendal Billingsley (HM) Kim Devine (HM) Mary Castelanelli (HM) Michelle Gleason (HM) Julie Hoshizaki (HM)

2005 2006

2007

2008 2009

2010 2011 2012

Crystal James (HM) Jill Oakes (HM) Mary Castelanelli (HM) Valerie Henderson (HM) Mary Castelanelli (2nd) Catherine Calvert (2nd) Valerie Henderson (HM) Christina DiMartino (HM) Catherine Calvert (HM) Dea Cook (HM) Valerie Henderson (HM) Kara Lang (HM) Catherine Calvert (HM) Kara Lang (HM) Jenna Belcher Elise Britt (HM) Dana Wall (HM) Kara Lang (HM) Dea Cook (HM) Elise Britt Dana Wall (2nd) Charney Burk Jenna Richmond (HM) Chelsea Braun (HM) Ally Courtnall (HM) Abby Dahlkemper (HM) Sarah Killion (HM) Kylie McCarthy (HM) Sam Mewis (HM) Megan Oyster (HM) Jenna Richmond (HM) Katelyn Rowland (HM) Chelsea Stewart (HM)

2013

2014

2015

2016

Abby Dahlkemper

Traci Arkenberg

Sarah Killion

29

Ally Courtnall (HM) Abby Dahlkemper (HM) Sarah Killion (HM) Sam Mewis (HM) Megan Oyster (HM) Jenna Richmond (HM) Katelyn Rowland (HM) Chelsea Stewart (HM) Rosie White (HM) Sarah Killion (2nd) Annie Alvarado (HM) Ally Courtnall (HM) Abby Dahlkemper (HM) Zoey Goralski (HM) Darian Jenkins (HM) Kylie McCarthy (HM) Sam Mewis (HM) Gabbi Miranda (HM) Megan Oyster (HM) Rosie White (HM) Annie Alvarado (HM) Zoey Goralski (HM) Darian Jenkins (HM) Lauren Kaskie (HM) Gabrielle Matulich (HM) Gabbi Miranda (HM) Claire Winter (HM) Annie Alvarado (HM) Zoey Goralski (HM) Darian Jenkins (HM) Lauren Kaskie (HM) Gabrielle Matulich (HM) Gabbi Miranda (HM)

2017

2018

Amber Munerlyn (HM) Claire Winter (HM) Sunny Dunphy (2nd) Julia Hernandez (2nd) MacKenzie Cerda (HM) Jessie Fleming (HM) Zoey Goralski (HM) Gabrielle Matulich (HM) Kaiya McCullough (HM) Teagan Micah (HM) Jacey Pederson (HM) Claire Winter (HM) Julia Hernandez (2nd) Olivia Athens (HM) Marley Canales (HM) Sunny Dunphy (HM) Jessie Fleming (HM) Kaiya McCullough (HM) Tegan Micah (HM) Jacey Pederson (HM) Karina Rodriguez (HM)

UCLA Female Athlete of the Year 1997

Traci Arkenberg

UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame 2008* 2012* 2019*

Traci Arkenberg Nandi Pryce Jill Ellis * Indicates induction year


NSCAA ALL-AMERICANS Christina DiMartino (2005-08) MF • Massapequa, N.Y. Three-time NSCAA All-American (200608) ... MAC Hermann Trophy finalist (2008) ... Soccer America MVP Team (2006-08) ... Pac-10 POY (2008)

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2005 2006 2007 2008 Totals

26-26 21-21 24-24 25-24 96-95

37 46 53 40 176

5 5 6 6 22

2 1 1 2 6

5 7 12 6 30

15 17 24 18 74

Jessie Fleming (2016-pres.) MF • London, Ontario, Canada MAC Hermann Trophy and Honda Award finalist in 2017 … First-team NSCAA AllAmerican in 2017 and third-team honoree in 2016 … Just the fourth UCLA freshman to earn All-America honors ... Led UCLA in scoring in 2016 with 11g, 27 pts.

Valerie Henderson

Danesha Adams (2004-07)

Zakiya Bywaters (2009-12)

F/MF • Shaker Heights, Ohio

F • Las Vegas, Nev.

Three-time NSCAA All-American (200507) ... Two-time Soccer America AllAmerican (2005 & ‘07) ... NCAA AllTournament Team in 2004 & 2005.

NSCAA first-team All-American and the Pac-12 Player of the Year in 2012 ... MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist ... No. 1 overall NWSL draft pick.

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2004 2005 2006 2007 Totals

25-23 26-26 19-19 24-24 94-92

78 95 80 67 320

12 21 12 15 60

5 9 7 5 26

4 4 4 8 20

28 46 28 38 140

2009 2010 2011 2012 Totals

25-23 23-23 21-21 23-21 92-88

20 52 43 90 205

2 3 3 15 23

0 1 0 6 7

7 4 6 4 21

11 10 12 34 67

Traci Arkenberg (1994-97) F • Palos Verdes Estates, Calif.

Lauren Cheney (2006-09) F • Indianapolis, Ind.

UCLA’s first All-American (1997) ... First women’s soccer player inducted into UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame ... Ranks second at school in scoring (169 pts.).

UCLA’s only four-time first-team AllAmerican ... Soccer America National Player of the Year (2007) ... Ranks No. 1 all-time at UCLA in scoring (173 pts.).

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

1994 1995 1996 1997 Totals

18-18 20-20 18-18 22-22 78-78

110 106 106 129 451

14 18 17 22 71

7 6 6 7 26

4 7 8 8 27

32 43 42 52 169

2006 2007 2008 2009 Totals

21-20 23-23 22-21 23-22 89-86

96 88 99 98 381

19 23 11 18 71

8 9 6 5 28

1 11 9 10 31

39 57 31 46 173

Lauren Barnes (2007-10) D • Upland, Calif.

Abby Dahlkemper (2011-14) D • Menlo Park, Calif.

Earned NSCAA third-team All-America honors in 2010 ... First-team All-Pac-10 selection in 2010 ... Soccer America Freshman All-American (2007).

UCLA’s first-ever Honda Award winner in 2013 … Four-time NSCAA All-American … 2013 MAC Hermann Trophy finalist and NSCAA Scholar All-American of the Year.

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2007 2008 2009 2010 Totals

24-24 25-24 25-25 22-22 96-95

11 19 17 19 66

1 0 2 5 8

0 0 1 2 3

3 6 10 6 25

5 6 14 16 41

2011 2012 2013 2014 Totals

21-21 23-23 25-24 24-24 93-92

13 21 25 17 78

0 3 1 1 5

0 2 0 1 3

2 3 2 3 10

2 9 4 5 20

30

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2016 2017 2018 Totals

19-16 23-23 11-11 53-50

42 48 23 113

11 6 5 22

3 3 3 9

5 8 5 18

27 20 15 62

Erin Hardy (2005-08) D • Costa Mesa, Calif. NSCAA All-American (2008) ... All-Pac-10 selection (2006-08) ... NSCAA All-Region selection (2007) ... Pac-10 All-Freshman Team (2005).

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2005 2006 2007 2008 Totals

25-25 21-21 15-15 24-24 85-85

2 0 0 3 5

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 2 2

0 0 0 2 2

Valerie Henderson (2004-08) GK • Orinda, Calif. NSCAA All-American (2005) ... Soccer America Freshman All-American (2004) ... NCAA All-Tournament Team (2004) ... UCLA career win leader (76).

YEAR

GP-GS

Min.

2004 2005 2006 2007 Totals

25-25 25-24 21-21 24-24 95-94

2278 65 12 2057 45 10 1869 61 8 2100 69 8 8305 240 38

Sv. SHO GA GAA

17 12 15 14 58

W-L-T

0.67 18-7-0 0.53 20-2-2 0.72 18-3-0 0.60 20-2-2 0.63 76-14-4

Darian Jenkins (2013-16) F • Riverton, Utah NSCAA third-team All-American and the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year in 2013 … Led UCLA in scoring in 2012 with 11 goals and 27 points.

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2013 2014 2015 2016 Totals

26-26 21-12 18-16 11-10 76-64

39 25 32 31 127

11 6 5 7 29

5 3 1 5 14

5 4 0 3 12

27 16 10 17 70


NSCAA ALL-AMERICANS Sarah Killion (2011-14) MF • Fort Wayne, Ind.

Mary-Frances Monroe (2001)

Nandi Pryce (2000-03)

MF • Tariffville, Ct.

D • Casselberry, Fla.

NSCAA 3rd-team All-American in 2014 … Two-time Top Drawer Soccer Best XI team selection … 2014 Pac-12 Scholar-Athlete of the Year.

Four-time NSCAA All-American ... NSCAA All-American at UCLA in 2001 ... Threetime All-American at UConn ... MAC Hermann Trophy finalist (1999-01).

Two-time NSCAA All-American (200203) ... Soccer America MVP Team (2002 and ‘03) ... Co-Pac-10 Player of the Year (2003) … UCLA Hall of Fame Class of 2013.

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2011 2012 2013 2014 Totals

21-11 17-17 26-25 24-24 88-77

8 15 22 45 90

0 3 1 9 13

0 2 1 2 5

2 6 12 12 32

2 12 14 30 58

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2001

23-23

106

12

6

4

28

Iris Mora (2002-05) F • Cancun, Mexico

F • Vancouver, BC, Canada

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2008 2009 2010 2011 Totals

19-18 24-24 20-20 21-21 84-83

50 98 77 89 314

5 23 13 16 57

2 7 6 8 23

6 2 1 3 12

16 48 27 35 126

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2002 2003 2004 2005 Totals

14-6 25-22 19-19 26-26 84-73

27 61 34 35 157

7 13 4 9 33

1 6 3 4 14

0 14 9 15 38

14 40 17 33 104

Jill Oakes (2002-05)

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2015 2016 2017 Totals

19-15 22-22 25-25 66-62

10 5 97 112

0 0 15 15

0 0 4 4

1 2 3 6

1 2 33 36

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

6 13 13 24 56

0 0 1 0 1

0 0 0 0 0

1 0 1 5 7

1 0 3 5 9

Stephanie Rigamat (2000-01) F • La Crescenta, Calif. NSCAA All-American in 2001 ... Hermann Trophy Candidate in 2001 ... Soccer America MVP Team (2000) ... Played on school’s first College Cup team.

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2000 2001 Totals

24-18 23-23 47-41

55 67 122

13 13 26

8 4 12

11 4 15

37 30 67

Katelyn Rowland (2011-14)

Two-time NSCAA All-American (2004-05) ... Soccer America MVP Team (2005) ... MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist (2006).

F/D • Ventura, Calif.

YEAR

SH

6-4 14-13 21-21 25-24 66-62

D/MF • West Hills, Calif.

Hailie Mace (2015-present) First-team All-American and MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist in 2017 after leading UCLA in scoring with 15 goals and 33 points in her first year playing at forward … Started at defender her first two years.

GP-GS

2000 2001 2002 2003 Totals

Three-time NSCAA All-American (200305) ... UCLA’s career assist leader (38) ... Ranks fourth in career scoring at UCLA (104 pts.).

Sydney Leroux (2008-11) Three-time NSCAA All-American (200911) ... MAC Hermann Trophy Semifinalist (2009 and ‘11) ... Soccer America MVP Team (2009-11).

YEAR

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2002 2003 2004 2005 Totals

19-18 19-18 25-25 26-26 89-87

39 24 35 34 132

3 1 3 3 10

1 1 2 0 4

4 2 2 6 14

10 4 8 12 34

GK • Vacaville, Calif. Two-time NSCAA 2nd-team All-American … Led nation in GAA in 2013 and 2014 … NCAA record-holder for career (55) and single-season (19) shutouts … 2014 Pac12 Goalkeeper of the Year.

YEAR GP-GS Min.

Sv. SHO GA GAA W-L-T

2011 2012 2013 2014 Totals

42 46 65 49 202

20-20 20-20 26-25 24-24 90-89

1618 1741 2311 2200 7870

10 11 0.61 13-1-4 11 11 0.57 17-3-0 15 7 0.27 22-1-3 19 6 0.25 21-1-2 55 35 0.40 73-6-9

Ashley Sanchez (2017-pres.) F • Monrovia, Calif.

Sam Mewis (2011-14) MF • Hanson, Mass.

First-team All-American in 2018 after leading team with 10 goals, 15 assists and 35 points ... Set or tied five school records in 2018, including single-season assists (15) and single-game assists (4).

2014 Honda Award winner, espnW Player of the Year and MAC Hermann Trophy Finalist …2014 NSCAA first-team AllAmerican … First-team Academic AllAmerican.

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2011 2012 2013 2014 Totals

21-21 16-16 26-25 24-24 87-86

54 34 73 91 252

6 3 6 16 31

0 0 4 7 11

7 3 9 13 32

19 9 21 45 94

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

2017 2018 Totals

24-23 21-20 45-43

35 78 113

6 10 16

3 2 5

12 15 27

24 35 59

Rhi Tanaka (1996-97) D • Huntington Beach, Calif. NSCAA All-American in 1997 ... NSCAA All-Far-West Region in 1996 and ‘97 ... First-team All-Pac-10 (1997) ... Transfer from USC.

Tracey Milburn (1998-2000) F • Moorpark, Calif. NSCAA All-American (2000) ... Pac-10 Player of the Year (2000) ... Three-time AllPac-10 (1998-00) ... Played on school’s first College Cup team.

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

1998 1999 2000 Totals

22-15 21-21 24-24 67-60

66 50 83 199

11 9 13 33

2 2 1 5

3 6 6 15

25 24 32 81

Jill Oakes

31

YEAR

GP-GS

SH

GLS

GWG

A

PTS

1996 1997 Totals

13-12 22-22 35-34

3 4 7

1 0 1

0 0 0

0 1 1

2 1 3


SINGLE-SEASON RECORDS

Points 1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 7. 8. 9.

Lauren Cheney, 2007 Traci Arkenberg, 1997 Sydney Leroux, 2009 Lauren Cheney, 2009 Danesha Adams, 2005 Sam Mewis, 2014 Traci Arkenberg, 1995 Traci Arkenberg, 1996 Kara Lang, 2005 Iris Mora, 2003

57 52 48 46 46 45 43 42 40 40

Goals 1. Sydney Leroux, 2009 Lauren Cheney, 2007 3. Traci Arkenberg, 1997 4. Danesha Adams, 2005 5. Lauren Cheney, 2006 6. Lauren Cheney, 2009 Traci Arkenberg, 1995 8. Kara Lang, 2005 Traci Arkenberg, 1996 10. Sam Mewis, 2014 Sydney Leroux, 2011

23 23 22 21 19 18 18 17 17 16 16

Assists 1, Ashley Sanchez, 2018 Iris Mora, 2005 2. Iris Mora, 2003 3. Sam Mewis, 2014 4. Ashley Sanchez, 2017 Sarah Killion, 2014 Sarah Killion, 2013 Christina DiMartino, 2007 8. Lauren Cheney, 2007 Stephanie Rigamat, 2000 10. Taylor Smith, 2013 Lauren Cheney, 2009 Lauren Barnes, 2009 Kristy Howard, 1993

15 15 14 13 12 12 12 12 11 11 10 10 10 10

Shots 1. Traci Arkenberg, 1997 2. Traci Arkenberg, 1994 3. Mary-Frances Monroe, 2001 Traci Arkenberg, 1996 Traci Arkenberg, 1995 6. Kara Lang, 2005 7. Lauren Cheney, 2008 8. Sydney Leroux, 2009 Lauren Cheney, 2009 Bristyn Davis, 2004

129 110 106 106 106 101 99 98 98 98

Sarah Lombardo

Game-Winning Goals 1. Lauren Cheney, 2007 Danesha Adams, 2005 3. Sydney Leroux, 2011 Lauren Cheney, 2006 Stephanie Rigamat, 2000 6. Sam Mewis, 2014 Sydney Leroux, 2009 Danesha Adams, 2006 Traci Arkenberg, 1997 Traci Arkenberg, 1994

Shutouts 9 9 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7

1. 2. 3. 4.

