2020-21 UCLA MEN’S TENNIS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
2020-21 QUICK FACTS
Location Los Angeles, CA Athletic Dept. Address 325 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 Athletics Phone (310) 825-8699 Men’s Tennis Office Phone (310) 206-6375 Chancellor Dr. Gene Block Director of Athletics Martin Jarmond Assoc. Athletic Director (Tennis) Chris Carlson Faculty Athletic Rep. Dr. Michael Teitell Home Court (Capacity) Los Angeles Tennis Center (10,000+) Enrollment 43,239 Founded 1919 Colors Blue and Gold Nickname Bruins Conference Pac-12 National Affiliation NCAA Division I Head Coach Billy Martin (Redlands ‘89) Career Record (Years) 604-128 (27) Associate Head Coach Rikus de Villiers Volunteer Assistant Coach Wil Martin 2020 Record 9-4 2020 Pac-12 Record (Finish) 2-0 (--) 2020 NCAA Tournament Not played (COVID-19) 2020 Final National Ranking 25 NCAA Championships 16 (1950, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1956, 1960, 1961, 1965, 1970, 1971, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1982,1984, 2005) All-Time NCAA Tournament Appearances (Last) 43 (2019) All-Time Conference Championships (Last) 44 (2019)
2021 SCHEDULE Date Jan. 15-17 Jan. 23 Jan. 24 Feb. 4 Feb. 12-14 Feb. 20 Feb. 24 Feb. 28 March 2 March 10 March 12 March 23 March 26 March 28 April 2 April 3 April 9 April 10 April 16 April 21-24 May 7-9 May 14 or 15 May 20-23 May 25-30
Opponent Pepperdine Invite California@ at USC/vs. UNLV@ Boise State ITA National Team Indoor Championships Loyola Marymount UC Santa Barbara USC UNLV Pepperdine Utah* UC Irvine at Arizona State* at Arizona* Oregon* Washington* at Stanford* at California* at USC* Pac-12 Championships NCAA First and Second Rounds NCAA Third Round NCAA Championships NCAA Individual Championships
The 2020-21 Bruins
Radio / TV Roster 2 Roster 3 Coaching Staff 4 Player Profiles - Graduate Students 6 Player Profiles - Seniors 7 Player Profiles - Juniors 11 Player Profiles - Sophomores 15 Player Profiles - Freshmen 16
2019-20 Season in Review 2019-20 Records & Honors 2020 Results
History / Records All-Time Letterwinners Team Captains Bruin Greats
17 18 20 21 21
Location Malibu, Calif. Los Angeles, Calif. Los Angeles, Calif. Los Angeles Tennis Center Chicago, Ill. Los Angeles Tennis Center Los Angeles Tennis Center Los Angeles Tennis Center Los Angeles Tennis Center Los Angeles Tennis Center Los Angeles Tennis Center Los Angeles Tennis Center Tempe, Ariz. Tucson, Ariz. Los Angeles Tennis Center Los Angeles Tennis Center Stanford, Calif. Berkeley, Calif. Los Angeles, Calif. Ojai, Calif. TBD TBD Orlando, Fla. Orlando, Fla.
Time (PT) TBD 10 am 10 am/3 pm 2 pm TBD 1 pm 1 pm 1 pm 2 pm 2 pm 2 pm 11 am TBD TBD 2 pm 1 pm TBD TBD 3 pm TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD
Home matches in bold / @ ITA Kickoff Weekend / * Pac-12 Conference match
1
Head-Coaching History Award Winners NCAA Championships All-Time Results Record vs. Opponents Record vs. Opponents in NCAA Play NCAA Seed History NCAA Tournament Year-by-Year Bruins in the ATP Rankings Grand Slam Titles Davis Cup Players Los Angeles Tennis Center
General Information Administrator Biographies Men’s Tennis Support Staff Media Information Pac-12 Conference
22 23 25 26 31 32 32 32 33 33 33 34 35 35 36 37
MEDIA INFORMATION
Tennis Contact: Andrew Sinatra Phone: 310-206-8141 Fax: 310-825-8664 E-mail: asinatra@athletics.ucla.edu Address: 325 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 Note: Student-athletes have been instructed not to grant any interview requests that have not been set up through the UCLA Athletic Communications Office.
RADIO / TV ROSTER
Drew BAIRD
Lucas BELLAMY
Roscoe BELLAMY
Sam FEIT
Ben GOLDBERG
Eric HAHN
Connor HANCE
6-3/So. Raleigh, N.C.
6-2/Sr. Los Angeles, Calif.
6-5/Jr. Pacific Palisades, Calif.
6-0/Gr. Los Angeles, Calif.
6-0/R-Sr. Pacific Palisades, Calif.
6-0/Jr. Fullerton, Calif.
5-10/Sr. Torrance, Calif.
Blaine HOVENIER
Stefan LEUSTIAN
Timothy LI
Govind NANDA
Bryce PEREIRA
Connor RAPP
Keegan SMITH
6-4/R-So. Los Angeles, Calif.
5-10/Fr. Sacramento, Calif.
5-11/Fr. Valley Village, Calif.
Mathew TSOLAKYAN
Max WILD
Patrick ZAHRAJ
6-1/Jr. Glendale, Calif.
Billy MARTIN
Head Coach
6-2/Jr. Murrieta, Calif.
Rikus DE VILLIERS
Associate Head Coach
5-9/Jr. Redlands, Calif.
6-0/Sr. Arcadia, Calif.
6-2/Jr. Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Max HAMMER
Wil MARTIN
Director of Operations
Volunteer Assistant Coach
2
6-2/R-Sr. Rancho Mirage, Calif.
6-7/Sr. San Diego, Calif.
ROSTER
ALPHABETICAL ROSTER Name Drew Baird Lucas Bellamy Roscoe Bellamy Sam Feit Ben Goldberg Eric Hahn Connor Hance Blaine Hovenier Stefan Leustian Timothy Li Govind Nanda Bryce Pereira Connor Rapp Keegan Smith Mathew Tsolakyan Max Wild Patrick Zahraj
TEAM STAFF Ht. 6-3 6-2 6-5 6-0 6-0 6-0 5-10 6-4 5-10 5-11 5-9 6-0 6-2 6-7 6-1 6-2 6-2
Yr. So. Sr. Jr. Gr. R-Sr. Jr. Sr. R-So. Fr. Fr. Jr. Sr. R-Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr.
Hometown (High School/College) Raleigh, N.C. (IMG Academy) Los Angeles, Calif. (Palisades Charter HS) Pacific Palisades, Calif. (Laurel Springs School) Los Angeles, Calif. (Milken Community School/Gonzaga) Pacific Palisades, Calif. (Palisades Charter HS) Fullerton, Calif. (Sunny Hills HS) Torrance, Calif. (Palos Verdes Peninsula HS) Los Angeles, Calif. (Campbell Hall) Sacramento, Calif. (Connections Academy) Valley Village, Calif. (Harvard-Westlake School) Redlands, Calif. (Laurel Springs School) Arcadia, Calif. (San Marino HS) Rancho Mirage, Calif. (Palm Desert HS) San Diego, Calif. (Point Loma HS) Glendale, Calif. (Laurel Springs School) Murrieta, Calif. (Laurel Springs School) Frankfurt am Main, Germany (Kurpfalz-Gymnasium Mannheim)
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE Sam Feit......................................................... like “fight” Blaine Hovenier...............................................HO-veneer Stefan Leustian........................... STEH-fawn LOOSE-chin Timothy Li....................................................... like “Lee” Govind Nanda........................................GO-vin NON-duh Mathew Tsolakyan.......................................so-LOCK-ian Patrick Zahraj.................................................... zuh-RYE Rikus de Villiers..............................RICK-iss de VILL-yers
Head Coach: Billy Martin (28th Year, Redlands, ‘89) Associate Head Coach: Rikus de Villiers (8th Year, Fresno State, ‘11) Volunteer Asst. Coach: Wil Martin (3rd Year, Saint Mary’s,‘15) Director of Operations: Max Hammer Staff Athletic Trainer: Ariel Guldstrand
ROSTER BREAKDOWN Height
Class
6-7.............................Smith 6-5......................R. Bellamy 6-4........................ Hovenier 6-3..............................Baird 6-2...................... L. Bellamy ...................................Rapp ....................................Wild ................................. Zahraj 6-1.......................Tsolakyan 6-0................................Feit ............................. Goldberg ...................................Hahn ................................Pereira 5-11.................................Li 5-10.......................... Hance ..............................Leustian 5-9............................Nanda
Freshmen (2): Leustian, Li Sophomores (2): Baird, Hovenier Juniors (6): R. Bellamy, Hahn, Nanda, Tsolakyan, Wild, Zahraj Seniors (6): L. Bellamy, Goldberg, Hance, Pereira, Rapp, Smith Graduate Students (1): Feit
State California (15): L. Bellamy, R. Bellamy, Feit, Goldberg, Hahn, Hance, Hovenier, Leustian, Li, Nanda, Pereira, Rapp, Smith, Tsolakyan, Wild North Carolina (1): Baird
International Germany (1): Zahraj
3
COACHING STAFF
BILLY
warranted, edging Torpegaard and Martin Joyce of Ohio State in a thriller, 6-7 (8), 7-6 (4), 1-0 (9). Most recently, Maxime Cressy and Keegan Smith completed an undefeated season by beating Patrick Kaukovalta and Mazen Osama of Alabama, 6-3, 6-4, in the final. Cressy and Smith did not drop a set on the year, beating 15 nationally-ranked opponents along the way.
MARTIN Head Coach 28th Season Redlands ‘89
In all, 33 players have achieved All-America status under Martin’s direction. Inducted into the ITA Men’s Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame in 1996, Martin’s playing career is full of highlights. To this very day he is still regarded as one of the best junior players in the history of the sport. He captured the 1973 and 1974 singles titles at Junior Wimbledon, the Junior U.S. Open and Junior Orange Bowl tournaments. Inside Tennis Magazine ran an article that named him “Junior Player of the Century.” Due to his tremendous success as a junior player while growing up in Illinois, Martin was inducted into the USTA Midwest Section Hall of Fame in December of 2010. He was also inducted into the Southern California Tennis Association Hall of Fame in August of 2011.
The program’s all-time leader in head-coaching wins, Billy Martin enters his 28th year guiding UCLA men’s tennis in 2020-21. It also marks his 38th year on staff, as he served as an assistant coach for 10 years prior to taking over for Glenn Bassett in 1994. Owner of a 604-128 (.825) record in dual matches, Martin passed friend and mentor Bassett with win No. 593 on April 25, 2019. The longest-tenured active head coach at UCLA is only the fourth in the history of the tennis program, following legends Bill Ackerman (1921-50), J.D. Morgan (1951-66) and Bassett (1967-93). Martin became just the third active head coach to be inducted into the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame, joining Al Scates and Valorie Kondos Field, in 2005. Perhaps the most amazing accomplishment in Martin’s career is his ability to contend for a championship each and every year, as only three times has he had a team finish out of the top five at the season-ending NCAA Championships.
Although Martin played just one season at UCLA before turning pro, the 1975 season was a special one, as he guided the team to a perfect 19-0 dual-match record en route to an NCAA team championship during his freshman year. After capturing the 1975 NCAA singles championship, Martin turned professional and enjoyed a fine career. He reached the Wimbledon singles quarterfinals in 1977 and was selected Rookie of the Year in his first professional season. Martin defeated top pros such as Ken Rosewall (twice), Stan Smith, John Newcombe, Roscoe Tanner and Harold Soloman. In 1975 he won the Arkansas International singles title. He also won doubles championships in 1977, ‘79 and ‘81 in Laguna Niguel, CA, Brussels, Belgium and Bristol, England, respectively.
Martin’s finest season at UCLA came in 2005 when he led the squad to its first NCAA title since 1984. UCLA’s 4-3 come-from-behind victory over top-seeded and undefeated Baylor that year marked the Bruins’ 16th NCAA Championship in men’s tennis and the school’s 97th NCAA title overall. The win snapped Baylor’s 57-match winning streak, the second longest in NCAA history. It also avenged the team’s 4-0 loss to the Bears in the 2004 NCAA final.
Martin attended UCLA for three years, working on his undergraduate studies before completing his bachelor’s degree in business management from the University of Redlands in 1989. He earned his MBA from USC in 1991. During the summer, Martin runs the Bassett-Martin Tennis Camp, one of the country’s most successful camps for youngsters. Martin also directs the UCLA Summer Tennis Camps held on the UCLA campus.
In addition to the team’s dramatic run to the title in 2005, Martin has had several near misses at the NCAA Championships, including 2013 when the top-seeded Bruins were narrowly edged by No. 2 Virginia, 4-3 in the championship match in Champaign, Ill. Under Martin, UCLA has reached the NCAA Final on three other occasions (1996, 1999 and 2004). After reaching the final in just his third year as head coach, Martin was named the 1996 ITA National Coach of the Year, as the Bruins finished with a 27-1 overall record.
Martin and his wife, Justine, have two children, William and Travis. William played college tennis at Saint Mary’s (2012-15) and currently serves as volunteer assistant coach for UCLA, while Travis played for the Bruins from 2014-17.
Career Coaching Record
During the coronavirus-shortened 2020 dual-match campaign, Martin collected the 600th win of his coaching career. He has guided 20 teams to 20 or more wins in his 26 completed seasons. The 2018 squad logged a 30-3 record en route to the national semifinals.
Year 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 2019 2020 Totals (27 yrs)
Another significant highlight in Martin’s career is his outstanding success in the highlycompetitive Pac-12 Conference, where he owns a 167-27 (.861) record. Under Martin’s direction, UCLA has captured 15 regular-season conference titles, including four in a row from 2004-07 and 2016-19. His teams have swept through conference regular-season play over a period that spans more than four seasons, going 31-0. UCLA has never finished out of the top three in the Pac-12 standings during Martin’s tenure and have won four conference tournament titles (2013, 2014, 2016, 2018). He has been named Pac-12 Coach of the Year five times (1996, 2012-14, 2018). In addition to his numerous team accomplishments, Martin takes great pride in helping his players achieve their individual goals as well. In 2006, he helped Benjamin Kohlloeffel become the 10th player in school history to capture the NCAA Singles Championship. Kohlloeffel notched a straight-set win over Virginia’s Somdev Devvarman in the title match that year, becoming the first Bruin player since Martin in 1975 to win the title. Kohlloeffel’s victory put his coach in an elite category, as Martin joined Georgia’s Manny Diaz as the only other active head coach to earn the career “triple crown” by leading their schools to three different titles at the NCAA Championships (team, singles and doubles). In 2014, Martin helped Marcos Giron become the school’s 11th NCAA Singles Champion when Giron downed Pepperdine’s Alex Sarkissian in straight sets in the 2014 championship match in Athens, Ga. In 2016, Martin coached three-time All-American Mackenzie McDonald to the NCAA Singles crown. The Bruin junior dispatched top-ranked Mikael Torpegaard of Ohio State in straight sets to become UCLA’s 12th NCAA Singles Champion. McDonald was named the 2016 ITA National Men’s College Player of the Year and earned his second straight Pac-12 Player of the Year nod (2015, 2016). Martin has coached four NCAA doubles champions, including three of the last four. The first came when he guided Justin Gimelstob and Srdjan Muskatirovic to the title in 1995. His second came in 2016, when McDonald and Martin Redlicki coasted past No. 8 Arthur Rinderknech and Jackson Withrow of Texas A&M, 6-4, 6-1, in the final. In 2018, Redlicki and Evan Zhu earned one of the final spots in the field and proved their inclusion was 4
Overall Record 22-6 19-6 27-1 25-4 17-8 26-3 24-4 23-3 23-5 24-4 23-6 27-3 20-6 22-4 23-4 21-5 17-7 18-7 26-4 29-2 26-4 17-10 25-3 22-6 30-3 19-6 9-4 604-128 (.825)
Conf. Record/Finish NCAA Finish 7-3/3rd NCAA Semifinals 7-3/3rd NCAA Semifinals 10-0/1st NCAA Runner-Up 9-1/T-1st NCAA Semifinals 5-2/T-2nd NCAA Quarterfinals 6-1/T-1st NCAA Runner-Up 6-1/2nd NCAA Quarterfinals 6-1/2nd NCAA Quarterfinals 6-1/1st NCAA Semifinals 6-1/2nd NCAA Semifinals 6-1/T-1st NCAA Runner-Up 6-1/T-1st NCAA Champion 6-1/T-1st NCAA Quarterfinals 7-0/1st NCAA Quarterfinals 5-2/T-2nd NCAA Semifinals 6-0/1st NCAA Semifinals 4-2/3rd NCAA Quarterfinals 3-3/T-3rd NCAA Round of 16 7-0/1st NCAA Semifinals 7-0/1st NCAA Runner-Up 6-1/2nd NCAA Semifinals 5-2/T-3rd NCAA Round of 16 7-0/1st NCAA Quarterfinals 6-0/1st NCAA Quarterfinals 8-0/1st NCAA Semifinals 8-0/1st NCAA Round of 16 2-0/-- Not played (COVID-19) 167-27 (.861) 26 NCAA Appearances
COACHING STAFF
RIKUS
WIL
Associate Head Coach Eighth Season Fresno State ‘11
Volunteer Assistant Coach Third Season Saint Mary’s ‘15
DE VILLIERS
MARTIN
Rikus de Villiers enters his eighth season on the UCLA men’s tennis coaching staff and first as associate head coach in 2020-21. He served in the role of volunteer assistant coach for five of the six seasons prior to his promotion by head coach Billy Martin in June 2018. De Villiers replaced Grant Chen, who was named head coach at SMU.
Equipped with NCAA Division I playing experience and a rich coaching pedigree, Wil Martin enters his third season as UCLA men’s tennis volunteer assistant coach in 2020-21. Son of long-time UCLA head tennis coach and ITA Hall of Famer Billy Martin, Martin has made a name for himself in the California tennis landscape. He played collegiate tennis at Saint Mary’s prior to his return to the Southland, where he replaced the promoted Rikus de Villiers on staff in 2018.
In his first season as a full-time assistant, de Villiers helped UCLA to its fourth straight regular-season Pac-12 title. The Bruins went 8-0 in conference play, stretching their winning streak in Pac-12 regular-season matches to 29. They would go on to reach the third round of the NCAA tournament. There was also individual success, as the duo of Maxime Cressy and Keegan Smith posted a 21-0 record and claimed the 14th NCAA doubles championship in program history.
The Bruins collected the Pac-12 regular-season championship in Martin’s debut season, going undefeated in eight conference matches and advancing to the third round of the NCAA tournament. The tandem of Maxine Cressy and Keegan Smith also had individual success, going 21-0 en route to the 14th NCAA doubles championship in program history.
De Villiers joined the UCLA staff in the fall of 2012 and immediately aided the Bruins in their run to the final round of the NCAA Championships the following spring. Over the course of his five seasons on staff, UCLA registered an overall record of 124-28 (.816) and dropped just two regular-season Pac-12 matches (32-2). The Bruins also secured three Pac-12 Tournament titles during de Villiers’ time as a volunteer. He coached American Ryan Harrison on the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) World Tour during his time away from the program in 2015-16.
A shoulder injury derailed a promising beginning with the Gaels for Martin, who won five of his first seven singles matches in the 2011-12 season. He sat out the entirety of the subsequent campaign, as well as most of the following fall before seeing his resilience pay off in the 2014 dual-match season. Martin was a stalwart, finishing third on the team in both singles wins and doubles triumphs with eight and nine, respectively. He remained a consistent doubles force through the 2014-15 season, his final one with the team. Martin attended Loyola High School in Los Angeles for three years before relocating to Ojai, Calif., where he attended Nordhoff High School and trained at Weil Tennis Academy.
Prior to joining UCLA, de Villiers played collegiate tennis from 2008-2011, spending one season at Pepperdine before transferring to Fresno State. The Durban, South Africa native came into his own with the Bulldogs, earning All-Western Athletics Conference (WAC) recognition each year. It was a breakout 2011 for de Villiers and the Bulldogs, who advanced to the NCAA Championships Second Round after claiming the WAC’s automatic bid to the tournament. Individually, de Villiers was named to the All-WAC Singles and Doubles First Teams. De Villiers and partner Remi Boutillier earned a second trip to the NCAA Doubles Championships and finished the season ranked No. 18 in the Campbell/ITA doubles rankings. De Villiers reached a career-best No. 83 on the singles list. A multiple-time winner at the African Championships as a junior player, de Villiers picked up his first ATP point at just 14 years old.
Associate head coach Rikus de Villiers
Volunteer assistant coach Wil Martin (right, with Max Wild)
5
PLAYER PROFILES - GRADUATE STUDENTS
SAM
(2-1) … played primarily on Court 1 in dual-match doubles action (5-3); also played on Courts 2 (1-0) and 3 (0-1) … All-WCC Honorable Mention selection for singles play … with O’Sullivan, earned All-WCC Second Team selection for doubles play … named WCC Singles Player of the Week (Feb. 13) after going 2-0 in home sweep of Idaho, UC Davis; defeated Ivan Thamma of Aggies, 6-4, 6-4, to clinch win … with O’Sullivan, named WCC Doubles Team of the Week (April 17) after going 2-0 while team beat Pacific, Saint Mary’s … bested Nathan Boniel of Portland State, 3-6, 7-5, 6-4, to reach A singles final round at Bulldog Classic (Oct. 29) … with O’Sullivan, defeated Alexander Flink/Rok Sitar of Montana State, 8-6, to reach doubles final round at Bulldog Classic (Oct. 29) … with O’Sullivan, beat Can Kaya/Gunther Matta of California, 8-6, to reach doubles semifinal round at ITA Northwest Regional Championships (Oct. 21) for first time in in program history … took down Cem Erturk of Fresno State, 6-4, 6-4, to reach singles Round of 16 at ITA Northwest Regional Championships (Oct. 20).
FEIT 6-0 / Graduate Student Los Angeles, Calif. Milken Community School/Gonzaga
2016-17 (GONZAGA)
COLLEGE CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
18-14 singles record (8-7 in dual matches) … 14-14 doubles mark (9-8 in dual matches) … played primarily on Court 3 in singles dual matches (8-6); also played on Court 2 (0-1) … played exclusively on Court 1 in doubles dual-match action … with O’Sullivan, named WCC Doubles Team of the Week (March 21) after posting 2-0 record during three-match Southern California road trip … knocked off Felix Fan of Portland, 7-5, 6-3, to seize Green singles consolation championship at Duck Invitational (Nov. 13) … defeated Kostya Nesterenko of Nevada, 7-5, 4-6, 1-0(6), to claim singles B consolation title at Aggie Invitational (Oct. 2) … earned first-career singles victory with decision over Wacil Bendjelti of Eastern Washington, 6-2, 6-4, in Red singles consolation match at EWU Fall Classic (Sept. 17).
• 2-time All-WCC Singles honoree (First Team – 2019, Honorable Mention – 2018) • 2-time All-WCC Doubles honoree (Honorable Mention – 2019, Second Team – 2018) • WCC Singles Player of the Week (Feb. 13, 2018) • 4-time WCC Doubles Team of the Week (last March 17, 2020 w/ Matthew Hollingworth) • 2-time ITA Scholar-Athlete (2019, 2020) • 2-time WCC All-Academic selection (Honorable Mention – 2019, 2020) • Career-high Oracle/ITA singles ranking: 118 (March 3, 2020) • Career-high Oracle/ITA doubles ranking: 33 (Feb. 5, 2020 w/ Matthew Hollingworth)
2019-20 (GONZAGA)
PRIOR TO COLLEGE
16-7 singles record in shortened season (6-3 in dual matches) … 11-12 doubles mark (5-6 in dual matches) … reached season-high No. 118 in Oracle/ITA singles rankings (March 3) … with partner Matthew Hollingworth, reached season-high No. 33 in Oracle/ ITA doubles rankings (Feb. 5) … played exclusively on Court 1 in singles dual matches … played primarily on Court 1 in doubles dual-match action (5-5); also recorded decision on Court 2 (0-1) … named ITA Scholar-Athlete … earned WCC All-Academic Honorable Mention recognition … with Hollingworth, named WCC Doubles Team of the Week (March 17) after defeating Johannes Seeman/Cagatay Soke of Fresno State, 6-4, on road … with Hollingsworth knocked off No. 41 Kennosuke Nouchi/Jannik Opitz of Western Michigan, 6-3 (Jan. 19) … with Hollingworth, beat Vasileio Iliopoulos/Arthur Neuhaus of Santa Clara, 8-6, to reach doubles semifinal round at ITA Northwest Regional Championships and match program’s best-ever showing (Oct. 28) … defeated Hamish Stewart of Tulane, 6-3, 7-6(2), to reach singles qualifying third round at ITA All-American Championships (Oct. 8).
Attended Milken Community School in Los Angeles … 4-star recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 101 in 2016 … occupied No. 1 singles spot for Wildcats throughout prep career, garnering team MVP recognition at conclusion of each season … two-time Liberty League MVP … went undefeated during junior and senior seasons, capturing Liberty League singles championship in 2015 … reached Boys’ 18 singles final round at 2016 Lakewood (Calif.) Junior Open Tournament … captured Boys’ 16 singles championship at 2015 Esme Pearson Memorial Junior Tournament in San Diego … claimed Boys’ 16 title at 2015 Long Beach (Calif.) Junior Tournament … won Boys’ 16 singles, doubles titles at 2014 Mike Agassi “No Quit” Championships in Las Vegas.
PERSONAL
Full name: Samuel Feit … son of Eric and Alona (Kashanian) … mother attended UCLA … has one older brother, Jonah … father (Guilford College) and brother (Wheaton College) played tennis in college … decided to attend UCLA because “it is the pinnacle of athletics and education” and he attended UCLA events and admired head coach Billy Martin’s “remarkable” program growing up … admires Marat Safin, Roger Federer and former basketball player Michael Jordan … hobbies and interests include basketball, mixing and producing music, finance and real estate … has 11 first cousins who are all male ... graduate student in UCLA Transformative Coaching and Leadership Academy.
