UCLA Bruins#Soccer
{{Short description|Sports team name of University of California at Los Angeles}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2017}}
{{Infobox college athletics
| name = UCLA Bruins
| logo = UCLA Bruins primary logo.svg
| logo_width = 200
| university = University of California, Los Angeles
| association = NCAA
| conference = Big Ten (primary)
Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (indoor track & field, men's volleyball, water polo)
| division = Division I (FBS)
| director = Martin Jarmond
| location = Los Angeles, California
| teams = 25
| stadium = Rose Bowl
| baseballfield = Jackie Robinson Stadium
| basketballarena = Pauley Pavilion
| softballstadium = Easton Stadium
| soccerstadium = Wallis Annenberg Stadium
| arena2 = Bel-Air Country Club
Drake Stadium
John Wooden Center
Los Angeles Tennis Center
Spieker Aquatics Center
Sunset Canyon Recreation Center
UCLA Marina Aquatic Center
| mascot = Joe & Josephine (Josie) Bruin
| nickname = Bruins
| fightsong = "Sons of Westwood"
| pageurl = https://uclabruins.com/
| altlogo = 200px
}}
File:Big Ten logo in UCLA colors.svg
The UCLA Bruins are the athletic teams that represent the University of California, Los Angeles. The Bruin men's and women's teams participate in NCAA Division I as part of the Big Ten Conference and the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF). For football, they are in the Football Bowl Subdivision of Division I (formerly Division I-A). UCLA is second to only Stanford University as the school with the most NCAA team championships at 124 NCAA team championships.{{Cite web|date=December 5, 2022|title=UCLA wins the 2022 national championship in an all-time classic, 3-2 in 2OT|url=https://www.ncaa.com/live-updates/soccer-women/d1/ucla-wins-2022-national-championship-all-time-classic-3-2-2ot|website=NCAA}}{{Cite web |date=6 May 2023 |title=NATTY π #121 |url=https://twitter.com/UCLAAthletics/status/1654999709982011397?s=20 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230507001824/https://twitter.com/UCLAAthletics/status/1654999709982011397?cxt=HHwWisDRjffd3vctAAAA |archive-date=7 May 2023 |access-date=6 May 2023 |website=Twitter}} UCLA offers 11 varsity sports programs for men and 14 for women.{{cite web|url=http://www.uclabruins.com/#|title=UCLA Bruins Official Athletic Site β UCLABruins.com|work=uclabruins.com |access-date=March 5, 2015}}
History
Upon its founding, UCLA joined the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC). In 1927, UCLA left the SCIAC and joined the Pacific Coast Conference, the forerunner of the Pac-12 Conference.
Following "pay-for-play" scandals at California, USC, UCLA, and Washington, the PCC disbanded in June 1959. On July 1, 1959, the new Athletic Association of Western Universities was launched, with California, UCLA, USC, and Washington as the four charter members.{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=UYtIAAAAIBAJ&sjid=AXcDAAAAIBAJ&pg=7176%2C5253075 |newspaper=St. Petersburg Times |agency=Associated Press |title=Hamilton quits at Pitt for Western loop job |date=June 30, 1959 |page=2C}} The conference renamed itself the Pacific-8 Conference in 1968, then the Pacific-10 Conference in 1978, and the Pac-12 in 2011.
= Nickname and mascot =
{{See also|Joe Bruin}}Upon UCLA's founding as the Southern Branch of the University of California in 1919, the football team was known as the "Cubs" because of its younger relationship to the California Bears in Berkeley. In 1923, the team adopted the nickname "Grizzlies." In 1926, the Grizzlies became the 10th and final member of the Pacific Coast Conference, which already included the University of Montana Grizzlies.{{Cite web|title=UCLA 100|url=https://100.ucla.edu/timeline?mode=time&nodeID=XL45lhAAACAA994Z|access-date=2021-12-11|website=100.ucla.edu|language=en}} The school, which had taken the "University of California, Los Angeles" name that year, became the "Bruins" and has been recognized as such in the years since.{{Cite web|title=UCLA BRUINS - Traditions|url=https://uclabruins.com/news/2013/4/17/208274749.aspx|access-date=2021-12-05|website=UCLA|language=en}}
The Bruins began to use live bears as mascots in the 1930s, renting animals to appear at all UCLA home football games at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The practice grew less common until the 1950s, when students and alumni brought "Little Joe Bruin" to Westwood. A Himalayan bear cub from India, "Little Joe" grew too large and was transferred to a circus. "Josephine" was purchased by a group of alumni in 1961 and was kept in the backyard of the Rally Committee chairman. She was eventually taken to the San Diego Zoo.{{Cite web|title=UCLA Traditions|url=https://alumni.ucla.edu/uclas-story/ucla-history-traditions/|access-date=2021-12-05|website=UCLA Alumni|language=en-US}}
A costumed mascot by the name of Joe Bruin was introduced in 1963.{{Cite web|title=Bruins' first costumed mascot finds success as UCLA professor|url=https://dailybruin.com/2018/05/01/bruins-first-costumed-mascot-finds-success-as-ucla-professor/|access-date=2021-12-05|website=Daily Bruin}} In 1967, the first female student to take the mascot role created Josephine "Josie" Bruin and joined Joe at athletic events. The design for the costumed bears has changed over the years, and Joe has had at least six looks over his history.{{Cite web|date=1996-01-25|title=UCLA Bares a Brawnier Joe Bruin : Will New Mascot Pump Up Sales or Did It Take Too Many Steroids?|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1996-01-25-me-28497-story.html|access-date=2021-12-05|website=Los Angeles Times|language=en-US}}
= Team colors =
The UCLA athletic teams' colors are UCLA Blue and Westwood Gold.{{Cite web|title=UCLA Nike Jordan Style Guide 20212 (PDF)|url=https://uclabruins.com/documents/2021/7/7/UCLA_Nike_Jordan_Style_Guide_20212.pdf|access-date=2021-12-05|website=UCLA|language=en}} Blue symbolizes the ocean and wildflowers; yellow to reflect the Golden State, the California poppy and sunsets.
In the early days of the school, UCLA had the same colors as the University of California, Berkeley: Yale Blue and gold. When football coach Red Sanders came to UCLA for the 1949 season he redesigned the football uniforms. The Yale blue was changed to a lighter shade of blue. Sanders figured that the baby blue would look better on the field and in a film. He would dub the baby blue uniform "powder-keg blue."{{Cite web|last=Sawyer|first=Thomas A.|date=2014-03-06|title=UCLA's football uniforms of the early Red Sanders years, 1949-1953, and the introduction of "powder-keg blue" . . .|url=https://thesouthernbranch.wordpress.com/2014/03/06/uclas-football-uniforms-of-the-early-red-sanders-years-1949-1953-and-the-introduction-of-powder-keg-blue/|access-date=2021-12-05|website=Southern Branch, University of Californiaβand the Los Angeles State Normal School! Unofficial notes on the early days of UCLA! The blog also deals with later UCLA history to some degree, and it emphasizes athletics, especially football!|language=en}}
In 2002, UCLA Athletics and Adidas developed a new True Blue color that was darker than powder blue; it was used for all athletic teams starting in 2003.{{Cite web|title=In with the TRUE blue|url=https://dailybruin.com/2003/08/24/in-with-the-true-blue/|access-date=2021-12-05|website=Daily Bruin}} The UCLA Marching Band incorporated True Blue into its previous navy blue uniforms in 2007.{{cite news|title=Clothes Make the Band|first=Mark|last=Davis|url=http://magazine.ucla.edu/features/bruin-marching-band/|magazine=UCLA Magazine|date=January 1, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110616225030/http://magazine.ucla.edu/features/bruin-marching-band/ |archive-date=June 16, 2011|url-status=live|access-date=January 31, 2011|quote=Following years of uncertain color chaos and confusion, years in which Bruinwear of all sorts and stripes exploded in a cyan anarchy of powdered to royal to pilfered blues (not to mention the infamously brief experiment of black basketball uniforms), the campus finally settled on one true Bruin blue in 2004}} The shade was replaced in 2017 with a return to Powderkeg Blue when UCLA switched to Under Armour as its apparel provider.{{Cite web|last=Nguyen|first=Thuc Nhi|date=2017-06-30|title=UCLA releases updated logo, colors before Under Armour debut|url=http://www.insidesocal.com/ucla/2017/06/30/ucla-releases-updated-logo-colors-armour-debut/|access-date=2021-12-05|website=Inside UCLA with Thuc Nhi Nguyen|language=en-US}} In 2021, Nike and the Jordan Brand aligned the athletics blue with the university's UCLA Blue hue, which has been used by the school's academic and administrative units.{{Cite web|title=UCLA Brand Guidelines|url=https://www.identity.ucla.edu/identity/colors|access-date=December 4, 2021}} The school's academic and administrative units had used UCLA Blue since 2004.UCLA Graphic Identity Program: [http://www.identity.ucla.edu/graphicstandards/colors.shtml "UCLA Colors"] Retrieved June 8, 2010.
Varsity sports
File:Big Ten logo in UCLA colors.svg
class="wikitable" style=" "
! width= 150px style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCLA Bruins|border=2}}"| Men's sports ! width= 150px style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCLA Bruins|border=2}}"| Women's sports | |
Baseball | Basketball |
Basketball | Beach volleyball |
Cross country | Cross country |
Football | Golf |
Golf | Gymnastics |
Soccer | Rowing |
Tennis | Soccer |
Track and fieldβ | Softball |
Volleyball | Swimming & diving |
Water polo | Tennis |
Track and fieldβ | |
Volleyball | |
Water polo | |
colspan="2" style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|UCLA Bruins}}" | {{small|β β Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor.}} |
=Baseball=
{{main|UCLA Bruins baseball}}
{{further|Jackie Robinson Stadium (UCLA baseball)}}
File:UCLA out in left field (cropped).jpg in 2007]]
The 2010 team, under head coach John Savage, won the Los Angeles Regional and Super-Regional, and was the first team to win 48 games in a season. The Bruins joined seven other teams in the 2010 College World Series and finished in second place, behind the University of South Carolina Gamecocks.[http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-basebl/recaps/061410aaa.html UCLA Earns Trip to College World Series, Downs Cal State Fullerton, 8β1], UCLABruins.com, June 13, 2010 The 2011 team won the Pac-10 Conference title.
The 2013 team won UCLA's 109th NCAA Championship and their first in baseball in the 2013 College World Series by beating Mississippi State 3β1 and 8β0.
Many UCLA baseball players have gone on to play in Major League Baseball (MLB). In the 2009 World Series, Chase Utley hit two home runs to help the Philadelphia Phillies win Game 1. There were a total of four former UCLA baseball players in the 2009 playoffs: Philadelphia's Ben Francisco and Chase Utley, Colorado's Garrett Atkins, and St. Louis' Troy Glaus, who was the 2002 World Series MVP for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Chris Chambliss and Gerrit Cole were No. 1 overall picks in the MLB drafts. Trevor Bauer was drafted as the No. 3 pick by the Arizona Diamondbacks on June 6, 2011. Former UCLA shortstop Brandon Crawford hit a grand-slam home run in his major-league debut with the San Francisco Giants on May 27, 2011, and helped the Giants to win the 2012 Major League World Series. Cole debuted with the Pittsburgh Pirates by winning his first four games he pitched and also drove in two runs with a single in his first at-bat in the 2013 MLB season.
=Basketball (men)=
{{main|UCLA Bruins men's basketball}}
File:Pauley Pavilion 2013.JPG vs. Oregon State Beavers, New Pauley Pavilion, January 2013]]
Several of the most revered championships were won by the Men's Basketball team under coaches John Wooden and Jim Harrick. The rich legacy of UCLA basketball has produced 11 NCAA championships β 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, and 1995. From 1971 to 1974, UCLA won 88 consecutive men's basketball games, an NCAA record for men. Recent UConn Huskies women's basketball teams have set overall NCAA basketball records with 90-game and (ongoing) 91-game winning streaks. The 35-year period (1940β1974) preceding and including the UCLA streak was characterized by less dynasties, however: 20 different men's teams won titles during that span. In comparison, the women's game to date has produced 35% less (tournament) parity, with 13 schools winning all 35 titles offered since its inception.
Past rosters of UCLA basketball teams have included greats such as Rafer Johnson who was the 1960 Olympic Decathlon Champion, Gail Goodrich, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (then known as Lew Alcindor), Bill Walton, Reggie Miller and Walt Hazzard. The Bruins also had a winning record for 54 consecutive seasons from the 1948β1949 season to the 2001β2002 season.{{cite web |url=http://www.laalmanac.com/sports/sp10rda.htm|title=UCLA Mens Basketball Historical Winβloss record|work=laalmanac.com|access-date=March 5, 2015}}
In recent years, UCLA Men's Basketball was returned to prominence under Coach Ben Howland. Between 2006 and 2008, UCLA has been to three consecutive Final Fours, while UCLA's players have received numerous awards, most notably Arron Afflalo, a 2007 First-Team All American and the Pac-10 Player of the Year, and Kevin Love, a 2008 First-Team All American and the Pac-10 Player of the Year.{{Cite web |url=http://www.pac-10.org/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/031008aal.html |title=This Week in Pac-10 Men's Basketball |access-date=May 21, 2008 |archive-date=May 7, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080507183817/http://www.pac-10.org/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/031008aal.html |url-status=dead }} UCLA has produced the most NBA Most Valuable Player Award winners, six of them by Abdul-Jabbar and one by Walton, who was Abdul-Jabbar's successor.Steve Aschburner, [http://www.nba.com/2011/news/features/03/25/race-to-the-mvp-week-22/index.html?ls=iref:nbahpt1 School is often out when it comes to picking an MVP], NBA.com, March 25, 2011
In March 2013, UCLA relieved head men's basketball coach Ben Howland of his duties after UCLA dropped an 83β63 decision to Minnesota in a second-round game of the NCAA tournament. The current head coach is Mick Cronin, former head coach at Cincinnati.
=Basketball (women)=
{{main|UCLA Bruins women's basketball}}
In the 1977β78 season, the women's basketball team, with a 27β2 record, were the AIAW Champions under head coach Billie Moore. The 2014β15 team won the 2015 WNIT championship by defeating the West Virginia Mountaineers 62β60 on April 4, 2015.
=Women's beach volleyball=
The UCLA Bruins women's beach volleyball team plays in the Pac-12 Conference.{{cite web|url=https://uclabruins.com/documents/2019/2/28/2019_UCLA_BeachVB_Results.pdf|title=UCLA Women's Beach Volleyball|publisher=uclabruins.com|access-date=December 2, 2019}} UCLA launched its beach volleyball program in 2013.{{cite web|url=https://uclabruins.com/news/2013/3/11/207903927.aspx|title=Sixth-Ranked Bruins Fall to No. 4 Florida State in Inaugural Match|publisher=uclabruins.com|access-date=December 2, 2019}}
Women's National Championships: 2018, 2019
The beach volleyball team won its first national title on May 6, 2018, by defeating Hawaii and Florida State at Gulf Beach Place, Gulf Shores, Alabama. They repeated one year later on May 5, 2019, defeating rivals USC to win the National Championship.
=Cross country=
The UCLA Bruins men's cross country team appeared in the NCAA Cross Country Championship thirteen times, with their highest finish being 5th place in the 1980β81 and 1981β82 school years.{{cite web |title=Division I Men's Cross Country Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_cross_country_champs_records/2018-19/D1.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=5 August 2018}} The UCLA Bruins women's cross country team appeared in the NCAA Cross Country Championship eleven times, with their highest finish being 6th place in the 1985β86 school year.{{cite web |title=Division I Women's Cross Country Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/w_cross_country_champs_records/2018-19/D1.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=5 August 2018}}
class="wikitable"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=UCLA Bruins|Year|Gender|Ranking|Points|border=2}} | |||
align="center"
| 1979 | Men | No. 15 | 386 |
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| 1980 | Men | No. 5 | 207 |
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| 1981 | Men | No. 5 | 187 |
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| 1982 | Men | No. 9 | 250 |
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| 1983 | Men | No. 20 | 361 |
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| 1985 | Men | No. 12 | 283 |
align="center"
| 1985 | Women | No. 6 | 200 |
align="center"
| 1986 | Women | No. 11 | 226 |
align="center"
| 1988 | Women | No. 13 | 273 |
align="center"
| 1998 | Women | No. 28 | 574 |
align="center"
| 1999 | Women | No. 30 | 631 |
align="center"
| 2001 | Women | No. 21 | 539 |
align="center"
| 2002 | Women | No. 25 | 568 |
align="center"
| 2003 | Women | No. 7 | 293 |
align="center"
| 2004 | Women | No. 27 | 640 |
align="center"
| 2006 | Men | No. 23 | 546 |
align="center"
| 2008 | Men | No. 26 | 576 |
align="center"
| 2012 | Men | No. 13 | 376 |
align="center"
| 2014 | Men | No. 18 | 454 |
align="center"
| 2014 | Women | No. 27 | 582 |
align="center"
| 2015 | Men | No. 14 | 429 |
align="center"
| 2016 | Men | No. 15 | 378 |
align="center"
| 2016 | Women | No. 28 | 596 |
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| 2017 | Men | No. 21 | 485 |
=Football=
{{main|UCLA Bruins football}}
File:UCLA Bruins enter the LA Coliseum, 2007.jpg
In 1954, the UCLA football team earned a share of the national title with a 9β0 record and a #1 ranking in the Coaches UPI football poll, while Ohio State was ranked No. 1 in the AP Poll. Owing to rules in place at the time, UCLA was unable to face off against Ohio State in the Rose Bowl, which would have resulted in one or the other being declared national champion. The Bruins have played in the Rose Bowl Game 12 times, winning 5 of them. The Bruins have won or shared the conference title 17 times. Among the many former UCLA football stars are Jackie Robinson (better known for his exploits as a baseball player, but nevertheless a 4-sport letterman and All-American), Heisman Trophy winner Gary Beban, Bob Waterfield, Troy Aikman, Carnell Lake, and Tommy Maddox. One of the great moments in recent history for the Bruins came on December 2, 2006, when they beat USC 13β9 in one of the greatest upsets in the rivalry. The Bruins are the Pac-12 Conference South Division Champions for two years in a row and played in both the 2011 and 2012 Pac-12 Football Championship Games.
