2018-19 UCLA Women's Tennis Information Guide

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2018-19 UCLA WOMEN’S TENNIS

TABLE OF CONTENTS

2018 QUICK FACTS

Location Los Angeles, CA Athletic Dept. Address 325 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 Athletics Phone (310) 825-8699 Women’s Tennis Office Phone (310) 206-6787 Chancellor Dr. Gene Block Director of Athletics Daniel G. Guerrero Sr. Women’s Administrator Dr. Christina Rivera 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 Stella Sampras Webster (UCLA ‘91) Career Record (Years) 420-158 (22) Associate Head Coach Rance Brown Volunteer Assistant Coach Giancarlo “GC” Cava 2018 Record 23-6 2018 Pac-12 Record (Finish) 9-1 (2nd) 2018 NCAA Tournament T-5th 2018 Final National Ranking 10 NCAA Championships 2 (2008, 2014) All-Time NCAA Tournament Appearances (Last) 37 (2018) All-Time Conference Championships (Last) 4 (2008)

The 2018-19 Bruins

Radio / TV Roster 2 Rosters 3 Team Photo 3 Coaching Staff 4 Player Profiles - Seniors 6 Player Profiles - Juniors 8 Player Profiles - Sophomores 9 Player Profiles - Freshmen 11

UCLA Head Coaching History Award Winners National Championships All-Time NCAA Tournament Results Record vs. Opponents in NCAA Play NCAA Seed History Bruins on the WTA Tour Miscellaneous Singles Records Los Angeles Tennis Center

2017-18 Season in Review

General Information

2017-18 Records & Honors 2018 Results

History / Records All-Time Letterwinners Record vs. Opponents

Administrator Biographies Media Information Pac-12 Conference

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2019 SCHEDULE

Date Jan. 26 Jan. 27 Feb. 2 Feb. 3 Feb. 8-11 Feb. 22 Feb. 23 Feb. 28 March 1 March 8 March 9 March 13 March 24 March 29 March 30 April 3 April 5 April 6 April 12 April 14 April 20 April 24-27 May 4-5 May 11 May 16-19 May 20-25

13 14

18 19 20 21 22 22 23 23 24

Opponent Location Time (PT) Minnesota@ Los Angeles Tennis Center 12 pm FIU/Loyola Marymount@ Los Angeles Tennis Center 9 am/12 pm at Oklahoma State Stillwater, Okla. 1 pm at Tulsa Tulsa, Okla. 9 am National Team Indoor Championships Seattle, Wash. All Day at Saint Mary’s Moraga, Calif. 2 pm at California Berkeley, Calif. 12 pm UC Santa Barbara Los Angeles Tennis Center 1:30 pm USC Los Angeles Tennis Center 1:30 pm at Arizona State* Tempe, Ariz. 12:30 pm at Arizona* Tucson, Ariz. 11 am at Pepperdine Malibu, Calif. 1 pm at Oregon* Eugene, Ore. 11 am Stanford* Los Angeles Tennis Center 1:30 pm California* Los Angeles Tennis Center 12 pm Pepperdine Los Angeles Tennis Center 1:30 pm Utah* Los Angeles Tennis Center 12 pm Colorado* Los Angeles Tennis Center 12 pm at Washington State* Pullman, Wash. 1:30 pm at Washington* Seattle, Wash. 12 pm at USC* Los Angeles, Calif. 12 pm Pac-12 Championships Ojai, Calif. All Day NCAA Regionals TBD All Day NCAA Super Regionals TBD All Day NCAA Team Championships Orlando, Fla. All Day NCAA Individual Championships Orlando, Fla. All Day

Home matches in bold / @ ITA Kickoff Weekend / * Pac-12 Conference match

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TV

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

Pac-12 Networks

Pac-12 Networks

Note: Student-athletes have been instructed not to grant any interview requests that have not been set up through the UCLA Athletic Communications Office.

On the Cover: Back row (left to right): Ayan Broomfield,

Gabby Andrews. Front: Alaina Miller.


RADIO / TV ROSTER

Abi ALTICK

Gabby ANDREWS

Katie LAFRANCE

Alaina MILLER

5-7/So. Monroe, La.

5-4/Fr. Little Rock, Ark.

Stella SAMPRAS WEBSTER Head Coach

5-9/Sr. Pomona, Calif.

Sophie BENDETTI

5-8/So. Pacific Palisades, Calif.

Elysia BOLTON

5-9/Fr. Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.

Ayan BROOMFIELD

5-7/Sr. Toronto, ON, Canada

5-6/Sr. Saratoga, Calif.

Rance BROWN

Associate Head Coach

Max HAMMER

Giancarlo “GC” CAVA

Director of Operations

Volunteer Assistant Coach

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Lasya GUDIPUDI

Team Manager

Jada HART

5-6/R-Jr. Colton, Calif.

Taylor JOHNSON 5-10/Fr. Prescott, Ariz.


ROSTERS / TEAM PHOTO

ALPHABETICAL ROSTER Name Abi Altick Gabby Andrews Sophie Bendetti Elysia Bolton Ayan Broomfield Jada Hart Taylor Johnson Katie LaFrance Alaina Miller

TEAM STAFF Ht. 5-7 5-9 5-8 5-9 5-7 5-6 5-10 5-4 5-6

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

Hometown (High School/College) Monroe, La. (K12 International Academy) Pomona, Calif. (Tyler Junior College) Pacific Palisades, Calif. (Oaks Christian School) Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. (Laurel Springs School) Toronto, ON, Canada (Clemson) Colton, Calif. (Riverside Virtual School) Prescott, Ariz. (Connections Academy) Little Rock, Ark. (Laurel Springs School) Saratoga, Calif. (Laurel Springs Online Academy)

PRONUNCIATION GUIDE Abi Altick........................................................... ALL-tick Elysia Bolton.............................................. uh-LEASH-uh Ayan Broomfield................................................ eye-ANN

Head Coach: Stella Sampras Webster (23rd Year, UCLA, ‘91) Associate Head Coach Coach: Rance Brown (21st Year) Volunteer Asst. Coach: Giancarlo “GC” Cava (5th Year) Director of Operations: Max Hammer Team Manager: Lasya Gudipudi Staff Athletic Trainer: Austyn Nealer

ROSTER BREAKDOWN Height

Juniors (1): Hart

5-10.......................Johnson 5-9........................ Andrews ................................. Bolton 5-8......................... Bendetti 5-7............................. Altick .......................... Broomfield 5-6............................... Hart .................................. Miller 5-4........................LaFrance

Seniors (3): Andrews, Broomfield, Miller

Class

Louisiana (1): Altick

Freshmen (3): Bolton, Johnson, LaFrance Sophomores (2): Altick, Bendetti

State California (4): Andrews, Bendetti, Hart, Miller Arkansas (1): LaFrance Arizona (1): Johnson New York (1): Bolton

International Canada (1): Broomfield

Top row (left to right): Jada Hart, Abi Altick, Katie LaFrance, Alaina Miller, Ayan Broomfield. Middle row (left to right): director of operations Max Hammer, associate head coach Rance Brown, head coach Stella Sampras Webster, volunteer assistant coach Giancarlo “GC” Cava, team manager Lasya Gudipudi. Front row (left to right): Elysia Bolton, Taylor Johnson, Gabby Andrews, Sophie Bendetti. 3


COACHING STAFF

STELLA

SAMPRAS WEBSTER

Lauded for her “achievements and contributions to the game of tennis across Southern California,” Sampras Webster was inducted into the Southern California Tennis Association Hall of Fame in 2017. Then, on Oct. 5, 2018, she became just the fourth active head coach to gain entry into the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame.

Head Coach 23rd Season UCLA ‘91

Born in Potomac, Md., Sampras Webster moved to the Los Angeles area as a child and graduated from Palos Verdes High School. A top-three player in Southern California and among the top 10 in the country as a junior, Sampras Webster claimed the CIF doubles title as a freshman and the singles title as a senior in 1987. She capped her high school career by being named her school’s Athlete of the Year. The second-oldest of four children of Sam and Georgia Sampras, Stella considers the support of her entire family most significant. Younger brother Pete demonstrated his level of support for Stella and the Bruin program when he personally endowed a scholarship and assisted with the important fund-raising effort in Stella’s first fall at the helm. Pete won a record 14 Grand Slam singles titles during his playing days, including seven Wimbledon championships.

Head coach Stella Sampras Webster enters her 23rd season at the helm of the UCLA women’s tennis program in 2018, compiling an impressive overall record of 420-158 (.727). Sampras Webster is only the third head coach in UCLA women’s tennis history, following legendary coaches Bill Zaima (1972-76 & 1986-96) and Gayle Godwin (1977-86).

Sampras Webster and her husband, Steve, were married on January 3, 2002 in Dana Point, Calif. They are the proud parents of twin girls Sophia and Savannah.

Sampras Webster and the Bruins captured the 2014 NCAA title in Athens, Georgia with a thrilling 4-3 victory over North Carolina in the final. It marked the 111th NCAA Championship for UCLA, as the Bruins finished the 2014 campaign with a 27-2 overall record, which included a 9-1 mark in the highly-competitive Pac-12 Conference. UCLA did not surrender the doubles point in any match that year, going a perfect 29-0 in doubles play. The 2014 season marked the second NCAA Championship for Sampras Webster, as she also led UCLA to the title in 2008. UCLA’s 2008 title was the first NCAA Championship for the program, following up on the team’s 1981 AIAW national crown. The 2012 ITA National Coach of the Year, Stella Sampras Webster is also responsible for helping the Bruins to their first Pac-10 Championship in 2008, as UCLA ended the conference season with a 7-1 record that year. For her efforts, she was named Pac-10 Coach of the Year at the end of the season. Few college coaches can match Sampras Webster’s ability to continually put their teams in the title hunt year in and year out. Prior to her first title in 2008, she also had a pair of second-place finishes at the NCAAs in 2004 and 2007. In all, Sampras Webster’s teams have finished in the top 10 at the NCAA Championships in 19 of her 22 seasons in Westwood. UCLA has also finished in the top five nationally on 13 occasions (1997, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018). The 2000 ITA West Region Coach of the Year, Sampras Webster has recruited and coached some of the top players in collegiate tennis. Under her tutelage, a total of 28 players have achieved All-America status. Two of the most notable during Sampras Webster’s tenure are Riza Zalameda and Robin Anderson. Zalameda was a four-time All-American and the Most Outstanding Player at the 2008 NCAA Championships. She and partner Tracy Lin captured the NCAA doubles title in 2008, marking the second UCLA team to capture the doubles title under Sampras Webster’s tenure. Lauren Fisher and Daniela Bercek also won the title in 2004. Anderson, who like Zalameda was named the Most Outstanding Player at the NCAAs in 2014, also achieved All-America status each of her four years.

Stella and her husband Steve with twins Sophie (left) and Savannah.

Career Coaching Record Year Overall Record Conf. Record/Finish NCAA Finish 1997 16-6 7-3/2nd T-5th 1998 17-11 5-3/4th T-9th 1999 18-8 5-3/4th T-17th 2000 17-9 6-2/T-2nd T-5th 2001 9-19 4-4/7th T-9th 2002 19-5 6-2/3rd T-5th 2003 16-11 4-4/5th T-5th 2004 21-8 6-2/3rd 2nd 2005 17-6 6-2/3rd T-9th 2006 15-7 5-3/4th T-9th 2007 21-8 6-2/T-2nd 2nd 2008 24-5 7-1/T-1st 1st 2009 19-7 5-3/T-9th 4th 2010 21-4 6-1/2nd T-9th 2011 22-6 7-1/2nd T-3rd 2012 26-3 8-2/T-3rd 2nd 2013 20-6 7-3/4th T-3rd 2014 27-2 9-1/2nd 1st 2015 23-5 8-2/3rd 2nd 2016 15-7 6-3/5th T-17th 2017 14-9 7-3/T-3rd T-17th 2018 23-6 9-1/2nd T-5th ­Totals (22 yrs) 420-158 96-28 2 NCAA Titles

A 1991 graduate of UCLA with a degree in Psychology, Sampras Webster enjoyed a successful four-year career as a Bruin player from 1987-1991 and competed on the pro circuit for a season prior to joining Zaima’s staff. An NCAA doubles champion as a freshman in 1988 with Allyson Cooper, Sampras Webster was also the NCAA doubles runner-up as a senior in 1991 with Kimberly Po. A four-time All-American, Sampras Webster was only the second player in UCLA history to obtain this status. She also won the 1989 and 1991 Pac-10 doubles championship and the 1990 Rolex Regional doubles title. Sampras Webster completed her UCLA career ranked No. 3 nationally in doubles and No. 42 in singles. Team accomplishments were most important to Sampras Webster, who helped lead the Bruins to four straight NCAA top-three finishes. As a professional, Sampras Webster’s highest international singles ranking was No. 248, and her best in doubles was No. 142. Her professional highlights include competing in both singles and doubles at the U.S. Open and Lipton Championships. She advanced to the U.S. Open second round in doubles and also competed in doubles at Wimbledon. She also won three satellite tournament titles and competed in Team Tennis for the Wichita Advantage in 1992.

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COACHING STAFF

RANCE

GIANCARLO “GC”

Associate Head Coach 21st Season

Volunteer Assistant Coach Fifth Season

BROWN

CAVA

Associate Head Coach Rance Brown is in his 21st season on the UCLA women’s tennis coaching staff. He served as an assistant to Bill Zaima during the 1996 season, and has been Stella Sampras Webster’s top assistant for 20 seasons. The 2000 and 2012 ITA National Assistant Coach of the Year, Brown was promoted to the position of associate head coach effective at the beginning of the 2008-09 season.

Giancarlo “GC” Cava is in his fifth season as volunteer assistant coach for UCLA women’s tennis. Cava replaced alumna Laura Gordon in 2014 and the Bruins have reached the second round of the NCAA Championships each year since. Cava’s first dual-match season came in 2015 and his appointment paid immediate dividends. Coming off its 2014 NCAA title, UCLA again reached the championship match in 2015 before falling short. Over his time on staff, the Bruins have put together a 75-27 (.735) overall record and a 30-9 (.769) conference mark. Honda Award winner Robin Anderson and Jennifer Brady each played one year under Cava, while Catherine Harrison and Kyle McPhillips are among others who have thrived under his tutelage.

During Brown’s tenure in Westwood, UCLA has continually been among the top teams in the nation. In addition to NCAA titles in 2008 and 2014, the Bruins have finished runnerup at the NCAA Championships four times (2004, 2007, 2012 and 2015). The Bruins have made the NCAA Tournament in each of his 20 seasons as an assistant. Brown has especially excelled in the area of recruiting, bringing in a number of highly-ranked junior players to the program over the years. He was also instrumental in the success of NCAA singles champion Keri Phebus, who became the first women’s tennis player inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame in 2007. Brown has been named the ITA Southwest Region Assistant Coach of the Year on five occasions (1999, 2000, 2007, 2010 and 2012). A total of 25 All-American Bruins have been named over the course of his tenure.

Immediately after his own collegiate career ended, Cava became a teaching professional at Riviera Country Club, a role that lasted until 2018—a span of 12 years. From 20082012, he also served as the head pro of Riviera’s junior program, leading summer camps and supervising the junior program during the school year. Cava played collegiately from 2003-06 at UC Riverside, where he manned Court 6 to the tune of three singles wins and also came out on top of four doubles decisions in his debut season. It was in the 2005-06 campaign that his tennis career took a turn. Cava assumed a role of player-coach, oftentimes guiding his teammates in singles play after participating in doubles. The Highlanders saw dramatic improvement to their team’s on-court performance during Cava’s time on campus, winning eight more matches in 2005-06 than they did in 2003-04.

Brown spent the summer of 2008 as the coach of the USTA Summer Collegiate Team, traveling to professional tournaments with some of the top women’s college players in the nation. He also guided USA Team’s quartet of Bruins at the 2015 Summer Universiade (World University Games) in Gwangju, South Korea. In addition to his efforts with the UCLA program, Brown was among the first graduating classes of the USTA High Performance Coaches’ Program. He also worked at the Riviera Country Club, heading up the club’s Elite Junior Tennis Program along with professional coach Erik Kortland. Prior to his appointment at Riviera, Brown headed up one of the most successful junior tennis programs in the country, serving as Director of Tennis at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel and Tennis Club in Orange County for more than 20 years.

A Southern California native, Cava is an avid CrossFit athlete and trainer.

Brown received his Associate of Arts degree from Golden West Junior College, where he played for two years. He helped lead the team to two conference team titles and notched one conference doubles title. He played the 1981 season at Long Beach State and competed professionally at Challenger Level tournaments before devoting his time to coaching.

Associate head coach Rance Brown, head coach Stella Sampras Webster, volunteer assistant coach Giancarlo “GC” Cava

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PLAYER PROFILES - SENIORS

Seniors (left to right): Gabby Andrews, Alaina Miller, Ayan Broomfield.