2018-19 (GONZAGA)
24-8 singles record (17-5 in dual matches) … 21-11 doubles mark (12-9 in dual matches) … with Ruadhan O’Sullivan, reached No. 82 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings (April 9) … played primarily on Court 1 in singles dual matches (9-4); also played on Court 2 (8-1) … played exclusively on Court 2 in doubles dual-match action (12-9) … First-Team AllWCC honoree for singles play … with Ruadhan O’Sullivan, earned All-WCC Honorable Mention selection for doubles play … named ITA Scholar-Athlete … earned WCC AllAcademic Honorable Mention recognition … with O’Sullivan, named WCC Doubles Team of the Week (April 9) after going 2-0 while team captured 4-3 wins versus Pepperdine, Loyola Marymount; Feit/O’Sullivan defeated No. 32 Nick Borchenko/Diego Nava of Lions, 6-2 … with O’Sullivan, defeated Lucas Castelo Branco/Matteo Fortini of Portland State, 8-4, to claim Blue doubles title at Gonzaga Invitational (Oct. 28) … with O’Sullivan, beat Jack Molloy/Jackson Suh of California, 8-5, to reach doubles quarterfinal round at ITA Northwest Regional Championships (Oct. 12) … with O’Sullivan, knocked off Max Korkh/ Oisin Shaffrey of Montana, 6-4, to reach Greg Patton doubles final round at Dar Walters Fall Classic (Oct. 7).
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2016-17* 8-7 10-7 18-14 9-8 5-6 14-14 2017-18* 7-3 10-4 17-7 6-4 9-4 15-8 2018-19* 17-5 7-3 24-8 12-9 9-2 21-11 2019-20* 6-3 10-4 16-7 5-6 6-6 11-12 Totals 38-18 37-18 75-36 32-27 29-18 61-45
* - with Gonzaga
2017-18 (GONZAGA)
17-7 singles record (7-3 in dual matches) … 15-8 doubles mark (6-4 in dual matches) … played primarily on Court 1 in singles dual matches (5-2); also played on Court 2
6
PLAYER PROFILES - SENIORS
LUCAS
BEN
6-2 / Senior Los Angeles, Calif. Palisades Charter HS
6-0 / Redshirt Senior Pacific Palisades, Calif. Palisades Charter HS
BELLAMY
GOLDBERG
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
2019-20
2019-20
• 6-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020)
• 6-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020)
Did not see action during tournament or dual-match portions of schedule … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Winter 2020, Spring 2020.
11-8 singles record in shortened season (5-4 in dual matches) … 2-3 doubles mark … played exclusively on Court 4 in singles dual matches … totaled team-high four matchclinching points, including 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 winner-take-all decision over No. 104 Bogdan Pavel of UCF in ITA Kick-Off Weekend final round (Jan. 26) … came back from 5-7, 1-5 deficit to defeat Riki Oshima, 5-7, 7-6(5), 7-6(1), and clinch 4-3 win at Oregon (March 1) … took down Rafa Izquierdo Luque of No. 10 NC State, 6-3, 6-1, at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 16) … defeated Adrian Oetzbach of Pepperdine, 7-6, 4-6, 6-3, to reach singles quarterfinal round at SoCal Intercollegiate Championships (Nov. 8) … topped Nico Borter of San Diego, 6-1, 6-2, to reach singles quarterfinal round at Jack Kramer Club Collegiate Invitational (Nov. 2) … with partner Connor Hance, defeated David Ball/Vinicius Feijao Nogueira of BYU, 8-5, to reach doubles quarterfinal round at Jack Kramer Club Collegiate Invitational (Nov. 1) ... named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2020, Spring 2020.
2018-19
1-1 singles record … 3-1 doubles mark … with partner Connor Rapp, beat Clayton Alenik and Eric Samuelsson of UNLV, 8-5, to reach doubles final round at Larry Easley Memorial Classic (Nov. 3) … defeated Mario Aguayo of UNLV, 6-2, 7-5, to record first-career singles win and advance to Flight Two second round at Larry Easley Memorial Classic (Nov. 1) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2018.
2017-18
0-4 singles record … 1-4 doubles mark … in doubles debut (with partner Connor Rapp), defeated Henrik Atlevi and Joseph Rotheram of UC Santa Barbara, 8-3, to reach second round of ITA Regional Championships (Oct. 19) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2018 and Spring 2018.
2018-19
11-12 singles record (9-10 in dual matches) … 5-10 doubles mark (1-7 in dual matches) … played primarily on Court 5 in singles dual matches (7-6); also notched decisions on Courts 4 (1-3) and 6 (1-1) … played primarily on Court 2 in doubles dual matches (1-6); also played on Court 3 (0-1) … defeated Russell Benkaim of No. 46 Utah, 6-4, 6-0, to clinch quarterfinal-round win at Pac-12 Championships (April 25) … went 3-2 versus nationallyranked singles opponents, including back-to-back decisions over No. 60 William Howells of No. 11 Notre Dame (7-5, 6-1 – Feb. 15) and No. 80 Rrezart Cungu of No. 1 Wake Forest (6-2, 6-3 – Feb. 16), in first and quarterfinal rounds at ITA Team Indoor Championships … beat No. 74 Logan Smith of No. 9 USC, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3, in 4-3 win versus Trojans (April 5) … with partner Connor Rapp, beat Ryan Marker and Romeo Midtgaard Jivraj of San Francisco, 6-2, to advance to Group 2 doubles final round at National Collegiate Tennis Classic (Jan. 12) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2018.
PRIOR TO UCLA
Attended Palisades Charter High School in Pacific Palisades, Calif. … 4-star recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 113 in 2015 ... won singles title at CIF-Los Angeles City Section (LA) 2017 Individual Championships in Encino, Calif. … Dolphins claimed 2017 National High School All-American Team Invitational title in Newport Beach, Calif. … earned CIF-LA First-Team selection as junior.
PERSONAL
Son of Steve and Elizabeth … has one older brother, Rob, and two younger brothers, Roscoe and Lincoln … mother and brother, Rob, played tennis at USC … brother, Roscoe, also plays tennis at UCLA ... decided to attend UCLA because he enjoys its environment and is a lifelong Bruin fan … describes his greatest athletic thrill to date as winning CIFLA singles title with 7-6 third set as a senior … admires Roger Federer … hobbies and interests include music, coding, kickboxing and computer and software development ... sociology major.
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2017-18 0-0 2018-19 0-0 2019-20 0-0 Totals 0-0
2017-18
10-6 singles record (5-0 in dual matches) … 9-7 doubles mark (3-3 in dual matches) … defeated Nick Borchenko of Loyola Marymount, 6-2, 7-6 (5), to clinch win (Jan. 23) … with partner Austin Rapp, knocked off Sander Gjoels-Anderson/Nicholas Mitchell of San Diego State, 7-5, to claim Flight 1 title at Aztec Fall Invitational (Oct. 8) … with partner Maxime Cressy, beat Valentin Lang/Gregoire Balenci of Grand Canyon University, 6-1, to clinch doubles point (Jan. 18) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2018 and Spring 2018.
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
0-4 0-4 0-0 1-4 1-4 1-1 1-1 0-0 3-1 3-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-5 1-5 0-0 4-5 4-5
2016-17
7-9 singles record (3-0 in dual matches) … 14-16 doubles mark (7-10 in dual matches) … defeated Michael Sienko of Army West Point, 6-2, 6-1, in first round at NCAA Championships (May 12) … clinched five doubles points with partner Maxime Cressy, including win over Wayne Montgomery and Walker Duncan of No. 12 Georgia, 6-4, in quarterfinal round at NCAA Championships (May 20) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Spring 2017.
PRIOR TO UCLA
Lettered all four years at Palisades Charter High School in Pacific Palisades, Calif. ... played No. 1 singles all four years ... member of four-time CIF-Los Angeles City Section (LA) championship team ... 5-star recruit per TennisRecruiting.net ... four-time First-Team All-City selection ... took singles championship at 2016 ITA Summer Circuit – Cal State Northridge … claimed singles title at CIF-LA 2015 Individual Championships in Encino, Calif. ... notched clinching wins to capture 2016 California Classic and 2016 LA City team titles ... won USTA Closed Regional – October singles title at 2015 Mike Agassi “No Quit” Championships in Las Vegas ... competed at 2015 and 2016 USTA National Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich.
Lucas Bellamy
7
PLAYER PROFILES - SENIORS
PERSONAL
PERSONAL
Son of Ken and Courtney … has one younger brother, Keaton, one younger sister, Kimmi, and one older sister, Kenadi … sister, Kenadi, plays tennis at Washington … decided to attend UCLA because of the “great combination of athletics, academics and California” … describes his greatest athletic thrill to date as being ranked No. 1 in nation by TennisRecruiting.net in 2014 … admires Roger Federer … hobbies and interests include surfing, playing the guitar, watching “Game of Thrones” and rock ‘n’ roll music … was a child actor ... business economics major.
Full name: Benjamin Donald Goldberg ... son of Dan and Vicky ... has one younger sister, Caroline ... father is Assistant Athletic Director, Compliance at UCLA ... admires Gael Monfils ... says he chose UCLA because “UCLA combines the best of athletics and academics, and it has always been [his] home away from home” ... political science major.
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2016-17 3-0 4-9 7-9 7-10 7-6 14-16 2017-18 5-0 5-6 10-6 3-3 6-4 9-7 2018-19 9-10 2-2 11-12 1-7 4-3 5-10 2019-20 5-4 6-4 11-8 0-0 2-3 2-3 Totals 22-14 17-21 39-35 11-20 19-16 30-36
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2017-18 15-5 3-3 18-8 1-0 2-2 3-2 2018-19 0-1 8-5 8-6 0-0 4-5 4-5 2019-20 2-1 4-2 6-3 0-0 2-2 2-2 Totals 17-7 15-10 32-17 1-0 8-9 9-9
CONNOR
BRYCE
HANCE
PEREIRA
5-10 / Senior Torrance, Calif. Palos Verdes Peninsula HS
6-0 / Senior Arcadia, Calif. San Marino HS
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• 2-time ITA Scholar-Athlete (2019, 2020) • Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll (2020) • 6-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Winter 2020)
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• 6-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020)
2019-20
2019-20
3-4 singles record in shortened season … 13-7 doubles mark (7-4 in dual matches) … played primarily on Court 3 in dual-match doubles action (6-4); also recorded decision on Court 2 (1-0) … with partner Patrick Zahraj, clinched two doubles points, including 7-6(1) winner-take-all result over JanMagnus Johnson/Alan Rubio of UCF in ITA Kick-Off Weekend final round (Jan. 26) … with partner Connor Rapp, defeated Eric Hahn/Max Wild of UCLA, 6-1, to take A Flight doubles title at Aztec Fall Invitational (Oct. 6) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Winter 2020, Spring 2020.
6-3 singles record in shortened season (2-1 in dual matches) … 2-2 doubles mark … earned spot on Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll ... named ITA Scholar-Athlete ... played exclusively on Court 6 in singles dual matches … defeated David Ball, 7-6(4), 6-3, to clinch win versus BYU (Jan. 15) … with partner Blaine Hovenier, topped Christian Lerby/George Stoupe of Arizona State, 8-7, to reach doubles semifinal round at National Collegiate Tennis Classic (Jan. 10) … beat Hiroki Sakagawa of Arizona, 6-1, 6-0, to reach singles quarterfinal round at Jack Kramer Collegiate Invitational (Nov. 2) … with partner Ben Goldberg, defeated David Ball/Vinicius Feijao Nogueira of BYU, 8-5, to reach doubles quarterfinal round at Jack Kramer Club Collegiate Invitational (Nov. 1) ... named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2020.
2018-19
0-4 singles record … 22-12 doubles mark (12-9 in dual matches) … played primarily on Court 3 in doubles play (12-7); also played on Courts 1 (0-1) and 2 (0-1) … clinched team-high seven doubles points with partner Patrick Zahraj, including 7-5 win over Grayson Broadus and Matt Gamble of No. 11 Notre Dame in first round at ITA Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 15) … with Zahraj, topped No. 80 Joseph Rotheram and Alex Soto of UC Santa Barbara, 7-6(5), to clinch doubles point (March 14) … with partner Max Wild, beat Lucas Bellamy and Connor Rapp of UCLA, 8-6, to take Larry Easley Memorial Classic doubles championship (Nov. 4).
2018-19
8-6 singles record (0-1 in dual matches) … 4-5 doubles mark … named ITA ScholarAthlete … playing on Court 5 in singles play, retired against Carson Haskins of Indiana in only dual-match appearance (Jan. 25) … beat Stewart Block of Arizona, 3-6, 6-2, 1-0(7), to reach Group 1 singles final round at National Collegiate Tennis Classic (Jan. 12) … with partner Connor Rapp, defeated David Goulak and Daniel Landa of UC Davis, 8-5, to reach Flight A doubles consolation final round at UCSB Classic (Oct. 6) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2019, Spring 2019.
2017-18
2017-18
6-8 singles record (1-0 in dual matches) … 24-12 doubles mark (21-6 in dual matches) … defeated Eric Samuelsson of UNLV, 6-4, 6-0, to reach quarterfinal round at Larry Easley Memorial Classic (Nov. 3) … clinched eight doubles points with partner Maxime Cressy, including win over Alex Knight/Harrison Brown of No. 15 Michigan, 6-4, in third round at NCAA Championships (May 18) … in doubles debut (with partner Keegan Smith), beat Dominic Barretto/Paul Barretto of California, 8-5, to reach Flight A quarterfinal round at UCSB Classic (Oct. 6) … with Cressy, topped No. 43 Hunter Tubert/Matt Mendez of No. 2 Ohio State, 6-4, at ITA Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 17) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2017, Winter 2018 and Spring 2018.
18-8 singles record (15-5 in dual matches) … 3-2 doubles mark (1-0 in dual matches) … posted four match-clinching points, including win over Jake DeVine of No. 12 USC, 6-4, 6-4, in final round at Pac-12 Championships (April 28) … in singles debut, defeated Piers Foley of Washington, 6-4, 6-7, 1-0 (8), to reach Round of 16 at Jack Kramer Club Collegiate Invitational … with partner Connor Rapp, knocked off Jake DeVine/Mateusz Smolicki of USC, 6-1, to reach semifinal round at Sherwood Collegiate Cup (Jan. 13) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2017, Winter 2018 and Spring 2018.
PRIOR TO UCLA
Attended Palos Verdes Peninsula High School in Rolling Hills Estates, Calif. … BlueChip recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached No. 1 in 2014 ... named AllAmerican by National High School Tennis All-American Foundation in 2017 … won CIF singles championship at 2016 Ojai Valley Junior Tournament in Ojai, Calif. … chosen to All-Tournament Team at 2017 National High School All-American Team Invitational in Newport Beach, Calif. … captured Boys’ 14 singles championship at 2013 Easter Bowl in Indian Wells, Calif. … Boys’ 16 singles finalist at 2014 USTA National Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich. … Boys’ 14 singles quarterfinalist at 2012 Eddie Herr International Championships at IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla.
PRIOR TO UCLA
Attended San Marino High School in San Marino, Calif. … 5-star recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 30 in 2016 ... named All-American by National High School Tennis All-American Foundation in 2016 … Pasadena Star-News Player of the Year pick in 2016, 2017 … two-time CIF doubles champion with partner Connor Lee at Ojai Valley Junior Tournament (2016, 2017) in Ojai, Calif. … became first player to capture three consecutive CIF-Southern Section doubles titles (with partner Derek Chen in 2015, Lee in 2016, 2017).
8
PLAYER PROFILES - SENIORS
PERSONAL
Smolicki of USC, 6-1, to reach semifinal round at Sherwood Collegiate Cup (Jan. 13) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2018 and Spring 2018.
Son of Melwin and Stephanie … has one older sister, Alexis … decided to attend UCLA because of the welcoming and friendly nature of the coaching staff and his appreciation for the team … describes his greatest athletic thrill to date as winning Boys’ 16 doubles title with partner Ivan Thamma at 2015 USTA National Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich. … admires Roger Federer … hobbies and interests include reading, eating and hanging with friends ... political science major.
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2017-18 1-0 2018-19 0-0 2019-20 0-0 Totals 1-0
2016-17
Redshirted … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2017 and Spring 2017.
PRIOR TO UCLA
Attended Palm Desert High School in Palm Desert, Calif. ... four-time All-Desert Valley League selection ... Palm Desert reached semifinal round of CIF State Championships in 2016 ... reached singles semifinal round at CIF-Southern Section (SS) 2015 Individual Championships in Seal Beach, Calif. ... reached singles final round at 2015 Ojai Valley Junior Tournament in Ojai, Calif. ... Aztecs advanced to CIF State Championships final rounds in 2013 and 2014 ... qualified for doubles draw at CIF-SS 2014 Individual Championships in Seal Beach, Calif.
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
5-8 6-8 21-6 3-6 24-12 0-4 0-4 12-9 10-3 22-12 3-4 3-4 7-4 6-3 13-7 8-16 9-16 40-19 19-12 59-31
PERSONAL
CONNOR
Son of David and Tiffany ... has one older brother, Austin ... has one younger sister, Katie ... brother played tennis at UCLA (2015-18) … favorite pro sports team is MLB’s St. Louis Cardinals ... decided to attend UCLA because it was the best fit and offered the combination of athletic and academic excellence ... political science major.
RAPP
6-2 / Redshirt Senior Rancho Mirage, Calif. Palm Desert HS
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2017-18 1-0 3-9 4-9 1-1 3-3 4-4 2018-19 1-0 9-8 10-8 8-10 8-5 16-15 2019-20 0-0 5-8 5-8 4-2 10-4 14-6 Totals 2-0 17-25 19-25 13-13 21-12 34-25
KEEGAN
SMITH
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• ITA Scholar-Athlete (2020) • Pac-12 All-Academic selection (Honorable Mention - 2019) • 8-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020) • Career-high Oracle/ITA doubles ranking: 84 (April 2, 2019 w/ Maxime Cressy)
6-7 / Senior San Diego, Calif. Point Loma HS
2019-20
5-8 singles record in shortened season … 14-6 doubles mark (4-2 in dual matches) … named ITA Scholar-Athlete ... played exclusively on Court 2 in dual-match doubles action … with partner Drew Baird, clinched three doubles points, including 6-3 winner-take-all result over Chih Chi Huang/Eliot Spizzirri of No. 4 Texas at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 14) … with Baird, beat No. 44 Alexis Galarneau/Robert Turzak of No. 10 NC State, 6-3, at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 16) … with partner Max Wild, beat Matthew Hollingworth/Vincent Rettke of Gonzaga, 8-3, to reach doubles final round at Larry Easley Memorial Classic (Nov. 2) … with partner Bryce Pereira, defeated Wild/ Eric Hahn of UCLA, 6-1, to take A Flight doubles title at Aztec Fall Invitational (Oct. 6) … beat Jakub Novak of Grand Canyon, 7-6(5), 6-2, to reach Aztec Flight singles quarterfinal round at Aztec Fall Invitational (Oct. 4) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Winter 2020, Spring 2020.
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• NCAA doubles champion (2019 w/ Maxime Cressy) • 3-time ITA All-America selection - 2020 (singles), 2019 (doubles), 2018 (doubles) • Pac-12 Doubles Team of the Year (2019 w/ Maxime Cressy) • Pac-12 Freshman of the Year (2018) • ITA Southwest Region Player to Watch (2019) • ITA Southwest Region Rookie of the Year (2018) • 2-time All-Pac-12 honoree (First Team - 2019, Second Team - 2018) • 3-time Pac-12 Player of the Week (last March 4, 2020) • ITA Indoors All-Tournament selection (Doubles No. 2 w/ Austin Rapp – 2018) • Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (Spring 2019) • Career-high Oracle/ITA singles ranking: 4 (March 3, 2020) • Career-high Oracle/ITA doubles ranking: 1 (May 29, 2019 w/ Maxime Cressy)
2018-19
10-8 singles (1-0 in dual matches) … 16-15 doubles mark (8-10 in dual matches) … with partner Maxime Cressy, reached season-high No. 84 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings (April 2) … earned Pac-12 All-Academic Honorable Mention recognition … played primarily on Court 2 in doubles play (6-8); also played on Courts 1 (2-0) and 3 (0-2) … clinched three doubles points with partner Govind Nanda, including 6-1 win over Valentin Lang and Jakub Novak of Grand Canyon in NCAA Championships first round (May 3) … with Cressy, beat Bar Botzer and Petros Chrysochos of No. 1 Wake Forest, 6-4, to clinch doubles point in quarterfinal round at ITA Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 16) … playing on Court 6, defeated Jakub Novak of Grand Canyon, 2-6, 6-2, 6-3 (Feb. 26) … topped Kyryll Krychvun of Mesa Community College, 6-1, 6-4, to reach Flight One singles final round at Larry Easley Memorial Classic (Nov. 3) … with partner Lucas Bellamy, beat Clayton Alenik and Eric Samuelsson of UNLV, 8-5, to reach doubles final round at Larry Easley Memorial Classic (Nov. 3) … with partner Connor Hance, defeated David Goulak and Daniel Landa of UC Davis, 8-5, to reach Flight A doubles consolation final round at UCSB Classic (Oct. 6) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Spring 2019.
2019-20
16-5 singles record in shortened season (8-3 in dual matches) … 12-4 doubles mark (9-3 in dual matches) … reached season-high No. 4 in Oracle/ITA singles rankings (March 3) … with partner Drew Baird, reached season-high No. 12 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings (Sept. 16); also reached No. 24 with partner Govind Nanda (Feb. 18) … earned ITA All-America selection for singles play … named Pac-12 Player of the Week (March 4) after defeating No. 119 Ewen Lumsden of Washington, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, and No. 19 Joshua Charlton of Oregon, 6-2, 6-2, in road sweep … played exclusively on Court 1 in singles, doubles dual matches … went 8-4 versus nationally-ranked singles opponents, including 6-4, 3-6, 6-1 win versus No. 23 Alex Brown of Illinois to reach final round at Oracle ITA Masters (Sept. 28); also beat Brown to reach Round of 16 at ITA All-America Championships (Oct. 10) … with Nanda, went 2-1 versus nationally-ranked doubles opponents, including 6-2 win versus No. 11 Christian Sigsgaard/Siem Woldeab of No. 4 Texas at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 14) … defeated Fabian Roensdorf, 6-2, 7-5, to clinch win versus San Diego State in ITA Kick-Off Weekend final round (Jan. 25) … with Nanda, clinched team-high five doubles points, including 6-4 result over No. 12 Tadas Babelis/
2017-18
4-9 singles record (1-0 in dual matches) … 4-4 doubles mark (1-1 in dual matches) … in singles debut, defeated Karl Enander of Cal Poly, 6-2, 6-1, to reach B Flight quarterfinal round at UCSB Classic (Oct. 6) … in doubles debut (with partner Lucas Bellamy), topped Henrik Atlevi/Joseph Rotheram of UC Santa Barbara, 8-3, to reach second round of ITA Regional Championships (Oct. 19) … with partner Connor Hance, beat Jake DeVine/Mateusz 9
PLAYER PROFILES - SENIORS Yannai Barkai of No. 10 NC State at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 16) … with Nanda, edged Axel Geller/Neel Rajesh of No. 11 Stanford, 7-6(12), to clinch doubles point (Feb. 1) … took down No. 34 Yuta Kikuchi of No. 15 California, 6-4, 6-2 (Jan. 31) … with Nanda, beat Mor Bulis/Ryder Jackson of USC, 6-3, to reach doubles final round at Sherwood Collegiate Cup (Jan. 19) … took down No. 28 Joseph Guillin of UC Santa Barbara, 6-3, 6-4, to reach singles semifinal round at Oracle ITA Masters (Sept. 27).
… with Austin Rapp, defeated No. 2 William Blumberg/Robert Kelly of North Carolina, 7-5, 4-6, 1-0 (4), to advance to semifinal round at NCAA Doubles Championships … qualified for NCAA Singles Championships … earned Pac-12 Player of the Week nod (Feb. 20) after posting unbeaten singles (3-0) and doubles (2-0) records through first three rounds of ITA Team Indoor Championships … with Austin Rapp, selected to ITA Indoors All-Tournament Team for No. 2 doubles ... posted four match-clinching points, including win over Myles Schalet of No. 15 Michigan, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2, in third round at NCAA Championships (May 18) … went 6-5 versus nationally-ranked opponents, including win over No. 64 Bjoern Petersen of Baylor, 6-4, 6-1, in quarterfinal round at Sherwood Collegiate Cup (Jan. 13) … knocked off No. 8 Tom Fawcett of Stanford, 6-2, 2-6, 6-4, to take Jack Kramer Club Collegiate Invitational singles title (Nov. 5) … won 17 consecutive singles decisions from Feb. 27-May 20 … clinched 10 doubles points with Austin Rapp (team high), including win over No. 9 Jack Jaede-Laurens Verboven of No. 10 USC, 6-4, in quarterfinal round at NCAA Championships … with Austin Rapp, registered 7-5 record versus nationally-ranked opponents, including win over No. 6 Jordi Arconada/Juan Carlos Aguilar of No. 6 Texas A&M, 6-4, at ITA Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 18) … in doubles debut (with partner Bryce Pereira), topped Dominic Barretto/Paul Barretto of California, 8-5, to reach Flight A quarterfinal round at UCSB Classic (Oct. 6).
2018-19
24-6 singles record (15-2 in dual matches) … 27-2 doubles mark (17-0 in dual matches) … teamed with Maxime Cressy to claim 14th NCAA doubles title in program history, defeating No. 11 Patrick Kaukovalta and Mazen Osama of Alabama, 6-3, 6-4, in final round (May 25); beat No. 26 Aziz Kijametovic and Francois Musitelli of Old Dominion, No. 29 Marko Ilic and Hendrik Inno of Belmont, No. 50 Joel Gamerov and August Holmgren of San Diego and No. 6 Timo Stodder and Preston Touliatos of Tennessee en route … reached second round of NCAA Championships singles tournament, defeating No. 64 Majed Kilani of Tulsa … finished No. 36 (May 29) in Oracle/ITA singles rankings and started season-high No. 28 (Sept. 11) … with Cressy, finished No. 1 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings … earned ITA All-America selection for doubles play … named to ITA Collegiate All-Star Team with Cressy … Pac-12 Doubles Team of the Year with Cressy ...named ITA Southwest Region Player to Watch … First-Team All-Pac-12 honoree … earned Pac-12 Player of the Week nod (April 23) after posting unbeaten singles (2-0) and doubles (2-0) records while team went 2-0 and clinched conference regular-season title … played exclusively on Court 2 in singles dual matches (15-2) … played primarily on Court 1 in doubles play (16-0); also played on Court 2 (1-0) … went 7-4 against nationally-ranked singles opponents, including 7-6(4), 6-3 decision over No. 13 Daniel Cukierman of No. 9 USC (April 5) … with Cressy, went 15-0 versus nationally-ranked doubles opponents, including 6-4 defeat of No. 11 Dominik Kellovsky and Nathan Ponwith of No. 27 Arizona State (April 19) … posted three match-clinching points, including 6-4, 6-4 decision over No. 83 August Holmgren of San Diego in ITA Kick-Off Weekend final round (Jan. 26) … with Cressy, recorded pair of 6-0 wins versus No. 8/31 Kikuchi and Jacob Brumm of Cal (Feb. 8, April 24), second of which came in semifinal round at Pac-12 Championships … clinched five doubles points with Cressy, including 6-4 win over No. 14 Brandon Holt and Riley Smith of No. 9 USC (April 5); also secured one with partner Govind Nanda … won 22 doubles decisions in a row from Jan. 25-May 25 … beat No. 39 Joseph Guillin of UC Santa Barbara, 6-4, 6-4 … defeated No. 39 Alexandre Rotsaert of No. 10 Stanford, 6-2, 6-4 … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Spring 2019.