File:UCLA vs Oregon, Pasadena, 2007.jpg
UCLA became the first school to have a top winner in both basketball and football in the same year with Gary Beban winning the Heisman Trophy and Lew Alcindor (now Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) winning the U.S. Basketball Writers Association player of the year award in 1968.
15 football players and coaches have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, John Sciarra being the latest inductee in the Class of 2014. A notable player and alumnus of the UCLA football team is current NCIS star, actor Mark Harmon. Winner of the "all-around excellence" award, Harmon led his team to victory several times as the quarterback.
The current head coach is DeShaun Foster. Foster replaced previous coach Chip Kelly on February 12, 2024.
The UCLA Bruins men's football team have an NCAA Division I FBS Tournament record of 16β20β1 through thirty-six appearances.{{cite web |title=List of bowl games |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2017/Bowls.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=11 August 2018}}
class="wikitable" | ||||
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=UCLA Bruins|Season|Coach|Bowl|Opponent|Result|border=2}} | ||||
align="center"
| 1942 | Edwin Horrell | Rose Bowl | Georgia | L 0β9 |
align="center"
| 1946 | Bert LaBrucherie | Rose Bowl | Illinois | L 14β45 |
align="center"
| 1953 | Henry Sanders | Rose Bowl | Michigan State | L 20β28 |
align="center"
| 1955 | Henry Sanders | Rose Bowl | Michigan State | L 14β17 |
align="center"
| 1961 | William Barnes | Rose Bowl | Minnesota | L 3β21 |
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| 1965 | Tommy Prothro | Rose Bowl | Michigan State | W 14β12 |
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| 1975 | Dick Vermeil | Rose Bowl | Ohio State | W 23β10 |
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| 1976 | Terry Donahue | Liberty Bowl | Alabama | L 6β36 |
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| 1978 | Terry Donahue | Fiesta Bowl | Arkansas | T 10β10 |
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| 1981 | Terry Donahue | Bluebonnet Bowl | Michigan | L 14β33 |
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| 1982 | Terry Donahue | Rose Bowl | Michigan | W 24β14 |
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| 1983 | Terry Donahue | Rose Bowl | Illinois | W 45β9 |
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| 1984 | Terry Donahue | Fiesta Bowl | Miami (FL) | W 39β37 |
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| 1985 | Terry Donahue | Rose Bowl | Iowa | W 45β28 |
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| 1986 | Terry Donahue | Freedom Bowl | BYU | W 31β10 |
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| 1987 | Terry Donahue | Aloha Bowl | Florida | W 20β16 |
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| 1988 | Terry Donahue | Cotton Bowl | Arkansas | W 17β3 |
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| 1991 | Terry Donahue | Hancock Bowl | Illinois | W 6β3 |
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| 1993 | Terry Donahue | Rose Bowl | Wisconsin | L 16β21 |
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| 1995 | Terry Donahue | Aloha Bowl | Kansas | L 30β51 |
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| 1997 | Bob Toledo | Cotton Bowl | Texas A&M | W 29β23 |
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| 1998 | Bob Toledo | Rose Bowl | Wisconsin | L 31β38 |
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| 2000 | Bob Toledo | Sun Bowl | Wisconsin | L 20β21 |
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| 2002 | Bob Toledo | Las Vegas Bowl | New Mexico | W 27β13 |
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| 2003 | Karl Dorrell | Silicon Valley Bowl | Fresno State | L 9β17 |
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| 2004 | Karl Dorrell | Las Vegas Bowl | Wyoming | L 21β24 |
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| 2005 | Karl Dorrell | Sun Bowl | Northwestern | W 50β38 |
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| 2006 | Karl Dorrell | Emerald Bowl | Florida State | L 27β44 |
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| 2007 | Karl Dorrell | Las Vegas Bowl | BYU | L 16β17 |
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| 2009 | Rick Neuheisel | EagleBank Bowl | Temple | W 30β21 |
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| 2011 | Rick Neuheisel | Hunger Bowl | Illinois | L 14β20 |
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| 2012 | Jim Mora | Holiday Bowl | Baylor | L 26β49 |
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| 2013 | Jim Mora | Sun Bowl | Virginia Tech | W 42β12 |
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| 2014 | Jim Mora | Alamo Bowl | Kansas State | W 40β35 |
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| 2015 | Jim Mora | Foster Farms Bowl | Nebraska | L 29β37 |
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| 2017 | Jim Mora | Cactus Bowl | Kansas State | L 17β35 |
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| 2022 | Chip Kelly | Sun Bowl | Pittsburgh | L 35-37 |
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| 2023 | Chip Kelly | LA Bowl | Boise State | W 35β22 |
=Golf=
The UCLA Bruins men's golf team has won two NCAA Championships, in 1988 and 2008. In the 2008 national championship, the team was led by senior Kevin Chappell, who won the respective individual title. In that championship, UCLA won by one shot over USC, and by two shots over Stanford. In 2009, UCLA came first in the NCAA Central Regional, pulling off their third regional championship in the last seven years. With that victory, the defending national champions, advanced to their seventh consecutive NCAA Championship, a school record. For 2011, the Bruins were first in stroke play before losing in the match play of the national championship tournament; and freshman golfer Patrick Cantlay was named GCAA Division I Jack Nicklaus National Player of the Year Award, the fourth player from UCLA.[http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-golf/spec-rel/060511aab.html Cantlay Receives GCAA National Player of the Year Honors] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120829163006/http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-golf/spec-rel/060511aab.html |date=August 29, 2012 }}, UCLABruins.com, June 5, 2011 Cantlay was also the National Freshman of the Year, winning the Phil Mickelson Award in addition to being the Pac-10 Player of the Year and Freshman of the Year.[http://collegiategolf.com/news/jack-nicklaus-award-recipients-announced-1543.html Jack Nicklaus Award recipients Announced] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110813204116/http://collegiategolf.com/news/jack-nicklaus-award-recipients-announced-1543.html |date=August 13, 2011 }}, Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA), June 5, 2011 Chappell won National Player of the Year in 2008, Corey Pavin in 1982 and Duffy Waldorf in 1985. At the 2011 U.S. Open, Chappell was the low American (tie with Robert Garrigus) and Cantlay was the low amateur. The team has won five Pac-12 Conference championships: 1982, 1983, 1985, 2003, 2006 and has had numerous individual conference champions the first of which was Peter Laszlo in 1970.
The women's team won the national championship in 1971 (DGWS), 1991, 2004 and 2011. In 2014, sophomore Alison Lee won the inaugural ANNIKA Award, which was created to honor the women's collegiate player of the year as chosen by a vote of coaches, college golfers, and members of the media.[http://annikasorenstam.com/news/uclas-alison-lee-wins-inaugural-annika-award-presented-by-3m/ UCLAs Alison Lee Wins Inaugural Annika Award], AnnikaSorenstam.com, June 17, 2014 In 2016, junior Bronte Law won the prestigious award as well.[http://golfweek.com/2016/06/07/college-golf-ucla-bronte-law-captures-2016-annika-award-impressive-junior-year/ UCLA's Bronte Law captures 2016 ANNIKA Award after impressive junior year], golfweek.com, June 7, 2016 The women's program also has many notable professional alumnae on tour, including British Open Champion Mo Martin, Sydnee Michaels, and Mariajo Uribe.
Former Bruin golf professionals include Scott McCarron, John Merrick, Corey Pavin, and Duffy Waldorf. Bruin alum Brandt Jobe tied for second at the 2011 Memorial Tournament. Maiya Tanaka, a member of the UCLA Women's Golf team from 2007 to 2009, competed with her sister Misa on The Amazing Race 20.
=Gymnastics=
{{main|UCLA Bruins gymnastics}}
File:UCLA Gymnastics Banners.jpg
The women's gymnastics team has won seven NCAA Women's Gymnastics championships under head coach Valorie Kondos Field, including championships in 1997, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2010, and 2018. Two NCAA Men's Gymnastics championships (1984 and 1987) were won by the men's team before the program was discontinued.
Some notable former UCLA gymnasts include current stuntwoman Heidi Moneymaker, Brian Ginsberg who was a two-time US junior national gymnastics champion, and U.S. Olympic Team members Jordan Chiles, Madison Kocian, Kyla Ross, Samantha Peszek, Jamie Dantzscher, Mohini Bhardwaj, Kate Richardson, Tasha Schwikert, Kristen Maloney, Yvonne Tousek, Stella Umeh, Luisa Portocarrero, Tim Daggett, Mitch Gaylord, and Peter Vidmar. 2008 Canadian Olympic Gymnastics team member Elyse Hopfner-Hibbs attended UCLA and was a member of the team for the 2008β2009 season. The team took home its 15th Pac-10 Gymnastics Championship on March 27, 2009. Most recently, on April 23, 2010, the team won their 6th National Championship in Gainesville, Florida; the win brought the total number of national championships for UCLA to 105.
At the 2015 NCAA national championship, Samantha Peszek was the All Around co-champion and the balance beam champion.Schuyler Dixon, [http://www.startribune.com/sports/gophers/300595961.html Utah's Dabritz gets NCAA women's gymnastics title on bars, but misses another perfect 10], Associated Press via StarTribune, April 19, 2015
At the 2018 NCAA national championship, Christine 'Peng Peng' Lee and Katelyn Ohashi won individual event titles on balance beam and floor exercise, respectively along with the team title.Thuc Nhi Nguyen, [https://www.dailynews.com/2018/04/21/peng-peng-lee-clinches-ncaa-title-for-ucla-gymnastics-with-perfect-10/ Peng-Peng Lee clinches NCAA title for UCLA gymnastics with perfect 10], Los Angeles Daily News, Retrieved April 21, 2018
=Rugby Union=
File:UCLA Rugby at the Wally.jpg
Since 1934, the UCLA Rugby Union Team has earned a reputation as a top level program in California, North America and around the world having successfully competed against the finest Universities, Clubs and International Teams in the rugby world.
James Schaeffer introduced the original team in 1934, which was eventually revived post-WWII through Norm Padgett and his tireless hustling and fraternity walks. In 1958, Padgett's former Captain, Ged Gardner, assumed the Coaching role from until 1965. Gardner built membership, interest and skill to which Coach Dennis Storer added his own unique style. Dennis Storer remained Head Coach from 1966 - 1982, when the program operated as a Varsity Sport, winning a national title in 1972 and then another in 1975.{{cite web | url=https://www.uclarugbyalumni.com/hall-of-fame | title=Culture }} Rugby was dropped as a varsity sport shortly after by the Athletics department. Storer subsequently resumed the role from 1987-89 after the program was downgraded to Club Status. During his tenure, Storer guided the program to 2 Monterey National Championship Titles, numerous Southern California Titles, 2 national championship titles, and produced 14 USA Eagles with himself being named the first ever USA Eagles Coach.
Over its history, 19 UCLA students have gone on to represent the USA Rugby Men's National Team with Coach Dennis Storer being the first ever coach of the team. Coach Dennis Storer was recognized for his contributions to USA Rugby with his inclusion in the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame{{cite web | url=https://uclabruins.com/honors/hall-of-fame | title=@title }} and the USA Rugby Hall of Fame.
List of UCLA Alumni who have a cap for the USA Eagles
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{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=UCLA Bruins|Name|Capped|border=2}} | |
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| Denis Storer | 1976 (Coach) |
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| Craig Sweeny | 1972 |
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| Steve Gray | 1981 |
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| Tommy Smith | 1981 |
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| Dennis Murphy | 1971 |
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| Ron Nisbet | 1971 |
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| Stephen Auerbach | 1972 |
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| David Stephenson | 1972 |
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| Terry Scott | 1973 |
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| Dave Briley | 1974 |
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| Jaime Grant | 1975 |
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| Skip Niebauer | 1976 |
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| Dennis Jablonski | 1976 |
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| Rob Duncanson | 1977 |
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| Del Chipman | 1980 |
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| John Fowler | 1983 |
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| Chip Howard | 1980 |
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| Russ Ortiz | 1988 |
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| Benjamin Broselle | 2019 (7s) |
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| Lucas Lacamp | 2021 (7s) |
Currently, the Bruins compete in all of the Major National Domestic competitions including the PAC Rugby Conference (XV's & 7's), USAR Collegiate National Championships, and the Collegiate Rugby 7s Championships (7's). Recently, the Bruins have reached the 1/4 Final of the Varsity Cup (2011β17), the Collegiate Rugby Championships Final (2016 & 18), Semi-final (2013 & 14) Quarter-Final (2017) and were Plate winners in 2015. The Bruins have also won the El Nino 7's 2015, UCLA 7's 2016 and the West Coast 7's title at San Luis Obispo in 2013 & 2014 by defeating California in the Championship on each occasion (the only team in the country to defeat California in 7's rugby over that time period).{{cite web | url=https://uclaclubsports.com/sports/2016/2/8/mrugby_0208165055.aspx#:~:text=Since%201934%2C%20the%20UCLA%20Rugby,Teams%20in%20the%20rugby%20world | title=History }}
=Soccer=
Men
{{Main|UCLA Bruins men's soccer}}
Since the beginning of the men's soccer tournament in 1959, UCLA has won national championship in 1985, 1990, 1997, and 2002; and finished second in 1970, 1972, 1973, and 2006. The men's soccer team won the 2008 Pacific-10 Conference championship and received the conference's automatic bid in the NCAA national championship Tournament, their 26 consecutive appearances. The conference title makes it the sixth title in 9 years.[http://uclabruins.cstv.com/sports/m-soccer/recaps/110208aaa.html UCLA Soccer: Pac-10 Champions!]