GABBY

2016-17

10-10 singles record (9-9 in dual matches) … 12-4 doubles mark (11-4 in dual matches) … with partner Alaina Miller, finished season-high No. 50 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings (May 31) … defeated No. 82 Madison Westby of No. 22 USC, 6-3, 6-3 (Feb. 18) … posted four match-clinching points, including win over Alexis Prokopuik of No. 35 Washington, 7-5, 6-0 (March 31) … clinched three doubles points with Miller, including win over No. 37 Gabby Smith and Zoe Katz of No. 32 USC, 6-4 (April 22) … with partner Terri Fleming, defeated Nicole Anderson and Maria-Paula Torres of San Diego, 6-3, to clinch doubles point (Feb. 12) … with Miller, defeated Amanda Atanasson and Melissa Baker of No. 47 UC Santa Barbara, 6-2, to clinch doubles point in first round at NCAA Championships (May 12) … clinched one doubles point with partner Kristin Wiley.

ANDREWS 5-9 / Senior Pomona, Calif. Tyler Junior College

2015-16 (TYLER JUNIOR COLLEGE)

34-5 singles record ... 31-6 doubles mark ... named ITA All-American for singles and doubles (with partner Montana Moore) ... selected to ITA Collegiate All-Star Team ... voted ITA JUCO Region II Rookie of the Year ... spent entire season slotted in top three of Oracle/ ITA Junior/Community College singles rankings; finished No. 1 (May 26) ... reached JUCO singles final round at 2015 USTA/ITA National Small College Championships in Sumter, S.C.

COLLEGE CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

• ITA All-America selection – singles, doubles (2016) • Career-high Oracle/ITA Division I doubles ranking: 24 (Feb. 20, 2018 w/ Ayan Broomfield) • Career-high Oracle/ITA Junior/Community College singles ranking: 1 (May 26, 2016) • Career-high Oracle/ITA Junior/Community College doubles ranking: 3 (3 times, last May 26, 2016 w/ Montana Moore)

PRIOR TO COLLEGE

Attended Claremont High School in Claremont, Calif. … Blue-Chip recruit according to TennisRecruiting.net; reached No. 1 in 2012 and 2013 ... won doubles title at 2012 US Open Junior Championships … claimed doubles crown at 2012 Australian Open Junior Championships.

2017-18

As a true junior, recorded a 7-2 record in singles (4-1 in dual matches) and 23-8 in doubles (13-5 in dual matches) ... alongside partner Ayan Broomfield, finished the season ranked No. 46 in the ITA Doubles Rankings ... Andrews/Broomfield was ranked a season-high No. 20 in the preseason rankings, and was ranked inside the top-50 in every poll until Apr. 10 ... Andrews/Broomfield went 12-5 overall and 11-4 in dual matches ... Andrews was also ranked in doubles with Jada Hart (the duo went 6-1 in the fall), reached as high as No. 25 and finishing the year at No. 74 ... Andrews/Hart won the ITA Southwest Regional doubles title at USD, defeating UCSB’s Natalie da Silveira/Paulina Dubavets in the final ... won seven straight doubles matchups from Sept. 30 to Nov. 1; she was partnered with Hart for all but one of those triumphs ... was 5-2 against ranked tandems when paired with Broomfield ... went 3-0 in doubles in the NCAA Tournament, including a 6-2 win over No. 48 Ida Jarlskog/Victoria Flores of Georgia Tech in the Elite Eight ... alongside Hart, topped then-No. 8 Sarah Dvorak/Sabrina Federici of Texas Tech on Nov. 3 ... by doubles position, was 1-0 on No. 1, 10-4 on No. 2, and 2-1 on No. 3 ... claimed a 7-6 (4) victory over LMU’s Miroshnichenko/Voracek tandem on court one on Feb. 16 ... Lost just twice overall in singles play and only once over her last eight matches ... was 2-1 on court 6 and 1-0 on court 5.

PERSONAL

Full name: Gabrielle Faith Andrews … daughter of Michael and Evelyn ... cousins Serena and Haley Jackson also attend/ed UCLA ... chose UCLA because it has always been her dream school and she wanted to challenge herself athletically and academically.

TJC Singles Record

TJC Doubles Record

Year Overall Overall

2015-16 34-5 31-6 Totals 34-5 31-6

Year

UCLA Singles Record

Duals Tournaments Overall

UCLA Doubles Record

Duals Tournaments Overall

2016-17 9-9 1-1 10-10 11-4 1-0 12-4 2017-18 4-1 3-1 7-2 13-5 10-3 23-8 Totals 13-10 4-2 17-12 24-9 11-3 35-12

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PLAYER PROFILES - SENIORS

AYAN

ALAINA

5-7 / Senior Toronto, ON, Canada Clemson

5-6 / Senior Saratoga, Calif. Laurel Springs School

BROOMFIELD

MILLER

COLLEGE CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

• ACC Freshman of the Year (2016) • ITA Carolina Region Rookie of the Year (2016) • 2-time All-ACC honoree (Second Team – 2016, 2017) • Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (Winter 2018) • Career-high Oracle/ITA singles ranking: 40 (April 12, 2016) • Career-high Oracle/ITA doubles ranking: 24 (Feb. 20, 2018 w/ Gabby Andrews)

• All-Pac-12 honoree (Honorable Mention - 2018) • 5-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2018) • Career-high Oracle/ITA singles ranking: 76 (Nov. 15, 2017) • Career-high Oracle/ITA doubles ranking: 50 (May 31, 2017 w/ Gabby Andrews)

2017-18

As a true junior, recorded a 23-5 record in singles (18-2 in dual matches) and 26-6 record in doubles (20-3 in dual) ... playing primarily at No. 6 in singles, going 15-2 in that position ... went 3-0 at No. 5 ... debuted at a season-high No. 76 in the first ITA regular season singles rankings, and stayed ranked all year, finishing the campaign at No. 121 ... lost just once in her final 19 singles matchups ... was similarly dominant in doubles, going unbeaten in her final 19 doubles matchups, all partnered with Ena Shibahara on Court 3 ... was at her best in March, going 6-0 in both singles and doubles; in that span she won 72 of her 86 singles games with four 6-0 sets ... had the best singles winning percentage on the team (.821) among those with 10+ decisions and had the No. 2 winning percentage in doubles (.813), just behind Shibahara’s .875 clip ... led the team in dual match singles wins (18) ... top-ranked opponent to fall to Miller was Cal’s Olivia Hauger (then-No. 75) on Sept. 30 at the Cal Fall Invitational ... provided the match-clinching win against No. 6 Ole Miss in the NCAA Sweet 16, topping Alexa Bortles 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-3 to send UCLA to the Elite Eight ... was a 6-3, 6-4 winner against No. 4 Georgia Tech’s Victoria Flores in the Elite Eight, capping off a 4-0 singles performance in the NCAA Tournament for Miller ... Miller/Shibahara were an undefeated 4-0 in doubles in the NCAA Tournament and were the first to finish their set in all four matches … selected to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2018 and Spring 2018.

2017-18

In her first season at UCLA, recorded a 17-11 record in singles (12-7 in dual matches) and 19-9 record in doubles (16-7 in dual) ... played primarily at No. 5, going 6-4 in dual matches in that position ... also went 4-0 at No. 3 and 2-3 at No. 4 ... lost just once in her final eight singles matchups ... was ranked No. 52 in the nation in the ITA preseason rankings ... in doubles, was the preseason No. 20-ranked pairing alongside Gabby Andrews ... Andrews/Broomfield ended the season ranked No. 46 after going 12-5 overall including a 5-2 mark against ranked opponents ... highest-ranked opponent to fall to Andrews/ Broomfield was LMU’s No. 24 Miroshnichenko/Voracek on Feb. 16, the UCLA duo’s lone match at the No. 1 position in 2018 ... went 1-1 in the NCAA Tournament, and won the opening set of her two other matches that went unfinished … selected to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2018.

2016-17 (CLEMSON)

Second-Team All-Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) selection … completed sophomore campaign slotted at No. 93 in the Oracle/ITA singles ranking; reached season-best No. 40 (Jan. 4) … recorded 19-15 record on the season, including 11-11 dual-match mark playing primarily on Court 1 … won five matches against ranked opponents, including upset triumph over No. 4 Sara Daavettila of North Carolina, 6-4, 6-3 (March 3) … in doubles, flourished with record of 23-7 … along with partner Marie Leduc, tallied 16-4 mark on Court 1; completed year ranked No. 32 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings and reached season-high No. 31 … standout performance for Broomfield-Leduc was season-closing sweep of Vanderbilt’s top-ranked team of Astra Sharma and Emily Smith, 6-0.

2016-17

17-14 singles record (10-9 in dual matches) … 16-10 doubles mark (10-6 in dual matches) … with partner Gabby Andrews, finished season-high No. 50 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings (May 31) … clinched two doubles points with partner Terri Fleming, including win over Jessica Failla and Gabby Smith of No. 22 USC, 6-2 (Feb. 18) … posted four match-clinching points, including win over Nia Rose of No. 35 Oregon, 6-4, 6-3 (March 17) … clinched three doubles points with Andrews, including win over No. 37 Gabby Smith and Zoe Katz of No. 32 USC, 6-4 (April 22) … with Andrews, defeated Amanda Atanasson and Melissa Baker of No. 47 UC Santa Barbara, 6-2, to clinch doubles point in first round at NCAA Championships (May 12) … selected to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2017 and Spring 2017.

2015-16 (CLEMSON)

Named ACC Freshman of the Year … honored as ITA Carolina Region Rookie of the Year … All-ACC Second-Team pick … registered 12-10 singles record, playing majority of debut season on top court … went 6-11 in doubles play.

2015-16

Slotted as high as No. 467 in WTA doubles rankings; reached No. 680 in singles rankings … collected ITF doubles titles at Victoria, BC, Canada in 2014 and Petit Bourg, France in 2015 … singles finalist at 2014 U18 Indoor Rogers Junior Nationals in Markham, ON, Canada … posted runner-up finish in singles play at 2013 Rogers Junior U18 National Championships in Mississauga, ON, Canada.

Posted a 14-6 dual match singles record, including a 7-2 mark playing at the No. 3 spot in the lineup ... was 3-5 against ranked opponents, most notably downing USC’s Gabby Smith (No. 85) ... compiled a 15-8 doubles record overall, playing mostly with Terri Fleming ... was 4-2 with Fleming in dual matches and 4-0 in tournament play ... with Fleming, upset second-seeded Sammi Hampton and Kassidy Jump of Arizona State to capture title at Pac-12 Invitational Doubles tournament in Ojai, Calif … selected to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Spring 2016.

PERSONAL

PRIOR TO UCLA

PRIOR TO COLLEGE

Daughter of Paul and Denise … has one older sister, Kai … sister played tennis at Marshall … describes her greatest athletic thrill to date as defeating her sister for the first time … admires basketball player LeBron James … decided to attend UCLA “because of its rich history and to have the opportunity to create something for its future” … hobbies and interests include running, cooking and hanging with family and friends … is a fan of singer Rihanna, who she hopes to meet one day.

Year

Career Singles Record

Career Doubles Record

Duals Tournaments Overall

Duals Tournaments Overall

2015-16* 11-9 2016-17* 11-11 2017-18 12-7 Totals 34-27

1-1 12-10 6-11 8-4 19-15 17-5 5-4 17-11 16-7 14-9 48-36 39-23

Graduated from Laurel Springs School … won Girls’ 16 singles title at 2014 USTA International Spring Championships in Carson, Calif. ... as part of Northern California team, won 2013 and 2014 Maze Cup competitions ... claimed Girls’ 14, 16 and 18 singles titles at NorCal Junior Sectional Championships.

PERSONAL

Daughter of Randolph and Aubyn ... has one older brother, Raleigh ... started playing tennis “because I saw my brother playing and I made it my mission to beat him, then somewhere along the way I fell in love with the game” ... admires Ana Ivanovic.

0-0 6-11 6-2 23-7 3-2 19-9 9-4 48-27

Year

Career Singles Record

Duals Tournaments Overall

Career Doubles Record

Duals Tournaments Overall

2015-16 14-6 1-4 15-10 10-7 5-1 15-8 2016-17 10-9 7-5 17-14 10-6 6-4 16-10 2017-18 18-2 5-3 23-5 20-3 6-3 26-6 Totals 42-17 13-12 55-29 40-16 17-8 57-24

* - at Clemson 7


PLAYER PROFILES - JUNIORS

Junior Jada Hart

JADA

singles matchup in conference play, but rebounded to go an unbeaten 7-0 the rest of the way against Pac-12 opponents in the regular season ... was instrumental in UCLA’s comeback win over No. 10 Pepperdine on Apr. 18, topping No. 16 Ashley Lahey 4-6, 6-4, 6-4 to help the Bruins erase a 3-1 deficit ... standout doubles wins include against No. 2 Arbuthnott/Gordon (Stanford) on Apr. 28, No. 9 Jeanjean/Pairone (Arkansas) on Sept. 31, and No. 8 Stefani/Sherif (Pepperdine) on Apr. 18 … selected to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2018 and Spring 2018.

HART 5-6 / R. Junior Colton, Calif. Riverside Virtual School

2016-17

18-10 singles record (11-7 in dual matches) … 27-8 doubles mark (16-4 in dual matches) … reached season-high No. 81 in Oracle/ITA singles rankings (March 7) … with partner Ena Shibahara, finished No. 19 in Oracle/ITA doubles rankings (May 31) and reached season-high No. 3 (March 21) … with partner Terri Fleming, finished No. 31 in Oracle/ ITA doubles rankings (May 31) and reached season-high No. 22 (March 21) … Pac-12 Doubles Team of the Year with Fleming … Second-Team All-Pac-12 honoree … collected two Pac-12 Player of the Week awards (Jan. 30, April 10) … qualified for NCAA Doubles Championships with Shibahara … claimed ITA Blue doubles title with Fleming at Cal Nike Fall Invitational, defeating Kassidy Jump and Sammi Hampton of Arizona State, 8-7 (4) (Oct. 2) … with Shibahara, defeated Vladica Babic and Carla Tur Mari of Oklahoma State, 6-3, 6-3, to reach final round of USTA/ITA National Indoor Intercollegiate Championships (Nov. 5) … clinched two doubles points with Shibahara, including win over No. 1 Aldila Sutjiadi and Mami Adachi of No. 20 Kentucky, 6-3, at ITA Kick-Off Weekend (Jan. 28) … with Shibahara and Fleming, won 12 consecutive doubles decisions (Feb. 4-April 8) … posted three match-clinching points, including win over Rianna Valdes of No. 22 USC, 2-6, 6-2, 7-5 (Feb. 18) … clinched six doubles points with Fleming, including win over No. 28 Maya Jansen and Maegan Manasse of No. 12 California, 7-6 (5) (March 11), and four in a row March 31-April 8 … selected to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2017 and Spring 2017.

UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

• ITA All-America selection - doubles (2018) • Pac-12 Doubles Team of the Year (2017 w/ Terri Fleming) • 2-time All-Pac-12 honoree (Second Team – 2017, 2018) • 4-time Pac-12 Player of the Week (last April 24, 2018) • 4-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2018) • Career-high Oracle/ITA singles ranking: 27 (May 30, 2018) • Career-high Oracle/ITA doubles ranking: 4 (4 times, last Feb. 7, 2018 w/ Ena Shibahara)

2017-18

As a redshirt sophomore, posted a 27-11 record in singles (16-6 in dual matches) and 29-15 in doubles (14-11 in dual matches) ... spent most of her time at singles No. 2, where she had a 14-6 record ... went 2-0 in two matches at No. 1 ... named an ITA Doubles All-American alongside partner Terri Fleming ... All-Pac-12 Second Team selection ... also made the Pac-12 All-Academic Team ... ended the year ranked No. 12 in doubles alongside Fleming ... after debuting at No. 38 on Feb. 20, Fleming/Hart appeared in each ITA doubles rankings ... appeared in the top-10 in four separate rankings, including a season-high No. 6 on Apr. 24 ... competed in the NCAA Doubles Championships with Fleming as the No. 7 seed, bowing out in the Round of 32 after a 2-6, 6-3, 7-10 loss to Syracuse’s No. 8-ranked Gabriela Knutson/Miranda Ramirez ... ended the year ranked a season-high No. 27 in singles; she was tabbed No. 73 in the ITA preseason rankings and stayed in the rankings all year ... also competed in the NCAA Singles Championship, making her the lone Bruin to compete in both the Singles and Doubles tournaments ... led the squad in overall doubles victories (29) ... was 14-10 at doubles No. 1 ... had a season-high nine straight doubles wins from Sept. 30 to Nov. 5 ... was named the Pac-12 Player of the Week on two occasions: on Feb. 13 (two singles victories at ITA Championships) and on Apr. 24 (2-0 in both singles and doubles against No. 10 Pepperdine and No. 47 USC) ... the pair of honors moved her career tally of Pac-12 weekly honors to four ... in singles, had an 11-7 record against ranked opponents, one of two Bruins (Shibahara) over the .500 mark ... had an unbelievable end to the regular season, going 4-0 in both singles and doubles while chipping in the match-clincher against both USC and Arizona ... was 2-0 in singles in the NCAA Tournament, with wins coming against No. 6 Ole Miss’s Sabrina Machalova (ranked No. 79 in singles) and No. 4 Georgia Tech’s Kenya Jones (No. 60) ... lost her first

2015-16

Redshirted ... with partner and fellow Bruin Ena Shibahara, captured doubles crown at 2016 US Open Junior Championships.