Katelyn Rowland, 2014 Katelyn Rowland, 2013 Ashley Thompson, 2008 Valerie Henderson, 2004 CiCi Peterson, 2000 6. Katelyn Rowland, 2012 CiCi Peterson, 2001 8. Katelyn Rowland, 2011 Valerie Henderson, 2005 Sarah Lombardo, 2002 Lindsay Culp, 1998

Saves 1. Gretchen Overgaard, 1994 2. Teagan Micah, 2016 3. Lindsay Culp, 1996 4. Ashley Thompson, 2008 5. Lindsay Culp, 1998 6. CiCi Peterson, 2001 7. Amy Palmer, 1993 8. Valerie Henderson, 2007 9. Lindsay Culp, 1997 10. Katelyn Rowland, 2013 Valerie Henderson, 2004

Goals Against Average 19 15 13 12 12 11 11 10 10 10 10

(Minimum 500 minutes played)

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

Katelyn Rowland, 2014 Ashley Thompson, 2008 Katelyn Rowland, 2013 CiCi Peterson, 2000 Gretchen Overgaard, 1994 Valerie Henderson, 2005 Sarah Lombardo, 2002 Katelyn Rowland, 2012 CiCi Peterson, 2001 10. Valerie Henderson, 2007

0.245 0.247 0.273 0.44 0.52 0.53 0.56 0.568 0.57 0.60

Wins

103 93 91 82 81 74 70 69 68 65 65

1. Katelyn Rowland, 2013 Ashley Thompson, 2008 3. Katelyn Rowland 2014 Chante’ Sandiford, 2009 5. Valerie Henderson, 2007 Valerie Henderson, 2005 7. Teagan Micah, 2017 CiCi Peterson, 2000 9. Valerie Henderson, 2006 Valerie Henderson, 2004 Sarah Lombardo, 2002 CiCi Peterson, 2001

22 22 21 21 20 20 19 19 18 18 18 18

NCAA Tournament Single-Season Records Points 1. Sydney Leroux, 2009 2. Kara Lang, 2005 3. Lauren Cheney, 2009 Danesha Adams, 2005 5. Ashley Sanchez, 2018 Danesha Adams, 2006

16 15 14 14 11 11

Goals 1. 2. 3. 4.

Sydney Leroux, 2009 Kara Lang, 2005 Danesha Adams, 2005 Lauren Cheney, 2009 Danesha Adams, 2006

8 7 6 5 5

Assists 1. Ashley Sanchez, 2018 2. Sam Mewis, 2013 Christina DiMartino, 2007 4. Ashley Sanchez, 2017 Lauren Cheney, 2009 Lauren Wilmoth, 2009 McCall Zerboni, 2005 Iris Mora, 2005 Iris Mora, 2004

Sydney Leroux

Christina DiMartino

Katelyn Rowland

32

7 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4


CAREER RECORDS

Shots 1. Traci Arkenberg, 1994-97 2. Lauren Cheney, 2006-09 3. Danesha Adams, 2004-07 4. Sydney Leroux, 2008-11 5. Sam Mewis, 2011-14 6. Bristyn Davis, 2002-06 7. Kristina Larsen, 2006-09 8. Lindsay Greco, 2000-04 9. Zakiya Bywaters, 2009-12 10. Kara Lang, 2005-09

Saves 451 381 320 314 250 227 225 213 205 200

1. Lindsay Culp, 1996-99 2. Valerie Henderson, 2004-07 3. Katelyn Rowland, 2011-14 4. Teagan Micah, 2016-pres. 5. CiCi Peterson, 1998-01 6. Gretchen Overgaard, 1994-95 7. Chante’ Sandiford, 2009-11 8. Ashley Thompson, 2004-08 9. Amy Palmer, 1993 10. Sarah Lombardo, 2001-04

Hat Tricks 1. Traci Arkenberg, 1994-97 2. Sydney Leroux, 2008-11 3. Danesha Adams, 2004-07 Sarah-Gayle Swanson, 2000-03

Shutouts 5 4 2 2

1. 2. 3. 4.

Katelyn Rowland, 2011-14 Valerie Henderson, 2004-07 Lindsay Culp, 1996-99 Teagan Micah, 2016-pres. CiCi Peterson, 1998-01 6. Chante’ Sandiford, 2009-11 7. Ashley Thompson, 2004-08 8. Gretchen Overgaard, 1994-95 9. Sarah Lombardo, 2001-04 10. Arianna Criscione, 2003-04

16 players tied with one last by Hailie Mace (Aug. 24, 2017)

Games Played Lauren Cheney

Points 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

Lauren Cheney, 2006-09 Traci Arkenberg, 1994-97 Danesha Adams, 2004-07 Sydney Leroux, 2008-11 Iris Mora, 2002-05 Sam Mewis, 2011-14 Staci Duncan, 1998-01 Sarah-Gayle Swanson, 2000-03 Tracey Milburn, 1998-00 Venus James, 1997-99

173 169 140 126 104 94 88 87 81 81

1. McCall Zerboni, 2005-08 2. Lindsay Greco, 2000-04 3. Lauren Barnes, 2007-10 Dea Cook, 2006-09 Lauren Wilmoth, 2006-09 Christina DiMartino, 2005-08 7. Valerie Henderson, 2004-07 Stacy Lindstrom, 2002-06 Kendal Billingsley, 2001-04 10. Caprice Dydasco, 2011-14 Danesha Adams, 2004-07

98 97 96 96 96 96 95 95 95 94 94

Lauren Barnes

1. Lauren Barnes, 2007-10 Lauren Wilmoth, 2006-09 Christina DiMartino, 2005-08 4. Valerie Henderson, 2004-07 5. Abby Dahlkemper, 2011-14 Danesha Adams, 2004-07 7. Jenna Richmond, 2010-13 8. Caprice Dydasco, 2011-14 Katelyn Rowland, 2011-14 Kylie Wright, 2007-10

(Former players only. Min. 1,000 minutes played)

95 95 95 94 92 92 90 89 89 89

1. Traci Arkenberg, 1994-97 2. Lauren Cheney, 2006-09 3. Sydney Leroux, 2008-11 Danesha Adams, 2004-07 5. Hailie Mace, 2015-18 Kara Lang, 2005-09 Kristina Larsen, 2006-09 8. Zakiya Bywaters, 2009-12 Iris Mora, 2002-05 Sarah-Gayle Swanson, 2000-03 Staci Duncan, 1998-01

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Ashley Thompson, 2004-08 Katelyn Rowland, 2011-14 Valerie Henderson, 2004-07 Sarah Lombardo, 2001-03 Arianna Criscione, 2003-04 Gretchen Overgaard, 1994-95 7. Chante’ Sandiford, 2009-11 8. CiCi Peterson, 1998-01 9. Lindsay Culp, 1996-99 10. Amy Palmer, 1993

0.39 0.40 0.63 0.64 0.66 0.66 0.73 0.76 0.96 1.39

Wins

Multiple Goal Games

71 71 60 57 35 35 33 33 31 30 30

55 38 31 26 26 17 16 15 14 7

Goals Against Average

Games Started

Goals 1. Lauren Cheney, 2006-09 Traci Arkenberg, 1994-97 3. Danesha Adams, 2004-07 4. Sydney Leroux, 2008-11 5. Sarah-Gayle Swanson, 2000-03 Staci Duncan, 1998-01 7. Iris Mora, 2002-05 Tracey Milburn, 1998-00 9. Sam Mewis, 2011-14 10. Kristina Larsen, 2006-09 Venus James, 1997-00

265 240 202 199 177 160 128 100 70 54

18 16 15 15 6 6 6 5 5 5 5

1. Valerie Henderson, 2004-07 2. Katelyn Rowland, 2011-14 3. Lindsay Culp, 1996-99 4. Teagan Micah, 2016-pres. 5. CiCi Peterson, 1998-01 6. Chante’ Sandiford, 2009-11 7. Sarah Lombardo, 2001-03 8. Ashley Thompson, 2004-08 9. Gretchen Overgaard, 1994-95 10. Arianna Criscione, 2003-04

76 73 52 46 45 37 26 25 20 14

Assists 1. Iris Mora, 2002-05 2. Sarah Killion, 2011-14 Sam Mewis, 2011-14 4. Lauren Cheney, 2006-09 5. Christina DiMartino, 2005-08 6. Ashley Sanchez, 2017-pres. Traci Arkenberg, 1994-97 8. Lauren Barnes, 2007-10 9. Caprice Dydasco, 2011-14 Jenna Richmond, 2010-13 Lauren Wilmoth, 2006-09

38 32 32 31 30 27 27 25 23 23 23

Game-Winning Goals 1. Lauren Cheney, 2006-09 2. Danesha Adams, 2004-07 Traci Arkenberg, 1994-97 4. Sydney Leroux, 2008-11 5. Darian Jenkins, 2013-16 Iris Mora, 2002-05 Sarah-Gayle Swanson, 2000-03 7. Staci Duncan, 1998-01 8. Stephanie Rigamat, 2000-01 9. Sam Mewis, 2011-14 Kristina Larsen, 2006-09 10. Venus James, 1997-00

28 26 26 23 14 14 14 13 12 11 11 10

Iris Mora

NCAA Tournament Career Records Goals

Points 1. 2. 3. 4.

Danesha Adams, 2004-07 Lauren Cheney, 2006-09 Kara Lang, 2005-09 McCall Zerboni, 2005-08 Iris Mora, 2002-05 6. Christina DiMartino, 2005-08 7. Jessie Fleming, 2016-pres. Sydney Leroux, 2008-11 8. Sam Mewis, 2011-14 Kristina Larsen, 2006-09 10. Ashley Sanchez, 2017-pres.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Danesha Adams, 2004-07 Lauren Cheney, 2006-09 Kara Lang, 2005-09 Sydney Leroux, 2008-11 McCall Zerboni, 2005-08 Jessie Fleming, 2016-pres. Hailie Mace, 2015-18 Taylor Smith, 2012-14 Kristina Larsen, 2006-09 Iris Mora, 2002-05 other: Anika Rodriguez, 2016-pres.

41 38 24 21 21 19 18 18 16 16 15

33

Assists 19 14 10 9 7 6 6 6 6 6 4

1. Ashley Sanchez, 2017-pres. 2. Lauren Cheney, 2006-09 3. Christina DiMartino, 2005-08 Iris Mora, 2002-05 5. Sam Mewis, 2011-14 6. Lauren Wilmoth, 2006-09 McCall Zerboni, 2005-08 8. Jessie Fleming, 2016-pres. Sarah Killion, 2011-14 10. Delanie Sheehan, 2017-pres.

11 10 9 9 8 7 7 6 6 5


TEAM RECORDS/MISCELLANEOUS RECORDS

Points 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Shots

2009 2014 2000 2005 2007

214 208 205 198 190

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Goals

501 492 470 465 456

Saves

1. 2000 2. 2009 2005 4. 2014 5. 2007

76 70 70 68 63

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Assists 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

2003 2008 2001 2000 2005

74 72 65 64 62

109 94 91 88 83

1. 2014 2008 3. 2013 4. 2000 5. 2005 1994

11 vs. So. Calif. College (9/7/93) 9 vs. Miss. Valley St. (11/11/05) 8 vs. Notre Dame (11/29/97) 49 vs. So. Calif. College (9/7/93) 41 vs. Louisville (9/7/01) 2 vs. Santa Clara (11/20/99) 2 vs. Santa Clara (11/20/99) 0 vs. So. Calif. College (9/7/93) 0 vs. Miss. Valley St. (11/11/05) 0 vs. Texas A&M (11/23/02)

Individual (Single-Game) 4, Sydney Leroux (11/13/09 vs. Boise St., 8/22/10 vs. Cal Poly)

Most Assists Most Points Most Saves Quickest Goal Scored

4, Lauren Cheney (9/23/07 vs. Hawai’i) 4, Danesha Adams (11/25/05 vs. Virginia) 4, Traci Arkenberg (9/29/96 vs. UC Irvine) 4, Ashley Sanchez (11/16/18 vs. Minnesota) 9, Traci Arkenberg (9/29/96 vs. UC Irvine) 17, Gretchen Overgaard (10/29/94 vs. Stanford) 00:11, Stephanie Rigamat (9/24/00 vs. USD)

Streaks (Team) Consecutive Wins Unbeaten Streak Consecutive Home Wins Home Unbeaten Streak Consecutive Shutouts

17 (9/23/07 - 11/30/07) 44 (9/8/13 - 11/23/14) 67 (11/4/05 - 10/1/10) 73 (9/11/05 - 10/1/10) 10 (8/30/08 - 10/5/08)

Streaks (Individual Single-Season) Consecutive Shutouts

10, Katelyn Rowland (10/13/14-11/23/14) Consecutive Shutout Minutes 969, Katelyn Rowland (10/13/14 - 11/28/14) Consecutive Games With a Point 13, Ashley Sanchez (9/30 - 11/24/18)

Consecutive Games With a Goal

9, Traci Arkenberg (9/26 - 10/31/97)

Freshman Season Records Goals Assists Points Game-Winning Goals Shots Saves Shutouts Wins GAA (Min. 10 Games)

1. 2. 3, 4. 5.

0.23 0.25 0.30 0.41 0.45

1. 2008 (14-0-0) 2007 (14-0-0) 2006 (16-0-0) 2009 (12-0-0) 2000 (8-0-0)

Wins 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000

1. 2013 (9-0-1) 2. 2008 (8-0-1) 2005 (8-0-1) 4. 2014 (7-0-1) 5. 2001 (10-1-0) 1997 (10-1-0)

7 (3-2-2) 7 (4-0-3) 7 (3-1-3) 6 (3-0-3) 6 (3-1-2)

2008 (22-1-2) 2014 (21-1-2) 2013 (22-1-3) 2005 (22-2-2) 2007 (20-2-2)

.920 .917 .904 .885 .875

Shutouts

1. 2013 2008 2005 3. 2014 2006 2009

22 22 22 21 21 21

1. 2014 2008 3. 2013 2005 5. 2003 2000

19 19 18 18 15 15

.950 .944 .944 .938 .909 .909

Cumulative Statistics (UCLA)

Team (Single Game)

Most Goals

Winning Percentage

1. 2016 2003 1994 4. 2013 2005

2008 2014 2013 2000 2005

Best Road Record 6 6 8 10 12 13

Miscellaneous Records Most Goals Scored (All Games) Most Goals Scored (vs. Division I) Most Goals Allowed Most Shots Taken (All Games) Most Shots Taken (vs. Division I) Fewest Shots Taken (All Games) Fewest Shots Taken (vs. Division I) Fewest Shots Allowed (All Games) Fewest Shots Allowed (vs. Division I)

OT Games (Record)

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Best Home Record

1994 2016 1996 2008 1998

Fewest Goals Allowed

2009 2014 2013 2007 2018

Goals Against Average

19, Lauren Cheney (2006) 12, Ashley Sanchez (2017) 40, Kara Lang (2005) 8, Lauren Cheney (2006) 110, Traci Arkenberg (1994) 103, Gretchen Overgaard (1994) 12, Valerie Henderson (2004) 18, Valerie Henderson (2004) 0.52, Gretchen Overgaard (1994)

Year Shots 1993 256 1994 331 1995 301 1996 296 1997 371 1998 372 1999 307 2000 465 2001 470 2002 416 2003 501 2004 367 2005 456 2006 452 2007 392 2008 492 2009 438 2010 337 2011 396 2012 403 2013 444 2014 451 2015 220 2016 269 2017 392 2018 380 Totals 10036

C-E 5-1 6-0 4-1 8-0 5-0 7-0 7-0 9-0 13-1 9-0 9-0 22-0 21-1 12-0 11-1 6-0 13-1 9-0 7-0 4-0 10-1 7-0 13-2 13-0 12-0 19-0 261-9

G A 43 32 24 22 39 34 37 34 56 44 50 41 52 39 76 53 51 27 55 44 57 57 50 43 70 58 53 39 63 64 60 61 70 74 34 31 44 48 53 54 51 65 68 72 23 16 42 48 56 61 61 62 1338 1235

Pts 118 70 112 108 156 141 143 205 129 154 171 143 198 145 190 181 214 99 136 160 167 208 62 132 173 184 3899

GA 23 13 18 21 23 18 32 10 14 13 19 17 12 19 16 6 22 20 12 13 8 6 32 22 21 17 447

GAA 1.25 0.64 0.84 1.02 1.05 0.79 1.50 0.41 0.60 0.57 0.73 0.66 0.45 0.75 0.65 0.23 0.87 0.84 0.55 0.55 0.30 0.25 1.65 0.96 0.82 0.75 0.73

SHO 6 8 9 8 10 11 9 15 13 12 15 13 18 13 12 19 12 9 13 14 18 19 4 9 9 12 310

Saves W-L-T (conf.) 71 10-6-1 (—) 109 11-4-3 (—) 75 14-4-2 (5-2-0, 2nd) 91 11-7-1 (4-3-0, T-4th) 73 19-3-0 (9-0-0, 1st) 83 17-4-1 (7-2, T-1st) 68 15-5-1 (6-2-1, 3rd) 66 19-4-1 (6-2-1, 3rd) 76 20-3-0 (8-1-0, 1st) 38 18-4-0 (8-1-0, 2nd) 60 20-2-3 (8-0-1, 1st) 70 18-7-0 (6-3-0, T-1st) 57 22-2-2 (7-0-2, 1st) 73 21-4-0 (8-1-0, 1st) 78 20-2-2 (9-0-0, 1st) 88 22-1-2 (9-0-0, 1st) 74 21-3-1 (8-1-0, 2nd) 71 13-8-2 (5-4-0, 4th) 53 16-1-4 (8-1-2, 2nd) 59 18-3-2 (8-2-1, 2nd) 67 22-1-3 (9-0-2, 1st) 49 21-1-2 (10-0-1, 1st) 67 8-10-1 (4-6-1, 8th) 94 15-5-2 (7-3-1, T-4th) 61 19-3-3 (8-2-1, T-2nd) 60 17-3-2 (9-2-0, 2nd) 1831 447-100-41 (176-38-16)