Three UCLA alumni β Frankie Hejduk, Sigi Schmid and Mike Lapper β helped the Columbus Crew to win its first-ever Major League Soccer title by defeating the New York Red Bulls 3β1 in the 2008 MLS Cup.[http://uclabruins.cstv.com/sports/m-soccer/spec-rel/112308aaa.html Hejduk, Schmid, Lapper Win 2008 MLS Cup]
Cobi Jones, USA's most capped national player, played for UCLA. Also, four former Bruin players, Carlos Bocanegra, Benny Feilhaber, Jonathan Bornstein and Marvell Wynne, were on the U.S. men's national team squad that defeated No. 1 ranked Spain in the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup semi-final.[http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-soccer/spec-rel/062409aaa.html U.S. National Team Upsets Top-Ranked Spain, 2β0] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110725154338/http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-soccer/spec-rel/062409aaa.html |date=July 25, 2011 }}, June 24, 2009
The team was involved in the 2019 college admissions bribery scandal as head coach Jorge Salcedo was arrested, and indicted by a federal grand jury in Boston for conspiracy to commit racketeering.{{Cite web |url=https://www.bruinsnation.com/ucla-mens-soccer/2019/3/12/18261823/ucla-mens-soccer-coach-jorge-salcedo-charged-in-latest-admissions-scandal |title=UCLA Men's Soccer Coach Jorge Salcedo Indicted in Latest Admissions Scandal |last=Piechowski |first=Joe |date=2019-03-12 |website=Bruins Nation |access-date=2019-03-21}} His indictment charged Salcedo with taking $200,000 in bribes to help two students, one in 2016 and one in 2018, get admitted to UCLA using falsified soccer credential admission information.{{cite news|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|title=UCLA men's soccer coach placed on leave after indictment in college admissions scam|url=https://www.latimes.com/sports/ucla/la-sp-college-admission-scam-ucla-soccer-coach-20190312-story.html|date=March 12, 2019|access-date=March 12, 2019}}{{Cite web |url=https://padailypost.com/2019/03/21/wiretap-reveals-local-father-was-paranoid-that-college-bribery-scam-would-implicate-kleiner-perkins/ |title=Wiretap reveals local father was paranoid that college bribery scam would implicate Kleiner Perkins |last=Levitsky |first=Allison |date=2019-03-14 |website=Daily Post |access-date=2019-03-21}} As a result, he was placed on leave by UCLA from his coaching position at the school.{{cite web|website=foxsports.com|title=USC, UCLA coaches and administrators involved in 'biggest college admissions scam ever'|url=https://www.foxsports.com/west/story/usc-trojans-ucla-bruins-coaches-and-administrators-involved-in-biggest-college-admissions-scam-ever-031219|date=March 12, 2019|access-date=March 12, 2019}} On March 21, 2019, it was announced that he had resigned.{{cite web|website=ESPN|title=UCLA soccer coach in admissions scandal resigns|url=http://www.espn.com/college-sports/story/_/id/26326583/ucla-soccer-coach-admissions-scandal-resigns?platform=amp|date=March 21, 2019|access-date=March 21, 2019}} On April 21, 2020, it was announced that he had agreed to plead guilty to the charges against him.{{cite web|website=www.dailynews.com|title=Former UCLA soccer coach Jorge Salcedo agrees to guilty plea in college admissions case |url=https://www.dailynews.com/2020/04/21/former-ucla-soccer-coach-jorge-salcedo-agrees-to-guilty-plea-in-college-admissions-case/|date=April 21, 2020|access-date=May 22, 2020}}
The UCLA Bruins men's soccer team have an NCAA Division I Tournament record of 74β41 through forty-five appearances.{{cite web |title=Division I Men's Soccer Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_soccer_champs_records/2017/D1.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=22 July 2018}}
class="wikitable"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=UCLA Bruins|Year|Round|Opponent|Result|border=2}} | |||
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| 1968 | Second Round | San Jose State | L 1β3 |
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| 1970 | Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | San Francisco Denver Howard Saint Louis | W 3β2 W 3β1 W 4β3 L 0β1 |
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| 1971 | Second Round Quarterfinals | Chico State San Francisco | W 5β1 L 2β6 |
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| 1972 | Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | Washington San Jose State Cornell Saint Louis | W 5β0 W 3β1 W 1β0 L 2β4 |
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| 1973 | Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | Washington San Francisco Clemson Saint Louis | W 3β0 W 3β1 W 2β1 L 1β2 |
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| 1974 | Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals | San Jose State San Francisco Saint Louis | W 3β2 W 1β0 L 1β2 |
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| 1975 | Second Round | San Francisco | L 1β4 |
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| 1976 | Second Round | San Francisco | L 0β1 |
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| 1977 | Second Round Quarterfinals | California San Francisco | W 3β0 L 1β4 |
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| 1980 | Second Round | San Francisco | L 1β2 |
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| 1983 | First round | San Francisco | L 0β5 |
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| 1984 | First round Second Round Third round Semifinals | Fresno State San Francisco Harvard Clemson | W 2β1 W 1β0 W 2β0 L 1β4 |
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| 1985 | First round Second Round Third round Semifinals National Championship | California UNLV SMU Evansville American | W 3β1 W 1β0 W 2β0 W 3β1 W 1β0 |
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| 1986 | First round Second Round | CSU Fullerton Fresno State | W 3β0 L 0β1 |
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| 1987 | First round Second Round Third round | Fresno State UNLV San Diego State | W 1β0 W 1β0 L 1β2 |
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| 1988 | First round Second Round | San Diego State Portland | W 2β1 L 0β2 |
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| 1989 | First round Second Round Third round | San Diego State Portland Santa Clara | W 2β1 W 1β0 L 0β2 |
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| 1990 | Second Round Third round Semifinals National Championship | San Diego SMU NC State Rutgers | W 2β1 W 2β0 W 1β0 W 1β0 |
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| 1991 | Second Round Third round | Portland Santa Clara | W 3β0 L 1β2 |
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| 1992 | Second Round | San Diego | L 1β2 |
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| 1993 | First round | San Diego | L 2β4 |
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| 1994 | First round Second Round Third round Semifinals | UAB SMU Charleston Indiana | W 3β2 W 4β2 W 3β2 L 1β4 |
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| 1995 | First round Second Round | Cal Poly Santa Clara | W 2β1 L 1β2 |
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| 1996 | First round | CSU Fullerton | L 1β2 |
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| 1997 | First round Second Round Third round Semifinals National Championship | Santa Clara Washington Clemson Indiana Virginia | W 3β0 W 1β0 W 2β1 W 1β0 W 2β0 |
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| 1998 | First round Second Round | Fresno State Creighton | W 2β1 L 0β2 |
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| 1999 | First round Second Round Third round Semifinals | San Diego Saint Louis Virginia Indiana | W 4β1 W 2β0 W 2β0 L 2β3 |
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| 2000 | First round | San Diego | L 0β1 |
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| 2001 | First round Second Round Third round | Loyola Marymount San Diego SMU | W 3β2 W 4β0 L 0β1 |
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| 2002 | Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | Loyola Marymount California Penn State Maryland Stanford | W 4β2 W 3β2 W 7β1 W 2β1 W 1β0 |
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| 2003 | Second Round Third round Quarterfinals | Tulsa FIU Indiana | W 3β2 W 2β0 L 1β2 |
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| 2004 | Second Round Third round | Loyola Marymount St. John's | W 3β0 L 1β2 |
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| 2005 | Second Round | SMU | L 0β3 |
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| 2006 | Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | Harvard Clemson Duke Virginia UC Santa Barbara | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β2 W 4β0 L 1β2 |
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| 2007 | First round Second Round | New Mexico Santa Clara | W 1β0 L 1β3 |
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| 2008 | First round | Cal Poly | L 0β1 |
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| 2009 | Second Round Third round Quarterfinals | Sacramento State UC Santa Barbara Wake Forest | W 2β1 W 2β1 L 0β2 |
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| 2010 | Second Round Third round Quarterfinals | Sacramento State Dartmouth Louisville | W 4β1 W 2β1 L 4β5 |
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| 2011 | Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals | Delaware Rutgers Louisville North Carolina | W 1β0 W 3β0 W 1β0 L 2β3 |
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| 2012 | Second Round | San Diego | L 2β5 |
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| 2013 | Second Round Third round | Elon Connecticut | W 4β0 L 3β4 |
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| 2014 | Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | San Diego California North Carolina Providence Virginia | W 2β1 W 3β2 W 4β3 W 3β2 L 0β1 |
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| 2015 | First round Second Round | Cal Poly Seattle | W 2β0 L 0β1 |
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| 2016 | First round Second Round | Colgate Louisville | W 4β2 L 1β2 |
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| 2018 | First round | Portland | L 0β1 |
Women
{{Main|UCLA Bruins women's soccer}}
The women's soccer team has won the Pac-10 championships eight times since beginning play in 1993. It has appeared six times in the College Cup and made 12 appearances in the NCAA national championship Tournament.{{Cite web |url=http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/ucla/sports/w-soccer/auto_pdf/08QuickFactsWSOC.pdf |title=2008 UCLA Women's Soccer Quick Facts |access-date=November 3, 2008 |archive-date=March 25, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090325231735/http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/ucla/sports/w-soccer/auto_pdf/08QuickFactsWSOC.pdf |url-status=dead }} They finished second three times (2000, 2004, and 2005).
For the 2008 Women's Soccer Championships, the undefeated UCLA women's soccer team was named one of the four No. 1 seeds, the third time in program history. The Bruins advanced to the quarterfinals,[http://uclabruins.cstv.com/sports/w-soccer/spec-rel/111908aaa.html UCLA Hosts USC For Spot in NCAA Quarterfinals] where they defeated the Duke Blue Devils 6β1, to earn a spot in the College Cup semifinals.
During the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, former player Lauren Cheney played for the U.S. women's national team and scored against North Korea. She scored the first goal and assisted on the winning goal in the semi-final against France to lead the US to the finals.
The UCLA Bruins women's soccer team have an NCAA Division I Tournament record of 66β19 through twenty-two appearances.{{cite web |title=Division I Women's Soccer Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/w_soccer_champs_records/2017/D1.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=25 July 2018}}
class="wikitable"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=UCLA Bruins|Year|Round|Opponent|Result|border=2}} | |||
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| 1995 | First round | Washington | L 1β2 |
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| 1997 | First round Second Round Third round | Portland SMU Notre Dame | W 1β0 W 3β2 L 0β8 |
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| 1998 | Second Round | BYU | L 0β2 |
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| 1999 | Second Round Third round | San Diego Santa Clara | W 2β1 L 0β7 |
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| 2000 | Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | USC Texas A&M Clemson Portland North Carolina | W 3β0 W 4β0 W 2β1 W 1β0 L 1β2 |
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| 2001 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals | CSU Fullerton Pepperdine Dayton Florida | W 3β0 W 2β1 W 3β1 L 0β1 |
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| 2002 | First round Second Round Third round | Loyola Marymount USC Texas A&M | W 4β0 W 1β0 L 0β1 |
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| 2003 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals | San Diego Pepperdine Kansas Penn State North Carolina | W 2β0 W 2β0 W 1β0 W 4β0 L 0β3 |
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| 2004 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | Pepperdine San Diego Duke Ohio State Princeton Notre Dame | W 1β0 W 3β0 W 2β0 W 1β0 W 2β0 L 1β2 |
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| 2005 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | Mississippi Valley State Colorado Marquette Virginia Florida State Portland | W 9β0 W 3β0 W 4β0 W 5β0 W 4β0 L 0β4 |
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| 2006 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals | UNLV CSU Fullerton Florida Portland North Carolina | W 6β1 W 3β1 W 3β2 W 2β1 L 0β2 |
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| 2007 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals | CSU Fullerton Oklahoma State Virginia Portland USC | W 3β1 W 4β0 W 2β1 W 3β2 L 1β2 |
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| 2008 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals | Fresno State San Diego USC Duke North Carolina | W 5β0 W 1β0 W 1β0 W 6β1 L 0β1 |
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| 2009 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals | Boise State San Diego State Virginia Portland Stanford | W 7β1 W 5β0 W 3β0 W 2β1 L 1β2 |
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| 2010 | First round Second Round Third round | BYU UCF Stanford | W 1β0 W 2β1 L 0β3 |
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| 2011 | First round Second Round | New Mexico San Diego | W 1β0 L 1β2 |
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| 2012 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals | Wisconsin Kentucky San Diego State Stanford | W 1β0 W 5β0 W 3β0 L 1β2 |
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| 2013 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | San Diego State Kentucky Stanford North Carolina Virginia Florida State | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 2β0 W 1β0 W 2β1 W 1β0 |
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| 2014 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals | San Diego Harvard Pepperdine Virginia | W 5β0 W 7β0 W 1β0 L 1β2 |
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| 2016 | First round Second Round Third round | Seattle Nebraska West Virginia | W 3β0 W 2β0 L 1β2 |
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| 2017 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | San Diego State Northwestern Virginia Princeton Duke Stanford | W 3β1 W 1β0 W 2β1 W 3β1 W 1β0 L 2β3 |
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| 2018 | First round Second Round Third round Quarterfinals | San Jose State Minnesota NC State North Carolina | W 5β0 W 5β0 W 5β0 L 2β3 |
=Softball=
{{main|UCLA Bruins softball}}
The Bruins have been 13-time NCAA champions, including the first one in 1982. Since then, they were second 7 times in the Women's College World Series (WCWS), last one in 2005.
They won the World Series in 1978,{{cite book | title=Women's Fastpitch Softball β The Path to the Gold, An Historical Look at Women's Fastpitch in the United States | author = Mary L. Littlewood | publisher = National Fastpitch Coaches Association, Columbia, Missouri | edition = first | pages = 145, 208 |year = 1998 | isbn= 0-9664310-0-6 }} 1982, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1999, 2003, 2004, 2010 and 2019. The 2010 and 2019 titles were guided by head coach Kelly Inouye-Perez, a former player and assistant coach.
Former Bruin Natasha Watley went on to help the United States women's national softball team win a gold medal in the 2004 Olympics and a silver medal in 2008. Andrea Duran helped Team USA win a gold medal at the 2006 ISF World championship and a silver medal at the 2008 Olympics. Other famous Bruin players include Lisa Fernandez (two time NCAA Champion and three time Olympic gold medalist) and Dot Richardson (NCAA Champion [1982] and Olympic medal winner).
=Swimming and diving=
UCLA's Men's Swim Team won 41 individual national championships, a team championship in 1982, had a runner-up finish in β81, and sent 16 alumni to the Olympics.{{Cite web|url=https://dailybruin.com/2017/01/11/the-hull-shebang-ucla-should-reinstate-mens-swimming-and-diving-team/|title = The Hull Shebang: UCLA should reinstate men's swimming and diving team}} Although the men's team was cut in 1994, the women's team currently trains at Spieker Aquatics Center under head coach Jordan Wolfrum.{{Cite web|url=https://uclabruins.com/news/2019/6/27/swimming-diving-jordan-wolfrum-named-ucla-swim-and-dive-head-coach.aspx|title = Jordan Wolfrum Named UCLA Swim and Dive Head Coach| date=June 27, 2019 }}
=Tennis=
The only school to have competed in every NCAA Men's Tennis Tournament, the team has won 16 national championships and 37 Pac-12 conference titles. Coach Billy Martin, who played at UCLA, has a 14 straight top 5 NCAA team finishes and a 9 consecutive 20-win seasons. He was named ITA (Intercollegiate Tennis Association) division 1 National Coach of the Year and is a member of ITA Hall of Fame.[http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-tennis/mtt/martin_billy00.html UCLABruins.com: Billy Martin profile]{{cite web |url=http://www.itatennis.com/AboutITA/HOF/Mens.htm |title=menshallclasses |work=itatennis.com |access-date=March 5, 2015 |archive-date=July 3, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170703072844/http://www.itatennis.com/AboutITA/HOF/Mens.htm |url-status=dead }} The 1950 men's tennis team won UCLA's first-ever NCAA Championship. Anita Kanter won the US girls tennis championship in 1951 as an 18-year-old sophomore at UCLA, as well as the 1951 National Hard Court Doubles and Mixed Doubles championships.[http://www.jewsinsports.org/profile.asp?sport=tennis&ID=65 Kanter, Anita: Jews In Sports]
In 2014, Marcos Giron became the school's 11th NCAA Men's Tennis Singles Champion, joining Jack Tidball (1933), Herbert Flam (1950), Larry Nagler (1960), Allen Fox (1961), Arthur Ashe (1965), Charles Pasarell (1966), Jeff Borowiak (1970), Jimmy Connors (1971), Billy Martin (1975), and Benjamin KohllΓΆffel (2006). Mackenzie McDonald claimed the school's 12th individual singles championship and the school's 12th doubles individual championship when he teamed with Martin Redlicki at the 2016 tournament. On May 28, 2018, Redlicki teamed with Evan Zhu for the school's 13th doubles championship.[http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/wake/sports/m-tennis/auto_pdf/2017-18/misc_non_event/ChampionshipRecap.pdf Menβs & Womenβs Championship Recap] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180529053821/http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/wake/sports/m-tennis/auto_pdf/2017-18/misc_non_event/ChampionshipRecap.pdf |date=May 29, 2018 }}, NCAA, May 28, 2018
The women's team, which won national championships in 1981 (AIAW), 2008 and 2014, is coached by Stella Sampras, the sister of Pete Sampras, who donated a scholarship at UCLA. Number of players have won the individual titles, including Keri Phebus (1995 Singles), Fangran Tian (2023 Singles), Heather Ludloff and Lynn Lewis (1982 Doubles), Allison Cooper and Stella Sampras (1988 Doubles), Mamie Ceniza and Iwalani McCalla (1992 Doubles), Keri Phebus and Susie Starrett (1995 Doubles), Daniela Bercek and Lauren Fisher (2004 Doubles), and Tracy Lin and Riza Zalameda (2008 Doubles).
On May 25, 2019, the Bruins took both the men's and women's NCAA tennis doubles championships with Gabby Andrews and Ayan Broomfield the women's champions, and Maxime Cressy and Keegan Smith the men's champions.
UCLA alumni in the ATP included Jimmy Connors, Arthur Ashe, Eliot Teltscher, Brian Teacher, Peter Fleming, Fritz Buehning, Jeff Borowiak, and Jean-Julien Rojer.
Inducted into the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) Hall of Fame:
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
- Arthur Ashe (1983 β P)
- J. D. Morgan (1983 β P)
- William C. Ackerman (1984 β C)
- Jimmy Connors (1986 β P)
- Herbert Flam (1987 β P)
- Allen Fox (1988 β P/C)
- Frank Stewart (1992 β Con.)