PRIOR TO UCLA
Attended Point Loma High School in San Diego … Blue-Chip recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 3 in 2017 … named All-American by National High School Tennis All-American Foundation in 2016 … was slotted at No. 1 in So. California sectional rankings for Boys’ 18 Singles … three-time CIF-San Diego Section champion, capturing doubles title as freshman (2014) and singles titles as sophomore (2015) and junior (2016) … earned two gold balls after winning singles and doubles titles at USTA National Open Hard Court Championships in San Diego … won Boys’ 18 singles championship at 2015 New Balance High School Tennis Championship in Cambridge, Mass.
PERSONAL
Son of Jim and Carol … has one older brother, Corey, and one older sister, Taryn … born in Wilmington, N.C. … admires basketball player LeBron James and Roger Federer … hobbies include surfing, fishing and playing the guitar … father (Tulane) and brother (USC) played tennis in college … cousins Katie (2006-09) and Kelly (2003, 2005-07) Rulon played for women’s water polo team at UCLA; each won four NCAA championships ... history major.
2017-18
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2017-18 25-2 15-5 40-7 13-9 8-6 21-5 2018-19 15-2 9-4 24-6 17-0 10-2 27-2 2019-20 8-3 8-2 16-5 9-3 3-1 12-4 Totals 48-7 32-11 80-18 39-12 21-9 60-21
40-7 singles record (25-2 in dual matches) … 21-15 doubles mark (13-9 in dual matches) … finished No. 57 in Oracle/ITA singles rankings and reached season-high No. 45 (March 20) … with partner Austin Rapp, finished season-high No. 6 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings … earned ITA All-America selection for doubles play … named ITA Southwest Region Rookie of the Year … Pac-12 Freshman of the Year … Second-Team All-Pac-12 honoree
Keegan Smith (left) and partner Maxime Cressy won the 2019 NCAA doubles championship, completing their 21-0 season on May 25 in Orlando, Fla.
10
PLAYER PROFILES - JUNIORS
ROSCOE
ERIC
6-5 / Junior Pacific Palisades, Calif. Laurel Springs School
6-0 / Junior Fullerton, Calif. Sunny Hills HS
BELLAMY
HAHN
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• ITA Scholar-Athlete (2020) • Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll selection (2020) • 5-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020)
• 5-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020)
2019-20
2-1 singles record in shortened season (1-0 in dual matches) … 1-0 doubles mark … defeated Deji Thomas-Smith, 6-2, 6-3, to clinch win versus Liberty (March 9) … knocked off Blake Bayldon of Boise State, 6-4, 7-5, to reach singles quarterfinal round at National Collegiate Tennis Classic (Jan. 11) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Spring 2020.
2019-20
8-11 singles record in shortened season (1-3 in dual matches) … 3-7 doubles mark … earned spot on Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll ... named ITA Scholar-Athlete ... played exclusively on Court 6 in singles dual matches … beat Zac Faveri of Western Michigan, 7-5, 7-5 (Feb. 11) … knocked off No. 75 Barnaby Smith of Texas A&M, 6-2, 6-0, to reach singles Round of 16 at Sherwood Collegiate Cup (Jan. 17) … with partner Max Wild, beat Daniel Gealer/Jeremy Merville of UC Irvine, 6-3, to reach A Flight doubles final round at Aztec Fall Invitational (Oct. 5) … defeated David Hough of San Diego State, 6-1, 6-1, in Aztec Flight singles third-place match at Aztec Fall Invitational (Oct. 6) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Winter 2020, Spring 2020.
2018-19
3-3 singles record (0-1 in dual matches) … 0-2 doubles mark … played exclusively on Court 6 in singles dual matches, including unfinished debut against Joe Woolley of Utah in quarterfinal round at Pac-12 Championships (April 25) … notched first-career singles win versus Pawel Jankowiak of Pepperdine, 6-4, 6-0, at National Collegiate Tennis Classic (Jan. 13) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2018, Winter 2019, Spring 2019.
2018-19
PRIOR TO UCLA
12-8 singles record (4-3 in dual matches) … 2-5 doubles mark … played primarily on Court 6 in singles dual matches (3-3), including unfinished debut against Guillermo Cabrera of No. 11 Notre Dame in first round at ITA Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 15); also played on Court 5 (1-0) … posted back-to-back match-clinching points, defeating Pawel Jankowiak of Pepperdine, 7-5, 6-1 (April 9), and Ethan Young-Smith of No. 48 Oregon, 7-6(6), 6-1 (April 12) … reached singles quarterfinal rounds at SoCal Intercollegiate Championships (Oct. 25-29) and Jack Kramer Collegiate Tournament (Nov. 1-4) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2018, Spring 2019.
Graduated from Laurel Springs School … consistently held Blue-Chip status as Top-10 national recruit by TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 4 in 2014 … top-ranked player nationally in Boys’ 12 and 14 divisions; also held top spot in Southern California Boys’ 10 group … won 2012 USTA Boys’ 12 National Hard Court Championships in Little Rock, Ark. … captured singles and doubles titles at 2014 USTA Boys’ 14 Sweet Sixteen National Clay Court Championships in Boca Raton, Fla. … won back-to-back USTA Boys’ 16 National Tournaments in Stockton, Calif. (2014) and Palm Desert, Calif. (2015) … finished third at Junior Orange Bowl tournament in 2014 … two-time doubles champion at Eddie Herr International Championships (2012, 2014); also reached semifinal round of singles tournament in 2014 … represented United States at prestigious Les Petits As in Tarbes, France, where he reached semifinal round … also represented US at Nike International Teen Tennis tournament in Bolton, England, where he won doubles title; also reached quarterfinal round of singles draw … one of three players selected to represent US at ITF World Junior Tennis Finals in Prostejov, Czech Republic.
PERSONAL
Son of Steve and Elizabeth … has two older brothers, Rob and Lucas, and one younger brother, Lincoln … brother, Lucas, also plays tennis at UCLA … mother and brother, Rob, played tennis at USC … decided to attend UCLA because he “always wanted to be a Bruin” and “couldn’t imagine being anywhere else” … admires Roger Federer ... communications major.
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Eric Hahn
2018-19 0-1 3-2 3-3 0-0 0-2 0-2 2019-20 1-0 1-1 2-1 0-0 1-0 1-0 Totals 1-1 4-3 5-4 0-0 1-2 1-2
PRIOR TO UCLA
Attended Sunny Hills High School in Fullerton, Calif. … 5-Star recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 12 in 2018 … claimed fifth place in singles draw at 2018 Boys’ 18 National Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich. to earn spot in US Open Junior Tennis Championships; also collected Dr. Allen B. Stowe Sportsmanship Award as part of tournament … won the 2018 Boys’ 18 National Team Championships in Champaign, Ill. with Southern California team … as part of Southern California team, won 2018 Maze Cup in Berkeley, Calif. … Boys’ 18 singles finalist at 2018 Henry Talbert Junior Championships (Level 1) in Palm Desert, Calif. and 2018 Fullerton (Calif.) Junior Closed Tournament (Level 2) … claimed Boys’ 18 doubles title at 2017 USTA Nationals in Lakewood, Calif.; Boys’ 18 singles semifinalist at pair of USTA Nationals events in Lakewood (2017) … Boys’ 18 doubles champion at 2017 Orange County/J.P. Yamasaki Junior Closed Tournament in Anaheim, Calif. … claimed Boys’ 18 title at 2017 Jim Hillman Southern California Junior Sectional Doubles Championships in Fullerton, Calif. … Boys’ 16 semifinalist at 2016 11
PLAYER PROFILES - JUNIORS
2018-19
USTA International Spring Championships in Carson, Calif. … claimed third place in Boys’ 16 singles at 2016 Henry Talbert Junior Championships (Level 1) in Palm Desert, Calif. … Boys’ 16 singles finalist at 2016 Southern California Junior Sectional Championships … received Boys’ 16 Southern California Tennis Association Sportsmanship Award for 2016 … Boys’ 16 doubles champion at 2015 USTA National Selection Tournament in Aptos, Calif. … won Boys’ 16 singles and doubles championships at 2015 USTA Closed Regional Tournament in Tucson, Ariz. … picked up back-to-back Freeway League titles with Sunny Hills HS in 2015 and 2016; named Freeway League MVP and won league’s singles title in 2016 after posting runner-up finish in 2015.
20-7 singles record (17-5 in dual matches) … 12-12 doubles mark (9-12 in dual matches) … qualified for NCAA Championships singles tournament as alternate … finished No. 100 in Oracle/ITA singles rankings (May 29) and reached season-high No. 35 (March 19) … with partner Maxime Cressy, reached season-high No. 69T in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings (May 1) … Second-Team All-Pac-12 honoree … earned Pac-12 Player of the Week nod (April 16) after posting unbeaten singles (2-0) and doubles (2-0) records while team went 3-0 … named ITA Scholar-Athlete … played primarily on Court 3 in singles dual matches (14-3); also played on Courts 1 (1-0) and 2 (2-2) … played primarily on Court 2 in doubles play (8-12); also recorded decision on Court 3 (1-0) … posted two match-clinching points, including 6-3, 2-6, 6-4 decision over Jack Molloy of California (Feb. 8) … clinched three doubles points with partner Connor Rapp, including 6-1 win over Valentin Lang and Jakub Novak of Grand Canyon in NCAA Championships first round (May 3); also secured one with partner Keegan Smith … totaled four singles wins versus nationally-ranked singles opponents, including 6-2, 6-3 decision over No. 23 Laurens Verboven of No. 24 USC (Feb. 23) … won 11 of 12 singles decisions from Feb. 23-April 25 … knocked off No. 30 Zeke Clark of No. 14 Illinois, 6-4, 7-5 (Feb. 13) … with Cressy, defeated Geller and Alexandre Rotsaert of Stanford, 6-2, to secure Sherwood Collegiate Cup doubles title (Jan. 20) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2019, Spring 2019.
PERSONAL
Son of Peter and Christine … has one older brother, Ryan … brother is a men’s tennis team manager at Penn State … decided to attend UCLA because it offers a “great balance of academics and athletics” … describes his greatest athletic thrill to date as winning the 2018 Boys’ 18 National Team Championships with Southern California team … admires Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal … hobbies and interests include listening to music and watching professional tennis matches on television and YouTube ... business economics major.
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2018-19 4-3 8-5 12-8 0-0 2-5 2-5 2019-20 1-3 7-8 8-11 0-0 3-7 3-7 Totals 5-6 15-13 20-19 0-0 5-12 5-12
PRIOR TO UCLA
Graduated from Laurel Springs School … also took classes through Connections Academy … Blue-Chip recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 2 in 2016 and 2017 … earned berths in 2018 French Open, Wimbledon and US Open junior tournaments … has earned number of Futures titles … captured his first ITF Grade 1 title on singles side of 2018 Pan American Championships in Charlotte, N.C. … won Boys’ 18 doubles title at 2018 Easter Bowl in Indian Wells, Calif. … reached doubles final at 2018 Boys’ 18 National Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich. … helped United States to runner-up showing at 2017 Junior Davis Cup in Budapest, Hungary … advanced to Boys’ 18 singles quarterfinal round at 2017 Orange Bowl International Tennis Championships in Plantation, Fla. … posted runner-up finish in doubles play at 2016 Eddie Herr International Championships in Bradenton, Fla. … won Boys’ 14 singles title at USTA National Winter Championships (Tucson, Ariz.) in 2015 … collected Boys’ 14 doubles championship at 2015 Easter Bowl in Indian Wells, Calif.
GOVIND
NANDA 5-9 / Junior Redlands, Calif. Laurel Springs School
PERSONAL
Son of Rajesh and Meena … has one sister, Shyamlee … decided to attend UCLA because he thought it was the best fit for him … describes his greatest athletic thrills to date as notching clinching wins at 2017 Junior Davis Cup … admires Rafael Nadal and former basketball player Kobe Bryant … hobbies and interests include video games, Netflix, basketball and hanging with friends … one of number of cousins to attend UCLA ... undeclared major.
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• All-Pac-12 honoree (Second Team - 2019) • ITA Southwest Region Player to Watch (2020) • Pac-12 Player of the Week (April 16, 2019) • 2-time ITA Scholar-Athlete (2019, 2020) • Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll selection (2020) • 4-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020) • Career-high Oracle/ITA singles ranking: 10 (Feb. 5, 2020) • Career-high Oracle/ITA doubles ranking: 24 (Feb. 18, 2020 w/ Keegan Smith)
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2018-19 17-5 3-2 20-7 9-12 3-0 12-12 2019-20 10-3 3-1 13-4 9-3 3-1 12-4 Totals 27-8 6-3 33-11 18-15 6-1 24-16
2019-20
13-4 singles record in shortened season (10-3 in dual matches) … 12-4 doubles mark (9-3 in dual matches) … reached season-high No. 10 in Oracle/ITA singles rankings (Feb. 5) … with partner Keegan Smith, reached season-high No. 24 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings (Feb. 18) … named ITA Southwest Region Player to Watch ... earned spot on Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll ... named ITA Scholar-Athlete ... played exclusively on Court 2 in singles dual matches … played exclusively on Court 1 in dual-match doubles action … went 7-3 versus nationally-ranked singles opponents, including 6-1, 7-5 win versus No. 18 Alexandre Rotsaert of No. 11 Stanford (Feb. 1) … with Smith, went 2-1 versus nationally-ranked doubles opponents, including 6-2 win versus No. 11 Christian Sigsgaard/Siem Woldeab of No. 4 Texas at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 14) … with Smith, clinched team-high five doubles points, including 6-4 result over No. 12 Tadas Babelis/Yannai Barkai of No. 10 NC State at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 16) … topped No. 43 Jack Davis of Washington, 6-1, 7-5 (Feb. 28) … with Smith, edged Axel Geller/Neel Rajesh of No. 11 Stanford, 7-6(12), to clinch doubles point (Feb. 1) … knocked off No. 49 Jack Molloy of California, 6-3, 6-4 (Jan. 31) … defeated No. 29 Juan Pablo Grassi Mazzuchi of UCF, 6-3, 3-6, 6-2, in ITA Kick-Off Weekend final round (Jan. 26); match ended in 4-3 score … with Smith, beat Mor Bulis/Ryder Jackson of USC, 6-3, to reach doubles final round at Sherwood Collegiate Cup (Jan. 19) … beat No. 9 Bulis of USC, 6-0, 6-3, to reach singles semifinal round at Sherwood Collegiate Cup (Jan. 18) ... named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2020, Spring 2020. Govind Nanda
12
PLAYER PROFILES - JUNIORS
MATHEW
MAX
6-1 / Junior Glendale, Calif. Laurel Springs School
6-2 / Junior Murrieta, Calif. Laurel Springs School
TSOLAKYAN
WILD
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• 3-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Winter 2020)
• ITA Scholar-Athlete (2020) • Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll selection (2020) • 5-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020) • Career-high Oracle/ITA singles ranking: 100 (March 19, 2019)
2019-20
3-8 singles record in shortened season … 8-7 doubles mark (0-1 in dual matches) … with partner Connor Rapp, beat Matthew Hollingworth/Vincent Rettke of Gonzaga, 8-3, to reach doubles final round at Larry Easley Memorial Classic (Nov. 2) … with partner Eric Hahn, beat Daniel Gealer/Jeremy Merville of UC Irvine, 6-3, to reach A Flight doubles final round at Aztec Fall Invitational (Oct. 5) … defeated Hiroki Sakagawa of Arizona, 6-3, 7-6(4), to reach Warrior Flight singles semifinal round at Aztec Fall Invitational (Oct. 4) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Winter 2020.
2019-20
7-3 singles record in shortened season (6-0 in dual matches) … 0-4 doubles mark … earned spot on Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll ... named ITA Scholar-Athlete ... played primarily on Court 6 in singles dual matches (4-0); also competed on Court 5 (2-0) … defeated Adam Torocsik, 6-1, 3-6, 6-2, to clinch win at Washington (Feb. 28) … won final six singles matches, including 6-3, 1-6, 7-6(4) decision over Brandon Lam of Oregon (March 1); match ended in 4-3 score … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Winter 2020, Spring 2020.
2018-19
6-8 singles record … 9-5 doubles mark (1-0 in dual matches) … with partner Govind Nanda on Court 3, defeated Freddie Grant and Lucas Grego of Grand Canyon, 6-3 (Feb. 26) … with partner Bryce Pereira, beat Lucas Bellamy and Connor Rapp of UCLA, 8-6, to take Larry Easley Memorial Classic doubles championship (Nov. 4) … with partner Mathew Tsolakyan, beat Cambell Nakayama and Karapet Vardanyan of Cal Poly, 8-7(5), to reach Flight B doubles final round at UCSB Classic (Oct. 6) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Spring 2019.
2018-19
8-12 singles record (4-8 in dual matches) … 3-4 doubles mark … reached season-high No. 100 in Oracle/ITA singles rankings (March 19) … played on Courts 4 (1-3), 5 (1-3) and 6 (2-2) in singles dual matches … defeated Lucas Grego of Grand Canyon, 7-6(4), 3-6, 6-4, to clinch 4-2 win versus Lopes (Feb. 26) … defeated No. 29 Sameer Kumar of Stanford, 8-3, at Sherwood Collegiate Cup (Jan. 21) … with partner Max Wild, beat Cambell Nakayama and Karapet Vardanyan of Cal Poly, 8-7(5), to reach Flight B doubles final round at UCSB Classic (Oct. 6) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2018, Spring 2019.
PRIOR TO UCLA
Graduated from Laurel Springs School … 5-star recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 26 in 2017 … Boys’ 16 doubles champion at 2016 USTA National Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich. … Boys’ 16 champion at 2015 USTA National Doubles Championship in Winston-Salem, N.C. … earned three USTA Sportsmanship Awards … claimed doubles championships at Newport Beach ITF and Delray Beach ITF in 2018 … won doubles title at 35th All Canadian Junior Championships in 2017 … registered runner-up finishes in doubles at Monterrey San Agustin ITF and Corpus Christi ITF (2017) … reached singles semifinal rounds at Delray Beach ITF and Corpus Christi ITF (2017).
PRIOR TO UCLA
Graduated from Laurel Springs School … 5-star recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 24 in 2015 … claimed Boys’ 18 title at 2017 Jim Hillman Southern California Junior Sectional Doubles Championships in Fullerton, Calif. … reached Boys’ 18 final round at 2017 Rendez-vous à Roland-Garros in Boca Raton, Fla. … repeat Boys’ 16 winner at The Ojai Tennis Tournament (2015, 2016) in Ojai, Calif. … finished fourth at 2016 USTA Boys’ 16 National Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich.
PERSONAL
Son of Aram and Gohar (Grigorian) … has one older sister, Elizabeth … decided to attend UCLA because of its great athletic program and prestigious academics … describes his greatest athletic thrills to date as winning three three-set matches to reach semifinal round at 2016 USTA Boys’ 16 National Championships … admires Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer … hobbies and interests include soccer, hiking, and swimming ... business economics major.
Full name: Maximilian Jurgen Wild … son of Robert and Annegret … has two sisters, Natalie and Jdee … decided to attend UCLA because he felt extremely welcomed by the players and coaching staff and it is a dream school with well-known academics and athletics while simultaneously being located in the “amazing” city of Los Angeles … describes his greatest athletic thrills to date as winning Kalamazoo and Winston-Salem USTA National Doubles Championships … admires Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Roger Federer and basketball player Paul George … hobbies and interests include working out and basketball ... communications major.
PERSONAL
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Year
2018-19 4-8 4-4 8-12 0-0 3-4 3-4 2019-20 6-0 1-3 7-3 0-0 0-4 0-4 Totals 10-8 5-7 15-15 0-0 3-8 3-8
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2018-19 0-0 6-8 6-8 1-0 8-5 9-5 2019-20 0-0 3-8 3-8 0-1 8-6 8-7 Totals 0-0 9-16 9-16 1-1 16-11 17-12
13
PLAYER PROFILES - JUNIORS
PATRICK
match-clinching points, including 7-6(4), 5-7, 7-6(7) winner-take-all decision over Riley Smith of No. 9 USC (April 5) … clinched team-high seven doubles points with partner Bryce Pereira, including 7-5 win over Grayson Broadus and Matt Gamble of No. 11 Notre Dame in first round at ITA Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 15) … beat Tim Ruehl of No. 27 Arizona State, 6-3, 2-6, 6-3, to clinch 4-2 win versus Sun Devils and share of Pac-12 regular-season championship (April 19) … knocked off Tristan McCormick of No. 11 Notre Dame, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2, to clinch first-round win at ITA Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 15) … with Pereira, topped No. 80 Joseph Rotheram and Alex Soto of UC Santa Barbara, 7-6(5), to clinch doubles point (March 14) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2019, Spring 2019.
ZAHRAJ 6-2 / Junior Frankfurt am Main, Germany Kurpfalz-Gymnasium Mannheim
PRIOR TO UCLA
Attended Kurpfalz-Gymnasium und Realschule Mannheim in Mannheim, Germany … competed for club teams TK Agrofert Prostejov (Czech Republic) and TEVC Kronberg (Germany) … as unseeded participant, advanced to Boys’ 16 singles final at 2015 Eddie Herr International in Bradenton, Fla. … defeated top-seeded Miomir Kecmanovic of Serbia in Boys’ 14 match at Tennis Austria 2012 Bergheim Europe Junior Tour in Bergheim, Austria … claimed four singles state championships (2010, 2011, 2013, 2014) and eight international doubles titles while taking part in number of Futures events.
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• 2-time ITA Scholar-Athlete (2019, 2020) • Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll selection (2020) • 5-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020)
2019-20
8-4 singles record in shortened season (4-2 in dual matches) … 9-6 doubles mark (7-4 in dual matches) … earned spot on Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll ... named ITA Scholar-Athlete ... played exclusively on Court 5 in singles dual matches … played primarily on Court 3 in dual-match doubles action (6-4); also recorded decision on Court 2 (1-0) … with partner Bryce Pereira, clinched two doubles points, including 7-6(1) winnertake-all result over JanMagnus Johnson/Alan Rubio of UCF in ITA Kick-Off Weekend final round (Jan. 26) … beat No. 105 Noah Schachter of Texas A&M, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3, in singles backdraw match at Sherwood Collegiate Cup (Jan. 18) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Winter 2020, Spring 2020.
PERSONAL
2018-19
Year
Son of Radek and Michaela … has one younger sister, Kim … decided to attend UCLA because he had “heard great and positive things about UCLA since [he] was very little,” while an introduction to the campus by coach Marcus Schneider in 2015 also drove him … describes his greatest athletic thrill to date as defeating Kecmanovic at Tennis Austria 2012 Bergheim Europe Junior Tour … admires Roger Federer and golfer Tiger Woods … hobbies and interests besides tennis include golf and winter sports like ice hockey and alpine skiing … has developed passion for paragliding ... business economics major.
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2018-19 6-6 2-0 8-6 12-10 3-1 15-11 2019-20 4-2 4-2 8-4 7-4 2-2 9-6 Totals 10-8 6-2 16-10 19-14 5-3 24-17
8-6 singles record (6-6 in dual matches) … 15-11 doubles mark (12-10 in dual matches) … named ITA Scholar-Athlete … played primarily on Court 4 in singles dual matches (5-3), also registered decisions on Courts 2 (0-1) and 3 (1-2) … played primarily on Court 3 in doubles play (12-8); also played on Courts 1 (0-1) and 2 (0-1) … posted three
Patrick Zahraj
14
PLAYER PROFILES - SOPHOMORES
DREW
BLAINE
6-3 / Sophomore Raleigh, N.C. IMG Academy
6-5 / Redshirt Sophomore Pacific Palisades, Calif. Campbell Hall
BAIRD
HOVENIER
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• 2-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020) • Career-high Oracle/ITA singles ranking: 124 (Feb. 18, 2020) • Career-high Oracle/ITA doubles ranking: 12 (Sept. 17, 2019 w/ Keegan Smith)
• ITA Scholar-Athlete (2020) • 4-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2020)
2019-20
2019-20
4-10 singles record in shortened season … 1-3 doubles mark … named ITA ScholarAthlete ... with partner Connor Hance, topped Christian Lerby/George Stoupe of Arizona State, 8-7, to reach doubles semifinal round at National Collegiate Tennis Classic (Jan. 10) … beat Rafael Gonzalez Almazan, 6-7(5), 7-6(3), 1-0(6), in C Flight singles thirdplace match at UCSB Classic (Oct. 13) … earned first-career singles victory with decision over Joshua Williams of UC Santa Barbara, 6-2, 6-4, to reach C Flight semifinal round at UCSB Classic (Oct. 12) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Winter 2020, Spring 2020.
6-6 singles record in shortened season (5-5 in dual matches) … 5-5 doubles mark (4-3 in dual matches) … reached season-high No. 124 in Oracle/ITA singles rankings (Feb. 18) … with partner Keegan Smith, reached season-high No. 12 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings (Sept. 16) … played exclusively on Court 3 in singles dual matches … played primarily on Court 2 in dual-match doubles action (4-2); also recorded decision on Court 3 (0-1) … with partner Connor Rapp, clinched three doubles points, including 6-3 winnertake-all result over Chih Chi Huang/Eliot Spizzirri of No. 4 Texas at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 14) … with Rapp, beat No. 44 Alexis Galarneau/Robert Turzak of No. 10 NC State, 6-3, at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 16) … defeated No. 37 Siem Woldeab of No. 4 Texas, 6-2, 6-3, at ITA National Team Indoor Championships (Feb. 14) … earned first-career singles victory with decision over Daniel Gealer of UC Irvine, 7-6(4), 6-4, to reach singles Round of 32 at ITA Southwest Regional Championships (Oct. 17) … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2019, Spring 2020.