PRIOR TO UCLA

Graduated from Riverside Virtual School … trained with USTA Player Development from 2009 through 2016 under coaches Adam Peterson, Chris Tontz and Leo Azevedo.

PERSONAL

Daughter of Nathan and Gigi Ann (Simpson) ... has two older brothers, Robert and Richard, and one older sister, Natalie ... loves playing tennis “because it is an individual sport and it makes me challenge myself mentally to see where I place myself among other great tennis players.” ... admires Roger Federer and Serena Williams.

Year

Career Singles Record

Career Doubles Record

Duals Tournaments Overall

Duals Tournaments Overall

2016-17 11-7 7-3 18-10 16-4 11-4 27-8 2017-18 16-6 11-5 27-11 14-11 15-4 29-15 Totals 27-13 18-8 45-21 30-15 26-8 56-23 8


PLAYER PROFILES - SOPHOMORES

Sophomores (left to right): Sophie Bendetti, Abi Altick.

ABI

PRIOR TO UCLA

Graduated from K12 International Academy.

ALTICK

PERSONAL

Full name: Helen Abigail Altick … daughter of James and Helena … has two older sisters, Frances and Hannah … decided to attend UCLA because of “the balance between the prestigious academics and athletics,” the beauty of the campus and her love of the coaches and team … describes her greatest athletic thrill to date as winning Girls’ 16 singles title at 2013 Eddie Herr International Championships at IMG Academy (Bradenton, Fla.) … admires Roger Federer and football player Drew Brees … hobbies and interests include traveling, hanging with friends, going to movies, shopping, going to the beach and trying new foods … grandfather played baseball at LSU, while sister, Frances, won NCAA team championship with Vanderbilt tennis … hopes to travel to all seven continents.

5-7 / Sophomore Monroe, La. K12 International Academy

UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

• All-Pac-12 honoree (Honorable Mention - 2018) • 3-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2018) • Career-high Oracle/ITA singles ranking: 31 (twice, last Feb. 20, 2018)

Year

Career Singles Record

Career Doubles Record

Duals Tournaments Overall

Duals Tournaments Overall

2017-18 16-7 14-4 30-11 5-3 6-4 11-7 Totals 16-7 14-4 30-11 5-3 6-4 11-7

2017-18

Had a standout debut in Westwood, posting a 30-11 record in singles (16-7 in dual matches) ... her 30 overall wins in singles play led the squad while her .732 winning percentage was second-best among the Bruins (10+ decisions) ... ITA Scholar-Athlete (3.50 GPA or higher, varsity letterwinner) ... had an extremely successful fall season, going 14-4 in ITA events ... was an All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention ... played primarily at No. 4 in singles, going 13-5 in that position ... was 0-1 at No. 3 and 3-1 at No. 5 ... was an undefeated 7-0 against Pac-12 opponents in singles ... Went 4-7 against ranked opponents ... finished the season ranked No. 77 in the nation in singles ... made her debut in the ITA singles rankings on Nov. 15 at No. 46 ... was ranked inside the top-50 nationally until Apr. 10, a span of 21 weeks ... reached a season-high ranking of No. 31 on Feb. 7, the first singles rankings after the completion of the fall season ... won four straight and 14 of 17 matches to start her UCLA career ... Top singles win of the year came against then No. 21 Vladica Babic of Oklahoma State, who she topped 2-6, 6-3-, 6-3 ... won a season-high seven straight matchups from Feb. 10 to Mar. 10 ... was 11-7 overall in doubles play (5-3 in dual matches) ... was partnered with Ayan Broomfield in seven matches, Terri Fleming in six matches, Alaina Miller for five matches, and Ena Shibahara for two matches ... in dual play, was 4-3 at doubles No. 2 and 1-0 at No. 3 ... made her last doubles appearance on Apr. 14 against Arizona ... won four of her first five doubles matches, including three straight victories paired with Miller at the ITA Regional Championships in San Diego from Oct. 19-23 … selected to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2017, Winter 2018 and Spring 2018.

Abi Altick

9


PLAYER PROFILES - SOPHOMORES

SOPHIE

BENDETTI 5-8 / Sophomore Pacific Palisades, Calif. Oaks Christian School

UCLA CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

• 3-time Athletic Director’s Honor Roll member (last Spring 2018)

2017-18

In her true freshman season, went 0-3 in singles and 1-3 in doubles ... ITA ScholarAthlete (3.50 GPA or higher, varsity letterwinner) ... made her NCAA debut on Sept. 29 against UC Davis’s Shirley Hall, falling 4-6, 4-6 ... made it to the Round of 16 at the Jack Kramer Collegiate Invitational alongside partner Alaina Miller after topping USC’s duo of Constance Branstine/Alexa Corcoleotes by a score of 8-2 ... was partnered with Miller and senior Kristin Wiley for two matches apiece ... made her last appearance of the season on Jan. 19 against UC Santa Barbara, falling 2-6 on doubles court No. 3 alongside Wiley … selected to Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2017, Winter 2018 and Spring 2018.

PRIOR TO UCLA

Attended Oaks Christian School in Westlake Village, Calif. … reached doubles final with partner and sister, Chloe, at CIF-Southern Section (SS) 2016 Individual Championships in Seal Beach, Calif. … named Lions’ team MVP three years in row … recognized as Girls Tennis Player of the Year by Ventura County Star in 2016.

PERSONAL

Daughter of Michael and Vanessa … has one younger sister, Chloe … decided to attend UCLA because it is “one of the most elite schools in the country and offers an amazing tennis program along with so many other opportunities” … describes her greatest athletic thrill to date as reaching the CIF-SS doubles final with her sister in 2016 … admires former basketball player Kobe Bryant and football player Tom Brady … hobbies and interests include surfing, playing the guitar, hiking and trying new foods … grandfather, Jack Kirby, played football at USC … mother has worked for UCLA and uncle attended UCLA … hopes to one day open her own restaurant … aspires to career in business or marketing.

Year

Career Singles Record

Career Doubles Record

Duals Tournaments Overall

Duals Tournaments Overall

2017-18 0-0 0-3 0-3 0-1 1-2 1-3 Totals 0-0 0-3 0-3 0-1 1-2 1-3

10


PLAYER PROFILES - FRESHMEN

Freshmen (left to right): Taylor Johnson, Elysia Bolton, Katie LaFrance.

ELYSIA

TAYLOR

5-9 / Freshman Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. Laurel Springs School

5-10 / Freshman Prescott, Ariz. Connections Academy

BOLTON

JOHNSON

PRIOR TO UCLA

PRIOR TO UCLA

Graduated from Laurel Springs School … Blue-Chip recruit according to TennisRecruiting. net; reached No. 1 in 2018 … career-high ITF junior ranking: 22 (Jan. 29, 2018) … career-high WTA singles ranking: 682 (Aug. 6, 2018) … participated in each junior Grand Slam tournament; made runs to quarterfinal rounds at 2017 US Open Junior Tennis Championships in both singles and doubles competitions … claimed Evansville ITF singles title in 2018 … reached Girls’ 18 singles semifinal at 2017 USTA International Spring Championships in Carson, Calif, where she defeated two Top-100 opponents … garnered Girls’ 18 doubles championships at 2017 Banana Bowl and 2016 Easter Bowl … took Girls’ 18 doubles title at 2016 USTA National Clay Court Championship in Memphis, Tenn. … seized Coral Gables ITF (Copa Badia) Girls’ 18 singles title in 2016; also reached Girls’ 18 final-round match … has earned array of gold, silver and bronze balls at various USTA national championships … won Girls’ 16 doubles title at 2014 USTA National Winter Championships in Scottsdale, Ariz. … represented United States at Les Petits As (Tarbes, France) and World Junior Tennis Finals (Prostejov, Czech Republic) in 2014; reached semifinal round at Les Petits As.

Graduated from Connections Academy … Blue-Chip recruit according to TennisRecruiting. net; reached No. 1 in 2017 and 2018 ... reached doubles quarterfinal round at each of four Grand Slam junior tournaments … claimed Girls’ 18 singles title at 2018 Southern California Junior Sectional Championships (Level 1) in Fountain Valley, Calif. … took singles title at 2018 USTA National Hard Court Championships in San Diego … won doubles title at 2017 USTA Billie Jean King Girls’ 18 National Championships in San Diego to earn automatic bid into US Open … posted runner-up finish in Girls’ 18 doubles competition at 2017 Easter Bowl in Indian Wells, Calif. … Girls’ 18 singles finalist at 2017 USTA International Spring Championships in Carson, Calif. … notched runner-up result in Girls’ 18 doubles tournament at 2016 USTA International Spring Championships in Carson, Calif. … claimed Girls’ 16 singles title at 2015 Henry Talbert Junior Championships (SCTA Level 1) in Palm Desert, Calif. … posted USTA National Selection Tournament championship performances in February (Girls’ 14 doubles) and November (Girls’ 16 singles) of 2014 … took Girls’ 14 singles title at 2014 Southern California Junior Sectional Championships in Fountain Valley, Calif. … veteran of ITF tournaments, including Girls’ 18 doubles wins at International Grass Court Championships (2015), Evert American (2014) and Atlanta (2014).

PERSONAL

PERSONAL

Daughter of Darren and Karen … has one younger sister, Sarah, who represented United States in track and field at 2018 International Wheelchair & Amputee Sports Youth World Games in Athlone, Ireland and hopes to participate in Paralympic Games … decided to attend UCLA because of “its amazing coaches and facilities,” the exclusively-outdoor training, its proximity to USTA Training Center – West in Carson, Calif. and the academic opportunities it provides … describes her greatest athletic thrills to date as winning first-round singles match at Junior Wimbledon and capturing professional singles title at Evansville ITF in front of family … admires Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Kim Clijsters and baseball player Kris Bryant … hobbies and interests include cooking, skiing and doing puzzles.

Daughter of Randy and Trynna … has two older brothers, Steven (Moore) and Travis, and one older sister, Rachel (Moore) … decided to attend UCLA because she loved the tennis program and everything it presented, while the proximity of its campus and athletic facilities gave her “everything [she] wanted” … describes her greatest athletic thrill to date as recording first-round, three-set win at 2016 US Open Junior Championships in front of crowd of supporters … admires Billie Jean King and former basketball player Kobe Bryant … hobbies and interests include cooking, reading, going to the beach, playing with her dog, hanging with friends and family and photography … is a fan of music artists from past decades like Frank Sinatra and The Beatles … father was drafted by NBA’s San Diego Clippers and played professional basketball in Europe, while mother was an all-state track performer in high school and uncles played football at Arizona State and Kansas.

11


PLAYER PROFILES - FRESHMEN

KATIE

LAFRANCE 5-4 / Freshman Little Rock, Ark. Laurel Springs School

PRIOR TO UCLA

Graduated from Connections Academy … Blue-Chip recruit according to TennisRecruiting. net; reached No. 1 in 2017 and 2018 ... reached doubles quarterfinal round at each of four Grand Slam junior tournaments … claimed Girls’ 18 singles title at 2018 Southern California Junior Sectional Championships (Level 1) in Fountain Valley, Calif. … took singles title at 2018 USTA National Hard Court Championships in San Diego … won doubles title at 2017 USTA Billie Jean King Girls’ 18 National Championships in San Diego to earn automatic bid into US Open … posted runner-up finish in Girls’ 18 doubles competition at 2017 Easter Bowl in Indian Wells, Calif. … Girls’ 18 singles finalist at 2017 USTA International Spring Championships in Carson, Calif. … notched runner-up result in Girls’ 18 doubles tournament at 2016 USTA International Spring Championships in Carson, Calif. … claimed Girls’ 16 singles title at 2015 Henry Talbert Junior Championships (SCTA Level 1) in Palm Desert, Calif. … posted USTA National Selection Tournament championship performances in February (Girls’ 14 doubles) and November (Girls’ 16 singles) of 2014 … took Girls’ 14 singles title at 2014 Southern California Junior Sectional Championships in Fountain Valley, Calif. … veteran of ITF tournaments, including Girls’ 18 doubles wins at International Grass Court Championships (2015), Evert American (2014) and Atlanta (2014).

PERSONAL

Daughter of Randy and Trynna … has two older brothers, Steven (Moore) and Travis, and one older sister, Rachel (Moore) … decided to attend UCLA because she loved the tennis program and everything it presented, while the proximity of its campus and athletic facilities gave her “everything [she] wanted” … describes her greatest athletic thrill to date as recording first-round, three-set win at 2016 US Open Junior Championships in front of crowd of supporters … admires Billie Jean King and former basketball player Kobe Bryant … hobbies and interests include cooking, reading, going to the beach, playing with her dog, hanging with friends and family and photography … is a fan of music artists from past decades like Frank Sinatra and The Beatles … father was drafted by NBA’s San Diego Clippers and played professional basketball in Europe, while mother was an all-state track performer in high school and uncles played football at Arizona State and Kansas.

12


2017-18 RECORDS & HONORS

Singles Records Player Abi Altick Gabby Andrews Sophie Bendetti Ayan Broomfield Terri Fleming Jada Hart Alaina Miller Ena Shibahara Kristin Wiley TOTALS

Dual-Match Scoring & Results

#1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 - - 0-1 13-5 3-1 - - - - - 1-0 3-1 - - - - - - - - 4-0 2-3 6-4 - - 1-0 4-9 0-1 - - 2-0 14-6 - - - - - - - - 3-0 15-2 15-6 - - - - - - - - - - 1-2 17-6 15-6 8-10 15-9 13-5 19-5

Duals Tour. Overall 16-7 14-4 30-11 4-1 3-1 7-2 0-0 0-3 0-3 12-7 5-4 17-11 5-10 11-4 16-14 16-6 11-5 27-11 18-2 5-3 23-5 15-6 12-4 27-10 1-2 3-3 4-5 87-41 64-31 151-72

Doubles Records Players Andrews/Wiley Hart/Miller Altick/Fleming Andrews/Broomfield Hart/Shibahara Bendetti/Wiley Broomfield/Fleming Altick/Miller Andrews/Hart Bendetti/Miller Fleming/Hart Andrews/Miller Miller/Shibahara Altick/Shibahara Altick/Broomfield Andrews/Shibahara TOTALS

#1 - - - 1-0 0-2 - - - - - 14-8 - - - - - 15-10

#2 - 0-1 - 10-4 - - 1-0 - - - - - - - 4-3 - 15-8

Individual Doubles Records Abi Altick Gabby Andrews Sophie Bendetti Ayan Broomfield Terri Fleming Jada Hart Alaina Miller Ena Shibahara Kristin Wiley

#3 - - - - - 0-1 - - - - - 1-1 19-1 1-0 - 1-0 22-3

Duals Tour. Overall 0-0 3-1 3-1 0-1 2-1 2-2 0-0 3-3 3-3 11-4 1-1 12-5 0-2 7-1 7-3 0-1 0-1 0-2 1-0 2-1 3-1 0-0 3-1 3-1 0-0 6-1 6-1 0-0 1-1 1-1 14-8 0-1 14-9 1-1 0-0 1-1 19-1 0-0 19-1 1-0 0-0 1-0 4-3 0-0 4-3 1-0 0-0 1-0 52-21 28-13 80-34

Against Ranked Singles Opponents 11-7 23-8 1-3 19-9 20-13 29-15 26-6 28-4 3-3

Abi Altick Gabby Andrews Sophie Bendetti Ayan Broomfield Terri Fleming Jada Hart Alaina Miller Ena Shibahara Kristin Wiley

4-7 2-5 0-7 11-7 1-3 17-8 0-1

All-Pac-12 Honors First Team

Michaela Bayerlova, WSU Stacey Fung, WASH Michaela Gordon, STAN Julia Rosenqvist, CAL Ena Shibahara, UCLA Gabby Smith, USC

Second Team

Lauryn John-Baptiste, ASU Anna Bright, C AL Jada Hart, UCLA Meiissa Lord, STAN Alyssa Tobita, ORE Vanessa Wong, WASH

Honorable Mention

Abi Altick, UCLA Emily Arbuthnott, STAN Terri Fleming, UCLA Nicole Fossa-Huergo, ASU Ilze Hattingh, ASU Olivia Hauger, CAL Emma Higuchi, STAN Caroline Lampl, STAND Alaina Miller, UCLA Daniela Nasser, ORE Alexia Petrovic, UTAH Shweta Sangwan, ORE Janice Shin, STAN Rianna Valdes, USC