- Jack Tidball (1992 β P)
- Glenn Bassett (1993 β C)
- Billy Martin (1996 β P)
- Ian Crookenden (1997 β P)
- Robert M. Perry (1997 β P)
- Peter Fleming (1998 β P)
- Brian Teacher (2001 β P)
- Larry Nagler (2004 β P)
- Jeff Borowiak (2006 β P)
- Ferdi Taygan (2006 β P)
- Jim Pugh (2008 β P)
- Brad Pearce (2009 β P)
- Roy Barth (2019 - P)
(P β Player, C β Coach, Con. β Contributor)
{{col-end}}
=Track and field=
- Men's Championships: 1956, 1966, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1978, 1987, 1988
- Women's Championships: 1975 (Outdoor), 1977 (Outdoor), 1982 (Outdoor), 1983 (Outdoor), 2000 (Indoor), 2001 (Indoor), 2004 (Outdoor)
The UCLA-USC Dual Meet Hall of Fame inducted Willie Banks (triple-jump), John Brenner (shot put), Wayne Collett (sprints) and Seilala Sua (shot put and discus) into the hall's first class in 2009.
Other notable team members are: Rafer Johnson, Dwight Stones, C. K. Yang.
When Meb Keflezighi was running for UCLA, he won four NCAA championships in one year, including the cross-country title, the 10,000 meters outdoors and the 5,000 meters indoors and outdoors titles in track. At the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece, Meb ran to a second-place finish and winning the silver medal in the marathon with a then personal-best time of 2:11.29. In 2009, he became the first American to win the New York City Marathon in 17 years.[http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-track/spec-rel/110109aaa.html UCLA's Meb Keflezighi Wins New York City Marathon] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928091100/http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-track/spec-rel/110109aaa.html |date=September 28, 2011 }}, Associated Press, via UCLABruins.com, November 1, 2009 At the 2014 Boston Marathon, he became the first American to win the men's race since 1983 with the time of 2:08.37. He paid tribute to the victims of the Boston Marathon bombing by writing their names on his running bib.
=Volleyball=
==Men's team==
{{main|UCLA Bruins men's volleyball}}
File:UCLA USC Volleyball game 08.jpg
: Men's National Championships: 1953, 1954, 1956, 1965, 1967, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1989, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2006, 2023, 2024
The UCLA men's team won 21 NCAA titles, 19 under Al Scates, who coached the Bruins for 48 years. The Bruins also won 5 USVBA titles prior to the sport being sanctioned by the NCAA, two of these under Scates. John Speraw became head coach of the men's program following the retirement of Scates in 2012. Former player Karch Kiraly (1983) was inducted into the College Sports Information Directors of America (COSIDA) Academic All-America Hall of Fame.[https://www.ncaa.org/wps/ncaa?ContentID=49935 The NCAA News: The Record], May 12, 2009
==Women's team==
{{main|UCLA Bruins women's volleyball}}
File:UCLA women's water polo at the WH.jpg
: Women's National Championships: 1972, 1974, 1975, 1984, 1990, 1991, 2011
Andy Banachowski led UCLA to six national championships (3 NCAA-1984, 1990, 1991; 2 AIAW-1974, 1975; and 1 DGWS-1972). The women's team played in 6 DGWS/AIAW championship games, has made 12 NCAA Final Four appearances, and has won 4 NCAA titles. Most recently, the women's team defeated Illinois to claim the 2011 NCAA title, twenty years after their previous title run.{{cite web |agency=The Associated Press |url=https://www.ncaa.com/news/volleyball-women/article/2011-12-17/ucla-wins-national-championship |title=UCLA wins national championship |publisher=NCAA.com |date=December 18, 2011 |access-date=August 24, 2014 |archive-date=May 8, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180508132334/https://www.ncaa.com/news/volleyball-women/article/2011-12-17/ucla-wins-national-championship |url-status=dead }}
The UCLA Bruins women's volleyball team have an NCAA Division I Tournament record of 90β32 through thirty-five appearances.{{cite web |title=Division I Women's Volleyball Championship Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/w_volleyball_champs_records/2017/D1.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=6 August 2018}}
class="wikitable"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=UCLA Bruins|Year|Round|Opponent|Result|border=2}} | |||
align="center"
| 1981 | Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals National Championship | Purdue Stanford San Diego State USC | W 3β2 W 3β2 W 3β1 L 2β3 |
align="center"
| 1982 | First round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | Louisville BYU San Diego State | W 3β0 W 3β0 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 1983 | Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals National Championship | Penn State Western Michigan Pacific Hawaii | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β2 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 1984 | Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals National Championship | Duke Texas San Jose State Stanford | W 3β0 W 3β1 W 3β0 W 3β2 |
align="center"
| 1985 | Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals | Georgia Texas Pacific | W 3β0 W 3β0 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 1986 | First round | Loyola Marymount | L 2β3 |
align="center"
| 1987 | First round Regional semifinals | California BYU | W 3β1 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 1988 | First round Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals | California BYU Washington Texas | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 1989 | First round Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals | Pepperdine Arizona Wyoming Nebraska | W 3β1 W 3β0 W 3β0 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 1990 | First round Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals National Championship | Gonzaga New Mexico Stanford LSU Pacific | W 3β0 W 3β1 W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 |
align="center"
| 1991 | First round Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals National Championship | Pepperdine New Mexico Stanford Ohio State Long Beach State | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β2 |
align="center"
| 1992 | First round Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals National Championship | Ball State Arizona State BYU Florida Stanford | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 1993 | Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | New Mexico Stanford BYU | W 3β0 W 3β1 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 1994 | Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals National Championship | Georgia Tech Duke Houston Penn State Stanford | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β2 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 1995 | Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | Ball State Ohio State Nebraska | W 3β0 W 3β0 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 1997 | First round Second Round | Pepperdine UC Santa Barbara | W 3β1 L 2β3 |
align="center"
| 1998 | First round Second Round | Virginia UC Santa Barbara | W 3β1 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 1999 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | Eastern Washington Ohio State Pepperdine Penn State | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 2000 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | Morgan State Michigan State Pacific Wisconsin | W 3β0 W 3β2 W 3β1 L 2β3 |
align="center"
| 2001 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | Penn Penn State Hawaii Long Beach State | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β1 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 2002 | First round Second Round | Long Beach State Pepperdine | W 3β0 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 2003 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | San Diego UC Irvine Nebraska USC | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β1 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 2004 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | Loyola Marymount Long Beach State Penn State Washington | W 3β1 W 3β0 W 3β1 L 2β3 |
align="center"
| 2005 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals | Kansas San Diego Nebraska | W 3β1 W 3β0 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 2006 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals | UAB Utah Oklahoma Hawaii Nebraska | W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 W 3β0 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 2007 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | Alabama A&M Clemson Oregon Stanford | W 3β0 W 3β1 W 3β1 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 2008 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals | LSU Duke Texas | W 3β1 W 3β0 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 2009 | First round Second Round | Long Beach State Baylor | W 3β0 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 2010 | First round Second Round | American Texas | W 3β2 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 2011 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals Semifinals National Championship | UMES San Diego Penn State Texas Florida State Illinois | W 3β0 W 3β1 W 3β0 W 3β1 W 3β0 W 3β1 |
align="center"
| 2012 | First round Second Round | LIU Brooklyn Michigan State | W 3β0 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 2014 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals | LIU Brooklyn Long Beach State Penn State | W 3β0 W 3β0 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 2015 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals | Lipscomb Michigan Texas | W 3β0 W 3β2 L 1β3 |
align="center"
| 2016 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals | Murray State Baylor North Carolina Minnesota | W 3β1 W 3β0 W 3β1 L 0β3 |
align="center"
| 2017 | First round Second Round Regional semifinals | Austin Peay Cal Poly Florida | W 3β0 W 3β1 L 1β3 |
=Water polo=
The women's team has captured 8 of the championships since it became an NCAA sponsored event.[http://www.dailynews.com/ucla/ci_12341078 UCLA defeats USC, claims NCAA women's water polo title] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110603233318/http://www.dailynews.com/ucla/ci_12341078 |date=June 3, 2011 }}, Los Angeles Daily News, May 10, 2009 The Bruins defeated Cal for the 2024 title. They also won non-NCAA national titles in 1996, 1997, 1998 and 2000. The men's team were champions 9 times and as runner-up 9 times.
Four UCLA water polo alumni and former coach Guy Baker were members of the USA women's and men's teams participated in the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Natalie Golda (now Benson) and Jaime Hipp were members of the women's team, while Adam Wright and Brandon Brooks were on the men's team. Both teams won a silver medal.
Sean Kern, Coralie Simmons, Natalie Golda, Kelly Rulon, and Courtney Mathewson won many prestigious individual award in American collegiate water polo.
Peter J. Cutino Award winners: Sean Kern, Garrett Danner, Nicolas Saveljic, Coralie Simmons, Natalie Golda, Kelly Rulon, and Courtney Mathewson.
The then No. 2-ranked men's water polo team opened the newest athletic facility at UCLA, the Spieker Aquatics Center, with a win over the No. 7-ranked UC Irvine Anteaters, 10β4, on Saturday, September 26, 2009. The center hosted the MPSF Women's Water Polo Championship Tournament April 30 β May 2, 2010 and the MPSF Men's Water Polo Championship Tournament November 25β27, 2011.
In 2009, the men's team defeated #1 ranked USC and #3 ranked California for the MPSF tournament championship to advance to the NCAA Men's Water Polo Championship. On February 28, 2010, the women's team played the longest match in NCAA women's water polo history, winning 7β6 over California at the UC Irvine Invitational.[https://www.ncaa.org/wps/portal/ncaahome?WCM_GLOBAL_CONTEXT=/wps/wcm/connect/ncaa/ncaa/ncaa+news/ncaa+news+online/2010/division+i/ucla+wins+marathon+water+polo+match_03_03_10_ncaa_news UCLA wins marathon water polo match], NCAA News, March 3, 2010
On December 7, 2014, the men's team defeated 3rd-seed USC 9β8 to win its ninth NCAA national championship at UC San Diego's Canyonview Aquatic Center at La Jolla, California.
On December 6, 2015, the men's team once again defeated USC, 10β7, to win back-to-back NCAA championships and finish with a perfect season at 30β0 on the UCLA campus. Outstanding goalkeeper and MPSF Player of the Year Garrett Danner won the prestigious Cutino Award, the second Bruin to do so.{{cite web|url=http://www.uclabruins.com/news/2016/6/6/210999857.aspx|title=Garrett Danner Wins Cutino Award|work=UCLABruins.com|access-date=April 6, 2017}}
On October 9, 2016, the men's team defeated UC Davis to set an NCAA record of 52 straight wins.{{cite web|url=http://www.uclabruins.com/news/2016/10/9/mens-water-polo-no-1-ucla-rewrites-history-at-no-11-uc-davis.aspx|title=No. 1 UCLA Rewrites History at No. 11 UC Davis|work=UCLABruins.com|access-date=April 6, 2017}}
On October 22, 2016, the men's team defeated the Cal Bears to improve their NCAA record to 54 straight wins.{{cite web|url=http://dailybruin.com/2016/10/22/no-1-mens-water-polo-buoyed-by-defense-in-close-win-at-no-2-cal/|title=No. 1 men's water polo buoyed by defense in close win at No. 2 Cal|work=DailyBruin.com|access-date=April 6, 2017}}
On December 3, 2017, the men's team defeated rival Southern California, 7β5, to capture their third National Championship in four years. The win also pulled the Bruins even with fellow Pac-12 school Stanford University for the most NCAA team championships in school history, both schools with 114 each. Earlier in the day, the Cardinal had pulled ahead when their women's soccer team defeated the Bruins' women's team 3β2. The lead lasted less than six hours.{{Cite web|url=http://dailybruin.com/2017/12/03/mens-water-polo-defeats-usc-claims-114th-ncaa-championship-title/|title = Men's water polo defeats USC, claims 114th NCAA championship title}} Stanford, subsequently won their 115th NCAA team championship, in men's soccer.
On March 21, 2021, the men's team defeated Southern California, 7β6, in the national championship game to win the men's program's twelfth title.
The UCLA Bruins men's water polo team have an NCAA Division I Tournament record of 63β27 through thirty-five appearances.{{cite web |title=National Collegiate Men's Water Polo Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_water_polo_champs_records/2018/champs.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=8 August 2018}}
In 2024, Sienna Green played for Australia in the 2024 Paris Olympics.
class="wikitable"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=UCLA Bruins|Year|Round|Opponent|Result|border=2}} | |||
align="center"
| 1969 | First round Semifinals National Championship | USC Long Beach State California | W 4β3 W 9β6 L 2β5 |
align="center"
| 1970 | First round Semifinals National Championship | UC Santa Barbara San Jose State UC Irvine | W 7β6 W 7β4 L 6β7 |
align="center"
| 1971 | First round Semifinals National Championship | Washington Long Beach State San Jose State | W 37β2 W 10β1 W 5β3 |
align="center"
| 1972 | First round Semifinals National Championship | Yale UC Irvine San Jose State | W 21β3 W 15β10 W 10β5 |
align="center"
| 1973 | First round Semifinals | UC Santa Barbara California | W 14β2 L 2β4 |
align="center"
| 1974 | First round Semifinals | Stanford UC Irvine | W 9β5 L 3β5 |
align="center"
| 1975 | First round Semifinals | Army California | W 26β2 L 9β13 |
align="center"
| 1976 | First round Semifinals National Championship | Texas A&M UC Irvine Stanford | W 18β3 W 14β9 L 12β13 |
align="center"
| 1979 | First round Semifinals National Championship | Bucknell California UC Santa Barbara | W 17β7 W 10β9 L 3β11 |
align="center"
| 1981 | First round | California | L 7β10 |
align="center"
| 1982 | First round Semifinals | UC Santa Barbara Stanford | W 8β6 L 9β11 |
align="center"
| 1983 | First round | Long Beach State | L 8β10 |
align="center"
| 1984 | First round | Pepperdine | L 11β12 |
align="center"
| 1985 | First round Semifinals | Loyola (IL) UC Irvine | W 14β6 L 6β7 |
align="center"
| 1986 | First round Semifinals | Navy California | W 13β7 L 8β11 |
align="center"
| 1987 | First round Semifinals | Pepperdine USC | W 11β7 L 11β12 |
align="center"
| 1988 | First round Semifinals National Championship | Navy USC California | W 11β3 W 13β10 L 11β14 |
align="center"
| 1990 | First round Semifinals | Pepperdine California | W 10β9 L 8β10 |
align="center"
| 1991 | First round Semifinals National Championship | UC San Diego Pepperdine California | W 14β10 W 6β5 L 6β7 |
align="center"
| 1994 | First round Semifinals | Pepperdine Stanford | W 8β7 L 5β9 |
align="center"
| 1995 | Semifinals National Championship | UC San Diego California | W 21β10 L 8β10 |
align="center"
| 1996 | Semifinals National Championship | UC Davis USC | W 18β6 W 8β7 |
align="center"
| 1999 | Semifinals National Championship | Massachusetts Stanford | W 14β6 W 6β5 |
align="center"
| 2000 | Semifinals National Championship | Navy UC San Diego | W 12β5 W 11β2 |
align="center"
| 2001 | Semifinals National Championship | Loyola Marymount Stanford | W 7β5 L 5β8 |
align="center"
| 2004 | Semifinals National Championship | Princeton Stanford | W 7β5 W 10β9 |
align="center"
| 2009 | Semifinals National Championship | Loyola Marymount USC | W 9β8 L 6β7 |
align="center"
| 2011 | Semifinals National Championship | UC San Diego USC | W 10β1 L 4β7 |
align="center"
| 2012 | Semifinals National Championship | St. Francis Brooklyn USC | W 17β3 L 10β11 |
align="center"
| 2014 | Semifinals National Championship | UC San Diego USC | W 15β6 W 9β8 |
align="center"
| 2015 | Semifinals National Championship | UC San Diego USC | W 17β4 W 10β7 |
align="center"
| 2016 | Semifinals | California | L 8β9 |
align="center"
| 2017 | Semifinals National Championship | Pacific USC | W 11β9 W 7β5 |
align="center"
| 2018 | Quarterfinals Semifinals | George Washington USC | W 18β6 L 7β8 |
align="center"
| 2020 | Opening Round Semifinals National Championship | California Baptist Stanford USC | W 19β14 W 11β10 W 7β6 |
; Coach of the Year
- Women's water polo: Adam Wright, 2024, 2025 (MPSF)
;USA Water Polo Hall of Fame
- Natalie Golda Benson, 2015
- Rich Corso, a former UCLA swimming and water polo coach, 2015
Championships
=Summary=
{{see also|List of NCAA schools with the most NCAA Division I championships}}
File:UCLA Women's Water Polo team honored for winning UCLA's 100th NCAA Championship.jpg
As of May 12, 2024, UCLA has won 124 NCAA team championships, second to Stanford's 135. The totals do not include any football championships at the FBS level.{{cite web|title=NCAA|url=http://web1.ncaa.org/web_files/stats/champs_records_book/summaries/combined.pdf|access-date=November 14, 2009|archive-date=June 27, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100627170832/http://web1.ncaa.org/web_files/stats/champs_records_book/summaries/combined.pdf|url-status=dead}}{{cite web|title=UCLA Champions Made Here|url=http://www.uclabruins.com/trads/no-1-combined-program.html|access-date=November 14, 2009|work=UCLA Official Athletic Site|archive-date=July 23, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080723113156/http://www.uclabruins.com/trads/no-1-combined-program.html|url-status=dead}}[http://www.uclabruins.com/ViewArticle.dbml?&DB_OEM_ID=30500&ATCLID=210565787 No. 1 UCLA Repeats as NCAA Champion], UCLABruins.com, December 6, 2015
UCLA secured three NCAA championships during the month of May 2008: on May 11 when UCLA defeated archrival USC, 6β3, for the Women's Water Polo Championship,[https://www.ncaa.org/wps/portal/home?WCM_GLOBAL_CONTEXT=/wps/wcm/connect/NCAA/NCAA+News/NCAA+News+Online/2008/Assocation-wide/UCLA+wins+fourth+straight+-+05-12-08+NCAA+News NCAA News: UCLA wins fourth straight] on May 20 when the Bruins defeated California for the Women's Tennis Championship,{{cite web|url=https://www.ncaa.org/|title=NCAA.org β The Official Site of the NCAA|work=NCAA.org|access-date=April 6, 2017}} and on May 31 when UCLA defeated archrivals Stanford and USC for the Men's Golf Championship.