2018-19
Redshirted … named to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Spring 2019.
PRIOR TO UCLA
Attended Campbell Hall in North Hollywood, Calif. … 3-star recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 230 in 2018 … trains with UCLA tennis alumni Kevin Kim (1997) and Clay Thompson (2011-14) … captained Vikings to undefeated regular season (33-0) in 2018 … 2018 Daily News All-Area First Team pick for singles play … named to Gold Coast League First Team in 2016, 2018 … selected to 2016 Daily News All-Area Second Team for singles play … played primarily on Court 2 as freshman … picked up Boys’ 18 singles title at 2016 Palm Valley New Year Junior Open Championships in Palm Desert, Calif. … claimed doubles title at 2017 ITA Summer Circuit – Cal State Northridge … won multiple USTA Southern California Level 4 junior tournaments.
PRIOR TO UCLA
Graduated from Connections Academy … also attended IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla. … Blue-Chip recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 3 in 2019 … beat 2018 ITA No. 1 Martin Redlicki en route to singles semifinal round at 2019 25K Futures event in Calabasas, Calif. … knocked off former Northwestern No. 1 Strong Kirchheimer at 2019 15K Futures event in Pittsburgh … turned in three three-set wins versus seeded opponents on way to singles semifinal round at 2018 Boys’ 18 National Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich. … participated in each of four Grand Slam junior tournaments in 2018; made singles main draw round of 16 at Australian Open … reached doubles quarterfinal round at 2018 US Open junior tournament … notched Boys’ 18 doubles quarterfinal-round showings at 2018 Orange Bowl, Eddie Herr and Easter Bowl events … represented United States at 2018 Youth Olympic Games in Buenos Aires, Argentina; beat Patrick Sydow of Aruba in singles first round.
PERSONAL
Son of Peter and Frances … decided to attend UCLA because it was a perfect fit and he’s always held UCLA in the highest regard as it has “the happiest students, a beautiful campus and prestigious athletics and academics” … describes his greatest athletic thrill to date as clinching Campbell Hall’s final regular-season match to secure team’s spot in CIF-Southern Section Division 2 playoffs as senior … admires Juan Martin del Potro and basketball players Kobe Bryant and Stephen Curry … hobbies and interests include eating good food, being a watch enthusiast, studying the stock market, playing pickup basketball games with friends and rooting for NBA’s Los Angeles Lakers and NFL’s Dallas Cowboys … his name was inspired by city of Blaine, Wash., where his parents first met … aspires to be investment banker or professional tennis player ... political science major.
PERSONAL
Full name: Andrew David Baird ... decided to attend UCLA because he felt it was an opportunity to “continually grow as a student-athlete, but most importantly, as a person” while putting him in position to achieve goal of becoming professional tennis player … lists his greatest athletic thrills to date as participating in all four Grand Slam junior tournaments and competing for Team USA at 2018 Youth Olympic Games … hobbies and interests include playing the guitar, listening to music and hanging out with teammates ... undeclared major.
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Year
Career Singles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2019-20 0-0 4-10 4-10 0-0 1-3 1-3 Totals 0-0 4-10 4-10 0-0 1-3 1-3
Career Doubles Record
Duals Tournaments Overall
2019-20 5-5 1-1 6-6 4-3 1-2 5-5 Totals 5-5 1-1 6-6 4-3 1-2 5-5
15
PLAYER PROFILES - FRESHMEN
STEFAN
TIMOTHY
5-10 / Freshman Sacramento, Calif. Connections Academy
5-11 / Freshman Valley Village, Calif. Harvard-Westlake School
LEUSTIAN
LI
PRIOR TO UCLA
PRIOR TO UCLA
Graduated from Connections Academy … also took classes through Horizon Charter Schools … Blue-Chip recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 5 in 2018 … reached singles and doubles second rounds at 2019 Boys’ 18 National Championships in Kalamazoo, Mich … captured Boys’ 18 doubles championship at 2019 International Tennis Federation (ITF) Futures event in Delray Beach, Fla. … notable Boys’ 18 singles finishes at 2017 ITF Futures events: final round in Corpus Christi, Texas, semifinal round in Austin, Texas, semifinal round in Lexington, S.C. … won 2016 Les Petits As Boys’ 14 singles championship in Tarbes, France; advanced through prestigious tournament as No. 8 seed … represented United States as one of its top 14-and-under players at 2016 World Junior Tennis Finals in Prostejov, Czech Republic … reached Boys’ 14 singles final round at 2016 USTA National Winter Championships in Tucson, Ariz. … advanced to Boys’ 14 doubles final round at 2016 Easter Bowl in Indian Wells, Calif.
Graduated from Harvard-Westlake School in Studio City, Calif. … 4-star recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached high of No. 63 in 2019 … collected Boys’ 18 singles title and sportsmanship award at 2020 Fullerton (Calif.) Junior Closed Tournament (Level 2) … Wolverines captured CIF-Southern Section (SS) Division 1 team title in 2017, 2018 and were finalists in 2019; HW went on to win title at 2018 CIF/USTA Southern California Boys Regional Tennis Championships in Claremont, Calif. and was finalist in 2019 … Wolverines won Mission League team championship in each of his completed seasons (2017-19) … HW claimed title at 2019 National High School Tennis All-American Team Invitational in Newport Beach, Calif.; Wolverines were finalists in 2017, 2018 … earned CIF doubles championship with partner Sacha Pritzker at 2018 Ojai Valley Junior Tournament in Ojai, Calif. … helped take Mission League doubles championships in 2017, 2018 … named a Mission League Most Valuable Doubles Player in 2017, 2018 … with Pritzker, named 2018 Doubles Team of the Year by Los Angeles Daily News … chosen to All-Tournament Team at 2018 National High School All-American Team Invitational in Newport Beach, Calif … with David Arkow, reached doubles final round at CIF-SS/Ford 2017 Boys Individual Tennis Championships in Seal Beach, Calif. … selected a 2017 Boys Tennis Newcomer of the Year by Los Angeles Daily News … collected Boys’ 16 doubles and Boys’ 16 singles backdraw championships at 2018 USTA National Level 2 Tournament in Rome, Ga. … earned Boys’ 16 singles title at 116th Annual Southern California Junior Sectional Championships (Level 1) in Fountain Valley, Calif. … reached singles final round at Anaheim (Calif.) Tennis Center Boys’ 16 Tournament (Level 3) … won Boys’ 14 doubles title at 2017 Easter Bowl in Indian Wells, Calif.; reached Boys’ 16 semifinal round in 2019 … claimed Boys’ 16 title at 2017 Jim Hillman Southern California Junior Sectional Doubles Championships in Fullerton, Calif.
PERSONAL
Son of Nick and Florina … decided to attend UCLA because of location, “top-notch” athletics and its reputation as “one of the best academic schools in the world” … lists his greatest athletic thrill to date as earning support of crowd during three-set win versus Frenchman Harold Mayot in singles semifinal round at 2016 Les Petits As in Tarbes, France … admires Roger Federer, Sebastien Grosjean, Rafael Nadal and basketball players Kobe Bryant and LeBron James … hobbies and interests include swimming, beach tennis, sleeping and hanging out with friends … played a variety of sports growing up and listens to “every single type of music” ... undeclared major.
PERSONAL
Son of Leo and Sharon (Hame) … parents attended UCLA … has one older brother, Christopher, and one older sister, Rebecca … decided to attend UCLA because its location and “combination of fantastic athletics and academics” made it “a dream come true” … admires Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer and basketball player LeBron James … hobbies and interests besides tennis include bowling, gaming, discovering new music and restaurants, travel and spending quality time with friends … was a child actor whose roles included appearances in commercials for Toyota and Walmart and television show “Yo Gabba Gabba” ... undeclared major.
16
2019-20 RECORDS & HONORS
Singles Records
Dual-Match Scoring & Results
Player #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 Drew Baird - - 5-5 - - - Roscoe Bellamy - - - - - 1-0 Ben Goldberg - - - 5-4 - - Eric Hahn - - - - - 1-3 Connor Hance - - - - - 2-1 Blaine Hovenier - - - - - - Govind Nanda - 10-3 - - - - Bryce Pereira - - - - - - Connor Rapp - - - - - - Keegan Smith 8-3 - - - - - Mathew Tsolakyan - - - - 2-0 4-0 Max Wild - - - - - - Patrick Zahraj - - - - 4-2 - TOTALS 8-3 10-3 5-5 5-4 6-2 8-4
Duals Tour. Overall 5-5 1-1 6-6 1-0 1-1 2-1 5-4 6-4 11-8 1-3 7-8 8-11 2-1 4-2 6-3 0-0 4-10 4-10 10-3 3-1 13-4 0-0 3-4 3-4 0-0 5-8 5-8 8-3 8-2 16-5 6-0 1-3 7-3 0-0 3-8 3-8 4-2 4-2 8-4 42-21 50-54 92-75
Date Jan. 15 Jan. 25 Jan. 26 Jan. 31 Feb. 1 Feb. 11 Feb. 14 Feb. 15 Feb. 16 Feb. 23 Feb. 28 March 1 March 9
Duals Tour. Overall 0-0 4-0 4-0 0-0 3-1 3-1 0-0 1-2 1-2 0-0 0-4 0-4 0-0 4-2 4-2 0-0 1-1 1-1 0-0 1-1 1-1 0-0 1-1 1-1 0-0 1-1 1-1 0-0 1-0 1-0 7-4 1-1 8-5 4-2 0-1 4-3 0-0 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-2 0-2 9-3 3-1 12-4 0-1 0-0 0-1 20-10 21-19 41-29
Home matches in ALL CAPS * Denotes Pac-12 Match @ ITA Kick-Off Weekend ^ ITA Indoors
Doubles Records Players Pereira/Rapp Hahn/Wild Pereira/Wild Hahn/Tsolakyan Rapp/Wild Baird/Zahraj Goldberg/Hance Goldberg/Rapp Hance/Hovenier R. Bellamy/Rapp Pereira/Zahraj Baird/Rapp Goldberg/Wild Hahn/Hovenier Nanda/Smith Baird/Wild TOTALS
#1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 9-3 - 9-3
#2 - - - - - - - - - - 1-0 4-2 - - - - 5-2
Individual Doubles Records Drew Baird Roscoe Bellamy Ben Goldberg Eric Hahn Connor Hance Blaine Hovenier Govind Nanda Bryce Pereira Connor Rapp Keegan Smith Mathew Tsolakyan Max Wild Patrick Zahraj
#3 - - - - - - - - - - 6-4 - - - - 0-1 6-5
Drew Baird Ben Goldberg Eric Hahn Blaine Hovenier Govind Nanda Connor Rapp Keegan Smith Max Wild Patrick Zahraj
1-2 1-2 1-4 0-1 7-3 0-4 8-4 0-1 1-0
1. USC 2. North Carolina 3. Michigan 4. Texas 5. Ohio State 6. NC State 7. TCU 8. Stanford 9. Florida 10. Texas A&M 11. Georgia 12. Tennessee 13. Wake Forest 14. Columbia 15. Ole Miss 16. Oklahoma State 17. Harvard 18. South Carolina 19. Pepperdine 20. Iowa 21. Miami (Fla.) 22. UCF 23. Princeton 24. Cornell 25. UCLA
Bruins in the Oracle/ITA Rankings Team UCLA
1/8 1/22 1/29 2/5 2/18 2/25 3/3 3/10 11 10 10 16 17 22 22 25
Singles 9/17 11/13 2/5 2/18 3/3 Drew Baird - - - 124 Govind Nanda - - 10 28 21 Keegan Smith 20 7 6 8 4
Doubles 9/17 11/13 2/5 2/18 3/3 Baird/Smith 12 - - - Nanda/Smith - - - 24 29
Keegan Smith (left) and Govind Nanda
17
Result, Score W, 7-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-3 L, 2-4 L, 2-4 W, 7-0 L, 2-4 L, 1-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 5-0 W, 4-3 W, 6-1
Oracle/ITA National Team Rankings
Against Ranked Singles Opponents 5-5 0-1 2-3 3-7 2-2 1-3 12-4 13-7 14-6 12-4 0-4 8-7 9-6
Opponent BYU SAN DIEGO STATE@ UCF@ at #15 California at #11 Stanford vs. Western Michigan vs. #4 Texas^ vs. #7 Texas A&M^ vs. #10 NC State^ UC IRVINE at Washington* at Oregon* LIBERTY
2020 RESULTS
The 2019-20 Bruins had their season cut short by the coronavirus pandemic.
#11 UCLA 7, BYU 0 Jan. 15, 2020 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. Nanda/Smith (UCLA) def. Hill/Vereau Melendez (BYU) 6-4 2. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) vs. Barnett/Ferreira Leite (BYU) 5-3, unfinished 3. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) def. Ball/Gajardo (BYU) 6-1 Singles competition 1. #7 Keegan Smith (UCLA) def. #80 Sean Hill (BYU) 4-6, 6-3, 6-1 2. Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. M. Vereau Melendez (BYU) 7-6 (9-7), 6-3 3. Drew Baird (UCLA) def. M. Ferreira Leite (BYU) 6-3, 3-6, 6-4 4. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) def. Jack Barnett (BYU) 6-2, 6-1 5. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) def. Ben Gajardo (BYU) 6-0, 3-6, 7-6 (7-5) 6. Connor Hance (UCLA) def. David Ball (BYU) 7-6 (7-4), 6-3
#10 UCLA 4, San Diego State 1 Jan. 25, 2020 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. Nanda/Smith (UCLA) def. Martinez/Pollanen (SDSU) 6-4 2. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) def. Gonzalez Almazan/Kirchhoff (SDSU) 6-4 3. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) vs. Restifo/Roensdorf (SDSU) 6-6 (3-1), unfinished Singles competition 1. #7 Keegan Smith (UCLA) def. Fabian Roensdorf (SDSU) 6-2, 7-5 2. Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. Aaro Pollanen (SDSU) 6-0, 6-3 3. Jan Kirchhoff (SDSU) def. Drew Baird (UCLA) 6-3, 6-4 4. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) vs. David Hough (SDSU) 6-3, 5-3, unfinished 5. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) vs. Arnaud Restifo (SDSU) 6-7 (4-7), 1-1, unfinished 6. Connor Hance (UCLA) def. Ignacio Martinez (SDSU) 6-2, 6-3
#10 UCLA 4, UCF 3 Jan. 26, 2020 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. Nanda/Smith (UCLA) def. Hilderbrand/Pavel (UCF) 6-4 2. #6 Decamps/Grassi Mazzuchi (UCF) def. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) 6-2 3. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) def. Johnson/Rubio (UCF) 7-6 (7-1)
Singles competition 1. #22 Gabriel Decamps (UCF) def. #7 Keegan Smith (UCLA) 6-2, 4-6, 6-2 2. Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. #29 J. Grassi Mazzuchi (UCF) 6-3, 3-6, 6-2 3. Alan Rubio (UCF) def. Drew Baird (UCLA) 7-6 (7-3), 4-6, 7-5 4. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) def. #108 Bogdan Pavel (UCF) 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 5. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) def. JanMagnus Johnson (UCF) 6-1, 7-5 6. Mikhail Sokolovskiy (UCF) def. Connor Hance (UCLA) 6-4, 6-1
#15 California 4, #10 UCLA 2 Jan. 31, 2020 @ Berkeley, Calif. Doubles competition 1. P. Barretto/Kaya (CAL) def. Nanda/Smith (UCLA) 6-1 2. Molloy/Kikuchi (CAL) vs. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) 3-4, unfinished 3. #22 Draper/Hoffmann (CAL) def. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) 6-2 Singles competition 1. #7 Keegan Smith (UCLA) def. #34 Yuta Kikuchi (CAL) 6-4, 6-2 2. Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. #49 Jack Molloy (CAL) 6-3, 6-4 3. Paul Barretto (CAL) vs. Drew Baird (UCLA) 6-2, 3-6, 1-2, unfinished 4. Kent Hunter (CAL) def. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) 6-4, 6-4 5. Ben Draper (CAL) def. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) 7-5, 6-3 6. #81 Bjorn Hoffmann (CAL) def. Eric Hahn (UCLA) 7-5, 6-1
#11 Stanford 4, #10 UCLA 2 Feb. 1, 2020 @ Stanford, Calif. Doubles competition 1. Nanda/Smith (UCLA) def. Geller/Rajesh (STAN) 7-6 (14-12) 2. Sah/Sridhar (STAN) def. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) 6-4 3. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) def. Kopczynski/Rotsaert (STAN) 6-2 Singles competition 1. Axel Geller (STAN) def. #7 Keegan Smith (UCLA) 5-7, 6-2, 6-2 2. Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. #18 Alexandre Rotsaert (STAN) 18
6-1, 7-5 3. #54 Sangeet Sridhar (STAN) def. Drew Baird (UCLA) 6-3, 6-2 4. Timothy Sah (STAN) def. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) 6-1, 2-6, 6-4 5. Neel Rajesh (STAN) vs. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) 6-1, 5-7, 5-1, unfinished 6. Filip Kolasinski (STAN) def. Eric Hahn (UCLA) 6-4, 6-1
#16 UCLA 7, Western Michigan 0 Feb. 11, 2020 @ Chicago, Ill. Doubles competition 1. Nanda/Smith (UCLA) def. Kuszynski/Opitz (WMU) 7-5 2. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) vs. Crespo/Randall (WMU) 6-5, unfinished 3. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) def. Honnappa/Nouchi (WMU) 6-1 Singles competition 1. #6 Keegan Smith (UCLA) def. Jannik Opitz (WMU) 6-4, 6-7 (4-7), 1-0 (10-2) 2. #10 Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. #124 Kennosuke Nouchi (WMU) 6-1, 6-2 3. Drew Baird (UCLA) def. Peter Kuszynski (WMU) 6-4, 7-6 (7-1) 4. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) def. Jack Randall (WMU) 6-4, 6-3 5. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) def. Rodrigo Crespo (WMU) 6-3, 6-2 6. Eric Hahn (UCLA) def. Zac Faveri (WMU) 7-5, 7-5
#4 Texas 4, #16 UCLA 2 Feb. 14, 2020 @ Madison, Wis. Doubles competition 1. Nanda/Smith (UCLA) def. #11 Sigsgaard/Woldeab (TEX) 6-2 2. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) def. Huang/Spizzirri (TEX) 6-3 3. Harper/Ito (TEX) def. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) 6-2 Singles competition 1. #2 Yuya Ito (TEX) def. #6 Keegan Smith (UCLA) 6-4, 6-7 (1-7), 6-1 2. #12 Christian Sigsgaard (TEX) def. #10 Govind Nanda (UCLA) 6-4, 6-7 (7-9), 6-2 3. Drew Baird (UCLA) def. #37 Siem Woldeab (TEX) 6-2, 6-3 4. Eliot Spizzirri (TEX) def. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) 6-4, 6-3 5. Chih Chi Huang (TEX) vs. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) 3-6, 7-6 (10-8), 3-4, unfinished 6. Cleeve Harper (TEX) def. Eric Hahn (UCLA) 6-2, 6-3
2020 RESULTS
#7 Texas A&M 4, #16 UCLA 1
#17 UCLA 4, UC Irvine 0
Feb. 15, 2020 @ Madison, Wis.