Date Jan. 19 Jan. 26 Jan. 27 Feb. 2 Feb. 9 Feb. 10 Feb. 11 Feb. 16 Feb. 23 Feb. 24 Mar. 9 Mar. 10 Mar. 14 Mar. 18 Mar. 24 Mar. 25 Apr. 6 Apr. 8 Apr. 13 Apr. 14 Apr. 18 Apr. 21 Apr. 26 Apr. 27 Apr. 28 May 11 May 12 May 17 May 19

Opponent Result, Score UC SANTA BARBARA W, 4-2 NC State@ W, 4-0 Northwestern@ W. 4-3 SAINT MARY’S W, 4-0 No. 8 Texas Tech L, 2-4 No. 16 Ole Miss L, 3-4 No. 19 South Carolina W, 4-1 LOYOLA MARYMOUNT W, 4-0 FRESNO STATE W, 4-0 No. 34 CALIFORNIA W, 5-2 at No. 46 Stanford* L, 3-4 at California* W, 4-3 No. 19 OKLAHOMA STATE L, 2-4 No. 20 OREGON* W, 4-0 No. 39 WASHINGTON STATE* W, 4-0 No. 47 WASHINGTON* W, 4-0 at Utah* W, 4-3 at Colorado* W, 7-0 No. 33 ARIZONA STATE* W, 4-0 ARIZONA* W, 4-0 at No. 10 Pepperdine W, 4-3 No. 47 USC* W, 4-0 No. 30 Oregon& W, 4-3 No. 35 Arizona State& W, 4-1 No. 16 Stanford& L, 2-4 FRESNO STATE% W, 4-0 No. 25 BAYLOR% W. 4-0 No. 6 Ole Miss% W, 4-1 No. 4 Georgia Tech% L, 3-4

Home matches in ALL CAPS * Denotes Pac-12 Match @ ITA Kick-Off Weekend & Pac-12 Tournament % NCAA Championships

Pac-12 Standings 1. Stanford 2. UCLA 3. Arizona State 4. California 5. Washington State Oregon Washington USC 9. Colorado 10. Utah 11. Arizona

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

Oracle/ITA National Team Rankings

Year-End Awards

Ena Shibahara, UCLA Arbuthnott/Gordon, STAN Michaela Gordon, STAN Lele Forood, STAN

Singles Player of the Year Doubles Team of the Year Freshman of the Year Coach of the Year

13

1. Stanford 2. Vanderbilt 3. North Carolina 4. Duke 5. Georgia Tech 6. Texas 7. Georgia 8. Ole Miss 9. Texas Tech 10. UCLA 11. Florida 12. South Carolina 13. Pepperdine 14. Oklahoma State 15. Northwestern


2018 RESULTS

The 2017-18 Bruins

#17 UCLA 4, UC Santa Barbara 2 Jan. 19, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. Dubavets/Da Silveira (UCSB) def. Fleming/Hart (UCLA) 6-4 2. Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. Sentenac/Volodko (UCSB) 6-2 3. Yamada/Atanasson (UCSB) def. Bendetti/Wiley (UCLA) 6-2 Singles competition 1. #119 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Palina Dubavets (UCSB) 6-2, 7-5 2. #100 Terri Fleming (UCLA) def. Natalie Da Silveira (UCSB) 6-1, 6-3 3. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Amanda Atanasson (UCSB) 6-2, 6-1 4. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) vs. Elizaveta Volodko (UCSB) 6-7 (4-7), 2-4, unfinished 5. Gabby Andrews (UCLA) def. Lise Sentenac (UCSB) 6-3, 6-1 6. Stephanie Yamada (UCSB) def. Kristin Wiley (UCLA) 6-3, 6-4

#16 UCLA 4, NC State 0 Jan. 26, 2018 @ Lexington, Ky. Doubles competition 1. #9 Rogers/Wiktorin (NCST) def. #7 Hart/Shibahara (UCLA) 6-2 2. Broomfield/Fleming (UCLA) def. Rebol/Reami (NCST) 7-6 (7-0) 3. Miller/Andrews (UCLA) def.Moldovan/Grimm (NCST) 6-4 Singles competition 1. #16 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. Anna Rogers (NCST) 6-2, 6-4 2. #119 Jada Hart (UCLA) vs. Adriana Reami (NCST) 6-4, 5-2, unfinished 3. #100 Terri Fleming (UCLA) def. Helene Grimm (NCST) 6-4, 6-1 4. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. #61 Claudia Wiktorin (NCST) 6-3, 6-3 5. Amanda Rebol (NCST) vs. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) no result 6. Bianca Moldovan (NCST) vs. #76 Alaina Miller (UCLA) no result

#16 UCLA 4, Northwestern 3 Jan. 27, 2018 @ Lexington, Ky. Doubles competition 1. #4 Larner/Lipp (NU) def. #7 Hart/Shibahara (UCLA) 7-5 2. Broomfield/Fleming (UCLA) vs. #8 Chatt/Or (NU) 6-5, unfinished

3. Doshi/Byrne (NU) def. Miller/Andrews (UCLA) 6-4 Singles competition 1. #16 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. #60 Lee Or (NU) 7-5, 6-1 2. Erin Larner (NU) def. #119 Jada Hart (UCLA) 5-7, 6-3, 7-6 (7-3) 3. #92 Maddie Lipp (NU) def. #100 Terri Fleming (UCLA) 6-3, 6-4 4. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Inci Ogut (NU) 6-3, 6-3 5. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. #99 Rheeya Doshi (NU) 6-3, 6-3 6. #76 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Alex Chatt (NU) 6-4, 3-6, 6-4

#13 UCLA 4, St. Mary’s 0 Feb. 2, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. Fleming/Hart (UCLA) def. Abdelouahid/Kozyreva (SMC) 6-4 2. Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. Clement/Critser (SMC) 6-1 3. Altick/Miller (UCLA) vs. Manji/McIntyre (SMC) 4-5, unfinished Singles competition 1. #119 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Marila Kozyreva (SMC) 6-2, 6-3 2. #100 Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Clementine Clement (SMC) 2-6, 6-1, 1-2, unfinished 3. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Kareena Manji (SMC) 6-1, 6-4 4. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) vs. Emma Critser (SMC) 6-3, 4-4, unfinished 5. #76 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Vanessa Nommensen (SMC) 6-1, 6-1 6. Gabby Andrews (UCLA) vs. Aubane Ville (SMC) 6-2, 3-3, unfinished

#8 Texas Tech 4, #13 UCLA 2 Feb. 9, 2018 @ Madison, Wis. Doubles competition 1. #16 Federici/Dvorak (TTU) def. Fleming/Hart (UCLA) 7-6 (8-6) 2. Talaba/Maltby (TTU) def. Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) 6-1 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Valenstein/Rush (TTU) 7-6 (7-2) Singles competition 1. #12 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. #13 Gabriela Talaba (TTU) 6-2, 6-4 14

2. #44 Felicity Maltby (TTU) def. #57 Jada Hart (UCLA) 7-5, 6-2 3. #72 Sabrina Federici (TTU) vs. #74 Terri Fleming (UCLA) 5-7, 6-2, 2-3, unfinished 4. Alex Valenstein (TTU) def. #94 Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) 7-6 (7-2), 6-4 5. #108 Sarah Dvorak (TTU) def. #31 Abi Altick (UCLA) 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 6. #93 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Lana Rush (TTU) 1-6, 6-2, 6-3

#16 Ole Miss 4, #13 UCLA 3 Feb. 10, 2018 @ Madison, Wis. Doubles competition 1. Fleming/Hart (UCLA) def. #11 Bortles/Hartono (MISS) 6-3 2. Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. #27 Suk/Machalova (MISS) 6-2 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) vs. Jandric/Janatova (MISS) 5-3, unfinished Singles competition 1. #25 Arianne Hartono (MISS) def. #12 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) 6-1, 6-4 2. #57 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Natalie Suk (MISS) 6-2, 6-2 3. Sabina Machalova (MISS) def. #74 Terri Fleming (UCLA) 6-3, 6-2 4. #124 Tea Jandric (MISS) def. #94 Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) 5-7, 6-4, 6-2 5. #31 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Alexa Bortles (MISS) 6-1, 6-4 6. Anna Vrbenska (MISS) def. #93 Alaina Miller (UCLA) 6-2, 6-2

#13 UCLA 4, #19 South Carolina 1 Feb. 11, 2018 @ Madison, Wis. Doubles competition 1. Fleming/Hart (UCLA) def. Chinellato/Martins (SC) 7-6 (7-4) 2. Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. Berg/Cline (SC) 7-5 3. Davies/Rohrabacher (SC) def. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) 6-3 Singles competition 1. #12 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. #118 Mia Horvit (SC) 6-3, 6-2 2. #57 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. #38 Hadley Berg (SC) 6-4, 6-0 3. #74 Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. I. Gamarra Martins (SC) 6-3, 5-3, unfinished 4. #31 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Silvia Chinellato (SC) 6-4, 0-1, retired 5. #93 Alaina Miller (UCLA) vs. Megan Davies (SC) 4-6, 4-4,


2018 RESULTS unfinished 6. Rachel Rohrabacher (SC) def. Gabby Andrews (UCLA) 6-1, 6-4

#9 UCLA 4, LMU 0 Feb. 16, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. Broomfield/Andrews (UCLA) def. #24 Miroshnichenko/ Voracek (LMU) 7-6 (7-4) 2. Anderson/Romeka (LMU) def. Hart/Miller (UCLA) 6-4 3. Altick/Shibahara (UCLA) def. De Lucas/Tumosa (LMU) 6-0 Singles competition 1. #12 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) vs. #22 V. Miroshnichenko (LMU) 6-2, 3-4, unfinished 2. #57 Jada Hart (UCLA) vs. #105 Eva Marie Voracek (LMU) 3-6, 3-2, unfinished 3. #94 Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Siobhan Anderson (LMU) 6-2, 6-3 4. #31 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Anna Romeka (LMU) 6-3, 6-0 5. #93 Alaina Miller (UCLA) vs. Yesica De Lucas (LMU) 6-1, 4-6, unfinished 6. Gabby Andrews (UCLA) def. Camila Tumosa (LMU) 6-1, 6-2

#9 UCLA 4, Fresno St. 0 Feb. 23, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #38 Hart/Fleming (UCLA) def. #49 Wilson/Lawson (FRES) 6-3 2. #24 Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Dario/Stloukalova (FRES) 5-2, unfinished 3. Shibahara/Miller (UCLA) def. Triebe/Noble (FRES) 6-0 Singles competition 1. #11 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) vs. Emma Wilson (FRES) 7-5, 0-2, unfinished 2. #73 Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Katerina Stloukalova (FRES) 6-3, 1-1, unfinished 3. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Juliane Triebe (FRES) 6-0, 6-4 4. #40 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Georgia Lawson (FRES) 6-2, 6-1 5. #99 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Alessia Dario (FRES) 6-2, 6-0 6. Gabby Andrews (UCLA) vs. Olivia Noble (FRES) 6-4, 2-1, unfinished

#9 UCLA 5, #34 CAL 2 Feb. 24, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #38 Hart/Fleming (UCLA) def. Hauger/Rosenqvist (CAL) 6-3 2. #24 Broomfield/Andrews (UCLA) vs. Bright/Glozman (CAL) 4-5, unfinished 3. Shibahara/Miller (UCLA) def. Dunk/Smith (CAL) 6-3 Singles competition 1. #11 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. #29 Anna Bright (CAL) 6-3, 6-3 2. #59 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. #42 Olivia Hauger (CAL) 6-3, 6-1 3. Julia Rosenqvist (CAL) def. #73 Terri Fleming (UCLA) 6-2, 2-6, 6-4 4. Maria Smith (CAL) def. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) 7-5, 1-6, 1-0 (10-6) 5. #40 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Vivian Glozman (CAL) 6-4, 6-1 6. #99 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Hana Mraz (CAL) 6-1, 6-4

#46 Stanford, #13 UCLA 3 March 9, 2018 @ Stanford, Calif. Doubles competition 1. #22 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) def. #3 Arbuthnott/Gordon (STAN) 6-4 2. Lampl/Yee (STAN) def. Altick/Broomfield (UCLA) 6-3 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Higuchi/Shin (STAN) 6-3

Singles competition 1. #17 Michaela Gordon (STAN) def. #8 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) 2-6, 6-2, 6-3 2. Caroline Lampl (STAN) def. #41 Jada Hart (UCLA) 6-2, 6-4 3. #33 Emily Arbuthnott (STAN) def. #104 Terri Fleming (UCLA) 3-6, 6-2, 6-4 4. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Janice Shin (STAN) 6-1, 6-3 5. Emma Higuchi (STAN) def. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) 6-2, 6-4 6. #118 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Kimberly Yee (STAN) 6-3, 6-2

#13 UCLA 4, CAL 3 March 10, 2018 @ Berkeley, Calif. Doubles competition 1. Hauger/Rosenqvist (CAL) def. #22 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) 6-4 2. Altick/Aan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Bright/Glozman (CAL) 7-6 (7-5) 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Dunk/Smith (CAL) 6-2 Singles competition 1. #68 Julia Rosenqvist (CAL) def. #8 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) 6-3, 6-4 2. #41 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. #35 Anna Bright (CAL) 4-6, 6-1, 6-2 3. #32 Olivia Hauger (CAL) def. #104 Terri Fleming (UCLA) 6-1, 3-6, 6-2 4. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Maria Smith (CAL) 6-1, 6-4 5. Vivian Glozman (CAL) def. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) 1-6, 7-6 (7-4), 3-0, retired 6. #118 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Jasie Dunk (CAL) 6-1, 6-2

#19 Oklahoma St., #15 UCLA 2 March 14, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #19 Babic/Blanco (OKST) def. #22 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) 7-6 (7-4) 2. Altick/Broomfield (UCLA) def. Guinart/Stresnakova (OKST) 7-5 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. McCray/Hornung (OKST) 6-2 Singles competition 1. #38 Vladica Babic (OKST) def. #8 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) 6-3, 6-4 2. #74 Megan McCray (OKST) def. #41 Jada Hart (UCLA) 6-3, 6-2 3. Katarina Stresnakova (OKST) def. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) 5-7, 6-4, 6-1 4. #96 Marina Guinart (OKST) def. #104 Terri Fleming (UCLA) 6-4, 6-4 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Sofia Blanco (OKST) 6-3, 5-7, 3-5, unfinished 6. #118 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Shir Hornung (OKST) 6-1, 6-0

#15 UCLA 4, #20 Oregon 0 March 18, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #22 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) vs. #61 Eshet/Sangwan (ORE) 4-4, unfinished 2. Altick/Broomfield (UCLA) def. Kahfiani/Tobita (ORE) 6-3 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Rose/Wagner (ORE) 6-4 Singles competition 1. #8 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. Alyssa Tobita (ORE) 6-1, 6-1 2. #41 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Shweta Sangwan (ORE) 6-2, 6-4 3. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) vs. Julia Eshet (ORE) 1-6, 6-2, 3-1, unfinished 4. #104 Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Julia Lilien (ORE) 6-4, 2-6, 2-1, unfinished 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Daniela Nasser (ORE) 6-4, 4-4, unfinished 6. #118 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Paiton Wagner (ORE) 6-3, 6-1

#13 UCLA 4, #39 Washington St. 0 March 24, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #15 Hart/Fleming (UCLA) def. Michalkova/Ates (WSU) 6-4 15

2. Yusupova/Mylonas (WSU) def. Altick/Broomfield (UCLA) 6-3 3. Shibahara/Miller (UCLA) def. Bayerlova/Miksovska (WSU) 7-6 (7-0) Singles competition 1. #13 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. #43 Michaela Bayerlova (WSU) 6-3, 6-4 2. #37 Jada Hart (UCLA) vs. Guzal Yusupova (WSU) 6-4, 3-2, unfinished 3. Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Tiffany Mylonas (WSU) 6-4, 4-4, unfinished 4. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Barbora Michalkova (WSU) 6-3, 6-2 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Aneta Miksovska (WSU) 6-1, 5-3, unfinished 6. #100 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Melisa Ates (WSU) 6-0, 6-0

#13 UCLA 4, #47 Washington 0 March 25, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #15 Hart/Fleming (UCLA) vs. #32 Kobayashi/Wong (WASH) 4-3, unfinished 2. Broomfield/Altick (UCLA) def. Hance/Prokopuik (WASH) 6-1 3. Shibahara/Miller (UCLA) def. Fung/Kopcalic (WASH) 6-0 Singles competition 1. #13 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) vs. #62 Vanessa Wong (WASH) 3-6, 2-2, unfinished 2. #37 Jada Hart (UCLA) vs. Miki Kobayashi (WASH) 6-3, 3-2, unfinished 3. Terri Fleming (UCLA) def. Alexis Prokopuik (WASH) 6-2, 6-0 4. #46 Abi Altick (UCLA) vs. Kenadi Hance (WASH) 6-3, 2-1, unfinished 5. #100 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Katarina Kopcalic (WASH) 6-1, 6-0 6. Kristin Wiley (UCLA) def. Angela Li (WASH) 6-1, 6-0