Cumulative Statistics (Opponents) Year 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Totals

Shots 158 252 210 234 201 203 182 151 173 109 166 192 155 202 178 201 219 201 141 159 184 123 207 272 199 176 4848 34

C-E 4-0 4-1 7-1 8-0 11-1 10-2 18-2 5-0 15-1 12-0 9-0 5-1 10-1 10-0 7-0 10-0 11-0 16-1 7-0 15-0 10-0 10-0 21-0 16-0 23-2 17-0 291-13

G 23 13 18 21 23 18 32 10 14 13 19 17 12 19 16 6 22 20 12 13 8 6 32 22 21 17 447

A 15 9 12 16 19 15 22 9 5 8 16 9 13 21 15 5 23 17 12 12 7 4 24 17 20 16 361

Pts 61 35 48 58 65 51 86 29 33 34 54 43 37 59 47 17 67 57 36 38 23 16 88 61 62 50 1255

GA 43 24 39 37 56 50 52 76 51 55 57 50 70 53 63 60 70 34 44 53 51 68 23 42 56 61 1338

GAA 2.35 1.18 1.83 1.79 2.55 2.20 2.43 3.09 2.19 2.43 2.18 1.94 2.61 2.10 2.54 2.33 2.76 1.44 2.00 2.25 1.89 2.78 1.19 1.83 2.18 2.70 2.20

SHO 2 6 1 2 2 2 3 3 2 3 3 3 4 2 1 3 1 9 2 1 2 1 4 2 3 2 69

Saves 103 110 103 105 123 137 122 170 180 153 177 149 146 140 137 176 149 110 133 130 148 163 67 84 134 145 3494

Total Min 1650 1830 1920 1860 1980 2047 1925 2213 2099 2039 2352 2321 2414 2275 2228 2315 2287 2132 1977 2119 2433 2200 1742 2064 2114 2035 54771


YEARLY LEADERS 1995 Traci Arkenberg 1994 Traci Arkenberg 1993 Sonja Munevar

6 7 3

Shots 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009

Stephanie Rigamat

Danesha Adams

Points 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

Assists

Ashley Sanchez Hailie Mace Jessie Fleming Darian Jenkins, Kodi Lavrusky Sam Mewis Darian Jenkins Zakiya Bywaters Sydney Leroux Sydney Leroux Sydney Leroux Lauren Cheney Lauren Cheney Lauren Cheney Danesha Adams Bristyn Davis Iris Mora Lindsay Greco Stephanie Rigamat Stephanie Rigamat Jessica Winton Staci Duncan Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg Sonja Munevar

35 33 27 10 45 27 34 35 27 48 31 57 39 46 34 40 21 30 37 29 31 52 42 43 32 32

Ashley Sanchez Hailie Mace Jessie Fleming Darian Jenkins Sam Mewis Darian Jenkins Zakiya Bywaters Sydney Leroux Sydney Leroux Sydney Leroux Kristina Larsen Lauren Cheney Lauren Cheney Danesha Adams Bristyn Davis Iris Mora Sarah-Gayle Swanson Stephanie Rigamat Sarah-Gayle Swanson Jessica Winton Staci Duncan Tracey Milburn Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg Sonja Munevar

10 15 11 5 16 11 15 16 13 23 13 23 19 21 14 13 9 13 14 12 11 11 22 17 18 14 13

Goals 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

Ashley Sanchez Ashley Sanchez Anika Rodriguez Zoey Goralski Sam Mewis Sarah Killion Jenna Richmond Sam Mewis Jenna Richmond Lauren Barnes Lauren Cheney Lauren Barnes Lauren Cheney Kara Lang Christina DiMartino Christina DiMartino Iris Mora Iris Mora Iris Mora Lindsay Greco Sarah-Gayle Swanson Stephanie Rigamat Bethany Bogart Staci Duncan Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg Michele Lieberman Kristy Howard

15 12 8 5 13 12 7 7 7 6 10 10 9 9 12 7 15 9 14 7 6 11 7 9 8 8 7 4 4 10

Saves 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

Game-Winning Goals 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996

Hailie Mace, Jessie Fleming Hailie Mace Darian Jenkins Annie Alvarado, Amber Munerlyn Sam Mewis Darian Jenkins Zakiya Bywaters Sydney Leroux Sydney Leroux Sydney Leroux Lauren Cheney Lauren Cheney Lauren Cheney Danesha Adams Danesha Adams Iris Mora Sarah-Gayle Swanson Mary-Frances Monroe Stephanie Rigamat Staci Duncan Staci Duncan Traci Arkenberg Traci Arkenberg

Ashley Sanchez 78 Hailie Mace 97 Jessie Fleming, Anika Rodriguez 42 Darian Jenkins 32 Sam Mewis 91 Sam Mewis 73 Zakiya Bywaters 90 Sydney Leroux 89 Sydney Leroux 77 Sydney Leroux 98 Lauren Cheney 98 Lauren Cheney 99 Lauren Cheney 88 Lauren Cheney 96 Kara Lang 101 Bristyn Davis 98 Bristyn Davis 82 Lindsay Greco 65 Mary-Frances Monroe 106 Tracey Milburn 83 Staci Duncan 54 Tracey Milburn 66 Traci Arkenberg 129 Traci Arkenberg 106 Traci Arkenberg 106 Traci Arkenberg 110 Sonja Munevar 49

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

Teagan Micah Teagan Micah Teagan Micah Arielle Schechtman Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Chante’ Sandiford Chante’ Sandiford Ashley Thompson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Arianna Criscione Sarah Lombardo CiCi Peterson CiCi Peterson CiCi Peterson Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Gretchen Overgaard Gretchen Overgaard Amy Palmer

45 61 93 26 49 65 46 42 63 60 82 69 61 45 65 37 36 74 60 43 81 68 91 57 103 70

Shutouts 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004

35

Teagan Micah Teagan Micah Teagan Micah Arielle Schechtman Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Chante’ Sandiford Chante’ Sandiford Ashley Thompson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson

8 9 9 2 19 15 11 10 8 9 13 8 8 10 12

2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

Arianna Criscione Sarah Lombardo CiCi Peterson CiCi Peterson Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Gretchen Overgaard Gretchen Overgaard Amy Palmer

7 9 12 15 6 11 9 8 7 8 5

Teagan Micah Teagan Micah Teagan Micah Cassie Sternbach, Siri Ervik Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Chante’ Sandiford Chante’ Sandiford Ashley Thompson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Arianna Criscione Sarah Lombardo CiCi Peterson CiCi Peterson CiCi Peterson Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Gretchen Overgaard Gretchen Overgaard Amy Palmer

12 19 15 3 21 22 17 13 13 21 22 20 18 20 18 13 18 18 19 8 17 17 11 11 9 9

Wins 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

Goals Against Average 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

Teagan Micah Teagan Micah Teagan Micah Cassie Sternbach Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Katelyn Rowland Chante’ Sandiford Chante’ Sandiford Ashley Thompson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Valerie Henderson Arianna Criscione Sarah Lombardo CiCi Peterson CiCi Peterson Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Lindsay Culp Gretchen Overgaard Gretchen Overgaard Amy Palmer

0.74 0.75 0.96 1.40 0.25 0.27 0.57 0.61 0.85 0.64 0.25 0.60 0.72 0.53 0.67 0.68 0.56 0.57 0.44 1.25 0.82 0.96 1.02 0.80 0.52 1.39


ALL-TIME RESULTS (1993-2018)

1995 UCLA Bruins

2000 UCLA Bruins

1993 Joy Fawcett — 10-6-1

9/7 9/10 9/13 9/16 9/16 9/26 9/29 10/6 10/8 10/9 10/17 10/22 10/26 10/29 10/30 11/6 11/7

@ So. Cal. College Pepperdine vs. USC Cal State Fullerton UCSD CS San Bernardino Cal Baptist @ Pepperdine @ LMU Chico State UC Irvine @ Cal State Fullerton LMU USC Washington St. @ San Diego St. @ San Diego

W , 11-0 L, 2-4 (OT) W, 6-0 W, 3-1 L, 2-3 (OT) L, 1-2 W, 1-0 L, 0-4 W, 1-0 T, 1-1 (OT) W, 3-1 W, 1-0 W, 3-1 W, 2-0 L, 2-4 (OT) W, 4-1 L, 0-1

1994 Joy Fawcett — 11-4-3

9/3 9/5 9/10 9/15 9/16 9/18 9/25 9/27 10/1 10/3 10/6 10/9 10/12 10/21 10/23 10/30 11/5 11/6

@ LMU San Diego Santa Clara vs. Washington St. vs. Hawaii @ New Mexico Cal Poly SLO @ USC Arizona @ UC Irvine @ Pepperdine UCSB USC Cal State Fullerton San Diego St. Stanford @ California @ San Francisco

W, 4-1 W, 2-1 L, 0-2 T, 0-0 (OT) W, 1-0 W, 2-1(OT) L, 0-2 (OT) W, 1-0 W, 4-0 T, 0-0 (OT) W, 1-0 L, 0-2 W, 3-1 (OT) W, 1-0 W, 1-0 T, 1-1 (OT) L, 0-1 W, 3-1

1995 Joy Fawcett — 14-4-2 / 5-2 Pac-10 (2nd)

9/2 9/3 9/8 9/9 9/16 9/19 9/22 9/24 9/29 10/1 10/4 10/6 10/13 10/17 10/22

vs. Colgate vs. Virginia @ San Diego St. @ San Diego @ Arizona USC @ UCSB St. Mary’s Washington UC Irvine @ Cal State Fullerton California Washington St. LMU @ Stanford

W, 5-1 T, 1-1 (OT) T, 2-2 (OT) W, 1-0 W, 3-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 2-0 W, 1-0 L, 1-3 (OT) W, 1-0 W, 2-0 W, 1-0 W, 2-1 L, 1-2

10/30 10/27 10/30 11/4 11/11

@ CSUN W, 3-0 @ Oregon St. L, 0-3 Nebraska W, 1-0 (OT) vs. San Francisco W, 3-1 Washington (NCAA 1st Rd.) L, 1-2

9/12 9/13 9/18 9/20 9/23 9/27 9/30 10/3 10/4 10/9 10/11 10/16 10/18 10/23 10/25 11/1 11/6 11/8 11/14

1996 Joy Fawcett — 11-7-1 / 4-3 Pac-10 (4th)

9/5 9/8 9/10 9/13 9/15 9/22 9/25 9/27 9/29 10/2 10/6 10/16 10/18 10/20 10/23 10/27 10/29 11/1 11/3

@ Cal Poly SLO Arizona @ CSUN @ North Carolina Duke Hawai’i Fresno St. San Diego @ UC Irvine Cal State Fullerton San Diego St. @ Pepperdine @ Washington @ Washington St. @ USC @ California @ San Francisco Oregon St. Stanford

L, 0-1 W, 6-0 L, 1-2 L, 1-3 L, 1-2 W, 2-0 W, 3-0 T, 0-0 (OT) W, 5-1 W, 1-0 W, 2-1 W, 3-2 W, 1-0 (OT) W, 2-0 L, 2-3 L, 1-2 (OT) W, 3-2 (OT) W, 2-0 L, 1-2 (OT)

1999 Jillian Ellis — 15-5-1 / 6-2-1 Pac-10 (3rd)

8/28 9/4 9/6 9/10 9/12 9/17 9/22 9/26 10/1 10/3 10/8 10/10 10/15 10/17 10/22 10/24 10/29 10/31 11/7 11/13 11/20

1997 Joy Fawcett — 19-3 / 9-0 Pac-10 (1st)

8/30 9/2 9/5 9/7 9/10 9/19 9/20 9/26 9/29 10/5 10/10 10/12 10/17 10/19 10/26 10/31 11/2 11/7 11/9 11/16 11/22 11/29

@ San Diego St. San Jose St. @ Cal State Fullerton Pepperdine UC Irvine @ Rutgers vs. Connecticut @ San Diego BYU San Francisco @ California @ Stanford @ Oregon @ Oregon St. USC Arizona Arizona St. Washington Washington St. @ Portland (NCAA 1st Rd.) @ SMU (NCAA 2nd Rd.) @ Notre Dame (NCAA QF)

W, 2-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 3-0 W, 3-2 W, 2-0 L, 0-1 W, 4-1 L, 1-3 W, 3-1 W, 1-0 W, 2-1 W, 6-0 W, 3-0 W, 3-1 W, 2-1 W, 3-0 W, 2-0 W, 4-0 W, 1-0 W, 3-2 L, 0-8

W, 4-1 L, 1-3 W, 1-0 W, 7-0 W, 1-0 W, 2-0 W, 5-1 W, 3-0 L, 0-4 W, 1-0 W, 5-0 W, 6-1 W, 2-1 T, 3-3 (OT) L, 0-6 W, 3-2 (OT) W, 2-0 L, 1-2 W, 3-0 San Diego (20) (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 2-1(OT) @ Santa Clara (1) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) L, 0-7

Jillian Ellis — 19-4-1 / 6-2-1 Pac-10 (3rd)

8/25 8/27 9/1 9/3 9/8 9/10 9/24 9/29 10/1 10/6 10/8 10/13 10/15

Todd Saldana — 17-4-1 / 7-2 Pac-10 (T-1st)

Navy Cal Poly SLO San Diego St.

@ Cal State Fullerton vs. Florida (4) vs. Maryland vs. UNC-Charlotte @ Wake Forest (25) UC Irvine Cal Poly SLO @ San Diego St. vs. North Carolina (3) vs. Texas Christian Arizona St. Arizona Washington St. Washington @ Stanford (10) @ California @ Oregon St. @ Oregon USC (11)

2000

1998 9/1 9/4 9/6

vs. Loyola (Baltimore) W, 5-0 vs. UNC-Charlotte W, 1-0 Nebraska W, 5-1 vs. Baylor W, 1-0 Cal State Fullerton W, 2-1 (2OT) San Diego T, 2-2 (2OT) @ UC Irvine W, 1-0 vs. Villanova W, 1-0 @ Hawaii W, 4-1 @ Washington W, 2-0 @ Washington St. W, 3-0 California L, 1-2 (2OT) Stanford W, 2-1 Oregon W, 2-0 Oregon St. W, 4-1 @ USC L, 4-5 @ Arizona W, 4-0 @ ASU W, 2-1 BYU (NCAA 2nd Rd.) L, 0-2

W, 3-0 W, 1-0 L, 0-1

36

@ Clemson (6) vs. Georgia St. vs. Georgia @ Florida (10) vs. Vanderbilt vs. Baylor @ San Diego Fresno St. @ LMU Marquette (19) @ USC (21) Oregon St. Oregon

L, 0-1 W, 5-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-0 W, 2-0 W, 3-0 W, 3-0 W, 3-0 W, 3-0 W, 5-1 T, 1-1(2OT) W, 3-0 W, 8-0

10/20 10/22 10/27 10/29 11/3 11/5 11/11 11/19 11/25 12/1 12/3

@ Washington St. W, 1-0 @ Washington (3) L, 0-1 (OT) Stanford (18) W, 5-0 California (6) W, 4-1 @ Arizona St. L, 0-1 (2OT) @ Arizona W, 8-0 USC (22) (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 3-0 Texas A&M (9) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 4-0 @ Clemson (5) (NCAA QF) W, 2-1 vs. Portland (12) (NCAA SF) W, 1-0 vs. North Carolina (4) (NCAA Final) L, 1-2

2001 Jillian Ellis — 20-3 / 8-1 Pac-10 (1st)

9/1 9/3 9/7 9/9 9/21 9/28 9/30 10/5 10/7 10/12 10/14 10/18 10/21 10/26 10/28 11/2 11/4 11/9 11/11 11/16 11/18 11/25 12/2

vs. Portland 93) W, 1-0 vs. Denver W, 5-1 vs. Louisville W, 7-0 vs. Syracuse W, 2-0 @ San Diego W, 2-0 @ James Madison W, 2-1 @ William & Mary (22) W, 2-0 LMU W, 3-0 Princeton (25) W, 2-0 Arizona W, 2-0 Arizona St. W, 3-2 @ Santa Clara (3) L, 0-3 USC W, 2-1 @ Oregon W, 2-0 @ Oregon St. L, 1-2 Washington (16) W, 1-0 Washington St. W, 3-1 @ California (17) W, 2-0 @ Stanford (4) W, 1-0 Cal State Fullerton (NCAA 1st Rd.)W,3-0 Pepperdine (25) (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 2-1 Dayton (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 3-1 Florida (9) (NCAA QF) L, 0-1 (2OT)

2002 Jillian Ellis — 18-4 / 8-1 Pac-10 (2nd)

8/30 9/6 9/8 9/13 9/15 9/20 9/22 9/25 10/4 10/6 10/11 10/13 10/18 10/20 10/27 11/1 11/3 11/8 11/10

San Diego Virginia (5) Penn St. (12) vs. San Francisco @ Hawaii @ Fresno St. CSUN BYU Santa Clara (11) @ LMU California (5) Stanford (2) @ Arizona @ Arizona St. @ USC (17) Oregon Oregon St. @ Washington @ Washington St.