Feb. 23, 2020 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center
Doubles competition 1. Aguilar/Smith (TAMU) def. Nanda/Smith (UCLA) 6-3 2. Schachter/Vacherot (TAMU) vs. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) 6-5, unfinished 3. Rollins/Storch (TAMU) def. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) 6-4
Doubles competition 1. #24 Nanda/Smith (UCLA) def. Peneff/Smolicki (UCI) 7-6 (7-4) 2. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) def. Gealer/Merville (UCI) 6-4 3. Man-Son-Hing/Sah (UCI) def. Baird/Wild (UCLA) 6-4
Singles competition 1. #14 Hady Habib (TAMU) vs. #6 Keegan Smith (UCLA) 6-7 (6-8), 6-6 (3-6), unfinished 2. #34 Carlos Aguilar (TAMU) def. #10 Govind Nanda (UCLA) 6-4, 7-5 3. #3 Valentin Vacherot (TAMU) def. Drew Baird (UCLA) 7-5, 6-3 4. Noah Schachter (TAMU) vs. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) 7-5, 6-6 (0-1), unfinished 5. Barnaby Smith (TAMU) def. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) 6-4, 6-2 6. Mathew Tsolakyan (UCLA) def. Guido Marson (TAMU) 6-4, 6-3
Singles competition 1. #8 Keegan Smith (UCLA) def. Mark Peneff (UCI) 6-3, 6-1 2. #28 Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. Mateusz Smolicki (UCI) 6-2, 6-4 3. #124 Drew Baird (UCLA) vs. Jeremy Merville (UCI) 7-5, 3-1, unfinished 4. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) vs. Aaron Bailey (UCI) 6-2, 4-4, unfinished 5. Mathew Tsolakyan (UCLA) def. Daniel Gealer (UCI) 6-3, 6-1 6. Eric Hahn (UCLA) vs. Mike Mkrtchian (UCI) 6-1, 5-4, unfinished
#16 UCLA 4, #10 NC State 0 Feb. 16, 2020 @ Madison, Wis. Doubles competition 1. Nanda/Smith (UCLA) def. #12 Babelis/Barkai (NCST) 6-4 2. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) def. #44 Galarneau/Turzak (NCST) 6-3 3. Izquierdo Luque/Shick (NCST) vs. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) 4-5, unfinished Singles competition 1. #77 Alexis Galarneau (NCST) vs. #6 Keegan Smith (UCLA) 6-2, 6-6 (1-2), unfinished 2. #10 Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. Tadas Babelis (NCST) 6-4, 6-2 3. Yannai Barkai (NCST) vs. Drew Baird (UCLA) 4-6, 5-4, unfinished 4. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) def. Rafa Izquierdo Luque (NCST) 6-3, 6-1 5. Robin Catry (NCST) vs. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) 3-6, 1-5, unfinished 6. Mathew Tsolakyan (UCLA) def. Collin Shick (NCST) 6-1, 6-2
Drew Baird
#22 UCLA 5, Washington 0 Feb. 28, 2020 @ Seattle, Wash. Doubles competition 1. Alvarez/Davis (WASH) vs. #24 Nanda/Smith (UCLA) 5-5, unfinished 2. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) def. Cancel/Torocsik (WASH) 6-3 3. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) def. Lam/Pulliam (WASH) 6-0 Singles competition 1. #8 Keegan Smith (UCLA) def. #119 Ewen Lumsden (WASH) 6-3, 3-6, 6-3 2. #28 Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. #43 Jack Davis (WASH) 6-1, 7-5 3. #124 Drew Baird (UCLA) def. Brandon Wong (WASH) 6-3, 6-4 4. Thibault Cancel (WASH) vs. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) 4-6, 6-5, unfinished 5. Jack Pulliam (WASH) vs. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) 6-1, 6-7 (1-7), unfinished 6. Mathew Tsolakyan (UCLA) def. Adam Torocsik (WASH) 6-1, 3-6, 6-2
Ben Goldberg
#22 UCLA 4, Oregon 3 March 1, 2020 @ Eugene, Ore. Doubles competition 1. #11 Charlton/Gentry (ORE) def. #24 Nanda/Smith (UCLA) 6-4 2. Lam/Roberts (ORE) vs. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) 5-6, unfinished 3. Klov-Nilsson/Oshima (ORE) def. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) 6-1 Singles competition 1. #8 Keegan Smith (UCLA) def. #19 Joshua Charlton (ORE) 6-2, 6-2 2. Emmanuel Coste (ORE) def. #28 Govind Nanda (UCLA) 7-6 (9-7), 2-6, 6-3 3. Ty Gentry (ORE) def. #124 Drew Baird (UCLA) 7-5, 4-6, 7-5 4. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) def. Riki Oshima (ORE) 5-7, 7-6 (7-5), 7-6 (7-1) 5. Patrick Zahraj (UCLA) def. Luke Vandecasteele (ORE) 7-5, 7-6 (7-3) 6. Mathew Tsolakyan (UCLA) def. Brandon Lam (ORE) 6-3, 1-6, 7-6 (7-4)
#22 UCLA 6, Liberty 1 March 9, 2020 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #29 Nanda/Smith (UCLA) def. Ferreira/Wilson (LIB) 6-1 2. Baird/Rapp (UCLA) vs. Marques Da Silva/Muamba (LIB) 6-6 (4-2), unfinished 3. Pereira/Zahraj (UCLA) def. Burton/Thomas-Smith (LIB) 7-6 (7-2) Singles competition 1. #4 Keegan Smith (UCLA) def. Nicaise Muamba (LIB) 6-1, 6-4 2. #21 Govind Nanda (UCLA) def. Josh Wilson (LIB) 6-3, 6-1 3. Drew Baird (UCLA) def. Chase Burton (LIB) 7-5, 6-2 4. Goncalo Ferreira (LIB) def. Ben Goldberg (UCLA) 6-4, 6-3 5. Mathew Tsolakyan (UCLA) def. R. Marques Da Silva (LIB) 6-3, 3-6, 6-3 6. Roscoe Bellamy (UCLA) def. Deji Thomas-Smith (LIB) 6-2, 6-3
Mathew Tsolakyan
19
ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS
A
Haythem Abid Hassan Akmal Jim Allen Vince Allegre Elio Alvarez Stanislav Arsonov Arthur Ashe Jeff Austin John Austin
Jordan Duboff
2006-08, 2010 1999 1968, 1969 1996-98 1969-71 2007 1963-65 1970-73 1976-78
B
Jean Baker 1962-65 David Bain 1993-95 Drew Baird 2020 Bill Barber 1989-1992 Roy Barth 1967-69 Bill Bartlett 1978, 1979 Mark Basham 1982-85 Bill Behrens 1989-1992 Lucas Bellamy 2018-2020 Roscoe Bellamy 2019, 2020 Russell Berkowitz 1989 Stanley Benoit 1980 Bobby Berger 1979, 1980, 1982, 1983 Bill Bethard 1963 Rob Bierens 1988, 1989 Fritz Bissell 1990-93 Joe Blatchford 1956 Ron Bohrnstedt 1967-69 Jeff Borowiak 1969-1971 Mike Bouck 1959 Eugen Brazdil 2009 Matt Breen 1996-98 Bruce Brescia 1979-1982 Alex Brigham 2010-13 Matt Brooklyn 2009, 2010 Elty Brown 1964-66 Gage Brymer 2014-17 Fritz Buehning 1978, 1979 Brett Buffington 1983, 1984 Barry Buss 1983
C
Mark Campana Bruce Campbell Stafford Carson Dane Chapin Willie Chan George Chen Rae Cho Jaysen Chung Tobias Clemens Dean Cohen Chris Conway Danny Conway Jimmy Connors Jason Cook Mark Copeland Ron Cornell Steve Cornell John Cranston Maxime Cressy Ian Crookenden Mark Cullers John Cunnea
D
John Davis Alex Decret Mathieu Dehaine Peter deLeon Joseph Di Giulio Erfan Djahangiri Ken Diller Adam Draper Jeremy Drean Colin Dresser
1989, 1990 1960-63 1957 1980, 1981 1957, 1958 2004, 2005 1994, 1995 2005-07 2001-04 1989, 1990 2005, 2006 2001, 2002 1971 1997-99 1988-1990 1970-72 1969-1971 1956-58 2016-19 1965-67 1978, 1979 1963, 1964 1981-83 1997, 1998 2005-08 1964 2014-17 2000-03 1985, 1986 2006-09 2005-08 2012
E
Andrew Eklov Randy Ellis Luis Enck
F
Buff Farrow Mark Ferriera Zack Fleishman Jake Fleming Peter Fleming Allen Fox Alberto Francis Mike Franks Jared Freedman Marcel Freeman Barry Friedman
G
Patrick Galbraith Craig Garman Brian Garrow Jeff Gast Daniel Gealer Graham Giles Justin Gimelstob Marcos Giron Drew Gitlin Ben Goldberg Tony Graham Mike Green Brett Greenwood Rodrigo Grilli Jean-Noel Grinda Gary Grossman Ed Grubb Philipp Gruendler Connor Gurley Mike Gurman Michael Guzman
H
Eric Hahn John Hall Connor Hance Warren Hardie Mike Harrington Craig Harter Brad Hess Chris Ho John Houghton Blaine Hovenier Michael Hui Richard Humphries
I
Amit Inbar Ahmed Ismail Ronen Itzhaki
J
Jay Jackson Lance Jackson Sean Jackson Robert Janecek Franklin Johnson Jim Johnson
K
Al Kabe Tom Karp Todd Katz Ron Kendis Lassi Ketola Jim Kilgore
1997
Kelvin Kim Kevin Kim Travis Kinard Jeff Klaparda Mark Knowles Zac Knysh Benjamin Kohlloeffel Daniel Kosakowski Brandon Kramer Bob Kreiss Mike Kreiss Nick Kreiss Taylor Kreiss Tommy Kreiss Steve Krulevitz Jun Kuki Dathan Kuppin Michael Kures Kris Kwinta
2006, 2007 1959, 1960 1975, 1976 1986-89 1985, 1986 1999 2009-2011 1976 1959-1961 2002-05 1956-58 2001 1979-1982 1976, 1977
L
Chris Lam Jimmy Landes John Larson Sebastien LeBlanc Evan Lee Jong-Min Lee John Lesch Eric Lin David Livingston Michael Look Tom Loucks Xavier Luscan
1986-89 1956 1987-89 2009-2012 2016, 2017 1993 1995, 1996 2012-14 1977 2017-2020 1976-78 1956-58 1984-87 2002, 2003 1998-2001 1964-68 1966-68 2004-07 2013 2007 2014-17
M
Dwight Makoff Ken Malley Jacques Manset Tal Marcus-Russ Billy Martin Travis Martin Jack Matalsky Marcin Matkowski Mackenzie McDonald Ryan McNaughton Bob McNown Nick Meister Dick Metz Tony Mickas Darren Miller Josh Miller Mark Miller Fabio Mion-Bet Dennis Mkrtchian Thorvald Moe Heath Montgomery Dean Moore Steve Mott Martin Mulligan Srdjan Muskatirovic
2019, 2020 1960-62 2018-2020 2011, 2012 1977-1980 1966 1988 2008 1968 2020 2012 1994, 1995 2009-2011 2008, 2009 1989
N
Larry Nagler Dan Nahirny David Nainkin Govind Nanda Jason Netter Noah Newman Derrick Nguyen Duke Nguyen Jason Nguyen Jason Nichinson Bruce Nichols Dennis Novikov
1996-99 2003, 2004 2007 1992-95 1956-58 1969 1972 1966-68 1980-83 1962-65 2000-03 1963
O
Harry Ohls Joel Ostroff 20
2008 1997 2003 1982-85 1990-92 2000, 2001 2005-07 2011 1997-2000 1970-73 1970, 1971 2002 2008 1972, 1974, 1975 1973 1969 2009 1983-86 2004, 2005
P
2003-04-05 1974 1992-93-94-95 1993-94 2010-11-12 1999-00 1956-57-58 1994-95-96-97 1982-83-84-85 2006-07-08-09 1976-77-79 1999
R
1956, 1957 1975 1981, 1982 1996, 1997 1975 2014-17 1962 2001-03 2014-16 2002 1964 2008-10, 2012 1979, 1980 1959 1996-99 2008 1996-99 1980-84 2012-15 1962, 1963 1993-96 1959 1973-76 1992-95 1995, 1996 1960-62 1986-89 1991, 1992 2019, 2020 1988-1991 1998, 1999 2001, 2002 1999 2004-06 2004 1975-78 2012, 2013 1957 1969
Paul Palmer Jon Paley Luben Pampoulov Ken Park Dave Parker Jon Parker Randy Part Charles Pasarell Giora Payes Karl Pazdernik Brad Pearce Bryce Pereira Norman Perry Loren Peters William Pham Darin Pleasant Reid Ponder Adrien Puget Jim Pugh Haroon Rahim Nikolas Ramadan Austin Rapp Connor Rapp Andre Ranadive Dave Reddie Martin Redlicki Dave Reed Horace Reid Travis Rettenmaier Sergio Rico Mark Rifenbark Dale Rohland Jean-Julien Rojer Gary Rose Marcin Rozpedski Jim Ruddick Herman Rundle Compton Russell
1961-63 1977, 1978 2004, 2005 1995 1974, 1975 1993-95 1981-83, 1985 1963-66 1988, 1989 1992-95 1985, 1986 2018-2020 1958-1961 1994, 1995 1989, 1990 1991-93 2018 2011-14 1983, 1984 1970, 1971 2015, 2016 2015-18 2018-2020 2007 1962 2015-18 1963-65 1974 2000, 2001 1994 1981 1957-59 2000-02 1966-68 1999 1959 1956 1972
S
Danny Saltz 1980-83 Dave Sanderlin 1963-65 Tom Sandor 1964 Chris Sands 1998-2001 Davide Sanguinetti 1992, 1993 Florante Sarmiento 2010 Ian Schindler 1975-77 Paul Scholtz 1988, 1989 Alon Schwartz 1996-98 Rayno Seegers 1973 Spencer Segura 1972-74 Holden Seguso 2008-2011 Karue Sell 2013-16 Lev Shvarts 1994, 1995 Jason Sher 1991-93 Tim Sheehan 1989 Reid Shumway 2016-18 Anthony Smith 1988 Doug Smith 1970 Keegan Smith 2018-2020 Otis Smith 1985-87 Harel Srugo 2008, 2009 Logan Staggs 2016-18 Forrest Stewart 1958-60 Kallim Stewart 2010 Bob Stock 1964 Seth Stolar 2013, 2014 Leif Sunderland 2006 Chris Surapol 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007
T
Maxime Tabatruong Ryoto Tachi Eric Taino Jamie Talbot
2010-13 2013-16 1994-97 1986, 1987
ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS / TEAM CAPTAINS / BRUIN GREATS Gino Tanasescu Ferdi Taygan Brian Teacher Eliot Teltscher Evan Teufel Clay Thompson Jason Thompson Steve Tidball Tony Trear Tim Trigueiro Mathew Tsolakyan
1964, 1965 1974-77 1973-76 1978 2010, 2011 2011-14 1996, 1997 1966, 1968, 1969 1982 1986, 1987 2019, 2020
U
Maik Ulrich
V
W
2012
Modesto Vasquez Craig Venter Robbie Venter Ivan Volkov
Brendan Wee Eric Wee Robbie Wendell Roger Werksman Max Wild Blaine Willenborg Chuck Willenborg Van Winitsky Alan Winkler
1969-71 1981-84 1978, 1980-82 1997
2012-14 1984, 1985 1990, 1991 1958-1960 2019, 2020 1979-1982 1983, 1984 1977 1977, 1978
Reed Witt Ted Wright
Y
Aaron Yovan Nishanth Yamani
Z
Patrick Zahraj Evan Zhu
1964 1957, 1958 2004-06 2014-17
2019, 2020 2017, 2018
Team Captains 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945
Robert Edwards Samuel Bender Robert Shuman Carl Busch Fred Houser Fred Houser Roger Vargas Alfred Duff Rod Houser Robert Laird Leonard Dworkin Orville Sholtz Elbert Lewis Forrest Froelich Jack Tidball Stanley Briggs Frank Stewart Hank Uhl Julius Heldman Bradley Kendis Norton Beach J.D. Morgan Alex Gordon Arnold Schwab Vincent Fotre Ralph Witt
1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971
Noel Brown Rod Sackett Gene Garrett/Ken Nichols Gene Garrett Glenn Bassett/Herb Flam Jack Shoemaker Keith Self Larry Huebner Ron Livingston/Bob Perry Dick Doss/Jim Read Joe Blatchford Dwight Makoff John Cranston/Mike Green Dale Rohland Norman Perry Allen Fox Larry Nagler Paul Palmer Arthur Ashe/Dave Reed Arthur Ashe Charles Pasarell Ian Crookenden Ed Grubb/Tom Karp Roy Barth/Steve Tidball Jeff Borowiak Jeff Borowiak
1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997
Ron Cornell Jeff Austin Spencer Segura Brian Teacher Ferdi Taygan Ferdi Taygan Tony Graham/Bruce Nichols Mike Harrington Mike Harrington Robbie Venter Robbie Venter Todd Katz Jeff Klaparda/Craig Venter Mark Basham/Jeff Klaparda Brett Greenwood/Brad Pearce Brett Greenwood Buff Farrow/Patrick Galbraith Buff Farrow/Patrick Galbraith Bill Barber Bill Barber Bill Barber Matt Quinlan Robert Janecek/Sebastien LeBlanc Robert Janecek H. Montgomery/S. Muskatirovic Eric Lin/Eric Taino
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Matt Breen Jean-Noel Grinda Jean-Noel Grinda/Brandon Kramer Jean-Noel Grinda/Chris Sands Erfan Djahangiri Erfan Djahangiri/Rodrigo Grilli Chris Lam Luben Pampoulov/Alberto Francis Ben Kohlloeffel Chris Surapol Jeremy Drean Michael Look/Harel Srugo Nick Meister Amit Inbar/Nick Meister Nick Meister Adrien Puget Marcos Giron/Adrien Puget Dennis Mkrtchian/Karue Sell Gage Brymer/Mackenzie McDonald G. Brymer/A. Rapp/M. Redlicki A. Rapp/M. Redlicki/L. Staggs Maxime Cressy/Bryce Pereira B. Goldberg/G. Nanda/K. Smith
Bruin Greats Arthur Ashe (1963-65)
of Tennis Professionals (ATP).
Arthur Ashe, one of tennis’ all-time greats, began his climb to success at UCLA in 1962. He was the first prominent African-American male tennis player to grace both the collegiate and professional tennis scenes. As a freshman at UCLA, he was ranked No. 18 nationally and No. 6 in Southern California. In 1962, he was named a member of the American Junior Davis Cup squad and was the 1962 All-University of California singles and doubles champ (with Charles Pasarell).
Sports Illustrated named him the 1992 Sportsman of the Year, the third of his four appearances on the magazine’s cover. Arthur Ashe, Jr., passed away on Feb. 6, 1993.
Ashe’s sophomore season at UCLA was just as successful as he reached the third round of the Wimbledon Championships and the quarterfinals of the NCAA singles championships. He finished the year ranked sixth nationally and second in Southern California. The 1963 U.S. Davis Cup member also became the first African-American to be ranked in America’s “First 10” during his sophomore campaign.
Connors played a key role in the Bruins’ 10th NCAA team championship when he captured the 1971 NCAA singles crown. The 1971 squad posted an impressive 17-0 record, one of only six undefeated years. Not only was he a key singles player during the 1971 year, but he also teamed up with Jeff Austin to post the team’s best doubles record that season with a 9-1 mark.
Ashe co-captained the 1964 UCLA team that finished as the NCAA runner-up for the third straight time in as many years. Ranked third nationally and second in Southern California, Ashe was a 1964 NCAA singles semifinalist and NCAA doubles finalist.
After turning pro in 1972, Connors captured one Australian Open title (1974), two Wimbledon titles (1974 and ’82) and five U.S. Open Championships (1974, ’76, ’78, ’82 and ’83).
Jimmy Connors (1971) Jimmy Connors, one of the few professional athletes in the world who remained a force in his respective sport for two entire decades, began his tennis success on the collegiate level as a player at UCLA.
He won every major championship except the French Open and is the only player in tennis history to have won the U.S. Open on three different surfaces (grass, clay and hardcourt). He reached the quarterfinals or better at the U.S. Open 17 out of 18 years, spanning from 1973-89 and 1991. Connors ranks as the all-time leader for most matches won at Wimbledon (84) and the U.S. Open (97).
His collegiate career peaked in 1965 when he brought home the coveted NCAA singles title and captained UCLA to an NCAA team title after a three-year run as NCAA runners-up. Ashe also teamed with Ian Crookenden for the 1965 NCAA doubles title, posting a 14-3 record in doubles play on the year. In singles, Ashe compiled a 36-4 record on the season, and picked up the NCAA title and AAWU singles titles. He was also the Southern California Intercollegiate champ, Ojai Tournament champion, Southern California championships finalist and Thunderbird Invitational finalist. Finishing the year ranked second nationally, he helped UCLA to a perfect 11-0 season. The year 1965 also marked the second time he was selected to the U.S. Davis Cup team.
The left-hander was also a talented doubles player on the pro level, owning 19 doubles titles, two of which were Grand Slams (1973 Wimbledon and 1975 U.S. Open). His highest doubles ranking was fifth on April 25, 1976.
Ashe, who was also a Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity member, earned four letters in tennis (1961-64). He graduated in June, 1966 with a degree in Business Administration.
On the professional circuit, he spent more weeks at the No. 1 spot than anyone in the history of the ATP rankings — 158 spanning from July 29, 1974 to Aug. 16, 1977.
He enjoyed an illustrious professional career with three Grand Slam singles titles (1968 U.S. Open, 1970 Australian Open and 1975 Wimbledon) and two doubles (1971 French Open and 1977 Australian Open) crowns to his credit. Ashe was a founding father of the present-day Association
Born Sept. 2, 1952, Connors remained one of the world’s top tennis players until his retirement in 1993. In all, Connors competed on the pro tour for a remarkable 21 years, even reaching the semifinals of the 1991 U.S. Open at the age of 39. 21
BRUIN GREATS / HEAD COACHING HISTORY
Bill Ackerman (1921-1950)
(1952, ’53, ’54 and ’56) and three in the 1960’s (1960, ’61 and ’65). He was the first coach in NCAA history to guide his team to three consecutive NCAA men’s tennis team titles. Morgan’s Bruins also finished in second place four times. He produced four NCAA singles champions and five NCAA doubles team champions in his 16-year tenure. He coached tennis greats Arthur Ashe, Charles Pasarell, Bob Perry and Ian Crookenden, to name a few. The NCAA singles champions during his tenure included Larry Nagler (1960), Allen Fox (1961), Ashe (1965) and Pasarell (1966). The NCAA doubles champions he coached included Perry-Larry Huebner (1953), Perry-Ron Livingston (1954), Fox-Nagler (1960), Ashe-Crookenden (1965) and Pasarell-Crookenden (1966).
William C. “Bill” Ackerman first became associated with UCLA as a freshman in 1920. In 1921, Ackerman’s sophomore year as a Bruin netter, he was named head coach of the UCLA men’s tennis team. That season, the Bruins won their first of five straight Southern Conference Championships. UCLA, then known as the University of California, Southern Branch, joined the Pacific Coast Conference in 1925. Seven years later, Ackerman guided the Bruins to a PCC team title (1932). His Bruins won nine more PCC titles until his retirement following the 1950 season. Ackerman coached the UCLA men’s tennis team to its first NCAA Team Championship in 1950, the first such title for any UCLA sports program. He also coached UCLA’s first-ever NCAA singles champ Jack Tidball (1933) and UCLA’s first player to capture an NCAA singles and doubles crown in the same year in Herb Flam (1950). Flam collected the doubles title with Gene Garrett, another of Ackerman’s star players. Ackerman was inducted into the Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame at the 100th NCAA Tennis Championships (1984) held at the University of Georgia. Ironically, 1984 was the same year that UCLA’s third-ever head coach and former Ackerman pupil, Glenn Bassett, coached the Bruins to an NCAA team title with a 5-4 victory over Stanford.
Morgan was inducted into the ITA Collegiate Hall of Fame in 1983. In his honor, the building that currently houses the athletic department offices and connects with the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame is named the J.D. Morgan Center.
Glen Bassett (1967-1993) Glenn Bassett maintained the tradition of Ackerman and Morgan from 1967 to 1993, collecting seven NCAA team championships and 13 Pac 8/10 titles. In his 27 years at the helm he never had a losing season. In addition, he produced three NCAA singles champions, four NCAA doubles team champions and 49 All-Americans. He is the only coach in NCAA history to win an NCAA tennis title as a player (one), assistant coach (five) and head coach (seven). Including his years as an assistant coach, he has worked with some of tennis’ most recognized players, including national champions Arthur Ashe, Ian Crookenden, Billy Martin and Jimmy Connors, and 1992 Olympian Mark Knowles. He finished his career ranked as the nation’s winningest (by percentage) active Division-I men’s tennis coach, having compiled an impressive dual match record of 592-92-2 (.864).
Ackerman, who passed away in 1988 at the age of 85, was also a charter member of the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame, and UCLA’s Student Union was renamed the William C. Ackerman Student Union in 1967.
J.D. Morgan (1951-1966) J.D. Morgan, the second head coach of the UCLA men’s tennis team, catapulted the Bruins to more success in the 1950’s and ’60’s. Just one year after taking over the helm from Ackerman, Morgan guided UCLA to an NCAA team championship (1952). He was the first UCLA coach in any sport to take the Bruins not only to back-to-back titles but also to three consecutive NCAA titles (1952, ’53 and ’54). Under his guidance, the Bruins won seven NCAA crowns, four in the 1950’s
After retiring from UCLA, Bassett joined the Pepperdine staff for two years. He continued to be a supporter of the Bruin program, attending home matches at the Los Angeles Tennis Center, until he passed away in 2020 at the age of 93.
Head Coaching History Bill Ackerman (1921-1950)
Bassett (Continued)
Year Record Nat. Finish Conf. Finish 1950 12-4 1st -TOTALS 12-4 1 NCAA Title
Year Record Nat. Finish Conf. Finish 1983 25-9 T-5th T-3rd 1984 31-3 1st 2nd 1985 31-4 2nd 1st 1986 29-2 T-3rd 1st 1987 23-8 2nd 2nd 1988 17-10 T-9th 3rd 1989 26-4 T-5th 1st 1990 27-4 T-3rd 1st 1991 27-4 T-5th 2nd 1992 21-5 T-3rd 2nd 1993 24-3 T-3rd 2nd TOTALS 592-92-2 7 NCAA Titles 13 Conf. Titles
J.D. Morgan (1951-1966) Year Record Nat. Finish Conf. Finish 1951 16-1 3rd 1st 1952 10-2 1st T-1st 1953 12-3 1st -1954 19-0 1st 1st 1955 11-2 3rd -1956 14-1 1st 1st 1957 9-2 -- T-1st 1958 7-0 -- 1st 1959 15-1 -- 1st 1960 14-3 1st 1st 1961 13-0 1st 1st 1962 10-3 2nd 2nd 1963 -- 2nd 2nd 1964 -- 2nd 2nd 1965 11-0 1st 1st 1966 -- 2nd 2nd TOTALS 161-18 7 NCAA Titles 10 Conf. Titles
Billy Martin (1994-present) Year Record Nat. Finish Conf. Finish 1994 22-6 T-3rd 3rd 1995 19-6 T-3rd 3rd 1996 27-1 2nd 1st 1997 25-4 T-3rd T-1st 1998 17-8 T-5th T-2nd 1999 26-3 2nd T-1st 2000 24-4 T-5th 2nd 2001 23-3 T-5th 2nd 2002 23-5 T-3rd 1st 2003 24-4 T-3rd 2nd 2004 23-6 2nd T-1st 2005 27-3 1st T-1st 2006 20-6 T-5th T-1st 2007 22-4 T-5th 1st 2008 23-4 T-3rd T-2nd 2009 21-5 T-3rd 1st 2010 17-7 T-5th 3rd 2011 18-7 T-9th T-3rd 2012 26-4 T-3rd 1st 2013 29-2 2nd 1st 2014 26-4 T-3rd 2nd 2015 17-10 9th T-3rd 2016 25-3 T-5th 1st 2017 22-6 T-5th 1st 2018 30-3 T-3rd 1st 2019 19-6 T-9th 1st 2020 9-4 Not played (COVID-19) -TOTALS 604-128 1 NCAA Title 15 Conf. Titles
Glenn Bassett (1967-1993) Year Record Nat. Finish Conf. Finish 1967 12-2 2nd 2nd 1968 14-2 3rd 2nd 1969 18-1-1 2nd 1st 1970 19-1 1st 1st 1971 17-0 1st 1st 1972 13-4-1 3rd 3rd 1973 21-4 3rd 1st 1974 18-3 6th 2nd 1975 19-0 1st 1st 1976 17-1 T-1st 1st 1977 19-2 3rd 1st 1978 23-3 2nd -1979 26-2 1st -1980 21-5 T-5th -1981 24-3 2nd 1st 1982 30-3 1st 1st 22
AWARD WINNERS
ITA Hall of Fame 1983* 1984* 1986* 1987* 1988* 1992* 1993* 1996* 1997* 1998* 2001* 2004* 2006* 2008* 2009* 2011* 2019*
Arthur Ashe J.D. Morgan William C. Ackerman Jimmy Connors Herb Flam Charles Pasarell Allen Fox Frank Stewart Jack Tidball Glenn Bassett Billy Martin Ian Crookenden Robert M. Perry Peter Fleming Brian Teacher Larry Nagler Jeff Borowiak Ferdie Taygan Jim Pugh Brad Pearce Marcel Freeman Roy Barth
All-Americans 1957 1958 1959
1960 1961
1962 1963 1964
1965 1966 1967
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2010 2012 2013 2014
* Indicates induction year
UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame 1984* 1987* 1995* 1998* 2005* 2006* 2011* 2012* 2015* 2019*
2000 2001
Arthur Ashe Bill Ackerman J.D. Morgan Jack Tidball Jimmy Connors Glenn Bassett Allen Fox Herb Flam Larry Nagler Charles Pasarell Billy Martin Peter Fleming
* Indicates induction year
John Cranston Myron Franks Mike Green John Lesch John Cranston Myron Franks Mike Green John Lesch Allen Quay Allen Fox Norman Perry Dale Rohland Roger Werksman Allen Fox Larry Nagler Norman Perry Roger Werksman Allen Fox Larry Nagler Paul Palmer Norman Perry Larry Nagler Paul Palmer Arthur Ashe Charles Pasarell David Reed Arthur Ashe Charles Pasarell David Reed David Sanderlin Arthur Ashe Ian Crookenden David Reed David Sanderlin Ian Crookenden Charles Pasarell Ian Crookenden
Peter Fleming (right, with AD Dan Guerrero) was inducted into the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame in 2019.