=Team=
UCLA has won 124 NCAA championships at the Division I level.{{cite web|title=Championships Summary|url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/champs_records_book/Overall.pdf|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|access-date=20 May 2018}}
- Men's (79)
- Baseball (1): 2013
- Basketball (11): 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1995
- Golf (2): 1998, 2008
- Gymnastics (2): 1984, 1987
- Outdoor track and field (8): 1956, 1966, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1978, 1987, 1988
- Soccer (4): 1985, 1990, 1997, 2002
- Swimming and diving (1): 1982
- Tennis (16): 1950, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1956, 1960, 1961, 1965, 1970, 1971, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1982, 1984, 2005
- Volleyball (21): 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1989, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2006, 2023, 2024
- Water polo (12): 1969, 1971, 1972, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2020, 2024
- Women's (45)
- Beach volleyball (2): 2018, 2019
- Golf (3): 1991, 2004, 2011
- Gymnastics (7): 1997, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2010, 2018
- Indoor track and field (2): 2000, 2001
- Outdoor track and field (3): 1982, 1983, 2004
- Soccer (2): 2013, 2022
- Softball (12): 1982, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1995 (vacated), 1999, 2003, 2004, 2010, 2019
- Tennis (2): 2008, 2014
- Volleyball (4): 1984, 1990, 1991, 2011
- Water polo (8): 2001, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2024
=Appearances=
The UCLA Bruins competed in the NCAA tournament across 25 active sports (11 men's and 14 women's) 773 times at the Division I FBS level.{{cite web|title=NCAA Championships Statistics|url=https://www.ncaa.org/sports/2021/2/9/statistics.aspx|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|access-date=10 April 2022}}
- Baseball (23): 1969, 1979, 1986, 1987, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019
- Men's basketball (49): 1950, 1952, 1956, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2021, 2022, 2023
- Women's basketball (16): 1983, 1985, 1990, 1992, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
- Beach volleyball (7): 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023
- Men's cross country (13): 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985, 2006, 2008, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
- Women's cross country (11): 1985, 1986, 1988, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2014, 2016
- Football (36): 1942, 1946, 1953, 1955, 1961, 1965, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017
- Men's golf (38): 1948, 1949, 1950, 1960, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018
- Women's golf (31): 1982, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019
- Women's gymnastics (36): 1982, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
- Rowing (4): 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014
- Men's soccer (45): 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018
- Women's soccer (23): 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022
- Softball (36): 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
- Women's swimming and diving (38): 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
- Men's tennis (42): 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021
- Women's tennis (37): 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021
- Men's indoor track and field (29): 1978, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019
- Women's indoor track and field (27): 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019
- Men's outdoor track and field (76): 1934, 1935, 1937, 1938, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
- Women's outdoor track and field (35): 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2018, 2019
- Men's volleyball (29): 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1989, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2016, 2018, 2022, 2023
- Women's volleyball (36): 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019
- Men's water polo (35): 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2024
- Women's water polo (17): 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2023
Results
class="wikitable sortable" width="55%" | |||
align="center"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=UCLA Bruins|School year|Sport|Opponent|Score|border=2}} | |||
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1949β50 | Men's tennis | California USC | 11β5 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1951β52 | Men's tennis | California USC | 11β5 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1952β53 | Men's tennis | California | 11β6 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1953β54 | Men's tennis | USC | 15β10 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1954β55 | Footballβ | USC | 34-0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1955β56 | Men's outdoor track and field | Kansas | 55.7β51 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1955β56 | Men's tennis | USC | 15β14 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1959β60 | Men's tennis | USC | 18β8 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1960β61 | Men's tennis | USC | 17β16 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1963β64 | Men's basketball | Duke | 98β83 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1964β65 | Men's basketball | Michigan | 91β80 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1964β65 | Men's tennis | Miami (FL) | 31β13 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1965β66 | Men's outdoor track and field | BYU | 81β33 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1966β67 | Men's basketball | Dayton | 79β64 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1967β68 | Men's basketball | North Carolina | 78β55 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1968β69 | Men's basketball | Purdue | 92β72 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1969β70 | Men's basketball | Jacksonville | 80β69 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1969β70 | Men's tennis | Trinity (TX) Rice | 26β22 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1969β70 | Men's volleyball | Long Beach State | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1969β70 | Men's water polo | California | 5β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1970β71 | Men's basketball | Villanova | 68β62 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1970β71 | Men's outdoor track and field | USC | 52β41 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1970β71 | Men's tennis | Trinity (TX) | 35β27 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1970β71 | Men's volleyball | UC Santa Barbara | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1971β72 | Men's basketball | Florida State | 81β76 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1971β72 | Men's outdoor track and field | USC | 82β49 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1971β72 | Men's volleyball | San Diego State | 3β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1971β72 | Men's water polo | San Jose State | 5β3 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1972β73 | Men's outdoor track and field | Oregon | 52β31 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1972β73 | Men's water polo | UC Irvine | 10β5 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1973β74 | Men's basketball | Memphis | 87β66 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1973β74 | Men's volleyball | UC Santa Barbara | 3β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1974β75 | Men's tennis | Miami (FL) | 27β20 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1974β75 | Men's volleyball | UC Santa Barbara | 3β1 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1975β76 | Men's basketball | Kentucky | 92β85 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1975β76 | Men's tennis | USC | 21β21 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1975β76 | Men's volleyball | Pepperdine | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1977β78 | Men's outdoor track and field | UTEP | 50β50 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1978β79 | Men's tennis | Trinity (TX) | 5β3 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1978β79 | Men's volleyball | USC | 3β1 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1980β81 | Men's volleyball | USC | 3β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1981β82 | Women's outdoor track and field | Tennessee | 153β126 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1981β82 | Softball | Fresno State | 2β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1981β82 | Men's swimming and diving | Texas | 219β210 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1981β82 | Men's tennis | Pepperdine | 5β1 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1981β82 | Men's volleyball | Penn State | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1982β83 | Women's outdoor track and field | Florida State | 116.5β108 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1982β83 | Men's volleyball | Pepperdine | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1983β84 | Men's gymnastics | Penn State | 287.3β281.25 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1983β84 | Softball | Texas A&M | 1β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1983β84 | Men's tennis | Stanford | 5β4 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1983β84 | Men's volleyball | Pepperdine | 3β1 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1984β85 | Softball | Nebraska | 2β1 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1984β85 | Women's volleyball | Stanford | 3β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1985β86 | Men's soccer | American | 1β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1986β87 | Men's gymnastics | Nebraska | 285.3β284.75 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1986β87 | Men's outdoor track and field | Texas | 81β28 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1986β87 | Men's volleyball | USC | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1987β88 | Men's golf | UTEP Oklahoma Oklahoma State | 1,176β1,179 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1987β88 | Men's outdoor track and field | Texas | 82β41 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1987β88 | Softball | Fresno State | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1988β89 | Softball | Fresno State | 1β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1988β89 | Men's volleyball | Stanford | 3β1 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1989β90 | Softball | Fresno State | 2β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1990β91 | Women's golf | San Jose State | 1,197β1,197 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1990β91 | Men's soccer | Rutgers | 0β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1990β91 | Women's volleyball | Pacific | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1991β92 | Softball | Arizona | 2β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1991β92 | Women's volleyball | Long Beach State | 3β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1992β93 | Men's volleyball | CSU Northridge | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1994β95 | Men's basketball | Arkansas | 89β78 |
align="center" bgcolor="#F0E8E8" | Softball | Vacated | -- |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1994β95 | Men's volleyball | Penn State | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1995β96 | Men's volleyball | Hawai'i | 3β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1995β96 | Men's water polo | California | 10β8 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1996β97 | Women's gymnastics | Arizona State | 197.15β196.85 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1996β97 | Men's water polo | USC | 8β7 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1997β98 | Men's soccer | Virginia | 2β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1997β98 | Men's volleyball | Pepperdine | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1998β99 | Softball | Washington | 3β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1999β00 | Women's gymnastics | Utah | 197.3β196.875 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1999β00 | Women's indoor track and field | South Carolina | 51β41 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1999β00 | Men's volleyball | Ohio State | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1999β00 | Men's water polo | Stanford | 6β5 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2000β01 | Women's gymnastics | Georgia | 197.575β197.4 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2000β01 | Women's indoor track and field | South Carolina | 53.5β40 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2000β01 | Men's water polo | UC San Diego | 11β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2000β01 | Women's water polo | Stanford | 5β4 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2002β03 | Women's gymnastics | Alabama | 197.825β197.275 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2002β03 | Men's soccer | Stanford | 1β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2002β03 | Softball | California | 1β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2002β03 | Women's water polo | Stanford | 4β3 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2003β04 | Women's golf | Oklahoma State | 1,148β1,151 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2003β04 | Women's gymnastics | Georgia | 198.125β197.2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2003β04 | Women's outdoor track and field | LSU | 69β68 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2003β04 | Softball | California | 3β1 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2004β05 | Men's tennis | Baylor | 4β3 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2004β05 | Men's water polo | Stanford | 10β9 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2004β05 | Women's water polo | Stanford | 3β2 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2005β06 | Men's volleyball | Penn State | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2005β06 | Women's water polo | USC | 9β8 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2006β07 | Women's water polo | Stanford | 5β4 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2007β08 | Men's golf | Stanford | 1,194β1,195 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2007β08 | Women's tennis | California | 4β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2007β08 | Women's water polo | USC | 6β3 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2008β09 | Women's water polo | USC | 5β4 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2009β10 | Women's gymnastics | Oklahoma | 197.725β197.25 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2009β10 | Softball | Arizona | 15β9 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2010β11 | Women's golf | Purdue | 1,173β1,177 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2011β12 | Women's volleyball | Illinois | 3β1 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2012β13 | Baseball | Mississippi State | 8β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2013β14 | Women's soccer | Florida State | 1β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2013β14 | Women's tennis | North Carolina | 4β3 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2014β15 | Men's water polo | USC | 9β8 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2015β16 | Men's water polo | USC | 10β7 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2017β18 | Beach volleyball | Florida State | 3β1 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2017β18 | Women's gymnastics | Oklahoma | 198.075β198.0375 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2017β18 | Men's water polo | USC | 7β5 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2018β19 | Beach volleyball | USC | 3β0 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2018β19 | Softball | Oklahoma | 5β4 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2020β21 | Men's water polo | USC | 7β6 |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2022β23 | Women's soccer | UNC | 3β2 in 2OT |
align="center" bgcolor=""
|2022β23 | Men's volleyball | Hawaii | 3β1 |
β The football championship is not an official NCAA championship.
Below are ten pre-NCAA national championships that were won by UCLA as a member of the AIAW from 1974 to 1981 and its predecessor, the DGWS, in 1971:
- Women's badminton (1): 1977 (AIAW)
- Women's basketball (1): 1978 (AIAW)
- Women's golf (1): 1971 (AIAW)
- Softball (1): 1978 (AIAW)
- Women's tennis (1): 1981 (AIAW)
- Women's outdoor track and field (2): 1975, 1977 (AIAW)
- Women's volleyball (3): 1971, 1974, 1975 (AIAW)
Below are twenty-four national club team championships:
- Co-ed archery (1): 2015 (USA Archery)
- Men's archery (1): 2015 (USA Archery)
- Women's archery (4): 1930, 1931, 1932, 2015 (USA Archery)
- Men's badminton (3): 1977, 1981, 1982 (ABA)
- Women's badminton (1): 1977 (ABA)
- Co-ed sailing (1): 1978 (ICSA)
- Men's team handball: 1979 (United States Team Handball Federation, highest adult division in 1979){{Cite journal|date=1979-05-10|title=Team handball club wins AAU title|url=https://archive.org/stream/ucladailybruin79losa#page/n480/mode/1up/search/handball|journal=Daily Bruin|volume=CV|issue=29|page=38|access-date=2018-03-31}}
- Co-ed tennis (1): 2011 (USTA)
- Men's tennis (7): 1984, 1991, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2001 (ITA)
- Women's tennis (1): 2012 (ITA)
- Women's triathlon (3): 2014, 2015, 2016 (USA Triathlon)
=Individual=
UCLA had 273 Bruins win NCAA individual championships at the Division I level.