#14 UCLA 4, Utah 3 April 6, 2018 @ Salt Lake City, Utah Doubles competition 1. Petrovic/Cheng (UTAH) def. #10 Hart/Fleming (UCLA) 6-4 2. Calton/Turley (UTAH) def. Broomfield/Altick (UCLA) 6-3 3. Shibahara/Miller (UCLA) def. Chisholm/Robertson (UTAH) 6-4 Singles competition 1. Alexia Petrovic (UTAH) def. #11 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 2. #33 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Brianna Chisholm (UTAH) 7-6, 6-1 3. #113 Terri Fleming (UCLA) def. Jena Cheng (UTAH) 6-1, 6-4 4. #50 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Taylor Calton (UTAH) 6-7, 6-2, 6-2 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Whitney Turley (UTAH) 6-2, 1-6, 6-3 6. Victoria Robertson (UTAH) def. Kristin Wiley (UCLA) 6-2, 6-1

#14 UCLA 7, Colorado 0 April 8, 2018 @ Boulder, Colo. Doubles competition 1. #10 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) def. Beck/Hule (COLO) 6-0 2. Daniel/Oleynik (COLO) vs. Altick/Broomfield (UCLA) 2-4, unfinished 3. Andrews/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Ronaldson/Wojcik(COLO) 6-2 Singles competition 1. #11 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. Linda Huang (COLO) 7-5, 7-5 2. #33 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Chloe Hule (COLO) 6-3, 7-6 (7-3) 3. #113 Terri Fleming (UCLA) def. Jeannez Daniel (COLO) 7-5, 6-2 4. #50 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Louise Ronaldson (COLO) 6-3, 6-3 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Brigitte Beck (COLO) 6-3, 6-2 6. Gabby Andrews (UCLA) def. Ilana Oleynik (COLO) 6-2, 6-3


2018 RESULTS

#15 UCLA 4, #33 ASU 0 April 13, 2018 @ Tempe, Ariz. Doubles competition 1. #11 Hart/Fleming (UCLA) def. #21 John-Baptiste/ Hattingh (ASU) 6-1 2. #48 Broomfield/Andrews (UCLA) vs. #49 Kolarova/ Slaysman (ASU) 3-4, unfinished 3. Shibahara/Miller (UCLA) def. Fossa Huergo/Klanecek (ASU) 6-3 Singles competition 1. #16 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) vs. #53 Lauryn John-Baptiste (ASU) 6-4, 6-7 (1-7), 0-1, unfinished 2. #37 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Ilze Hattingh (ASU) 1-6, 6-0, 6-4 3. #122 Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Nicole Fossa Huergo (ASU) 6-4, 2-6, 5-4, unfinished 4. #52 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Savannah Slaysman (ASU) 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Sasa Klanecek (ASU) 6-2, 6-4 6. Gabby Andrews (UCLA) vs. Tereza Kolarova (ASU) 5-7, 6-3, 3-4, unfinished

#15 UCLA 4, Arizona 0 April 14, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #11 Hart/Fleming (UCLA) def. Lewis/Van Aelst (ARIZ) 6-0 2. #48 Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. Chypyha/ Wesbrooks (ARIZ) 6-1 3. Shibahara/Altick (UCLA) vs. Corley/Thomas (ARIZ) 3-2, unfinished Singles competition 1. #16 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. Devin Chypyha (ARIZ) 6-2, 6-1 2. #37 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Mary Lewis (ARIZ) 6-3, 6-3 3. #122 Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Paris Corley (ARIZ) 7-5, 3-2, unfinished 4. #52 Abi Altick (UCLA) vs. Camila Wesbrooks (ARIZ) 6-0, 1-6, 3-2, unfinished 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Marie Van Aelst (ARIZ) 7-5, 0-3, unfinished 6. Gabby Andrews (UCLA) def. Talya Zandberg (ARIZ) 6-0, 6-1

#14 UCLA 4, #10 Pepperdine 3 April 18, 2018 @ Malibu, Calif. Doubles competition 1. #7 Hart/Fleming (UCLA) def. #8 Stefani/Sherif (PEP) 6-4 2. #90 Levashova/Milovanovic (PEP) def. #52 Broomfield/ Andrews (UCLA) 6-3 3. Shibahara/Miller (UCLA) def. Lahey/Lekaj (PEP) 7-6 Singles competition 1. #15 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. #25 Luisa Stefani (PEP) 6-2, 6-7, 6-3 2. #35 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. #16 Ashley Lahey (PEP) 4-6, 6-4, 6-4 3. #19 Mayar Sherif (PEP) def. Terri Fleming (UCLA) 6-2, 6-4 4. #67 Evgeniya Levashova (PEP) def. #55 Abi Altick (UCLA) 6-4, 6-2 5. #88 Laura Gulbe (PEP) def. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) 6-3, 6-3 6. #98 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Dzina Milovanovic (PEP) 4-6, 6-3, 6-3

#14 UCLA 4, #47 USC 0 April 21, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #7 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) def. #46 Kulikov/Valdes (USC) 6-4 2. #52 Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. Smith/Weismann (USC) 6-1 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) vs. Branstine/Westby (USC) 5-4, unfinished

Singles competition 1. #15 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) vs. #36 Gabby Smith (USC) 6-2, 3-4, unfinished 2. #35 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. #91 Rianna Valdes (USC) 6-3, 6-2 3. Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Becca Weismann (USC) 6-7 (3-7), 1-0, unfinished 4. #55 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Angela Kulikov (USC) 6-2, 6-0 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Madison Westby (USC) 6-1, 6-2 6. #98 Alaina Miller (UCLA) vs. Constance Branstine (USC) 7-6 (7-5), 3-1, unfinished

#13 UCLA 4, #30 Oregon 3 April 26, 2018 @ Ojai, Calif. Doubles competition 1. #6 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) vs. #69 Sangwan/Eshet (ORE) 4-3, unfinished 2. #56 Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. #88 Kahfiani/Tobita (ORE) 6-1 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Lilien/Wagner (ORE) 6-4 Singles competition 1. #13 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. #43 Alyssa Tobita (ORE) 6-4, 6-2 2. Shweta Sangwan (ORE) def. #30 Jada Hart (UCLA) 6-3, 6-1 3. Julia Lilien (ORE) def. Terri Fleming (UCLA) 6-4, 7-5 4. Daniela Nasser (ORE) def. #59 Abi Altick (UCLA) 7-5, 6-2 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Julia Eshet (ORE) 7-5, 6-4 6. #117 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Paiton Wagner (ORE) 6-2, 7-5

#13 UCLA 4, #35 ASU 1 April 27, 2018 @ Ojai, Calif. Doubles competition 1. Hattingh/John-Baptiste (ASU) def. Fleming/Hart (UCLA) 6-2 2. Kolarova/Slaysman (ASU) def. Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) 6-4 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Fossa Huergo/Klanecek (ASU) 6-3 Singles competition 1. Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. Lauryn John-Baptiste (ASU) 6-1, 0-6, 6-3 2. Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Ilze Hattingh (ASU) 6-4, 6-4 3. Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Nicole Fossa Huergo (ASU) 6-1, 2-6, 5-6, unfinished 4. Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Savannah Slaysman (ASU) 6-0, 6-1 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Sasa Klanecek (ASU) 5-7, 5-5, unfinished 6. Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Tereza Kolarova (ASU) 6-2, 6-3

#16 Stanford 4, #13 UCLA 2 April 28, 2018 @ Ojai, Calif. Doubles competition 1. #6 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) def. #2 Arbuthnott/Gordon (STAN) 7-6 (9-7) 2. #78 Lampl/Yee (STAN) def. #56 Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) 6-4 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Lord/Shin (STAN) 6-4 Singles competition 1. Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. Lauryn John-Baptiste (ASU) 6-1, 0-6, 6-3 2. Jada Hart (UCLA) def. Ilze Hattingh (ASU) 6-4, 6-4 3. Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Nicole Fossa Huergo (ASU) 6-1, 2-6, 5-6, unfinished 4. Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Savannah Slaysman (ASU) 6-0, 6-1 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Sasa Klanecek (ASU) 5-7, 5-5, unfinished 6. Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Tereza Kolarova (ASU) 6-2, 6-3

#14 UCLA 4, Fresno State 0 May 11, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. #7 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) def. #50 Lawson/Wilson (FRES) 6-4 2. #64 Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Dario/Triebe (FRES) 5-2, unfinished 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Noble/Stloukalova (FRES) 6-1 16

Singles competition 1. #9 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. Emma Wilson (FRES) 6-0, 7-6 (8-6) 2. #33 Jada Hart (UCLA) vs. Katerina Stloukalova (FRES) 6-4, 2-5, unfinished 3. Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Juliane Triebe (FRES) 6-2, 4-6, unfinished 4. #67 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Ndindi Ndunda (FRES) 6-0, 6-0 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Georgia Lawson (FRES) 6-2, 5-4, unfinished 6. #121 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Olivia Noble (FRES) 6-0, 6-1

#14 UCLA 4, #25 Baylor 0 May 11, 2018 @ Los Angeles Tennis Center Doubles competition 1. Sujova/Testa (BAY) def. #7 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) 6-4 2. #64 Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. Hinojosa/Van Zyl (BAY) 6-4 3. Miller/Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. Shakhraichuk/Sorokolet (BAY) 6-3 Singles competition 1. #9 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) def. Emma Wilson (FRES) 6-0, 7-6 (8-6) 2. #33 Jada Hart (UCLA) vs. Katerina Stloukalova (FRES) 6-4, 2-5, unfinished 3. Terri Fleming (UCLA) vs. Juliane Triebe (FRES) 6-2, 4-6, unfinished 4. #67 Abi Altick (UCLA) def. Ndindi Ndunda (FRES) 6-0, 6-0 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) vs. Georgia Lawson (FRES) 6-2, 5-4, unfinished 6. #121 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Olivia Noble (FRES) 6-0, 6-1

#14 UCLA 4, #6 Ole Miss 1 May 17, 2018 @ Winston-Salem, N.C. Doubles competition 1. #5 Hartono/Bortles (MISS) vs. #7 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) 3-5, unfinished 2. #90 Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. #64 Machalova/ Jandric (MISS) 6-4 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Suk/Vrbenska (MISS) 6-4 Singles competition 1. #7 Arianne Hartono (MISS) vs. #9 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) 6-7 (4-7), 7-6 (7-3), 2-2, unfinished 2. #33 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. #79 Sabina Machalova (MISS) 6-2, 6-2 3. Tea Jandric (MISS) vs. Terri Fleming (UCLA) 6-7 (3-7), 6-3, 2-3, unfinished 4. Anna Vrbenska (MISS) def. #67 Abi Altick (UCLA) 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 5. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) def. Natalie Suk (MISS) 6-2, 6-0 6. #121 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Alexa Bortles (MISS) 6-7 (4-7), 6-4, 6-3

#4 Georgia Tech 4, #14 UCLA 3 May 19, 2018 @ Winston-Salem, N.C. Doubles competition 1. #1 Hourigan/Jones (GT) def. #7 Fleming/Hart (UCLA) 6-4 2. #64 Andrews/Broomfield (UCLA) def. #48 Jarlskog/Flores (GT) 6-2 3. Miller/Shibahara (UCLA) def. Otsuka/Renaud (GT) 6-4 Singles competition 1. #14 Paige Hourigan (GT) def. #9 Ena Shibahara (UCLA) 3-6, 6-3, 6-3 2. #33 Jada Hart (UCLA) def. #60 Kenya Jones (GT) 6-1, 6-3 3. Johnnise Renaud (GT) def. Terri Fleming (UCLA) 6-1, 6-3 4. #125 Ida Jarlskog (GT) def. #67 Abi Altick (UCLA) 7-6 (8-6), 0-6, 6-3 5. Nami Otsuka (GT) def. Ayan Broomfield (UCLA) 7-5, 7-6 (7-2) 6. #121 Alaina Miller (UCLA) def. Victoria Flores (GT) 6-3, 6-4


ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS

A

Algazi, Jessica Altick, Abi Amaral, Annemarie Anderson, Robin Andrews, Gabby Anglin, Jody

B

Baker, Jenny Barg, Penny Bartel, Colinne Basica, Amanda Bell, Becky Bendetti, Sophie Bercek, Daniela Blount, Rene Brady, Jennifer Bradley, Megan Broomfield, Ayan Bruno, Andrea

C

Campbell, Cindy Carleton, Jackie Ceccato, Debbie Ceniza, Marnie Cetale, Dominique Chi, Jane Chi, Stephanie Chiles, Meredith Cooper, Allyson Cooper, Annica

D

Dewis, Karen Dockendorf, Jordan Dolehide, Courtney Donahue, Jennifer Doty, Jill

Jane Chi

Dreyer, Kirsten Duesler, Becky Duvall, Jeanne

E

Emmons, Jessica Esseghir, Feriel

F

Fisher, Lauren Fleming, Holly Fleming, Terri

1984, 1985 2018 1987 2012-15 2017, 2018 1996, 1997 1992, 1993 1983 1986-88 1998-2000 1978-1980 2018 2004, 2005 1978 2014, 2015 2002 2018 1981, 1982 1980-82 2003, 2004 1987 1989-1992 2014 1993-95 1995, 1996 1993 1985-88 1997-2000 1981-84 2009 2011-14 1998-2000 1987

Karen Dewis

1988-1991 2007, 2008 1978 1988-1990 2003-04 2001-04 2012, 2013 2015-18

Foley, Cammie Freudenberg, Brandi Fritz-Knockow, Mariko Fuchs, Jennifer

G

Gallant, Kerry Gerken, Barbara Gilbert, Dana Godbey, Chelsea Goldt, Lara Gordon, Laura Gordon, Shannon Gray, Alyson Gray, Shana Gregg, Sarah

H

Hain, Michelle Harrison, Catherine Hart, Jada Hawley, Catherine Henricksson, Ann Hickey, Noelle

1990-93 1996-99 2001, 2002 1986, 1987

Lin, Tracy Lind, Anna-Viktoria Loncaric, Anya Luca, Laura Ludloff, Heather Lumpkin, Elizabeth

1995, 1996 1983 1978, 1979 2001 1989 2003-06 1978, 1979 1996-98 1996-98 2002-05

M

Magill, Maia Mall, Anne Manset, Helena Marinova, Petya May, Alysia McCalla, Iwalani McGoodwin, Alex McPhillips, Kyle

Hilt, Jenny Hoffpauir, Stephanie Howard, Kristy Huebner, Karin Hy, Patricia

J

Jablonow, Jill Jannone, Michelle Jellen, Stacey Joelson, Ashley Johansson, Maya Jolson, Kate Jones, McCall Joshi, Shilpa

K

Keil, Kathrin Kirsch, Dylan Kocsis, Kati Kriva, Andrea

L

LaFranchi, Debbie LaFranchi, Maria Lewis, Lynn Lester, Megan Liebermann, Andrea

2015, 2016 1992 1980-83 1999-2002 1989 1989-1992 2004-08 2013-16

S

Sampras, Stella Schmidt, Elizabeth Schnack, Yasmin Seguso, Carling Shaffer, Kelly Shibahara, Ena Snelson, Kathy Solomon, Shelly Spadea, Diana Spears, Abigail Stadler, Liz Starrett, Susie Stiefel, Michelle

T

Tenny, Robin Thomas, Jane Thomas, Morgan Tu, Helen

1987 2013-16 2017, 2018 2000-02 1979 2010, 2011

U

Urban, Joni Abigail Spears

Cammie Foley

2005-08 2006-09 2003-05 2016 1982, 1983 2005-08

Mendez, Anicia Milholland, Allegra Miller, Alaina Minter, Elizabeth Montez, Pamela Morton, Skylar Moyers, Jennifer

Kati Kocsis

N

1991-94 2010 1994 1980-83 1984-86

Nicholson, Beth

O

O’Brien, Kathy O’Daly, Kathy O’Meara, Catherine Ouwendijk, Wendy

1980-82 1994, 1995 1994 2006-09 2009-2011 2003, 2004 2011, 2012 2003, 2004

P

Pantic, Nina Patterson, Cameron Phebus, Keri Po, Kimberly Popescu, Cristina Poppelbaum, Sara

R

1981, 1982 2013 1997, 1998 1983

Rajfer, Becky Ray, Amber Ray, Kaitlin Remynse, Andrea Rosen, Brittany Rostovsky, LeeAnn Roubanova, Katia Rudolph, Kelly

1989-1991 1985-88 1982-85 2011-13 1989

17

V

Susie Starrett

1993-96 1990, 1991 2016-18 1984 2010-13 2012, 2013 1987 1989 1979-1982 1995-97 1986-89 1987, 1988 2009-2011 2016 1993-96 1990, 1991 1998-2001 1982 1998 2004-07 2012-15 2008-2011 2008-2009 1992, 1993 1997-99 1995-98

Van Nguyen, Chanelle

Jane Thomas

W

Walker, Angela Walker, Sara Walters, Karina Wetmore, Stephanie Wild, Susi Wiley, Kristin Wilkins, Jannell