W, 6-0 W, 4-3 (OT) L, 0-1 (2OT) W, 4-1 W, 2-0 W, 3-0 W, 4-0 W, 6-0 L, 1-2 (OT) W, 3-2 W, 1-0 L, 0-1 W, 1-0 W, 3-0 W, 2-0 W, 2-0 W, 4-1 W, 2-1 W, 2-1


ALL-TIME RESULTS (1993-2017) 10/17 10/19 10/24 10/31 11/2 11/7 11/9 11/14 11/17 11/22 11/29 12/5

@ Arizona St. @ Arizona @ USC (9) Stanford (2) California @ Oregon St. @ Oregon Fresno State (NCAA 1st Rd.) San Diego (NCAA 2nd Rd.) USC (8) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) Duke (15) (NCAA QF) vs. North Carolina (4) (NCAA SF)

W, 3-0 W, 2-0 W, 2-1 W, 1-0 W, 3-0 W, 2-1 W, 2-0 W, 5-0 W, 1-0 W, 1-0 W, 6-1 L, 0-1

2009 Jillian Ellis — 21-3-1 / 8-1 Pac-10 (2nd)

The 2003 Bruins

11/15 LMU (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 4-0 11/17 USC (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 1-0 (2OT) 11/23 Texas A&M (4) (NCAA 3rd Rd.)L, 0-0 (PKs)

2003 Jillian Ellis — 20-2-3 / 8-0-1 Pac-10 (1st)

8/29 8/31 9/3 9/5 9/12 9/14 9/19 9/21 10/3 10/7 10/9 10/11 10/17 10/19 10/24 10/26 10/29 11/2 11/7 11/9 11/14 11/16 11/21 11/28 12/5

@ Santa Clara (1) T, 1-1 (2OT) @ Pepperdine (13) W, 2-0 UCSB T, 0-0 (2OT) St. Mary’s W, 1-0 (OT) vs. Wisc.-Milwaukee W, 4-0 vs. Oakland W, 6-2 vs. North Carolina (1) L, 2-5 @ Duke (17) W, 2-1 @ UNLV W, 1-0 @ San Diego W, 2-0 Washington St. W, 2-1 (OT) Washington (9) W, 3-2 (2OT) @ Stanford T, 0-0 (2OT) @ California W, 1-0 Arizona St. W, 4-1 Arizona W, 4-0 LMU W, 5-0 USC W, 2-0 @ Oregon St. W, 3-1 @ Oregon W, 3-2 (2OT) San Diego (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 2-0 Pepperdine (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 2-0 Kansas (13) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 1-0 Penn St. (5) (NCAA QF) W, 4-0 vs. North Carolina (1) (NCAA SF) L, 0-3

2004 Jillian Ellis — 18-7 / 6-3 Pac-10 (T-1st)

8/27 8/29 9/5 9/10 9/12 9/17 9/19 9/24 10/1 10/3 10/8 10/10 10/15 10/17 10/22 10/24 10/29 1/31 11/7

San Diego @ LMU UCSB @ Virginia (5) vs. Maryland @ SMU (21) @ Texas A&M (15) Pepperdine (24) Utah Santa Clara (15) Oregon St. Oregon @ Washington St. @ Washington (7) Stanford (18) California @ Arizona St. @ Arizona @ USC

W, 4-0 W, 2-1 W, 6-1 L, 1-3 L, 1-2 W, 2-0 W, 1-0 W, 1-0 L, 1-2 W, 1-0 W, 4-1 W, 6-0 L, 0-1 W, 5-1 W, 1-0 L, 0-1 (2OT) W, 1-0 L, 0-1 W, 3-2 (2OT)

11/12 11/14 11/20 11/27 12/3 12/5

Pepperdine (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 1-0 San Diego (21) (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 3-0 Duke (18) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 2-0 @ Ohio St. (8) (NCAA QF) W, 1-0 vs. Princeton (12) (NCAA SF) W, 2-0 vs. Notre Dame (2) (NCAA Final) L, 1-1 (4-3 PKs)

10/22 10/27 10/29 11/3 11/5 11/10 11/12 11/17 11/24 12/1

2005 Jillian Ellis — 22-2-2 / 7-0-2 Pac-10 (1st)

8/26 8/28 9/2 9/4 9/9 9/11 9/16 9/18 9/23 9/28 10/2 10/7 10/14 10/16 10/21 10/23 10/28 10/30 11/4 11/6 11/11 11/13 11/19 11/25 12/2 12/4

Long Beach St. W, 3-0 @ San Diego (25) W, 4-1 vs. Princeton (14) W, 1-0 vs. Florida Atlantic W, 2-0 Penn St. (4) L, 0-1 (2OT) Colorado W, 2-0 @ Santa Clara (4) W, 2-1 (OT) @ St. Mary’s W, 4-0 Denver W, 1-0 @ UCSB W, 5-0 @ Pepperdine (10) W, 2-1 USC W, 3-2 (2OT) @ Oregon W, 3-0 @ Oregon St. W, 3-0 Washington W, 4-0 Washington St. T, 0-0 (2OT) @ California (9) W, 2-0 @ Stanford (17) T, 0-0 (2OT) Arizona (23) W, 2-1 (2OT) Arizona St. W, 2-1 Miss. Valley St. (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 9-0 Colorado (19) (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 3-0 Marquette (12) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 4-0 Virginia (6) (NCAA QF) W, 5-0 vs. Florida St. (7) (NCAA SF) W, 4-0 vs. Portland (1) (NCAA Final) L, 0-4

@ Arizona St. Washington Washington St. @ Oregon @ Oregon St. UNLV (NCAA 1st Rd.) Cal State Fullerton (NCAA 2nd Rd.) Florida (16) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) Portland (6) (NCAA QF) vs. North Carolina (1) (NCAA SF)

W, 2-1 W, 2-0 W, 2-0 L, 1-2 W, 4-0 W, 6-1 W, 3-1 W, 3-2 W, 2-1 L, 0-2

2007 Jillian Ellis — 20-2-2 / 9-0 Pac-10 (1st)

9/2 9/7 9/9 9/14 9/16 9/21 9/23 9/28 10/5 10/7 10/12 10/14 10/19 10/21 10/26 11/2 11/4 11/9 11/11 11/16 11/18 11/23 11/30 12/7

2006

vs. Texas (9) L, 1-2 Illinois W, 4-2 San Francisco W, 3-0 @ San Diego T, 0-0 (2OT) @ CSUN W, 3-1 @ Pepperdine T, 1-1 (2OT) Hawai’i W, 6-0 Portland (2) W, 2-1 (OT) @ San Diego St. W, 5-1 Santa Clara (5) W, 4-1 Oregon St. W, 1-0 Oregon W, 3-0 @ Stanford (2) W, 2-0 @ California (19) W, 2-0 USC (9) W, 2-0 Arizona St. W, 3-1 Arizona W, 3-0 @ Washington St. W, 2-0 @ Washington W, 3-0 Cal State Fullerton (NCAA 1st Rd.)W,3-1 Oklahoma St. (22) (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 4-0 Virginia (7) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 2-1 (OT) Portland (3) (NCAA QF) W, 3-2 (2OT) USC (9) (NCAA SF) L, 1-2

Jillian Ellis — 21-4 / 8-1 Pac-10 (1st)

8/25 8/27 9/1 9/3 9/8 9/10 9/15 9/22 9/24 9/29 10/1 10/6 10/8 10/15 10/20

@ Penn St. (3) vs. Maryland San Diego St. Long Beach St. Texas A&M (3) UConn (11) CSUN @ Santa Clara (5) Pepperdine (19) San Diego Gonzaga California (10) Stanford @ USC @ Arizona

2008

L, 1-3 W, 3-0 W, 1-0 W, 1-0 W, 2-1 W, 3-0 W, 1-0 L ,0-3 W, 3-0 W, 3-0 W, 1-0 W, 4-1 W, 2-0 W, 2-1(OT) W, 1-0

Jillian Ellis — 22-1-2 / 9-0 Pac-10 (1st)

8/26 8/30 9/1 9/7 9/12 9/14 9/19 9/21 9/25 10/3 10/5 10/10 10/12 37

UCSB @ Portland (6) @ Portland St. UC Irvine @ UConn (25) vs. Brown Miami New Mexico @ Santa Clara Pepperdine San Diego (19) Washington St. (25) Washington

W, 2-1 W, 1-0 W, 7-0 W, 3-0 W, 3-0 T, 0-0 (2OT) W, 3-0 W, 3-0 T, 0-0 (2OT) W, 1-0 W, 3-0 W, 2-1 W, 4-0

8/22 8/28 8/30 9/4 9/6 9/13 9/18 9/20 9/25 9/27 10/2 10/9 10/11 10/16 10/18 10/23 10/25 10/30 11/6 11/8 11/13 11/15 11/20 11/28 12/4

@ North Carolina (1) L, 2-7 at San Diego (15) T, 1-1 (2OT) at Long Beach St. W, 4-0 at Illinois (11) W, 2-1 vs. Florida (6) W, 3-0 Gonzaga W, 2-0 Utah W, 6-1 Missouri W, 5-0 at CSUN W, 2-0 at UCSB W, 3-1 at Pepperdine W, 2-0 Arizona W, 2-0 Arizona St. (20) W, 3-2(2OT) at California (17) W, 1-0 at Stanford (1) L, 0-2 Oregon W, 5-1 Oregon St. W, 3-0 USC (18) W, 2-1 at Washington W, 2-1 at Washington St. (17) W, 2-0 Boise State (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 7-1 San Diego St. (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 5-0 Virginia (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 3-0 Portland (2) (NCAA QF) W, 2-1 vs. Stanford (1) (NCAA SF) L, 1-2 (OT)

2010 Jillian Ellis — 13-8-2 / 5-4 Pac-10 (4th)

8/22 8/27 9/29 9/5 9/10 9/12 9/17 9/19 9/24 9/26 10/1 10/8 10/10 10/15 10/17 10/22 10/29 10/31 11/5 11/7 11/11 11/13 11/19

Cal Poly W, 7-0 @ Wisconsin (20) W, 1-0 vs. Northwestern L, 0-1 CSUN W, 4-1 Notre Dame (3) W, 2-1 (2OT) UCSB T, 1-1 (2OT) vs. Denver W, 4-2 @ Colorado L, 0-1 (2OT) San Diego W, 2-0 Santa Clara (10) W, 1-0 Pepperdine L, 0-1 California (16) W, 1-0 Stanford (1) L, 0-2 @ Oregon W, 3-1 @ Oregon St. L, 0-3 @ USC L, 0-1 Washington L, 0-1 Washington St. W, 2-0 @ Arizona W, 1-0 @ Arizona St. W, 3-0 BYU (25) (NCAA 1st Rd.)T, 0-0 (4-3 PKs) UCF (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 2-1 @ Stanford (1) (NCAA 3rd Rd.)L,0-3

2011 B.J. Snow — 16-1-4 / 8-1-2 Pac-12 (2nd)

8/19 8/26 8/28 9/2 9/4 9/9 9/11 9/17

@ CSUN @ Tennessee vs. Florida (8) @ Pepperdine (24) Rutgers SMU Fresno St. @ LMU

W, 2-0 W, 2-1 W, 2-0 T , 1-1 (2OT) W, 1-0 W, 1-0 W, 4-1 W, 3-1


ALL-TIME RESULTS (1993-2017) 9/23 9/30 10/2 10/7 10/9 10/14 10/21 10/23 10/28 10/30 11/4 11/12 11/18

Washington W, 1-0 Oregon W, 1-0 Oregon St. (23) W, 1-0 @ California T, 0-0 (2OT) @ Stanford (1) L, 1-4 @ Washington St. (25) T, 0-0 (2OT) Arizona W, 6-1 Arizona St. W, 2-0 @ Colorado W, 8-0 @ Utah W, 1-0 (OT) USC W, 5-2 New Mexico (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 1-0 San Diego (NCAA 2nd Rd.) T, 1-1 (L 2-3 PKs)

2012 B.J. Snow — 18-3-2 / 8-2-1 Pac-12 (2nd)

8/19 8/24 8/26 8/31 9/7 9/9 9/14 9/16 9/20 9/28 10/1 10/5 10/7 10/12 10/19 10/21 10/26 10/28 11/2 11/10 11/16 11/18 11/23

@ UMass W, 2-1 @ Fresno St. W, 2-0 Illinois (22) W, 2-0 Wisconsin (11) W, 2-0 LMU T, 1-1 (2OT) Tennessee (20) W, 1-0 Princeton W, 7-0 Pepperdine (18) W, 4-0 Washington St. T, 0-0 (2OT) @ Arizona W, 2-1 @ Arizona St. W, 4-1 @ Oregon W, 1-0 @ Oregon St. W, 4-1 @ Washington W, 1-0 Colorado W, 2-1 Utah W, 2-0 California (21) L, 1-4 Stanford (1) W, 3-0 @ USC L, 2-3 (OT) W, 1-0 Wisconsin (NCAA 1st Rd.) Kentucky (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 5-0 @ San Diego St. (4) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 3-0 @ Stanford (1) (NCAA QF) L, 1-2

2013 NCAA Champions Amanda Cromwell — 22-1-3 / 9-0-2 Pac12 (1st)

8/23 8/25 8/30 9/1 9/6 9/8 9/13 9/20 9/22 9/29 10/4 10/7 10/10 10/13 10/18 10/25 10/27 11/1 11/3 11/7 11/15 11/22 11/24 11/30 12/6 12/8

Northeastern W, 4-0 CSUN W, 3-0 vs. Marquette (20) W, 2-1 @ Notre Dame (7) W, 1-0 vs. North Carolina (1) L, 0-1 @ Duke (12) W , 2-1 San Diego St. W, 2-0 @ Pepperdine W, 2-0 @ LMU W, 3-0 @ Arizona W, 2-1 Washington St. W, 2-0 Washington T, 0-0 (2OT) @ Stanford (5) W, 2-1 (2OT) @ California (8) W, 1-0 Arizona St. W, 3-0 @ Utah T, 1-1 (2OT) @ Colorado W, 1-0 Oregon St. W, 3-0 Oregon W, 2-0 USC W, 4-1 San Diego St. (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 3-0 Kentucky (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 3-0 Stanford (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 2-0 @ North Carolina (5) (NCAA QF)W, 1-0 (2OT) vs. Virginia (1) (NCAA SF)T, 1-1 (4-2 PKs) vs. Florida St. (3) (NCAA Final)W, 1-0 (OT)

2013 NCAA Champions

2014

2016

Amanda Cromwell — 21-1-2 / 10-0-1 Pac12 (1st)

Amanda Cromwell — 15-5-2 / 7-3-1 Pac12 (T-4th)

8/22 8/24 8/29 8/31 9/5 9/7 9/12 9/19 9/21 9/26 10/3 10/5 10/9 10/13 10/17 10/24 10/26 10/31 11/2 11/7 11/14 11/21 11/23 11/28

8/19 8/26 8/28 9/2 9/9 9/11 9/16 9/18 9/22 9/29 10/2 10/6 10/9 10/13 10/20 10/23 10/27 10/30 11/4 11/11 11/18 11/20

Maryland W, 3-0 UC Irvine W, 3-0 North Carolina (9) T, 0-0 (2OT) San Diego W, 2-0 @ Hawai’i W, 6-0 vs. Pepperdine (11) W , 2-0 Wake Forest W, 2-1 @ Texas W, 1-0 LMU W, 4-1 @ Arizona St. (24) T, 1-1 (2OT) Utah (19) W, 1-0 Colorado W, 1-0 Stanford (3) W, 2-1 California (22) W, 3-0 Arizona (23) W, 6-0 @ Oregon St. W, 3-0 @ Oregon W, 5-0 @ Washington St. (19) W, 1-0 @ Washington (17) W, 6-0 @ USC W, 2-0 San Diego (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 5-0 Harvard (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 7-0 Pepperdine (11) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 1-0 Virginia (4) (NCAA QF) L, 1-2