class="wikitable sortable" width="60%" | ||||
align="center"
! colspan=5 style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCLA Bruins}}"| NCAA individual championships | ||||
Order
! School year ! Athlete(s) ! Sport ! Source | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 1 | 1932β33 | Jack Tidball | Men's tennis | {{cite web |title=Division I Men's Tennis Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/tennis_champs_records/2018/DIMTennis.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=22 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 2 | 1934β35 | Jimmy LuValle | Men's outdoor track and field | {{cite web |title=Division I Men's Outdoor Track Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/track_outdoor_champs_records/2017/D1Men.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=21 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 3 | 1937β38 | Bill Lacefield | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 4 | 1939β40 | Jackie Robinson | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 5 | 1946β47 | Ray Maggard | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 6 | 1948β49 | Craig Dixon | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 7 | 1948β49 | Craig Dixon | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 8 | 1949β50 | Herbert Flam Gene Garrett | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 9 | 1949β50 | Herbert Flam | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 10 | 1950β51 | George Brown | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 11 | 1951β52 | George Brown | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 12 | 1952β53 | Bob Perry Lawrence Huebner | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 13 | 1952β53 | Don Perry | Men's gymnastics | {{cite web |title=National Collegiate Men's Gymnastics Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/gymnastics_champs_records/2017-18/2017men.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=21 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 14 | 1953β54 | Bob Perry Ronald Livingston | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 15 | 1953β54 | Don Perry | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 16 | 1954β55 | Don Faber | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 17 | 1954β55 | Robert Hammond | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 18 | 1955β56 | Ron Drummond | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 19 | 1955β56 | Nick Dyer | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 20 | 1959β60 | Larry Nagler Allen Fox | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 21 | 1959β60 | Jim Johnson | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 22 | 1959β60 | Larry Nagler | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 23 | 1960β61 | Allen Fox | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 24 | 1961β62 | Kermit Alexander | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 25 | 1964β65 | Ian Crookenden Arthur Ashe | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 26 | 1964β65 | Arthur Ashe | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 27 | 1964β65 | Bob Day | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 28 | 1965β66 | Tom Jones Bob Frey Ron Copeland Norm Jackson | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 29 | 1965β66 | Gene Gall Don Domansky Ron Copeland Bob Frey | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 30 | 1965β66 | Ian Crookenden Charlie Pasarell | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 31 | 1965β66 | Ron Copeland | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 32 | 1965β66 | Tom Jones | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 33 | 1965β66 | Charlie Pasarell | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 34 | 1966β67 | Mike Berger Russell Webb Stanley Cole Zac Zom | Men's swimming and diving | {{cite web |title=Division I Men's Swimming and Diving Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/swimming_champs_records/2017-18/D1men.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=22 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 35 | 1966β67 | Mike Burton | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 36 | 1966β67 | Zac Zom | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 37 | 1967β68 | Mike Burton | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 38 | 1967β68 | Steve Marcus | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 39 | 1967β68 | Jon Vaughan | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 40 | 1967β68 | Zac Zom | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 41 | 1967β68 | Zac Zom | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 42 | 1968β69 | Frey Heath | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 43 | 1968β69 | John Smith Len Von Hofwegen Andy Young Wayne Collett | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 44 | 1969β70 | Bob Langston John Smith Brad Lyman Wayne Collett | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 45 | 1969β70 | Jeff Borowiak | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 46 | 1969β70 | Mike Burton | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 47 | 1969β70 | Mike Burton | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 48 | 1969β70 | Mike Burton | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 49 | 1970β71 | Warren Edmonson Reggie Echols John Smith Wayne Collett | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 50 | 1970β71 | Haroon Rahim Jeff Borowiak | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 51 | 1970β71 | Jimmy Connors | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 52 | 1970β71 | John Smith | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 53 | 1971β72 | Reggie Echols Ron Gaddis Benny Brown John Smith | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 54 | 1971β72 | Tom Bruce | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 55 | 1971β72 | James Butts | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 56 | 1971β72 | Warren Edmonson | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 57 | 1971β72 | John Smith | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 58 | 1972β73 | Ron Gaddis Gordon Peppars Maxie Parks Benny Brown | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 59 | 1972β73 | Finn Bendixen | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 60 | 1972β73 | Milan Tiff | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 61 | 1973β74 | Lynnsey Guerrero Benny Brown Jerome Walters Maxie Parks | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 62 | 1973β74 | Jerry Herndon | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 63 | 1974β75 | Benny Brown | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 64 | 1974β75 | Billy Martin | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 65 | 1974β75 | George McDonnell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 66 | 1975β76 | Peter Fleming (tennis) Ferdi Taygan | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 67 | 1976β77 | John Hart | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 68 | 1976β77 | James Owens | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 69 | 1977β78 | John Austin Bruce Nichols | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 70 | 1977β78 | Greg Foster | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 71 | 1977β78 | Brian Goodell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 72 | 1977β78 | Brian Goodell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 73 | 1977β78 | Brian Goodell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 74 | 1977β78 | Dave Laut | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 75 | 1977β78 | Mike Tully | Men's indoor track and field | {{cite web |title=Division I Men's Indoor Track Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/track_indoor_champs_records/2018-19/D1Men.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=21 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 76 | 1977β78 | Mike Tully | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 77 | 1978β79 | Fred Bohna | Wrestling | {{cite web |title=Division I Wrestling Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/wrestling_champs_records/2018-19/D1.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=22 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 78 | 1978β79 | Greg Foster | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 79 | 1978β79 | Brian Goodell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 80 | 1978β79 | Brian Goodell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 81 | 1978β79 | Brian Goodell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 82 | 1978β79 | Dave Laut | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 83 | 1979β80 | Mark Anderson | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 84 | 1979β80 | William Barrett | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 85 | 1979β80 | William Barrett | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 86 | 1979β80 | Greg Foster | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 87 | 1979β80 | Brian Goodell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 88 | 1979β80 | Brian Goodell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 89 | 1979β80 | Brian Goodell | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 90 | 1980β81 | William Barrett | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 91 | 1980β81 | Rafael Escalas | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 92 | 1980β81 | Andre Phillips | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 93 | 1980β81 | Peter Vidmar | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 94 | 1980β81 | Peter Vidmar | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 95 | 1981β82 | William Barrett Christopher Silva Stuart MacDonald Robin Leamy | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 96 | 1981β82 | Heather Ludloff Lynn Lewis | Women's tennis | {{cite web |title=Division I Women's Tennis Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/tennis_champs_records/2018/DIWTennis.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=22 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 97 | 1981β82 | William Barrett | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 98 | 1981β82 | Florence Griffith | Women's outdoor track and field | {{cite web |title=Division I Women's Outdoor Track Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/track_outdoor_champs_records/2017/D1Women.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=21 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 99 | 1981β82 | Jackie Joyner | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 100 | 1981β82 | Robin Leamy | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 101 | 1981β82 | Robin Leamy | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 102 | 1981β82 | Peter Vidmar | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 103 | 1981β82 | Peter Vidmar | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 104 | 1981β82 | Peter Vidmar | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 105 | 1982β83 | Michelle Bush | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 106 | 1982β83 | Mitch Gaylord | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 107 | 1982β83 | Florence Griffith | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 108 | 1982β83 | Tom Jager | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 109 | 1982β83 | Jackie Joyner | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 110 | 1982β83 | Alex Schwartz | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 111 | 1983β84 | Christopher Silva Franz Mortensen Lawrence Hayes Tom Jager | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 112 | 1983β84 | Tonya Alston | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 113 | 1983β84 | John Brenner | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 114 | 1983β84 | John Brenner | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 115 | 1983β84 | Tim Daggett | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 116 | 1983β84 | Tim Daggett | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 117 | 1983β84 | Tim Daggett | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 118 | 1983β84 | Tom Jager | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 119 | 1983β84 | Tom Jager | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 120 | 1984β85 | Tom Jager | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 121 | 1984β85 | Tony Pineda | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 122 | 1985β86 | Brian Ginsberg | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 123 | 1985β86 | Tom Jager | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 124 | 1985β86 | Giovanni Minervini | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 125 | 1985β86 | Curtis Holdsworth | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 126 | 1985β86 | Toni Lutjens | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 127 | 1985β86 | Doug Shaffer | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 128 | 1986β87 | Anthony Washington Kevin Young Henry Thomas Danny Everett | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 129 | 1986β87 | Kim Hamilton | Women's gymnastics | {{cite web |title=National Collegiate Women's Gymnastics Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/gymnastics_champs_records/2017-18/2017wgy.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=21 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 130 | 1986β87 | Jim Connolly | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 131 | 1986β87 | David Moriel | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 132 | 1986β87 | Kevin Young | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 133 | 1987β88 | Steve Lewis Kevin Young Danny Everett Henry Thomas | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 134 | 1987β88 | Monica Phillips Gail Devers Chewaukii Knigthen Janeene Vickers | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 135 | 1987β88 | Patrick Galbraith Brian Garrow | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 136 | 1987β88 | Allyson Cooper Stella Sampras | Women's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 137 | 1987β88 | Jill Andrews | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 138 | 1987β88 | Gail Devers | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 139 | 1987β88 | Danny Everett | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 140 | 1987β88 | Kim Hamilton | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 141 | 1987β88 | Giovanni Minervini | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 142 | 1987β88 | Kevin Young | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 143 | 1988β89 | Jill Andrews | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 144 | 1988β89 | Kim Hamilton | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 145 | 1988β89 | Kim Hamilton | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 146 | 1988β89 | Janeene Vickers | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 147 | 1988β89 | Chris Waller | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 148 | 1989β90 | Brad Hayashi | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 149 | 1989β90 | Steve Lewis | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 150 | 1989β90 | Tracie Millett | Women's indoor track and field | {{cite web |title=Division I Women's Indoor Track Championship Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/track_indoor_champs_records/2018-19/D1women.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=21 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 151 | 1989β90 | Tracie Millett | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 152 | 1989β90 | Tracie Millett | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 153 | 1989β90 | Janeene Vickers | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 154 | 1989β90 | Chris Waller | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 155 | 1990β91 | Eric Bergreen | Men's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 156 | 1990β91 | Andrea Cecchi | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 157 | 1990β91 | Brad Hayashi | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 158 | 1990β91 | Scott Keswick | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 159 | 1990β91 | Tracie Millett | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 160 | 1990β91 | Janeene Vickers | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 161 | 1991β92 | Mamie Ceniza Iwalani McCalla | Women's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 162 | 1991β92 | Andrea Cecchi | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 163 | 1991β92 | Andrea Cecchi | Men's swimming and diving | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 164 | 1991β92 | Dawn Dumble | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 165 | 1991β92 | Scott Keswick | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 166 | 1992β93 | Dawn Dumble | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 167 | 1992β93 | Steve McCain | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 168 | 1992β93 | Erik Smith | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 169 | 1993β94 | Amy Acuff | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 170 | 1993β94 | Jim Foody | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 171 | 1993β94 | John Godina | Men's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 172 | 1993β94 | John Godina | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 173 | 1993β94 | Karen Hecox | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 174 | 1993β94 | Steve McCain | Men's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 175 | 1994β95 | Amy Acuff | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 176 | 1994β95 | Keri Phebus Susie Starrett | Women's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 177 | 1994β95 | Amy Acuff | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 178 | 1994β95 | Valeyta Althouse | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 179 | 1994β95 | Ato Boldon | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 180 | 1994β95 | Dawn Dumble | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 181 | 1994β95 | Dawn Dumble | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 182 | 1994β95 | John Godina | Men's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 183 | 1994β95 | John Godina | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 184 | 1994β95 | John Godina | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 185 | 1994β95 | Greg Johnson | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 186 | 1994β95 | Keri Phebus | Women's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 187 | 1994β95 | Stella Umeh | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 188 | 1995β96 | Justin Gimelstob SrΔan MuΕ‘katiroviΔ | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 189 | 1995β96 | Amy Acuff | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 190 | 1995β96 | Valeyta Althouse | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 191 | 1995β96 | Ato Boldon | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 192 | 1995β96 | Jonathan Ogden | Men's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 193 | 1995β96 | Annette Salmeen | Women's swimming and diving | {{cite web |title=Division I Women's Swimming and Diving Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/swimming_champs_records/2017-18/D1women.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=22 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 194 | 1996β97 | Amy Acuff | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 195 | 1996β97 | Meb Keflezighi | Men's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 196 | 1996β97 | Meb Keflezighi | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 197 | 1996β97 | Meb Keflezighi | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 198 | 1996β97 | Seilala Sua | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 199 | 1997β98 | Meb Keflezighi | Men's cross country | {{cite web |title=Division I Men's Cross Country Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_cross_country_champs_records/2018-19/D1.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=20 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 200 | 1997β98 | Heidi Moneymaker | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 201 | 1997β98 | Stella Umeh | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 202 | 1997β98 | Seiala Sua | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 203 | 1998β99 | Jess Strutzel Brian Fell Michael Granville Mark Hauser | Men's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 204 | 1998β99 | Michael Granville Malachi Davis Terrence Williams Brian Fell | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 205 | 1998β99 | Kiralee Hayashi | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 206 | 1998β99 | Joanna Hayes | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 207 | 1998β99 | Heidi Moneymaker | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 208 | 1998β99 | Seilala Sua | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 209 | 1998β99 | Seilala Sua | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 210 | 1999β00 | Mohini Bhardwaj | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 211 | 1999β00 | Lena Degteva | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 212 | 1999β00 | Tracy O'Hara | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 213 | 1999β00 | Tracy O'Hara | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 214 | 1999β00 | Keyon Soley | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 215 | 1999β00 | Jess Strutzel | Men's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 216 | 1999β00 | Seilala Sua | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 217 | 1999β00 | Seilala Sua | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 218 | 1999β00 | Seilala Sua | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 219 | 2000β01 | Mohini Bhardwaj | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 220 | 2000β01 | Christina Tolson | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 221 | 2000β01 | Christina Tolson | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 222 | 2000β01 | Yvonne Tousek | Women's gymnastics | β |
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| 223 | 2000β01 | Onnie Willis | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 224 | 2001β02 | Tiffany Burgess Monique Henderson Jessica Marr Lena Nilsson | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 225 | 2001β02 | Jessica Cosby | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 226 | 2001β02 | Jamie Dantzscher | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 227 | 2001β02 | Jamie Dantzscher | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 228 | 2001β02 | Jamie Dantzscher | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 229 | 2001β02 | Darnesha Griffith | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 230 | 2001β02 | Darnesha Griffith | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 231 | 2001β02 | Lena Nilsson | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 232 | 2001β02 | Tracy O'Hara | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 233 | 2001β02 | Chaniqua Ross | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 234 | 2002β03 | Jamie Dantzscher | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 235 | 2002β03 | Lena Nilsson | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 236 | 2002β03 | Kate Richardson | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 237 | 2002β03 | Kate Richardson | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 238 | 2002β03 | Sheena Tosta | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 239 | 2003β04 | Daniela BerΔek Lauren Fisher | Women's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 240 | 2003β04 | Chelsea Johnson | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 241 | 2003β04 | Sheena Tosta | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 242 | 2004β05 | Candice Baucham | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 243 | 2004β05 | Monique Henderson | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 244 | 2004β05 | Kristen Maloney | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 245 | 2004β05 | Kristen Maloney | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 246 | 2004β05 | Tasha Schwikert | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 247 | 2005β06 | Chelsea Johnson | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 248 | 2005β06 | Benjamin KohllΓΆffel | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 249 | 2005β06 | Kate Richardson | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 250 | 2006β07 | Nicole Leach | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 251 | 2006β07 | Rhonda Watkins | Women's indoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 252 | 2006β07 | Rhonda Watkins | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 253 | 2007β08 | Tracy Lin Riza Zalameda | Women's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 254 | 2007β08 | Kevin Chappell | Men's golf | {{cite web |title=Division I Men's Golf Championships Records Book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/golf_champs_records/2017/DIMen.pdf |publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association |access-date=21 July 2018}} |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 255 | 2007β08 | Tasha Schwikert | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 256 | 2007β08 | Tasha Schwikert | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 257 | 2008β09 | Nicole Leach | Women's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 258 | 2009β10 | Brittani McCullough | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 259 | 2009β10 | Vanessa Zamarripa | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 260 | 2010β11 | Samantha Peszek | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 261 | 2012β13 | Julian Wruck | Men's outdoor track and field | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 262 | 2013β14 | Marcos Giron | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 263 | 2014β15 | Samantha Peszek | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 264 | 2014β15 | Samantha Peszek | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 265 | 2015β16 | Mackenzie McDonald Martin Redlicki | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 266 | 2015β16 | Danusia Francis | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 267 | 2015β16 | Mackenzie McDonald | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 268 | 2016β17 | Kyla Ross | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 269 | 2016β17 | Kyla Ross | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 270 | 2017β18 | Martin Redlicki Evan Zhu | Men's tennis | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 271 | 2017β18 | Christine Lee | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 272 | 2017β18 | Christine Lee | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 273 | 2017β18 | Katelyn Ohashi | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 274 | 2018β19 | Kyla Ross | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 275 | 2018β19 | Kyla Ross | Women's gymnastics | |
align="center" bgcolor=""
| 276 | 2018β19 | Maxime Cressy Keegan Smith | Men's tennis | |
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| 277 | 2018β19 | Gabby Andrews Ayan Broomfield | Women's tennis | |
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| 278 | 2022β23 | Fangran Tian | Women's tennis |
Notable non-varsity sports
=Badminton=
The UCLA varsity men's badminton team won three national championships in 1977, 1981 and 1982.{{cite news|title= ASU second in badminton|page=C-3|date= April 20, 1982|work=The Arizona Republic|location=Phoenix, Arizona|access-date=March 4, 2017|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/121586001}} The 1977 squad was led by Chris Kinard, multiple winner of the U.S. Men's Singles Championship before and during his career at UCLA. Kinard is a member of the U.S. Badminton Hall of Fame.
The women's varsity badminton team also won the AIAW intercollegiate championship in 1977.
=Boxing=
The men's and women's boxing teams have competed as part of the National Collegiate Boxing Association since 2016, after switching from the United States Intercollegiate Boxing Association. The women's team has earned three individual national boxing titles: one from the USIBA in 2014, and two from the NCBA, in 2016 and 2019.{{cite web |url=http://www.collegeboxing.org/national-tournament |website=USIBA |title=Past USIBA Champions |access-date=2019-08-23 |archive-date=August 23, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190823190922/http://www.collegeboxing.org/national-tournament |url-status=dead }}{{cite web |title=Club Athlete Spotlight: Elizabeth Pratt of Boxing |date=April 26, 2016 |url=https://uclaclubsports.com/news/2016/4/26/club-athlete-spotlight-elizabeth-pratt-of-boxing.aspx |access-date=2019-09-06}}{{cite news|title=Club boxer Chloe Beverina rises to success, ends season with national championship |date=May 14, 2019 |work=Daily Bruin |access-date=September 6, 2019 |url=https://dailybruin.com/2019/05/14/club-boxer-chloe-beverina-rises-to-success-ends-season-with-national-championship/}}
=Ice Hockey=
{{main|UCLA Bruins men's ice hockey}}
Before the school was even called 'UCLA', the ice hockey program was formed, joining several other local teams including USC and Occidental. The team continued for several years despite the great depression being in full force. In the late 1930s a new arena was built for the Los Angeles programs but World War II forced all of the pacific coast teams to shutter their programs in the early '40s. When teams were reconstituted afterwards, UCLA was not among the programs to resurface and the new arena, the Tropical Ice Gardens, was demolished in 1949.
UCLA eventually returned to the ice in 1961 but only as a club sport. Until recently, it played against many of its former varsity opponents in the Pac-8.
Currently, UCLA plays in the West Coast Hockey Conference in the Tier 1 division against rivals like Loyola Marymount, Long Beach State, Grand Canyon, Northern Arizona, Arizona State, and others. They've made back to back appearances at the ACHA Men's D2 Western Region playoffs. They are currently coached by former player Griffin McCarty, son of the Detroit Red Wings legend Darren McCarty and Sean Allen, a former Hamilton College men's hockey player.