1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973
1974 1975 1976 1977
1978
1979 1980
1981 1982
Gary Rose Steve Tidball Roy Barthe Tom Karp Roy Barthe Jeff Borowiak Haroon Rahim Jeff Borowiak Bob Kreiss Haroon Rahim Elio Alvarez Jeff Borowiak Jimmy Connors Haroon Rahim Jeff Austin Bob Kreiss Mike Kreiss Jeff Austin Bob Kreiss Steve Krulevitz Brian Teacher Steve Mott Ferdi Taygan Brian Teacher Billy Martin Ferdi Taygan Brian Teacher Peter Fleming Ferdi Taygan Brian Teacher John Austin Tony Graham Bruce Nichols Jon Paley Ferdi Taygan Van Winitsky John Austin Tony Graham Bruce Nichols Eliot Teltscher Fritz Buehning Marcel Freeman Mike Harrington Blaine Willenborg Marcel Freeman Dick Metz Robbie Venter Blaine Willenborg John Davis Marcel Freeman Robbie Venter Marcel Freeman
1983 1984 1985
1986
1987 1988 1989 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
23
Robbie Venter Jeff Klaparda Mark Basham Jeff Klaparda Michael Kures David Livingston Jim Pugh Craig Venter Ken Diller Jeff Klaparda Michael Kures Brad Pearce Ken Diller Michael Kures Dan Nahirny Brad Pearce Pat Galbraith Brian Garrow Brett Greenwood Dan Nahirny Rob Bierens Buff Farrow Pat Galbraith Brian Garrow Buff Farrow Pat Galbraith Brian Garrow Jason Netter Fritz Bissell Mark Knowles Jason Netter Bill Behrens Mark Knowles Robert Janecek Sebastien LeBlanc Davide Sanguinetti Robert Janecek Sebastien LeBlanc Eric Lin Robert Janecek Eric Lin Eric Taino Justin Gimelstob Srdjan Muskatirovic Kevin Kim Eric Lin Eric Taino Vince Allegre Matt Breen Jean-Noel Grinda Jason Cook Jean-Noel Grinda
2015 2016 2017 2018
2019 2020
Brandon Kramer Jong-Min Lee Brandon Kramer Jong-Min Lee Jean-Noel Grinda Jean-Julien Rojer Tobias Clemens Marcin Matkowski Jean-Julien Rojer Tobias Clemens Tobias Clemens Alberto Francis Kris Kwinta Benjamin Kohlloeffel Luben Pampoulov Philipp Gruendler Benjamin Kohlloeffel Benjamin Kohlloeffel Amit Inbar Nick Meister Nick Meister Marcos Giron Marcos Giron Mackenzie McDonald Clay Thompson Mackenzie McDonald Mackenzie McDonald Martin Redlicki Martin Redlicki Evan Zhu Austin Rapp Martin Redlicki Keegan Smith Evan Zhu Maxime Cressy Keegan Smith Keegan Smith
ITA National Player of the Year 1982 2006 2014 2016
Marcel Freeman Benjamin Kohlloeffel Marcos Giron Mackenzie McDonald
ITA National Senior Player of the Year 2014 2018
Clay Thompson Martin Redlicki
ITA Regional Senior Player of the Year 2004 2007 2014 2018 2019
Tobias Clemens Benjamin Kohlloeffel Clay Thompson Martin Redlicki Maxime Cressy
ITA National Rookie of the Year 1993 2005
Sebastien LeBlanc Benjamin Kohlloeffel
ITA Regional Rookie of the Year 2005 2011 2014 2015 2018
Benjamin Kohlloeffel Daniel Kosakowski Mackenzie McDonald Martin Redlicki Keegan Smith
ITA Regional Player to Watch
2001 2002 2013 2019 2020
Jean-Julien Rojer Rodrigo Grilli Marcos Giron Keegan Smith Govind Nanda
AWARD WINNERS 2007 2013 2015 2016 2018
Marcin Matkowski Benjamin Kohlloeffel Dennis Novikov Mackenzie McDonald Mackenzie McDonald Martin Redlicki
* Pac-10 Southern Division Player of the Year
Pac-12 Doubles Team of the Year
2000 Brandon Kramer/Jong-Min Lee 2002 Marcin Matkowski/Jean-Julien Rojer 2004 Alberto Francis/Kris Kwinta 2006 Philipp Gruendler/Ben Kohlloeffel 2007 Philipp Gruendler/Ben Kohlloeffel 2016 Mackenzie McDonald/Martin Redlicki 2017 Martin Redlicki/Evan Zhu 2018 Martin Redlicki/Evan Zhu 2019 Maxime Cressy/Keegan Smith
Pac-12 Freshman of the Year Marcos Giron
ITA/Rafael Osuna Sportsmanship Award 1973
Jeff Austin
ITA/Arthur Ashe Regional Leadership & Sportsmanship Award 2016 2018
Mackenzie McDonald Austin Rapp
WIlson/ITA National Coach of the Year 1973 1976 1993 1996
Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Billy Martin
Wilson/ITA Regional Coach of the Year 2008 2016
Billy Martin Billy Martin
ITA National Assistant Coach of the Year 1999
Brett Greenwood
ITA Regional Assistant Coach of the Year 2001 2010 2016
Jason Sher Kris Kwinta Grant Chen
ITA All-American Champions
1981 Robbie Venter (S) 1988 Patrick Galbraith/Brian Garrow (D) 1995 Justin Gimelstob/Srdjan Muskatirovic (D) 2001 Marcin Matkowski/Jean-Julien Rojer (D)
ITA National Intercollegiate Indoors Champions 1997 2005 2006 2013
Kevin Kim/Eric Lin (D) Benjamin Kohlloeffel (S) Benjamin Kohlloeffel (S) Clay Thompson (S)
ITA National Team Indoor Champions 1984 1991 1993 1996 1997 1999 2001
Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin
All-Pac-12 1988 1989 1990 1992 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 2019
Buff Farrow Brian Garrow Buff Farrow Pat Galbraith Brian Garrow Jason Netter Billy Barber Mark Knowles Robert Janecek Sebastien LeBlanc Robert Janecek Robert Janecek, 1st Justin Gimelstob, 2nd Justin Gimelstob, 1st Srdjan Muskatirovic, 1st Eric Taino, 1st Alex Decret , 1st Eric Taino, 1st Matt Breen, 2nd Kevin Kim, 2nd Jean-Noel Grinda , 1st Vince Allegre, 2nd Matt Breen, 2nd Jean-Noel Grinda, 1st Jason Cook, 2nd Zack Fleishman, HM Jean-Noel Grinda, 1st Jong-Min Lee, 1st Brandon Kramer, 1st Jean-Julien Rojer, 2nd Jean-Julien Rojer, 1st Jean-Noel Grinda, 2nd Tobias Clemens, 1st Rodrigo Grilli, 1st Marcin Matkowski, 2nd Jean-Julien Rojer, HM Tobias Clemens, 1st Marcin Matkowski, 1st Rodrigo Grilli, 2nd Erfan Djahangiri, HM Chris Lam, HM Tobias Clemens, 1st Chris Lam, 2nd Luben Pampoulov, HM Benjamin Kohlloeffel, 1st Luben Pampoulov, 1st Kris Kwinta, HM Benjamin Kohlloeffel, 1st Haythem Abid, 2nd Chris Surapol, HM Haythem Abid, 1st Benjamin Kohlloeffel, 1st Chris Surapol, 2nd Philipp Gruendler, HM Mathieu Dehaine, 1st
Harel Srugo, 1st Holden Seguso, 2nd Haythem Abid, 1st Matt Brooklyn, 2nd Michael Look, 2nd Nick Meister, HM Holden Seguso, HM Harel Srugo, HM Nick Meister, 1st Matt Brooklyn, 2nd Amit Inbar, 2nd Haythem Abid, HM Daniel Kosakowski, 1st Amit Inbar, 2nd Clay Thompson, HM Nick Meister, 1st Clay Thompson, 2nd Adrien Puget, 2nd Marcos Giron, HM Marcos Giron, 1st Dennis Novikov, 1st Adrien Puget, 1st Dennis Mkrtchian, HM Marcos Giron, 1st Clay Thompson, 1st Gage Brymer, 2nd Mackenzie McDonald, 2nd Karue Sell, HM Mackenzie McDonald, 1st Dennis Mkrtchian, 1st Martin Redlicki, 2nd Karue Sell, HM Mackenzie McDonald, 1st Martin Redlicki, 1st Karue Sell, 2nd Gage Brymer, 2nd Martin Redlicki, 1st Gage Brymer, 2nd Evan Zhu, 2nd Logan Staggs, HM Martin Redlicki, 1st Keegan Smith, 2nd Evan Zhu, 2nd Maxime Cressy, HM Maxime Cressy, 1st Keegan Smith, 1st Govind Nanda, 2nd
Pac-12 Singles Player of the Year 1976 1979 1982 1984 1989 1996 2003 24
Peter Fleming Fritz Buehning Marcel Freeman Michael Kures* Brian Garrow* Justin Gimelstob* Tobias Clemens
2000 2005 2011 2014 2018
Jean-Julien Rojer Benjamin Kohlloeffel Daniel Kosakowski Mackenzie McDonald Keegan Smith
Pac-12 Coach of the Year 1979 1984 1990 1993 1996 2012 2013 2014 2018
Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Billy Martin Billy Martin (Co) Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin
Pac-12 Singles Champions 1930 1933 1937 1947 1950 1951 1954 1959 1960 1961 1962 1964 1965 1970 1971 1975 1976 1979 1984 1986 1988 1989 1990 1993 2002 2003
Len Dworkin Jack Tidball Julius Heldman Herb Flam Herb Flam Robin Willner Bob Perry Allen Fox Larry Nagler Larry Nagler Larry Nagler Arthur Ashe Arthur Ashe Haroon Rahim Jeff Borowiak Billy Martin Peter Fleming Fritz Buehning Michael Kures Brad Pearce Brian Garrow Pat Galbraith Jason Netter Fritz Bissell Rodrigo Grilli Marcin Matkowski
Pac-12 Doubles Champions
1987 Brian Garrow/Pat Galbraith 1989 Billy Barber/Mark Quinney 1999 Jean-Noel Grinda/Jong-Min Lee 2000 Brandon Kramer/Jong-Min Lee 2002 Marcin Matkowski/Jean-Julien Rojer 2004 Philipp Gruendler/Luben Pampoulov 2006 Mathieu Dehaine,/Jeremy Drean
Pac-12 Invitational Singles Champions 1998 1999
Jason Cook Marcin Rozpedski
AWARD WINNERS / NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS 2000 2003 2004 2011
Erfan Djahangiri Alberto Francis Chris Surapol Warren Hardie
Pac-12 Invitational Doubles Champions 1999 2000
Marcin Rozpedski/Chris Sands Lassi Ketola/Travis Rettenmaier
Pac-12 All-Academic 1992 1995 1996 1997 1998 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Bill Barber, 1st Eric Lin, 1st Eric Lin, 1st Justin Gimelstob, 2nd Eric Lin, 1st Jason Thompson, 2nd Vince Allegre, 2nd Alex Decret, 2nd Chris Sands, 2nd Tobias Clemens, 2nd Erfan Djahangiri, HM Tobias Clemens, 2nd Erfan Djahangiri, HM Chris Lam, 1st Tobias Clemens, 2nd Luben Pampoulov, 2nd Chris Surapol, HM Chris Lam, 1st Luben Pampoulov, 2nd Benjamin Kohlloeffel, HM Mathieu Dehaine, 1st Jeremy Drean, 1st Philipp Gruendler, HM Benjamin Kohlloeffel, HM Chris Surapol, HM Mathieu Dehaine, 1st Jeremy Drean, 1st
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Michael Look, 1st Benjamin Kohlloeffel, HM Chris Surapol, HM Mathieu Dehaine, 1st Jeremy Drean, 1st Michael Look, 1st Michael Look, 1st Nick Meister, HM Harel Srugo, HM Nick Meister, 2nd Kallim Stewart, 2nd Amit Inbar, HM Amit Inbar, 2nd Nick Meister, 1st Adrien Puget, HM Dennis Mkrtchian, 2nd Alex Brigham, HM Marcos Giron, HM Adrien Puget, HM Clay Thompson, HM Marcos Giron, 2nd Clay Thompson, HM Dennis Mkrtchian, 1st Mackenzie McDonald, HM Martin Redlicki, 1st Gage Brymer, 2nd Mackenzie McDonald, 2nd Austin Rapp, HM Martin Redlicki, 2nd Gage Brymer, HM Maxime Cressy, HM Austin Rapp, HM Logan Staggs, HM Austin Rapp, 1st Martin Redlicki, 1st Maxime Cressy, 2nd Logan Staggs, HM Maxime Cressy, HM Connor Rapp, HM
2020
Eric Hahn Connor Hance Govind Nanda Mathew Tsolakyan Patrick Zahraj
Pac-12 Scholar-Athlete of the Year 2008 2009 2014 2015 2018
Mathieu Dehaine Michael Look Clay Thompson Dennis Mkrtchian Martin Redlicki
Pac-12 Medal Winner 2009 2018
Michael Look Martin Redlicki
Pac-12 Regular-Season Champions 1932 1945 1947 (tie)* 1948 (tie)* 1949 (tie)* 1951* 1952 (tie)* 1954* 1956* 1957 (tie)* 1958 1959 1960 1961 1965 1969 1970 1971
Bill Ackerman Bill Ackerman Bill Ackerman Bill Ackerman Bill Ackerman J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett
1973 1975 1976* 1977* 1981* 1982* 1985* 1986* 1989* 1990* 1996* 1997 (tie)* 1999 (tie)* 2002 2004 (tie) 2005 (tie) 2006 (tie) 2007 2009 2012 2013 2014 2016 2017 2018
Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin
* Pac-10 Southern Division Champions
Pac-12 Tournament Champions 2013 2014 2016 2018
Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin Billy Martin
NCAA Championships NCAA Team Champions (16) 1950 1952 1953 1954 1956 1960 1961 1965 1970 1971 1975 1976 1979 1982 1984 2005
Bill Ackerman J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan J.D. Morgan Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Glenn Bassett Billy Martin
NCAA Singles Champions (12) 1933 1950 1960 1961 1965 1966 1970 1971 1975 2006 2014 2016
Jack Tidball Herb Flam Larry Nagler Allen Fox Arthur Ashe Charles Pasarell Jeff Borowiak Jimmy Connors Billy Martin Benjamin Kohlloeffel Marcos Giron Mackenzie McDonald
NCAA Doubles Champions (14) 1950 Herb Flam/Gene Garrett 1953 Larry Huebner/Bob Perry 1954 Ron Livingston/Bob Perry 1960 Allen Fox/Larry Nagler 1965 Arthur Ashe/Ian Crookenden 1966 Ian Crookenden/Charles Pasarell 1971 Jeff Borowiak/Haroon Rahim 1976 Peter Fleming/Ferdi Taygan 1978 John Austin/Bruce Nichols 1988 Patrick Galbraith/Brian Garrow 1996 Justin Gimelstob/Srdjan Muskatirovic 2016 Mackenzie McDonald/Martin Redlicki 2018 Martin Redlicki/Evan Zhu 2019 Maxime Cressy/Keegan Smith
Coach J.D. Morgan (left) and Arthur Ashe in 1965. Ashe won the NCAA Triple Crown that year.
Mackenzie McDonald swept the NCAA singles and doubles (with Martin Redlicki) championships in 2016.
25
ALL-TIME RESULTS (1981-2020)
The 1982 Bruins
The 1984 Bruins
1981
Glenn Bassett -- 24-3 / 9-1 Pac-10 (1st)
FRESNO STATE SAN DIEGO STATE REDLANDS UC SANTA BARBARA CLEMSON @ Trinity UC IRVINE VANDERBILT @ Pepperdine SMU SAN JOSE STATE SAN DIEGO PEPPERDINE @ Arizona @ Arizona State @ California @ Stanford @ USC ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE USC STANFORD CALIFORNIA vs. Michigan% vs. Arkansas% vs. USC% vs. Stanford%
W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 L, 7-2 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 5-4 L, 6-3 W, 5-4 W, 6-3 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 5-4 W, 7-2 W, 6-3 W, 5-4 W, 5-4 L, 5-4
% NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1982
NCAA Champions Glenn Bassett -- 30-3 / 10-0 Pac-10 (1st)
REDLANDS UC SANTA BARBARA CSU BAKERSFIELD SAN DIEGO STATE CLEMSON @ Pepperdine vs. Utah& vs. Georgia& vs. Clemson& UC IRVINE SAN DIEGO UTAH PEPPERDINE LONG BEACH STATE SOUTH CAROLINA SMU PRINCETON HARVARD @ Arizona State @ Arizona USC SAN JOSE STATE CALIFORNIA STANFORD ARIZONA STATE
W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 L, 6-3 W, 5-1 L, 5-4 L, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 7-2 W, 5-4 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 5-1 W, 7-2 W, 7-2 W, 5-4 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 8-1
ARIZONA @ Stanford @ California @ USC vs. Harvard% vs. TCU% @ Georgia% vs. Pepperdine%
W, 7-2 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 5-1 W, 6-0 W, 5-4 W, 5-1
vs. USC& vs. Stanford& SAN DIEGO LONG BEACH STATE UC SANTA BARBARA @ Pepperdine LSU CHAPMAN PRINCETON SMU ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA MIAMI (FLA.) AUBURN @ Arizona State @ Arizona @ USC CALIFORNIA STANFORD PEPPERDINE @ Stanford @ California USC vs. LSU% vs. Auburn% vs. Pepperdine% vs. Stanford%
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1983
Glenn Bassett -- 25-9 / 5-5 Pac-10 (T-3rd)
REDLANDS UC IRVINE SAN DIEGO STATE BYU @ Pepperdine SAN DIEGO vs. Wichita State& vs. Trinity& FRESNO STATE LONG BEACH STATE CHAPMAN SAN JOSE STATE UC SANTA BARBARA SOUTH CAROLINA ARKANSAS SMU PRINCETON CLEMSON PEPPERDINE UTAH HARVARD @ Arizona @ Arizona State USC TRINITY @ California @ Stanford ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE STANFORD CALIFORNIA @ USC vs. Michigan% vs. Pepperdine%
W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 L, 6-3 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 L, 5-4 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 L, 7-2 W, 6-3 W, 6-3 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 L, 5-4 W, 5-4 L, 3-6 L, 4-5 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 L, 6-3 W, 6-3 L, 8-1 W, 5-2 L, 5-4
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1985
Glenn Bassett -- 31-4 / 9-1 Pac-10 (1st)
UC SAN DIEGO @ Pepperdine SAN DIEGO STATE UC SANTA BARBARA vs. Texas& vs. Harvard& vs. USC& vs. SMU& FRESNO STATE ARIZONA LONG BEACH STATE UC IRVINE CHAPMAN GEORGIA TECH ARIZONA STATE DUKE TEXAS A&M PRINCETON CLEMSON @ USC @ Arizona @ Arizona State ILLINOIS @ California @ Stanford USC STANFORD CALIFORNIA
& Nat. Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1984
NCAA Champions Glenn Bassett -- 31-3 / 8-2 Pac-10 (2nd)
REDLANDS SAN DIEGO STATE FRESNO STATE UC IRVINE BYU vs. Auburn& vs. Pepperdine&
W, 5-4 W, 6-3 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 6-3 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 L, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 L, 5-4 L, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 W, 6-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-3 W, 5-4
W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 W, 5-4 26
W, 9-0 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 5-3 W, 6-2 L, 5-3 L, 5-2 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 L, 5-4 W, 5-4 W, 8-1 W, 9-0
SAN JOSE STATE PEPPERDINE CAL POLY vs. Miami (Fla.)% vs. Clemson% vs. SMU% @ Georgia%
W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 5-2 W, 5-3 W, 5-4 L, 5-1
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1986
Glenn Bassett -- 29-2 / 10-0 Pac-10 (1st)
CAL POLY SAN DIEGO STATE ARIZONA SAN DIEGO LONG BEACH STATE SOUTH CAROLINA LSU vs. Oklahoma& vs. Clemson& vs. California& GEORGIA TECH ARIZONA STATE KANSAS @ Arizona State @ Arizona MIAMI (FLA.) CLEMSON USC PRINCETON CHAPMAN @ Stanford @ California @ USC CALIFORNIA STANFORD SAN JOSE STATE UC IRVINE PEPPERDINE vs. Minnesota% vs. Texas% vs. Stanford%
W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 5-4 W, 7-2 W, 7-2 W, 5-1 L, 5-4 W, 5-1 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 6-3 W, 5-4 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 5-4 W, 5-4 W, 5-4 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 6-3 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 5-0 W, 5-2 L, 5-1
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1987
Glenn Bassett -- 23-8 / 6-3 Pac-10 (2nd)
SAN DIEGO STATE CAL POLY UNLV SAN DIEGO @ Pepperdine GEORGIA TECH UC IRVINE ARIZONA STATE LONG BEACH STATE vs. TCU& vs. California& vs. USC&
W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 6-3 L, 5-4 W, 5-3 W, 5-3 L, 5-2
ALL-TIME RESULTS (1981-2020)
Patrick Galbraith (left) and Brian Garrow
UC SANTA BARBARA TEXAS SAN JOSE STATE MARYLAND @ USC WICHITA STATE @ Arizona State @ Arizona STANFORD CALIFORNIA CHAPMAN USC @ California @ Stanford PEPPERDINE vs. TCU% vs. Miami (Fla.)% vs. Tennessee% @ Georgia%
L, 5-4 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 L, 5-1 W, 9-0 W, 5-2 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 6-3 W, 7-2 L, 8-1 L, 5-4 W, 8-1 L, 5-3 W, 5-1 W, 5-1 W, 5-2 L, 5-1
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1988
Glenn Bassett -- 17-10 / 6-4 Pac-10 (3rd)
CAL POLY SAN DIEGO STATE UC SANTA BARBARA FRESNO STATE SAN DIEGO CHAPMAN ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA vs. UC Irvine& vs. Southwestern Louisiana& vs. South Carolina PEPPERDINE SAN JOSE STATE WEST VIRGINIA PRINCETON KENTUCKY @ Arizona @ Arizona State @ Stanford @ California USC CALIFORNIA STANFORD @ USC UC IRVINE @ Pepperdine @ Georgia%
W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 6-0 W, 5-1 L, 5-2 L, 5-3 W, 5-3 W, 6-3 L, 5-2 W, 5-3 W, 5-1 L, 5-2 W, 5-1 W, 5-4 L, 5-3 W, 5-1 L, 6-2 W, 6-0 L, 5-2 L, 5-4 W, 5-3 L, 5-1 L, 5-4
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1989
Glenn Bassett -- 26-4 / 9-1 Pac-10 (1st)
SAN DIEGO STATE UC IRVINE SAN DIEGO LONG BEACH STATE
W, 8-1 W, 6-3 W, 7-2 W, 7-2
Bruin coaches Glenn Bassett (left) and Billy Martin
FRESNO STATE ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE vs. Miami (Fla.)& vs. South Carolina& vs. USC& SAN JOSE STATE MICHIGAN NOTRE DAME WEST VIRGINIA USC MIAMI (FLA.) KENTUCKY HARVARD @ Arizona State @ Arizona STANFORD CALIFORNIA UC SANTA BARBARA @ USC @ California @ Stanford @ UC Irvine PEPPERDINE vs. Utah% vs. TCU%
W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 6-0 L, 5-3 W, 5-3 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 5-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-0 W, 9-0 W, 6-0 W, 6-0 W, 5-1 W, 6-3 W, 9-0 W, 5-3 W, 5-4 L, 5-2 L, 5-4 W, 6-2 W, 5-1 L, 5-4
vs. California% vs. Tennessee% & National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Los Angeles - USC)
1991
Glenn Bassett -- 27-4 / 7-3 Pac-10 (2nd)
UNLV LONG BEACH STATE SAN DIEGO FRESNO STATE WASHINGTON UC SANTA BARBARA SAN DIEGO STATE UC DAVIS ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE vs. North Carolina& vs. Tennessee& vs. Georgia& vs. USC& @ UC Irvine SAN JOSE STATE WEST VIRGINIA NOTRE DAME WISCONSIN @ ARIZONA STATE @ Arizona USC STANFORD CALIFORNIA CAL POLY @ USC @ California @ Stanford UC IRVINE vs. Mississippi State% @ Georgia%
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1990
Glenn Bassett -- 27-4 / 8-1 Pac-10 (1st)
CAL POLY FRESNO STATE UNLV UC SANTA BARBARA SAN DIEGO LONG BEACH STATE WASHINGTON SAN DIEGO STATE SAN JOSE STATE ARIZONA STATE @ Pepperdine vs. Clemson& vs. California& vs. Alabama& CAL STATE HAYWARD UC RIVERSIDE WEST VIRGINIA @ USC UC IRVINE @ Arizona @ Arizona State @ Stanford USC CALIFORNIA STANFORD ARIZONA PEPPERDINE @ UC Irvine vs. San Diego%
W, 5-3 L, 5-4
W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 6-0 W, 5-4 W, 7-2 W, 5-2 W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 6-0 L, 5-4 W, 6-3 L, 5-3 W, 5-1 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 W, 5-4 W, 5-1 W, 6-3 W, 5-3 L, 5-1 W, 5-1 W, 5-2 W, 7-2 W, 5-1 W, 5-3 W, 6-3 W, 5-1
W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 5-1 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 5-1 W, 6-0 W, 5-1 W, 5-4 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 5-3 W, 7-1 W, 5-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-3 W, 5-3 W, 5-1 L, 5-2 W, 5-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-0 L, 6-0 W, 5-2 L, 6-1 W, 6-0 W, 5-1 L, 5-4
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1992
Glenn Bassett -- 21-5 / 8-2 Pac-10 (2nd)
UC SANTA BARBARA UNLV WASHINGTON SOUTH FLORIDA @ Pepperdine ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA vs. Tennessee& vs. TCU& vs. LSU SAN JOSE STATE SAN DIEGO @ UC Irvine @ USC WISCONSIN PEPPERDINE @ Arizona State 27
W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 L, 5-3 W, 6-0 W, 6-0 W, 5-1 L, 4-2 W, 4-2 W, 8-1 W, 5-0 W, 7-2 L, 5-4 W, 5-1 W, 6-3 W, 5-1
@ Stanford @ California USC CALIFORNIA STANFORD @ Arizona vs. Ole Miss% vs. North Carolina% vs. Stanford%
L, 5-3 W, 6-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-3 W, 6-0 W, 6-0 W, 6-0 W, 5-2 L, 5-1
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1993
Glenn Bassett -- 24-3 / 8-2 Pac-10 (2nd)
NEW MEXICO UNLV FRESNO STATE WASHINGTON SAN JOSE STATE @ Arizona State @ Arizona vs. Florida& vs. Georgia& vs. USC& vs. Tennessee& UC IRVINE PEPPERDINE MIAMI (FLA.) USC DUKE ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE SAN DIEGO STATE STANFORD CALIFORNIA @ USC @ California @ Stanford vs. TCU% vs. Alabama% @ Georgia%
W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-2 W, 7-2 W, 8-0 W, 5-1 W, 8-1 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 9-0 W, 6-0 W, 9-0 W, 5-4 W, 5-1 W, 5-4 W, 6-0 W, 7-2 W, 5-1 W, 6-0 L, 5-1 W, 8-1 L, 5-4 W, 5-1 W, 5-0 L, 5-4
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1994
Billy Martin -- 22-6 / 7-3 Pac-10 (3rd)
BOISE STATE WASHINGTON NEW MEXICO CAL POLY FRESNO STATE ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA SAN DIEGO vs. Florida& vs. Georgia& vs. Duke& UC IRVINE @ Arizona @ ARIZONA STATE
W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 L, 6-1 L, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 5-1
ALL-TIME RESULTS (1981-2020)
The 1999 Bruins
@ USC @ Stanford @ California SAN DIEGO STATE USC CALIFORNIA STANFORD UNLV PEPPERDINE ARIZONA^ PEPPERDINE^ vs. Florida% vs. TCU% vs. Stanford%
The 2001 Bruins
L, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W by default W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-1 W, 4-3 L, 4-0
& National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals % NCAA Championships (South Bend, IN)
1995
Billy Martin -- 19-6 / 7-3 Pac-10 (2nd)