2017

2015

Amanda Cromwell — 19-3-3 / 8-2-1 Pac12 (T-2nd)

Amanda Cromwell — 8-10-1 / 4-6-1 Pac12 (8th)

8/21 8/23 8/30 9/4 9/6 9/11 9/13 9/17 9/25 10/1 10/4 10/9 10/11 10/17 10/23 10/25 10/29 11/1 11/6

@ San Diego St. W, 5-0 @ Texas A&M (11) W, 1-0 Florida (6) L, 3-4 (OT) Penn St. (13) W, 1-0 (OT) North Carolina (8) L, 1-2 San Diego W, 3-1 @ Pepperdine (25) W, 3-0 Long Beach St. W, 2-1 Arizona St. W, 2-0 @ Oregon St. W, 1-0 @ Oregon W, 3-2 California (14) T, 1-1 (2OT) Stanford (1) L, 2-3 (2OT) @ Arizona W, 2-1 (2OT) Washington W, 3-2- (OT) Washington St. W, 2-1 @ Colorado L, 0-1 @ Utah L, 0-2 @ USC (5) W, 1-0 Seattle (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 3-0 vs. Nebraska (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 2-0 @ West Virginia (1) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) T, 1-1 (2-4 PKs)

8/18 8/20 8/24 8/27 9/1 9/3 9/7 9/15 9/22 9/28 10/1 10/5 10/8 10/12 10/19 10/22 10/26 10/29 11/3 11/10

@ Long Beach St. L, 0-1 @ San Diego W, 1-0 (2OT) Wisconsin (13) W, 2-1 Virginia (1) L, 1-2 Texas L, 1-2 @ Wake Forest W, 2-1 @ North Carolina (4) L, 1-3 Pepperdine (19) W, 1-0 Oregon W, 1-0 @ Washington L, 1-2 @ Washington St. (20) L, 2-4 Arizona (15) W, 5-1 Arizona St. T, 1-1 (2OT) @ Oregon St. L, 1-2 Colorado W, 2-1 Utah W, 2-1 @ California (20) L, 0-7 @ Stanford (4) L, 0-2 USC (14) L, 0-2

38

San Diego St. W, 5-1 @ Long Beach State W, 5-1 Santa Clara W, 4-2 UC Santa Barbara W, 3-1 @ BYU W, 1-0 @ Weber State W, 2-0 @ Virginia W, 2-1 Pepperdine T, 1-1 (2OT) @ Colorado W, 2-0 Oregon W, 2-0 Oregon State W, 4-1 @ Arizona State W, 3-0 @ Arizona T, 2-2 (2OT) Utah W, 2-1 @ Washington State L, 0-1 @ Washington W, 3-0 Stanford (1) L, 0-1 California (16) W, 1-0 USC (6) W, 3-2 (OT) San Diego State (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 3-1

11/17 Northwestern (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 1-0 (OT) 11/19 Virginia (12) (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W 2-1 11/25 Princeton (13) (NCAA QF) W, 3-1 12/1 Duke (1) (NCAA Semis) T, 0-0 (4-3 PKs) 12/3 Stanford (1) (NCAA Final) L, 2-3

2018 Amanda Cromwell — 17-3-2 / 9-2-0 Pac12 (2nd)

8/17 8/25 8/31 9/2 9/7 9/13 9/16 9/21 9/27 9/30 10/4 10/7 10/12 10/18 10/21 10/25 10/28 11/2 11/9 11/16 11/18 11/24

Long Beach State W, 1-0 @ Penn State (3) W, 2-1 @ Florida (22) T, 0-0 (2OT) @ Florida St. (4) L, 1-4 Pepperdine W, 3-0 @ Loyola Marymount W, 3-0 @ San Diego State W, 3-0 Washington St. L, 0-1 @ Stanford (1) L, 2-3 @ California W, 4-0 Arizona State W, 3-1 Arizona W, 2-0 @ Washington W, 2-0 Oregon W, 2-1 Oregon State W, 6-0 @ Utah W, 5-1 @ Colorado (20) W, 2-1 @ USC (2) W, 3-2 (2OT) San Jose St. (NCAA 1st Rd.) W, 5-0 Minnesota (NCAA 2nd Rd.) W, 5-0 NC State (NCAA 3rd Rd.) W, 5-0 @ North Carolina (3) (NCAA QF) T, 2-2 (2-4 PKs)


ALL-TIME NCAA TOURNAMENT RESULTS

1995

2007

Seed: None / NCAA Finish: T-17th Nov. 11 L, 1-2 Washington

Seed: #1 / Finish: T-3rd Nov. 16 W, 3-1 Nov. 18 W, 4-0 Nov. 23 W, 2-1 (OT) Nov. 30 W, 3-2 Dec. 7 L, 1-2

First Round @ Los Angeles

1997 Seed: None / NCAA Finish: T-5th Nov. 16 W, 1-0 Portland Nov. 22 W, 3-2 SMU Nov. 29 L, 0-8 Notre Dame

1st Round @ Portland, Ore. Round of 16 @ Dallas, Texas Quarterfinals @ South Bend, Ind.

Seed: #1 / Finish: T-3rd Nov. 14 W, 5-0 Nov. 17 W, 1-0 Nov. 22 W, 1-0 Nov. 29 W, 6-1 Dec. 5 L, 0-1

2nd Round @ Los Angeles

1999 Seed: None / NCAA Finish: T-9th Nov. 13 W, 2-1 (OT) San Diego Nov. 20 L, 0-7 Santa Clara

USC Texas A&M Clemson Portland North Carolina

Seed: #1 / Finish: T-3rd Nov. 13 W, 7-1 Nov. 15 W, 5-0 Nov. 20 W, 3-0 Nov. 28 W, 2-1 Dec. 4 L, 1-2

2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Clemson, S.C. Semifinals @ San Jose, Calif. Final @ San Jose, Calif.

Seed: None / Finish: T-9th Nov. 11 T, 0-0 (4-3 PKs) Nov. 13 W, 2-1 Nov. 19 L, 0-3

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Los Angeles

Seed: #3 / Finish: T-5th Nov. 10 W, 1-0 Nov. 16 W, 5-0 Nov. 18 W, 3-0 Nov. 23 L, 1-2

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Los Angeles Semifinals @ Cary, N.C.

2013 Seed: #2 / Finish: 1st Nov. 15 W, 3-0 Nov. 22 W, 3-0 Nov. 24 W, 2-0 Nov. 30 W, 1-0 (2OT) Dec. 6 T, 1-1 (W 4-2 PKs) Dec. 8 W, 1-0 (OT)

Pepperdine San Diego Duke Ohio State Princeton Notre Dame

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Columbus, Ohio Semifinals @ Cary, N.C. Final @ Cary, N.C.

Mississippi Valley St. Colorado Marquette Virginia Florida State Portland

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Los Angeles Semifinals @ College Station, Texas Final @ College Station, Texas

Seed: #1 / Finish: T-5th Nov. 14 W, 5-0 Nov. 21 W, 7-0 Nov. 23 W, 1-0 Nov. 28 L 1-2

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles

Wisconsin Kentucky San Diego State Stanford

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ San Diego, Calif. 3rd Round @ San Diego, Calif. Quarterfinals @ Stanford, Calif.

San Diego State Kentucky Stanford North Carolina Virginia Florida State

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles 3rd Round @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Chapel Hill, N.C. Semifinals @ Cary, N.C. Final @ Cary, N.C.

San Diego Harvard Pepperdine Virginia

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles 3rd Round @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Los Angeles

2016 Seed: #4 / Finish: T-9th Nov. 11 W, 3-0 Seattle Nov. 18 W, 2-0 Nebraska Nov. 20 T, 1-1 (L 2-4 PKs) West Virginia

UNLV Cal State Fullerton Florida Portland North Carolina

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Morgantown, W.V. 3rd Round @ Morgantown, W.V.

2017 Seed: #2 / Finish: 2nd Nov. 10 W, 3-1 Nov. 17 W, 1-0 (OT) Nov. 19 W, 2-1 Nov. 25 W, 3-1 Dec. 1 T, 0-0 (W 4-3 PKs) Dec. 3 L, 2-3

2006 Seed: #2 / Finish: T-3rd Nov. 10 W, 6-1 Nov. 12 W, 3-1 Nov. 17 W, 3-2 Nov. 24 W, 2-1 Dec. 1 L, 0-2

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Rd. of 16 @ Stanford, Calif.

2014

2005 Seed: #1 / Finish: 2nd Nov. 11 W, 9-0 Nov. 13 W, 3-0 Nov. 19 W, 4-0 Nov. 25 W, 5-0 Dec. 2 W, 4-0 Dec. 4 L, 0-4

BYU UCF Stanford

2012 1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles

2004 Seed: #14 / NCAA Finish: 2nd Nov. 12 W, 1-0 Nov. 14 W, 3-0 Nov. 20 W, 2-0 Nov. 27 W, 1-0 Dec. 3 W, 2-0 Dec. 5 L, 1-1 (PKs)

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Los Angeles Semifinals @ College Station, Texas

Seed: #2 / Finish: T-17th Nov. 12 W, 1-0 New Mexico Nov. 18 T, 1-1 (L 3-4 Pks) San Diego

2003 Seed: #4 / NCAA Finish: T-3rd Nov. 14 W, 2-0 San Diego Nov. 16 W, 2-0 Pepperdine Nov. 21 W, 1-0 Kansas Nov. 28 W, 4-0 Penn State Dec. 5 L, 0-3 North Carolina

Boise State San Diego State Virginia Portland Stanford

2011

2002 Seed: #7 / NCAA Finish: T-9th Nov. 15 W, 4-0 Loyola Marymount Nov. 17 W, 1-0 (2OT) USC Nov. 23 L, 0-0 (PKs) Texas A&M

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Los Angeles Semifinals @ Cary, N.C.

2010

2001 Seed: #3 / NCAA Finish: T-5th Nov. 16 W, 3-0 CS Fullerton Nov. 18 W, 2-1 Pepperdine Nov. 25 W, 3-1 Dayton Dec. 2 L, 0-1 (OT) Florida

Fresno State San Diego USC Duke North Carolina

2009

2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Santa Clara, Calif.

2000 Seed: #6 / NCAA Finish: 2nd Nov. 11 W, 3-0 Nov. 19 W, 4-0 Nov. 25 W, 2-1 Dec. 1 W, 1-0 Dec. 3 L, 1-2

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Los Angeles Semifinals @ College Station, Texas

2008

1998 Seed: None / NCAA Finish: T-17th Nov. 14 L, 0-2 BYU

Cal State Fullerton Oklahoma State Virginia Portland USC

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles Round of 16 @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Los Angeles Semifinals @ Cary, N.C.

San Diego State Northwestern Virginia Princeton Duke Stanford

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles 3rd Round @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Los Angeles Semifinals @ Orlando, Fla. Finals @ Orlando, Fla.

San Jose State Minnesota NC State North Carolina

1st Round @ Los Angeles 2nd Round @ Los Angeles 3rd Round @ Los Angeles Quarterfinals @ Cary, N.C.

2018 Seed: #2 / Finish: 2nd Nov. 9 W, 5-0 Nov. 16 W, 5-0 Nov. 18 W, 5-0 Nov. 24 T, 2-2 (L 2-4 PKs) 39


2013 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP

#110 Their goal, their motivator, their mantra all season was 110. The number of NCAA Championships UCLA would have if they won their first. The women’s soccer team was one of the few teams on campus that had yet win a championship, their place in the famed trophy room in the Hall of Fame non-existent. That would change in 2013 when the Bruins, despite a difficult playoff path that saw them face three No. 1 seeds and the last two NCAA champions, won their first-ever title, 1-0 in overtime against Florida State. UCLA breezed through the regular season with a 17-1-2 record, winning the Pac-12 title and taking a No. 2 national ranking and a 15-game unbeaten streak into the postseason, their only loss coming in game five of the season, 1-0, to North Carolina. The Bruins, however, were denied a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament and had to face Pac-12 rival Stanford, the 2011 NCAA Champion, in the Round of 16 before traveling to Chapel Hill for a quarterfinal matchup with 2012 NCAA Champion North Carolina. UCLA posted its third-straight NCAA shutout by beating Stanford, 2-0, turning the tables on a Cardinal team that had eliminated the Bruins in three of the last four tournaments. With one of the last two NCAA champions taken out, the Bruins set their sights on the most recent one, the No. 1-seed Tar Heels. Unlike the first meeting earlier in the year, where UCLA goalkeeper Katelyn Rowland was making heroic save after heroic save as the Tar Heels outshot the Bruins, 23-6, this quarterfinal match was more evenly-played, with each team taking 11 shots. The Bruins had eight of their 11 shots on goal, forcing UNC goalkeeper Anna Sieloff into a career-high seven saves, while UNC tallied four shots on goal, all of which were saved by Rowland. Taylor Smith broke the scoreless tie early in the second overtime, scoring a minute and a half in. Sarah Killion sent a great through ball to Smith, whose shot was initially saved by Sieloff. Smith, however, followed through on the rebound, scoring far post to end the match and give UCLA its first-ever win over North Carolina. At the College Cup for the ninth time in school history, the Bruins had another No. 1 seed to face in the semifinals - No 1 overall seed Virginia. The Cavaliers took a 1-0 lead in the 73rd minute after a rare defensive miscue by the Bruins led to an empty net goal by Makenzy Doniak. UCLA fought back, however, to tie on an Ally Courtnall goal with less than five minutes remaining in regulation, and forced overtime, where the Bruins hit the post twice but failed to score, sending the game to a penalty kick shooutout. Rowland came up big in the shootout, stopping the Cavaliers’ third and fourth kicks. With

The 2013 NCAA Champions won UCLA’s 110th NCAA title

the Bruins holding a 3-2 advantage after successful makes by Sam Mewis, Sarah Killion and Lauren Kaskie, Rosie White stepped up for the potential winner. The 2012 New Zealand Olympian calmly stepped up and put the shot into the back of the net to send the Bruins to the championship game. In the final, it was UCLA against yet another No. 1 seed, Florida State. The Bruins controlled the majority of possession in the first half, but were unable to generate any chances in the early going. Smith had the first serious chance of the match for either side in the 30th minute, controlling a free kick from Killion in the box before wheeling around and putting a shot on frame. The ball beat Florida State keeper Kelsey Wys but clanged off the crossbar and out of play, keeping the match scoreless. Then right before the half, UCLA almost went ahead again when Caprice Dydasco took a long shot that forced Wys to make a diving save. Smith gathered the rebound and put a shot towards the far post, but once again the ball bounced off the post and away from danger, sending the teams into the locker room tied at 0-0. The Bruins continued to keep the ball in their third of the field at the start of the second half, and created another good scoring opportunity in the 59th minute. Darian Jenkins did well to keep the ball on the left side of the Seminole box and was able to cross the ball back to the top of the box to Jenna Richmond.

Richmond one-timed a shot on goal, but once again Wys was there to make the save. Kodi Lavrusky had another shot at putting the Bruins on top in the 66th minute, when a cross from White trickled to the front of the goal to Lavrusky. She could not get a foot on it though, and Wys eventually gathered the ball for Florida State. UCLA continued to push forward, consistently keeping the possession. In the 87th minute however, the Seminoles nearly took the lead when Kristin Grubka headed a long throw-in on net. Defender Megan Oyster came up big for the Bruins though, heading the ball off the line to prevent the goal. From there, neither side could find the back of the net before regulation ended and the match went to overtime. In the first overtime, Killion had a chance to end the game for the Bruins in the 96th minute when she controlled a corner and took a shot towards an open net after Wys came out. Her shot was cleared off the line by the Seminoles, however, and the match stayed scoreless. Then in the 97th minute, Lavrusky finally handed the Bruins the title when she took a terrific through ball in the box from Oyster and finished far post for her seventh goal of the year. UCLA head coach Amanda Cromwell became just the second women’s soccer coach ever to win the NCAA title in her first season with a team, as well as only the second female coach to win the title, joining Becky Burleigh, who led Florida to victory in 1998. Courtnall, who scored the game-tying goal in the semifinal, was named the College Cup’s Most Outstanding Defensive Player and selected to the all-tournament team along with Killion, Oyster and Rowland. The Bruins continued to enjoy the fruits of victory when they returned home to Los Angeles, making an appearance on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno and being honored at the State Capitol and City Hall. Defender Abby Dahlkemper won the Honda Award for soccer, becoming the first Bruin ever to take the honor, and she was also named the NSCAA Scholar All-American Player of the Year and a finalist for the MAC Hermann Trophy. Head coach Amanda Cromwell was awarded Soccer America’s National Coach of the Year.