Y

Yaftali, Nina Yang, Sarah Yaroshuk, Paige

Z

Zalameda, Riza Zlebnik, Zana

1988-1991 1997-2000 2007-2010 2009-2012 2014-16 2017, 2018 1978 1981, 1982 1994, 1995 2000 1980, 1981 1994, 1995 2000, 2001 1978 1984-87 2011-14 1991-93 1985-88 2012-15

Riza Zalameda

1980 2000-03 1985 2007-09 2003 2015-18 1987 2003, 2004 2007, 2008 1992-96 2005-08 2000, 2001


RECORD VS. OPPONENTS / UCLA HEAD COACHING HISTORY

Record vs. Opponents Arizona 65-8 Arizona State 58-18 Arkansas 2-0 Army West Point 2-0 BYU 5-2 Baylor 7-6 Boise State 2-0 Boston College 1-0 Boston University 2-0 Brown 1-0 Buffalo 1-0 California 43-35 Cal Poly 5-0 CSU Bakersfield 1-0 CSU Dominguez Hills 1-0 CSU Fullerton 21-0 CSU Los Angeles 4-0 CSU Northridge 8-0 Clemson 6-3 Colorado 8-0 Denver 1-0 Duke 6-4 Eastern Kentucky 1-0 Florida 12-14 Florida State 1-0

Fresno State 15-2 Georgia 5-8 Georgia Tech 3-4 Harvard 4-0 Hawai’i 3-0 Hawai’i Pacific 1-0 Idaho 1-0 Illinois 1-0 Illinois State 1-0 Indiana 7-0 IUPUI 1-0 Kansas 2-0 Kansas State 1-0 Kentucky 5-0 LSU 1-0 Long Beach State 29-0 Loyola Marymount 24-0 Marshall 1-0 Marquette 1-0 Miami (Fla.) 12-4 Michigan 2-0 Minnesota 2-0 NC State 1-0 New Mexico 0-1 Notre Dame 5-0

North Carolina 6-2 Northwestern 8-3 Ohio State 0-2 Oklahoma 2-0 Oklahoma State 2-1 Ole Miss 3-2 Oregon 23-1 Pacific 7-1 Pepperdine 55-16 Princeton 1-0 Quinnipiac 2-0 Rice 3-0 Rollins 1-1 SMU 3-1 Sacramento State 2-0 Saint Mary’s 7-0 San Diego 17-0 San Diego State 26-7 Santa Clara 1-0 South Alabama 1-1 South Carolina 5-0 Southern University 1-0 Stanford 19-79 TCU 3-0 Tennessee 3-0

Texas 10-10 Texas A&M 2-1 Texas Tech 0-1 Trinity 9-8 Tulsa 1-0 UC Davis 4-0 UC Irvine 41-2 UC Riverside 1-0 UC Santa Barbara 33-0 UC San Diego 2-0 UNLV 12-0 USC 53-50 American International 4-0 Utah 17-0 Vanderbilt 2-3 Virginia 1-0 Wake Forest 1-0 Washington 26-2 Washington State 24-1 Western Michigan 1-0 William & Mary 3-1 Wisconsin 4-0 Yale 2-0

Head Coaching History Bill Zaima (1972-76, 1986-1996)

Stella Sampras Webster (1997-present)

Year Record Nat. Finish Conf. Finish 1972 8-0 -- -1973 8-1 -- -1974 8-2 -- -1975 16-5 -- -1976 18-3 4th 1st (SCWIAC) 1986 4-4 9th T-4th (PacWest) 1987 22-7 5th 2nd (Pac-10) 1988 20-6 3rd 3rd (Pac-10) 1989 21-5 2nd 2nd (Pac-10) 1990 23-7 3rd 3rd (Pac-10) 1991 23-5 2nd 2nd (Pac-10) 1992 16-8 T-5th T-4th (Pac-10) 1993 8-14 T-9th 6th (Pac-10) 1994 15-8 T-9th 3rd (Pac-10) 1995 16-9 T-5th 4th (Pac-10) 1996 19-6 T-3rd 3rd (Pac-10) TOTALS 245-90 1 Conf. Title

Year 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 TOTALS

Gayle Godwin (1977-1986) Year 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 TOTALS

Record 16-4 23-4 21-3 21-10 27-4 29-4 23-6 17-7 14-11 10-5 201-58

Nat. Finish 9th 3rd 4th 6th 1st 2nd 3rd 5th 9th 9th 1 AIAW Title

Conf. Finish 2nd (WCAA) 2nd (WCAA) 1st (WCAA) 2nd (WCAA) 2nd (WCAA) 1st (WCAA) 2nd (WCAA) 4th (WCAA) 4th (PacWest) T-4th (PacWest) 2 Conf. Titles

18

Record 16-6 17-11 18-8 17-9 9-19 19-5 16-11 21-8 17-6 15-7 21-8 24-5 19-7 21-4 22-6 26-3 20-6 27-2 23-5 15-7 14-9 23-6 420-158

Nat. Finish T-5th T-9th T-17th T-5th T-9th T-5th T-5th 2nd T-9th T-9th 2nd 1st T-9th T-9th T-3rd 2nd T-3rd 1st 2nd T-17th T-17th T-5th 2 NCAA Titles

Conf. Finish 2nd (Pac-10) 4th (Pac-10) 4th (Pac-10) T-2nd (Pac-10) 7th (Pac-10) 3rd (Pac-10) 5th (Pac-10) 3rd (Pac-10) 3rd (Pac-10) 4th (Pac-10) T-2nd (Pac-10) T-1st (Pac-10) 4th (Pac-10) 2nd (Pac-10) 2nd (Pac-10) T-3rd (Pac-12) 4th (Pac-12) 2nd (Pac-12) 3rd (Pac-12) 5th (Pac-12) T-3rd (Pac-12) 2nd (Pac-12) 1 Conf. Title


AWARD WINNERS

ITA/Arthur Ashe Regional Leadership & Sportsmanship Award

UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame 2007* 2018*

Keri Phebus Stella Sampras Webster

Honda Award 1978 1995 2014 2015

All-Americans 1976 1977 1978 1979

1980 1981 1982

1983

1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991

1992 1993 1994

1995

1996 1997

2008

* Indicates induction year

Wilson/ITA National Coach of the Year

Jeanne Duvall Keri Phebus Robin Anderson Robin Anderson Paula Smith Cindy Thomas Paula Smith Rene Blount Jeanne Duvall Dana Gilbert Shannon Gordon Becky Bell Dana Gilbert Shannon Gordon Ann Hendricksson Kathy O’Brien Kathy O’Brien Ann Hendricksson Kathrin Keil Kathy O’Brien Shelly Solomon Kathrin Keil Lynn Lewis Heather Ludloff Helena Manset Kathy O’Brien Shelly Solomon Barbara Gerken Andrea Kriva Heather Ludloff Helena Manset Patricia Hy Lynn Lewis Elizabeth Minter Lynn Lewis Jane Thomas Joni Urban Jennifer Fuchs Jane Thomas Jennifer Fuchs Jane Thomas Joni Urban Jessica Emmons Stella Sampras Joni Urban Marnie Ceniza Jessica Emmons Alysia May Stella Sampras Marnie Ceniza Stella Sampras Marnie Ceniza Iwalani McCalla Kimberly Po Stella Sampras Marnie Ceniza Iwalani McCalla Cammie Foley Keri Phebus Jane Chi Keri Phebus Diana Spadea Susie Starrett Jane Chi Stephanie Chi Keri Phebus Susie Starrett Keri Phebus Paige Yaroshuk Annica Cooper

Elizabeth Lumpkin

2012

Stella Sampras Webster

ITA National Assistant Coach of the Year 2000 2012

Rance Brown Rance Brown

ITA Regional Assistant Coach of the Year 1999 2000 2007 2010 2012

Wilson/ITA Regional Coach of the Year

Heather Ludloff (left) and Lynn Lewis

1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2012

2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

Rance Brown Rance Brown Rance Brown Rance Brown Rance Brown

Kati Kocsis Katia Roubanova Elizabeth Schmidt Annica Cooper Amanda Basica Annica Cooper Sara Walker Lauren Fisher Petya Marinova Sara Walker Megan Bradley Lauren Fisher Petya Marinova Sara Walker Jackie Carleton Sara Walker Daniela Bercek Jackie Carleton Daniela Bercek Riza Zalameda Laura Gordon Riza Zalameda Tracy Lin Yasmin Schnack Riza Zalameda Tracy Lin Riza Zalameda Andrea Remynse Yasmin Schnack Noelle Hickey Andrea Remynse Yasmin Schnack Robin Anderson Courtney Dolehide Pamela Montez Skylar Morton Robin Anderson Kyle McPhillips Skylar Morton Robin Anderson Jennifer Brady Catherine Harrison Kyle McPhillips Chanelle Van Nguyen Robin Anderson Jennifer Brady Catherine Harrison Kyle McPhillips Chanelle Van Nguyen Catherine Harrison Kyle McPhillips Ena Shibahara Terri Fleming

Jada Hart Ena Shibahara

ITA National Player of the Year 1995

Keri Phebus

ITA National Senior Player of the Year 1996 2008 2015

Keri Phebus Riza Zalameda Robin Anderson

ITA Regional Senior Player of the Year 1996 2006 2008 2010 2015 2016

Keri Phebus Laura Gordon Riza Zalameda Yasmin Schnack Robin Anderson Catherine Harrison

ITA National Rookie of the Year 2002 2012 2017

Megan Bradley Robin Anderson (Co) Ena Shibahara

ITA Regional Rookie of the Year 2001 2002 2003 2012 2013 2014 2017

Lauren Fisher Megan Bradley Jackie Carleton Robin Anderson Kyle McPhillips Jennifer Brady Ena Shibahara

ITA National Player to Watch 1993 2000

Keri Phebus Sara Walker

ITA Regional Player to Watch 2018

Ena Shibahara

ITA/Cissie Leary National Sportsmanship Award 2006

Laura Gordon

ITA/Cissie Leary Regional Sportsmanship Award 2002 2006 2007 19

Sara Walker Laura Gordon Elizabeth Lumpkin

1988 1989 1990 1995 1996 2000 2012

Bill Zaima Bill Zaima Bill Zaima Bill Zaima Bill Zaima Stella Sampras Stella Sampras Webster

ITA National Intercollegiate Indoors Champions 1995 1995

Jane Chi (S) Keri Phebus/Susie Starrett (D)

USTA/ITA National Indoors Sportsmanship Award 2003

Sara Walker

UCLA Female Athlete of the Year 1995

All-Pac-12 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Keri Phebus

Jane Thomas Allyson Cooper Jessica Emmons Jessica Emmons Kimberly Po Mamie Ceniza Keri Phebus Jane Chi Keri Phebus Jane Chi Keri Phebus Keri Phebus Paige Yaroshuk Stephanie Chi, 2nd Kati Kocsis Elizabeth Schmidt, 2nd Annica Cooper Cristina Popescu, 2nd Annica Cooper Amanda Basica, HM Cristina Popescu HM Sara Walker Annica Cooper, 2nd Abigail Spears, HM Sara Walker Sara Walker Megan Bradley Sara Walker, 2nd Jackie Carleton, 2nd Daniela Bercek, 2nd


AWARD WINNERS / NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

Jackie Carleton, 2nd Daniela Bercek Riza Zalameda, 2nd Laura Gordon Riza Zalameda, 2nd Tracy Lin, HM Riza Zalameda Tracy Lin, 2nd Yasmin Schnack, 2nd Riza Zalameda Tracy Lin, 2nd Andrea Remynse, HM Yasmin Schnack Andrea Remynse, 2nd Yasmin Schnack Andrea Remynse, 2nd Noelle Hickey, HM Noelle Hickey, HM Andrea Remynse, HM Robin Anderson Robin Anderson Kyle McPhillips, 2nd Robin Anderson Jennifer Brady Chanelle Van Nguyen. 2nd Kyle McPhillips. HM Robin Anderson Catherine Harrison, 2nd Chanelle Van Nguyen, 2nd Jennifer Brady, HM Kyle McPhillips, HM Catherine Harrison Kyle McPhillips, 2nd Ena Shibahara Jada Hart, 2nd Terri Fleming, HM Ena Shibahara, 1st Jada Hart, 2nd Abi Altick, HM Terri Fleming, HM Alaina Miller, HM

Pac-12 Singles Player of the Year 1995 1998 2008 2010

Keri Phebus Annica Cooper Riza Zalameda Yasmin Schnack

2014 2015 2017

Robin Anderson Robin Anderson Ena Shibahara

2008 2009 2010

Pac-12 Doubles Team of the Year 2005 2008 2010 2014 2017

Pac-12 Invitational Doubles Champions

Daniela Bercek/Riza Zalameda Tracy Lin/Riza Zalameda Andrea Remynse/Yasmin Schnack Robin Anderson/Jennifer Brady Jada Hart/Terri Fleming

2009 Maya Johansson/Anna-Viktoria Lind 2010 Stephanie Hoffpauir/Carling Seguso 2016 Terri Fleming/Alaina Miller

Pac-12 All-Academic

Pac-12 Freshman of the Year 2000 2002 2004 2012 2013 2014 2017

1991 1998 1999 2000 2002 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

Sara Walker Megan Bradley Daniela Bercek Robin Anderson Kyle McPhillips Jennifer Brady Ena Shibahara

Pac-12 Coach of the Year 1988 1991 2008

Bill Zaima Bill Zaima Stella Sampras Webster

Pac-12 Singles Champions 1987 1995 1998 2000 2008 2010 2013 2014 2015

Jane Thomas Keri Phebus Annica Cooper Sara Walker Riza Zalameda Yasmin Schnack Kyle McPhillips Jennifer Brady Catherine Harrison

Pac-12 Doubles Champions 1989 1991 1996 2001 2007 2010

Mamie Ceniza/Stella Sampras Kimberly Po/Stella Sampras Keri Phebus/Paige Yaroshuk Mariko Fritz-Krockow/Sara Walker Yasmin Schnack/Riza Zalameda Andrea Remynse/Yasmin Schnack

Pac-12 Invitational Singles Champions 2006

Ashley Joelson

National Championships AIAW Team Champions (1)

NCAA Team Champions (2)

USTA National Collegiate Singles Champions (1)

NCAA Doubles Champions (6)

1981

1965

Gayle Godwin

Mimi Henreid

AIAW Singles Champions (1) 1978

Jeanne Duvall

2008 2014

1982 1988 1992 1995 2004 2008

Stella Sampras Webster Stella Sampras Webster

Lynn Lewis/Heather Ludloff Allyson Cooper/Stella Sampras Marnie Ceniza/Iwalani McCalla Keri Phebus/Susie Starrett Daniela Bercek/Lauren Fisher Tracy Lin/Riza Zalameda

2008 UCLA Bruins

NCAA Singles Champions (1) 1995

Alex McGoodwin Carling Seguso Nina Pantic

Keri Phebus

2014 UCLA Bruins

20

Kirsten Dreyer Kimberly Po, 2nd Annica Cooper Amanda Basica Annica Cooper Cristina Popescu, HM Katia Roubanova, HM Elizabeth Schmidt, HM Amanda Basica Annica Cooper Elizabeth Schmidt, 2nd Lauren Fisher, 2nd Catherine Hawley, HM Lauren Fisher Jackie Carleton, HM Alex McGoodwin Daniela Bercek, 2nd Laura Gordon, HM Sarah Gregg, HM Alex McGoodwin Tracy Lin, 2nd Elizabeth Lumpkin, 2nd Riza Zalameda, 2nd Laura Gordon, HM Tracy Lin Elizabeth Lumpkin Alex McGoodwin Riza Zalameda, 2nd Anna-Viktoria Lind, HM Tracy Lin

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

Elizabeth Lumpkin Alex McGoodwin Riza Zalameda, 2nd Andrea Remynse, 2nd Ashley Joelson, HM Andrea Remynse Nina Pantic, HM Andrea Remynse Maya Johansson, HM Courtney Dolehide, HM Kaitlin Ray Courtney Dolehide, HM Kaitlin Ray Kyle McPhillips, HM Courtney Dolehide, HM Kaitlin Ray Robin Anderson, HM Catherine Harrison, HM Kyle McPhillips, HM Kyle McPhillips Catherine Harrison, HM Terri Fleming, HM Kristin Wiley, HM Laura Luca, HM Terri Fleming, HM Kristin Wiley, HM Terri Fleming, HM Jada Hart, HM Alaina Miller, HM Ena Shibahara, HM

Pac-12 Scholar-Athlete of the Year 2008 2015

Riza Zalameda Kaitlin Ray

Pac-12 Regular-Season Champions 2008

Stella Sampras Webster


ALL-TIME NCAA TOURNAMENT RESULTS

1982

Finish: 2nd Round of 16 Quarterfinals Semifinals Final

Quarterfinals W, 5-2 Semifinals L, 1-5 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 5-4 L, 3-6

vs. Arizona vs. Miami (Fla.) vs. USC vs. Stanford

Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Lake City, Utah

vs. Florida vs. Indiana vs. Trinity

Albuquerque, N.M. Albuquerque, N.M. Albuquerque, N.M.