Historically, UCLA and USC have faced off in an annual 5-game series dubbed "The Crosstown Cup". Up until the COVID-19 pandemic, one of the games took place at the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles.
The Bruins currently play at The Cube Ice and Entertainment Center in Santa Clarita, California, which played host to the 2023 and 2024 WCHC Playoffs, both of which UCLA lost in the final of.
=Rugby=
Founded in 1934, UCLA rugby is one of the historically great college rugby teams.[http://www.rugbytoday.com/college/ucla-joins-varsity-cup "UCLA Joins Varsity Cup"], Rugby Today, Pat Clifton, December 7, 2012. UCLA has won 2 national championships, and amassed a 362β46β2 record from 1966 to 1982,{{cite web|url=http://www.bruinrugby.com/aboutus.html|title=Bruinrugby.com|access-date=April 6, 2017}}{{cite web|url=http://rugbymag.com/college-news/6634-ucla-joins-varsity-cup.html|title=Rugby Mag, UCLA Joins Varsity Cup, December 7, 2012|work=RugbyMag.com|access-date=April 6, 2017}} but the program lost its varsity status in 1982.Rugby Mag, Bruins Hope to Return to Glory at CRC, May 7, 2013, http://www.rugbymag.com/tournaments-special/crc/7982-bruins-hope-to-return-to-glory-at-crc.html The Bruins play Division 1 college rugby in the PAC Rugby Conference. The Bruins are led by head coach Scott Stewart, who formerly played international rugby for Canada. The team plays its home games at the Wallis Annenberg Stadium.
James Schaeffer introduced the original team in 1934, which was eventually revived post-WWII through Norm Padgett and his tireless hustling and fraternity walks. In 1958, Padgett's former Captain, Ged Gardner, assumed the Coaching role from until 1965. Gardner built membership, interest and skill to which Coach Dennis Storer added his own unique style. Dennis Storer remained Head Coach from 1966 - 1982, when the program operated as a Varsity Sport, winning a national title in 1972 and then another in 1975. Rugby was dropped as a varsity sport shortly after by the Athletics department. Storer subsequently resumed the role from 1987-89 after the program was downgraded to Club Status. During his tenure, Storer guided the program to 2 Monterey National Championship Titles, numerous Southern California Titles, 2 national championship titles, and produced 14 US Eagles with himself being named the first ever USA Eagles Coach.
In the summer of 2003, a dedicated Alumni group headed by Coach Storer, launched an effort to return Bruin Rugby to its former prowess as the program had not reached the National Playoffs since the 1980's, was relegated to Club Status, and suffered from a lack of experienced and committed leadership. This initiative led to the hiring Head Coach Scott Stewart, a former Canadian International with 64 caps and 5 World Cup appearances. Since that time, the Bruins have progressed rapidly and have become a consistently top-ranked program in both XV's and 7's rugby and a regular contender to win a National Championship in both codes.
UCLA finished the 2010β11 season ranked 25th in the country.Rugby Mag, Final CPD Rankings for 2010β11, May 24, 2011, http://rugbymag.com/cpl/988-final-cpd-rankings-for-2010-2011.html In the 2011β12 season UCLA placed second in the Pacific Conference, reached the quarterfinals of the 2012 men's national playoffs,{{cite web|url=http://themortreport.blogs.deseretnews.com/2012/05/04/byu-mens-rugby-team-hosts-ucla-in-di-a-quarterfinals/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120507145241/http://themortreport.blogs.deseretnews.com/2012/05/04/byu-mens-rugby-team-hosts-ucla-in-di-a-quarterfinals/|url-status=dead|archive-date=May 7, 2012|title=Classifieds|work=DeseretNews.com|access-date=April 6, 2017}} and finished the season ranked 11th in the nation.{{cite web|url=http://rugbymag.com/cpl/4634-final-2012-d1-a-college-rankings.html|title=Rugby Mag, Final 2012 D1-A College Rankings, May 20, 2012|work=RugbyMag.com|access-date=April 6, 2017}} During the 2012β13 season, UCLA finished second in the PAC conference, highlighted by a 50β38 win over 6th-ranked Utah,UCLA Bruins Rugby, BRUINS UPSET #6 UTAH AT HOME, March 13, 2013, http://www.bruinrugby.com/?p=1059 which propelled UCLA into a top-10 position in the national rankings. UCLA β along with fellow PAC schools Cal and Utah β was one of the original eight teams to form the Varsity Cup, which began play in 2013. UCLA reached the quarterfinals of the 2015 Varsity Cup, before losing to eventual champions BYU.[http://www.canyon-news.com/ucla-rugby-flashes-promise-in-varsity-cup-loss-to-byu/20348 "UCLA Rugby Flashes In Varsity Cup Loss"], Canyon News, Joseph Wilhelm, April 13, 2015.
UCLA has also been successful in rugby sevens. UCLA reached the quarterfinals of the 2012 Las Vegas Invitational college rugby sevens tournament.Rugby Mag, CRC Qualified Down to Eight, February 10, 2012, http://rugbymag.com/news/colleges/collegiate-sevens/4765-crc-qualifier-down-to-eight.html UCLA defeated Arizona State to finish third at the 2012 PAC 7s tournament.Rugby Mag, Cal Wins PAC 7s, November 4, 2012, http://www.rugbymag.com/news/colleges/collegiate-sevens/6305-cal-wins-pac-7s.html UCLA defeated Dartmouth to reach the semifinals of the 2013 Collegiate Rugby Championship at PPL Park in Philadelphia in a tournament broadcast live on NBC.[http://www.csnphilly.com/ncaa/cal-wins-college-rugby-sevens-title-ppl-park "Cal wins college rugby sevens title at PPL Park"], CSNphilly.com, Dave Zeitlin, June 2, 2013. UCLA again reached the semifinals of the 2014 Collegiate Rugby Championship, before losing, 17β20, to eventual champions Cal.[http://www.csnphilly.com/ncaa/cal-tops-kutztown-rugby-title-ppl-park "Cal tops Kutztown for rugby title at PPL Park"], CSNPhilly.com, Matt Allibone, June 1, 2014. UCLA won the 2014 West Coast 7s with a 14β12 upset victory over Cal in the final.{{cite web|url=http://www.thisisamericanrugby.com/2014/10/ucla-upsets-cal-to-win-west-coast-7s.html|title=UCLA Upsets Cal To Win West Coast 7s|work=ThisIsAmericanRugby.com|access-date=April 6, 2017}} In 2016 the Bruins fell to rivals Cal and then in 2018 to Lindenwood in the final of the Collegiate Rugby Championship (7s).
Scott Stewart was replaced in 2020 by Dave Clancy. Clancy coached around the world with professional teams such as Munster Rugby, international teams such as Samoa, Cayman Islands and US Representative teams along with domestic experience building a club program with the Chicago Lions. Due to certain circumstances and the struggles of the pandemic, Dave left the program in 2021.
After a rigorous search for a new head coach, Harry Bennett was announced as the new head coach of UCLA Rugby in 2022. Combining an impressive playing career, familiarity with the Los Angeles rugby community, and a strong coaching pedigree, Coach Bennett quickly became the clear choice among the scores of excellent applicants for the head coach position. Coach Bennett hails from Scone, New South Wales, Australia. He has played flyhalf or fullback for teams across the rugby landscape both internationally and in the US. Harry Bennett began his professional career with Super Rugby team, the NSW Waratahs, out of High-School. Most recently he ended his playing career with the New York Ironworkers in the MLR.
In 2019 UCLA rugby player, Benjamin Broselle was called up to the USA Eagles 7s team to play in the HSBC USA 7s tournament.{{cite web | url=https://eagles.rugby/players/ben-broselle | title=Ben Broselle | Player Profile | USA Eagles }} In 2021, UCLA rugby produced another Eagle,Lucas Lacamp, who made his debut at the HSBC Dubai 7s while still a Junior at UCLA. Lacamp received honors as a Rudy Scholz Award Finalist{{cite web | url=https://www.goffrugbyreport.com/news/get-know-scholz-finalists-lucas-lacamp | title=Get to Know the Scholz Finalists: Lucas Lacamp | Goff Rugby Report | date=May 3, 2022 }} and is likely to be a part of the squad that travels to compete at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.
Currently, the Bruins compete in all of the Major National Domestic competitions including the PAC Rugby Conference (XV's & 7's), CRAA D1A, USAR Collegiate National Championships, and the Collegiate Rugby 7s Championships (7's).
Athletics facilities
In 2014, UCLA named all of its recreation and athletics facilities in honor of Jackie Robinson, who was a four-sport student-athlete at the school and went on to play Major League Baseball as the first African American to do so in the league.[http://www.uclabruins.com/ViewArticle.dbml?ATCLID=208271477 UCLA Athletic Facilities], UCLABruins.com, November 21, 2014. The Jackie Robinson "42" Athletics and Recreation Complex monument was installed in front of the John Wooden Recreation Center and was unveiled on March 5, 2016. The school also retired number 42 which was the number Robinson worn as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers.[http://newsroom.ucla.edu/stories/jackie-robinson-s-number-42-lives-on-at-ucla Jackie Robinson's number 42 lives on at UCLA], UCLA.edu, March 5, 2016.
Two notable sports facilities serve as home venues for UCLA sports. Since 1982, the Bruin football team has played home games at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. From 1923 to 1981, including the Bruins' 1954 National Championship year, the team played at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles. The men's and women's basketball, women's gymnastics and volleyball teams play at Pauley Pavilion on campus. The softball team plays on campus at Easton Stadium. Down the hill, the water polo teams, as well as the swim and dive teams, compete at Spieker Aquatics Center. For baseball, there is the Steele Field at Jackie Robinson Stadium, located close to campus.
See also: Bel-Air Country Club, Drake Stadium, Los Angeles Tennis Center, Sunset Canyon Recreation Center, UCLA Marina Aquatic Center, Wallis Annenberg Stadium
Athletic alumni
{{See also|List of University of California, Los Angeles people}}
Mark Harmon, Lynn "Buck" Compton, Jackie Robinson, Rafer Johnson, Walt Hazzard, Gail Goodrich, Troy Aikman, Gary Beban, Kenny Easley, Tom Fears, Billy Kilmer, Bob Waterfield, Jimmy Connors, Lonzo Ball, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Lew Alcindor), Jamaal Wilkes, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Evelyn Ashford, Bill Walton, Kenny Washington, Arthur Ashe, Reggie Miller, Troy Glaus, Tim Daggett, Baron Davis, Stacey Nuveman, Lisa Fernandez, Amanda Freed, Kevin Love, Tairia Flowers, Donna de Varona, Russell Westbrook, Cobi Jones, Lauren Cheney, Sydney Leroux and Ann Meyers are just some of the notable athletic alumni, many of whom have achieved success in other fields.
Former coaches have included Red Sanders, Tommy Prothro, Dick Vermeil, Terry Donahue, Al Scates, Adam Krikorian, Jonathan Bornstein, Andy Banachowski, Jim Harrick, and John Wooden.
Olympic competitors
In addition to the success of its collegiate sports program, UCLA has been represented at the Olympics. In the 2004 Athens games, UCLA sent 56 athletes, more than any other university in the country. At the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Bruins won 15 medals, including 4 gold, 9 silver, and 2 bronze. Additionally, five coaches came from UCLA: Jill Ellis (women's soccer, gold), Guy Baker (women's water polo, silver), Bob Alejo (men's beach volleyball, gold), Jeannette Boldon (women's track and field, multiple medals), and John Speraw (men's volleyball, gold).
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |||
Gold | Silver | Bronze | |
---|---|---|---|
Total Olympic Medals
| 126 || 65 || 60 |
Symbolism
File:Joe and Josephine Bruin, Pauley Pavilion, UCLA, 2008.jpg|Joe and Josephine Bruin in Pauley Pavilion.
File:UCLA Marching Band.jpg|The Solid Gold Sound performs on the field at the Rose Bowl.
File:220px-UCLA Bruin.jpg|The statue of the UCLA Bruin, on Bruin Walk. The statue was designed by Billy Fitzgerald.{{Cite web|title=Billy Fitzgerald, The Bruin, UCLA|url=http://www.publicartinla.com/UCLAArt/bruin_bear.html|access-date=2021-12-05|website=www.publicartinla.com|archive-date=April 14, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120414230058/http://www.publicartinla.com/UCLAArt/bruin_bear.html|url-status=usurped}}
The Bruin mascots are Joe and Josephine Bruin. In addition to regular attendance at UCLA sporting events, the duo participates in other events for the university.
On September 30, 1984, the UCLA Alumni Association celebrated its 50th anniversary by installing "The Bruin" statue in Bruin Plaza. It was billed as the largest bear sculpture in the United States, at 10 feet long, 6 feet wide, 3 feet across and weighing more than 2 tons.{{Cite web|title=The Bruin Statue is Installed, "Mighty Bruins" Debuts {{!}} UCLA 100|url=https://100.ucla.edu/timeline/the-bruin-statue-is-installed|access-date=2021-12-05|website=100.ucla.edu|language=en}}
The Solid Gold Sound of the UCLA Bruin Marching Band entertains crowds at major athletic and extracurricular events. The school fight songs are "Sons of Westwood" and "The Mighty Bruins." The spirit squad includes the cheer squad, the dance team and the yell crew, in addition to the mascots. The UCLA alumni band is the official band of the gymnastics team at the school.{{Cite web|title=UCLA Alumni Band|url=https://uclaalumniband.org/|access-date=2021-12-05|website=UCLA Alumni Band|language=en}}
Rivalries
{{main|UCLAβUSC rivalry}}
{{see also|CaliforniaβUCLA football rivalry|Notre Dame-UCLA rivalry|Arizona-UCLA basketball rivalry}}
UCLA shares a traditional sports rivalry with the nearby University of Southern California (USC). This rivalry is relatively unique{{Citation needed|date=April 2017}} in NCAA Division I sports because both schools are located within the same city, Los Angeles. The Lexus Gauntlet was the name given to a now defunct competition between UCLA and USC in the 18 varsity sports that both competed in head-to-head; in 2003, 2005, and 2007 UCLA won the Lexus Gauntlet Trophy, while the University of Southern California won the trophy in 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, and 2009. Competitions with official sponsorship were held from 2001 until the licensing contract ended in 2009. The annual football game features both teams vying for the Victory Bell.
California and UCLA have met annually on the football field since 1939.{{cite web|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/ucla/1933-schedule.html |title=1933 UCLA Bruins Schedule and Results | College Football at |publisher=Sports-reference.com |access-date=August 24, 2014}} Because UCLA was founded as the southern branch of the University of California, the series takes on the quality of a sibling rivalry.{{cite web |url=http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/UCHistory/general_history/campuses/ucla/overview.html |title=University of California History Digital Archives |publisher=Sunsite.berkeley.edu |access-date=August 24, 2014 |archive-date=April 30, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060430204632/http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/uchistory/general_history/campuses/ucla/overview.html |url-status=dead }} The series was dominated early by Cal, followed by dominance by UCLA in the 1950s until 80s, and has become more evenly matched recently.
UCLA had a basketball rivalry with Notre Dame, with games played every year from 1966 to 1995.{{cite web |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2009-feb-07-sp-dufresne--ucla-notre-dame7-story.html|title=UCLA vs. Notre Dame: A rivalry the way they used to be|work=Los Angeles Times|date=February 7, 2009 |access-date=March 5, 2015}} After UCLA's victory on February 7, 2009, UCLA leads the all-time series, 28β19.{{Cite web |url=http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/020609aaa.html |title=UCLA Renews Historical Rivalry with Notre Dame on CBS |access-date=January 9, 2014 |archive-date=March 23, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120323121557/http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/020609aaa.html |url-status=dead }}
The performance of UCLA and Arizona influences the national opinion of the conference.{{cite web | last=Foster | first=Chris | url=https://www.latimes.com/sports/la-xpm-2013-mar-02-la-sp-0302-ucla-arizona-pac-12-20130302-story.html | title=UCLA, Arizona need to raise Pac-12 level | work=Los Angeles Times | date=March 2, 2013 | quote=California Coach Mike Montgomery, "...If those two are not good, the conference is not perceived as being good. People don't give credit to the schools across the board in the league."}}
UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame
In conjunction with the opening of the J.D. Morgan Athletics Center in November 1983, UCLA established an athletics Hall of Fame with 25 charter members representing a cross-section of the school's athletic history. Each year, a minimum of one and a maximum of eight former UCLA athletes, coaches or administrators are added to the Hall of Fame. Upon its 23rd year of existence, The Hall of Fame was moved to a new location facing Westwood Plaza. The new Hall of Fame is now double in size after its renovation and expansion, which was completed in the Winter of 2000. The first floor in the east wing of the new J.D. Morgan Athletics Center features the {{convert|8000|sqft|m2|adj=on}} Athletics Hall of Fame and serves as the main entrance to the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics.