The Bruins react to Rosie White’s decisive penalty kick in the semifinals

40


RECORD VS. OPPONENTS 2008 2002 2000 1996

W, 5-0 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 3-0 (H)

Miami (1-0)

W, 6-1 (N)

Miss. Valley State (1-0)

Georgia (1-0) 2000

Georgia State (1-0) 2000

2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994

W, 2-0 (H) T, 2-2 (2ot) (A) W 2-1 (2ot) (H) W, 5-1 (H) W, 6-0 (H) W, 2-1 (A) W, 2-1 (A) W, 6-1 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 2-1 (2ot) (H) L, 0-1 (A) W, 4-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 8-0 (A) W, 6-1 (H) W, 4-0 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 6-0 (H) W, 3-1 (A) W, 4-0 (H)

Arizona State (19-1-2) 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997

W, 3-1 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 4-1 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 3-2 (2ot) (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 3-1 (H) W, 2-1 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 4-1 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 3-2 (H) L, 0-1 (ot) (A) W, 5-0 (H) W, 2-1 (A) W, 3-0 (H)

2002 1998 1997

California (18-5-2) 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994

W, 4-0 (N) W, 1-0 (N)

Boise State (1-0) 2009

W, 7-1 (H)

Brown (0-0-1) 2008

T, 0-0 (2ot) (N)

BYU (2-2-1) 2017 2010

W, 1-0 (A) T, 0-0 (2ot) (H)

W, 4-0 (A) W, 1-0 (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (H) L, 0-7 (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 3-0 (H) T, 0-0 (2ot) (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 4-1 (H) W, 2-0 (A) L, 0-1 (2ot) (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 4-1 (H) W, 3-2 (ot) (A) L, 1-2 (ot) (H) W, 1-0 (A) L, 1-2 (ot) (A) W, 2-0 (H) L, 0-1 (A)

Cal Baptist (1-0) 1993

W, 1-0 (H)

Cal Poly (3-2) 2010 1999 1998 1996 1994

W, 7-0 (H) W, 5-1 (H) W, 1-0 (H) L, 0-1 (A) L, 0-2 (ot) (H)

Cal State Fullerton (11-0) 2007 2006 2001 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

Baylor (2-0) 2000 1998

W, 6-0 (H) L, 0-2 (H) L, 1-3 (H)

W, 3-1 (H) W, 3-1 (H) W, 3-0 (H) W, 4-1 (A) W, 2-1 (ot) (H) W, 4-1 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 3-1 (H) W, 1-0 (A)

Cal State Northridge (8-1) 2013 2011 2010 2009 2007 2006 2002 1996 1995

W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 4-1 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 3-1 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 4-0 (H) L, 1-2 (A) W, 3-0 (A)

1993

L, 1-2 (H)

Chico State (0-0-1) 1993

T, 1-1 (ot) (H)

Clemson (1-1) 2000

L, 0-1 (H) W, 2-1 (A)

Colgate (1-0) 1995

W, 5-1 (N)

Colorado (9-2) W, 2-1 (A) W, 2-0 (A) L, 0-1 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 1-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 8-0 (A) L, 0-1 (2ot) (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-0 (H)

Connecticut (2-1) 2008 2006 1997

W, 3-0 (A) W, 3-0 (H) L, 0-1 (N)

Dayton (1-0) W, 3-1 (H)

Denver (3-0)

Illinois (3-0) 2011 2009 2007

W, 4-1 (N) W, 1-0 (H) W, 5-1 (N)

Duke (4-1-1) T, 0-0 (PKs) (N) W, 2-1 (A) W, 6-1 (H) W, 2-0 (H) W, 2-1 (A) L, 1-2 (N)

Florida (4-3-1) T, 0-0 (2ot) (A) L 3-4 (ot) (H) W, 2-0 (N) W, 3-0 (N) W, 3-2 (H) L, 0-1 (2ot) (H) W, 4-0 (A) L, 1-3 (N)

2003 2013 2012 2018 2017 2016 2015 2009 2006 2005

2012 2011

W, 2-0 (A) W, 4-1 (H) 41

W, 3-0 (H)

2018 2014 2013 2012 2011 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1995 1994 1993

2016 1998 1995

W, 2-0 (N) W, 5-1 (H) W, 1-0 (ot) (H)

New Mexico (3-0) 2011 2008 1994

W, 1-0 (H) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-1 (ot) (A)

North Carolina (1-11-2) 2018 2016 2015 2014 2013 2009 2008 2006 2003 2000 1999 1996

T, 2-2 (PKs) (A) L, 1-2 (H) L, 1-3 (A) T, 0-0 (2ot) (H) W, 1-0 (2ot) (A) L, 0-1 (N) L, 2-7 (A) L, 0-1 (N) L, 0-2 (N) L, 2-5 (N) L, 0-3 (N) L, 1-2 (N) L, 0-4 (N) L, 1-3 (A)

Notre Dame (2-2)

W, 5-0 (N)

LMU (14-0-1) W, 3-0 (A) W, 4-1 (H) W, 3-0 (A) T, 1-1 (H) W, 3-1 (A) W, 2-1 (A) W, 5-0 (H) W, 3-2 (A) W, 4-0 (H) W, 3-0 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 4-1 (A) W, 1-0 (A) W, 3-1 (H)

Marquette (3-0)

2012

1998

W, 7-0 (N)

W, 2-1 (N) W, 4-0 (H) W, 5-1 (H) W, 3-0 (H) W, 3-0 (N) L, 1-2 (N) W, 1-0 (N)

Massachusetts (1-0)

Fresno State (6-0)

W, 5-0 (H)

North Carolina State (1-0)

Loyola-Baltimore (1-0)

2014 2006 2004 1999

2009

W, 1-0 (H) W, 5-1 (A) W, 2-1 (H) L, 0-1 (A) W, 4-0 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 3-0 (H)

Louisville (1-0)

Maryland (3-1)

L, 1-4 (A) W, 1-0 (ot) (N) W, 4-0 (N)

W, 3-0 (H) W, 5-0 (N)

Long Beach St. (6-1)

2000 2018 2013 2005

W, 1-0 (H)

Kentucky (2-0)

Florida Atlantic (1-0) W, 2-0 (N)

W, 2-1 (A)

Kansas (1-0)

2013 2005 2000

Florida State (2-1)

W, 2-0 (H) W, 2-1 (A) W, 4-2 (H)

James Madison (1-0)

1998

2010 2005 2001

2018 2016 2011 2009 2006 2001 2000 1999

W, 6-0 (A) W, 6-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 4-1 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 1-0 (ot) (N)

2001

2001

W, 9-0 (H)

W, 2-0 (H) W, 1-0 (H) W, 7-0 (N)

2001

2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2005

2017 2013 2008 2004 2003 1996

2014 2007 2002 1998 1996 1994

2005

Navy (1-0)

Hawai’i (6-0) CS San Bernardino (0-1)

W, 5-0 (H)

Nebraska (3-0)

2014

Arizona (22-1-1)

2018

W, 5-0 (N)

Harvard (1-0) Players celebrate a goal during a match against New Mexico in 2008.

W, 3-0 (H)

Minnesota (1-0)

Missouri (1-0)

Gonzaga (2-0) 2009 2006

2008

W, 2-1 (A)

2018

W, 5-0 (H)

Northeastern (1-0) 2013

W, 4-0 (H)

Northwestern (1-1) 2017 2010 2013 2010 2004 1997

W, 1-0 (ot) (H) L, 0-1 (N) W, 1-0 (A) W, 2-1 (ot) (H) L, 1-1 (PKs) (N) L, 0-8 (A)

Oakland (1-0) 2003

W, 6-2 (N)

Ohio State (1-0) 2004

W, 1-0 (A)

Oklahoma State (1-0) 2007

W, 4-0 (H)

Oregon (20-2) 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999

W, 2-1 (H) W, 2-0 (H) W, 3-2 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 5-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 3-1 (A) W, 5-1 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 3-0 (H) L, 1-2 (ot) (A) W, 3-0 (A) W, 6-0 (H) W, 3-2 (2ot) (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 8-0 (H) L, 1-2 (A)


RECORD VS. OPPONENTS 1998 1997

W, 2-0 (H) W, 6-0 (A)

2004 2001

Oregon State (20-4)

Rutgers (2-0)

2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995

2011 1997

W, 6-0 (H) W, 4-1 (H) W, 1-0 (A) L, 1-2 (A) W, 3-0 (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 4-1 (A) W, 1-0 (H) L, 0-3 (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-1 (2ot) (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 4-0 (A) W, 3-0 (A) W, 4-1 (H) W, 3-1 (A) W, 4-1 (H) L, 1-2 (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 4-1 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) L, 0-3 (A)

Penn State (3-3) 2018 2016 2006 2005 2003 2002

W, 2-1 (A) W , 1-0 (ot) (H) L, 1-3 (A) L, 0-1 (2ot) (H) W, 4-0 (H) L, 0-1 (2ot) (H)

Pepperdine (19-3-3) 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2001 1997 1996 1994 1993

W, 3-0 (H) T, 1-1 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 2-0 (N) W, 1-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 4-0 (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (A) L, 0-1 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 1-0 (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-1 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 1-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 2-1 (H) W, 3-0 (H) W, 3-2 (A) W, 1-0 (A) L, 2-4 (ot) (H) L, 0-4 (A)

Portland (8-1) 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2001 2000 1997

W, 2-1 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 3-2 (2ot) (H) W, 2-1 (ot) (H) W, 2-1 (H) L, 0-4 (N) W, 1-0 (N) W, 1-0 (N) W, 1-0 (A)

Portland State (1-0) 2008

W, 7-0 (A)

Princeton (5-0) 2017 2012 2005

W, 3-1 (H) W, 7-0 (H) W, 1-0 (N)

W, 2-0 (N) W, 2-0 (H) W, 1-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 4-0 (A) W, 1-0 (ot) (H) W, 2-0 (H)

San Diego (20-1-5) 2016 2015 2014 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

W, 3-1 (H) W, 1-0 (2ot) (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 5-0 (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (H) W, 2-0 (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 1-0 (H) T, 0-0 (2ot) (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 4-1 (A) W, 4-0 (H) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 6-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 3-0 (A) W, 2-1 (ot) (H) T, 2-2 (ot) (H) W, 4-1 (A) T, 0-0 (ot) (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 2-1 (H) L, 0-1 (A)

San Diego State (15-1-1) 2018 2017 2016 2013 2012 2009 2007 2006 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

W, 3-0 (A) W, 3-1 (H) W, 5-1 (H) W, 5-0 (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-0 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 5-0 (H) W, 5-1 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 3-0 (A) L, 0-1 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 2-1 (H) T, 2-2 (ot) (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 4-1 (A)

San Francisco (6-0) 2007 2002 1997 1996 1995 1994

W, 3-0 (H) W, 4-1 (N) W, 3-1 (H) W, 3-2 (ot) (A) W, 3-1 (N) W, 3-1 (A)

San Jose State (2-0) 2018 1997

W, 5-0 (H) W, 4-1 (H)

Santa Clara (5-5-2) 2017 2010 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001

L, 0-7 (A) L, 0-2 (H)

Seattle (1-0)

St. Mary’s (3-0) 2005 2003 1995

1999 1994

W, 4-2 (H) W, 1-0 (H) T, 0-0 (2ot) (A) W, 4-1 (H) L, 0-3 (A) W, 2-1 (ot) (A) W, 1-0 (2ot) (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (A) L, 1-2 (ot) (H) L, 0-3 (A)

2016

W, 5-0 (H)

SMU (3-0) 2011 2004 1997

W, 1-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 3-2 (A)

So. California College (1-0) 1993 W, 11-0 (A)

Stanford (11-16-2) 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994

L, 2-3 L, 2-3 (N) L, 0-1 (H) L, 2-3 (2ot) (H) L, 0-2 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 2-0 (H) W, 2-1 (2ot) (A) L, 1-2 (A) L, 1-2 (H) L, 1-4 (A) L, 0-3 (A) L, 0-2 (H) L, 1-2 (N) L, 0-2 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) T, 0-0 (2ot) (A) W, 1-0 (H) T, 0-0 (2ot) (A) L, 0-1 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 5-0 (H) L, 0-6 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 2-1 (A) L, 1-2 (ot) (H) L, 1-2 (A) T, 1-1 (ot) (H)

Syracuse (1-0) 2001

W, 2-0 (N)

Tennessee (2-0) 2012 2011

W, 1-0 (H) W, 2-1 (A)

Texas (1-2) 2015 2014 2007

L, 1-2 (H) W, 1-0 (A) L, 1-2 (N)

Texas A&M (4-1) 2016 2006 2004 2002 2000

W, 1-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A) L, 0-0 (PKs) (H) W, 4-0 (H)

TCU (1-0) 1999

W, 1-0 (N)

UC Irvine (8-1-1) 2014 2010 2008 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-1 (H) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 3-2 (H) W, 5-1 (A) L, 1-3 (ot) (H) T, 0-0 (ot) (A) W, 3-1 (H)

UCSD (0-1) 1993

L, 2-3 (ot) (H)

42

UCSB (6-1-2)

Wake Forest (3-0)

2017 2010 2009 2008 2005 2004 2003 1995 1994

W, 3-1 (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (H) W, 3-1 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 5-0 (A) W, 6-1 (H) T, 0-0 (2ot) (H) W, 4-0 (A) L, 0-2 (H)

UNC-Charlotte (2-0) 1999 1998

W, 7-0 (N) W, 1-0 (N)

UNLV (2-0) 2006 2003

W, 6-1 (H) W, 1-0 (A)

USC (25-6-1) 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

W, 3-2 (2ot) (A) W, 3-2 (ot) (H) W, 1-0 (A) L, 0-2 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 4-1 (H) L, 2-3 (ot) (A) W, 5-2 (H) L, 0-1 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 2-1 (A) W, 1-0 (H) L, 1-2 (N) W, 2-0 (H) W, 2-1 (ot) (A) W, 3-2 (2ot) (H) W, 3-2 (2ot) (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 1-0 (2ot) (H) W, 2-1 (H) T, 1-1 (A) W, 3-0 (H) W, 3-0 (H) L, 4-5 (A) W, 3-1 (H) L, 2-3 (A) W, 4-1 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 3-1 (ot) (H) W, 6-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H)

Utah (7-2-1) 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2009 2004

W, 5-1 (A) W, 2-1 (H) L, 0-2 (A) W, 1-0 (H) W, 1-0 (H) T, 1-1 (2ot) (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 1-0 (ot) (A) W, 6-1 (H) L 1-2 (H)

2015 2014 1999

W, 2-1 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 1-0 (N)

Washington (19-4-2) 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995

W, 2-0 (A) W, 3-0 (A) W, 3-2 (ot) (H) L, 1-2 (A) W, 6-0 (A) T, 0-0 (2ot) (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 1-0 (H) L, 0-1 (H) W, 2-1 (A) W, 4-0 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 4-0 (H) W, 5-1 (A) W, 3-2 (2ot) (H) W, 2-1 (A) W, 1-0 (H) L, 0-1 (A) T, 3-3 (ot) (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 1-0 (ot) (A) W, 1-0 (H) L, 1-2 (H)

Washington St. (17-5-4) 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993

L, 0-1 (H) L, 0-1 (A) W, 2-1 (H) L, 2-4 (A) W, 1-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) T, 0-0 (2ot) (H) T, 0-0 (2ot) (A) W, 2-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 2-1 (2ot) (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 2-0 (H) T, 0-0 (2ot) (H) L, 0-1 (A) W, 2-1 (ot) (H) W, 2-1 (A) W, 3-1 (H) W, 1-0 (A) W, 2-1 (H) W, 3-0 (A) W, 4-0 (H) W, 2-0 (A) W, 1-0 (H) T, 0-0 (ot) (N) L, 2-4 (ot) (H)

Weber State (1-0) 2017

W, 2-0 (A)

West Virginia (0-0)

Vanderbilt (1-0)

2016

2000

William & Mary (1-0)

W, 2-0 (N)

2001

Villanova (1-0) 1998

W, 1-0 (N)

Virginia (6-3-2) 2017 2015 2014 2013 2009 2007 2005 2004 2002 1995

T, 1-1 (PKs) (A)

W, 2-1 (H) W, 2-1 (A) L, 1-2 (H) L, 1-2 (H) T, 1-1 (PKs) (N) W, 3-0 (H) W, 2-1 (ot) (H) W, 5-0 (H) L, 1-3 (A) W, 4-3 (ot) (H) T, 1-1 (ot) (N)

W, 2-0 (A)

Wisconsin (4-0) 2015 2012 2010

W, 2-1 (H) W, 2-0 (H) W, 1-0 (H) W, 1-0 (A)

Wisconsin-Milwaukee (1-0) 2003 W, 4-0 (N)


FINAL RANKINGS (1993-2018)

1993 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.