Finish: T-5th Round of 16 W, 5-0 Quarterfinals L, 2-5

NORTHWESTERN STANFORD

Finish: T-5th Round of 16 L, 0-5 Seed: #8 / Finish: T-17th 1st Round W, 5-0 2nd Round L, 2-5

Los Angeles Los Angeles

vs. Trinity

Oklahoma City, Okla.

Seed: #8 / Finish: T-5th 1st Round W, 6-0 2nd Round W, 6-0 Round of 16 W, 5-2 Quarterfinals L, 0-5

vs. Northwestern

Austin, Texas

2001

KENTUCKY STANFORD

Los Angeles Los Angeles

TRINITY CALIFORNIA FLORIDA

Seed: #7 / Finish: T-5th 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-1 Round of 16 W, 4-1 Quarterfinals L, 2-4

Los Angeles Los Angeles Los Angeles

W, 6-3 W, 5-4 W, 5-2 L, 0-5

vs. Arizona vs. USC at Florida vs. Stanford

Seed: #11 / Finish: T-5th 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-3 Round of 16 W, 4-3 Quarterfinals L, 0-4

Gainesville, Fla. Gainesville, Fla. Gainesville, Fla. Gainesville, Fla.

BOSTON UNIVERSITY GEORGIA TECH vs. #11 Texas vs. #1 Stanford

Los Angeles Los Angeles Malibu, Calif. Malibu, Calif.

Fresno, Calif. Fresno, Calif. Stone Mountain, Ga.

SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY Los Angeles WASHINGTON Los Angeles vs. #10 USC Stanford, Calif. vs. #2 Georgia Stanford, Calif.

IUPUI PEPPERDINE vs. #6 Washington vs. #3 Duke

Los Angeles Los Angeles Gainesville, Fla. Gainesville, Fla.

LONG BEACH STATE PEPPERDINE vs. #8 USC vs. Miami (Fla.) vs. #5 Clemson vs. #2 Stanford

Los Angeles Los Angeles Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga.

ILLINOIS STATE WASHINGTON vs. #7 USC

Los Angeles Los Angeles Athens, Ga.

2004

1990

Finish: T-3rd Round of 16 W, 6-0 Quarterfinals W, 5-4 Semifinals L, 2-5

vs. South Carolina vs. Pepperdine at Florida

Gainesville, Fla. Gainesville, Fla. Gainesville, Fla.

vs. Ole Miss vs. California vs. Florida at Stanford

Stanford, Calif. Stanford, Calif. Stanford, Calif. Stanford, Calif.

vs. Indiana

Stanford, Calif.

Seed: #9 / Finish: 2nd 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-2 Round of 16 W, 4-2 Quarterfinals W, 4-3 Semifinals W, 4-0 Final L, 1-4

1991

Finish: 2nd Round of 16 Quarterfinals Semifinals Final

Los Angeles Los Angeles

2003

1989

Finish: 2nd Round of 16 Quarterfinals Semifinals Final

WESTERN MICHIGAN SOUTH ALABAMA

2002

1988

Finish: T-3rd Round of 16 W, 6-0 Quarterfinals W, 6-0 Semifinals L, 2-5

Notre Dame, Ind.

Seed: None / Finish: T-9th 1st Round W, 4-3 vs. Georgia Tech 2nd Round W, 4-3 at Fresno State Round of 16 L, 1-4 vs. #6 Vanderbilt

1987

Finish: T-5th Round of 16 W, 8-1 Quarterfinals L, 1-5

vs. Texas

2000

1986

Finish: T-9th Round of 16 L, 3-6

Stanford, Calif. Stanford, Calif.

1999

1985

Finish: T-9th Round of 16 L, 1-8

vs. Tennessee vs. Texas

1998

1984

Finish: T-5th Round of 16 W, 6-3 Quarterfinals L, 1-8

Tallahassee, Fla. Tallahassee, Fla.

1997

1983

Finish: T-3rd Round of 16 W, 7-2 Quarterfinals W, 8-1 Semifinals L, 4-5

vs. Arizona vs. Florida

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

2005

Seed: #10 / Finish: T-9th 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-0 Round of 16 L, 3-4

1992

Finish: T-5th Round of 16 W, 5-1

2006

Seed: None / Finish: T-9th 1st Round W, 4-0 vs. San Diego State 2nd Round W, 4-0 at #13 Pepperdine Round of 16 L, 3-4 vs. #4 Florida

1993

Finish: T-9th Round of 16 L, 1-5

vs. Arizona State

Gainesville, Fla

2007

1994

Finish: T-9th Round of 16 L, 2-5

vs. Florida

Athens, Ga.

Seed: #12 / Finish: 2nd 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-2 Round of 16 W, 4-0 Quarterfinals W, 4-3 Final L, 2-4

vs. Wake Forest vs. Stanford

Malibu, Calif. Malibu, Calif.

2008

1995

Finish: T-5th Round of 16 W, 5-1 Quarterfinals L, 4-5

Seed: #7 / Finish: 1st 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-0 Round of 16 W, 4-0

1996

Finish: T-3rd Round of 16 W, 5-3

vs. Vanderbilt

Malibu, Calif. Malibu, Calif. Stanford, Calif.

Tallahassee, Fla. 21

QUINNIPIAC FLORIDA STATE vs. #5 Northwestern vs. #1 Stanford vs. #3 Georgia Tech

Los Angeles Los Angeles Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga.

BUFFALO DENVER vs. #10 USC

Los Angeles Los Angeles Tulsa, Okla.


ALL-TIME NCAA RESULTS / RECORD VS. OPPONENTS IN NCAA PLAY / NCAA SEED HISTORY Quarterfinals W, 4-0 Semifinals W, 4-2 Final W, 4-0

vs. Arkansas vs. #6 Florida vs. #8 California

Tulsa, Okla. Tulsa, Okla. Tulsa, Okla.

PRINCETON ARIZONA STATE vs. #6 Miami (Fla.)

Los Angeles Los Angeles College Station, Texas

ARMY WEST POINT ARIZONA STATE vs. #10 Duke

Los Angeles Los Angeles Athens, Ga.

QUINNIPIAC SAN DIEGO STATE vs. #11 Virginia vs. #3 Duke vs. #2 Florida

Los Angeles Los Angeles Stanford, Calif. Stanford, Calif. Stanford, Calif.

EASTERN KENTUCKY LONG BEACH STATE vs. Rice vs. #9 California vs. #5 USC vs. #2 Florida

Los Angeles Los Angeles Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga.

ARMY WEST POINT OKLAHOMA vs. #10 Michigan vs. #2 North Carolina vs. #3 Texas A&M

Los Angeles Los Angeles Urbana, Ill. Urbana, Ill. Urbana, Ill.

SACRAMENTO STATE OLE MISS vs. #12 Miami (Fla.) vs. #4 Duke vs. #8 Florida vs. #7 North Carolina

Los Angeles Los Angeles Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga. Athens, Ga.

IDAHO NORTHWESTERN vs. #10 Texas A&M vs. #2 North Carolina vs. #6 Georgia vs. #4 Vanderbilt

Los Angeles Los Angeles Waco, Texas Waco, Texas Waco, Texas Waco, Texas

Record vs. Opponents in NCAA Play (87-35) Opponent Arizona Arizona State Arkansas Army West Point Baylor Boston University Buffalo California Clemson Denver Duke Eastern Kentucky Florida Florida State Fresno State Georgia Georgia Tech Idaho Illinois State Indiana IUPUI Kentucky Long Beach State Miami (Fla.) Michigan North Carolina Northwestern Notre Dame Ohio State Ole Miss Oklahoma Pepperdine Princeton Quinnipiac Rice Sacramento State San Diego State South Alabama South Carolina Southern University Stanford Tennessee Texas Texas A&M Trinity UC Santa Barbara USC Vanderbilt Virginia Wake Forest Washington Western Michigan TOTALS

2009

Seed: #11 / Finish: T-9th 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-3 Round of 16 L, 2-4

2010

Seed: #7 / Finish: T-9th 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-0 Round of 16 L, 2-4

2011

Seed: #6 / Finish: T-3rd 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-0 Round of 16 W, 4-1 Quarterfinals W, 4-2 Semifinals L, 0-4

2012

Seed: #1 / Finish: 2nd 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-0 Round of 16 W, 4-0 Quarterfinals W, 4-1 Semifinals W, 4-3 Final L, 0-4

2013

Seed: #7 / Finish: T-3rd 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-0 Round of 16 W, 4-0 Quarterfinals W, 4-1 Semifinals L, 3-4

2014

Seed: #5 / Finish: 1st 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-3 Round of 16 W, 4-0 Quarterfinals W, 4-2 Semifinals W, 4-0 Final W, 4-3

2015

Seed: #7 / Finish: 2nd 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-0 Round of 16 W, 4-0 Quarterfinals W, 4-1 Semifinals W, 4-1 Final L, 2-4

NCAA Seed History

2016

Seed: None / Finish: T-17th 1st Round W, 4-1 vs. Notre Dame 2nd Round L, 1-4 at Ohio State

Seed NCAAs Sweet 16s Quarters Semis Finals Titles #1 1 1 1 1 1 #5 1 1 1 1 1 1 #6 1 1 1 1 - #7 5 5 4 3 2 1 #8 2 1 1 - - #9 1 1 1 1 1 #10 1 1 - - - #11 2 2 1 - - #12 2 2 2 1 1 #17+/UR 4 2 - - - PRE-’99 17 17 12 7 3 1999-CURRENT 20 17 12 8 6 2 OVERALL 37 34 24 15 9 2

Columbus, Ohio Columbus, Ohio

2017

Seed: None / Finish: T-17th 1st Round W, 4-0 vs. UC Santa Barbara 2nd Round L, 1-4 at Pepperdine

Malibu, Calif. Malibu, Calif.

2018

Seed: #12 / Finish: T-5th 1st Round W, 4-0 2nd Round W, 4-0 Round of 16 W, 4-1 Quarterfinals L, 3-4

FRESNO STATE BAYLOR vs. #5 Ole Miss vs. #4 Georgia Tech

Overall Home Road Neutral 3-0 - - 3-0 2-1 2-0 - 0-1 1-0 - - 1-0 2-0 2-0 - 1-0 1-0 - 1-0 1-0 - 1-0 1-0 - 4-0 1-0 - 3-0 1-0 - - 1-0 1-0 1-0 - 2-2 - - 2-2 1-0 1-0 - 6-8 0-1 1-1 5-6 1-0 1-0 - 2-0 1-0 1-0 1-1 - - 1-1 2-2 1-0 - 1-2 1-0 1-0 - 1-0 1-0 - 2-0 - - 2-0 1-0 1-0 - 1-0 1-0 - 2-0 2-0 - 3-1 - - 3-1 1-0 - - 1-0 3-0 - - 3-0 3-1 2-0 - 1-1 1-0 - - 1-0 0-1 - 0-1 3-0 1-0 - 2-0 1-0 1-0 - 4-1 2-0 1-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 - 2-0 2-0 - 1-0 - - 1-0 1-0 1-0 - 2-0 1-0 - 1-0 0-1 0-1 - 1-0 - - 1-0 1-0 1-0 - 1-8 0-2 0-1 1-5 1-0 - - 1-0 1-2 - - 1-2 1-1 - - 1-1 1-2 1-0 - 0-2 1-0 - - 1-0 6-1 - - 6-1 1-2 - - 1-2 1-0 - - 1-0 1-0 - - 1-0 3-0 2-0 - 1-0 1-0 1-0 - 87-35 35-4 3-4 49-27

Los Angeles Los Angeles Winston-Salem, N.C. Winston-Salem, N.C.

NCAA instituted 64-team format in 1999.

22


BRUINS ON THE WTA TOUR / MISCELLANEOUS SINGLES RECORDS

Bruins on the WTA Tour Name Kim Po-Messerli Patricia Hy-Boulais Dana Gilbert Barbara Gerken Heather Ludloff Jennifer Brady Jane Chi Abigail Spears Kathrin Keil Paula Smith Jessica Emmons Robin Anderson Keri Phebus Jennifer Fuchs Jane Thomas Stella Sampras Stephanie Chi Karen Dewis Allyson Cooper Iwalani McCalla Yasmin Schnack Elizabeth Schmidt Lynn Lewis Brandi Freudenberg Elizabeth Lumpkin Chanelle Van Nguyen Courtney Dolehide Annica Cooper Susie Starrett

Singles Doubles 14 6 28 36 46 NR 55 45 57 37 60 70 62 178 66 10 68 209 87 75 131 71 183 233 186 147 206 113 244 106 248 142 265 304 280 NR 339 249 347 329 371 140 380 137 425 295 432 380 443 280 447 445 453 486 464 379 491 292

Former Bruin player Kimberly Po-Messerli (second from left) and her partner Nathalie Tauziat finished runner-up at the 2001 U.S. Open, falling to Lisa Raymond and Rennae Stubbs in the championship match.

* Career-high WTA Tour Rankings as of Jan. 1, 2018. Players are listed in order of highest singles ranking (Top 500 only).

Miscellaneous Singles Records Most Wins Overall Top 20 (Since 1991)

1. Keri Phebus 2. Robin Anderson 3. Annica Cooper 4. Catherine Harrison 5. Sara Walker 6. Yasmin Schnack 7. Andrea Remynse 8. Elizabeth Lumpkin 9. Riza Zalameda 10. Tracy Lin 11. Kelly Rudolph 12. Chanelle Van Nguyen 13. Jane Chi 14. Laura Gordon 15. Brandi Freudenberg 16. Ashley Joelson Kyle McPhillips 18. Alex McGoodwin 19. Elizabeth Schmidt 20. Sarah Gregg

144-29 127-25 120-55 116-35 115-43 106-43 105-44 101-41 97-55 94-58 91-44 90-37 89-24 87-56 84-65 83-57 83-35 81-46 79-71 68-57

Most Wins at No. 1 Singles Top 10 (Since 1991)

1. Robin Anderson 2. Keri Phebus 3. Sara Walker 4. Riza Zalameda 5. Ena Shibahara 6. Annica Cooper 7. Yasmin Schnack 8. Daniela Bercek 9. Jane Chi 10. Catherine Harrison

73 51 38 36 33 29 28 20 19 17

Sara Walker

23


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 of 2019.

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ADMINISTRATOR BIOGRAPHIES

Dan Guerrero

Chris Carlson

Dr. Gene Block

Director of Athletics 17th Year UCLA ‘74

Associate Athletic Director 5th Year UC Santa Barbara ‘93

Chancellor 11th Year Stanford ‘77

Sixteen years and 30 NCAA Championships later, Dan Guerrero’s mantra of ‘image and substance’ has clearly been established at a level that few others in his profession can approach. At the department’s helm when UCLA Athletics became the first to 100 NCAA team championships, the Bruins’ current total of 116 NCAA titles ranks second in the nation. UCLA teams have also finished second 29 times and have totaled 123 Top 5 NCAA finishes. Across all sports, UCLA teams are fixtures in the postseason, with 88% of the Bruin teams in 2017-18 qualifying for NCAA postseason play. The football team has appeared in 13 bowl games, while the men’s basketball team advanced to consecutive Final Fours from 2006-08 and has made six trips to the Sweet 16. The program has also won 69 conference championships in 16 different sports, produced over 700 All-Americans and featured 10 Honda Award winners, including two honorees in 2017-18 and the 2003-04 Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year. In his 16 years at UCLA, the Bruins have finished second five times and third four times in the race for the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup. In 2017-18, UCLA recorded a school-record 1,326 points in a close runner-up finish for the Directors’ Cup. Guerrero was the first athletic director at the NCAA Division I level (FBS, FCS and NCAA Division I-AAA) to earn three NACDA Under Armour Athletic Director of the Year awards (2013-14 and 200607 at UCLA, 2001-02 at UC Irvine). In 2017, he was honored by the National Football Foundation with the John L. Toner Award, becoming the first-ever sitting athletics director from the West Coast to receive the honor. He was also a finalist for the Athletic Director of the Year at the 2017 Sports Business Awards. While success on the playing field with 30 NCAA Championships in 15 different sports and 29 second-place finishes during his tenure are extraordinary numbers, UCLA’s academic success under Guerrero is equally noteworthy. During Winter 2018, a school-record 351 student-athletes made the Director’s Honor Roll. UCLA’s Graduation Success Rate (GSR) and Academic Progress Rates (APR) continue to remain high nation-wide. The UCLA student-athlete GSR is currently at 86%, and every Bruin team maintained multi-year APR rates of 930 or above, including a school-record seven with perfect scores of 1000. Guerrero has extensive experience in committee work at both the NCAA and conference level. Currently, he serves on the Division I Men’s Basketball Oversight Committee, which he chaired the previous two years, and he also chairs an NCAA Working Group on behalf of the Division 1 Men’s Basketball Rice Commission. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the NABC, the Institute for Sport and Social Justice, and the Vice President of the United States International University Sports Federation.

Chris Carlson, who previously served the men’s basketball program at UCLA for five years, begins his fifth year as an Associate Athletic Director supervising men’s tennis. Carlson also supervises women’s tennis, men’s basketball and men’s and women’s golf. 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.