PACIFIC UNLV PEPPERDINE @ ARIZONA STATE @ Arizona UC IRVINE @ Pepperdine vs. Kentucky& vs. Duke& vs. Stanford& NEW MEXICO ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA USC HARVARD WASHINGTON STANFORD CALIFORNIA FRESNO STATE @ USC @ California @ Stanford vs. Fresno State% vs. South Alabama% vs. Stanford%
W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 L, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 5-3 L, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 4-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 L, 5-2 L, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 4-1 L, 4-1
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1996
Billy Martin -- 27-1 / 10-0 Pac-10 (1st)
UC SANTA BARBARA PACIFIC UNLV BOISE STATE PEPPERDINE OREGON ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA vs. Harvard& vs. Pepperdine&
W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-1
vs. Ole Miss& vs. Stanford& FRESNO STATE @ Arizona @ ASU @ USC HARVARD @ Pepperdine @ Stanford @ Cal UC IRVINE USC CALIFORNIA STANFORD vs. New Mexico% vs. Fresno State% vs. TCU% vs. Stanford%
W, 4-1 W, 5-1 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 5-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 4-1
ARIZONA ASU CAL POLY @ USC vs. Illinois& vs. Ole Miss& vs. Florida& FRESNO STATE USC WISCONSIN @ Arizona State @ Arizona @ Stanford @ California @ Washington @ Oregon CAL STANFORD ARIZONA STATE^ WASHINGTON^ vs. Texas% vs. Stanford%
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
1997
Billy Martin -- 25-4 / 9-1 Pac-10 (T-1st)
CAL POLY BOISE STATE TEXAS UC IRVINE UNLV @ Pepperdine UC SANTA BARBARA ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE vs. Fresno State& vs. Duke& vs. Ole Miss& vs. Georgia& FRESNO STATE @ Arizona State @ Arizona USC UTAH MIDDLE TENNESSEE STATE STANFORD CALIFORNIA OREGON @ USC @ Stanford @ California PEPPERDINE NORTHWESTERN% DUKE% GEORGIA%
& National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 5-2 L, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 4-2
1999
Billy Martin -- 26-3 / 6-3 Pac-10 (2nd)
FRESNO STATE TULANE @ Arizona @ ASU NEW MEXICO SAN DIEGO USC @ Washington vs. SMU& @ Washington& vs. Duke& vs. Illinois& RICE @ USC ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA MIAMI STANFORD CALIFORNIA OREGON WASHINGTON @ California @ Stanford WESTERN MICHIGAN^ SAN DIEGO STATE^ vs. Virginia Tech% vs. Florida% vs. LSU% @ Georgia%
& National Team Indoors % NCAA Championships (Los Angeles - UCLA)
1998
Billy Martin -- 17-8 / 5-2 Pac-10 (2nd)
SAN DIEGO STATE @ UC Irvine UNLV
W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 L, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 L, 7-0 L, 4-3 L, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 L, 6-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-2 L, 5-0
& National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 28
W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 L, 4-3
2000
Billy Martin -- 24-4 / 6-1 Pac-10 (2nd)
SAN DIEGO STATE UNLV FRESNO STATE ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE PEPPERDINE @ UC Irvine USC @ Kentucky vs. Harvard& vs. Florida& vs. Duke& vs. Stanford& @ ASU @ Arizona DUKE UC SANTA BARBARA @ USC @ Stanford @ Cal @ Oregon @ Washington CALIFORNIA STANFORD UMKC^ NOTRE DAME^ vs. Texas% vs. Tennessee%
W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 L, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 5-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-1 W, 5-2 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 L, 4-1
& National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
2001
Billy Martin -- 23-3 / 6-1 Pac-10 (2nd)
BYU @ Arizona @ Arizona State GEORGIA TECH @ Portland vs. San Diego State% vs. Texas A&M% vs. TCU% vs. Stanford% @ USC ASU ARIZONA KENTUCKY PEPPERDINE CAL POLY USC STANFORD CAL WASHINGTON OREGON @ Stanford @ California SACRAMENTO STATE^ SOUTH FLORIDA^
W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-2 W, 4-2 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 L, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-0
ALL-TIME RESULTS (1981-2020)
The 2005 Bruins
vs. Washington& vs. SMU&
Luben Pampoulov (left) and Alberto Francis
W, 4-1 L, 4-3
% - National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) & NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
2002
Billy Martin -- 23-5 / 6-1 Pac-10 (1st)
UC SANTA BARBARA FRESNO STATE UNLV USC @ Kentucky vs. Kentucky& vs. USC& vs. Duke& SAN DIEGO SAN DIEGO STATE @ Arizona State @ Arizona PEPPERDINE @ USC DUKE ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE CALIFORNIA STANFORD @ Washington @ Oregon @ Stanford @ California UC SANTA BARBARA^ SAN DIEGO STATE^ vs. Florida% vs. Auburn% vs. Georgia%
W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-2 L, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 L, 4-3 L, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 L, 5-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-2
& National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (College Station, TX)
2003
Billy Martin -- 24-4 / 6-1 Pac-10 (2nd)
UC IRVINE FRESNO STATE UNLV @ USC SAN DIEGO OHIO STATE ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA @ Kentucky vs. San Diego State& vs. Duke& vs. Florida& VIRGINIA USC SAN DIEGO STATE @ Arizona @ Arizona State @ California
W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 L, 4-1 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 L, 5-2
@ Stanford OREGON WASHINGTON STANFORD CALIFORNIA WICHITA STATE^ USC^ vs. Oklahoma State% vs. Florida% vs. Vanderbilt%
W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 L, 4-3
vs. Oklahoma State& vs. Virginia& vs. Florida& STANFORD CAL @ USC @ Arizona State @ Arizona VCU ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE WASHINGTON OREGON @ California @ Stanford USC MANHATTAN^ CALIFORNIA^ vs. Tennessee% vs. Virginia% vs. Ole Miss% vs. Baylor%
& National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
2004
Billy Martin -- 23-6 / 6-1 Pac-10 (T-1st)
UC IRVINE FRESNO STATE CLEMSON USC vs. Kentucky& vs. Florida& vs. Ole Miss& vs. Illinois& BYU @ Arizona State @ Arizona BAYLOR @ USC DUKE ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE SAN DIEGO STATE CALIFORNIA STANFORD @ Oregon @ Washington @ Stanford @ California ORAL ROBERTS^ PEPPERDINE^ vs. Texas A&M% vs. Clemson% vs. Illinois% vs. Baylor%
W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-2 W, 4-2 W, 4-3 L, 4-0 W, 6-1 L, 2-5 W, 4-3 L, 5-2 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 L, 4-0
& National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (College Station, TX)
2006
Billy Martin -- 20-6 / 6-1 Pac-10 (T-1st)
SAN DIEGO BYU BOISE STATE @ California @ Stanford PEPPERDINE SAN DIEGO STATE vs. LSU& vs. Georgia& @ Washington& ARIZONA ARIZONA STATE USC BAYLOR DUKE @ Arizona State @ Arizona STANFORD CALIFORNIA @ Oregon @ Washington @ USC STONY BROOK^ COLORADO^ vs. Illinois% vs. Pepperdine%
& - National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (Tulsa, OK)
2005
NCAA Champions Billy Martin -- 27-3 / 6-1 Pac-10 (T-1st)
AZUSA PACIFIC PACIFIC UNLV BYU UC IRVINE UC SANTA BARBARA SAN DIEGO STATE SAN DIEGO
W, 4-2 L, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 L, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-0 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 W, 4-3
W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1
& National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (Stanford, CA)
29
W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 4-2 L, 4-3 W, 4-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 4-1
2007
Billy Martin -- 22-4 / 7-0 Pac-10 (1st)
UC IRVINE SAN DIEGO BYU CALIFORNIA STANFORD @ Baylor vs. Miami (Fla.)% vs. Illinois % vs. Ohio State% TEXAS A&M PEPPERDINE @ USC @ Arizona @ Arizona State OREGON WASHINGTON ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA SAN DIEGO STATE @ Stanford @ California USC UNLV^ TEXAS TECH^ vs. Oklahoma State& @ Georgia&
W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 L, 4-2 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 L, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-0
% National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) & NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
2008
Billy Martin -- 23-4 / 5-2 Pac-10 (T-2nd)
PEPPERDINE @ Stanford @ California SAN DIEGO BOISE STATE vs. Notre Dame& vs. Virginia& vs. Oklahoma State& UC SANTA BARBARA RICE USC BAYLOR DUKE LOYOLA MARYMOUNT @ Washington OREGON CALIFORNIA STANFORD @ Arizona @ Arizona State UC IRVINE @ USC EASTERN WASHINGTON^ WISCONSIN^ vs. Florida State%
W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 L, 4-3# W, 6-1 L, 4-3# W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0
ALL-TIME RESULTS (1981-2020)
The 2013 Bruins
vs. USC% vs. Texas%
The 2016 Bruins
W, 4-2 L, 4-2
& National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (Tulsa, OK) # - Two 4-3 UCLA wins overturned.
2009
Billy Martin -- 21-5 / 6-0 Pac-10 (1st)
BYU BOISE STATE SOUTH ALABAMA# FRESNO STATE# SAN DIEGO STATE vs. Illinois& vs. Virginia& vs. Ohio State& @ Baylor CALIFORNIA STANFORD @ USC HAWAI’I UC IRVINE @ Stanford* @ California* OREGON* WASHINGTON* ARIZONA* @ Pepperdine USC* SOUTHERN ILLINOIS^ HAWAI’I^ vs. Miami (Fla.)% vs. Ole Miss% vs. Ohio State%
W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 5-2 W, 4-2 L, 4-3 L, 4-0 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-3 L, 4-3
# National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) & National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (College Station, TX)
W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 L, 4-2
@ Washington @ Arizona @ Utah CALIFORNIA STANFORD @ USC vs. California* vs. USC* EASTERN KENTUCKY& SAN DIEGO& vs. Ole Miss$ vs. Ohio State$ vs. USC$
# National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) & National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
2011
Billy Martin -- 18-7 / 3-3 Pac-10 (T-3rd)
BYU UC SANTA BARBARA MINNESOTA# FLORIDA STATE# UC IRVINE @ Baylor BOISE STATE Louisville& Tennessee& Florida& CALIFORNIA @ USC HAWAI’I LOYOLA MARYMOUNT @ California @ Stanford WASHINGTON OREGON ARIZONA @ Pepperdine CAL POLY USC BINGHAMTON^ OLE MISS^ Baylor%
W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 4-1 L, 1-4 W, 4-3 L, 2-5 L, 2-5 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 L, 3-4 L, 1-6 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-0 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 L, 3-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 L, 3-4
Billy Martin -- 17-7 / 4-2 Pac-10 (3rd)
W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 L, 4-2 L, 4-0 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 L, 6-1 W, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 L, 4-3
2013
Billy Martin -- 29-2 / 7-0 Pac-12 (1st)
UC SANTA BARBARA CAL POLY# BYU# FRESNO STATE SAN DIEGO STANFORD CALIFORNIA vs. Tennessee% vs. Georgia% vs. USC% @ USC SAINT MARY’S HAWAI’I @ Baylor TULSA @ California @ Stanford UTAH ARIZONA WASHINGTON OREGON @ Pepperdine USC vs. Stanford* vs. USC* UMKC& DRAKE& vs. Vanderbilt$ vs. Duke$ vs. Ohio State$ vs. Virginia$
2012
Billy Martin -- 26-4 / 7-0 Pac-12 (1st)
BYU UC IRVINE ALABAMA# FRESNO STATE# @ California @ Stanford SAN DIEO STATE PEPPERDINE vs. Duke% vs. Tennessee% vs. California% SAINT MARY’S USC HAWAI’I BAYLOR LOYOLA MARYMOUNT @ Oregon
W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 5-0 L, 2-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 L, 1-4
# - National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) % - National Team Indoors * Pac-12 Championships & NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) $ NCAA Championships (Athens, GA)
# National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) & National Team Indoors ^ NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) % NCAA Championships (Stanford, CA)
2010
HAWAI’I# PEPPERDINE# vs.Kentucky& vs. Tennessee& vs. USC& SAN DIEGO STATE UC IRVINE @ California USC DUKE BAYLOR WICHITA STATE @ Washington @ Oregon BOISE STATE CALIFORNIA STANFORD PEPPERDINE @ Arizona
@ USC SACRAMENTO STATE^ CALIFORNIA^ vs. Stanford% vs. Virginia%
W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 L, 2-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 L, 1-6 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0
W, 6-1 W, 4-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 L, 3-4 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 L, 3-4
# National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) % National Team Indoors * Pac-12 Championships & NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) $ NCAA Championships (Champaign, Ill.)
2014
Billy Martin -- 26-4 / 6-1 Pac-12 (2nd)
UC IRVINE WISCONSIN# 30
W, 7-0 W, 5-0
TEXAS TECH# vs. Florida vs. Georgia vs. Pepperdine% vs. Oklahoma% vs. USC% PEPPERDINE USC VIRGINIA SAINT MARY’S BAYLOR CMS @ Washington @ Oregon CALIFORNIA STANFORD @ Utah @ Arizona UC SAN DIEGO @ USC vs. Oregon* vs. USC* CAL POLY& SAN DIEGO& vs. Tennessee$ vs. Ohio State$ vs. Oklahoma$
W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 3-4 W, 4-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 L, 2-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 5-0 L, 2-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 2-4
# National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) % National Team Indoors * Pac-12 Championships & NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) $ NCAA Championships (Athens, Ga.)
2015
Billy Martin -- 17-10 / 6-1 Pac-12 (T-3rd)
UC IRVINE PEPPERDINE# TEXAS TECH# @ Georgia vs. Florida SAN DIEGO STATE SAINT MARY’S vs. North Carolina% vs. Ole Miss% vs. TCU% @ Baylor STANFORD TULSA @ USC UNLV OREGON WASHINGTON STANFORD ARIZONA UTAH @ Stanford @ California USC vs. Washington* vs. USC* FLORIDA GULF COAST&
W, 4-0 W, 5-0 W, 4-1 L, 2-4 L, 3-4 W, 4-0 W, 7-0 L, 2-4 L, 3-4 W, 4-1 L, 0-4 W, 5-2 W, 5-0 L, 1-4 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 7-0 L, 3-4 W, 4-1 L, 2-4 W, 4-0 L, 1-4 W, 4-0
ALL-TIME RESULTS (1981-2020) / RECORD VS. OPPONENTS TEXAS TECH& vs. Oklahoma$
W, 4-0 L, 3-4
# National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) % National Team Indoors * Pac-12 Championships & NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) $ NCAA Championships (Waco, Texas)
2016
Billy Martin -- 25-3 / 7-0 Pac-12 (1st)
SAN FRANCISCO SMU# GEORGIA TECH# GEORGIA SAN DIEGO @ Virginia vs. Georgia% vs. Texas A&M% vs. North Carolina% UC IRVINE @ Stanford USC BYU @ UNLV @ Oregon @ Washington STANFORD CALIFORNIA @ Arizona @ Utah UC SAN DIEGO @ USC vs. Stanford* vs. California* WEBER STATE& SAN DIEGO& vs. Stanford$ vs. Oklahoma$
W, 7-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 6-1 W. 7-0 L, 1-6 W, 4-3 W,4-2 L, 2-4 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 3-4
# National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) % National Team Indoors * Pac-12 Championships & NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) $ NCAA Championships (Tulsa, Okla.)
2017
@ Stanford UNLV @ Seattle vs. Illinois% vs. Ohio State% vs. Texas A&M% vs. Wake Forest% PORTLAND USC @ Oregon @ Washington OKLAHOMA UC IRVINE STANFORD CALIFORNIA @ USC @ Arizona State @ Arizona UTAH vs. Arizona* vs. Oregon* vs. USC* IDAHO& SAN DIEGO& vs. Michigan$ vs. USC$ vs. Ohio State$
Billy Martin -- 22-6 / 6-0 Pac-12 (1st)
GRAND CANYON UC SANTA BARBARA NEW MEXICO# LAMAR# vs. Georgia @ Florida @ Tulsa vs. USC% @ Virginia% vs. California% STANFORD @ USC BAYLOR DUKE UC IRVINE WASHINGTON OREGON @ Stanford UTAH ARIZONA CAL LUTHERAN USC vs. Stanford* vs. USC* ARMY WEST POINT& OLE MISS& vs. Texas A&M$ @ Georgia$
W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 L, 2-4 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 L, 0-4 L, 3-4 W, 4-2 L, 1-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-2 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 L, 3-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 L, 2-4
# National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) % National Team Indoors * Pac-12 Championships & NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) $ NCAA Championships (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
# National Team Indoor Qualifying (Sunset Canyon Courts) % National Team Indoors * Pac-12 Championships & NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) $ NCAA Championships (Athens, Ga.)
2019
Billy Martin -- 19-6 / 8-0 Pac-12 (1st)
INDIANA# SAN DIEGO# CALIFORNIA vs. Illinois vs. Notre Dame% vs. Wake Forest% vs. TCU% @ USC GRAND CANYON
2018
Billy Martin -- 30-3 / 8-0 Pac-12 (1st)
GEORGE WASHINGTON GRAND CANYON PEPPERDINE LOYOLA MARYMOUNT UC DAVIS# UTAH STATE#
L, 3-4 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 L, 2-4 W, 7-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-3 L, 1-4
W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0
W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 L, 2-4 W, 4-1 L, 3-4 L, 0-4 L, 1-4 W, 4-2
@ Utah UC SANTA BARBARA LOYOLA MARYMOUNT @ Stanford @ California USC PEPPERDINE OREGON WASHINGTON ARIZONA STATE ARIZONA vs. Utah* vs. California* GRAND CANYON& OKLAHOMA STATE& @ Baylor^
W, 4-2 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-2 W, 4-3 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 L, 1-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 L, 1-4
# - National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) % National Team Indoors * Pac-12 Championships & NCAA Regionals (Los Angeles) ^ NCAA Third Round (Waco, Texas)
2020
Billy Martin -- 9-4 / 2-0 Pac-12 (--)
BYU SAN DIEGO STATE# UCF# @ California @ Stanford vs. Western Michigan vs. Texas% vs. Texas A&M% vs. NC State% UC IRVINE @ Washington @ Oregon vs. Liberty
W, 7-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-3 L, 2-4 L, 2-4 W, 7-0 L, 2-4 L, 1-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 5-0 W, 4-3 W, 6-1
Remainder of season not played due to COVID-19 # National Team Indoor Qualifying (LATC) % National Team Indoors
Record vs. Opponents (Since 1967) Alabama 3-0 Arizona 72-1 Arizona State 64-3 Arkansas 5-0 Army West Point 1-0 Auburn 3-0 Azusa Pacific 1-0 BYU 19-0 Baylor 6-10 Binghamton 1-0 Boise State 7-1 CBU 2-0 CMS 1-0 Cal Lutheran 1-0 Cal Poly 13-0 CSU Bakersfield 3-0 CSU East Bay 1-0 CSU Fullerton 1-0 CSU Northridge 3-0 California 97-15 Chapman 6-0 Clemson 7-2 Colorado 1-0 Columbia 1-0 Drake 1-0 Duke 16-3 Eastern Kentucky 1-0 Eastern Washington 1-0 Florida 13-3 Florida Gulf Coast 1-0 Florida State 2-0 Fresno State 25-0
French Davis Cup Team 1-0 George Washington 1-0 Georgia 8-14 Georgia Tech 5-0 Grand Canyon 4-0 Harvard 9-0 Hawai’i 6-0 Houston 1-0 Idaho 1-0 Illinois 7-3 Indiana 1-0 Kansas 2-0 Kentucky 9-1 LSU 5-0 Lamar 1-0 Liberty 1-0 Long Beach State 14-1 Louisville 1-0 Loyola Marymount 5-0 Manhattan 1-0 Maryland 1-0 Miami (Fla.) 11-0 Michigan 9-0 Middle Tennessee State 1-0 Minnesota 2-0 Mississippi State 1-0 NC State 1-0 New Mexico 9-0 North Carolina 2-2 Northwestern 1-0 Notre Dame 7-0 Ohio State 5-4
Oklahoma 3-3 Oklahoma City University 1-0 Oklahoma State 6-0 Ole Miss 7-2 Oral Roberts 1-0 Oregon 29-0 Pacific 3-0 Pepperdine 51-15 Portland 2-0 Princeton 8-0 Redlands 16-0 Rice 2-0 SIU Edwardsville 2-0 SMU 14-3 Sacramento State 2-0 San Diego 31-0 San Diego State 37-0 San Diego City College 1-0 Santa Monica City College 1-0 San Francisco 1-0 San Jose State 29-11 Seattle 1-0 South Alabama 2-0 South Carolina 6-0 South Florida 1-0 Southern Illinois 1-0 Southwestern Louisiana 1-1 Saint Mary’s 4-0 Stanford 74-52 Stony Brook 1-0 TCU 11-2 Tennessee 10-4 31
Texas 8-2 Texas A&M 7-1 Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 1-0 Texas-Pan American 1-0 Texas Tech 4-0 Trinity 9-0 Tulane 1-0 Tulsa 3-0 UC Davis 2-0 UC Irvine 40-2 UC Riverside 1-0 UC San Diego 4-0 UC Santa Barbara 29-1 UCF 1-0 UMKC 2-0 UNLV 17-0 USC 84-50 Utah 16-0 Utah State 1-0 VCU 1-0 Vanderbilt 2-1 Virginia 3-7 Virginia Tech 1-0 Wake Forest 0-2 Washington 36-2 Washington State 5-0 Weber State 1-0 West Virginia 4-0 Western Michigan 2-0 Wichita State 3-0 Wisconsin 4-0
RECORD VS. OPPONENTS IN NCAA PLAY / NCAA SEED HISTORY / NCAA TOURNAMENT YEAR-BY-YEAR
Record vs. Opponents in NCAA Play (124-39)
NCAA Seed History
Opponent Overall Home Road Neutral Alabama 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Arkansas 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Army West Point 1-0 1-0 -- -Auburn 2-0 -- -- 2-0 BYU 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Baylor 1-3 -- 0-1 1-2 Binghamton 1-0 1-0 -- -Cal Poly 1-0 1-0 -- -California 3-0 2-0 -- 1-0 Clemson 2-0 -- -- 2-0 Colorado 1-0 1-0 -- -Drake 1-0 1-0 -- -Duke 2-0 1-0 -- 1-0 Eastern Kentucky 1-0 1-0 -- -Eastern Washington 1-0 1-0 -- -Florida 4-0 -- -- 4-0 Florida Gulf Coast 1-0 1-0 -- -Florida State 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Fresno State 2-0 -- -- 2-0 Georgia 1-10 0-1 1-8 0-1 Grand Canyon 1-0 1-0 -- -Harvard 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Hawai’i 1-0 1-0 -- -Idaho 1-0 1-0 -- -Illinois 2-0 -- -- 2-0 LSU 2-0 -- -- 2-0 Manhattan 1-0 1-0 -- -Miami (Fla.) 4-0 -- -- 4-0 Michigan 3-0 -- -- 3-0 Minnesota 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Mississippi State 1-0 -- -- 1-0 New Mexico 1-0 -- -- 1-0 North Carolina 2-0 -- -- 2-0 Northwestern 1-0 1-0 -- -Notre Dame 1-0 1-0 -- -Ohio State 3-2 -- -- 3-2 Oklahoma 0-3 -- -- 0-3 Oklahoma State 3-0 1-0 -- 2-0 Ole Miss 6-0 2-0 -- 4-0 Oral Roberts 1-0 1-0 -- -Pepperdine 5-3 1-0 -- 4-3 SMU 1-1 -- -- 1-1 Sacramento State 2-0 2-0 -- -San Diego 5-0 4-0 -- 1-0 San Diego State 2-0 2-0 -- -South Alabama 1-0 -- -- 1-0 South Florida 1-0 1-0 -- -Southern Illinois 1-0 1-0 -- -Stanford 4-9 -- -- 4-9 Stony Brook 1-0 1-0 -- -TCU 5-1 -- -- 5-1 Tennessee 3-2 -- -- 3-2 Texas 4-1 -- -- 4-1 Texas A&M 2-0 -- -- 2-0 Texas Tech 2-0 2-0 -- -Trinity 1-0 -- -- 1-0 UC Santa Barbara 1-0 1-0 -- -UMKC 2-0 2-0 -- -UNLV 1-0 1-0 -- -USC 5-1 1-0 -- 4-1 Utah 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Vanderbilt 1-1 -- -- 1-1 Virginia 1-2 -- -- 1-2 Virginia Tech 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Washington 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Weber State 1-0 1-0 -- -Western Michigan 1-0 1-0 -- -Wichita State 1-0 1-0 -- -Wisconsin 1-0 1-0 -- -Yale 1-0 -- -- 1-0 TOTALS 124-39 44-1 1-9 79-29
Seed NCAAs Round of 16 Quarters Semis Finals Titles 1 2 2 2 2 2 -2 3 3 3 1 -- -3 2 2 2 1 -- -4 3 3 3 3 1 -5 1 1 1 -- -- -6 2 2 2 2 -- -7 2 2 2 2 1 1 9 2 2 2 -- -- -10 1 1 1 -- -- -11 1 1 -- -- -- -12 1 1 -- -- -- -16 1 1 -- -- -- -1977-1999 22 22 21 16 8 3 1999-CURRENT 21 21 18 11 4 1 TOTALS 43 43 39 27 12 4
* NCAA instituted 64-team format in 1999 *Tournament not played in 2020 due to COVID-19
The 1979 Bruins.