North Carolina Stanford Notre Dame Santa Clara Massachusetts William & Mary Portland Duke Wisconsin George Mason Connecticut Southern Methodist California Dartmouth Florida International UC Santa Barbara Hartford Tulsa Virginia Washington

1994 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. T20. T20.

Notre Dame North Carolina Stanford Duke William & Mary Connecticut Portland Hartford Santa Clara Virginia Wisconsin Brown Clemson Dartmouth Oregon State George Mason Massachusetts Washington Vanderbilt George Washington Washington State

1995 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. T7. T7. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

North Carolina Portland Southern Methodist Connecticut Notre Dame Maryland Duke Santa Clara Stanford Virginia Hartford North Carolina St. Texas A&M William & Mary Massachusetts Clemson Minnesota Wisconsin San Diego Vanderbilt Cal Poly Kentucky Penn State UCLA James Madison

1996 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

North Carolina Notre Dame Santa Clara Portland Connecticut Nebraska Maryland Florida Wisconsin Penn State Texas A&M Massachusetts Harvard James Madison San Diego Duke Vanderbilt Clemson Virginia Wake Forest UNC Greensboro George Mason Dartmouth Kentucky California

1997 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. T22. T22. 24. 25.

North Carolina Connecticut Notre Dame Santa Clara William & Mary Harvard Nebraska UCLA Hartford Clemson Portland Texas A&M Minnesota Florida Virginia Southern Methodist George Mason Michigan Maryland Duke UNC Greensboro Brigham Young Massachusetts Penn State Vanderbilt

1998 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Florida North Carolina Santa Clara Portland Notre Dame Connecticut Penn State Dartmouth William & Mary Nebraska Clemson San Diego State Brigham Young Northwestern Hartford Georgia Vanderbilt Baylor Michigan Virginia UCLA Southern California Harvard Wake Forest James Madison

1999 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. T7. T7. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. T17. T17. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

North Carolina Notre Dame Santa Clara Penn State Nebraska Clemson Hartford Stanford Connecticut Florida Texas A&M Wake Forest William & Mary UCLA Southern Methodist Virginia Harvard USC Kentucky Brigham Young Michigan Duke Maryland San Diego James Madison

2000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19.

North Carolina UCLA Notre Dame Portland Clemson Penn State Santa Clara Connecticut Nebraska Brigham Young Washington Texas A&M Virginia Florida State California Dartmouth Duke Harvard Florida

20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Stanford Southern California Hartford Wake Forest Marquette Michigan

2001 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. T17. T17. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Santa Clara North Carolina Portland Florida UCLA Penn State Texas A&M Virginia Stanford Connecticut Clemson Nebraska Dartmouth Rutgers Cincinnati Dayton Notre Dame St. Mary’s Washington Florida State SMU Pepperdine Princeton Michigan California

2002 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. T25. T25.

Portland Santa Clara North Carolina Penn State Stanford Texas A&M UCLA Connecticut Pepperdine Tennessee Michigan West Virginia Nebraska Texas Notre Dame Richmond Virginia California Florida State SMU Purdue Southern California Brigham Young Maryland Charlotte Clemson

2003 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

North Carolina UConn UCLA Florida State Santa Clara Penn State Portland Florida Notre Dame West Virginia Texas A&M Tennessee Kansas BYU Villanova Michigan Virginia Illinois Duke Pepperdine Colorado Arizona State Nebraska Utah Boston College

2004 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. t11. t11.

Notre Dame UCLA Santa Clara Princeton North Carolina Portland Virginia Ohio State Penn State Washington Duke Tennessee

13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. t19. t19. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

UConn Illinois Texas A&M Texas Boston College Kansas Auburn Stanford Florida Nebraska Villanova Maryland Arizona

2005 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. T21. T21. 23. 24. 25.

Portland Penn State UCLA Florida State North Carolina Notre Dame Santa Clara Virginia Cal Boston College Texas A&M Cal State Fullerton Yale Marquette Tennessee Duke Arizona Pepperdine West Virginia Illinois Nebraska Colorado USC Florida UConn

2006 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. t14. t14. 16. 17. 18. t19. t19. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

North Carolina Notre Dame UCLA Florida State Texas A&M Portland Penn State Texas Santa Clara Florida Boston College Colorado Rutgers Clemson Illinois Stanford Oklahoma State Virginia Cal Wake Forest UConn West Virginia Utah Louisville Tennessee

2007 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

USC Florida State UCLA Notre Dame Portland North Carolina West Virginia Virginia UConn Stanford Texas Penn State Texas A&M Tennessee Duke Purdue Florida Georgia California Wake Forest Indiana Santa Clara Oklahoma State Boston College Missouri

2008 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

North Carolina Notre Dame UCLA Stanford Portland Florida State

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7. Texas A&M 8. USC 9. Duke 10. Florida 11. Boston College 12. Virginia 13. Oklahoma State 14. West Virginia 15. Minnesota 16. San Diego 17. Missouri 18. Texas 19. James Madison 20. BYU 21. Rutgers 22. Colorado 23. Illinois 24. Wisc.-Milwaukee 25. Wake Forest

2009 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

North Carolina Stanford UCLA Notre Dame Portland Florida State Boston College Wake Forest South Carolina Santa Clara Maryland Virginia Tech Texas A&M LSU Florida Rutgers Central Florida Washington State Virginia BYU Oregon State Penn State Ohio State USC Dayton

2010 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Notre Dame Stanford Boston College Ohio State Oklahoma State North Carolina Florida State Portland Virginia Maryland Marquette Florida West Virginia UC Irvine Washington Texas A&M Oregon State Georgetown Santa Clara Duke Minnesota UCLA UNC-Greensboro South Carolina Wake Forest

2011 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Stanford Duke Florida State Wake Forest Oklahoma State Virginia UCLA Penn State Memphis Pepperdine Maryland Central Florida North Carolina Long Beach State Boston College Marquette Boston University West Virginia Illinois Santa Clara Texas A&M Virginia Tech Wisconsin-Milwaukee Louisville South Carolina

2012 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

North Carolina Penn State Stanford Florida State BYU UCLA San Diego State Florida Duke Virginia Baylor Marquette Notre Dame Texas A&M Wake Forest Maryland Georgetown Santa Clara Michigan UCF California Denver Ohio State Portland Texas Tech

2013 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

UCLA Florida State Virginia Virginia Tech North Carolina Michigan Santa Clara Texas A&M Stanford Florida Portland West Virginia Nebraska Notre Dame South Carolina Marquette Texas Tech Duke Boston College Georgetown Wake Forest UCF BYU Denver Illinois

2014 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Florida State Virginia Stanford Texas A&M UCLA Penn State Florida North Carolina South Carolina Pepperdine Notre Dame Virginia Tech Wisconsin Texas Tech West Virginia Central Florida Kentucky Washington DePaul California Clemson BYU Kansas Georgetown Rutgers

2015 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.

Penn State Duke Florida State Rutgers Virginia Stanford West Virginia Florida Texas A&M Connecticut USC Auburn Clemson North Carolina Notre Dame Ole Miss BYU Virginia Tech Arizona Santa Clara

21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Texas Tech Ohio State Loyola Marymount California South Alabama

2016 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

USC West Virginia Georgetown North Carolina South Carolina Stanford Duke Auburn BYU Florida Virginia Clemson UCLA Florida State Minnesota Utah Santa Clara Northwestern Arkansas UConn Notre Dame Pepperdine Colorado North Carolina State Rutgers

2017 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Stanford UCLA Duke South Carolina Penn State Florida Princeton North Carolina Virginia West Virginia Baylor Texas A&M USC Texas Florida State Pepperdine Central Florida Notre Dame Washington State Santa Clara North Carolina State Rutgers Ohio State Georgetown Tennessee

2018 1. 2T. 2T. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Florida State North Carolina Stanford Georgetown UCLA USC Tennessee Penn State Baylor Duke Virginia Santa Clara Texas A&M West Virginia Wisconsin Vanderbilt South Carolina LSU South Florida Texas Virginia Tech North Carolina State Memphis Texas Tech Wake Forest

NOTE: Poll was conducted by the Intercollegiate Soccer Coaches Association of America (ISCAA) until 1995. The United Soccer Coaches (formerly named NSCAA) assumed responsibility in 1996.


SOCCER FACILITIES

Wallis Annenberg Stadium

Wallis Annenberg Stadium

Home Attendance Records

The UCLA soccer teams will begin its second year of play at Wallis Annenberg Stadium, which officially opened its doors on Aug. 17, 2018 with a thrilling 1-0 victory by the UCLA women over Long Beach State.

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

The stadium, which seats 2,145, is located at the previouslynamed North Athletic Field, where the Bruins practiced and played selected home games from 1993-1999. The new stadium was made possible thanks to a $5 million lead gift from the Annenberg Foundation. The grand opening completes the first phase of the stadium project and includes grandstand seating and press box on the west side, scoreboard and stadium lighting. Expected upgrades in future phases include a spectator amenity building to house restrooms and concessions; a day-of-game locker room building that includes two team locker rooms and two auxiliary locker rooms; and a shared team meeting room and equipment storage. The grass infield, named Marshall Field, houses a regulation 75-yard by 120-yard soccer field. Drake Stadium, which was the Bruins’ home stadium from 2000-17, now serves as the teams’ practice facility. Prior to moving to Drake Stadium, the Bruins played home games on the North Athletic FIeld, Spaulding Field and Murdock Stadium at El Camino College. UCLA’s all-time home record is 263-33-17.

Date 11/3/17 11/6/15 10/28/12 10/1/17 11/4/11 10/14/01 10/26/07 9/28/17 10/9/14 10/30/09 10/23/16 11/22/08 11/3/13 11/7/99 11/25/17 10/26/17 10/29/06 10/29/17 11/13/99 10/9/16

Opponent USC (Drake) USC (Drake) Stanford (Drake) Oregon State (Drake) USC (Drake) ASU (Drake) USC (Drake) Oregon (Drake) Stanford (Drake) USC (Drake) Washington St. (Drake) USC (Drake) Oregon (Drake) USC (NAF) Princeton (Drake) Stanford (Drake) Washington St. (Drake) California (Drake) San Diego (NAF) Stanford (Drake)

Win-Loss Records by Facility Attendance 11,925 6,253 4,068 3,941 3,826 3,466 3,345 3,285 3,222 3,210 3,115 3,114 2,744 2,962 2,913 2,895 2,815 2,705 2,665 2,629

Drake Stadium 2000 4-0-0 2001 8-1-0 2002 9-4-0 2003 10-0-0 2004 10-2-0 2005 11-1-1 2006 16-0-0 2007 14-0-0 2008 13-0-0 2009 12-0-0 2010 7-3-2 2011 8-0-1 2012 9-1-2 2013 11-0-1 2014 13-1-1 2015 6-3-1 2016 7-3-1 2016 12-1-1 Overall 180-20-11 El Camino College 1996 1997 1998 Overall

UCLA soccer set a new attendance record on Nov. 3, 2017 when a NCAA regular season record 11,925 fans packed Drake Stadium to see the Bruins win the crosstown showdown over USC, 3-2 in overtime.

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1-0-0 4-1-0 3-0-0 8-1-0

North Athletic Field 1993 5-4-1 1994 5-3-1 1995 7-2-0 1996 2-0-1 1998 2-1-1 1999 2-0-1 2008 1-0-0 2010 1-0-0 2011 2-0-0 Overall 27-10-5 Spaulding Field 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2003 Overall

3-1-0 5-0-0 2-1-0 4-0-0 4-0-0 2-0-0 1-0-1 21-2-1

Wallis Annenberg Stadium 2018 9-1-0 Overall 9-1-0 All-Time Home Record 245-34-17


NATIONAL TEAM BRUINS

Sydney Leroux kisses the 2015 World Cup Trophy Abby Dahlkemper, Mal Pugh and Sam Mewis helped lead the U.S. to its second-straight title in 2019

Rosie White has played in 3 World Cups for New Zealand

Full National Team Players

Name Danesha Adams Lauren Cheney Abby Dahlkemper Tina DiMartino Kennedy Faulknor Jessie Fleming Jackie Gilday Sarah Killion Kara Lang Sydney Leroux Rachel Lowe Hailie Mace Sam Mewis Teagan Micah Mary-Frances Monroe Iris Mora Jill Oakes Megan Oyster Nandi Pryce Mal Pugh Teagan Micah with former Bruin coach Aline Reis in 2019 Stephanie Rigamat Ashley Sanchez 2018-19 Player Statuses Taylor Smith Below is a list of current and former Bruin players and their Chelsea Stewart highest level of participation in 2018-19. Listings are U.S. Rosie White

Country USA USA USA USA Canada Canada Nicaragua USA Canada USA Australia USA USA Australia USA Mexico USA USA USA USA USA USA USA Canada New Zealand

Soccer unless otherwise indicated.

Jessie Fleming after scoring her first World Cup goal in 2019

Name Marley Canales Abby Dahlkemper Maddi Desiano Mia Fishel Jessie Fleming (Canada) Shana Flynn (Canada) Sunshine Fontes Jackie Gilday (Nicaragua) Rachel Lowe (Australia) Hailie Mace Sam Mewis Teagan Micah (Australia) Hannah Mitchell (Scotland) Lucy Parker (England) Mal Pugh Maricarmen Reyes (Mexico) Anika Rodriguez Karina Rodriguez Ashley Sanchez Delanie Sheehan Taylor Smith Viviana Villacorta Rosie White (New Zealand) McCall Zerboni

Team U-23s Full Team U-18s U-17s Full Team U-20s U-17s Full Team Full Team Full Team Full Team Full Team U-19s U-23s Full Team U-20s U-23s U-20s U-23s U-20s Full Team U-20s Full Team Full Team

World Cup Players Name Abby Dahlkemper Jessie Fleming Lauren Holiday Sydney Leroux Sam Mewis Teagan Micah Chelsea Stewart Rosie White Kara Lang Iris Mora

Olympians Name Lauren Cheney Jillian Ellis^ Jessie Fleming Kara Lang Sydney Leroux Sam Mewis* Iris Mora Nandi Pryce* Chelsea Stewart Rosie White ^ Coach / * Alternate

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Country (Yr.) USA (2019) Canada (2015, 2019) USA (2011, 2015) USA (2015) USA (2019) Australia (2019) Canada (2011) New Zealand (2011, 2015, 2018) Canada (2003, 2007) Mexico (1999, 2003)

Country (Yr.) USA (2008, 2012) USA (2008, 2012, 2016) Canada (2016) Canada (2008) USA (2012) USA (2016) Mexico (2004) USA (2000) Canada (2012) New Zealand (2012, 2016)


BRUINS IN PROFESSIONAL SOCCER

Bruins in the NWSL in 2019

UCLA’s Draft History

Name Lauren Barnes Abby Dahlkemper Caprice Dydasco Zoey Goralski Darian Jenkins Sarah Killion Sydney Leroux Sam Mewis Megan Oyster Mal Pugh Katelyn Rowland Taylor Smith Rosie White McCall Zerboni

2000 (WUSA) Name Skylar Little Traci Arkenberg Tracey Milburn Venus James Louise Lieberman

Round 4th 7th 9th 11th 15th

Overall Pick 26th 50th 71st 88th 119th

Team Washington Freedom San Diego Spirit Washington Freedom Bay Area CyberRays Washington Freedom

Round 1st

Overall Pick 6th

Team San Diego Spirit

Round 2nd 3rd

Overall Pick 13th 18th

Team Philadelphia Charge Washington Freedom

Round 1st 1st

Overall Pick 2nd 6th

Team FC Gold Pride Chicago Red Stars

Round 1st 3rd 7th

Overall Pick 3rd 33rd 47th

Team FC Gold Pride Los Angeles Sol Los Angeles Sol

Round 1st 2nd 7th

Overall Pick 2nd 17th 59th

Team Boston Breakers St. Louis Athletica FC Gold Pride

Round 1st 3rd

Overall Pick Team 7th Atlanta Beat 15th Philadelphia Independence

Round 1st

Overall Pick 1st

Team Atlanta Beat

Round 1st

Overall Pick 1st

Team Chicago Red Stars

Round 2nd

Overall Pick 16th

Team Kansas City FC

Round 1st 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 3rd

Overall Pick 2nd 3rd 4th 13th 17th 19th

Team Sky Blue FC Western NY Flash Western NY Flash Washington Spirit Kansas City FC Washington Spirit

Round 1st 4th

Overall Pick 7th 39th

Team North Carolina Courage Chicago Red Stars

Round 3rd

Overall Pick 27th

Team Chicago Red Stars

Round 1st

Overall Pick 2nd

Team Sky Blue FC

2001 (WUSA) Name Karissa Hampton

2002 (WUSA) Name Mary-Frances Monroe Stephanie Rigamat

Team Reign FC North Carolina Courage Sky Blue FC Chicago Red Stars Reign FC Sky Blue FC Orlando Pride North Carolina Courage Reign FC Washington Spirit North Carolina Courage Reign FC Reign FC North Carolina Courage

2008 (WPS) Name Jill Oakes Danesha Adams

2009 (WPS) Name Christina DiMartino Valerie Henderson McCall Zerboni

2010 (WPS) Name Lauren Cheney Kristina Larsen Lauren Wilmoth

2011 (WPS) Name Kylie Wright Lauren Barnes

Sarah Killion was the No. 2 overall pick in the 2015 NWSL draft

2012 (WPS) Name Sydney Leroux

2013 (NWSL) Name Zakiya Bywaters

2014 (NWSL) Name Jenna Richmond

2014 (NWSL) Name Sarah Killion Abby Dahlkemper Sam Mewis Megan Oyster Katelyn Rowland Caprice Dydasco

Zakiya Bywaters was selected No. 1 overall by the Chicago Red Star in the inaugural NWSL Draft in 2013.