Dr. Gene Block became chancellor of UCLA in summer 2007, taking the helm of a world-class institution comprising 37,000 students and 27,000 faculty and staff, with an annual budget of $3.6 billion. As chief executive officer, he oversees all aspects of the university’s three-part mission of education, research and service. Previously, Dr. Block served as vice president and provost of the University of Virginia, where he also held the Alumni Council Thomas Jefferson Professorship in Biology. With academic expertise in biological clocks, he conducts research on the neurobiology of circadian rhythms in higher organisms, leading a research lab funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). From 1991 to 2002, he directed the National Science Foundation’s Science and Technology Center for Biological Timing. In 1997, he was named a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He has invented a number of devices and holds a patent for a non-contact respiratory monitor for the prevention of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Dr. Block joined the faculty of the University of Virginia in 1978 as an assistant professor of biology. He served as vice provost for research from 1993 to 1998 and then as vice president for research and public service until his appointment as vice president and provost in 2001. He also headed an NIH graduate training program aimed at increasing the number of scientists from underrepresented groups. In 1998, he received the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Outstanding Public Service Award for his work with Virginia’s business community. A native of Monticello, NY, Dr. Block holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Stanford University and a master’s and Ph.D.in psychology from the University of Oregon. He also completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Stanford, working with the late Colin Pittendrigh, “the father of biological timing” and distinguished biologist and former Stanford President, Donald Kennedy. Dr. Block and his wife, Carol, have two adult children.

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, Nicklas,14, and Charlie, 11.

Resource development has been a core tenet of Guerrero’s tenure. During this recent UCLA Centennial Campaign (2014-18), Guerrero and his external development team have raised in excess of $275 million, to date, in fundraising support to the program. He also secured major long-term apparel and rightsholder contracts with Under Armour and WME-IMG that, at the time of their signing, were the largest collegiate deals nationally in their respective areas. Guerrero came to UCLA from UC Irvine, where he had served as UCI’s fifth permanent Director of Athletics for 10 years (1992-2002), helping to elevate that program to unprecedented success. Prior to arriving at UCI, Guerrero worked at Cal State Dominguez Hills, where he led that program to national prominence while serving as Athletic Director for five years (1988-92).

Women’s Tennis Support Staff

A proud alumnus of UCLA, Guerrero received his Bachelor’s degree from the University in 1974 and played second base for the Bruins for four years. Known as “Warrior” during his playing career, he was inducted into the UCLA Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996. Guerrero earned a Master’s degree in Public Administration in 1982 from Cal State Dominguez Hills and was named to the Pi Alpha Alpha Honor Society for Public Affairs and Public Policy that same year. Guerrero was raised in Wilmington, CA. He is married to the former Anne Marie Aniello, and they have two grown daughters.

Michael Teitell Faculty Athletic Representative

25

Linda Lassiter

Stephane Rochet

Austyn Nealer

Senior College Academic Counselor

Assistant Athletic Performance Coach

Assistant Athletic Trainer


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)

550 Camarillo Center Dr. Camarillo, CA 93010 (p)805-437-0277 (f)805-482-6167 venturacountystar.com

5800 Sunset Blvd. Hollywood, CA 90028 (p)323-460-5907 (f)323-460-5333

UCLA Daily Bruin

1999 S. Bundy Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90025 (p)310-584-2030 (f)310-584-2450

308 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 (p)310-825-2095 (f)310-206-0906 dailybruin.com

National Newspapers

Los Angeles Daily News

Associated Press

21860 Burbank Blvd., Ste. 200 Woodland Hills, CA 91367 (p)818-713-3600 (f)818-713-3436 dailynews.com

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

Riverside Press-Enterprise

USA Today

3450 14th St. Riverside, CA 92501 (p)951-368-9533 (f)951-368-9029 pe.com

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

South Bay Daily Breeze

Television Stations

5215 Torrance Blvd. Torrance, CA 90509 (p)310-540-4201 (f)310-540-3067 dailybreeze.com

Long Beach Press-Telegram

Radio Stations AM 570 LA Sports 3400 W. Olive Ave. #550 Burbank, CA 91505 (p)818-559-2252 (f)818-729-2511

500 Circle Seven Dr. Glendale, CA 91201 (p)818-863-7677 (f)818-863-7889

Photography

Television and photo credentials entitle video and still photographers to shoot between courts. Please consult with sports information staff to find out where the photography areas are. Flash photography is strictly forbidden. Interview Policies

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

Travel Information

For security purposes, the UCLA Athletic Communications Office does not release to the general public any travel information for UCLA athletic teams. If you would like to reach a member of the UCLA women’s tennis team on the road, please contact the Athletic Communications Office. Obtaining Information

UCLA women’s tennis news, results, statistics, biographies, and more can be found at uclabruins.com. Los Angeles Tennis Center

Located on the UCLA campus just west of Pauley Pavilion and south of Drake Stadium, the Los Angeles Tennis Center is easily accessible from Lots 4, 8, and 7.

NBC4 (Ch. 4)

Pasadena Star-News/

Media and photography credentials for UCLA home matches may be obtained by working press only by writing or calling Andrew Sinatra at the UCLA Athletic Communications Office, PO Box 24044, Los Angeles, CA 90024, (310) 2068141, asinatra@athletics.ucla.edu. All requests should be submitted at least 24 hours in advance. Press and photo credentials can be picked up on the patio above court 2 at Los Angeles Tennis Center.

The UCLA team is scheduled to practice at Los Angeles Tennis Center. Athletes and coaches are available before or after practice, depending on class schedules.

4200 Radford Ave. Studio City, CA 91604 (p)818-655-2400 3000 W. Alameda Ave. Burbank, CA 91523 (p)818-840-4237 (f)818-840-3076

1210 N. Azusa Canyon Rd. West Covina, CA 91790 (p)626-962-8811 (f)626-856-2758 pasadenastarnews.com sgvtribune.com

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

CBS2 (Ch. 2)/KCAL (Ch. 9)

604 Pine Ave. Long Beach, CA 90844 (p)562-499-1338 (f)562-437-8914 ptconnect.com

San Gabriel Valley Tribune

Press Credentials

KABC (Ch. 7)

Stay Connected:

facebook.com/UCLAWomensTennis @UCLAWTennis

26


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 2017-18. 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 once again led the nation in 2017-18 with 12 NCAA crowns. This haul adds to an incredible 175 NCAA team titles claimed since 1999-2000 and 317 since 1981-82, the start of women’s sports sponsorship, an average of over nine per year. Even more impressive has been the breadth of the Pac-12’s success with championships coming in 28 different men’s and women’s sports. The Pac-12 has led or tied the nation in NCAA Championships in 52 of the last 58 years, the only exceptions being in 1980-81, 1988-89, 1990-91 and 1995-96 when the Conference finished second, and only twice finished third in 1998-99 and 2004-05. For the 13th-consecutive year, the Pac-12 had the most, or tied for the most, NCAA titles of any conference in the country, winning at least six every year since 2000-01. No other conference has won double-digit NCAA crowns in a single year, the Pac-12 doing so 10 times, including a record 14 in 1996-97. Spanning over a century of outstanding athletics achievements, the Pac-12 has claimed 513 NCAA Championships (300 men’s, 183 women’s, 30 combined), over 200 more than the next league. Pac-12 members have won 300 NCAA team championships on the men’s side, 83 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 48 NCAA titles in volleyball, 44 of 49 in water polo, 30 in skiing, and 24 in swimming & diving national championships. Individually, the Conference has produced an impressive number of NCAA individual champions. Over 2,000 (2,334) individual crowns have been won by Pac-12 student-athletes over the years with 1,370 by male student-athletes. Studentathletes have also captured 186 individual titles at combined championships (i.e., skiing and fencing).

2017-18 REVIEW The Conference’s 12 NCAA titles came in the form of nine women’s and three men’s crowns. Six members claimed at least one NCAA title and, of the five institutions in the country to have won multiples titles, three were from the Pac-12. STANFORD’s four NCAA titles this year are the most won by any school, extending its streak of winning an NCAA title to 42 years, winning a third-straight championship in men’s soccer, claiming women’s swimming and diving for the second-straight year in record fashion, winning an All-Pac-12 final in women’s soccer and the women’s tennis crown for the second time in three years. UCLA claimed three national titles, winning the women’s gymnastics crown for the first time since 2010 on a pair of perfect 10s, its first-ever beach volleyball title and its third men’s water polo crown in four years. USC won a pair of national championships this season, winning its fifth women’s water polo title in a tense All-Pac-12 finale ,and the women’s track & field team needed a photo finish in the 4x400-meter relay to claim the team national crown, its first since 2001. A playoff putt sealed the women’s golf crown for ARIZONA, its first since 2000; CALIFORNIA won its second rowing national championship in three years; and OREGON STATE fought off six elimination games to win the baseball title, its third all-time and first in over a decade. In addition to the 12 national championships, the Pac-12 also had runners-up in 10 NCAA Championship events: women’s soccer (UCLA), men’s water polo (USC), skiing (COLORADO), men’s swimming and diving (CALIFORNIA), women’s swimming and diving (CALIFORNIA), men’s indoor track & field (USC), softball (WASHINGTON), rowing (WASHINGTON), men’s volleyball (UCLA) and women’s water polo (STANFORD). In 11 sports, there were at least two teams among the final four and 39 teams finished in the top four at 23 NCAA Championship events, including all-Pac-12 finals in women’s soccer, men’s water polo and women’s water polo. Participation in the postseason was a common occurrence for the Pac-12 in 2017-18. Of the 24 sports sponsored by the

Conference, 17 witnessed at least half its teams participating in NCAA or other postseason action. The men sent 63 of a possible 101 teams into the postseason (62.4 percent), while the women sent 82 of a possible 130 teams (63.0 percent). USC became the first South Division team to capture the Pac-12 football title. After the North Division won the Conference’s first six Pac-12 Football Championship Games, the Trojans ended the North Division streak with a 31-28 win over Stanford to claim their 39th conference crown. The Pac-12 placed nine teams in bowl games, including a pair of teams in the CFP with USC in the Cotton Bowl and WASHINGTON in the Fiesta Bowl. STANFORD running back Bryce Love became the fifth player in Pac-12 history to rush for 2,000 yards (2,118) and was named the Doak Walker Award winner as the nation’s top running back. ARIZONA’s Khalil Tate became the first quarterback in Pac-12 history to rush for 1,000 yards (1,411 yards) and set an FBS single-game rushing record by a quarterback with 327 yards vs. Colorado. USC’s Sam Darnold was the No. 3 overall pick in the NFL Draft by the New York Jets, while UCLA’s Josh Rosen was the No. 10 selection overall by the Arizona Cardinals. It marked the third time in Conference history that two Pac-12 quarterbacks were selected in the first round, and the sixth time ever that multiple quarterbacks from the same conference were selected in the first round. Pac-12 men’s basketball sent eight teams to postseason play for the fourth time in the past six seasons, with three teams - ARIZONA, ARIZONA STATE and UCLA - selected for the NCAA Tournament and a league-record five chosen to the NIT. All five NIT teams - OREGON, STANFORD, USC, UTAH and WASHINGTON - won their opening round games, and the Utes enjoyed the deepest postseason run of any Conference team, advancing to New York City and Madison Square Garden where they defeated Western Kentucky in the NIT semifinals before falling to Penn State in the title game. Seven Pac-12 teams reached the 20-win plateau, equaling the most-ever for the league, highlighted by regular-season and tournament champion Arizona’s 27-win campaign. Pac-12 women’s basketball has enjoyed historic performances over the last four years, establishing the Conference as a premier league in the sport. Six teams earned NCAA

On the women’s side, the story is much the same. Since the NCAA began conducting women’s championships 37 years ago, Pac-12 members have claimed at least four national titles in a single season on 27 occasions, including a current streak of 18-consecutive years, dating back to 2000. Overall, the Pac-12 has captured 183 NCAA women’s titles, easily outdistancing the SEC, which is second with 100. Pac-12 members have dominated a number of sports, winning 23 softball titles, 24 tennis crowns, 15 volleyball titles, 19 of the last 29 trophies in golf, and 16 in swimming & diving. Pac-12 women student-athletes shine nationally on an individual basis, as well, having captured an unmatched 778 NCAA individual crowns, an average of over 21 championships per season, including 29 in 2017-18. The Pac-12’s excellence is further proven in the annual Division I Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup competition, the prestigious award that honors the best overall collegiate athletics programs in the country. STANFORD won an unprecedented 24th-consecutive Directors’ Cup in 2017-18 to lead the Conference, leading a 1-2-4 finish for Pac-12 institutions. Five Pac-12 member institutions ranked among the top-25 Division I programs: No. 1 STANFORD, No. 2 UCLA, No. 4 USC, No. 19 CALIFORNIA and No. 24 OREGON. At least five member institutions have been ranked in the top 25 each of the Directors’ Cup program, with seven appearing in the top 20 on five different occasions (1998, 2001, 2003, 2005 and 2006). Abi Altick and UCLA met Stanford in fthe inal round of the 2018 Pac-12 Championships in Ojai, Calif.

27


PAC-12 CONFERENCE Tournament bids, marking the fifth-consecutive year at least five teams garnered bids. Four teams advanced to the NCAA Sweet Sixteen for the third-consecutive year and a record-tying three teams were in the NCAA Elite Eight. It was the second time in three years that at least that many teams advanced that far. OREGON won its first Pac-12 regular-season title since 1999-2000 and first-ever Pac-12 Tournament crown. The Ducks earned their highest NCAA Tournament seed, garnering the No. 2 seed in the Spokane Regional. ARIZONA STATE, CALIFORNIA, OREGON STATE, STANFORD and UCLA joined UO in the “Big Dance,” with UTAH earning a bid in the WNIT. For the first time in Pac-12 history, three teams were ranked in the final top-25 of the USA Today/WBCA Coaches poll, the Ducks finishing with their highest-ever final ranking at No. 5. UCLA was at No. 7, OREGON STATE was No. 8 and STANFORD was No. 13, appearing in the final poll for the 17th-consecutive year. Four teams also appeared in the final Associated Press poll, the fourth-straight year the Conference had at least four teams in the final ranking. The Pac-12 boasts the most NCAA Tournament wins of any conference in the country over the last three years (41) and the best winning percentage among peer leagues (.695). STANFORD won its 17th all-time Pac-12 women’s volleyball title, advancing to its 21st all-time NCAA semifinal in 2017. The Cardinal headlined nine league teams to earn NCAA Tournament bids, marking the fourth time in the last five years at least eight Conference teams participated in the postseason event. Along with Stanford, COLORADO, OREGON, OREGON STATE, UCLA, USC, UTAH, WASHINGTON and WASHINGTON STATE punched their tickets to the tournament. Eleven studentathletes were selected AVCA All-Americans, with seven of those being sophomores or juniors on the first or second teams. Six teams appeared in the final AVCA Coaches poll, five of them in the top 15. The Pac-12 has won a NCAA-record 15 of the 37 NCAA titles awarded. OREGON STATE baseball recorded the Pac-12’s 12th and final NCAA title of the 2017-18 campaign, the Beavers winning the last two of the three-game championship series versus Arkansas to claim their third all-time College World Series title and first since 2007. The Beavers had their backs against the wall since losing their opening game of the CWS, winning four-straight elimination games to get to the championship series, before winning two more versus Arkansas to claim the crown. STANFORD claimed the Pac-12 crown for the first time in 15 years and received the Conference’s automatic bid as four league squads earned berths. UCLA and WASHINGTON rounded out the four postseason teams, the Huskies advancing for the first time ever to the CWS as well. 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. The Pac-12 Conference has historically dominated the sport of softball where league teams have claimed 23 NCAA titles in the 37-year history of the championship. Pac-12 teams captured an unprecedented nine in a row from 1988-1997, then most recently claimed six-straight from 2006-11. OREGON picked up its fourth Pac-12 title in six years and seven league teams earned berths to the 2018 NCAA Tournament, marking the 23rd-consecutive year the Conference has had five or more teams advance to the postseason and has had at least three berths every year since the league began sponsoring the sport in 1987. Half of the eight-team Women’s College World Series field was comprised of Pac-12 teams, with WASHINGTON, ARIZONA STATE, OREGON and UCLA advancing that far. The Huskies played in the championship series, marking the 29th time at least one Pac-12 team reached the finale.

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. 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 Buffaloes and Utes officially became the 11th and 12th members of the Conference on July 1, 2011, the first additions to the league since 1978. It was during the 2010-11 academic year that 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 women’s lacrosse a new addition for the 2017-18 academic year and beach volleyball having been added in 2015-16. 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.

PAC-12 CONFERENCE HISTORY The roots of the Pac-12 Conference date back more than 100 years, to December 2, 1915, when the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) was founded at a meeting at the Imperial Hotel in Portland, Ore. The original membership consisted of four schools - the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Washington, the University of Oregon, and Oregon Agricultural College (now Oregon State University). All four are still charter members of the Conference. 28


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