NCAA Tournament Year-by-Year Year Seed Result 2020 Not played (COVID-19) 2019 11 Round of 16 2018 2 Semifinals 2017 5 Quarterfinals 2016 3 Quarterfinals 2015 16 Round of 16 2014 6 Semifinals 2013 1 Runner-Up 2012 4 Semifinals 2011 12 Round of 16 2010 9 Quarterfinals 2009 7 Semifinals 2008 3 Semifinals 2007 9 Quarterfinals 2006 10 Quarterfinals 2005 7 Champion 2004 4 Runner-Up 2003 6 Semifinal 2002 4 Semifinal 2001 2 Quarterfinals 2000 2 Quarterfinals 1999 1 Runner-Up
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Year 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977
Result Quarterfinals Semifinals Runner-Up Semifinals Semifinals Semifinals Semifinals Quarterfinals Semifinals Quarterfinals Round of 16 Runner-Up Semifinal Runner-Up Champion Quarterfinal Champion Runner-Up Quarterfinal Champion Runner-Up Semifinal
BRUINS IN THE ATP RANKINGS / GRAND SLAM TITLES / DAVIS CUP PLAYERS
Bruins in the ATP Rankings
Grand Slam Titles
Singles
Australian Open
Name Jimmy Connors Arthur Ashe Eliot Teltscher Brian Teacher Peter Fleming Jeff Borowiak Fritz Buehning Billy Martin Charles Pasarell Van Winitsky Jim Pugh Davide Sanguinetti Haroon Rahim Marcel Freeman Blaine Willenborg Jeff Austin Mackenzie McDonald Ferdi Taygan Justin Gimelstob Kevin Kim John Austin Marcos Giron Steve Krulevitz Brad Pearce Bob Kreiss Brian Garrow Mark Knowles
Rank Year 1 1974 2 1976 6 1982 7 1981 8 1980 20 1977 21 1981 32 1975 35 1974 35 1982 37 1987 42 2002 44 1977 46 1986 50 1984 52 1973 57 2019 59 1980 63 1999 63 2005 70 1982 70 2021 70 1981 71 1990 84 1974 93 1990 96 1996
French Open
Arthur Ashe Jimmy Connors Arthur Ashe Brian Teacher Jim Pugh Jim Pugh Jim Pugh Jim Pugh Justin Gimelstob Mark Knowles
1970 1974 1977 (D) 1980 1988 (D) 1988 (M) 1989 (D) 1989 (M) 1998 (M) 2002 (D)
Wimbledon Jimmy Connors Jimmy Connors Arthur Ashe Peter Fleming Peter Fleming Jimmy Connors Peter Fleming Peter Fleming Jim Pugh Jim Pugh Mark Knowles Jean-Julien Rojer
1973 (D) 1974 1975 1979 (D) 1981 (D) 1982 1983 (D) 1984 (D) 1989 (M) 1990 (D) 2009 (M) 2015 (D)
Bob Perry Arthur Ashe Billy Martin Ferdi Taygan Justin Gimelstob Mark Knowles Jean-Julien Rojer
1956 (D) 1971 (D) 1980 (M) 1982 (D) 1998 (M) 2007 (D) 2014 (M)
US Open Arthur Ashe Jimmy Connors Jimmy Connors Jimmy Connors Jimmy Connors Peter Fleming Peter Fleming Jimmy Connors Peter Fleming Jimmy Connors Jim Pugh Patrick Galbraith Patrick Galbraith Mark Knowles Jean-Julien Rojer
1968 1974 1975 (D) 1976 1978 1979 (D) 1981 (D) 1982 1983 (D) 1983 1988 (M) 1994 (M) 1996 (M) 2004 (D) 2017 (D)
* Career-high ATP Tour Rankings as of Jan. 4, 2021. Players are listed in order of highest singles ranking (Top 100 only).
Doubles Name Peter Fleming Pat Galbraith Mark Knowles Jim Pugh Jean-Julien Rojer Fritz Buehning Brian Teacher Marcin Matkowski Van Winitsky Ferdi Taygan Blaine Willenborg Arthur Ashe Justin Gimelstob Charles Pasarell Brad Pearce Eliot Teltscher Brian Garrow
Rank Year 1 1984 1 1993 1 2002 1 1989 3 2015 4 1983 6 1981 7 2012 7 1983 8 1983 13 1988 15 1977 18 2000 22 1977 24 1993 38 1985 42 1991
* Career-high ATP Tour Rankings as of Jan. 4, 2021. Players are listed in order of highest doubles ranking (Top 50 only).
Arthur Ashe (right) defeated fellow Bruin Jimmy Connors, 6-1, 6-1, 5-7, 6-4 in the 1975 Wimbledon final.
Davis Cup Players Name Haythem Abid Elio Alvarez Arthur Ashe Jimmy Connors Ian Crookenden Herb Flam Peter Fleming Allen Fox Patrick Galbraith Justin Gimelstob Lassi Ketola Mark Knowles Steve Krulevitz Jun Kuki Sebastien LeBlanc Marcin Matkowski Srdjan Muskatirovic Charles Pasarell Bob Perry Jim Pugh Haroon Rahim Jean-Julien Rojer Compton Russell Davide Sanguinetti Eric Taino Eliot Teltscher Modesto Vasquez
Singles 25-14 2-0 27-5 10-3 3-6 10-2 0-0 2-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 23-25 4-3 11-6 1-0 4-2 1-4 3-0 1-1 0-0 2-3 28-6 0-3 11-10 8-2 5-4 1-1
Mark Knowles
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Doubles 9-7 4-4 1-1 0-0 1-3 2-0 14-1 0-0 1-1 0-2 0-1 18-7 0-2 0-0 0-0 31-10 0-1 3-1 1-0 6-0 1-3 22-8 0-2 0-1 4-2 0-0 1-1
First Year 2001 1970 1963 1976 1962 1951 1979 1963 1996 1998 2004 1989 1978 1971 1997 2000 1991 1966 1952 1990 1965 1998 1971 1998 2006 1982 1968
Ties Country 37 Tunisia 8 Argentina 18 United States 7 United States 5 New Zealand 8 United States 15 United States 1 United States 2 United States 2 United States 1 Finland 29 Bahamas 4 Israel 9 Japan 1 Canada 41 Poland 3 Yugoslavia 5 United States 2 United States 6 United States 4 Pakistan 44 Netherlands Antilles 3 Caribbean/West Indies 12 Italy 10 Philippines 5 United States 2 Argentina
LOS ANGELES TENNIS CENTER
With the ability to hold more than 10,000 spectators, the Los Angeles Tennis Center is one of the nation’s premier on-campus facilities.
Los Angeles Tennis Center Located on the UCLA campus nestled just west of Pauley Pavilion and south of Drake Stadium is the impressive Los Angeles Tennis Center: home to both UCLA men’s and women’s tennis teams. The LATC was the first large-scale outdoor tennis stadium opened in the Los Angeles metropolitan area and was officially dedicated on May 20, 1984, just in time to host the 1984 NCAA Women’s Tennis Championships and the 1984 Olympic Games. Since then, the LATC has been site of several top collegiate and professional tournaments. The NCAA Women’s Tennis Championships returned to the LATC in 1987 and ’88, while the NCAA Men’s Tennis Championships called the LATC home in 1997. On the professional level, the LATC has been a regular stop of
The men’s and women’s locker rooms were renovated in 2010.
the ATP Tour for many years. The first tournament held at the LATC, the Union 76 Pacific Southwest Open, featured former Bruins Jimmy Connors and Eliot Teltscher in the finals. The tournament, renamed The LA Open, continues to thrive at the LATC each summer. The LATC features six lighted, hard-surface courts, a 5,800-permanent seat grandstand around the three main courts and a two-level clubhouse. At full capacity, the LATC can accommodate more than 10,000 spectators. The clubhouse contains locker rooms, coaches’ offices and team rooms for both the UCLA men’s and women’s teams, as well as offices for the Southern California Tennis Association (SCTA). The second level of the clubhouse features a 4,000-square foot indoor dining area and kitchen. Center court is called the Times-Mirror Center Court. The stadium is named the Straus Stadium and Clubhouse.
In January of 2010, both the men’s and women’s teams received a complete renovation of their locker rooms. The newest project at the LATC was completed in January of 2019, as the Katz Family Scoreboard debuted. Its Daktronics display, measuring 18 feet high and 31.2 feet wide, is among the largest LED video screens in collegiate tennis. Stationed at the east end of LATC’s main stadium courts, the board features a 13HD pixel pitch and RGB LED lights. Also new to the match-day experience is a custom JBL speaker system set to improve audio on the front courts while introducing sound to the back courts. The Katz Family Scoreboard replaced the Budge Offer Family Scoreboard, which served UCLA tennis for nearly 20 years. The Greiner Family Scoreboard was added to the back courts in 2005, enabling fans to follow the action on every court from either location.
The Katz Family Scoreboard was unveiled in January 2019.
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ADMINISTRATOR BIOGRAPHIES / MEN’S TENNIS SUPPORT STAFF
in school history.
Martin Jarmond
Chris Carlson
Dr. Gene Block
Director of Athletics 1st Year UNC Wilmington ‘01
Associate Athletic Director 7th Year UC Santa Barbara ‘93
Chancellor 14th Year Stanford ‘77
Martin Jarmond was hired on May 19, 2020 as UCLA’s Alice and Nahum Lainer Family Director of Athletics, becoming the ninth athletic director
Jarmond came to UCLA from Boston College, where he served as the school’s Director of Athletics for three years. During his time there, he orchestrated the Eagles’ first-ever strategic plan, a comprehensive five-year goal to advance the program by fostering student-athlete formation, strengthening competitive excellence, increasing external engagement and enhancing facilities. The strategic plan was supported by BC’s first-ever athletics-only capital campaign, at the time, the largest campaign of any Atlantic Coast Conference institution at $150 million. The campaign has raised $121 million to date. Among the new ventures he brought to Boston College were a student-athlete fueling station, a program for first-generation student-athletes, and a fan council focused on improving the atmosphere and fan experience. Boston College teams enjoyed on-the-field success during his tenure, with the football team playing in a bowl game each season, the women’s lacrosse team reaching the national championship game in 2018, the 2019 women’s field hockey team advancing to its first Final Four, and the men’s and women’s hockey teams combining for three conference championships in the last two years. Academically, Boston College continued to thrive under Jarmond’s leadership. The school ranks eighth in the nation with an overall Graduation Success Rate (GSR) of 94% in all sports among Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) schools, with 12 teams scoring a perfect 100 GSR. Boston College also ranks among the highest in the nation in Academic Progress Rate (APR). Six Eagles teams recently received the NCAA APR Public Recognition Award, which is bestowed upon teams finishing in the top 10% of their respective sport, based on the multi-year APR. Included in those six was football, one of only 13 football programs at the FBS level to earn a Public Recognition Award, and one of only five to earn an award for the last three years. Prior to joining Boston College in 2017 and becoming the youngest athletic director of any Power Five institution at age 37, Jarmond previously served as deputy director of athletics at Ohio State, moving up the ranks after arriving as an associate athletic director for development in 2009. During his time at Ohio State, he was the lead administrator for a variety of sports, including football and men’s basketball, and directed external and internal relations and day-to-day operations. He also had responsibility for football scheduling, served on the NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Committee, and was a member of the inaugural College Football Playoff National Championship Advisory Group and the Rose Bowl Advisory Committee. As Ohio State Athletics’ chief advancement officer, Jarmond helped raise more than $120 million between 2010-2012. Jarmond was also an assistant athletic director for development for seven years at Michigan State, where he served on the athletic director’s executive leadership team. He was a key member of the $1.2 billion “Campaign for MSU” development team and a liaison between Michigan State’s university development and alumni association leadership.
Chris Carlson, who previously served the men’s basketball program at UCLA for five years, begins his seventh year as an Associate Athletic Director supervising men’s tennis. Carlson also supervises men’s basketball, men’s and women’s golf and women’s tennis. Prior to returning to UCLA, Carlson worked one year as an Associate Commissioner for the West Coast Conference. Previous to that position, he was the head men’s basketball coach at UC San Diego, where he guided the Tritons to the Division II NCAA Tournament in three of his six seasons. Carlson served five years (2003-07) as Director of Operations for former UCLA basketball coach Ben Howland. At UCLA, Carlson was responsible for the day-to-day operations of the program and served as a liaison to the athletic administration and other school officials. Additionally, he assisted in scheduling and recruiting.Prior to that, Carlson served in the same capacity for two years (2002-03) at the University of Pittsburgh. Originally from the San Diego area, Carlson joined the Pittsburgh staff (where Howland was the head coach) in the summer of 2001. Before joining Howland at Pittsburgh, Carlson was on Howland’s coaching staff at Northern Arizona for one season (1998-99). Howland left NAU a year later to take the Pittsburgh head coaching position. Carlson remained at NAU for two more years (1999-2001), where he worked with the Lumberjacks’ post players, along with recruiting and scheduling. Prior to working at Northern Arizona, Carlson served as an assistant coach at his alma mater, UC Santa Barbara, from 1994-98. Carlson was also an assistant coach at Dos Pueblos HS in Goleta from 1991-93. His administrative basketball experience includes his one year at the West Coast Conference (2013) and 12 years as a game management assistant for the National Association of Basketball Coaches All-Star Game. Carlson has also worked four NCAA Tournament West Regionals. Carlson is a 1993 graduate of UC Santa Barbara with a bachelor’s degree in History. He is married to Karen Nance and they have two sons, Nick and Charlie. His older son, Nick, plays on the men’s basketball team at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo, Calif.
Dr. Gene Block became chancellor of UCLA in August 2007. As chief executive officer, he oversees the university’s three-part mission of education, research and service. He has defined academic excellence, civic engagement, diversity and financial security as top priorities for his administration. A champion of public universities, his dedication to access and affordability has enhanced UCLA’s position as a national leader in enrolling undergraduates who are Pell Grant recipients, come from underrepresented groups and go on to become first-generation college graduates. Under Chancellor Block’s leadership, UCLA has been named the number one public university in the United States, has grown its profile internationally and receives $1 billion annually in research grants. In one of the largest capital campaigns ever undertaken by a public university, UCLA surpassed its $4.2 billion Centennial fundraising goal more than a year ahead of schedule, raising $5.49 billion total. An expert in neuroscience, Chancellor Block’s current research focuses on the effects of aging in the nervous system and how it impacts biological timing in mammals, including humans. He holds faculty appointments in psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences in the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and in integrative biology and physiology in the UCLA College of Letters and Science. Chancellor Block holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Stanford University and a master’s and Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Oregon. Before becoming chancellor of UCLA, Block served as vice president and provost of the University of Virginia, where he was also the Alumni Council Thomas Jefferson Professor of Biology. During his 29 years there, he served as vice president for research and public service and as founding director of the National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center in Biological Timing. Chancellor Block has served on the executive boards of several leading organizations, including the Association of American Universities, National Collegiate Athletic Association, Association of Public and Land-grant Universities and the Association of Pacific Rim Universities. He is the recipient of numerous professional awards and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Chancellor Block is a native of Monticello, N.Y. He and his wife, Carol, have two adult children.
Jarmond continued Athletic Association All-Academic honors in 2001. He holds both a M.B.A. and a master’s in sports administration from Ohio University. Jarmond is married to Dr. Jessica Jarmond, a dentist. They have three daughters: Scarlett, Savannah and Serena.
Men’s Tennis Support Staff
Jarmond recently served on the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Oversight Committee and is on the John McLendon Minority Scholarship Foundation Board of Directors. In 2017 and 2019, he was named to Sports Business Journal’s Forty Under 40. A native of Fayetteville, North Carolina, Jarmond, 40, earned a bachelor’s degree in communication studies from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. A two-year captain of the men’s basketball team, he led his team to the program’s first-ever NCAA tournament appearance in 2000 and earned Colonial
Dr. Michael Teitell Faculty Athletic Representative
35
Ariel Guldstrand
Daniel Rivas
Ruben Telliyan
Assistant Athletic Traine
Assistant Athletic Performance Coach
College Academic Counselor
MEDIA INFORMATION
UCLA’s Primary Media Outlets Newspapers Los Angeles Times 202 West First St. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (p)213-237-7145 (f)213-237-7876 latimes.com
Orange County Register 625 N. Grand Ave. Santa Ana, CA 92711 (p)714-796-7817 (f)714-565-6765 ocregister.com
Ventura County Star
KTLA (Ch. 5)
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facebook.com/UCLAMensTennis @UCLATennis (Twitter) @UCLAMTennis (Instagram) Keegan Smith (left) and Maxime Cressy after winning the NCAA doubles title in 2019
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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 2019-20. 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. The only conference to win 500 NCAA Championships, the Pac-12 captured three of the seven national championships contested in 2019-20 before all sports competition was canceled due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic adding to a legacy that includes 193 NCAA team titles claimed since 1999-2000 and 333 since 1981-82, the start of women’s sports sponsorship, an average of over eight 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 54 of the last 60 years, with the exceptions coming no lower than third. The Pac-12 has won the most or tied for the most NCAA titles for 15-consecutive seasons, winning at least six every year from 1999-2000 to 2018-19, winning a record 14 in 1996-97. No other conference has won double-digit NCAA championships in a single year. Spanning over a century of outstanding athletics achievements, the Pac-12 has claimed 529 NCAA Championships (305 men’s, 193 women’s, 31 combined), over 200 more than the next league. Pac-12 members have won 305 NCAA team championships on the men’s side, 78 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, 46 of 51 in water polo, 31 in skiing, and 25 in swimming & diving national championships. On the women’s side, the story is much the same. Since the NCAA began conducting women’s championships 39 years ago, Pac-12 members have claimed at least four national titles in a single season on 29 occasions, including every year since 2000-01 except two (2012-13 and the 2019-20-shortened campaign). Pac-12 teams have captured 193 NCAA women’s titles, easily outdistancing the SEC, which is second with 106. Pac-12 members have dominated a number of sports, winning 24 softball titles, 24 tennis crowns, 17 volleyball titles, 19 of the last 30 trophies in golf, and 17 in swimming & diving.
championships, representing five different Pac-12 institutions. The Cardinal won titles this season in men’s water polo, women’s soccer and women’s volleyball, extending its streak of at least one NCAA team title to 44 years. Stanford also posted top-four finishes in women’s cross country and men’s soccer, while Colorado came in third at the men’s cross country national meet and USC placed in a tie for third in men’s water polo. Three-quarters of the NCAA Women’s College Cup hailed from the Pac-12 for the first time ever with WASHINGTON STATE making its first-ever appearance in the national semifinal, joining the Cardinal and UCLA. The Pac-12 Champion OREGON Ducks capped a 12-2 season with a one-point Rose Bowl Game victory over Wisconsin, 28-27, as the Conference went 4-3 in the postseason. The Ducks finished the season ranked No. 5, while UTAH came in at No. 16 in the final polls. Oregon handily won its third Pac12 Football Championship Game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., defeating the Utes, 37-15, as CJ Verdell was named the game’s Most Valuable Player. In the postseason, ARIZONA STATE was a winner at the Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl in El Paso, Texas, (vs. Florida State, 20-14), CALIFORNIA won the Redbox Bowl in Santa Clara, Calif. (vs. Illinois, 35-20) and WASHINGTON had a commanding win at the Mitsubishi Motors Las Vegas Bowl (vs. Boise State, 38-7). Postseason bids were also extended to USC (SDCCU Holiday Bowl), Utah (Valero Alamo Bowl) and WASHINGTON STATE (Cheez-It Bowl). As many as 13 Pac-12 student-athletes were named All-Americans at season’s end. Combining both on-field and off-field performances, Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert was recipient of the Campbell Trophy, honoring the college football’s top scholar-athlete. He was also named first team Academic All-America for the second straight year and repeated as the Academic Team Member of the Year completing a schoolrecord 827 passes for 10,541 yards and 95 touchdowns for his career while earning his degree in general science with an emphasis in biology. Oregon offensive tackle Penei Sewell and California linebacker Evan Weaver were consensus AllAmerica selections, while Utah defensive end Bradlee Anae was a unanimous selection. Sewell was honored with the Outland Trophy as the nation’s top interior lineman, while
Weaver led the FBS in tackles with 182 (14.0 per game). Herbert was the Pac-12’s top selection in the NFL draft as a first round pick/sixth overall by the Los Angeles Chargers. The 2019-20 men’s basketball campaign was also cut short, with the season coming to an abrupt end on March 12, 2020, prior to the start of the Pac-12 Tournament quarterfinals, due to national and global concerns stemming from the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Prior to that, OREGON and Payton Pritchard dominated the hardwood. The Conference’s Player of the Year and consensus first team All-American, Pritchard became the second player to lead the league in scoring, assists and threes in a season to propel the Ducks to the outright Pac-12 regular-season title by a game over runner-up UCLA. Pritchard was also named the Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Lute Olson National Player of the Year. Another outstanding Pac-12 career came to close as OREGON STATE’s Tres Tinkle concluded his four years in the Conference’s all-time top 10 in scoring (overall and Conference-only), field goal attempts, and free throws made and attempted. The remainder of the NCAA Division I season, including March Madness, was subsequently canceled with the Pac-12 projected to have at least six NCAA Tournament berths. Six teams reached the 20-win plateau during the 2019-20 regular season, equaling the most ever for the Conference. With wins in football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball during 2019-20, Oregon became the first school in Conference history to sweep the three league titles in the same season. Pac-12 women’s basketball has established itself as a premier league in the sport, riding a wave of success in recent years that includes winning the most NCAA Tournament games of any conference in the last four postseasons. In 2019-20, the Pac-12 was the most talked about conference in women’s basketball beginning with OREGON’s historic exhibition win over Team USA before the season started. Led by consensus national player of the year and three-time Pac-12 Player of the Year Sabrina Ionescu, the Ducks went on to win the regularseason for the third year in a row and cut down the nets of the Pac-12 Tournament for the second time in three years in the event’s new home at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in
Individually, the Conference has produced an impressive number of NCAA individual champions. Over 2,000 (2,379) individual crowns have been won by Pac-12 student-athletes over the years with 1,383 by male student-athletes. Pac12 women student-athletes have captured an unmatched 808 NCAA individual crowns, an average of nearly 21 championships per season. Student-athletes have also captured 188 individual titles at combined championships (i.e., skiing and fencing). 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 with at least five member institutions earning scores in the top 25 each year of the Directors’ Cup program. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Directors’ Cup was not awarded in 2019-20. 2019-20 YEAR IN REVIEW Seven NCAA Championships were contested during the 201920 campaign before the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic led to the cancelation of competition in mid-March, including the remainder of the national championships. Stanford alone was en route to a special season, claiming three of the seven titles as no other school claimed multiple titles. Nine Pac-12 teams finished among the top four out of a possible 28 at the
Head coach Billy Martin and the Bruins took the top spot at the 2018 Pac-12 Championships in Ojai, Calif.
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PAC-12 CONFERENCE Las Vegas. The league boasted the No. 1 conference RPI and five teams were expected to receive top-16 NCAA Tournament seeds, as was announced in the final NCAA reveal in the first week of March. For the first time ever, six Pac-12 teams were ranked in the final Associated Press poll with Oregon (No. 2), STANFORD (No. 7) and UCLA (No. 10) appearing in the top 10. A record number of Pac-12 student-athletes were also nationally recognized this season, including four that were tabbed Naismith Hall of Fame/WBCA Starting Five winners, three alone coming from Oregon, with Ionescu winning the Nancy Lieberman Award for the third-straight year. Ionescu’s stellar collegiate campaign included becoming the first-ever men’s or women’s player in NCAA history to tally 2,000 points, 1,000 rebounds and 1,000 assists. She is, by far, the NCAA leader in triple-doubles, recording 26 for her career. She broke the Pac-12 all-time assists record, passing Hall of Famer Gary Payton, and finishing fourth all-time in NCAA women’s history. A record number were also tabbed All-Americans with as many as five receiving national recognition including three from Oregon, ARIZONA and UCLA. Pac-12 teams have advanced to 10 of the last 12 NCAA Women’s Final Fours. In 2019, the Pac-12 went a combined 11-1 in the first two rounds, the best record for a conference since 1997. Four years ago, the STANFORD freshman class came in with plenty of expectations and they did not disappoint. With Kathryn Plummer leading a team with no less than four All-Americans, the Cardinal won its NCAA-leading ninth NCAA title and third in four years. The Cardinal, and Plummer, were dominant in the postseason after winning its 19th all-time Pac-12 title, dropping just two sets in the tournament to fellow league-opponent UTAH, who also had a record season. Joining the Cardinal and Utes in the postseason were UCLA, USC, WASHINGTON and WASHINGTON STATE. Twelve student-athletes were tabbed All-Americans by the American Volleyball Coaches Association with WSU’s Magda Jehlarova becoming the first-ever Coug to be named AVCA National Freshman of the Year. Four teams also appeared in the final AVCA Coaches poll. The Pac-12 has won a NCAA-record 17 of 39 NCAA titles awarded. The Pac-12 baseball and softball seasons abruptly came to an end just before league play got underway because of the COVID-19 pandemic. UCLA was leading the country with the lowest hits allowed per nine innings average (4.97) and best WHIP (0.87). Six Pac-12 student-athletes were named to the 2020 Golden Spikes Award watch list and two were named to the NCBWA Stopper of the Year preseason watch list. The Pac-12 has had nine Golden Spikes Award winners all-time, leading all other conferences. The Pac-12 has, by
far, won the most baseball national titles of any conference in the country, claiming 29 titles dating back to 1947 when the first NCAA Championship was contested, including 2019 winner Oregon State. The Pac-12 has historically dominated the softball field, as well, claiming a national record 24 NCAA titles in the 38year history of the championship, the most recent coming in 2019 when UCLA captured its 13th all-time. Pac-12 teams captured an unprecedented nine in a row from 1988-1997, then claimed six-straight from 2006-11. At least one Pac-12 team has reached the NCAA Women’s College World Series championship series 30 times. Three teams were among the top-five in the national polls when the season was cancelled in mid-March, including UCLA and WASHINGTON occupying Nos. 1 and 2 in the USA Today/NFCA poll, with ARIZONA ranking in the top five. Twelve student-athletes across five schools were named to the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year Watch List, 10 in total were tabbed preseason All-Americans. 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, Oregon. 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. Pacific Coast Conference play began in 1916 and, one year later, Washington State College (now Washington State University) was accepted into the league, with Stanford University following in 1918. In 1922, the PCC expanded to eight teams with the admission of the University of Southern California (USC) and the University of Idaho. In 1924, the University of Montana joined the league roster and in 1928, the PCC grew to 10 members with the addition of UCLA. The Pacific Coast Conference competed as a 10-member league until 1950, with the exception of 1943-45 when World War II curtailed intercollegiate athletic competition to a minimum. During that time, the league’s first commissioner was named. Edwin N. Atherton was Commissioner in 1940 and was succeeded by Victor O. Schmidt in 1944. In 1950, Montana resigned from the Conference and the PCC continued as a nine-team Conference through 1958.
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In 1959, the PCC was dissolved and the Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU) was formed with Thomas J. Hamilton appointed Commissioner of the new league. The original AAWU membership included California, Stanford, USC, UCLA, and Washington. Washington State joined the membership in 1962, while Oregon and Oregon State joined in 1964. Under Hamilton’s watch, the name Pacific-8 Conference was adopted in 1968. In 1971, Wiles Hallock took over as Commissioner of the Pac-8. Ten years later, on July 1, 1978, the University of Arizona and Arizona State University were admitted to the league and the Pacific-10 Conference became a reality. In 1986-87, the league took on a new look, expanding to include 10 women’s sports. Since then, the Conference has been considered the premier league in women’s athletics, securing the most NCAA titles in women’s sports of any conference nearly every year. Thomas C. Hansen was named the Commissioner of the Pac-10 in 1983, a role he would hold for 26 years until 2009, when he was succeeded by current Commissioner Larry Scott. 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 Conference became the Pac-12 and officially began competition on July 1, 2011. It was during the 2010-11 academic year that 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.