:1984 (25 charter members): Bill Ackerman, athletic director; Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), basketball; Arthur Ashe, tennis; Gary Beban, football; Mike Burton, swimming; Paul Cameron, football; Chris Chambliss, baseball; Elvin 'Ducky' Drake, track coach and trainer; Gail Goodrich, basketball; Walt Hazzard (Mahdi Abdul-Rahman), basketball; Cecil Hollingsworth, football scout and gymnastics and wrestling coach; Rafer Johnson, track; Kirk Kilgour, volleyball; Billy Kilmer, football; Donn Moomaw, football; J.D. Morgan, athletic director and tennis coach; Jackie Robinson, football, baseball, basketball and track; Henry 'Red' Sanders, football coach; Al Sparlis, football; Bill Spaulding, football coach; Bill Walton, basketball; Kenny Washington, football; Bob Waterfield, football; Keith (Jamaal) Wilkes, basketball; and John Wooden, basketball coach.
:1985 (6): Bob Davenport, football; Craig Dixon, track; Wilbur Johns, athletic director/basketball coach; Tommy Prothro, football coach; George Stanich, basketball; and Sidney Wicks, basketball.
:1986 (8): Kermit Alexander, football; Burr Baldwin, football; Keith Erickson, basketball; Mike Frankovich, football; Jimmy LuValle, track; Willie Naulls, basketball; Jerry Norman, basketball player and assistant coach; and Don Paul, football.
:1987 (8): Don Barksdale, basketball; George Dickerson, football; Jack Ellena, football; Bert LaBrucherie, football; Dick Linthicum, basketball; Jim Salsbury, football; John Smith, track; Jack Tidball, tennis.
:1988 (6): Sam Balter, basketball; Mel Farr Sr., football; Robert Fischer, athletic director; Marques Johnson, basketball; Ann Meyers, basketball; and C.K. Yang, track.
:1989 (7): Peter H. Dailey, football; Tom Fears, football; Vic Kelley, sports information director, Carl McBain, track; Karen Moe-Thornton, swimming; Ernie Suwara, volleyball; and Pat Turner, track.
:1990 (7): Evelyn Ashford, track; Dr. Bobby Brown, baseball; Stan Cole, water polo; Denny Crum, basketball; Norm Duncan, football/administration; Mike Marienthal, football/special service; Mike Warren, basketball.
:1991 (7): Willie Banks, track; Kenny Easley, football; Brian Goodell, swimming; Briggs Hunt, wrestling; Tim Leary, baseball; Jerry Robinson, football; Christopher "Sinjin" Smith, volleyball.
:1992 (9): Wayne Collett, track; Terry Condon, volleyball; Jim Johnson, football; Robin Leamy, swimming; Freeman McNeil, football; Dave Meyers, basketball; Jack Myers, baseball; Corey Pavin, golf; Woody Strode, football.
:1993 (8): Sue Enquist, softball; Greg Foster, track; Maurice (Mac) Goodstein, football; Charles "Karch" Kiraly, volleyball; Jose Lopez, soccer; Don Manning, football; Bill Putnam, basketball; Curtis Rowe, basketball.
:1994 (7): Don Bragg, basketball; Denise Curry, basketball; John Richardson, football; Larry Rundle, volleyball; John Sciarra, football; Kiki Vandeweghe, basketball; Peter Vidmar, gymnastics.
:1995 (8): Jimmy Connors, tennis; Debbie Doom, softball; Mitch Gaylord, gymnastics; Ricci Luyties, volleyball; Stephen Pate, golf; John Peterson, football/track; Jerry Shipkey, football; Mike Tully, track.
:1996 (7): Bill Barrett, swimming; Jackie Joyner-Kersee, track; Liz Masakayan, volleyball; Eddie Merrins, golf coach; Dot Richardson, softball; Skip Rowland, football; Dick Wallen, football.
:1997 (8): Jim Bush, track coach; Paul Caligiuri, soccer; Tim Daggett, gymnastics; David Greenwood, basketball; Frank Lubin, basketball; Doug Partie, volleyball; Cal Rossi, football/baseball; Charles Young, chancellor.
:1998 (12): Glenn Bassett, tennis coach; Sheila Cornell, softball; Randy Cross, football; Gaston Green, football; Florence Griffith-Joyner, track; Tom Jager, swimming; Eric Karros, baseball; Reggie Miller, basketball; Ken Norton, Jr., football; Tom Ramsey, football; Art Reichle, baseball coach; Cy Young, track.
:1999 (12): Troy Aikman, football; Sam Boghosian, football; Kay Cockerill, golf; Tracy Compton, softball; Denise Corlett, volleyball/basketball; Dave Dalby, football; Gail Devers, track; Bob Horn, water polo; Ernie Johnson, football; Torey Lovullo, baseball; Sharon Shapiro, gymnastics; Kevin Young, track.
:2000 (10): Lucius Allen, basketball; Jeanne Beauprey-Reeves, volleyball; John Brenner, track and field; George Farmer, football; Kim Hamilton, gymnastics; Carnell Lake, football; Billie Moore, basketball; Steve Salmons, volleyball; Eddie Sheldrake, basketball; Dick Vermeil, football.
:2001 (11): Jill Andrews, gymnastics; Sharron Backus, softball; Jim Brown, football; Charles Cheshire, football; Gary Cunningham, basketball; Terry Donahue, football; Warren Edmonson, track and field; John Green, basketball; John Lee, football; Lisa Longaker, softball; and Ozzie Volstad, volleyball.
:2002 (9): Denny Cline, volleyball; Bob Day, track and field; Cobi Jones, soccer; Don MacLean, basketball; Shane Mack, baseball; Ted Narleski, football; Anita Ortega, basketball; Duffy Waldorf, golf; Russell Webb, water polo/swimming.
:2003 (8): Danny Everett, track and field; Lisa Fernandez, softball; Brad Friedel, soccer; Ryan McGuire, baseball; Jerome "Pooh" Richardson, basketball; Don Rogers, football; Al Scates, volleyball; Tim Wrightman, football.
:2004 (8): Henry Bibby, basketball; Dennis Dummit, football; Carlton Gray, football; Steve Lewis, track & field; James Owens, football/track & field; Sigi Schmid, soccer; Fred Slaughter, basketball; Natalie Williams, basketball/volleyball.
:2005 (8): Hardiman Cureton, football; Dawn Dumble, track & field; Allen Fox, tennis; John Godina, track & field; Ed O'Bannon, basketball; Mike O'Hara, volleyball; Art Shurlock, gymnastics; Kenny Washington, basketball.
:2006 (8): Carol Bower, rowing; Herb Flam, tennis; Monte Nitzkowski, swimming/water polo; Jonathan Ogden, football/track and field; Annette Salmeen, swimming; Dennis Storer, soccer/rugby; John Vallely, basketball; Elaine Youngs, volleyball.
:2007 (8): Amy Acuff, track & field; George Brown, track & field; Jennifer Brundage, softball; Jim Ferguson, water polo; Troy Glaus, baseball; John Moore, basketball; Jeff Nygaard, volleyball; Keri Phebus, tennis
:2008 (8): Traci Arkenberg, Soccer; Peter T. Dalis, Athletic Director/Administration; Kurt Krumpholz, Water Polo/Swimming; Leah Homma, Gymnastics; Robert Seaman, Track & Field; Jackie Tobian-Steinmann, Women's Golf Coach; Eric Turner, Football; Todd Zeile, Baseball
:2009 (8): Tyus Edney, basketball; James "Cap" Haralson, football/track & field; Cade McNown, football; Stein Metzger, volleyball; Nicolle Payne, water polo; J.J. Stokes, football; Daiva Tomkus, volleyball; Walt Torrence, basketball
:2010 (8): David Ashleigh, men's water polo; Andy Banachowski, women's volleyball coach; Judith Holland, administration; Mebrahtom Keflezighi, men's track & field; Valorie Kondos Field, women's gymnastics coach; Seilala Sua, women's track & field; Chase Utley, baseball; and Catherine Von Schwarz, women's water polo.
:2011 (8): Gary Adams, baseball; Ato Boldon, track & field; Theotis Brown, football; Ernie Case, football; Larry Nagler, tennis; Mel North, fencing; Alex Rousseau, water polo; and Janeene Vickers-McKinney, track & field.
:2012 (9): Ron Ballatore, men's swimming coach; Dr. Julie Bremner Romias, women's volleyball; Jack Hirsch, men's basketball; Fred McNeill, football; Stacey Nuveman, softball; Charles Pasarell, men's tennis; Coralie Simmons, women's water polo; Stella Umeh, gymnastics; and Dr. Gerald Finerman, team doctor
:2013 (8): Mohini Bhardwaj, gymnastics; Carlos Bocanegra, men's soccer; Fred Bohna, wrestling; Eric Byrnes, baseball; Yvonne Gutierrez, softball; Don Johnson, men's basketball; Maylana Martin Douglas, women's basketball; Nandi Pryce, women's soccer
:2014 (8): Guy Baker (water polo), James Butts (men's track & field), Joanna Hayes (women's track & field), Joe-Max Moore (men's soccer), Francis Wai (football, basketball, track & field, rugby), Natasha Watley (softball), and Onnie Willis (women's gymnastics)
:2015 (8): Annett Buckner Davis (volleyball), Danny Farmer (football/volleyball), Billy Martin (men's tennis), Paul Nihipali (men's volleyball), Jan Palchikoff (women's rowing/swimming & diving), Janice Parks (softball), Eric Valent (baseball) and Richard Washington (men's basketball)
:2016 (8): Julie Adams (softball), Jamie Dantzscher (women's gymnastics), Baron Davis (men's basketball), Natalie Golda (women's water polo), Chris Henderson (men's soccer), Adam Krikorian (water polo), Mike Marsh (track & field) and Wendell Tyler (football)
:2017 (9): Toby Bailey (men's basketball), Robin Beauregard (women's water polo), Monique Henderson (track & field), Maurice Jones-Drew (football), Bob Larsen (track & field/cross country coach), Kristen Maloney (gymnastics), Brandon Taliaferro (men's volleyball), Gina Vecchione (softball), and Bobby Field (football, administration)
:2018 (8): Nikki Blue (women's basketball), Kevin Chappell (men's golf), Lynn "Buck" Compton (baseball/football), Larry Farmer (men's basketball), Amanda Freed (softball), Jenny Johnson Jordan (women's volleyball), Eric Lindroth (men's water polo), and Stella Sampras Webster (women's tennis)
:2019 (7): Jill Ellis (women's soccer), Peter Fleming (men's tennis), Tairia Flowers (softball), Skip Hicks (football), Courtney Mathewson (women's water polo), Adam Naeve (men's volleyball), Kristee Porter (women's volleyball, basketball, track & field)
:2020 (9): Keira Goerl (softball), Lauren (Cheney) Holiday (womenβs soccer), Kevin Love (menβs basketball), Mike Powell (track and field), Noelle Quinn (womenβs basketball), Dave Roberts (baseball), Tasha Schwikert (gymnastics), Russell Westbrook (menβs basketball), Adam Wright (menβs water polo)
:2021 (8): Jeanette Bolden (track & field), Tiffany Joh (women's golf), Megan Langenfeld (softball), Marcedes Lewis (football), Tracy Murray (men's basketball), Keiko Price (women's swimming & diving), Kate Richardson (gymnastics)
:2022 (9): Patrick Cantlay (men's golf), Gerrit Cole (baseball), DeShaun Foster (football), Dawn Harper-Nelson (track & field), Kelly Inouye-Perez (softball), Ole Mikkelsen (men's soccer), Linda Robertson Hanley (women's beach volleyball), Dave Saunders (men's volleyball), Ed Kezirian (extraordinary service)
:2023 (8): B'Ann Burns (softball), Kevin Craig, (men's water polo), Carrie Forsyth (women's golf), Heidi Moneymaker (gymnastics), Kelly Rulon (women's water polo), Randy Schwartz (baseball), Lynn Shackelford, (men's basketball), Erik Sullivan (men's volleyball){{cite web |title=UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2023 Announced |url=https://uclabruins.com/news/2023/6/8/bruin-athletics-ucla-athletic-hall-of-fame-class-of-2023-announced.aspx |website=UCLABruins.com |date=June 8, 2023 |publisher=UCLA Athletics |access-date=8 June 2023}}
:2024 (7): Milt Davis (football), Rod Foster (men's basketball), Sean Kern (men's water polo), Charlotte Mayorkas (women's golf), Brian Teacher (men's tennis), Vanessa Teff (women's rowing) and Vanessa Zamarripa (women's gymnastics)
:2025 (9): Tracey Milburn Bailey (soccer), Brandon Crawford (baseball), Cyndi Gallager (swimming & diving), Mike Franks (tennis), Jason Kapono (men's basketball), Brittani McCullough (gymnastics), Kimberly Po (women's tennis), Sheena Johnson Tosta (track and field), Lisa Willis (women's basketball)
Athletics apparel sponsorships
From 1993 to 1999, the school had an apparel contract with Reebok.
In 1999, an agreement was reached with Adidas for six years, ending in June 2005. The deal was to provide equipment and apparel to UCLA's 21 intercollegiate teams. Additional terms of the deal included internship opportunities for UCLA students and an exclusive licensee for athletic replica wear.{{cite web|title=UCLA Signs Apparel Deal with Adidas|url=http://www.uclabruins.com/genrel/082498aaa.html|work=article|publisher=UCLABruins.com|access-date=February 12, 2012|archive-date=June 12, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120612015623/http://www.uclabruins.com/genrel/082498aaa.html|url-status=dead}} The reported monetary terms of the agreement included $1.625 million in cash and $1.3 million in equipment each year.
In 2005, the deal was renewed for $2.6 million in cash and $1.6 million in equipment. Additional terms included one full-time Adidas employee on the UCLA campus, $2,500 each year for a "non-UCLA charitable" project selected by the Football or Basketball head coach, game tickets for Adidas executives, radio acknowledgements during games, and appearances by the Football and Basketball head coaches at Adidas events.{{cite web|last=Allen|first=Sam|title=Fate of adidas contract with UCLA athletic department undetermined|url=http://www.dailybruin.com/index.php/article/2010/03/fate-adidas-contract-ucla-athletic-department-unde|work=article|publisher=Daily Bruin|access-date=February 12, 2012}}
In April 2010, a letter of intent to renew was reached between UCLA Athletics and Adidas.{{cite web|last=Allen|first=Sam|title=UCLA to renew adidas deal |url=http://www.dailybruin.com/index.php/article/2010/04/ucla-renew-adidas-deal|work=article|publisher=Daily Bruin|access-date=February 12, 2012}} By June of that same year the terms of the deal were finalized but not published.{{cite web|last=Forrester|first=Nick|title=UCLA renews sponsorship with Adidas |url=http://www.sportspromedia.com/news/ucla_renews_sponsorship_with_adidas/|work=article|date=June 9, 2010|publisher=Sports Pro Media|access-date=February 12, 2012}} In a report, UCLA Athletic Director Dan Guerrero stated that the deal is for seven years and "will approach" the deal Adidas has with Michigan worth $7.5 million.{{cite web|last=Bachman|first=Rachel|title=Lucrative deals with Nike, Adidas another edge in battle between college 'haves,' 'have nots'|url=http://blog.oregonlive.com/pac10/2010/06/lucrative_deals_with_nike_adid.html|work=article|date=June 5, 2010|publisher=The Oregonian |access-date=February 12, 2012}}
In May 2016, UCLA signed a 15-year, $280 million deal with sportswear manufacturer Under Armour starting in the 2017β18 season.[http://www.latimes.com/sports/ucla/la-sp-0525-ucla-under-armour-20160525-snap-story.html UCLA's Under Armour deal for $280 million is the biggest in NCAA history] β David Wharton, Los Angeles Times, 24 May 2016 In June 2020, Under Armour announced that it will be terminating its apparel deal with UCLA.
In December 2020, UCLA signed a 6-year deal with the Jordan Brand to outfit the football and men's and women's basketball teams.{{Cite web|url=https://uclabruins.com/news/2020/12/8/bruin-athletics-ucla-athletics-to-team-up-with-jordan-brand-nike.aspx|title = UCLA Athletics to Team up with Jordan Brand, Nike| date=December 8, 2020 }} Starting July 1, 2021, Nike also outfits the other 25 varsity sports teams at UCLA.{{cite web |title=UCLA Athletics Reaches Multi-Year Agreement with NIKE, Inc. and Jordan Brand |url=https://news.nike.com/news/nike-inc-jordan-brand-ucla-agreement |website=Nike News |access-date=July 7, 2021 |date=December 8, 2020}}
- 1993-1999 Reebok
- 1999-2017 Adidas
- 2017-2021 Under Armour
- 2021-Future Jordan and Nike
See also
References
{{reflist|30em}}