2016 (NWSL) Name Darian Jenkins Lauren Kaskie

2018 (NWSL) Name Zoey Goralski

2019 (NWSL) Name Hailie Mace

2016 NWSL Champions Taylor Smith, Abby Dahlkemper, Sam Mewis and Katelyn Rowland

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ADMINISTRATOR BIOGRAPHIES

Dan Guerrero

Dr. Christina Rivera

Dr. Gene Block

Director of Athletics 18th Year UCLA ‘74

Sr. Asso. Athletic Director/SWA 13th Year at UCLA UC Irvine ‘96

Chancellor 13th Year at UCLA Stanford ‘77

Seventeen years and 32 NCAA Championships later, Dan Guerrero’s mantra of ‘image and substance’ has clearly been established at a level that few others in his profession can approach. At the department’s helm when UCLA Athletics became the first to 100 NCAA team championships, the Bruins’ current total of 118 NCAA titles ranks second in the nation. UCLA teams have also finished second 29 times and have totaled 130 Top 5 NCAA finishes. Across all sports, UCLA teams are fixtures in the postseason, with 20 Bruin teams in 2018-19 qualifying for NCAA postseason play. The football team has appeared in 13 bowl games, while the men’s basketball team advanced to consecutive Final Fours from 2006-08 and has made six trips to the Sweet 16. The program has also won 73 conference championships in 16 different sports, produced nearly 800 All-Americans and featured 11 Honda Award winners, including 2018-19 Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year Rachel Garcia. In his 17 years at UCLA, the Bruins have finished second five times and third four times in the race for the Learfield IMG College Directors’ Cup. In 2017-18, UCLA recorded a school-record 1,326 points in a close runner-up finish for the Directors’ Cup. Guerrero was the first athletic director at the NCAA Division I level (FBS, FCS and NCAA Division I-AAA) to earn three NACDA Under Armour Athletic Director of the Year awards (2013-14 and 200607 at UCLA, 2001-02 at UC Irvine). In 2017, he was honored by the National Football Foundation with the John L. Toner Award, becoming the first-ever sitting athletics director from the West Coast to receive the honor. He was also selected as a finalist for the Athletic Director of the Year at the 2017 Sports Business Awards. While success on the playing field with 32 NCAA Championships in 15 different sports and 29 second-place finishes during his tenure are extraordinary numbers, UCLA’s academic success under Guerrero is equally noteworthy. During the Fall 2017 quarter, a record 341 student-athletes made the Director’s Honor Roll, a number that was surpassed in Winter 2018, when 351 earned that distinction. UCLA’s Graduation Success Rate (GSR) and Academic Progress Rates (APR) continue to remain high nation-wide. The UCLA student-athlete GSR is currently at an all-time high 90%, and every Bruin team maintained multi-year APR rates of 930 or above, including four who achieved perfect scores of 1000. Guerrero has extensive experience in committee work at both the NCAA and conference level. Currently, he serves on the Division I Men’s Basketball Oversight Committee, which he previously chaired for two years, and he also recently chaired an NCAA Working Group on behalf of the Division 1 Men’s Basketball Rice Commission. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC), the Institute for Sport and Social Justice, the YMCA of Metropolitan Los Angeles, and the United States International University Sports Federation, where he also serves as Vice President. Resource development has been a core tenet of Guerrero’s tenure. During this recent UCLA Centennial Campaign, from 2014 through July 2019, Guerrero and his external development team have raised in excess of $325 million in fundraising support to the program. He also secured major long-term apparel and rights-holder contracts with Under Armour and WME-IMG that, at the time of their signing, were the largest collegiate deals nationally in their respective areas. During his tenure, he has spearheaded in excess of $430 million in new and renovated UCLA athletic facilities. Guerrero came to UCLA from UC Irvine, where he had served as UCI’s fifth permanent Director of Athletics for 10 years (19922002), helping to elevate that program to unprecedented success. Prior to arriving at UCI, Guerrero worked at Cal State Dominguez Hills, where he led that program to national prominence while serving as Athletic Director for five years (1988-92). A proud alumnus of UCLA, Guerrero received his Bachelor’s degree from the University in 1974 and played second base for the Bruins for four years. Known as “Warrior” during his playing career, he was inducted into the UCLA Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996. Guerrero earned a Master’s degree in Public Administration in 1982 from Cal State Dominguez Hills and was named to the Pi Alpha Alpha Honor Society for Public Affairs and Public Policy that same year. Guerrero was raised in Wilmington, CA. He is married to the former Anne Marie Aniello, and they have two grown daughters.

Dr. Christina Rivera is in her fourth year as the Senior Associate Athletic Director/Senior Woman Administrator (SWA) and 13th year overall at UCLA, having joined the staff in September 2007. In her role, Dr. Rivera directly supervises several sports, administrative areas and leads department initiatives, especially in the areas of Title IX and gender equity, women in sport, governance and legislation, and performance evaluation and program assessment. As a member of the senior management team reporting directly to the Director of Athletics, she serves in a leadership role for coaches and staff and works towards establishing department goals as well as developing and implementing department policy. In addition to these responsibilities, Dr. Rivera collaborates with University officials to provide guidance and direction to coaches and staff in order to enhance the growth and development of student-athletes both on and off the field. In the face of changing NCAA legislation, she also works to develop strategic initiatives and programs that benefit the department, teams, coaches, staff and student-athletes and ensures that they are executed in a consistent, efficient and professional manner throughout the support services areas. Prior to serving as the Senior Associate Athletic Director/SWA, Dr. Rivera was the Associate Athletic Director responsible for the academic and student support services provided to Bruin student-athletes. This included academic counseling, academic mentoring, peer learning, student services and student-athlete development programming. She also had direct oversight of the academic eligibility certification process as well as the requirements associated with the NCAA Academic Progress Rate (APR) and NCAA Graduation Success Rate (GSR). Dr. Rivera joined the Bruins after spending four years as the Associate Director and Eligibility Coordinator for the StudentAthlete Academic Services Office at USC, where she also served as the Academic Counselor to the football, men’s basketball, women’s soccer and women’s volleyball teams. Prior to her stint at USC, Dr. Rivera was an Athletic Academic Counselor for the Student-Athlete Support Services Office at Ohio State University. During her time in Columbus, she was also a lecturer for the School of Physical Activity and Educational Services, as well as for the Athletics Department. Dr. Rivera is on the Board of Directors for the Collegiate Women Sports Awards, which honors the nation’s top NCAA women student-athletes recognizing superior athletic skills, leadership, academic excellence and eagerness to participate in community service. Dr. Rivera is an active member of the National Association of Academic and Student-Athlete Development Professionals (N4A) and is a member of Women Leaders in College Sports. In June 2007, she received the N4A Professional Promise Award presented to a member who has dedicated their energy to the Association and its members. She has also presented at several conferences in regards to factors related to academic achievement and student-athlete retention, as well as the use of technology for reporting and increasing academic accountability in athletics. Dr. Rivera earned her Doctor of Philosophy degree in Higher Education Administration at Ohio State University in August 2004 where her dissertation focused on the identification of key factors student-athletes perceived to be important to the college student-athlete retention process. She also earned her Master’s degree in Educational Policy from the University of Pennsylvania and her Bachelor’s degree in Social Ecology at UC Irvine, where she was a varsity soccer student-athlete. A native of Southern California, Dr. Rivera currently resides in Marina Del Rey with her spouse and son.

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Dr. Gene Block became chancellor of UCLA in summer 2007, taking the helm of a world-class institution comprising 37,000 students and 27,000 faculty and staff, with an annual budget of $3.6 billion. As chief executive officer, he oversees all aspects of the university’s three-part mission of education, research and service. Previously, Dr. Block served as vice president and provost of the University of Virginia, where he also held the Alumni Council Thomas Jefferson Professorship in Biology. With academic expertise in biological clocks, he conducts research on the neurobiology of circadian rhythms in higher organisms, leading a research lab funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). From 1991 to 2002, he directed the National Science Foundation’s Science and Technology Center for Biological Timing. In 1997, he was named a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He has invented a number of devices and holds a patent for a non-contact respiratory monitor for the prevention of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Dr. Block joined the faculty of the University of Virginia in 1978 as an assistant professor of biology. He served as vice provost for research from 1993 to 1998 and then as vice president for research and public service until his appointment as vice president and provost in 2001. He also headed an NIH graduate training program aimed at increasing the number of scientists from underrepresented groups. In 1998, he received the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Outstanding Public Service Award for his work with Virginia’s business community. A native of Monticello, NY, Dr. 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. He also completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Stanford, working with the late Colin Pittendrigh, “the father of biological timing” and distinguished biologist and former Stanford President, Donald Kennedy. Dr. Block and his wife, Carol, have two adult children.


PAC-12 CONFERENCE Built on a firm foundation of academic excellence and superior athletic performance, the Pac-12 Conference renewed its undisputed claim as the Conference of Champions® in 2018-19. Beyond the courts and fields, the Pac-12’s accomplishments extend into the classrooms across 12 campuses, and outside its traditional geographic footprint into new corners around the world.

dominated a number of sports, winning 24 softball titles, 24 tennis crowns, 16 volleyball titles, 19 of the last 30 trophies in golf, and 17 in swimming & diving.

The only conference to win 500 NCAA Championships, the Pac-12 once again led the nation in 2018-19 with 13 NCAA crowns. This haul adds to an incredible 188 NCAA team titles claimed since 1999-2000 and 330 since 1981-82, the start of women’s sports sponsorship, an average of nearly nine per year. Even more impressive has been the breadth of the Pac-12’s success with championships coming in 28 different men’s and women’s sports. The Pac-12 has led or tied the nation in NCAA Championships in 53 of the last 59 years, with the exceptions coming no lower than third.

The Pac-12’s excellence is further proven in the annual Division I Learfield IMG College Directors’ Cup competition, the prestigious award that honors the best overall collegiate athletics programs in the country. STANFORD won an unprecedented 25th-consecutive Directors’ Cup in 2018-19 to lead the Conference, leading a 1-5-6 finish for Pac-12 institutions. Six Pac-12 member institutions ranked among the top-25 Division I programs: No. 1 STANFORD, No. 5 USC, No. 6 UCLA, No. 18 CALIFORNIA, No. 19 ARIZONA STATE and No. 24 WASHINGTON. At least five member institutions have been ranked in the top 25 each year of the Directors’ Cup program.

For the 14th-consecutive year, the Pac-12 had the most, or tied for the most, NCAA titles of any conference in the country, winning at least six every year since 1999-2000. No other conference has won double-digit NCAA crowns in a single year, the Pac-12 doing so 11 times, including a record 14 in 1996-97. Spanning over a century of outstanding athletics achievements, the Pac-12 has claimed 526 NCAA Championships (304 men’s, 191 women’s, 31 combined), over 200 more than the next league. Pac-12 members have won 304 NCAA team championships on the men’s side, 85 more than the next-closest conference. Men’s NCAA crowns have come at a phenomenal rate for the Pac-12 - 16 basketball titles by six schools, 54 tennis titles, 47 outdoor track & field crowns, and 29 baseball titles. Pac-12 members have won 25 of 49 NCAA titles in volleyball, 45 of 50 in water polo, 31 in skiing, and 25 in swimming & diving national championships. Individually, the Conference has produced an impressive number of NCAA individual champions. Over 2,000 (2,334) individual crowns have been won by Pac-12 student-athletes over the years with 1,370 by male student-athletes. Studentathletes have also captured 186 individual titles at combined championships (i.e., skiing and fencing). On the women’s side, the story is much the same. Since the NCAA began conducting women’s championships 38 years ago, Pac-12 members have claimed at least four national titles in a single season on 29 occasions, including every year except one since 2000-01. Overall, the Pac-12 has captured 191 NCAA women’s titles, easily outdistancing the SEC, which is second with 103. Pac-12 members have

Pac-12 women student-athletes have captured an unmatched 808 NCAA individual crowns, an average of over 21 championships per season, including 29 in 2018-19.

2018-19 REVIEW The Conference’s 13 NCAA titles came in the form of eight women’s, four men’s crowns and one from a combined sport. Seven Conference members claimed at least one NCAA title and, of the five institutions in the country to have won multiple titles, two were from the Pac-12. STANFORD tied the single-season NCAA record for most NCAA titles with six, a record the Cardinal had set in 1996-97. The Cardinal extended its streak of winning an NCAA title to 43 years with the women’s volleyball team capturing its second crown in three years and NCAA-leading eighth national championship all-time. Stanford was one of just five teams in the nation to win multiple NCAA Championships in 2018-19 and the only one to win more than a pair. Also a multiple championship winner, UCLA defended its beach volleyball title winning an All-Pac-12 final and claimed its NCAA-leading 12th softball crown, the Conference’s first since 2011. Led by senior Dani Jones who claimed the individual crown, COLORADO dominated the women’s cross country field to claim its third all-time title. USC won its 10th national championship in men’s water polo, playing in its NCAA-record 14th-consecutive final. UTAH skiing won its second title in three years and 12th all-time while CALIFORNIA men’s swimming and diving built a commanding 85-point cushion over the second-place team to win its first national crown since 2014 and sixth in program history. WASHINGTON women’s rowing swept all three grand finals to win the NCAA Championship for the second time in three years. In addition to the 13 national championships, the Pac-12 also had runners-up in six NCAA Championship events: men’s

2014 Pac-12 Champions

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water polo (STANFORD), women’s swimming (CALIFORNIA), women’s indoor track & field (USC), women’s water polo (USC), beach volleyball (USC) and wiomen’s track & field (USC). In nine sports, there were at least two teams among the final four and 33 teams finished in the top four at 21 NCAA Championship events, including all-Pac-12 finals in beach volleyball, men’s water polo and women’s water polo. Participation in the postseason was a common occurrence for the Pac-12 in 2018-19. Of the 24 sports sponsored by the Conference, 19 witnessed at least half its teams participating in NCAA or other postseason action. The men sent 63 of a possible 95 teams into the postseason (66.3 percent), while the women sent 79 of a possible 130 teams (60.8 percent). PAC-12 CONFERENCE HISTORY The roots of the Pac-12 Conference date back more than 100 years, to December 2, 1915, when the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) was founded at a meeting at the Imperial Hotel in Portland, Ore. The original membership consisted of four schools - the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Washington, the University of Oregon, and Oregon Agricultural College (now Oregon State University). All four are still charter members of the Conference. The University of Colorado accepted its invitation to join the Pac-12 on June 11, 2010, and on June 17, 2010, the University of Utah agreed to join the Conference. The Buffaloes and Utes officially became the 11th and 12th members of the Conference on July 1, 2011, the first additions to the league since 1978. It was during the 2010-11 academic year that Commissioner Larry Scott helped deliver monumental changes that transformed the Conference into a modern 12-team league. In addition to expanding to 12 teams, member institutions agreed to equal revenue sharing for the first time in the Conference’s history, created two football divisions - the North and the South, and established a Football Championship Game for the first time. He also secured landmark media rights deals with ESPN and FOX that dramatically increased national exposure and revenue for each school, in addition to establishing Pac-12 Networks which guaranteed enhanced exposure across all sports. Currently, the Pac-12 sponsors 11 men’s sports and 13 women’s sports, with the most recent additions coming in the 2017-18 (women’s lacrosse) and 2015-16 (beach volleyball) academic years. Additionally, the Conference is a member of the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) in four other men’s sports and two women’s sports. The Pac-12 Conference offices are located in the heart of San Francisco in the SOMA district.


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